424 B3

PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT NO. 9

To Prospectus dated May 9, 2008

 

Filed Pursuant to Rule 424(b)(3)

Registration No. 333-129842       

Computer Software Innovations, Inc.

14,435,472 SHARES OF COMMON STOCK

This Prospectus Supplement supplements the Prospectus dated May 9, 2008, as amended and supplemented, relating to the offer and sale by the selling stockholder identified in the Prospectus of up to 14,435,472 shares of common stock of Computer Software Innovations, Inc. (the “Company”).

This Prospectus Supplement includes the Company’s Form 8-K dated September 24, 2008 filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on September 24, 2008.

The information contained in the report included in this Prospectus Supplement is dated as of the period of such report. This Prospectus Supplement should be read in conjunction with the Prospectus dated May 9, 2008, as supplemented on June 4, 2008, July 2, 2008, July 16, 2008, July 17, 2008, August 5, 2008, August 25, 2008, September 17, 2008 and September 17, 2008, which Prospectus Supplements are to be delivered with this Prospectus Supplement. This Prospectus Supplement is qualified by reference to the Prospectus except to the extent that the information in this Prospectus Supplement updates and supersedes the information contained in the Prospectus dated May 9, 2008, including any supplements or amendments thereto.

Neither the Securities and Exchange Commission nor any state securities commission has approved or disapproved of these securities or determined if this prospectus is truthful or complete. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.

The date of this Prospectus Supplement No. 9 is September 24, 2008.


 

 

UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

WASHINGTON, DC 20549

 

 

FORM 8-K

 

 

CURRENT REPORT PURSUANT

TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE

SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

Date of report (Date of earliest event reported) September 24, 2008

 

 

COMPUTER SOFTWARE INNOVATIONS, INC.

(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

 

 

Delaware

(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation)

 

000-51758   98-0216911
(Commission File Number)   (IRS Employer Identification No.)
900 East Main Street, Suite T, Easley, South Carolina   29640
(Address of principal executive offices)   (Zip Code)

(864) 855-3900

(Registrant’s telephone number, including area code)

 

 

(Former name or former address, if changed since last report)

 

 

Check the appropriate box below if the Form 8-K filing is intended to simultaneously satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of the following provisions (see General Instruction A.2. below):

 

¨ Written communications pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR 230.425)

 

¨ Soliciting material pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14a-12)

 

¨ Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 14d-2(b) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14d-2(b))

 

¨ Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 13e-4(c) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13e-4(c))

 

 

 


Item 7.01. Regulation FD Disclosure.

Computer Software Innovations, Inc. (the “Company”) is furnishing as Exhibit 99.1 a PowerPoint presentation to be presented in various locations to interested persons. The presentation contains certain forward-looking financial information concerning the Company.

 

Item 9.01. Financial Statements and Exhibits.

 

  (c) Exhibits.

The following exhibit is furnished as part of this report:

 

Exhibit
Number

  

Description

Exhibit 99.1    PowerPoint Investor Presentation (September 2008)

Forward-Looking and Cautionary Statements

This report contains “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Among other things, these statements relate to our financial condition, results of operations and future business plans, operations, opportunities and prospects. In addition, we and our representatives may from time to time make written or oral forward-looking statements, including statements contained in other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission and in our reports to stockholders. These forward-looking statements are generally identified by the words or phrases “may,” “could,” “should,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “plan,” “believe,” “seek,” “estimate,” “predict,” “project” or words of similar import. These forward-looking statements are based upon our current knowledge and assumptions about future events and involve risks and uncertainties that could cause our actual results, performance or achievements to be materially different from any anticipated results, prospects, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance. Many factors are beyond our ability to control or predict. You are accordingly cautioned not to place undue reliance on such forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date that we make them. We do not undertake to update any forward-looking statement that may be made from time to time by or on our behalf.

In our most recent Form 10-K, we have included risk factors and uncertainties that might cause differences between anticipated and actual future results. We have attempted to identify, in context, some of the factors that we currently believe may cause actual future experience and results to differ from our current expectations regarding the relevant matter or subject area. The operations and results of our software and systems integration businesses also may be subject to the effects of other risks and uncertainties, including, but not limited to:

 

   

a reduction in anticipated sales;

 

   

an inability to perform customer contracts at anticipated cost levels;

 

   

our ability to otherwise meet the operating goals established by our business plan;

 

   

market acceptance of our new software, technology and services offerings;

 

   

an economic downturn; and

 

   

changes in the competitive market place and/or customer requirements.

 

2


SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned hereunto duly authorized.

