Contents
Entity Profile
- Type: Family-owned woman-owned small business; disaster-recovery consultancy
- Domain: halorrs.com
- HQ: 405 N Jefferson Ave, Suite 1015, Springfield, MO 65806
- Phone: 417-450-0624
- Hosting: Wix (DNS, web, CDN, TLS all delegated)
- Email: Microsoft 365 (GoDaddy-resold tenant
NETORGFT15327551.onmicrosoft.com) fronted by Proofpoint Essentials - Incorporation age: Florida foreign LLC filed 2024-11-12; Missouri domestic LLC presumably contemporaneous — firm is ~17 months old
- Headcount: LinkedIn shows 2-10 employees
- Internal Oahe asset: Existing Joplin tornado case study at docs/intelligence/2026-04-19-joplin-tornado-case-study.md — same disaster that seeded this firm
Budget Signals
HaloRRS itself doesn't spend federal money — but their entire client portfolio does, and they exist to advise that spending. The money they touch flows through:
- FEMA Public Assistance (Category A-G) — debris removal, emergency protective measures, permanent restoration of public buildings (schools). Their services page advertises Grants Portal navigation, RPA filing, and project closeout.
- CDBG-DR (HUD) — Seth Spencer is named as "Advisor, CDBG Funding." CDBG-DR is the second wave after FEMA PA — multi-year, far less prescriptive, where real margin sits for an advisor.
- SBA disaster loans — co-flow with FEMA in their engagement geographies (not a HaloRRS service line per se).
- K-12 Title-eligible recovery dollars — districts often blend Title I/IV and FEMA after a disaster.
- Self-reported aggregates: $75M-$100M+ in grants secured for clients; $250M in permanent construction projects advised on.
Where Oahe could help them spend better: the firm's central pain (see Pain Points) is evidence assembly for FEMA Project Worksheets and CDBG-DR applications. Damage extent, demographic-impact analysis, longitudinal recovery indicators — these are FP-STAN-style problems and they currently depend on whatever data the impacted district's administrators can scrape together themselves.
Technology Gaps
- No federally registered trademark on "Halo Recovery Responder™" or "Halo Responder™" — common-law claim only. This is the IP equivalent of running production without backups. Anyone can file ahead of them.
- No DMARC record at apex; SPF includes both Proofpoint and
secureserver.net(GoDaddy mail relay vestige) — a phishing-friendly posture for a vendor selling crisis trust. - Wix-default security headers — HSTS + nosniff only. No CSP, no Frame-Options, no Referrer-Policy. Fine for marketing site; thin for a firm whose product brand carries "Responder."
- Halo Recovery Responder™ as a product is publicly described but invisible: no public pricing, no public demo, no public API, no app-store listing surfaced. Either it's a true SaaS that lives behind authenticated portal pages — in which case the marketing site dramatically undersells it — or it's a service-offering wrapper, in which case the "Responder" branding overpromises a software product.
- No CMS/ops tooling visible beyond Wix — no Salesforce/HubSpot indicators, no Calendly/scheduling integrations on the team pages, no public knowledge base. They are running on Wix + M365 + a phone line.
Where Oahe could help: if the Halo Recovery Responder™ is actually a product, it almost certainly needs (a) a real backend with audit-grade logging, (b) a data layer that integrates FEMA/USGS/NWS/EPA reference data, and (c) an evidence-assembly workflow for FEMA PA Project Worksheets. Three things Oahe builds.
Decision Makers
| Name | Role | Why they matter | Outreach lever |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jennifer Huff | CEO / Owner | Holds the woman-owned credential; legal owner; signs contracts | LinkedIn + 417-450-0624 main line |
| C.J. Huff, Ed.D. | Director, BD | The brand. Former Joplin Schools Supt. 2008-2015. Three speaker bureaus actively booking him through 2026 | cjhuff.com; easier to reach via speaker-bureau channels than corporate |
| Teresa Huff | Chief Grants Officer | Owns the $75M-grants-secured headline. Technical buyer for grants-data tooling | Direct LinkedIn |
| Seth Spencer | Advisor, CDBG Funding | HUD/CDBG technical credentialed; would evaluate a CDBG-data or recovery-indicators tool | Direct LinkedIn |
| Michele Gay | Senior Advisor, School Safety | Sandy Hook mom; co-founder Safe and Sound Schools — gives access to the K-12 safety conference circuit, not HaloRRS contracts directly | Conference channel |
Family ownership shape: four Huffs on the roster (Jennifer, C.J., Teresa, Ryan). Decisions concentrate inside that family unit. Persuasion is family-trust work; not enterprise-procurement work.
