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Search Results for: marketing matters

InMotionNow, Wyrick Robbins, and Toss the Boss

November 17, 2014 by rpowell

After the show!

Mid-show

 

 

 

Ben Hartmere   Ben Hartmere, CEO, inMotionNow

Ben Hartmere is the CEO of inMotionNow, serving on the company’s board of directors.  As CEO, Ben has brought his 15 years experience leading venture-backed and publicly-traded technology organizations delivering enterprise technology solutions and professional services. Hartmere works closely with the inMotionNow leadership team to set strategy and foster a culture of innovation and continuous process improvement within enterprise creative departments.

Prior to joining inMotionNow, Mr. Hartmere served as Vice President of Business Development for FileONE, managing the company’s global sales and marketing efforts.  Among his achievements, Hartmere led the implementation of an enterprise-wide business registration workflow application for the Government of Puerto Rico, credited with positioning Puerto Rico as the world’s 11th most efficient country/territory in which to open a business.

Mr. Hartmere holds both a M.B.A. and undergraduate degree from the University of North Carolina’s Kenan-Flagler Business School, where he also serves as Advisory Board member for the school’s Executive M.B.A. programs, as well as an Adam Advisors with Kenan-Flagler’s Center for Entrepreneurial Studies.

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Follow Ben on Twitter and LinkedIn

 

Zach Bishop   Zach Bishop, Partner, Wyrick Robbins

Zach’s practice is concentrated on technology and corporate transactions, including the licensing and distribution of intellectual property, business process and information technology outsourcing, technology acquisition and development, mergers and acquisitions, joint ventures and general corporate matters. Zach’s practice includes the representation of prominent video game and middleware developers on a full range of matters. He has significant experience in sourcing and complex technology transactions. Prior to joining the firm in 2009, Zach practiced in the Raleigh office of Hunton & Williams LLP and the Atlanta office of Alston & Bird LLP.

Zach received his B.A. in Economics from Duke University and received his J.D., magna cum laude, from Tulane University Law School. Zach served as an Assistant Managing Editor for the Tulane Law Review and is a member of the Order of the Coif.

Follow Wyrick Robbins on Twitter and LinkedIn

Follow Zach on Twitter and LinkedIn

 

Chip Fudge   Betty Fudge    Chip Fudge & Betty Fudge, Consultants, Toss the Boss

Since 2001, Chip and Betty Fudge have matched new and veteran franchise owners with America’s best and fastest growing franchise systems. They have an extensive background in owning and operating franchised and non-franchised businesses. They understand the challenges of balancing work, marriage, and raising children within the constraints of corporate demands and they have enjoyed the freedom of business success. They are ideally suited to answer our questions about franchise ownership.

 

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HQ Raleigh, Citrix, Akili, and Red Hat

November 10, 2014 by rpowell

After the show!

Mid-show

 

Elizabeth Tracy   Elizabeth Tracy, Director of Community Development, HQ Raleigh

Liz Tracy is the Director of Community Development at HQ Raleigh and a facilitator for both the ThinkHouse and Citrix-Red Hat Accelerator programs. Liz brings international experience in community development and public outreach to her role as Community Director. She has coordinated  international leadership and social entrepreneurship programs in Panama, started and run a nationally-recognized jewelry company and last year  was selected by the U.S. State Department as the adult mentor for an entrepreneurship program in Central Europe for high school students. Originally from California, Liz has lived in the Triangle for the past two years.

Follow HQ Raleigh on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn

Follow Elizabeth on Twitter and LinkedIn

 

Grady Slane   Grady Slane, Product Marketing Manager, Citrix

Grady Slane is a product marketing manager at Citrix. He is a graduate of Duke University and joined ShareFile in 2010, prior to its acquisition by Citrix. He is a cofounder of one of two internal teams participating in the Citrix Innovators Program.

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Michelle Harper   Michelle Harper, CEO, Akili

Follow Michelle on LinkedIn

 

DeLisa Alexander   DeLisa Alexander, Executive Vice President and Chief People Officer, Red Hat

DeLisa Alexander serves as the executive vice president and chief people officer of Red Hat, leading the organization responsible for global human resources including Red Hat® University. The organization’s mission is to be a strategic partner to the business in acquiring, developing, and retaining talent and to enhance the Red Hat culture and talent brand. Red Hat has been recognized as one of the best places to work in multiple publications around the globe.

