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Steve Gilman With Range

October 6, 2022 by Jacob Lapera

Steve-Gilman
Startup Showdown Podcast
Steve Gilman With Range
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SteveGilmanSteve Gilman, Co-Founder & CEO at Range

Steve graduated Yale University with a BS in Mechanical Engineering and was elected captain of the baseball team. He spent several years as a closing pitcher after being drafted in 2008 by the Detroit Tigers.

Following baseball he spent time as an Intelligence Officer for the Department of Defense, completing embassy tours as a diplomat in Cairo and Abu Dhabi.

He attended Columbia business school, graduating in 2015 with his MBA, it was then he Co-Founded blockparty, which changed the way tailgating partnerships are developed division 1 colleges.

While building the company in Dallas, TX, he received a direct commission into the US Navy as a Reserve Intelligence Officer, where he currently serves as a Lieutenant. Steve moved back to NYC area at the end of 2020 and started Range, an early-stage workforce development tech company.

Connect with Steve on LinkedIn.

What You’ll Learn In This Episode

  • Leading an early-stage team
  • What makes a good co-founder
  • Test Go to Market Strategies
  • Professional development for employees
  • Product development

This transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:04] Welcome back to the Startup Showdown podcast, where we discuss pitching, funding and scaling startups. Join us as we interview winners, mentors and judges of the monthly $120,000 pitch competition powered by Panoramic Ventures. We also discuss the latest updates in software Web3, Healthcare, Tech, FinTech, and more. Now sit tight as we interview this week’s guest and their journey through entrepreneurship.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:39] Lee Kantor here another episode of Startup Showdown, and this is going to be a good one. But before we get started, it’s important to recognize our sponsor, Panoramic Ventures. Without them, we couldn’t be sharing these important stories. Today on Startup Showdown, we have Steve Gilman with Range. Welcome, Steve.

Steve Gilman: [00:00:57] Hey, Lee. Thanks for having me. Excited to be here.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:00] Well, I’m excited to learn what you’re up to. Tell us a little bit about range, how you serve in folks.

Steve Gilman: [00:01:05] Yeah. So Range is a professional development platform and service that allows companies to invest in the individual employees. We’re a service that allows companies to strategically upskill all of their employees to make sure they retain and grow top talent.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:23] So how did you get into this line of work? Have you always been involved in this industry?

Steve Gilman: [00:01:29] Yeah, I think it’s it’s interesting. I haven’t always been. I come from a varied background of different types of organizations. But throughout my career, I reflected and understood that the one thing that I always tried to do, no matter what my job title was, was to empower others. And usually I saw myself doing that, advising chief people, officers or HR in terms of how professional development worked at the company. I basically wanted my self and friends to get ahead if they were willing to continuously learn throughout their career. And so whether it was with the government or with Johnson Johnson, IBM, in my past, I’ve always kind of found a way to to help others thrive. And so range is just a culmination of of that and making it more scalable for professional development to happen everywhere.

Lee Kantor: [00:02:22] So you always saw the value of professional development and came up with a way that it can kind of be deployed for more people and more situations.

Steve Gilman: [00:02:32] That’s exactly right. I saw the value in professional development. I also kind of saw whether it’s a small company or a large company, no matter what the industry is, it’s incredibly hard to deploy true professional development, which is usually very individualized, usually uses external resources. We’ve all heard of tuition reimbursement and things like that, and when it comes down to it, companies usually don’t have the infrastructure to do what’s needed, what their employees are continuously demanding for lifelong education. So I got together with my co-founder and CTO Hooten a little over a year ago and realized that we both saw the same issues, both as employees of larger companies and operators of our own companies in the past.

Lee Kantor: [00:03:18] So you decided to go the route with a co founder. Can you talk about kind of the trade offs you had to make when identifying the right co founder and kind of negotiating the arrangement?

Steve Gilman: [00:03:30] Yeah, I think who tends a good friend of mine and has been since we both started our first company separately, we met in a combined co-working center back in 2015 and each had our own experiences. I went into live events in hospitality with a company called BLOCK Party. He went into machine learning as well as an E commerce business. Starting from the ground up. When we settle on the idea of starting a company co-founding a company together. I think there was two main things. One, we had enough startup experience to know how forming arrangements work and and why that was going to be good for us, our company and any stakeholders that came along. So that was relatively easy to put together. Our first conversation and the other piece is bifurcation of duties. I’m clearly on the business side. He’s clearly on the product brand technology side. And so it was a little easier to know which domains we kind of control. And at the end of the day, we trust each other. So conversations have been easy ever since ever since we decided to start something together.

Lee Kantor: [00:04:43] Now, you mentioned your past. That’s been pretty varied in terms of what you’ve done, whether it’s been playing sports, whether it’s been getting involved in the government or work in enterprise level organizations, making this leap to, you know, a startup. How has that been? Or is this just another kind of game that you’re playing here and that it’s the same rules, just a different field?

Steve Gilman: [00:05:09] I like how I like how you frame that. So to kind of describe where I am in my journey, I am a recovering mechanical engineer, recovering professional baseball player, recovering project manager, recovering intelligence officer. And that all happened before I went back to business school full time to discover what I wanted to do next. I found very quickly, not just in the groups that I kind of spend most of my time with, but also just as a creative outlet that building businesses from the ground up was going to be what I did with my life, and I needed business school to understand how that transition work and get some of the skills I needed to apply every business that I start. I, I, I want to be with it for 10 to 20 years and beyond, and I want to be in it with the right people. So I started my first company in 2015. I started this latest one when I moved back up to New York during the pandemic, knowing I want to have a technology venture with Hooton and we started building. So, you know, startups for me are a time in my life where I don’t see anything else in front of me. Right. You kind of work for your own. You’re building that creativity. Whenever I’ve been part of other organizations, I’ve always looked out for what’s next. Now it’s all about Do we have what it takes to drive the mission? And so range is kind of a culmination of everything I’ve been through, but the only thing really that I care about right now.

Lee Kantor: [00:06:45] So in some ways it’s similar to sports in terms of you have a goal that you’re putting all your efforts and that building a team around. Do you notice any similarities to, you know, having been part of successful teams and have building your own team here with range?

Steve Gilman: [00:07:05] Yeah. So I owe baseball and athletic career to a lot of the lessons that I derive in my life about leadership, about achieving goals, about interacting with different personalities, dealing with adversity and everything like that. I think the main difference, which is why startups are just so interesting and fascinating and kind of never stop, is that with sports you usually have a goal defined for you. In baseball, it’s scored more runs than the other team and win the World Series, right. And keep climbing the ladder. So everything you’re doing is building towards that goal. Work harder, work smarter, get the right people on the team, lead through adversity. Awesome in startup land, in business land in general. All of those same things apply to hit the goals, but you have to define what the goals are, and it’s a little more ambiguity. There’s a lot more ambiguity when it comes to leading a team in the right direction, because you’ll never 100% of the time know the exact direction that you have to be leading the team. And so in that way, it’s more challenging, more stimulating. You bring all the pieces together, but you’re also doing a lot of trying to figure it out every every day along the pattern, if you’re if you’re heading towards the right goals, because if you achieve the wrong goals, it’s not going to matter much in terms of achieving your mission.

Lee Kantor: [00:08:29] Right. That’s something that’s always fascinated me about sports, is that in some ways, sports it’s it’s very it’s a meritocracy in the sense that the best players are the ones playing and participating. But each season kind of is finite. So there’s an end and that means there’s a rest period and reevaluation. And then rejiggering of the team happens. So sports and business have similarities, but you brought up some really great points, the ambiguity and the lack of, you know, kind of a finish line that’s, you know, that everybody knows that we’re all aiming for is a lot different. And it requires different skills and a different kind of timeline and level of patience and humility.

Steve Gilman: [00:09:13] Yeah, I think. I think that’s right. Our coaches used to pose it to us in baseball. You play for seven months out of the year what they call the championship season from spring training until you lose or win in the playoffs. And then you have five months off and you get sick of the game that you play every single day, no matter how exciting it is, that offseason gives you a chance to do something else, realize how much you miss it, and then come back energized. And the seven five rule kind of works really well for a lot of different sports. You don’t get the time off with start ups. Yeah, there’s slower times of the month and their seasonality to some of the things that work. But much like the rest of the working world, there’s no time off to kind of reevaluate and realize what you miss most about the day. So it’s a little bit different in that way. The other thing that I’ll kind of point out is in baseball, we often joked amongst the folks who went in right after college that you take it so seriously, right? You want to be competitive. It’s what you do. It’s your trade, it’s what you get paid for. But at the end of the day, it is a game, right? You still go to Denny’s after the game, eat your grand slam and then the next day you wake up and it’s all over. The worst that happens is some fans say I’ll shucks, will get them tomorrow and they’re not tremendously pleased when they go home. Business is different. You’re trying to affect people’s lives every single day. So we take it very seriously here and we try to have fun while we’re doing it to make sure we’re we’re creative and innovative. But it’s very different than kind of the the swings of being in it and being not in it when when you’re doing sports.

Lee Kantor: [00:10:56] Now, getting back to the business part of things, when did you start realizing that with this idea that you had something that is viable? Like did you have a moment where you’re like, okay, this I’m getting kind of some love from these beta testers or I got my first client and they, they see some things that here that can really scale. Like, when did you start seeing those breadcrumbs that you had something?

Steve Gilman: [00:11:26] Yeah, excellent question. So Hooten and I got together and had to figure out what we were really passionate about. And when it came to professional development, I mentioned we had some disconnects with employers or as employers with our employees. And so there’s really two things that came together very quickly in our process. The first is we built a site that aggregated different tools, kind of as like a very late MVP. We said, hey, online courses, books, come get whatever you want. And within the first day, people came to the site and then they mentioned that they need some way for their companies to sponsor. So if you’re going to take a $400 course on Coursera, that’s awesome. But my company needs to pay for it, right? So we quickly realized, hey, this is all going to land within a company ROI for attracting and retaining folks. And then too we started talking to a company leaders and there was always, always, always a disconnect between what executives or managers thought they were doing for people in terms of professional development and what the employees thought that companies were doing for them. All right. So a typical conversation would be we invest in all of our employees. They get whatever resources they want. They continuously upskill and it’s part of their performance. Talk to an employee that maybe just came into the company or has a new manager and they say, Yeah, I know there’s some budget that I can access for external resources, but I’m not familiar with how to use it. I wouldn’t know where to find it, and I’m a little afraid to put it on my personal card because I’ve heard some disaster stories about reimbursements in the past. I mean, that was a typical conversation that kept happening over and over and over again. So the reason we love our business models, because we align the employees interests and goals with the employer’s interests and goals, and we do it all from a single platform, something that technology helps a tremendous amount with and that, you know, honestly, we could have started years earlier to make sure it happens.

Lee Kantor: [00:13:28] So with the professional development, the way you’ve defined it, it sounds like it includes online courses and things like that. Does it also include like coaching, business coaching, those kind of elements as well?

Steve Gilman: [00:13:43] Yeah. So we defined professional development as individualized. There has to be specific budgets because everyone’s goals are usually different. We define it as strategic upskilling. So it’s not just to be competent with your current job or be compliant with what you’re currently doing, but how to get ahead, how to challenge the status quo in your own career. And it’s usually from external resources. And that doesn’t come from us. That comes from employees. And surveys show that 99% of employees participate in professional development and activities. And of that, 90% of them are external. So it’s outside of what the company is actually able to provide. When it comes to format. We are edtech at the end of the day. So online courses continue to be great and there’s huge demand for them. In-person courses and seminars, things like that are coming back. We’re starting to see conferences. Webinars coaching you mentioned, is pretty huge, connecting with people that have experience, books, podcasts and everything also. We’re format agnostic because we know most employees are format agnostic. Typically, we’ll see people get one or two courses, a book from Amazon, a podcast, and maybe a coach for three months out of the year. And that’s how they choose to develop their skills.

Lee Kantor: [00:15:01] So what’s next? What do you need next? How can we help?

Steve Gilman: [00:15:07] Yeah, I appreciate that. We’re we’re getting the word out. We have launched our latest features which completely streamline everything for the company and for the employee. If for those not familiar with range, we’re a marketplace solution where employees can add whatever they need to the marketplace, be it a coach, conference book, podcast, anything like that, while also discovering their own. And now we help companies streamline payments, which helps with security, and people don’t have to do any personal reimbursement. So when we go into companies, we are an end to end solution that requires little to no management and or oversight, but the companies win and the employees continuous continuously win. We have enough data at this point to provide great recommendations for someone, and at any step of their career and for anybody in the organization, no matter what your job function is, which is different than what we’ve seen in the market, we’re getting out there and we’re building professional development programs with companies either from scratch, we’re taking over software solutions like a single online course provider, or we’re working to help manage the stipends that pre exist, just making it more transparent to employees and delivering an ROI to the company. So no matter what stage a company is at, we can come in and help very seamlessly with with some great technology.

Lee Kantor: [00:16:32] Now, how did you hear about Startup Showdown and Panoramic Ventures? How did they get on your radar?

Steve Gilman: [00:16:38] Yeah, so we were kind of in the middle of a fund raise a few months ago, so I was well aware of panoramic ventures and and what they have done in the space. And we’re also part of Capital Factory, so we’re Capital Factory Portfolio Company, which is an accelerator investment fund co-working center out of Austin, Texas. Startup Showdown worked with Capital Factory in partnership not only for investment purposes, but also to host the startup showdown. So we got connected through Capital Factory. We love going through the application process because it helped us reorient and organize our thoughts and we kind of launched off into actually getting to the finals and making a trip to Austin to to have fun with them. On the Startup Showdown.

Lee Kantor: [00:17:31] Now, can you talk a little bit about when when you get kind of go through the ringer there and they really are asking hard questions how how you handle that? And in terms because it takes confidence, but humility, you have to be confident in your product and service, but you also have to be coachable and and listened. How did your you and the team handle that?

Steve Gilman: [00:17:56] Yeah. So I think the first thing is you have to have a business that’s headed in the right direction. Right. So no application can be strong unless you know the market, you know your position in the market and you’re you’re gaining traction. You’re helping people in that way. The first step is always a written application, pitch decks, things like that. So until you’re able to really get to know someone and they’re able to understand your background, your product and service is exactly what you put out there. So descriptions of backgrounds, pitch decks, things like that. I think one of the pieces that we excelled in, but was also very advantageous for us, was what they call a mentoring session, where they organize the entrepreneurs. They for 2 hours put you in front of four different mentors. One individual is from Panoramic Ventures as an investor. The other three were from different areas of business. All three of those, in addition to the panoramic ventures investor I connected with pretty immediately I’ve stayed in contact with and their whole thing was pitched to me and I’ll give you my thoughts, feedback and everything else while making sure that you are a good fit to be evaluated for the next round. So that was really just getting in front of people and almost like a speed dating, but really meant to be beneficial to the company. And I really thought that was a good part of the process that I haven’t seen traditionally in a lot of the competitions.

Lee Kantor: [00:19:24] Now in your career, I would imagine you’ve had mentors or people that you’ve looked up to and maybe used as a kind of a guide to go through the process. Is there anybody from the startup world that you’re kind of lean on for advice or whether you know them personally or you just read their blog or their books? Is there anybody out there as your new kind of your role model of startup founder?

Steve Gilman: [00:19:48] Oh, yeah. Listen, there’s there’s way too much there’s way too many to mention my network from undergrad and graduate school. I continually to continually lean on almost every single day. I’ve become friends with investors of mine. I’ve made investors friends of mine. And so I think in terms of people that I looked up to, I can throw out a few names. Going into business school, I wrote an essay on wanting to be a consultant, which I think is what most people do if they don’t know what they want to do coming out of business school. I was turning down job offers to make sure I could be an entrepreneur. I think one of the people that I credit for that is an individual named Dave Lerner. He’s director of entrepreneurship at Columbia University as a whole. But I knew him through Columbia Business School and he taught me that 0 to 1 kind of mentality of how to go out and do it. Another person that I kind of look up to is Ryan Petersen of Flex. He’s a multi time entrepreneur who came back actually to a class to teach about how he built his businesses. And so I have fun following his career and listening to his interviews and things like that. We were able to spend some time together and I got more advice in 5 minutes in a car ride than I did from him about fund raising. Then I traditionally see reading articles and articles and following different people. So those are two folks that came from my business school career I continually lean on and look up to as entrepreneurs.

Lee Kantor: [00:21:29] Now, before we wrap, I’d like you to share a piece of advice for other founders and maybe let’s talk specifically of folks who have gone and played sports at a high level, because I think that that’s a unique group. And I think that a lot of times those folks are high achievers, no matter what they do well outside the sports world. Can you share some advice for somebody that plays sports at a high level? And then, you know, the clock ran out for them that they’ve gone as far as they can go. And it’s time now to enter the business world. Can you share some advice for them to either start their own thing or just to be successful?

Steve Gilman: [00:22:11] Yeah, that the the transition between sports and business, especially entrepreneurship, is a difficult one. What’s made it easier and what I think I would give advice to for any founder is that when you’re on a sports team, you have a team, you have a coach. Depending on what level you’re at, they all get better. You never want to be the best person on your team, right? Because then you’re learning less than than most people on your team. And so when it comes down to being a founder, transitioning to a business career, you kind of have to set up those relationships on your own. Specifically talking about building your own team, which is different than you’ve experienced in sports. I’m talking about getting with other founders or other business like minded people that do something similar because you’re going to learn from those people the most. And then in terms of coaches and where you’re going to go, you need to gain experience. So build relationships with mentors. You’d be lucky to call them investors, obviously, and have financial stakes in each other’s outcomes. But when it comes down to it, if you don’t seek all of the components that you used to have playing on a sports team at a competitive level, you’re not going to learn as quick. You’re not going to be as effective. And to be honest, playing at a competitive level, you love having teammates, right? So never isolate yourself. Never spend all your day reading on the Internet, trying to learn something new. Get around the people that already know what they’re doing and hopefully get accepted into into networks that can help you continue to build and grow.