Pain Points
- Evidence assembly under deadline — FEMA PA Project Worksheets, CDBG-DR applications, insurance claims all require quantitative damage and demographic context that a small district administrator does not have time to compile in the 60-180 days after a disaster. HaloRRS sells this assembly as a service. Right now they likely build it by hand.
- Multi-state expansion without a multi-state knowledge base — they've worked MO, AR, TX, CA. Each state has its own emergency management agency, CDBG-DR allocation, and procurement portal. As they grow, the cost of "remembering AR" or "remembering CA" goes up. No public knowledge base or playbook visible.
- Sales cycle is conference-and-relationship-driven, not search-driven — zero PR wires, light press, no SEO investment, no thought-leadership content cadence. This works at their current size; it caps growth.
- No trademark protection on flagship product — first business-risk lawsuit they encounter could be a trademark dispute they brought on themselves by not filing.
- No SAM.gov visibility — even if registered, they are not discoverable to federal contracting officers searching for woman-owned disaster-recovery vendors. If they want CDBG-DR direct contracts (not just sub-recipient advising), this is a gap.
Competitive Landscape
Direct competitors (FEMA PA / CDBG-DR consultancies serving K-12 and county clients):
- Tidal Basin — large; federal prime contractor; FEMA's own go-to for advisory contracts
- IEM — large; dominant in CDBG-DR allocation work
- Hagerty Consulting — mid-large; Joplin-tornado-era veteran
- Witt O'Brien's — large; storm-recovery prime
- Innovative Emergency Management — federal prime
- Local-tier: state-specific debris monitoring firms, district-side grants consultants
HaloRRS competes on superintendent-to-superintendent trust (C.J. Huff), not on size, federal prime status, or technology. Their wedge is small districts traumatized by a disaster who don't want to talk to a 500-person consultancy.
Implication for Oahe: we are not competing with HaloRRS — we could equip HaloRRS. They are the relationship; we could be the data layer that makes their evidence assembly faster than a Tidal Basin/IEM team could match.
Timing Opportunities
- Firm is 17 months old. Tooling decisions are still soft — they have not yet bought the SaaS that will lock in their workflow for the next decade. The window to influence what they pick is open.
- 2024 hosting migration to Wix suggests an active rebuild/refresh year. Adjacent decisions (CRM, project management, file storage) are likely contemporaneous.
- Hurricane season 2026 is the next pressure test — if a major declared event hits a school district in their geography (TX, MO, AR, CA, FL footprint), they will be operationally over-extended and ready to buy tooling that previously felt like nice-to-have.
- CDBG-DR is moving — multiple 2024-2025 disaster declarations are entering the CDBG-DR phase right now (Helene, Milton, Wynne). Seth Spencer's advisory line item should be active.
- C.J. Huff's speaker calendar through 2026 — three bureaus booking him; a sponsored panel or co-presentation at AASA or Safe and Sound National Summit could create a proper introduction without cold outreach.
Recommended Approach
Position Oahe as the data/evidence-assembly layer that makes HaloRRS's superintendent-trust premise scale. Don't sell to them as a grants-tooling vendor (Teresa already does grants); don't sell to them as a software vendor (they have Wix for marketing and aren't ready to be a SaaS company). Sell as a disaster-recovery evidence partner — the team that can assemble the FEMA PA / CDBG-DR data package faster than any large competitor can.
Entry point: C.J. Huff via the Joplin alumni / superintendent network, or via a co-attended Safe and Sound Schools event. The Joplin-tornado case study already in this repo gives us conversational ground that we are taking the same disaster seriously, from a different angle.
Pitch frame: "You are the recovery superintendent in the room. We are the evidence team behind you. Together you outrun Tidal Basin in any district small enough to choose people over volume."
What NOT to do: do not approach as a competitor (we are not), do not approach as a SaaS vendor (they will pattern-match to grants software), do not lead with the Halo Recovery Responder™ trademark issue (it is a real issue but it is not how relationships start).
INTERNAL — OAHE DATA — NOT FOR EXTERNAL DISTRIBUTION