Alexander received a “Women in Business” executive award from the Triangle Business Journal in 2010. She serves on the executive committee for the Council for Entrepreneurial Development (CED), the board of directors for Raleigh Chamber of Commerce, the board of advisers for the Frank Hawkins Kenan Institute of Private Enterprise, Bull City Ventures, NC State University Poole College of Management, Soar, and Innovate Raleigh.

Alexander joined Red Hat in 2001 and served in the office of general counsel until mid 2006, most recently as assistant general counsel and assistant secretary. During this time, Alexander was responsible for equity and executive compensation, and trademark, copyright, and employment matters. Alexander also advised the company’s management and board of directors on securities and corporate governance.

Prior to joining Red Hat, Alexander was associated with the law firm Kilpatrick Stockton where she focused on mergers, acquisitions, venture capital, and intellectual property licensing. She started her career as a judicial clerk for the Honorable William B. Chandler, chancellor of the renowned Delaware Court of Chancery.

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Follow DeLisa on Twitter and LinkedIn

 

Special Edition: TiE Atlanta

November 10, 2014 by rhondachale

ABR

Dick Ingwersen / Warren Averett Linkedin

Dick Ingwersen is a Member of the Warren Averett Tax Division and serves on the Firm’s Executive Committee. Dick brings to clients extensive experience in individual tax and financial planning, estate and fiduciary planning, retirement plans, employee compensation, partnership taxation, private investment partnerships and closely-held corporations.

Matthew Frooman / Warren Averett

Matthew Frooman is a Member in the Tax Division of Warren Averett where his practice includes a wide variety of business and individual client matters. In addition, he is a Technical Compliance Firm Best Practices Leader. He has extensive experience with income tax compliance and planning for corporations, partnerships, trusts and individuals, including having worked with a number of multi-state and inbound and outbound foreign business clients, many with heavy capital and/or personnel investments. Some of Matthew’s special projects have included detailed analysis and mediation relating to litigation support (including divorce) matters, purchases and sales of businesses and Internal Revenue Service examinations. Additionally, he has led the roll-out of various specialized tax services for the Firm in conjunction with alliance partners, such as cost segregation studies, Georgia retraining tax credits and Section 412i defined benefit plans. He’s particularly adept at locating and executing opportunities to amend new clients’ prior tax returns for tax refunds, and at identifying improved tax filing positions on a current and ongoing basis for continued tax savings. Clients have called him “tenacious” in his approach to finding the best results for them. They value the creativity and acumen he brings to the table, along with his integrity and commitment to the Firm’s 5-STAR client service. Matthew resides in Atlanta with his wife of 30 years, and they have four children and one grandson.

Vikas Verma / Alpha Insulation & Waterproofing Linkedin

Vic Verma is the Chairman & CEO  for Alpha Insulation & Waterproofing Co. He is also Managing Partner with  The Radiology Group LLC.

Vic is an Entrepreneur, Real Estate Developer & Investor. He arrived in the US from India in 1977 after finishing his Bachelor’s Degree in Engineering & Associate Degrees in Marketing Management and International Marketing. He started with the San Antonio based Alamo Insulation Co. as Junior Estimator & rose to the President’s position in 3 years. Vic established Alpha Insulation & Waterproofing in 1982 in San Antonio. The company headquarter was moved to Atlanta in 1989. Alpha now has 9 offices throughout Texas, Georgia, Carolinas, Tennessee, Florida & Alabama. He currently oversees business and market development & finance for Alpha’s operations.

He invested in The Radiology Group (TRG) & Women’s Imaging Centers (WIG) in 2011 & took over the role of Managing Partner in 2013 after making critical changes in company’s personnel & culture and making them profitable. TRG is an Atlanta based Radiology Services company serving Clinics and Hospitals in 9 states. WIG has 3 current locations and is exploring national franchise options to stimulate rapid growth.

Over the years, he’s been actively involved with various trade organizations & served as President of Georgia Walls & Ceilings Association & Charter Mentor of The Indus Entrepreneur (TiE). He currently is a board member of the National Association of Minority Contractors (Atlanta) & Cobb Chapter of the Boys & Girls Clubs of Atlanta. Vic also serves as advisor emeritus for Cobb Chamber CEO Roundtable Blue group. He is past chairman of Indo American Cultural Association and Founder of Senior Citizens Group for Asian Indians in Atlanta. Vic has over 37 years of business startup & management experience and served on the Advisory Boards of Bank of N. Georgia (formerly Charter Bank & Trust), Owens Corning & Johns Manville, a Berkshire company. Vic is also a graduate of Leadership Atlanta Class of 2005.