Lee Kantor: [00:23:46] Yeah, that’s super important advice. And like you said, in one five minute car ride, you learn more than you did reading, you know, pages and pages of books and articles so the right person can accelerate your learning and your network everything dramatically. So meet more people.

Steve Gilman: [00:24:07] Yeah, that’s right. I in undergrad, I concentrated on mechanical engineering design. All right, so how do you build a bicycle from someone from scratch? What materials do you use? How do they connect? What’s the packaging look like? Stuff like that. And I had an influential professor. That one day senior year looked at the class and he goes, Och, I have no idea what size, sprocket or gear to put on this bicycle. How do I figure it out? And 15 people in the class, 14 of them went directly to the mechanical engineering book for design. We had in front of us, flip through, started writing down calculations and while it looked like I was the slowest one to start opening my book and looking for calculations, I ended up having the best answer, which was the point of his question, which is, if you don’t know, just ask somebody. Yeah, there’s calculations you can do, there’s chalkboards you can draw on, there’s different tools and software you can build out. But if someone’s already built the bicycle and they know what size the sprocket should be for a certain gear length, ask them. And that’s where you learn the most. So building on human experiences has been kind of the theme throughout my career.

Lee Kantor: [00:25:18] Good stuff, Steve. Congratulations on all the success. If somebody wants to learn more about range, what’s a website?

Steve Gilman: [00:25:25] Yeah, you can find us at get range dot com, get range dot com. And we’re happy to chat with folks about professional development on LinkedIn personally or through the company page.

Lee Kantor: [00:25:36] All right. Well, thank you again for sharing your story. You’re doing important work and we appreciate you.

Steve Gilman: [00:25:40] Thank you so much, Lee.

Lee Kantor: [00:25:42] Appreciate it. All right. This is Lee Kantor. We’ll see you all next time on Startup Showdown.

Intro: [00:25:48] As always, thanks for joining us. And don’t forget to follow and subscribe to the Startup Showdown podcast. So you get the latest episode as it drops wherever you listen to podcasts to learn more and apply to our next startup Showdown Pitch Competition Visit Showdown VC. That’s Showdown Dot VC. All right, that’s all for this week. Goodbye for now.

Tagged With: Range, Steve Gilman

Ngozi Ahanotu With Hiihat Global

October 3, 2022 by Jacob Lapera

Ngozi Ahanotu
Atlanta Business Radio
Ngozi Ahanotu With Hiihat Global
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hiihatNgozi AhanotuNgozi Ahanotu-Anorue is an ambitious, well-versed Founder across content creation and customer experience. As early as she could remember, she was shuffling words on paper and selling something to someone, somewhere. So she’s turned her passion for entrepreneurship and community, into the story-driven content agency NIA NIA Creative Studio and community-led website hiihat, a search engine to help people find all things Black, an all-in-one place called hiihat.

Ngozi’s superpower is improving and advancing the intricacies of a brand’s online or offline presence through words, data, and video. Her approach at developing brand voice allows her to mentor and coach creators on upskilling and implementing sharp marketing efforts or campaigns.

A graduate of Georgia State University (B.A. Journalism) and Johnson and Wales University (MBA Hospitality), she lives, breathes, and creates all things Black not just for herself, but for the future of Black communities. Although a tech founder, her love for storytelling doesn’t lean only on technology but on the historical themes that can repeat themselves in society, offline. She believes supporting and endorsing Black life is not charity work, it’s a necessity for the American economy to survive.

Ngozi resides in Atlanta, GA and is recently married. When she’s not advancing how we circulate the dollar in Black communities through content or via search, she’s traveling with her husband, spending time with her family, friends, and sorority sisters at celebrations and live concerts, or dining at a new restaurant anywhere in the world.

Connect with Ngozi on LinkedIn.

What You’ll Learn In This Episode

  • hiihat 1000 list that celebrate small Black businesses
  • Paid advertising that is better than Google

This transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:03] Broadcasting live from the business radio studios in Atlanta, Georgia. It’s time for Atlanta Business Radio, brought to you by on pay. Built in Atlanta on pay is the top rated payroll and HR software anywhere. Get one month free at on pay. Now here’s your host.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:31] Lee Kantor here another episode of Atlanta Business Radio. But this is one of my favorite series that we do the GSU ENI radio series where we spotlight folks doing work out of GSU any and or the Main Street fund. So excited to be talking to my guest today. Ngozi Ahanotu with Hiihat Global. Welcome.

Ngozi Ahanotu: [00:00:52] Thank you so much for having me, Lee.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:54] Well, I’m so excited to learn what you’re up to. Tell us about Hiihat Global. How are you serving, folks?

Ngozi Ahanotu: [00:01:00] Oh, my gosh. Hiihat is such a labor of love. But it came from I had is a B2C search platform. We operate as a search engine similar to Google, but ultimately we are serving the black community in terms of black businesses, black media, black services. We are working with these small businesses who are the bedrock of America to make sure they’re getting the traffic and exposure they need to ultimately build their business and create generational wealth.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:30] Now, what was the impetus of this adventure? What was the genesis of the idea?

Ngozi Ahanotu: [00:01:36] Yeah, so I had basically derived from me growing up, I have to be very honest. Like Black History Month tends to be very repetitive. They kind of tell the same stories. They showcase the same people who, while they are pioneers and our elders and our ancestors and we respect them. It’s just something where we think that we want to see something more future. Like who are the people that are leading us now? Who are the people that we should look up to and that we can see as our representation? So for me, part of that was going into my research skills and finding black owned businesses in my area when I was growing up in Atlanta and Stone Mountain. So from that, just over the years, I grew into doing more black owned things, working with more black owned businesses. And when COVID hit, I just decided, okay, how can I just ultimately do everything more black owned and really support these businesses? So from that database, I just said, let me try a search engine, you know, instead of a directory or marketplace, because I really think everything needs to be in one place. I want to read black news in one place. I want to buy my products in one place. I want to get my services from my home or whatever I need in one place. And that’s how high hat came together. It’s search all things black, all in one place.

Lee Kantor: [00:02:55] Now, are you a technologist? Where were you able to kind of code this yourself?

Ngozi Ahanotu: [00:03:00] No, I am a non-technical person. I do have a tech team. A close friend of mine when I went to grad school. He works in tech and we were able to connect and he really believed in what I was building. So he’s been helping me get this off the ground and launch it and it’s really been great.

Lee Kantor: [00:03:19] Now, can you give some advice for other non-tech founders? How were you able to identify that right partner? And how were you able to kind of get them buying into your vision of what this could be?

Ngozi Ahanotu: [00:03:33] Absolutely. That’s a really great question. You know, I would say in my case, I’ve known this person for almost ten years. So for me, it was a matter of really showing him this is what I’m doing, this is what I can contribute to the business and this is what I would need your help contributing. And once I was able to do that with him, he really believed in what I was putting together and we were able to convince some other tech people what we can really do and build. So that’s how we’ve been able to get things done so quickly in a matter of a few months, just adding new features and things like that. But and what I would advise other entrepreneurs who are non-technical, don’t be afraid to like, learn some things and then go at someone. This is what I’m trying to build. How can you help me? Because a lot of people are going to help you based off your commitment, your vision, your ability to contribute. It’s not just having an idea. It’s like, okay, maybe you don’t know how to code, but maybe, you know some other things tech wise that you can keep up with. Or maybe you’re really good at research, so you can research some things to help the tech team be able to contribute. And they will. It’ll show them that you can really you’re committed to this project and you’re serious about it.

Lee Kantor: [00:04:50] Now, when you started kind of building and putting it out there for the world to see, did you have some indication, some clues that, hey, we might be on to something big here?

Ngozi Ahanotu: [00:05:02] Yeah, I think that initial clue was when I would talk to the customers, customers and the people using it. It was really like, Oh, I found what I was looking for. And for me that’s the biggest thing in search. That’s something that Google is trying to solve every day. When I when someone comes to search for something, are they finding what they’re looking for within the first or second page? So when that is what’s happening or what’s what they’re getting, you’re definitely on to something because when they find what they’re looking for, then they’re able to then they’re able to really you’re able to really say, okay, the customer likes what’s happening, the user likes what’s happening.

Lee Kantor: [00:05:38] Now, are you going to monetize in the same manner that a Google monetize in terms of advertising?

Ngozi Ahanotu: [00:05:44] Yes. So that’s why we’re a B2C search platform, because ultimately we are working with small businesses on their ability to pay per click advertising, which they’re not already doing inside of they’re not already doing with Google. So we’re able to work with them directly on the ground and say, oh my gosh, like this is something that can really help your business. And we know you’re not as technical or we know that you’re not able to keep up with the trends. But we’re such a niche search platform, we’re able to really put together what it is that they need.

Lee Kantor: [00:06:15] Now, is your I know you’re based in Georgia. Is this something that is going to start out kind of Georgia centric and then expand kind of organically, organically from there? Or is kind of the world your oyster because there’s black owned businesses all over the planet?

Ngozi Ahanotu: [00:06:30] Yeah, the world is our oyster and we’re actually already in most major cities in the US. Were also have some things in UK like London that we’ve been able to put together Australia, South Africa and we’re hoping to get some things in Mexico and Canada as well. So it’s just an ongoing process of us really building things out.

Lee Kantor: [00:06:53] And is. I know that you’re doing something to celebrate black businesses, small black businesses. Can you talk a little bit about that?

Ngozi Ahanotu: [00:07:03] Yes. So we are having our annual event, Black Quest. It’s going to be on Saturday, October 1st, in Atlanta, Georgia. Our starting point is Mocha Pops, which is a black owned popsicle shop. And basically what happens, people sign up as teams or solo participants and they have a chance to win $1,000 when they use hi hat to find the destinations on the clues. So it’s a really fun event that we do every year. The businesses love it, the teams love it. You know, the city really gets to just come alive when you’re starting to find all these black owned businesses that you never knew.

Lee Kantor: [00:07:43] So it’s kind of like a treasure hunt.

Ngozi Ahanotu: [00:07:45] Yes, But I would say scavenger hunt tours the prizes at the end. You don’t get treasure throughout where there are some prizes throughout. But yeah, I would say closer to scavenger hunt. I don’t know. Treasure hunt. Scavenger hunt. You are using hi hat to find it.

Lee Kantor: [00:08:00] And then is this something that you plan to roll out in the other markets that you’re in?

Ngozi Ahanotu: [00:08:05] Yes, we actually so part of what we’re doing is black is really for the users. It’s just for them to know how to use the website, for them to just really learn what’s in their city. But some other events we’re doing directly for our business customers are they would need to come to happy hour events that we’re doing. I personally am going to speak to small business organizations in order to figure out what is it that you need. How can we help you outside of the paper Click advertising. We have some really great things that we’re putting together for small business owners in order to get them onto the platform.

Lee Kantor: [00:08:40] And then what’s your kind of sales pitch to a business owner to advertise with Hi rather than Google?

Ngozi Ahanotu: [00:08:49] Well, what’s really great is that they’re probably not already advertising with Google so that I don’t even have to compete with them. But my pitch is usually, you know, how are you getting customers? And here’s an opportunity for you to get more qualified customers that you know are looking for your services, because our search platform is so niche that when someone looks for something, it’s more likely they’re going to find what they’re looking for in your business when you have advertising with us. Because what they are searching for is a very particular thing, which is a black person who can do these services. A black business who has these products or a black media platform who has this type of news.

Lee Kantor: [00:09:33] And how did you hear about the mainstream fund?

Ngozi Ahanotu: [00:09:36] So I am actually third generation in Georgia State. My father was a professor there for several years. My sister graduated from there. So I was always on campus with her growing up as well as my dad. I was always on Georgia State campus growing up and then I went there as well. I graduated 2010 and I just always continue to stay involved. So I was chair of the Georgia State University Alumni Entrepreneurship Network. And as a chair, I just know more about entrepreneurship opportunities, and that was when I was able to have a better understanding of what it is that. You know, Jordan State’s doing and how I can be involved as an entrepreneur and business owner.

Lee Kantor: [00:10:16] So how has gone going through the program helped you grow your business?

Ngozi Ahanotu: [00:10:22] You know, I have to say, like I’ve actually learned so much and I have been able to transform my business in ways I would not have thought of prior to this program. And I’m sure a lot of people are going to say that. But I genuinely have to say like, I don’t mind. I want my hat to be looked at as a search engine. So I spent a lot of the program trying to figure out what is it that I’m telling businesses as customers and users who are customers as well? What am I telling them to make sure they understand? While we do appear to be a search engine like Google, we have so much more to offer you when it comes to your efforts to a little more black owned life. So I think this program has really been able to push me into a different direction as to how I can get that message out, the type of language I need to use, and ultimately how I can best serve the users and customers.

Lee Kantor: [00:11:15] Yeah, I think that community’s at the heart of it and focusing on that and that I think is going to resonate with a lot of folks.

Ngozi Ahanotu: [00:11:24] Absolutely. Thank you so much.

Lee Kantor: [00:11:26] Now, if somebody wants to learn more about high hat, either maybe submit their business to be in the search engine or advertise on the search engine, what is the the website? What’s the best way to learn more?

Ngozi Ahanotu: [00:11:40] Yes. So if you are a business owner and you want to claim your business in our search engine, you will go to high hat dot com h i h a t. There is a button there for you to claim your business. It takes a matter of 60 seconds and once your business is in there, we can start crawling you and get you right into the search engine. And if you’re a user who is someone who is transitioning to a more black owned lifestyle, you’re someone who money doesn’t matter. I really want to make sure I support black owned everything. Or if you’re even an ally and you have someone in your life who you love, who is black or African or of that community, and this is a way for you that you think you can support them. All of you guys can visit dot com I hate and take advantage of the search engine to your best visibility and find what you’re looking for.

Lee Kantor: [00:12:33] Well, congratulations on all the success. You’re doing important work and we appreciate you.

Ngozi Ahanotu: [00:12:38] Thank you so much for having me again. Lee. It’s great.

Lee Kantor: [00:12:42] All right. This is Lee Kantor. We’ll see you all next time on GSU. Any radio?

Intro: [00:12:51] Today’s episode of Atlanta Business Radio is brought to you by On pay. Built in Atlanta on pay is the top rated payroll in HR software anywhere. Get one month free at on Paycom.

 

About Our Sponsor

OnPay’sOnPay-Dots payroll services and HR software give you more time to focus on what’s most important. Rated “Excellent” by PC Magazine, we make it easy to pay employees fast, we automate all payroll taxes, and we even keep all your HR and benefits organized and compliant.

Our award-winning customer service includes an accuracy guarantee, deep integrations with popular accounting software, and we’ll even enter all your employee information for you — whether you have five employees or 500. Take a closer look to see all the ways we can save you time and money in the back office.

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Tagged With: Hiihat Global, Ngozi Ahanotu

Meridith Michelle Rose With HomeTele SLP

October 3, 2022 by Jacob Lapera

Meredith Rose
Atlanta Business Radio
Meridith Michelle Rose With HomeTele SLP
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Hometele SLPMeredith RoseMeridith Rose, MS, CCC-SLP is a pediatric speech-language pathologist and owner of HomeTele SLP, which was founded in June 2020. She was inspired to become a speech-language pathologist over 20 years ago, following her youngest brother’s diagnosis with an autism spectrum disorder.

Her passion to help her brother and other children with communication and neurodevelopmental disorders led to her receiving her Bachelor of Arts degree in Communication Sciences and Disorders from the University of Florida, Master of Sciences degree in Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology from Florida Atlantic University, and Applied Behavior Analysis program certificate from Florida Institute of Technology.

She has 15 years of experience as a Florida and Georgia licensed and certified Speech-Language Pathologist, and has served neurotypical and neurodiverse pediatric populations ages 2-18 with various communication disorders and exceptionalities in a variety of settings (e.g., schools, daycares/preschools, clinics, homes). Her background in Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) has been instrumental in her speech and language therapy treatment approaches (e.g., positive reinforcement, facilitation of oral language development).

Throughout her career she has developed an immense passion for her work. She strives to improve her clients’ communication skills through the implementation of fun yet functional therapy activities that are culturally responsive, in their school or home environment via tele-therapy. Understanding the importance of the generalization of learned skills, she works closely with her clients and their families to provide them with strategies and supports to aid in the transfer of communication skills across environments.

As a lifelong learner, She is continually seeking opportunities to grow professionally. She is currently a doctoral student, graduate research assistant (GRA), and GaLEND Fellow at Georgia State University, where she is pursuing a Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in the Education of Students with Exceptionalities.

Free 30-minute consults that can be scheduled by visiting the website www.HomeTeleSLP.com

Connect with Meredith on LinkedIn.

What You’ll Learn In This Episode

  • The start of HomeTele SLP
  • HomeTele SLP – as a business
  • SLPs do in their work with children (Communication Disorders)
  • Target audience

This transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:03] Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in Atlanta, Georgia. It’s time for Atlanta Business Radio, brought to you by on pay. Built in Atlanta on pay is the top rated payroll and HR software anywhere. Get one month free at unpaid. Now here’s your host.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:31] Lee Kantor are here, another episode of Atlanta Business Radio. And these are my very favorite ones. These are the GSU ENI radio episodes where we spotlight folks coming either through or around the GSU ENI program. Today on the show we have Meredith Rose with HomeTele SLP. Welcome, Meridith.