 

COMPUTER SOFTWARE INNOVATIONS, INC.
By:   /s/ David B. Dechant
Name:   David B. Dechant
Title:   Chief Financial Officer

Date: September 24, 2008


Computer Software Innovations, Inc.
OTC BB: CSWI
Investor Presentation
September 2008
1
Exhibit 99.1


This
presentation
contains
“forward-looking
statements”
that
is,
statements
related
to
future,
not
past,
events.
In
this
context,
forward
looking
statements
often
address
our
expected
future
business
and
financial
performance,
and
often
contain
words
such
as
“may,”
“could,”
“should,”
“expect,”
“believe,”
“seek,”
“estimate,”
“predict,”
or
“project.”
Forward-looking
statements
by
their
nature
address
matters
that
are,
to
different
degrees,
uncertain.
For
us,
particular
uncertainties
arise
from
economic
health
of
the
software
and
technology
industry,
demand
for
CSI’s
products
and
engineering
services,
competitive
pricing
pressures
and
the
availability
of
necessary
financing.
In
addition,
other
risks
are
more
fully
described
in
CSI’s
2007
Form
10-K
and
other
filings
with
the
Securities
and
Exchange
Commission.
These
uncertainties
may
cause
our
actual
results
to
be
materially
different
from
those
expressed
in
our
forward-looking
statements.
We
do
not
undertake
to
update
our
forward-
looking
statements.
Safe Harbor
2


CSI, Inc. Overview
OTCBB:CSWI
Headquarters:
Easley, SC
225 Employees
4 offices
Provider of software and technology solutions to southeast
education and government markets
Customer base: 600+ K-12 school districts,
colleges/universities, city/county governments, non-profit
organizations
Solutions
Proprietary SmartFusion®
software suite
Accounting, billing, payroll, workflow
Connected Classroom
Interactive white boards, video conferencing, Microsoft web portal
Network infrastructure & end-devices
Design, installation, hardware, computing, printing, imaging
Convergence applications
IP telephony, IP video
Network management
Disaster recovery, archiving, identity lifecycle, performance
3


Founded 1989
Released Financial
Management Software
1999
Released CSI
Accounting+Plus
for Windows
2007
Released SmartFusion
Microsoft.Net/SQL
1999
Added Technology Div.
Selling Computer &
Network Hardware
2001
Added
IP Telephony
2003
Added
IP Surveillance
2003
Added
Interactive
Whiteboards
2004
Added
Classroom Audio
2005
Added
Network Security
2006
Added Storage and
Disaster Recovery
2005
Created Publicly
Traded
Company: CSWI
2007
Acquired  McAleer
Computer Associates/
Alabama
2008
Acquired  ICS/
North Carolina
4
Company Timeline
2008
Acquired 
Version3/
South Carolina


Recognition
2008, 2007, 2006, 2005, 2004 VAR Business 500
2004, 2003, 2002 Elliott Davis: SC Fastest Growing Companies
2005 VAR Business: Government 100
2004 VAR Business: 50 Fastest Growing Technology Companies
2004 VAR Business: Technology Innovator Award-Application Development
2003 CRN: Top 5 Rising Stars
2003 Ingram Micro: Nation’s Fastest Growing K-12 Sector
5


6
($ in millions)
FY 2007 (12.31.07) Year/Year Growth
State of the Business
1
EBITDA is a non-GAAP financial measure. See reconciliation to GAAP measure provided in Financial section.


7
($ in millions)
Q2 2008 Year/Year Growth
State of the Business
1
EBITDA is a non-GAAP financial measure. See reconciliation to GAAP measure provided in Financial section.


Strong Gross Margins
Software 44.6%; Technology 20.2%
Recurring Revenue Stream (50% of Software Revenue)
Stable Public Sector Markets
Excellent collection history
Ongoing technology budgets
Accelerated Market Share Growth via Acquisitions
ICS (Greensboro, NC) April 2008
Gained 85 municipal customers, expanded NC territory
McAleer (Mobile, AL) in January 2007
Gained 180 K12 school districts; created footprint in new markets
State of the Business
8


Market Demand For Connected Classroom
Increase Customer Base In Existing Markets
Leverage Solution Portfolio:
Sell CSI Solutions To Customers Gained In Acquisitions
Cross-Sell Existing Customers
Continue Expanding Into New Geographies
Growth Drivers
9
Growth Drivers


School rooms with
Internet
access
1
1994: 3%
2005: 93%
Public schools providing
handheld computers to
students
or
teachers
1
2003: 10%
2005: 19%
K12
enrollment
in
South
region  projected to
grow 17% through 2016
highest growth in the
country
1
U.S. has highest
growth rate
for interactive
white
boards
2
55% in 2007
Grow via demand for connected classroom
10
1
Source: Dept. of Education-
Nat’l Center for Education Statistics
2
Source: Decision Tree Consulting 2008 Study
Growth Components