 

 

Interview With Bob Dorf, Author of 'The Startup Owner's Manual' – Business RadioX

October 29, 2014 by ravendavis

Announcer: Broadcasting live from the Raleigh Convention Center at the CED Tech Venture Conference. Here are your Business RadioX hosts, Lee Canter and Stone Payton.

Lee: Lee Canter with Stone Payton at the 29th Annual CED Tech Venture Conference, the premier technology venture conference in the Southeast. Stone, last interview of the day.

Stone: Yeah, I know we’re rounding things down, but it has been quite a day. I really have had a terrific time. I’ve learned a lot. I caught up with some old friends, made some new ones, and this conversation is going to be a lot of fun. I know you’ve been looking forward to it all day. Please join me in welcoming the author of The Startup Owner’s Manual, Mr. Bob Dorf. How are you doing man?

Bob: I’m doing great thanks.

Stone: We are delighted to have you. Lee, I know you’ve got all kind of questions to ask this guy. What’s your first?

Lee: Well, The Startup Owner’s Manual, you wrote it with Steve Blank. Can you talk a little bit about how the idea for the book bubbled up? I know you guys are active in the startup world, but can you talk about that?

Bob: Sure. Well, I mean, truth be told, I try to tell that at least once in a while.

Stone: Hey, listen. Lee brought the cheap microphones so you’ve got to talk right into the very end of it. You can’t even look at him when you’re talking to him.

Lee: We have a beautiful woman in here so just focus on her.

Bob: That will keep me focused. Stone: So tell us about this book now?

Bob: This book is 98 percent Steve Blank’s vision of how to build startups differently and maybe 72 percent of my perspiration and Steve perspired plenty too. This book is built on the back of Steve’s first book published in 2003 called “Four Steps to the Epiphany” that laid out the principles of gee, nothing really matters to a startup other than can it get customers and how might it go about figuring that out before it spends the last dime in the checkbook.

Steve got a lot of feedback from entrepreneurs in these seven or eight years since he wrote that book about how valuable the concept of the methodology was. How do you turn that into a roadmap or a really step-by-step methodology? Steve and I go back about 20 years, and I guess about four years ago, he grabbed me and said, you’ve written one of these business method books before. You know a lot about startups, and we work well together. Shake my hand and be my partner. Let’s put this all down on paper.

Stone: And it’s quite a book. This is not a read in an hour kind of book.

Bob: This is not a curl up for a weekend in your favorite hammock. This is more, the way I lovingly think of it, it’s more like the book you get when you buy a riding lawn mower or a chainsaw. Not something you read on your vacation or relaxation. When you hear a pop or something doesn’t work on your riding mower or your chainsaw, you want to know exactly where that book is and be able to navigate your way through it to figure out what the hell do I do now.

Lee: Do you have a favorite chapter or two that you really like to lean on or that was more fun to write?

Bob: The two that were the most fun to write for me were the… one was sort of the finance piece of this. How do you… in fact, we lovingly talk about it as this will get you thrown out of any business school’s finance course in North America, because it’s really startup math. Startup math isn’t… what’s the three year going forward forecast, P and L fully loaded blah, blah, blah. It’s how am I going to keep from running out of money? What do I do? Where do I cut expenses? Where do I add? Steve is a freaking genius when it comes to startups. If there is one thing that is not his strong suit, he knows how to make the money. He just doesn’t know quite how to… he’s not a math whiz.

Lee: Because like in the startup world, it’s a race against money, isn’t it?

Bob: Your number one enemy is this ferocious man eating or woman eating thing called the zero bank balance. A startup with no traction, the closer it gets to that zero bank balance, the closer it gets to its funeral. You’re in this perpetual race against the clock. The chapter we developed was let’s look at three typical startups and what simple back of the envelop math can the startup do to get some sense of whether it’s going to survive bank balance zero by demonstrating enough traction to some investor to get another sort of lease on life.

We took a physical products company that made handy dandy gardening implement, because that’s sort of the simplest way to look at a business. It has fundamentally two channels, direct retail and web commerce. How do I as the founder think of my first year or two in a fragile business like that? The second one was an ad-supported website where the weight to revenue is a frightening long time. The third was a sort of more typical e-commerce or social media kind of a business. That was really fun to write, because it’s one thing to do the spreadsheet for what does the first, second, third quarter look like, but when the numbers are ugly, okay, what is a entrepreneur to do?

Lee: Exactly. That’s real life. What do you do now?

Bob: Okay, how do you like Ramen Noodles really? Can you do three more months of Ramen Noodles?

Lee: And do you have any tips for managing your spouse in the book or that’s the next sequel?