Meridith Michelle Rose: [00:00:53] Hi, Good morning, Lee. How are.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:54] You? I am doing well. I’m so excited to learn what you’re up to. Tell us about your company. How are you serving folks?

Meridith Michelle Rose: [00:01:01] So HomeTele SLP provides speech, language evaluations and speech language therapy via tele therapy. And it is person centered, family centered and culturally responsive. So we provide those services to pediatric populations ages 3 to 18 and both the states of Georgia and Florida.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:22] So what was kind of the genesis of the idea? How did you get started with this?

Meridith Michelle Rose: [00:01:27] Well, it’s kind of funny, actually. My journey to becoming a speech language pathologist started over 20 years ago following the diagnosis of my youngest brother’s, his diagnosis with autism spectrum disorder. And so that’s where my journey towards speech language pathology started. And I had a strong passion and not only helping my brother to communicate, but children like him. And so I’ve been a pediatric speech language pathologist for the past 15 years and have often worked privately outside of a full time job in providing services to children and their families. However, the pandemic changed that a little bit, and so I had to pivot from providing in-home services to tele therapy services. So that was the genesis of Home Tele SLP.

Lee Kantor: [00:02:15] Now, what is kind of so how does the practice work? So a person has a child that is suffering or needs some help in this area and they contact you. And then is this kind of just online or how are you communicating with them and how does it work?

Meridith Michelle Rose: [00:02:32] Yes. So parents will often reach out to me. I have free 30 minute consults that I provide to parents of children who may have a communication disorder, but children who have a speech or language disorder pretty easy to identify. A parent may notice that their child produces speech that is unclear. Or maybe they have a younger child and they’re not making sounds or gestures, or they’re using very few words. They’re not easily understood or they have difficulty understanding others. Or perhaps it’s more so about their social skills or even older kids. Maybe they have trouble with their writing skills and having conversations, conversational skills. So typically a parent will reach out to me for a console, we’ll schedule an evaluation, and then from there we start treatment.

Lee Kantor: [00:03:22] Now, in your work, when you’re working with a child, what are some of the activities that are going to go on during the kind of the work that you’re doing?

Meridith Michelle Rose: [00:03:33] So depending on the child’s area of weakness, we’re going to target those areas by developing individualized goals. So let’s say the child is having difficulty with their receptive language skills following directions. We work on skills that help with that area or, for example, expressive language skills. Maybe they have difficulty answering questions or who, what, where questions, or even just putting words together in a fluid manner. So we help with both expressive, receptive language skills, social skills and writing skills, oral language skills and writing skills as well.

Lee Kantor: [00:04:16] Now, is there something that it’s an everyday thing, every week thing? Does it take forever to like, is this a lifelong journey or is sometimes your work can help people kind of get over the hump and then they can do some self work on their own and just improve organically over time?

Meridith Michelle Rose: [00:04:35] Every child is different. No child is exactly the same. And so some children have communicate communication disorders that are mild in terms of their severity. Others may have moderate to severe disorders. So every child’s treatment plan is different, but typically a child may receive 30 minute sessions twice a week, once a week, depending on if they’re progressing in their session time or I’m sorry, and their therapy session. So the time will change depending on that child in terms of how long they’re in therapy, that is something that also depends.

Lee Kantor: [00:05:15] Now when they’re working for you, is this something that the child like enjoys? Is this something that becomes a something that’s fun for the child? Because I remember with my child he was having some speech issues. When he was very young and he worked with the school speech pathologist and he loved it like he it was like one of the favorite parts of his day. So do you kind of create your therapy in an enjoyable manner for the children? Or is this something like, Oh, I got to do this?

Meridith Michelle Rose: [00:05:45] Absolutely. It is enjoyable. We focus on providing therapy that is fun and functional. So while we are targeting goals and objectives to help improve the child’s communication skills, we’re also implementing positive reinforcement. And so by knowing what things interest the child, those interests can be incorporated into our therapy sessions to increase engagement.

Lee Kantor: [00:06:10] Now, is this something that affects a lot of children and maybe goes undiagnosed and they don’t take it seriously? But if you I would imagine if you kind of nip it at the butter early, you’re really going to have a lot of benefits for the child moving forward.

Meridith Michelle Rose: [00:06:24] Yes, that is true. Early intervention is always key. According to the National Institute of Health. We know that nearly one in 12 or 7.7% of us children between the ages of three and 17 has a disorder that’s related to speech, language, voice or swallowing. So these are disorders that impact a lot of our children.

Lee Kantor: [00:06:48] And then is it something that usually the parent identifies this or the pediatrician, or is it the the teacher or somebody at their school?

Meridith Michelle Rose: [00:06:58] During for example, you mentioned a pediatrician during an annual physical, a pediatrician may ask the parent questions related to their child’s speech and language. And during those conversations, that child may be referred, if not a parent, may just have concerns having had having other children in their family. So maybe their child is the youngest. So they know that developmentally there are milestones that their child may not be meeting as early as their their other children. So that may be something that prompts them to explore whether or not therapy is needed. And as you also mentioned, teachers in our educational system, they are very keen on knowing if there’s something happening at times related to speech and language that may be impacting that child academically. And so oftentimes in the school systems, referrals are also made.

Lee Kantor: [00:07:51] Now, in your work, can you share a story maybe of a child that came to you obviously don’t name their name, but maybe share what the challenge was and how you were able to help them get to a new level.

Meridith Michelle Rose: [00:08:02] Oh my goodness. There are so many, so many children. If I could think of one, there was a child who had a very difficult time and producing clear speech. This child had a proxy of speech and a lot of his vocalizations consisted of vowels. So there weren’t a lot of consonant sounds which made it which made it hard to decipher what he was trying to say. And it was very amazing because over a six month period of time he went from using vowels to using syllables to using words, the phrases, the sentences. And it’s just so exciting to see a child make progress in a way that impacts not only their ability to make their wants and needs known, but it also is very affirming for the family to see that their child is able to communicate with them and their peers and their family.

Lee Kantor: [00:09:08] Now, this must be such a rewarding work for you to be able to make that kind of impact, like you said, not just on the child, but on the family as well. And it could change the whole trajectory of that child’s life if they kind of can take care of this early and really get the improvement that you described it. You must feel really good every day waking up and doing this kind of work.

Meridith Michelle Rose: [00:09:33] It’s extremely rewarding. I have a few families that have kept in contact with me over the past 15 years, students that I worked with when they were a preschool age that are now in college or in the military. And it’s just been really nice to see over the years. Some of these families have kept in contact with me and reached out to me if their child needed assistance here and there. It’s just a beautiful, beautiful thing to witness, a wonderful profession to be a part of. And I consider it a blessing to be able to impact the lives of children and their families.

Lee Kantor: [00:10:14] Now, how did you get involved with the Main Street fund? How did that get on your radar?

Meridith Michelle Rose: [00:10:19] I remember learning about Main Street and specifically and I through Fujitsu during my graduate student orientation fall of last year. And so it all started there. And once I found out that they were accepting applications for their third cohort, I applied and and here I am.

Lee Kantor: [00:10:41] Now, what have you gotten out of it? Has this been helpful as you grow your business?

Meridith Michelle Rose: [00:10:45] Yes, this has been extremely helpful. I’ve received a lot of coaching to help me with identifying my customer. I’ve received a lot of help financially, even with my business, to help me to get it off the ground and to start to gain traction. I’ve learned quite a bit about how to pitch my business, and so everything that I’ve learned over the past six months in Main Street has been, I think, very instrumental to where I am now.

Lee Kantor: [00:11:18] So what do you need more of? How can we help you?

Meridith Michelle Rose: [00:11:21] I need more exposure. I need for people to know about home tele SLP, what we do, why we’re here, and we’re here to help.

Lee Kantor: [00:11:32] And if somebody wants to learn more, what’s the website? What’s the best way to find you and get a hold of you to have a more substantive conversation?

Meridith Michelle Rose: [00:11:39] Our website is home tele slp ph0etel slp dot com and you can follow us on social media at home tele slp.

Lee Kantor: [00:11:54] And that’s home. E. T e. L e slp dot com.

Meridith Michelle Rose: [00:11:59] That is correct.

Lee Kantor: [00:12:00] Well, Meredith, congratulations on all the success and the momentum. You’re doing such important work and we appreciate you.

Meridith Michelle Rose: [00:12:07] Thank you so much for your time, Lee.

Lee Kantor: [00:12:09] All right. This is Lee Kantor. We’ll see you next time on Gesu e anni radio.

Intro: [00:12:18] Today’s episode of Atlanta Business Radio is brought to you by On pay. Built in Atlanta on pay is the top rated payroll in HR software anywhere. Get one month free at onpay.com.

About Our Sponsor

OnPay’sOnPay-Dots payroll services and HR software give you more time to focus on what’s most important. Rated “Excellent” by PC Magazine, we make it easy to pay employees fast, we automate all payroll taxes, and we even keep all your HR and benefits organized and compliant.

Our award-winning customer service includes an accuracy guarantee, deep integrations with popular accounting software, and we’ll even enter all your employee information for you — whether you have five employees or 500. Take a closer look to see all the ways we can save you time and money in the back office.

Follow OnPay on LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter

Tagged With: HomeTele SLP, Meridith Michelle Rose

Jarett S. Levan With BBX Capital

October 3, 2022 by Jacob Lapera

Jarett Levan
South Florida Business Radio
Jarett S. Levan With BBX Capital
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DTLLogo-Blue-Bannerv2BBX CapitalJarett LevanJarett S. Levan is President and CEO of BBX Capital (OTC: BBXIA), a diversified investment and asset management company. The business of BBX Capital includes real estate ownership, direct acquisition and joint venture equity in real estate, specialty finance, and the acquisition of controlling and non-controlling investments in operating businesses, including its ownership in The Altman Companies, BBX Logistic Properties, Renin Holdings and BBX Sweet Holdings.

He is also CEO of BBX Sweet Holdings, which owns and operates Hoffman’s Chocolates, a 45-year old South Florida chain of chocolate and scoop shops, IT’SUGAR, the largest specialty candy retailer in the United States with 100 locations in 26 states, and Las Olas Confections and Snacks, a manufacturer of specialty chocolates and candies. He sits on the boards of BBX Capital, Bluegreen Vacations Holdings (NYSE: BVH), and Bluegreen Vacations Corporation (NYSE: BXG).

Mr. Levan also serves on the boards of Broward Performing Arts Foundation, and is the Chair of Business for the Arts of Broward, and is an Advisory Board Member of Hollywood Art and Culture Center. He is a Board Member of the Broward College Foundation, the Broward Workshop and Greater Fort Lauderdale Alliance Foundation, a member of the Nova Southeastern University Ambassadors’ Board and Fellows’ Society, and is a member of Young Presidents’ Organization (YPO) and the Florida Bar.

He is also on the board of the BBX Capital Foundation. The BBX Capital Foundation, formerly the BankAtlantic Foundation, was established in 1994 to support a wide array of activities in the arts, education, social welfare, and community and economic development. The role of the foundation is to foster partnerships with other private sector organizations, not-for-profit institutions and government agencies. Since its inception, the Foundation has awarded more than $20 million in contributions and in kind services to charitable organizations throughout the state of Florida.

Connect with Jarett on LinkedIn and follow BBX Capital on Facebook and Twitter.

What You’ll Learn In This Episode

  • The importance of diversified investments and assets
  • The business of candy and sweets
  • The importance of giving back and how BBX Capital supports the community

This transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:01] Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in South Florida. It’s time for South Florida Business Radio. Now, here’s your host.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:12] The Lee Kantor here another episode of South Florida Business Radio. And this is going to be a good one. But before we get started, it’s important to recognize our sponsor, Diaz Trade Law, your customs expert today on South Florida Business Radio, we have Jarrett Levan with BBX Capital. Welcome, Jarett.

Jarett Levan: [00:00:32] Hi, Lee. Thank you.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:33] I am so excited to learn what you’re up to. But for those who don’t know, tell us a little bit about BBX Capital. How you serving folks?

Jarett Levan: [00:00:42] So, BBX Capital is a diversified holding company. We have three major, what we call verticals or in the real estate business or in the candy business. And then we make door parts, barn door sliders, closet doors, and hardware. So it’s a very diversified and eclectic portfolio.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:01] Now can you just share a little bit about the history? Did you start out in one industry and then organically grew into the others, or like how did this kind of conglomerate come about?

Jarett Levan: [00:01:12] So our company has gone through many transitions over over five decades. We started in the real estate business in Miami in the mid eighties. We acquired a company called Bank Atlantic, which we operated for about 30 years, sold that in 2012, and at that point BBW became a diversified holding company, still stayed with our roots, which is real estate and real estate investing, and then have diversified into other platforms.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:40] So how did the Candy and Sweets business catch your eye?

Jarett Levan: [00:01:44] So actually, interestingly enough, Hoffmann’s Chocolates, which is headquartered in Green Acres and Palm Beach County, was a customer virus of Bank Atlantic. And as CEO of Bank Atlantic, I used to visit our customers regularly and just coincidentally, I would I would make Hoffman’s on my every time I went to Palm Beach County. I would put that on on the tour and we sold Bank Atlantic and decided to to develop a diversified platform. I’ve always been always had a sweet tooth. I was in the candy business in sixth grade and decided to reach out to the owners of Hoffman’s and see if they would sell to us. And they did. And that that was our first acquisition ten years ago this year, and it kind of catapulted us into this exciting industry.

Lee Kantor: [00:02:29] So when you were in in kind of banking, you had a glimpse of lots and lots of businesses. So that was the first thing that caught your eye was a chocolate company.

Jarett Levan: [00:02:40] Well, what I love well, first of all, I’m a chocoholic. So yes, I’m very passionate about my chocolate. But what I loved about Hoffmann’s on a much smaller scale was that they were rooted in the local community, which is no different than Bank Atlantic. We were rooted in the South Florida community. Hoffman’s was as well. Bank Atlantic had 100 locations. Hoffmann’s had three, but the concept was the same. And I tell people that the candy industry is very, very similar to the banking industry. You have very large companies like Mars and Hershey’s and Nestlé like you have very large banks and you have thousands of much smaller candy businesses around the country. And that’s what appealed to me about this industry.

Lee Kantor: [00:03:23] And then from there, that led to the other kind of confectionery acquisitions.

Jarett Levan: [00:03:30] Yes, we we had after Hoffmann’s, we made two more acquisitions in Florida, including the company that makes the legendary coconut patties that you see in the airports and the in the hotels and other shops around Florida and other tourist destinations. And then we acquired five years ago it’s Sugar, which is the largest of the specialty candy retailers in North America. And that business is really catapulted BBQ Sweet holdings.

Lee Kantor: [00:03:57] Now that that’s a franchise, right?

Jarett Levan: [00:04:00] No, it’s not a franchise. It’s not it Sugar owns and as a result owns 100, owns and operates 100 store locations and just we just opened our first one in Canada about six weeks ago.

Lee Kantor: [00:04:13] Wow. I didn’t realize that because I know I’ve seen them around the country and I just assumed it was a franchise. So those are all owner operated?

Jarett Levan: [00:04:20] Yes, they are.

Lee Kantor: [00:04:21] Wow. So what attracts you to that kind of an operation?

Jarett Levan: [00:04:27] Well, first of all, Candy, in North America is a $35 billion industry and growing. It’s not recession proof. Nothing is. But I’d like to say it’s recession resistant. We all like our candy. Many of us have a sweet tooth, but it’s sugar specifically has partnered with a lot of the large brands. And we we opened the first Sour Patch Kids Cafe. We just opened the first ever Oreo Cafe. We have relationships with all the large brands and, you know, our our footprint, you know, you can you can buy our you can buy the same candy maybe at Target or or at a I was going to say a five and dime, but those don’t exist anymore. But you can buy them at a grocery store or a drugstore. But we provide the entertainment aspect and we provide license apparel and accessories, and it’s just a different experience. Shopping at adventure, which makes it fun and exciting.

Lee Kantor: [00:05:26] Yeah, and it’s very social media friendly. I mean, that’s a it’s I mean, your marketing is kind of built into the to the store.

Jarett Levan: [00:05:34] It is. And we’re opening larger stores. We opened a 24,000 square foot store in New Jersey near the Meadowlands. We opened up 15,000 square foot store on Michigan Avenue. We’re opening a big store in Miami next year. We’ve got a big store in Times Square that just opened two months ago. So we have larger footprint, which allows us to to offer not only more candy, more nostalgic candy, more more fan favorites, but also, as I mentioned, we can also sell we have room to sell the licensed merchandise from from some of the big candy brands.

Lee Kantor: [00:06:12] Now, are you telling them to make kind of the large, super large packaged goods there or they had them? They always had them. And it was just difficult for the consumer to get.

Jarett Levan: [00:06:24] They always had them. We also have some exclusive items which we call the Giants, which are cereal sized boxes and larger. And we do some fun things with the brands. For instance, a lot of people like the Pink Starburst. You cannot buy pink Starburst in the store, but you can buy an exclusive pink starburst starburst collection, added sugar. You know, that’s just one example. But, you know, we work with the brands to create fun and exclusive content that you might not be able to buy elsewhere.

Lee Kantor: [00:06:54] Now, when you were kind of falling into this diversified investment strategy of yours, was it something that after a while you’re like, Hey, we maybe should have done this sooner? Like, was that something you were like, This was this was really working out well, because now, you know, we’re not as dependent on one aspect of the economy. If something gets hit, there’s always some kind of a hedge in there.