South Carolina
Classrooms ² : 16,712
Potential: $69 -
$94 million
Grow via demand for connected classroom
North Carolina
Classrooms ² : 78,042
Potential: $320 -
$437 million
11
New School
Spending
AL/NC/SC
1
$2.6 billion
+23% y/y
vs. +8% total U.S.
Alabama
Classrooms ² : 24,414
Potential: $100 -
$137 million
1
Source: Dept. of Education-
Nat’l Center for Education Statistics
$489 -
$668 million
potential in CSI
Promethean
states
2
2
Source: Dept. of Education-
Nat’l Center
for Education Statistics.
Classrooms already equipped by CSI have
been excluded from the base used to project
remaining potential.
State Prospects


Grow via increasing customer base in existing markets
CSI
Core Markets
12
Opportunities in Core Markets
Matching CSI Target Profile
408
...county
governments
1
2,664
...city
governments
2
439
...library
systems
1
476
...colleges/universities
3
595
...K12
school
districts
3
8,295
...K12
schools
3
Core Market Opportunity
Sources:
1
Dept. of Census
2
Nat’l League of Cities
3
Dept. of Education-
Nat’l Center for Education Statistics


Grow via leveraging solution portfolio
Sell CSI Solutions to
Acquired Customers
180 K12 school districts
85 city governments
Cross-Sell Existing
Customers
Network
Infrastructure &
End-Devices
SmartFusion®
Proprietary
Software Suite
Connected
Classroom
Network
Management
Convergence
Applications
13
CSI Solutions


Grow via continued expansion into new geographies
CSI
Core Markets
Total
U.S.
3,100
County
Governments
1
36,000
City
Governments
2
14,000
School
Districts
3
Total
U.S.
14
1
Source: Dept of Census
2
Source: National League of Cities
3
Source: Dept. of Education-
National Center for Education Statistics
Nationwide Prospects


Successful “Beachhead”
Strategy
2007 McAleer Acquisition
1.
Acquisition creates
beachhead
Immediate revenue &
positive cash flow
2.
Sell CSI solutions to
acquired accounts
3.
Use CSI solutions to
attract new customers
4.
Expand sales force into
contiguous  territories
Grow via continued expansion into new geographies
15
Expansion Strategy


Summary of Capitalization as of 9.1.08
Common
Shares
Outstanding
1
7.1 M
F/D Shares Outstanding
12.3 M
Full Potential Diluted
20.5 M
Warrant Conversion Yields
$ 8.7 M
52 Wk Trading Range
$ 0.85 -
$1.70
Current Share Price
$ 0.95
Current Market Cap
$ 5.9 M
Management/Board Ownership                             
2.2 Million Shares= 31% of Common
outstanding; 16% outstanding shares
(common & preferred)
Select Financials
16
Key Statistics YTD thru 6.30.08
Fiscal Year Ends
Dec 31
EPS (Fully Diluted)
$ 0.12
Revenue FY 2007
$ 55.2 M
Total Assets
$ 24.5 M
Revenue
TTM
2
$ 56.1 M
Total Debt
EBITDA
3
FY
2007
$ 4.8 M
With Sub-Debt
$ 6.4 M
EBITDA
3
TTM
2
$ 5.2 M
Without Sub-Debt
$ 4.4 M
3
EBITDA is a non-GAAP financial measure. See reconciliation to GAAP measure provided in Financial section.
2
TTM: Trailing Twelve Months is a sum of the past 12 month timeframe.
1
Common shares outstanding includes 0.8 M shares held in trust related to Version3 acquisition.


Select Financials
($ in millions)
1
EBITDA is a non-GAAP financial measure. See reconciliation to GAAP measure provided in Financial section.
17
Income Statement 3-Year Trend


Select Financials
($ in millions)
18
Balance Sheet 3-Year Trend
1
Includes deferred revenue, such as revenue from recurring support agreements.