Bob: That’s another book. It’s probably longer than The Startup Owner’s Manual which is I think as I recall 117,000 words. In fact, the only tip we have for managing your spouse is do not do a startup with him or her.

Lee: So now you guys talk a lot about customer development. Can you talk about that a little bit and maybe for some of the people in the room here, ways that they can attack that?

Bob: Well, sure. I mean this whole… this again… this is all Steve’s brilliance and the heart of his initial thinking was nothing really matters to a startup. No opinions, no votes. Nothing matters other than do your concept… does the vision of your startup resonate with your customers? Because without customers, you’ll never get investors. You’ll never get traction. You’ll never have revenue. Why would you ask your professor, your advisor, your investors what do that like and what they don’t like?

Lee: Because their opinion is kind of not relevant at this point?

Bob: Right and typically we all go and show these things to our friends and our roommates, and our classmates, and our relatives, and they all know the answer we want to hear. So it’s oh yeah. It’s great.

Lee: Great idea!

Bob: I’d love to buy it. It’s like, can your startup pass the ugly baby test? If you bring the ugliest baby on the planet to Christmas dinner, everyone in the family will find something positive to say. You bring the ugliest startup on the planet to a room full of your friends, everybody will find something positive to say, because they know that’s what you want to hear.

The way you use your friends in customer development is gee, can you introduce me to anyone who’s an enterprise software buyer in the financial services space, or do you know any lawyers who I can talk to, who may owe me 20 minutes as a favor to you, my friend, but don’t owe me, “Oh, it’s wonderful. I love it.” That maybe the world’s ugliest baby to some, but to me it’s gorgeous kind of that.

Lee: Now how do you… you’re a professor, so how do you deal with the kids that are like, “I have a great idea. I have a great idea.” Like they think that the idea is this thing.

Bob: I say two things to them. The most important thing I say to them is my opinion doesn’t matter at all. I give them the only opinion that matters, the opinion of people who might give you money for purchases.

Lee: Who will write you a check, right?

Bob: But be careful, because they say, “Oh, you mean I’ve got to get investors to love it.”

Lee: You’ve got to sell something.

Bob: Investors aren’t going to love it unless customers are going to love it.

Lee: You’ve got to sell something. Right. So you’ve got to sell your first one, and then let’s talk…

Bob: Right and the other thing I tell them is that entrepreneurs love to go and show their product or their prototype to people so they can come home and say, “Oh, look at this. I showed it to 12 people. Three of them thought it was fabulous. Two of them threw me out of their office, but I did a lot today.”

Lee: Right.

Bob: Step one in customer development is what I lovingly call the give a crap test. Don’t talk about your product at all. Go out and talk to people who you suspect might be interested in buying it and don’t’ talk about your company or your product or your idea. Talk only about the problem that your product solves or the need it fills. Is this a problem you worry about every night before you go to sleep and it keeps you up for two hours? Are you worried about going broke, losing your spouse, losing your house, losing your job? Because if you’re not solving a thorny problem particularly in B to B sales, nobody is going to buy it.

Then you need to either rethink who you’re selling to or the way you’re describing the problem or the actual problem you’re solving and see if you can recalibrate it so that more people say, “Oh my God, I worry about that all the time. Yeah, if you can solve that problem for me, I’d buy anything you had.”

Stone: You’re an author. Are you an investor and/or are you actively involved in starting companies up as well or what you do most of your time?

Bob: Not any more. I’ve made a total of 35 startup investments. Seven in companies that I was personally the founding CEO of, 27 where I just wrote checks and was somehow involved as an advisor board member, whatever.

Lee: And you still have hair. I want our listening audience to know this guy still has hair.

Bob: I’ve got hair, but I’ve got scars on my back that go from my hairline to my butt cheeks. The way I think about it is 27 angel or seed investments, 7 IPOs, 6 DTTs, my new acronym that somebody coined actually earlier today, Direct to Toilet investments. That’s where you learn the most, because when you have a homerun, the whole founding team gets together, drinks, pats each other on the back, talks about how brilliant we are. The only real introspection you get, and I remember twice walking across the yard to my wife’s office in this little cottage way from our house.

Twice I had to walk in there and tell her, “Honey, we lost a million dollars today of our money.” The first time that I told her that, she had the perfect answer for the loving, supportive wife of 25 years of an entrepreneur which was, “Don’t worry about it. You’ll figure it out.” I was like… so that actually allowed me to lose a million dollars five times and only tell her about it twice. Anyway, the point when you’re teaching entrepreneurs, it’s very hard to also invest. Because when I’m giving a lecture and I’m talking about this great company, am I hyping the stock or when I’m beating up a team of entrepreneurs, is it so I can take them out for a drink after the beating. Say, “Well, now that I told you how horrible your company is, I’d like to invest at this very…” So it’s too many conflicts, and I think 35 investments in 42 years is enough anyway.