Jarett Levan: [00:07:18] So. So let me answer that in two ways. One, I don’t look back. I think there’s always a time and place. And the banking business was really good for 30 years. And what I enjoy about the diversified holding company is that we get to, you know, day is the same every day. I’m involved in different aspects of the different businesses. But the most important thing is that, you know, we have best practices across the companies, across industries. We have shared experiences, shared resources, we collaborate. And that’s the benefit that that a capital has as a diversified company, having different businesses, lots of different leaders throughout the organization, different geographies and different experience. And and that’s the beauty of of our diversified holding company.

Lee Kantor: [00:08:11] Now, how do you kind of create a culture that maybe permeates all of the brands that you serve?

Jarett Levan: [00:08:19] So we launched about three years ago an internal concept called one PBX, working together as the power of one. And we we have councils across the organizations. We have starting with the CEO council, we get I lead a council of myself and five other of our CEOs of a marketing council, a real estate council, a Finance council, a community Impact Council culture committee. So we encourage and tap people to join these councils to represent each of the companies that they become ambassadors for one, and they become ambassadors for the culture across and around the organization.

Lee Kantor: [00:09:05] Now that you’re in multiple markets, are you able to kind of live into that philosophy of supporting the community? I know how much you support the South Florida community, but does that kind of trickle into the other markets you serve with your brands in different parts of the country?

Jarett Levan: [00:09:22] It does. With our Community Impact Council, they meet once a month and we have people represented from South Florida, from Orlando and from from Toronto, and they talk about collaboration on initiatives like food drives or we did a a a build day a couple of months ago where we had in five different locations and five different cities across two countries where we had 101 associates building on the same day. And and then we created a video with photos and videos from each of the sites and put it on our in our one box newsletter. So, yes, we we we encourage the companies to do things locally, but we also try to do try to do community initiatives collectively. We also have a big partnership with Make-A-Wish nationally through a sugar and Witch, which is across all of our stores, and we’re in 28 states and two countries added sugar. And we’ve we’ve written a check as much as 700,000 to to to make a wish. So all these initiatives are important for and it’s it’s been a part of our DNA since since inception to give back to our local communities and local can be defined in many ways.

Lee Kantor: [00:10:52] Now, do you have any advice for other leaders that might be leading a diversified kind of portfolio that like you are? Is there any advice that you would give to them on how to kind of make sure that everybody is on the same page when it comes to communication? It sounds like that one is a great way for everybody to kind of get alignment and kind of get on the same page.

Jarett Levan: [00:11:19] So I, I joke internally that in addition to my title being the CEO, it’s also the CRO, the chief reminding officer and I spent a lot of time talking about talking to our executives across our companies and encouraging our companies to learn from each other. And that doesn’t just happen by chance. You have to create the platforms and the counsels and the communication for that to occur. And so I would encourage anybody that’s involved in or runs a diversified holding company to set up the platforms for their people to communicate. We have a newsletter I mentioned we sent out every month, and in addition to a memo from me, we highlight people and projects and initiatives and new stores and new apartment complexes and awards across the different companies. So I think the communication is just so critical in not only any company, but especially in a diversified platform.

Lee Kantor: [00:12:27] Especially when in one area somebody stumbles upon a great idea. It’s so important for that to be disseminated because you never know how somebody in the different industry might be able to leverage a similar principles.

Jarett Levan: [00:12:38] Actually, if we have time, I’ll share a story with you in the in the middle of the pandemic where freight costs from from China or had just gone went through the roof and one of our companies was struggling with the with the being incredible increase in the cost of bringing containers from China. I had heard of another one of our companies that was paying about 40% less. So I put the two of them together and it was significant savings that that was materialized just from that conversation.

Lee Kantor: [00:13:14] Right where it was. It might have been a throwaway line that you heard, but you were able to go, Hey, this connection is going to be valuable to somebody else. And and having that kind of open lines of communication to encourage sharing and then having somebody that can connect the dots, I mean, that’s where really a lot of impact happens.

Jarett Levan: [00:13:35] Exactly.

Lee Kantor: [00:13:37] So what do you need more of? How can we help?

Jarett Levan: [00:13:42] We what do we need more of? We need. We need we need good weather.

Lee Kantor: [00:13:51] We’ll work on that.

Jarett Levan: [00:13:53] We’ll work on that. What we need is we need which is happening. We need talented people, skilled workers in Florida, and we’re located on LA Solis. We need it’s actually easier than it used to be, used to be difficult to recruit people to South Florida. It’s gotten easier. Quality of life is just so great here. You know, having no state income tax really helps. But we just we continue to need more skilled, qualified labor in South Florida.

Lee Kantor: [00:14:25] And then what kind of backgrounds do you need? Do you need finance people? You need real estate experts. What kind of talent are you looking for?

Jarett Levan: [00:14:34] Finance and technology.

Lee Kantor: [00:14:37] Finance and technology. And then if somebody wants to learn more, what is the best way of doing that? What’s the best way to learn more about capital and maybe connect with you or somebody on your team?

Jarett Levan: [00:14:52] Well, they can. They can go to a capital com for sure. They can connect with me on LinkedIn and. You know, we’re we’re we’re always looking for ideas and opportunities. We’re we’re an acquisitive organization. So we do look for good opportunities, whether it’s in real estate or in operating companies. So if anybody has an idea or I love meeting with people to get new ideas. So if someone has an idea, I’d encourage them to reach out.

Lee Kantor: [00:15:25] And then so are you looking to acquire more candy companies, more real estate? Is that, you know, kind of the doors are open for that kind of conversation or are you open to any other businesses that might be doing interesting things?

Jarett Levan: [00:15:38] So I probably more focused on what we call bolt on acquisitions of our existing portfolio companies. However, if there’s an I, I’d be more focused right now on a company in Florida that might be available. But if there is an opportunity that someone thinks makes sense, we look for good brands. We don’t invest in startups, we don’t really invest in technology, we’re investing in mature brands in good sectors. We will, even if it’s not a bolt on, it’s a new sector. We would look at it.

Lee Kantor: [00:16:13] Good stuff. Well, Jared, thank you so much for sharing your story. You’re doing important work and we appreciate you.

Jarett Levan: [00:16:18] Thank you, Lee. I appreciate it.

Lee Kantor: [00:16:20] All right. This is Lee Kantor. We’ll see you all next time on South Florida Business Radio.

Tagged With: BBX Capital, Jarett Levan

Rolina Camello With Trans International Trucking Inc.

October 3, 2022 by Jacob Lapera

Rolina Camello
Association Leadership Radio
Rolina Camello With Trans International Trucking Inc.
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Trans Intl Trucking Inc.Rolina CamelloRolina Camello, SR VP Sales at Trans International Trucking Inc.

She is a member of Foreign Trade Association. Global Logistics Professional, specializing in Transpacific Ocean shipping, Drayage transportation, Full Truckload, LTL/Volume transportation, Cross-dock and Warehousing, and Chassis knowledge, offering Global Supply Chain Solutions. Specialties: Global Logistic Specialist – Certified (CSULB – 2005). Hands-on, skilled professional, offering Project Management, Pricing, Operations, Terminal Relations, providing Customer Retention with experience in Marketing and Social Media.

Connect with Rolina on LinkedIn.

What You’ll Learn In This Episode

  • About Trans International Trucking Inc.

This transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:02] Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX Studios in Atlanta, Georgia. It’s time for Association Leadership Radio. Now here’s your host.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:20] Lee Kantor here another episode of Association Leadership Radio and this is going to be a good one. Today on the show we have Rolina Camello with Trans International Trucking. Welcome.

Rolina Camello: [00:00:33] Thank you. Thank you so much for having me, Lee.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:36] Well, before we get too far to things, tell us about trans international trucking. How are you serving, folks?

Rolina Camello: [00:00:42] So what we do is we do container drainage. So all those containers at the Port of L.A. and Long Beach, those big ships that are there, our trucks go in and we pull those containers out. We bring them to local distribution centers here in Southern California.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:55] Now, for the people who aren’t super familiar with supply chain and logistics, can you explain the importance to that activity you’re doing and just the activity in and around transportation that a lot of people don’t realize the importance of it. And I think they’re kind of the unsung heroes of this economy.

Rolina Camello: [00:01:17] Yeah, absolutely. And I think a lot of us seem seeing that in the in the media this over this last year after the pandemic. But the importance is that it’s not quite the end of the of the the supply chain, the end route, but it’s the major point where the containers are going to the warehouses. And from the warehouses they pull the freight off. And the commodities that we’re moving is anywhere from clothing, apparel to important items like, you know, essential goods that we need to have on the shelf for retail. So it all kind of plays a part in this. That’s why they call it supply chain. So we’re part of that chain of bringing the containers to the warehouse distribution centers. So it’s very important. It’s very vital because there’s a lot of different regulations to that we have to pull through to stay operating here at the Port of L.A. and Long Beach.

Lee Kantor: [00:02:11] And it’s one of those things where it’s just very complex. A lot of folks touch each thing and it all has to kind of work seamlessly so the consumer gets their what they’re looking for in an efficient manner. And it just it’s this remarkable dance that I just don’t feel like people understand how hard it is to do because it looks so easy when you just show up at your store and there’s always the thing you want on the shelf.

Rolina Camello: [00:02:36] Correct? Correct. And there’s there’s a lot of challenges that come into play. You know, a lot of things could happen. And right now, the inventories are so high, which is actually a good thing. But the volumes that we’re seeing coming in from Asia is very low. But yes, we do play a very intricate part. There still is another part where we do and we also trans international does this part of the transportation to where we have trucks that pull from the distribution centers to the actual store door. So we actually do deliveries like to the Coles and to the Rosses of the world for retail.

Lee Kantor: [00:03:13] And what’s your story? How did you get involved in this line of work? It’s fascinating.

Rolina Camello: [00:03:18] So very fascinating. And I actually started just as a job doing data entry for a trucking company here in Long Beach. And it was so interesting to me. I grew up in Long Beach and I saw the port structure grow from a kid going to high school out here. And I just kept staying with it. I did different jobs within the trucking company. I took a global logistics specialist course at Cal State University, Long Beach, and realized that, wow, it’s not just dredge. There’s a whole supply chain of different things that happen. And I just found it so fascinating that I made it my career. And I’ve been here for about 23 years plus in the industry. But that’s how I started. I started just doing data entry and then customer service and then working my way up.

Lee Kantor: [00:04:04] Now, how have you seen the industry evolve? Because it’s probably not your grandfather and grandmother’s supply chain as it was when you were starting out.

Rolina Camello: [00:04:16] Right, Right. Well, it’s very interesting, you know, how the containerization changed and the Pacific, East and West trade out of Asia. It really started to get its boom in the eighties. I see. Just by some of the studies that I did. And they started to realize, you know, all these steamship lines started building bigger ships and bigger vessels. And as they started building, so did the port structure grow? And if you go over the bridge there, you can see there’s it’s just an ocean almost of containers everywhere. And I believe that, you know, as as as the global economy started to grow, so did the ocean freight. And so it just kind of took off from there.

Lee Kantor: [00:04:58] And when more when the ships were putting more and more containers on them, then they had the ports had to dig deeper and deeper. Right. Like this was kind of a domino effect. If you want bigger boats, then you have to have bigger ports to handle that size of of a ship.

Rolina Camello: [00:05:17] Yeah. And and believe it or not, they’re still working. They’re still dredging more space to offload more container ships. I mean, that that I think is going to be an evolution that never changes. Now the terminals are working on automation just so that they can operate more efficiently. So it’s really come a long way. There’s been tremendous growth in just over the last few years, you know, having the influx of many vessels calling at the terminal at once and being able to handle all those container moves, you know, I think we’ve kind of seen the need even more and we’re really still working on the infrastructure as well. But yeah, it’s it’s definitely, definitely an ever evolving industry challenges every day. And that’s, I think, one of the reasons why I stay in this industry. You know, never a dull moment.

Lee Kantor: [00:06:08] Now on the boats are those containers that like every container kind of goes on to an 18 wheeler chassis so that it could be sent. How many containers can fit on on some of these large vessels?

Rolina Camello: [00:06:25] Some of them are about 8000 to 10000 we call them t use, which is a 20 equivalent unit or a 40 to 40 equivalent unit. So a lot of these vessels are about 8500 or even 10,000. We even have some that are up to 18,000, not too many of them. But yet we they can go up to bigger than the Eiffel Tower.

Lee Kantor: [00:06:51] And it’s one of those things if you’ve ever had the opportunity at a port to see one of those ships coming in, it just boggles the mind how many containers there are. It just the size is just it’s just difficult to really imagine unless you see it with your eyes and then just look at that. That’s going to turn, you know, all that’s going to hit a highway somewhere or hit a warehouse somewhere. And it’s just crazy the amount of goods that are transported this way.

Rolina Camello: [00:07:20] Yeah, absolutely.

Lee Kantor: [00:07:21] Now, for your work, who is your ideal customer? Who? Who are you good partners with?

Rolina Camello: [00:07:29] So there’s a variety of different partners that that trucking company who does drainage and over the road works with primarily we we always like to work directly with the with the shipper or we call it the BCL, the beneficial cargo owner. But we we have relationships with them as customers. But another partner that’s very strategic for us is also the steamship lines. They already have the relationship with the BCOs and they’re also helping what they call door deliveries. So they’ll orchestrate and communicate with us and have us pick up the container for them and bring it to their customers door or to the warehouse. So it’s kind of between those two. And then there’s also another party, which is a freight forwarder, and they actually contract freight as a third party through the steamship lines. And so they can also be a customer of ARDS as well. So it kind of gets a you know, there’s a broad spectrum of folks that we work with that need their containers delivered. And usually, you know, it filters right down to the VCO, which is why that’s those are our major players.

Lee Kantor: [00:08:35] Now, for you personally, as your career was starting to blossom, did you get involved in any trade associations or business associations to kind of immerse yourself in the industry?

Rolina Camello: [00:08:46] Yes, I did. In fact, that was that was one of the the key things that kind of opened my eyes to so many different facets of the industry. And the first trade association that I signed up for was the Los Angeles Transportation Club. And I’ve always been a big believer on staying involved in a lot of these social networks and associations because you you meet other colleagues in your field as well as others that are in other fields, and you learn about their challenges and we start to work together. And I feel that from right now in 2022 compared to 1998, we’ve opened up our eyes and we are all working together as a team to try to have the cargo move fluidly and try to help each other, help each other, if that makes any sense. But I’ve always been big on pushing folks to come to these meetings, learn about what each other is doing, learn about what challenges are ahead, and then also learn about each other’s successes and how we can operate our business more efficient.

Lee Kantor: [00:09:47] Yeah, I think that’s great advice, especially to young people that are new to an industry. It’s such a wonderful way to kind of learn more about the industry and also demonstrate some leadership by getting involved in volunteering and meeting colleagues that could help you get your next job or, you know, just really influence your path in your career.

Rolina Camello: [00:10:11] Yeah, absolutely. And and that’s kind of what happened. And through the years, I’ve made some really great friends, great connections and business connections as well.

Lee Kantor: [00:10:20] So now in the association you’re a member of today, are you taking up leadership positions like what’s your roles in them?

Rolina Camello: [00:10:30] So, so now I’m involved in the FTA, which is a foreign trade association, one of the board of directors for that that conglomerate. And they’re there primarily of customs house brokers. So they handle all of the legalities of cargo that’s moving from overseas here and then also export and import side so that this organization that I just became involved in over the last few years and it’s been kind of it hasn’t there hasn’t been a lot of activity because we’ve all been working from home. So there’s been a lot of Zoom calls meeting with the team. But, you know, they’re a great organization for me. I’ve learned so much about some of the challenges that they have overseas with factories and such and what Customs is doing as far as clearing cargo and things like that. Another association that I’m involved with in I am not a board of directors, but I’m a very active member, is the Harvard Trucking Association that that organization is a key player for you if you are in the drug business. And it’s because they they do a lot of of battling for us over rules and regulations that we don’t even know about that’s coming our way. You know, I hear there’s there’s about 100 new laws passing monthly, almost four against our trade, and we don’t even know about them. So it’s very good to stay involved and keep our company abreast of what challenges are ahead so that we can make sure that we operate efficiently.

Lee Kantor: [00:12:00] Yeah, that’s a key point that a lot of these associations are advocating for the people that are doing the work in the industry because sometimes politicians are making rules and laws that impact your industry and they don’t really understand maybe the full scope of the ramifications of some of those rules and laws.

Rolina Camello: [00:12:21] Yeah, absolutely. And, and, and that’s another thing that I do too. Besides the being involved in the association is I’ll meet with other colleagues weekly just to touch base and educate them on what I’m experiencing here. And we have some challenges ahead of us. We have a new car ruling coming out where they will ban trucks that are 2010 and older out of the Portobello and Long Beach, which is going to drop about 30% of capacity. And that’s just around the corner. So a lot of folks don’t know about that. And so, you know, just a lot of educating and just cross-referencing to find out like what you’re doing about it. Do you have the right key players in place so that you can continue to operate efficiently through these challenges?

Lee Kantor: [00:13:05] Yeah, education is so important and it’s also you have to get ahead of these things because I see it so many times that that rule is passed or regulation is passed and they don’t understand the unintended consequences of that. You know, a couple of years down the road and then all of a sudden everybody’s scrambling and they’re like, how did this happen? You know, it could be one sentence in a big, you know, legal proceeding that happened. And all of a sudden now it’s a fire drill for everybody.

