ProComp Computer Services, Inc.
is a family owned, closely held
Georgia corporation. We have two principals:
Jeanette Peppers

Jeanette is our President and Business Manager. After graduating from Druid Hills High School, she attended Georgia State University,
where she received a Bachelor Of Business Administration in Accounting.
Following that, she began working as an accountant, receiving her
certification as a CPA in 1982. Meanwhile, she returned to Georgia
State, where she earned a Master's degree in Information Services.
Shortly after receiving her certification, she left her employer, and opened
her own accounting firm, Jeanette Peppers, CPA, PC, which is still a
thriving business.
As an accountant, with computer training, she naturally
was drawn to QuickBooks as an accounting solution, becoming quite proficient
with it. When Intuit began offering certification in 1999, she
immediately took the test, and was one of the earliest Certified ProAdvisers.
Today, she holds all of the available certifications. She continues to
practice accounting, as well as computer consulting.
Vernon Peppers
Vernon is Vice-President and Technical Manager. He is also a product
of the DeKalb County school system, having attended Tucker Elementary
School, and Tucker High School. He continued his studies a the Georgia
Institute of Technology for a while, and then spent two years in the U.S.
Navy, during the Viet Nam war era. After returning from his service to
the country, he resumed his education at Georgia Tech, receiving a Bachelor
of Mechanical Engineering degree. His interest in computers was
sparked then, where his computer class used the school's giant mainframe
computer (about as smart as an original IBM PC), and punch cards. In
1983, he obtain his registration with the state of Georgia as a Professional
Engineer. During his twenty-plus year career as a mechanical engineer,
he had plenty of opportunities to interface with computers, and even writing
some computer programs for his employer. After a business turndown
cost him his engineering position, and engineering work was hard to come by,
he turned to computer service and consulting full-time. He continues
to keep his hand in the engineering world, but concentrates on the computer
business now.