EBITDA
Non-GAAP Financial Measure: Explanation and Reconciliation of EBITDA
EBITDA
is
a
non-GAAP
financial
measure
used
by
management,
lenders
and
certain
investors
as
a
supplemental
measure
in
the
evaluation
of
some
aspects
of
a
corporation's
financial
position
and
core
operating
performance.
Investors
sometimes
use
EBITDA
as
it
allows
for
some
level
of
comparability
of
profitability
trends
between
those
businesses
differing
as
to
capital
structure
and
capital
intensity
by
removing
the
impacts
of
depreciation
and
amortization.
EBITDA
does
not
include
changes
in
major
working
capital
items
such
as
receivables,
inventory
and
payables,
which
can
also
indicate
a
significant
need
for,
or
source
of,
cash.
Since
decisions
regarding
capital
investment
and
financing
and
changes
in
working
capital
components
can
have
a
significant
impact
on
cash
flow,
EBITDA
is
not
a
good
indicator
of
a
business's
cash
flows.
We
use
EBITDA
for
evaluating
the
relative
underlying
performance
of
the
Company's
core
operations
and
for
planning
purposes,
including
a
review
of
this
indicator
and
discussion
of
potential
targets
in
the
preparation
of
annual
operating
budgets.
We
calculate
EBITDA
by
adjusting
net
income
or
loss
to
exclude
net
interest
expense,
income
tax
expense
or
benefit
and
depreciation
and
amortization,
thus
the
term
"Earnings
Before
Interest,
Taxes,
Depreciation
and
Amortization"
and
the
acronym
"EBITDA."
EBITDA
is
presented
as
additional
information
because
management
believes
it
to
be
a
useful
supplemental
analytic
measure
of
financial
performance
of
our
core
business,
and
as
it
is
frequently
requested
by
sophisticated
investors.
However,
management
recognizes
it
is
no
substitute
for
GAAP
measures
and
should
not
be
relied
upon
as
an
indicator
of
financial
performance
separate
from
GAAP
measures
(as
discussed
further
below).
When
evaluating
EBITDA,
investors
should
consider,
among
other
things,
increasing
and
decreasing
trends
in
the
measure
and
how
it
compares
to
levels
of
debt
and
interest
expense,
ongoing
investing
activities,
other
financing
activities
and
changes
in
working
capital
needs.
Moreover,
this
measure
should
not
be
construed
as
an
alternative
to
net
income
(as
an
indicator
of
operating
performance)
or
cash
flows
(as
a
measure
of
liquidity)
as
determined
in
accordance
with
GAAP.
While
some
investors
use
EBITDA
to
compare
between
companies
with
different
investment
and
capital
structures,
all
companies
do
not
calculate
EBITDA
in
the
same
manner.
Accordingly,
the
EBITDA
presented
below
may
not
be
comparable
to
similarly
titled
measures
of
other
companies.
A
reconciliation
of
net
income
reported
under
GAAP
to
EBITDA
is
provided
in
the
following
slide.
19


Reconciliation of EBITDA
Amounts in Thousands $
Three Months Ended
June 30
Year Ended
December 31
TTM
Ended
June 30
2008
2007
2007
2006
Reconciliation of Net income
(loss) per GAAP to EBITDA:
Net income (loss) per GAAP
$ 1,012
$ 903
$ 1,741
$ (880)
$ 1,993
Adjustments:
Income tax expense
674
776
855
(98)
855
Interest expense, net
131
152
549
406
528
Depreciation and
amortization of fixed assets
and trademarks
180
129
525
338
609
Amortization of software
development costs
314
259
1,109
709
1,208
EBITDA
$ 2,310
$ 2,219
$ 4,779
$ 475
$ 5,193
20
1
TTM: Trailing Twelve Months is a sum of the past 12 month timeframe.
1


Nancy K. Hedrick
CEO & President
27 yrs in IT
President of CSI since 1989
Thomas P. Clinton
Sr. VP of Strategic Partnerships
22 yrs in IT
VP at CSI since 1999
David Dechant, CPA
Chief Financial Officer
22 yrs in Finance
(including Conso Int’l Corp & Warner-Lambert)
CFO at CSI since 2005
Beverly N. Hawkins
Sr. VP of Software Development,
Implementation & Support
21 yrs in IT
VP of CSI since 1989
William J. Buchanan
Sr. VP of Delivery & Support
22 yrs in IT
VP at CSI since 1999
Senior Management Team
21


Advantages of business model
Strong gross margins
Recurring revenue stream
Focused on public sector markets with stable budgets
Positioned for continued growth
Market demand for connected classroom solutions
Customer base growth in existing markets
Leverage solution portfolio with newly acquired and existing customers
Continue expanding into new geographies
Investment Summary
22


Company Contact
David Dechant, CFO
ddechant@csioutfitters.com
Telephone: 864.855.3900
Company Website: www.csioutfitters.com
Investor Contact
Alliance Advisors, LLC
Mark McPartland
markmcp@allianceadvisors.net
Telephone: 910.221.1827
23
Contact Us