Rolina Camello: [00:13:36] Right. And one of the things to Lee about being ahead of the curve is that there’s also incentives in play for those who who want to be ahead of the curve. Ev trucks is another big term that we’ve been all dancing around here over the last year. Electric trucks. Years ago, it was LNG. It keeps getting more and more complex and we have a big goal to hit zero emission here in the next five years. So, you know, I always find it fascinating educating myself so that I can educate my team here at Trans International and what regulations are coming up and then what options do we have for electric vehicles and electric trucks And then how is that infrastructure going to look? How is it going to roll out? What days and what locations are they looking at, putting this infrastructure in place? So there’s a lot of things that you can do. And I feel like knowledge is key and it’s it’s almost like you’re investigating every day on on what new things that you can do and what things you can take advantage of as well.

Lee Kantor: [00:14:38] Now, what other trends do you see kind of moving ahead in the trucking world? You mentioned electronic vehicles. What are you seeing any of these autonomous vehicles popping up or is this kind of still a science fiction dream?

Rolina Camello: [00:14:53] You know what, it’s funny you mention that. I was just talking to a colleague yesterday and it is very real. I’m not sure the rollout date. I know there’s a good handful of people that are for it just for for safety reasons and also because capacity. I my opinion might be a little bit jaded on that. I mean, you hear what’s going on with Tesla and their, you know, automated driving system and it’s just I don’t think we’re quite there yet, but I don’t think that’s something that we that’s pie in the sky. I think it will it will come to pass. It’s something that that I think it’s inevitable and there’s lots of different ways to use that automation. It could be just on a local move or, you know, something to that nature. There’s a lot of the rigs at the terminals that run automated and they move containers and there’s nobody even in the truck driving it. And that happens now through, I believe it’s Magnetic Technologies.

Lee Kantor: [00:15:51] Now, what about the kind of driver shortage you been hearing a lot of that. Is there some room in that area for some solutions that can alleviate some of that?

Rolina Camello: [00:16:04] You know what? That’s I think the driver shortage problem is something that I’ve seen throughout my last 20 years in this industry. We’ve always had difficulties keeping drivers and retaining drivers, fighting to get the drivers paid properly and things to that nature. It’s always something that a lot of people are now thinking drivers and we have driver appreciation days and such, but it’s always been a challenge to keep drivers and to bring new drivers into the community. One of the hopes that I’ve heard out there with my associations is that with these new electric vehicles and newer truck models, it’s a lot different, right? It’s not like riding your normal diesel truck. And so it makes it a lot, I guess, a lot more attractive for younger drivers to step into the seat and take up that gig.

Lee Kantor: [00:16:54] Now, what do you need more of? How can we help you?

Rolina Camello: [00:16:59] You know what I would say? Nobody really knows who trans international is, and I’m trying to market my company. A lot of people don’t know who we are. We’ve been in business for 25 years, but we’ve been very busy with our customers that we’ve had long term relationships with. And we’re ready to grow. We’re going to be starting up a new operation out in Houston, Texas, and Savannah, as well as we see continual container growth and movement out that way. So just marketing and telling folks about trans international trucking and in what we do.

Lee Kantor: [00:17:34] And then if somebody wants to learn more, have a more substantive conversation with you or somebody on the team, what’s the website.

Rolina Camello: [00:17:41] Our website is w ww dot trans i n. T. T r. U c k. I and g. So that’s trans int trucking dot com.

Lee Kantor: [00:17:54] Well, thank you so much for sharing your story today. You’re doing such important work and we appreciate you.

Rolina Camello: [00:17:59] Thank you so much, Lee.

Lee Kantor: [00:18:01] All right. This is Lee Kantor. We’ll see y’all next time on Association Leadership Radio.

Tagged With: Rolina Camello, Trans International Trucking Inc.

Scott Snider With Exit Planning Institute

September 30, 2022 by Jacob Lapera

Scott Snider
Association Leadership Radio
Scott Snider With Exit Planning Institute
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EPIScott SniderScott Snider is the President of Exit Planning Institute (EPI), which is widely recognized as the authority on exit planning in the United States and offers the Certified Exit Planning Advisor (CEPA) credential program. Scott earned the CEPA credential in 2008 and saw the potential for growing the exit planning discipline within the financial planning industry. Scott and his father Chris Snider purchased EPI in 2012 and have grown the number of CEPAs from 120 to over 3,000. Since the start of the pandemic, EPI has expanded its curriculum to include an online CEPA Masterclass and an in-person CEPA Executive course.

In addition to the rapid expansion of the CEPA community, Scott Snider lives his life according to the value acceleration model the program espouses and teaches. He started his first business at 17 and exited 7 years later. Scott continuously educates businesspeople and entrepreneurs about incorporating succession planning in their financial plans through his writing and speaking.

Connect with Scott on LinkedIn and follow EPI on Facebook and Twitter.

What You’ll Learn In This Episode

  • About Exit Planning Institute
  • Personal experiences with exit planning
  • Goals for the Exit Planning Institute as they continue to grow

This transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:02] Broadcasting live from the business radio studios in Atlanta, Georgia. It’s time for Association Leadership Radio. Now, here’s your host.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:20] Lee Kantor here another episode of Association Leadership Radio and this is going to be a good one. Today on the show, we have Scott Snider with the who’s the President of the Exit Planning Institute. Welcome, Scott.

Scott Snider: [00:00:34] Hey, Lee. Thanks for having me.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:36] I’m so excited to learn what you’re up to. Tell us a little bit about Exit Planning Institute, how you servin’ folks.

Scott Snider: [00:00:42] Yeah, sure. So the Exit Planning Institute primarily serves professional advisors. So more specifically, that likely is a financial advisor, a accountant or a consultant to business owners. And so what we’re trying to do at EPRI is surround the the lower middle market or small business owner with the right holistic minded team to help them grow value in their business and align their business personal and financial goals. So EPI serves and educates the professional advisor that then goes out and surrounds the business owner with a high quality team.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:17] Now, when it comes to exit planning for folks that are the ilk that you describe, you know, these kind of folks that have spent their career building a practice and growing it, is there some kind of maybe a misconception of the value of it if they just kind of think like, oh, it’s time to retire and then I’m going to call it and I’ll just, you know, hey, hey, my practice up for sale. And then there’s kind of smack in the face of you think it’s worth what, Like if you don’t plan this, right? Aren’t you in for kind of a really big surprise?

Scott Snider: [00:01:51] You are really hit. You hit the nail on the head for sure. We talk about it at API as very successful companies versus very significant ones. And if there’s a business owner listening to the show right now, you probably feel I think most business owners feel very prideful and very proud of what they’ve done. They feel very successful. They likely are successful, right? They have great people. They have great customers. They’re likely kind of the heartbeat of their culture, if you will. They might have a strong balance sheet, have a good pal, might live a nice lifestyle. And then to your point, when they go to sell this company a decade from now, or if you’re a baby boomer business owner, right, that’s maybe 65 years old, you started your business back when you were 30 out of the shed in your backyard or your garage or your bedroom. You’ve owned this thing for 35 years and you go to sell this thing. And to your point, I love how you use it. You’re kind of smacked across the face because in fact, the buyer on the other end now has called your baby ugly. They’re saying, look, it’s either not what you think it’s worth or unfortunately maybe not worth anything at all. And that’s a I think, a big issue. It’s a big issue across the United States and a big issue across the globe, as many business owners, regardless of age, primarily focus in on what they’re most passionate about, and that’s growing their business. What they don’t realize is that just because you have a successful company year over year doesn’t necessarily mean that you have something of significance or something that’s worth that’s that’s something that’s valuable and transferable. So you’re you’re spot on. Many owners forget to concentrate on the end and only concentrate in the moment.

Lee Kantor: [00:03:30] Now, this came very clear to me. I’ll never forget it. My background is in marketing, so I have I’m kind of paying attention to marketing when it comes to businesses. So I had a dentist that I went to regularly love the dentist, and then all of a sudden, you know, he got older, just like you described probably in his mid sixties, and then he sold the practice to somebody else. And I went to that person one time and then I’m like, Why am I going to this dentist is a brand new dentist. I can go to any dentist. You know, I’ve always gone to this other guy because I’ve been there going to him for 20 years. Why am I going to this new person? Why don’t I? And I had moved since then and I was trying driving to see my old dentist and now I’m like, Why am I driving all this way? There has to be a dentist near me. I didn’t have any connection with this new person, so they bought a business and the client who was me that had no kind of loyalty, they had no, I wasn’t invested in this new person. I always liked my old person. So I became clear to me like this person bought a business that really is a brand new business. Like unless there’s a really elegant kind of way to hand this off. And maybe they would have had them kind of do some of my work and over the over years to build some trust. So if you don’t plan for this and you just think you’re going to just find somebody and say, Hey, here’s a business, buy this. I got 100 clients. You don’t have this new person doesn’t have 100 clients.

Scott Snider: [00:05:02] Right? So I think you’re I think you’re spot on. These are actually some of these, like service based businesses, physician’s office, dentists, veterinarian practices. There have a lot of goodwill and a lot of that goodwill is usually with their people. So to your point. Couple of things. One from the the original dentist, right? The guy that you like to go see, what he was able to sell his practice. Right. So, so good for him. I think that that’s great. However, you know, if you’re again, in that realm of things, if you’re in that service base kind of businesses, when you’re approaching your kind of ideal exit or we have to start thinking about to ensure a good exit and a high multiple. Right. Maybe your dentist could have actually sold his business for much more, but they built a business that sounds like a really nice lifestyle company built around one single dentist. To your point, integrating other other people, having the right customer experience overall, something maybe unique to that that that dentist that that that’s practice culture, people, clients, systems processes that’s really what that person was buying was that if you just kind of want I always kind of think about it in these smaller companies that are service based. Well, you know, to your point, you’re kind of married to the dentist. So when that dentist leaves, you’re likely going you’re likely going somewhere else. And so I think that if I was waiting to buy that business right, I would just wait for that person to just retire. Why would I buy his book of business when likely they’re tied to that dentist that you weren’t tied to the brand? That was the dentistry office, right? You were tied to the dentist, the individual. So I think there’s and you see a lot of that. There’s obviously a huge amount of businesses in our small and our small business market that tend to have a owner operator type feel and the business is very dependent on them.

Lee Kantor: [00:06:51] So how do you help your members kind of rethink the plan? Because, you know, for a lot of folks that start a business, you know, maybe they were disgruntled and they go, I’m going to do this myself and I’m going to, you know, I hate my boss, so I’m going to start my own practice or my own firm. And then how do you kind of help them prevent what we were discussing, where that the client is buying a brand? They’re not buying an individual because when you’re relying on that individual that’s fragile and it’s probably not worth anywhere near as much as if it was a if they were falling in love with a brand.

Scott Snider: [00:07:28] Yeah. No, I think you’re absolutely right. So we would do what? And so we combat that by teaching what we call the value acceleration methodology. It’s a process that integrates three elements business, personal and financial. These three elements that I think every business owner has and gives them a framework that brings these longer term goals and strategies down into one year strategies in the 90 day sprints. But basically what you’re saying is, and what we would call three challenges that every owner face, right? So number one, the first challenge is, is that they actually if you looked at some of our state of owner readiness research, we just released one in the understanding business owners in the state of Colorado every time time and again, I don’t care what state we’re in. The first question we ask is, is having an exit and transition strategy important to your your future and the future of your business? 95% agreed in some way, shape or form, 61% strongly agreed with that statement. But what we’ve been talking about over the last few minutes is their kind of their goals and objectives and way of thinking don’t match that statement because they’re actually not doing anything about it, which is challenge one. They actually believe it’s important. Yes. They’re not doing anything about it because they don’t think it’s urgent. Well, I’m not ready to sell now. I’ll do it when the time comes to or maybe maybe 18 months, 24 months before I go to sell my company. It’s kind of like readying a house for sale.

Scott Snider: [00:08:53] Right. Let’s paint the doors. Let’s get some some fresh paint on the inside. Maybe re landscape a little bit. Let’s get this thing position for sale. And that’s just not how it works. Challenge two that would definitely hit your your dentist example is whether you’re a huge business with multiple employees generating millions of dollars of revenue or a smaller owner operator type business with only a few people. We are all subject to what we call these five D’s, these things that involuntarily force us out of our companies, something like our global pandemic, something like a partner dispute, a death, a disability, something that particularly in these lifestyle owner operator businesses force us out of the a force us out these content these these unbeknownst to us things that that happen. Right. And then last I think many owners are concentrated on generating a nice income not generating value. Right. How many times you walk into an owner’s business and maybe you’re looking at their metrics or their key performance indicators and you’re looking at things like customer retention, lead generation, customer satisfaction, efficiency scores. You don’t see a lot of things that relate to how much more value did I create in my business this month or this quarter or this year? So those three challenges are really combated by the value acceleration methodology, which is what we’re teaching to those certified exit planning advisors that then go out and teach those business owners and align with those business owners to create a company of significance.

Lee Kantor: [00:10:23] So then who are your members? Are they kind of consultants that want to help folks exit in a successful manner, or are they you know, maybe they’re already CPAs or they’re already kind of in a business that touches on some of these elements? Who is a member?

Scott Snider: [00:10:41] Yeah, our members are financial advisors, CPAs, accountants or consultants. So they’re going to come back. They’re going to come with three different specialties, right? So you have the business, so you have the CPA, the attorney, the consultant on that, and then you have the personal and financial side, which is typically their financial advisor. So any and all of those types of advisors, you can think about it as anybody that’s really surrounding the business owner in an advisory capacity is coming to API to get trained and how to be a better advisor, how to be a more holistic minded advisor, and how to think about those three challenges that owners have and how to implement the methodology to combat them.

Lee Kantor: [00:11:20] So when should a business owner start thinking about their exit? Is it one of those things where as soon as you start, you should be kind of picturing at least or planning for the end in mind 100%?

Scott Snider: [00:11:34] I would say that whether you’re 25 years old and just launching your very first business as a new entrepreneur or you’re 65 or 70 years old, trying to more immediately harvest the value from your company and move into the next phase of your life. You should be focusing on exit planning. Now, we always say at RPI that exit planning is present tense, not something that you do in the future. You focus on right now. If you focus on exit planning right now, not only will you have a better business year over year, a more successful company, but you’ll be building a business that for the is is more valuable and transferable for the future that’s aligned to your business, personal and financial goals. Or the short answer is right now we should all be practicing exit planning if we’re owners.

Lee Kantor: [00:12:12] Now, you mentioned kind of a membership that involves kind of wealth advisors and CPAs and folks like that. How much of their time are they spending even discussing this? You know, even if they’re never a member of your association, Are these conversations are even having with their clients or are they kind of, you know, is the CPA like, hey, I’m doing their taxes and, you know, I’ll give them a pal every quarter or whatever. And it’s like that they’re are they’re kind of on their own.

Scott Snider: [00:12:41] Yeah, I would say that if you asked me that question like ten years ago, I would have said that no one’s really talking about it. Right? The owner certainly not talking about it because they’re focused on income generation, not value creation. They’re focused on short term, not long term. And the advisor is, to your point, concentrating on their expert expertise. So if I’m the accountant, I’m concentrating on the financials and the tax position from the if I’m the financial advisor, well, I don’t really care about the business because I’m really talking about helping the owner in their investment portfolio. And if I’m the consultant, well, I don’t really care about what they want to do personally because I’m here to grow the business. And so ten years ago I think many advisors, although very much experts inside of their space, didn’t come with a holistic approach. Nowadays, I think more conversations are being had both by advisor and owner from an owner’s perspective. Last year we saw one of the hottest markets in our country’s history high multiples, a lot of businesses being sold, primarily driven by the baby boomers who are the average owner this year. The average baby boomer business owner this year is 67 years old. And according to an NY study that came out just last year, they said that the average owner starts thinking about exit and transition when they’re 63.

Scott Snider: [00:13:56] So I think that the market is prime time. So more owners are saying, Hey, you know, you’re my most trusted advisor as my CPA. You’ve been around for a while and now I’m thinking about transitioning. How do I get out of this business? How do I sell it? And then the advisors are a lot more educated because the market has come along and to this the more holistic minded market. And if you look down the generational stream, if you will, to people in their forties or early fifties, these Gen Xers, well, their generational characteristics tell us that they’re actually more focused on optimizing their time, they’re more focused on investing and saving money appropriately, and they’re more focused on a balance of life. And if you are appropriately doing exit planning, these things all come to you, right? We’re talking kind of come back to this organizing principle, this balance of business, personal and financial goals. So I think in 2022 and beyond, I think many advisors and owners are having these conversations more frequently. And I think that’s why you see this exit planning space or exit planning profession really as a hot topic within the in the business ownership realm or in the professional advisory space.

Lee Kantor: [00:15:06] Now when you’re talking to a CPA that maybe isn’t doing this right now or is learning about Exit Planning Institute, is this something they’re like, Oh, where have you been all my life? Or is this something where it’s like, Oh great, something else I have to learn or something else I have to do? And I like to just stay in my lane and I’m not I don’t want to start being responsible for an exit and that kind of thing, because I’m just I don’t know, the mindset of a lot of CPAs are just let me do your taxes. You know, I’m not here to help you grow. I’m here to help count your money.

Scott Snider: [00:15:46] Right? That might that might not be their role. So I think that a lot of people, when you think about exit planners, they think that it’s going to be a new service line or they think about this person that’s a consultant, what we would call like a value advisor, this person that actually goes in and runs the methodology. To your point, I agree a lot of the CPAs and a lot of the financial advisors who work on the personal and financial side, they don’t work on the business, so they’re not here to help you position your business for for sale. They’re not here to work on these mitigating risk business improvements. But what they are here to do is align your personal. On financial plan with your business plan. And so though they might not run like the CPA might not come in and say, look, I want to do the exit planning. They might say, look, I want to stay in my lane and I want to work with my expertise, which is giving you good business advice, doing your taxes and mitigating some risk in that realm. I think any advisor, though, this adviser of the future, if you will, that wants to work with business owners, needs to understand what it takes to exit a company, even though they might not do it. So many of our members actually don’t do the work. They come in and become a certified exit planning advisor and maintain a membership with us because they always want to continuously be evolving their thinking and their position with business owners.

Scott Snider: [00:17:02] And so there’s people that are what we call CPAs that are these influencers and educators. They’re here to kind of help the owner down the exit path, though they might introduce somebody on the other side of the coin, which is the value advisor that will come in and run this, run this methodology and actually ready the business for sale, whether that’s an internal or internal or external exit. I think for the most part these days, given the topics hot, most people are like, Oh man, I know. I didn’t know Exit Planning Institute existed. Right? It’s the the running joke in our office. If you just kind of think about exit planning institute and know very little about exit planning, you guys probably think we’re funeral directors or something. But nonetheless. Yeah I think people today are, are certainly saying, okay, my business owners are starting to talk about this transition, this exit, the succession plan. I’m not necessarily equipped to have this conversation. Where can I have it? And so they’re turning to the API that you’re turning, you’re turning to the Exit Planning Institute to get the right credentials, courses, content and community to have these type of conversations and bring the right people in. If it’s not you that’s going to go do that work.

Lee Kantor: [00:18:10] So now in your association, is it kind of a national virtual association? Are there chapters around the country where people meet in person? Sure. How do you kind of work it?

Scott Snider: [00:18:23] Certainly, yeah. So we’re a global organization, though, I think primarily we’re certainly here in the United States. We have about 25,000 advisors in the overall community, and 4000 of those 25,000 have the Certified Exit Planning Advisor credential or designation, primarily here in the United States. But EPRI is technically in about 18 different countries across the world. So obviously since two years ago and our pandemic changed our world, we’ve certainly become more virtual than not. So I would say today the API community and the people that associate to it are virtual and in person. So we have weekly think tanks that allow advisors to get together and have deeper conversations and network that are virtual so you can tune in from anywhere across the world. And then we have our chapter network, which has about 20 to 25 different chapters around the United States, where people come together on a monthly basis to actually to meet and to meet in person and and collaborate and network there. And on a larger scale, we have something that’s called the Exit Planning Summit. It’s the largest exit planning centric event in the United States. So if you’re looking to further your knowledge or get associated with some experts within the space, the summit is a place where we bring together about 1000 people each year to talk exit planning and have different experiences and different innovative ideas along the way. And so we have both virtual and in-person options depending on how deep you want to go.

Lee Kantor: [00:19:56] So what’s your backstory? How did you get involved in this line of work?

Scott Snider: [00:19:59] Yeah, interesting backstory for sure. So I’m an exited owner, so I started my business at the seat in my geometry class when I was 16 years old. I probably should have been paying more attention, but I really wanted to start my business and so I started that and was able to sell it when I was 24 years old. The interesting twist to this story is that my father, Chris, who’s the creator of the value acceleration methodology, which is in Chris’s my dad’s book, Walking to Destiny, we he was a certified exit planning advisor, so he was a part of the first 100 CPAs certified back in 2008. So I knew a little bit about exit planning and I struggled with my exit. Even though my dad was a CPA. Primarily, I struggled on the personal side. I remember coming out selling my first business. I was 24 years old. I had a little change in my pocket, probably more so than my buddies that were all graduating and college and starting their careers with a lot of college debt. And I literally I lost my identity. As the year progressed after selling my business, I fell into this Price Waterhouse statistic that we always hear in our space that says 75% of owners profoundly regret selling their business just a year after selling it. And it’s usually from a personal standpoint, they they lost. My phone wasn’t ringing. People didn’t need me. There was no big challenges for the day. There was no massive interaction with people. So I came into my dad’s practice at the time and again, he’s a he’s a CPA. And what I found was many owners had similar issues and my dad was running a process that then he called buy in, prove, grow, sell the Biggs process.

Scott Snider: [00:21:38] And I said, Dad, I think that we need to really change our model. I think what you’ve learned at CPA back in 2008 and what you’re doing with owners today, you’ve create this very interesting approach and outlook that have combined some new concepts and a process that you can go out and execute to see results. And some of the original exit planning principles that were taught to you and CPA in 2008. So fast forward now a couple of years from there, Dad and I ended up buying the Exit Planning Institute, which was based in Chicago, now based here in Cleveland, Ohio. And we flipped our model. Instead of working with business owners, we worked with professional advisors. And again, as we kind of started our conversation, we felt that though the advisors on the team were highly qualified experts within their role, they weren’t unified under one goal and objectives and they weren’t having cross collaboration and communication around these three critical elements business, personal, financial that allowed a business owner to grow from success to significant. So we bought API, implemented what’s now called the value acceleration methodology, and here we are today. But yeah, so it’s an interesting, it’s always an interesting perspective for me. Sometimes I have a hat on that’s an educator, sometimes I have a hat on that’s advisor and almost always I have the hat on. It’s a business owner as well. So so that’s the interesting back story of API and how we, how we came into this business.

Lee Kantor: [00:23:08] Now when you took it over, was it a when did you start kind of feeling like, Hey, we’re on to something? This is something that really is resonating and people are, you know, getting that aha moment and they really do understand what we’re trying to accomplish here.

Scott Snider: [00:23:29] And so we bought it in 2012 and I would say it was probably about 2017 when we really took good root and really started to, you know, J curve, if you will, on the on the entrepreneurial growth and the growth entrepreneurial growth path. And I would say that because in 2013 we changed up the credentialing program that our members were taught, we implemented the value acceleration methodology as core curriculum, and that took a couple of years to kind of take root. And then in 2016, my dad wrote his book Walking to Destiny, and it launched into the market. So we were able to actually hit more people. At the same time we were launching chapters across the United States. So awareness in these different regional pockets came and then we also had about four years under us of doing regular consistent research on over owners through our state of owner readiness research. So I would say between those three or four kind of critical thrust kind of initiatives, 2017, we started to see really major, I would say a major spike in general, generally in professional advisors wanting to be involved, whether that was attending the annual summit, getting involved in our chapters or taking the full leap and becoming a CPA, that’s really, really took root. And we went from about, I think it was about 500 certified exit planning advisors at the end of seven and 17 to over 4000 certified exit planning advisors as we conclude this year. So yeah, pretty, pretty massive growth.

Lee Kantor: [00:25:07] Just five years to be an overnight success, right?

Scott Snider: [00:25:10] Yeah, that and a lot of sleepless nights now.

Lee Kantor: [00:25:13] Do you have any advice for other folks that are leading associations and maybe emerging associations, like how do you kind of attract those early chapter leads? How do you kind of enter a new market with something that I don’t want to say isn’t fully baked but is still evolving?

Scott Snider: [00:25:33] Yeah, I think that you have to have like champions, like boots on the ground, people that really believe in what you do and that are going to spread the word. And I think that, you know, for me, my dad, Chris, who invented the value acceleration methodology, but the founders of API way back in 2005, Peter Christman and Rich Jakab, when they started these kind of original exit planning concepts in their book called The $10 Trillion Opportunity, these people will really think that those three gentlemen were people that sparked an idea what happened when we started to grow the membership and we had these chapter leaders that are running these regional chapters across the United States. Those are really people that carried the torch and that really championed the appropriate way to grow a company, and that’s through the value acceleration methodology. And I think that if I had to look at other association leaders and. Talk to them. I would say that what that truly boils down to me is being very in tune to your member’s needs and your member feedback. And I could tell you that maybe a lot of us experienced this again in 2020 and April and May when we all kind of had to look at ourselves and say, Hey, maybe we were primarily an in-person organization.

Scott Snider: [00:26:40] Now we have to have this virtual component. It really we dialed it back in 2020 and said, We want to focus this year, obviously pivoting our company. But in order to do that, we wanted to pivot the organization in a way that was very representative to our and very driven by the members themselves and creating opportunities, experiences and creating programing that was member driven, not necessarily top down driven, but bottom up, I guess you could say, really creating a community that wasn’t really about the $10 trillion opportunity, wasn’t necessarily about walking Destiny, wasn’t about Chris or Scott Snyder, but it was truly about the certified exit planning advisor and what they were saying. So really understanding in depth with data backed with data backed information, really understanding your members and what they want, I think allows associations to evolve, whether that be evolve and growing and retaining their membership or evolve by growing through some acquisitions of other like minded associations. But always keeping your your member in mind I think is critical.

Lee Kantor: [00:27:49] Well, what do you need more of? How can we help?

Scott Snider: [00:27:52] Sure. I think that spreading the word around exit planning is better for everybody. I think that it’s truly a economic and a social impact. Right. If you think about business owners in the United States and how much they power, whether that be taxes, charitable intent, employment, all of that good stuff, I think that spreading the word of exit planning, you can do that. So you can do that in two ways. Number one, just go to earn CPA and you can interact with all kinds of different stuff there, whether that’s content, people experiences, we have that all. And I would say go on to LinkedIn and just follow me on LinkedIn. Scott Snyder with an I. Snyder and I try to share different stories, experiences and content. I think a pretty authentic approach. I’d like to thank almost daily. So check that out and begin to spread the word about what it means to really grow a company of significance.

Lee Kantor: [00:28:45] Well, Scott, thank you so much for sharing your story. You’re doing important work and we appreciate you. And then before we wrap up one more time, the website and the best just the website would be great.

Scott Snider: [00:28:57] Sure. Cpa dot com and CPA is certified exit planning advisor. So it’s earn CPA dot com.

Lee Kantor: [00:29:04] All right. Well thank you again. It’s so important for entrepreneurs business owners to have the exit they’ve kind of earned and not leave money on the table. If you do this right, if you plan for it, you’re going to be so much more successful when it comes time to have that good exit.

Scott Snider: [00:29:24] Thanks. Yeah. Totally agree.

Lee Kantor: [00:29:26] All right. This is Lee Kantor will sell next time on Association Leadership Radio.

Tagged With: EPI, Exit Planning Institute, Scott Snider

Alon Bender With CLEER Security

September 29, 2022 by Jacob Lapera

Alon Bender
South Florida Business Radio
Alon Bender With CLEER Security
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DTLLogo-Blue-Bannerv2CLEER SecurityAlon BenderAlon Bender is the CEO and founder for CLEER Security, a Miami based cybersecurity startup. Backed by industry leaders, CLEER Security offers a SAAS Cybersecurity solution to help SOC teams respond quicker to the alerts that needs their immediate attention. Prior to his current role, he spent 20 years as enterprise cybersecurity engineer working at the leading cybersecurity vendors including: Trend Micro, Symantec, McAfee and Proofpoint.

He designed and delivered hundreds of cybersecurity solutions to F500, G2000, State and Local Government in the US since 2002. Earlier in his career, he served as EVP Strategy – Network Privacy Inc., CEO & Founder – WingedHat, CTO – IntraTech, CEO & Founder – AB Networks and Cyber Ops Planning Commander – IDF. He relocated from Silicon Valley to South Florida in 2017 and working since to help support and grow local cybersecurity presence building his company here in Miami. He holds twenty-five certifications, in addition to bachelor’s degree in science in applied science and technology from Trinity University.

He is active in the South Florida technology innovation scene. Member of Cybersecurity Advisory Committee at NSU, Levan Innovation Center MDC Cybersecurity Center of the Americas Advisory Committee, member South Florida HIMSS local chapter member.

Connect with Alon on LinkedIn.

What You’ll Learn In This Episode

  • About CLEER security
  • Recipe for success
  • The most valuable lesson he have learned from his previous start-ups
  • Advice to young entrepreneurs that are looking to build B2B software startup

This transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:01] Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in South Florida. It’s time for South Florida Business Radio. Now, here’s your host.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:14] Lee Kantor here another episode of South Florida Business Radio. And this is going to be a good one. But before we get started, it’s important to recognize our sponsor, Diaz Trade Law, Your customs expert today on South Florida Business Radio, we have Alan Bender and he is with CLEER Security. Welcome.

Alon Bender: [00:00:34] Great to be here.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:36] I am so excited to be talking to you about this. This is so important. But before we get too far into things, tell us about CLEER security, how you serve in folks.

Alon Bender: [00:00:45] Yeah, absolutely. I appreciate it. So we CLEER security. We are early stage startup and we are helping organization to deal with the problem of being overwhelmed with the alerts and data. And so if you look at the last five years, the volume of security alerts in security operations has doubled. The staff level didn’t double in any organization that we are aware of. So really the solution is to automate more and reduce the workload in a security operations center and allow companies to respond quicker and faster to to security threats.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:28] Now, for the listeners who aren’t kind of in the weeds of this as much as you are, can you share a little bit about cybersecurity and and the kind of maybe the evolution of the bad actors? At one point, you know, there were movies where the bad actors or teenagers in a basement, you know, with Cheetos and Red Bull. But today’s bad actor, they they’re much more sophisticated. This is a full time job. This is very organized. So can you speak to that a little bit to educate the listener about where we’re at and what we’re dealing with today?

Alon Bender: [00:02:03] Yeah, absolutely. So, yeah, you’re absolutely right about that. Today’s what we call bad actors are sophisticated, that it’s really an underground economy. It’s a very large economy, actually. And what you’re seeing, the type of threats that you you’re seeing, especially since COVID is really going after what we call the human behavior, meaning that you may get a link. So you may heard the term phishing emails say, hey, your PCR results arrive, click here, it’s urgent and it really takes you to an identity stealing basically website or here’s your Amazon gift card or Apple gift card, whatever the case may be, all the way to more sophisticated attacks where the bad actors are assuming or basically stealing an identity and assuming an identity of a manager and finding the way into an organization, sending a message on behalf of the manager to the people that report to the manager, asking them to do something with the typically with the sense of urgency, Hey, I need this account number. Sign your CFO. I’m on the road, please send it to me a.S.A.P. And unfortunately, those type of sophisticated attacks are extremely powerful from the bad actors perspective. And the main motivation here is really is money. There are some government actors that are looking for sensitive data, but for the most, say, a majority of those type of attacks, the driver, the main driver is basically they are looking to make money and they are fortunately making a lot of money.

Lee Kantor: [00:03:47] So what’s your back story? How did you get involved in this line of work?

Alon Bender: [00:03:52] Yeah. So I’ve been walking actually in Silicon Valley before I moved to Florida back in 2017, and I’ve been working with the companies, Fortune 500 companies from all the verticals from NASCAR to Nike to Chevron to Bank of America and others. And what I’ve noticed is that everybody is dealing with the same problem, meaning that DDoS attacks are becoming more sophisticated, they are harder to detect. And if you don’t do take those, then you can really have what is called a response policy in place to go and remediate those as soon as possible. While the different vendors are offering new and shiny tools that will be the best next detection antivirus tools that will block supposedly 100% of threats out there, where the reality is that there’s really no solution. There is no tool that will always block 100% of threats. So this basically turned into an operational nightmare where especially with large organizations, they just can’t keep up with all of the data, all of the alerts that are coming in from all of the different security tools. And they still need to be able to basically investigate every single one because that’s not actually taking place. Many of those alerts are left basically as is. And for the most well known breaches, those alerts actually were buried in the pile of information and no one knew that that’s the alert that they needed to get to a right now. So this is really the background of why we founded Clear Security. With that in mind and with those experiences, seeing those experiences firsthand, working with customers from all verticals.

Lee Kantor: [00:05:40] Now, this is one of the biggest challenges for large organizations especially, is they want to be responsive to their customers. Their customers are expecting kind of almost real time answers and real time information and the ability to get into their accounts. The businesses have to keep the account secure and they have to make sure it’s who they say they are are really who they are. It just and and they’re fighting a force that is just really sharing information and sharing best practices. It’s just it seems like an almost overwhelming challenge. How does clear kind of stay in front of this? Because it just seems like there’s there’s so many challenges in this regard.

Alon Bender: [00:06:28] Yeah, absolutely. And you touch a very important point, which is brands, right? So brands are built in the digital economy on trust. If you don’t trust your back, you may think twice before you sign up or open an account. With Bank A versus bank B, your bank is getting breached and it’s all over the news every other week. So that that has a real impact. So with clear security, what we identified is that most of the breaches. So if you look at the latest, some of the latest reports from the top analysts in the cybersecurity industry, 82% of threats are actually targeting humans people. So what we did with clear security, we build a technology that allows us to identify how people, how humans are being targeted and from there adding that missing visibility to all of those threats so that even if that entire event took place outside of the corporate network, when someone was on their smartphone, working from home, working in a hybrid type of environment where the security team don’t necessarily have full visibility into the user’s activity, by bringing that exposure, we are able to basically add that missing context around how your employees or your people are being targeted and then bring in all of the other signals or security alerts from your existing tools so that you will know which alert you need to respond to right now and fully automate that entire process from there.

Lee Kantor: [00:08:09] So now is the is your ideal customer, are they these kind of are they only enterprise level or does this trickle down to the smaller business as well?

Alon Bender: [00:08:19] Yeah. So it’s very interesting. It’s a good question because we see interest from MSPs or managed security service providers that are typically smaller in size. So one of them from the West Coast that we are working with right now, they have about 115 customers. They very lean, mean a level of staff that don’t have lots of employees. It’s fairly a thin type of environment and they need to manage for their customers. Exactly the. Ability to respond quickly to those type of threats, and they don’t have the ability to add lots of staff. So what we see is that with clear security, we are like a force multiplier. So by adding that automation, we’re able to basically allow the MSP, the service provider, to provide better services, more services without necessarily having to increase the size of their team by doing so. Also keeping their cost costs of a customer, their customer within their profit margin.

Lee Kantor: [00:09:27] Now let’s talk a minute about the South Florida Tech community, especially around cybersecurity. Are you able to find the talent you need there in South Florida or is your team kind of everywhere?

Alon Bender: [00:09:40] Yeah. So we we are all working remotely, but we do have several employees that are based in Florida and South Florida. So most of our employees are local. Finding talent in cybersecurity is not as easy. There is a big gap in the industry. So just a couple of months ago, the White House actually started an initiative trying to address the talent crisis we have in the cybersecurity industry right now. There are 714,000 cybersecurity analyst positions that companies and organizations are trying to fill, and that talent is nowhere to be found. So this is a real problem in the entire industry. And we see some of that also here in Florida, in south Florida. And this is also where I’m involved with several initiatives, working with Miami-Dade College, working with NSU, and then being a member in several associations like James Isay for South Florida and others to basically help build that that cybersecurity talent and that next generation cybersecurity and resources that are desperately needed here in Florida, in South Florida.

Lee Kantor: [00:11:01] Are you finding that the universities are open to allowing some people from industry to help create this curriculum that will kind of train that next generation of cybersecurity expert with the help of industry for these jobs that you know so that your team and others like you can kind of grow your own employees and at least get them pretty trained up just through the universities.

Alon Bender: [00:11:28] Yeah, absolutely. So we’ve been working with clear security, we’ve been working with the Miami-Dade College, for example, last year and also actually right now on internship programs. So working closely with the Miami-Dade College and others to really perform any number of things from what we call mock interview interviews, meaning expose the students to what is expected of them in a real cybersecurity workplace type of environment, all the way to internship programs, which is we’re hiring students, exposing them to cybersecurity. In our case, it’s a startup environment. So using lots of innovation, innovative tools, collaboration tools and other tools that they will most likely see in the in the commercial industry once they go out there. And and the third pillar here is my personal involvement through the different committees, whether it’s an issue or whether it’s a Miami-Dade College. I remember the advisory center of the America Advisory Committee with the Miami-Dade College with NSU. I’m also a member in the Cyber Security Advisory Committee as a member. So that gives us in the private industry an opportunity to influence, communicate and support the students and the next generation cybersecurity talent that is coming out of education.

Lee Kantor: [00:13:03] Now, having come from Silicon Valley where there’s so much innovation and has been around for so long and there’s so much density when it comes to startups, so that when a startup doesn’t go the way that the founder wanted, there’s a place for that founder to land or to mash up with another startup that might be doing something similar. Are you seeing the South Florida kind of ecosystem kind of taking that same tact where they’re trying to increase the number of startups there and as well as giving those founders a place to land when the the startup doesn’t go the way they want?

Alon Bender: [00:13:42] Yeah, absolutely. So the short answer is yes, definitely. The longer answer is that when I first moved here in 2017, all of my. Friends from Silicon Valley thought I’m crazy and two years later they want to join me. So South Florida is becoming a major tech hub, and it’s as real as it gets, not just in cybersecurity, but in innovation in general, from crypto to A.I.. Just a couple of weeks ago, Miami Dade College, for example, they launched a brand new AI center. So I definitely see a lot of opportunity in South Florida like never before, so that when you have that what we call the repeat of serial entrepreneurs that may have started one project or one initiative, they had to pivot to something else. Maybe they were successful more or less. There are plenty of opportunities to participate in the ecosystem, and we have the different communities, frameworks, clubs and associations that really are part of that, a fast growing infrastructure that allows all of that talent to continue and invest from their expertise, from their talent, feeding back into the ecosystem and basically finding their way through collaboration, through maybe exploring new ideas or other ideas, through collaboration with the with the academia. And that’s definitely a growing trend. And it’s a very, very strong here in South Florida.

Lee Kantor: [00:15:27] Now, do you have any advice for other founders in the community? Like what are some of the lessons learned that kind of resonate the most with you?

Alon Bender: [00:15:36] Yeah, I think if I were to be asked this question, probably I would say it all starts with people, right? So that would be probably my number one takeaway for at least for myself. You want to surround yourself typically with people that are smarter and more successful than yourself, and that that opens up lots of opportunity. What I learned from previous startups that I founded or was part of is that it’s really it’s all about the people, frankly. It starts and ends with the people, with the team. From there, it’s really make sure that you talk to your potential customers before you start to build anything. And when you build, make sure that you’re able to prove real value and make that repeatable so it can be like a one off thing, but it really has to be a repeatable process. Always negotiate from a position of strength that’s based on my prior experiences. Make sure that you are always negotiating, whether it’s with investors, whether it’s with the employees, whether it’s with customers. Always make sure that you have. When I say strength, I mean value. So always make sure that you have enough value to offer and that’s really your strength. Stay focus. Focus is key, especially in startup. It’s very easy to get distracted, especially with today’s social media, slack, etc. It’s very easy to get distracted to lose focus, and that applies to also the team that you are part of. Or if you manage a team, make sure that you stay on track. But with that being said, always have enough flexibility to be able to pivot and fine tune and have that as a repeatable process. Listening to your customers, listening to the people that you are working with and proving value.

Lee Kantor: [00:17:35] Now, is there anything in the South Florida Tech scene that you wish that they had more of?

Alon Bender: [00:17:44] I think we have the growing pain of a fast growing tech environment. So I would say I would love to see more cybersecurity talent here. I would love to see more cybersecurity startups there. Not too many cybersecurity startups here in South Florida. I would definitely would love to see more. I’m I believe that I’m not afraid of competition per se. I think there is enough room for everyone. Cybersecurity is an industry. It’s it’s a huge industry and there is an opportunity for everyone. So I would love to see cyber security becoming stronger. And I’m doing at least on my side with all humility, of course, whatever I can to support the different through associations, through the universities, to support that. The trend to attract more cybersecurity talent and grow that cybersecurity tech and. Ecosystem here in South Florida.

Lee Kantor: [00:18:55] So what does clear need more of right now and how can we help? Are you looking for more talent? You need more clients. What would you like to have more of?

Alon Bender: [00:19:04] Yeah. So we are just now launching our first release of our product and we have been reaching out to several organizations and design partners that we have been working with and Will definitely would welcome the opportunity to work with any organization that is looking to increase productivity in their security operations center, and that would like to learn more about a human signal technology, a unique and innovative way to respond to threats that matter. Now.

Lee Kantor: [00:19:37] Well, if somebody wanted to learn more, have a more substantive conversation with you or somebody on the team, what’s the website? What’s the best way to get ahold of you?

Alon Bender: [00:19:44] Yeah, the best way our website is clear sec that c. L e e r s e c dot com. And you can also find me on LinkedIn alone. That’s al0n vendor B and the r and the happy to also help others. If anyone is looking for mentorship as far as guidance in cybersecurity here in South Florida, happy to help whenever I can as as far as clear security will definitely welcome the opportunity to to add more customers to our platform.

Lee Kantor: [00:20:21] Well, Alan, thank you so much for sharing your story. You’re doing important work and we appreciate you.

Alon Bender: [00:20:27] Thank you so much, Lee. Appreciate it.

Lee Kantor: [00:20:29] All right. This is Lee Kantor. We’ll see you all next time on South Florida Business Radio.

 

Tagged With: Alon Bender, CLEER Security

Sylvia Montgomery With SiMMs Solutions for Business & Life, LLC

September 29, 2022 by Jacob Lapera

Sylvia Montgomery
Richmond Business Radio
Sylvia Montgomery With SiMMs Solutions for Business & Life, LLC
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Coach-Karena-ambassadorSiMMs SolutionsSylvia MontgomerySylvia Montgomery is the owner and founder of SiMMs Solutions for Business & Life, LLC. She has dedicated most of her career as a public servant where she spent 30 years at the U.S. Department of Agriculture in Washington, DC. She retired in September 2019 and is now living in her purpose, helping businesses and individuals to live their best lives and be successful.

In this capacity, she’s provided various forms of content for many small businesses in multiple industries, writing blogs, product descriptions, web content, social media posts, service descriptions, landing pages, scripts, biographies, and news releases for nearly 150 clients.

She’s a book editor and has edited nearly 30 non-fiction books that provide knowledge to mainstream individuals to help them succeed in life. She’s a course creator having created, An Introvert’s Guide to Finding Purpose, which helps any individual to realize their purpose, and she’s a podcast host who talks to other entrepreneurs to encourage and inspire everyday individuals to live their purpose.

Connect with Sylvia on LinkedIn and follow her on Facebook.

What You’ll Learn In This Episode

  • How I help people in business and life
  • The importance of purpose to your work
  • What your life looks like when it’s not purpose-driven
  • How we can discover our purpose
  • Ways to stay focused on your purpose

This transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:03] Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in Richmond, Virginia. It’s time for Richmond Business Radio. Now here’s your host.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:16] Lee Kantor here another episode of Richmond Business Radio and this is going to be a good one. But before we get started, it’s important to recognize our sponsor works by consulting solutions, supporting women to lean into their purpose, craft their vision and crush their goals. Today on Richmond Business Radio, we have Sylvia Montgomery with SiMMs Solutions for Business and Life. Welcome, Sylvia.

Sylvia Montgomery: [00:00:43] Hello, Lee. How are you today?

Lee Kantor: [00:00:45] I am doing well. I am so excited to learn what you’re up to. Tell us a little bit about SiMMs. How are you serving folks?

Sylvia Montgomery: [00:00:52] So Sims Solutions is just that. It’s an opportunity to help provide solutions to individuals and businesses, particularly small businesses, because it’s life is hard enough, right? It’s not easy. And so when we have the opportunity to provide solutions or to help in any way, then I just find it an awesome thing to be able to do that. And the solutions I provide are around content creation and copy editing, and that’s particularly to businesses or entrepreneurs who for one reason or another, they may not have time to really take the time to create the copy that they need, the content that they need for their business. And anyone in business knows that content is extremely important in anything that you do. So what I do is I step in there and I help to create that content. And that content can be in just about any form. It can be blog post, social media, email campaigns, news releases, even websites. So anything that a business needs, oftentimes there just isn’t time. And especially with small businesses because we were 1001 hats, right? So just being able to provide that type of help and those types of solutions to businesses, you know, is extremely important. And I also work in the way of copyediting. So when you need someone to look over your work, when you need someone to look over your websites and things of that nature, I also edit books, manuscripts.

Sylvia Montgomery: [00:02:40] So for individuals who are trying to create that next project, that next book project, I’m also available to that. And I’ve helped quite a few businesses over the past couple of years as well as have edited 28 book projects. So, you know, I find that very you know, I love writing and I love proofing. So that’s just something that I love to do. But I really like helping other people to live their best lives and reach their best selves as well. I also provide informational blogs that are very beneficial and useful to businesses, to entrepreneurs who are trying to find solutions to some of their challenges that they have around business. And I am a podcast host where I interview entrepreneurs so that they can help encourage and motivate other entrepreneurs or who are just trying to get started or just getting started. Oftentimes there are people who want to get started in business, but there are so many challenges they see before them and they’re not quite sure what to do, how to do things. And so my weekly podcast helps to inspire, motivate, encourage and provide solutions by even giving them people that they can sort of relate to, associate with and even go to if they need to.

Sylvia Montgomery: [00:04:10] So to provide assistance in that way. And then the other thing I do really is because I’m so focused on purpose, I believe that. No one can really be truly happy or fulfilled in life if they are not living their purpose. And I don’t care what it is we’re doing in life. I work in the federal government for 30 years, and even in doing that, I was not fulfilling my purpose. It is not. It’s just been these past few years when I went on my entrepreneur journey that I am now evolving into the person that I was meant to be in fulfilling my purpose. And so I am on a mission to help others do that as well. So I’ve created a purpose course. I’m an Introverts guide to finding purpose to help introverts extroverts. It really doesn’t matter who you are. I just believe that you will not live your best life until you are fully living in your purpose. And so I provide that opportunity as well. So I’m just really excited right now about the opportunities to come to help other people, and I just want to do it as often as I can for whomever I can.

Lee Kantor: [00:05:26] So let’s dig in a little deeper when it comes to purpose. And I agree with you 100%. If you’re aligned with your purpose, then life is a lot easier and it’s a lot more fulfilling. Do you have any advice for the folks out there who might be struggling, who might be frustrated in the life they’re leading on how to kind of know when you’re on the right track and that you are kind of living a life of purpose or there are some things, are there some clues or some work they can do right now to help them kind of identify what their true north is or should be?

Sylvia Montgomery: [00:06:00] So it’s you know, it’s sort of a tricky question because a lot of times we can be doing things or we can be living a certain way and we find ourselves happy in doing that and we feel a little content and especially if, you know, if everything’s going well for us and if we’re busy, right? It just seems like we’re always having something to do. We’re always on the go. A lot of times that leaves us with not much time to really think about what we’re doing and how we’re living. And if we’re really, really fully happy with what we’re doing with our lives. So I’d say there are quite a few things that we really need to do within us to really a certain whether or not we’re on the path that we’re meant to be. And, you know, even with my course, I have people go back as far back as they can early in their childhood to just really think about what their dreams were when they were small. Because when we’re young, that’s when we’re our authentic selves, right? That’s when we are truly our best selves. We’re young and we’re thinking or thinking outside the box. It’s like no limits, right? And the sky’s the limit for us. But as we get older, we find that as we get older, we go through life.

Sylvia Montgomery: [00:07:24] Life happens. Reality sets in. And all those dreams that we used to have, we no longer have them. We may still have them, but we don’t feel as compelled to move forward with trying to fulfill those dreams because life can hit us hard. And when it does, we tend to feel that that’s just not possible. So one of the things I tell people is go back to your young self, because if we go back there, that is where so many of our answers lie. We can do that. One of the things that I did, even though, like I said, I was in the federal government for 30 years, I always felt myself doing things on the side and I always had people coming to me asking me certain things, certain questions, as if they knew I could help them. I didn’t have solutions then, but it was always as if and even now, you know, people still come to me with certain things. And when that happens, if they come to me enough with those things, then I know that’s what I need to figure out how to do for that individual, or that’s what I need to figure out how to do for more people as part of my solutions package. But a lot of times the answers are right around us. The answers are there.

Sylvia Montgomery: [00:08:45] We’re either not paying attention or we just don’t want to give into it. Because again, when we truly live our purpose, it’s hard. Purpose is not easy. It’s a challenge. And a lot of times we just want to avoid it because we feel that it is too challenging. And that’s why my podcast, I feel, is just so important because it helps people to understand the challenges are going to come in life regardless of what you do. Everyone has challenges, even those who have been successful in being able to live the life that they were meant to live have had challenges. But we talk about how we get over those challenges and we talk about how to get through those things. Even when you’re not living your purpose, you’re going to have challenges. You know something? One of my guests recently said is that choose your heart. Choose your heart because the challenges are going to come. It’s going to be hard either way. So do you want to try to challenge through what it is you are meant to do to get over it? Or do you want to have the challenges of something that’s not even fulfilling yet? So you’re going to have the challenges that are going to come, but let’s have the challenges around what we were meant to do so that we can help you to get over it, because help is out there.

Sylvia Montgomery: [00:10:09] There are people who are there to support, and that’s one of the things that I do at some solutions. So those are two of the things I say. Go back to your childhood and I say, Just look around you. And when you really take time to take time to yourself, when we get away from our busyness and just really think about our lives, there are like a ton of questions that I put out there for people to just answer about themselves. One of the things I have them do is to define Who are you? Answer that question. A lot of us, if you ask who are you, they’re not able to really tell you who they are. So that I think there’s so many questions that that help us to answer that question about ourselves. So, you know, there are some exercises there, but really spending time with yourself because the. The answer lies within you. It’s there. And guess what? It’s been there all the time. So our purpose is for us. Our purpose is it’s what makes us truly happy. It’s what truly fulfills us. And if we’re not living it, we might be content for a little bit, but that’s always going to be something that’s missing.

Lee Kantor: [00:11:23] Now, how do you recommend folks who say, okay, I believe every word you’re saying, I am going to now live my life with purpose, on purpose, and I am. So that’s going to mean I’m changing a little bit. You know, like you said, you were working 30 years in the government and now you’re an entrepreneur and, you know, coming to a family or a group of friends who were part of that, they might, you know, with your best interests at heart, might not they might kind of I don’t want to say sabotage, but they might not be as enthusiastic about that drastic change as you were about making it, which the change is difficult by itself. So how do you kind of protect yourself and insulate yourself, inoculate yourself from some of the negativity that might come with a change of directions, especially if it is kind of drastic in terms of what you used to be and what you’d like to be?

Sylvia Montgomery: [00:12:20] Mm hmm. That’s a very good question. And again, as I said, you know, it’s challenging, it’s hard. And that’s even one of the challenges, just trying to stay focused. So, you know, once you have an idea, you’ve come to a certain of what your purpose is. And you you know, you said this is what I want to do and this is the course I want to take. Yeah, there are definitely going to be obstacles. You know, I’m not even going to I’m not even going to lie about that. There are going to be so many obstacles. There going to be so many distractions. There are going to be people around you who will not understand and who will be very feel very free to tell you, oh, just stay where you are or God, you should just do this. You know, they’re even going to put words in your mouth and tell you what you should be doing. But that is why that weekly podcast is so important, because we put that out there, the importance of understanding that those types of obstacles and those are just, you know, those aren’t even the real, real like work related obstacles. That’s just a mindset thing, you know, it’s important that mindset change doesn’t happen overnight. That’s a process. So you have to surround yourself around the right people. And if you’ve never been around the right people again, that’s not an overnight thing. You have to look for the right people. You’ve got to join groups, be a part of networks. There’s so much stuff happening online now. There are so many Facebook groups out there just for just about anything that you can think of.

Sylvia Montgomery: [00:13:56] So if you just do some searching out there, you will find a Facebook group that can relate to what you’re going to or what it is you’re trying to do. Even maybe so, I would say connect with the people that you really need to help you to think a little bit better, be a little bit more positive about what it is you’re trying to do. Mindset is extremely important and actually that’s one of the places I start from with my course, because again, we’re talking about when you’re talking about mindset, you’re talking about changing your belief system and changing what you have probably thought or believed all of your life. And a lot of that belief system is stuff that we learned along the way as we grew up from our parents and then from generations and generations. You know, it could be a generational thing. You know, you don’t do this or you don’t do that or you shouldn’t do that. One of the misconceptions that are one of the beliefs that I had growing up with that, one of the things I used to hear a lot was money don’t grow on trees. And while that is true, that’s a very true statement. It does not grow on trees. But what that led me to believe is that money is very, very, very limited. You know, there’s not a lot out there. And I believe to this day, there is so much out there, we just need to know how to access it. So it’s about accessing the money where it is. Otherwise it can leave you in a state of feeling very limited and that you have very few options and that there’s no way to get to anything.

Sylvia Montgomery: [00:15:30] But that’s a mindset thing and that’s just something that how it just triggers and it can change everything. Now, if I really believe that it’s there, I just need to figure out how to get to it, then that changes everything you see. So that just totally changed how I can now feel a little freer about how I move. Otherwise I feel that my future is hopeless and I’ll never be able to do the things that I want to do in life. So I think that. Dealing with, you know, mindset because that is what’s going to help us to be able to get through some of those challenges that you just named off. And another thing that I do is I provide six weeks of goal setting, well, six sessions of goal setting. And in that, what it is, is so once you’ve discovered or decided what it is you need to be doing, you may not have a clue how to even get started. And so the six sessions of goal setting just sort of helps to get you on the right course, even connect you with people that you need to connect to in that regard if that is the case. So there are definitely some things you can do, but you’re going to have to if you don’t have the right people around you. That’s the biggest challenge. Getting past that and understanding that you’re going to hear so many negative things before you even get started, really. And that can keep us from getting started. And that’s the one thing we don’t want.

Lee Kantor: [00:17:00] Now, is there an ideal client of yours? Do you have a niche that you’re you’re really kind of good at, or is this for pretty much anybody? Like, do you work primarily with solopreneur or with big corporate people? Do you work with executives? Is there a niche that that your solutions are best suited for?

Sylvia Montgomery: [00:17:23] So I work mostly with small businesses for the content creation. I understand that time, you know, you just don’t have the time to put in to, you know, that type of work because there’s research involved. And so I, you know, help them with that and get a lot of that done to actually get the blog posts and things of that nature. And I’ve worked with businesses in just about any industry. My favorite industry, though, is finance, and I love writing about entrepreneurship in itself. So but I’ve worked in many different industries as far as the purpose. I’m looking more toward individuals who just do not feel fulfilled in life. And my guess is the reason you don’t feel fulfilled is because you’re not doing what you are meant to be doing. We all have a purpose from the moment we were born, just as I said, from when we were our smallest selves, there is something we were meant to be doing and if we are not doing it, then we’re not completely fulfilled. And I just want to help people to live their best lives.

Lee Kantor: [00:18:30] So if somebody wants to learn more about your practice, maybe get on your calendar for a chat. Is there a website? What is the best way to get a hold of you or somebody on your team?

Sylvia Montgomery: [00:18:43] Yes. So they can go to my website, which is Sims Hyphen Solutions Bill.com and that Sims with two M’s hyphen solutions bill.com. I’m also on Instagram. Sims underscore solutions and they can find me there and they can email me at business at. Sam Solutions BLOCK.

Lee Kantor: [00:19:16] Well, congratulations on all the success and the momentum. You’re doing such important work and we appreciate you.

Sylvia Montgomery: [00:19:24] But thank you, Lee. I appreciate being on your show today. Thank you for having me.

Lee Kantor: [00:19:28] Well, thank you for sharing your story. All right. This is Lee Kantor. We’ll see you all next time on Richmond Business Radio.

 

Tagged With: LLC, SiMMs Solutions for Business & Life, Sylvia Montgomery

Dennis Li With Reeske

September 29, 2022 by Jacob Lapera

Dennis-Li
Startup Showdown Podcast
Dennis Li With Reeske
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ReeskeDennis LiDennis Li is a credentialed actuary, ex-insurance business leader, and co-founder of Reeske. He strives to challenge the status quo and accelerate change.

Dennis delivers a positive impact through innovation & technology, in a sustainable, meaningful, and scalable way.

Connect with Dennis on LinkedIn

What You’ll Learn In This Episode

  • About Reeske and how it works
  • Aspects of the Startup Showdown process that are most beneficial
  • Difficulties when starting a company
  • Advice for other startups that are getting started

This transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:00] Welcome back to the Startup Showdown podcast, where we discuss pitching, funding and scaling startups. Join us as we interview winners, mentors and judges of the monthly $120,000 pitch competition powered by Panoramic Ventures. We also discuss the latest updates in software Web three, health care, tech, fintech and more. Now sit tight as we interview this week’s guest and their journey through entrepreneurship.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:39] Lee Kantor here another episode of Startup Showdown podcast, and this is going to be a good one. But before we get started, it’s important to recognize our sponsor Panoramic Ventures. Without them, we couldn’t be sharing these important stories. Today on startups, on startup shutdown, we have Dennis Li with Reeske. Welcome, Dennis.

Dennis Li: [00:00:59] Hey, thanks for having me. Glad to be here.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:01] Well, I’m excited to learn what you’re up to. Tell us about your startup.

Dennis Li: [00:01:06] Yeah. Yes. So we are in short tech companies and we redefine how millennials protect their money using embedded insurance with AI.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:17] So if they’re not using your service, what are they doing or are they doing anything?

Dennis Li: [00:01:22] Great question. So that’s a problem, right? When you look at the broader picture, millennials, personal finance today is very fragile for an average person. We estimated three quarters, 75% of their income is subject to unprotected risk like death, illness, disabilities, all these horrible stuff. You know, a small portion of people choose to buy it from a traditional broker and agent. But most people just involuntarily choose inaction just because there is no good digital solution to do it. And we’re here to bring insurance to everyone and make it accessible using data.

Lee Kantor: [00:02:00] Are you communicating with these millennials directly or do you use intermediaries?

Dennis Li: [00:02:06] Yeah, great question. So we actually access these millennials through fintech company. So our business model where B2C. So we empower B2C, fintech companies who offer income protection insurance. By that I mean life insurance, disability insurance and critical illness insurance and all that. You know, non-compulsory product, complicated product. We access customer through through these channels.

Lee Kantor: [00:02:34] So what was the genesis of the idea? How did you come up with this?

Dennis Li: [00:02:38] Yeah, so I didn’t really come up with it because before I started Risky actually live and breathing insurance for nine years I was an actuary, so we actually built products, insurance product from the ground up. But what I realize is, you know, product innovation is great, but when it comes to insurance, we’re not there yet, meaning that we struggle even as a big company to access customer economically just to be getting in front of them when it gets to digital channel, it’s a huge challenge. And the second thing is, you know, even if we get in front of them, how do we convey the value proposition now without like a broker, an agent to kind of walk them through? So it’s really these two barriers we need to get over first before we think about developing new product. And that’s really what risky set out to do to solve the distribution inefficiency problem and also the customer engagement problem using, you know, the newly available technology and the data.

Lee Kantor: [00:03:42] Now, I would imagine that this is an interesting time when it comes to insurance. There’s so much information and there’s so much availability for a person if they wanted it on one hand, right? It’s all there. Everything’s there. But then it’s just almost overwhelming. Or they’re thinking about things they don’t want to think about, so they just kind of either put it off or they ignore it.

Dennis Li: [00:04:05] Yeah. Spot on. That’s the problem we try to solve. You know, up until today, in the past five or six years, the way life and health insurance company tried to try to market digitally is mostly direct to consumer. But, you know, you just talk about the challenges, right? It’s very hard to use advertisement to get people to just all of a sudden think about insurance. You know, it’s very hard to convert people that way and it is also have anti selection. So most people end up buying life that will be poor risk. Right. So it just it’s just a really leaky funnel at many levels. And, you know, we’re trying to come in here and figure out where are the customer today. Right. They are looking for insurance. These are necessary evil. You know, insurance is always something that people have to think about. But where is a place that people already thinking about insurance? They already trust the customer. They already trust the brand. So being part of that, right, being part of that, to engage with customers and also provide a level of personalization to be more efficient in conveying value proposition is what we do and what we do very differently from other other companies.

Lee Kantor: [00:05:20] Now, let’s talk for a second about your journey. You mentioned being an actuary insurance, kind of seasoned insurance veteran. How did you kind of make the leap into a startup which, you know, the talk about risk, you know, that’s not for the faint of heart for somebody who’s so numbers oriented. How did you kind of wrap your head around the risk of kind of founding a startup and doing something like that? Because that seems it’s not for everybody.

Dennis Li: [00:05:55] Yeah, that’s always an interesting topic because I’m an entrepreneur. Coming from actuarial background is still rare and every time I meet one it was it just makes me smile. Right. And I think, you know, even since I was young, I always like to build stuff, you know, I always really creative, want to solve problems, you know, just throughout my, my, my, my journey, I’m always trying to find these opportunities. And when I get into college, I started to learn about insurance. So I didn’t really know anything about insurance before college. And that just really get fascinated about how much legacy Bowdoin has, how much you know, because it really touch upon multiple subject right is finance is you know, it touch upon behavioral psychology. So all these things really just get me fascinated. I started my career as an actuary. You know, I work in different functions finance, building, product, technology. So it just allow me to see where exactly the market gap is. And at some point, right. I understand that if I want to, you know, have a bigger impact, I it’s very challenged. I’m very challenged to do that in a big corporation. So just have to pull the plug at one point. And, you know, starting the beginning of last year, it was just the right time. It was just the right time. So I just did it.

Lee Kantor: [00:07:21] Can you I’m just trying to dig in here a little bit more in terms of for folks out there that may be in the back of their head, they’re like, you know what, I’m entrepreneurial. I’d like at some point to do this, but I’m in a pretty secure spot here. I feel pretty good. I’m kind of moving up the ladder. Yeah. Did you can you share a little bit about how you did the math of this, the trade offs back and forth on, you know, you had this itch you wanted to scratch, you saw this gap. And, you know, obviously you pulled the trigger and went for it. A lot of folks struggle with taking that leap. Can you share some of kind of the the the mental gymnastics you did to get to the to where you are today?

Dennis Li: [00:08:04] Yeah, for sure. You know, I think it’s all about individual’s priority, right? I think for me, just solving interesting problem. It’s on the top, right. And I’m also enjoy uncertainty. I think that’s one of the key elements. If you want to be successful in entrepreneurship or an entrepreneur journey is, you know, if you are if you thrive in uncertainty. Right. And this journey has been great so far. It’s very exciting, but definitely not every day. It’s good news. A lot of times there’s bad news and sometimes these good news and bad news will not one hour apart. So my point is, you know, I started to understand myself a lot more even before I started to started this journey. And I knew that I would I would enjoy it and it will give me a great opportunity to solve interesting problem, you know. And of course, there’s always opportunity cause. Right. And understanding that and make. Make a decision. I think there is no magic pill behind that. But just understanding what you prioritize, who you are, what you’re good at, and use all these data. So it’s still a data driven decision, but, you know, it’s also a a judgment element in it.

Lee Kantor: [00:09:23] Now, you mentioned that this is B to B to C, are you having a difficult time reaching the other B involved, the intermediary in order to explain the offering and the value proposition? Or did you start talking to those folks early and then get a hint that, hey, we’re going to be able to leverage this and this? This could work out?

Dennis Li: [00:09:47] Yeah, it happened a little bit. Both. So we definitely didn’t land it at this distribution channel right off the bat. Wish we did. But we actually went through a lot of iterations. You know, we we understand that to access customer, we have to go through an intermediary. That’s a fact, right? Because direct to consumer is just very challenging for the product we’re trying to distribute. But the next question is what intermediary makes sense, right? The unique challenge of B to B to C is that we have to provide value to both B and C to have a long term mutual success. There has to be alignment of interest. Timing has to be right. And also both parties have to be willing to move at the pace that that that makes sense to each party. So in the beginning it is challenging. But, you know, once we gaining more exposure in the space, once I understand the channel a little bit more after we landed at this fintech channel, just after having a lot more opportunity to have those direct conversations with the founders, the customer discovery session almost naturally organically turned into a sort of a sales process because I realize a problem is the one that we’re addressing so perfect, right? So that’s sort of how it unfolds right now. We are pretty small team. I’m leading the effort in growing the business. So yeah, looking forward to to to really expand our go to market team and get some sales superstar on board.

Lee Kantor: [00:11:20] Now how did you hear about start of shutdown in panoramic was that you know how did they get on your radar.

Dennis Li: [00:11:28] Yeah. So one of our mentors in the Atlanta area actually mentioned panoramic to us. So I check you guys out. I was pretty intrigued by the thesis and the mission to to help founders overlook founders, first time founders and for the showdown event. I always love these types of favors, so it’s pretty a no brainer for me to sign up. And after all, it’s a really well-organized event. So kudos to the.

Lee Kantor: [00:11:56] Team now having gone through what were some of the things that you got out of it? What were some some things that were most beneficial to you?

Dennis Li: [00:12:06] Yeah, I think the whole experience was quite fun. I enjoy meeting other founders, sharing our mission and bringing awareness to insurance innovation. Right, because it’s a it’s not a very fun topic for most people, but important topics. So, you know, often fell off people’s radar. So I like this all kind of opportunity. Also enjoyed the competition element of it. I think most founders like it in terms of, you know, learning other people’s business and sharing their mission.

Lee Kantor: [00:12:36] Now, you mentioned a mentor. Has there been a lot of mentors for you kind of guiding your path? Is there any startup founder that’s out there that you’re kind of looking up to, that you’re trying to emulate or, you know, whether you know them in person or you just heard about them? Is there someone you go to for advice and inspiration?

Dennis Li: [00:12:56] Yeah, we have a very strong supporting system behind Risky, so that’s something I’m really grateful of. They are, you know, insurance executives, business leaders, and there are some ex operators as well. I think, you know, there are a lot of names of people I look up to. But those are instrumental, right? Because as a first time founders, I don’t know what I don’t know. Right. And most of the time, I think when startup didn’t work out, it’s not necessarily because founders lack of any skills, but because of strategic planning, right? Things. They haven’t get to the point they need to get to before they run out of money. So just talking to people and having these experienced folks behind us, pulling us away is instrumental.

Lee Kantor: [00:13:44] Now, has there been maybe a mistake you made or some setback that you were able to get through that propelled you forward? Because you mentioned iterating the intermediaries a bit. Can you share a little bit about how. Because that’s always hard. You know, everybody it’s not a straight line. It’s ups and downs, but. Sometimes the downs really are a blessing in disguise that that helps catapult you to a new place because it opens your mind to a new opportunities.

Dennis Li: [00:14:14] Yes, I think there is a lot of there’s a lot of learnings throughout the journey. One thing that’s been particularly helpful is how do we do customer discovery? I think in the beginning it’s a common issue. I heard from founders just talk too much, right? We have our hypotheses. We try to sell before we learn. And I think being a good listener, like an active listener throughout the session, really gave us insight into what’s the real problem out there. I think in the insurance and fintech ecosystem, everyone hold a piece of the puzzle to solve this, to solve this, this problem we’re trying to solve. And our job is to put it together. And to do that, we have to be able to listen well and, you know, not letting our sort of bias or hypothesis like, you know, overshadow what’s the truth out there.

Lee Kantor: [00:15:13] I know it’s hard, though. That takes a lot of self-discipline because you’re so excited about your solution and you want everybody to know about it. But really, maybe the first step is just being a good, active listener. Hearing their challenges and their frustrations and then seeing if you can elegantly fit your solution in there is probably better. You’re better served if you can pull that off for sure.

Dennis Li: [00:15:37] Yep.

Lee Kantor: [00:15:37] So what’s next for you guys? How can we help?

Dennis Li: [00:15:42] Yeah. So right now, you know, we’re just moving forward full speed. We’ve grown the business in terms of partnership, building out the right team and of course, you know, get to work with investors who share the same mission really in democratizing insurance for everyone. So, you know, a full plate here. But yeah, we’d love to talk to any investor right now. We’re still trying to close a round of the seed round right now, so we’d love to get in touch with people who are interested in solving this problem and innovating insurance distribution.

Lee Kantor: [00:16:17] And if somebody wants to learn more, have a more substantive conversation with you or somebody on the team, what’s a website?

Dennis Li: [00:16:23] Yeah, so you can reach me very easy. Dennis Dublin is at Risky, Risky dotcom, so we’d love to hear from you and bounce ideas.

Lee Kantor: [00:16:35] Well, Dennis, thank you so much for sharing your story. You’re doing important work and we appreciate you.

Dennis Li: [00:16:39] Thank you for having me.

Lee Kantor: [00:16:41] All right. This is Lee Kantor. We’ll see you all next time on Startup Showdown.

Intro: [00:16:47] As always, thanks for joining us. And don’t forget to follow and subscribe to the Startup Showdown podcast. So you get the latest episode as it drops wherever you listen to podcasts to learn more and apply to our next startup Showdown Pitch Competition Visit Showdown Dot VC. That’s Showdown Dot VC. All right, that’s all for this week. Goodbye for now.

 

Tagged With: Dennis Li, Reeske

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