Stone: Now, in your portfolio of investments, obviously, you had winners and you had losers. At the beginning stages of each, could you tell, like was there a hint or any red flags when you’re looking back and doing an autopsy on the losers or the winners, is there anything that maybe you could have seen… or that it’s very difficult to tell until you actually start doing something?

Bob: There have been a couple of clues. I constantly beat up Steve Blank about why didn’t you write this damn book in ’98 instead of ’02. You would have saved me a couple of trips to the wood shed to talk to my wife. I think the places where I can look back and spot the most glaring mistakes were people mistakes.

I still remember sitting across the table from this founding CEO, and then I said, “Gosh, I love this business model, but I don’t like this guy at all. I don’t trust this guy. I had two co-investors and they badgered me. This was the future of information gathering, blah, blah, blah. Oh God, we lost a bunch of money on that guy.” I mean let’s face it. Entrepreneurs and investors don’t invest in things they aren’t orgasmically excited about on the way in and hindsight doesn’t do you much good once the check clears. You sort of bury your wounded or you dead, and you just move on…

Stone: Keep moving.

Bob: I remember one in the peak of the bubble… in the second half of ’99, I remember one $425,000 investment I made personally where it was, “We need to close by Friday, because the ship’s coming in or whatever.” Know that there is no diligence material. What did I say? I said, “Okay, you’re telling me you’re in for a lot more than I am, and you’ve studied this company, and you worked with these people? Where do I wire the money? Not smuck. You’re going to give $425,000 to this guy you know but don’t really totally trust on his word that this is a good deal? And I got what I deserved, which is about zero back. It was also an incredibly weird frothy time where bagofpoop.com went from a dollar a share to 40 overnight.

Stone: Right. A lot of systems look good in those bull markets. Bob: Absolutely. You know rising tides lifts all boats, whatever.

Stone: Now you have The Startup Owner’s Manual, how does the Lean Startup fit into this?

Bob: They’re almost one and the same. I think ‘The Lean Startup‘ which is a wonderful book by a really smart guy named Eric Reis, who as Steve Blank loves to say, was one of the smartest students Steve ever had in his classroom. ‘The Lean Startup’ suggests that you need three things to do a lean startup: customer development, a business model instead of a business plan, and agile development. Eric’s contribution to the field, which is critically important is you can’t do good customer development unless you are also building using agile development.

Because, otherwise, if you’re out in the field everyday talking to customers getting ideas about what to drop, add, change, improve in your product, and you go back to the development team that’s working on a traditional waterfall development plan, they say, “Well, those are nice thoughts. We’ll talk about those in six months when we get through with Rev 3 and start Build 4.” That was a really critical addition to the whole customer development process, that you have to have a software or product development methodology that is as agile as your nimble and…

Stone: Right, because this pivoting, as you learn, is an important component so then the infrastructure has to pivot as well and has to be as nimble.

Bob: Right. You have to be able to rip 10,000 lines of code out, throw it on the floor, and race like hell to get 2000 new lines in a week. Get them up, get them tested, QA’d and so forth.

Stone: Now there’s a get out the building theme of the book. Can you talk a little about that and why that’s important for the entrepreneur?

Bob: Well, it’s where facts live. The mantra of the book is get out of the building. It’s really the hue and cry of the lean startup movement, of the customer development movement that there are no facts in your office. The only facts are in the heads of your customers, and you’ve got to get out of the building and talk to them. Now just to take that one step further, there’re two other associated rules, if you will. Number one, that you is not some 25-year-old kid in marketing. It’s not some McKinsey person or some ad agency person or a focus group. It is the founder who has to get this feedback in his or her face, who has to see whether the customer is lighting up or falling asleep when they talk about the product and how it works.

The founder has to do much of this himself or herself. The other rule is no surveys, no focus group. You need to see people’s pupils dilate. See them jump across the table at you and say, “God, can I get this like right now?” Or yawn, ho hum, polite, lukewarm interest and you can’t really sense that unless you’re out of the building where your customers are face to face, and we have sort of a… I haven’t had to honor this promise yet but come close. Any student of mine at Columbia University who gets arrested for doing hyper-aggressive customer discovery gets automatic honors plus praise, plus bail money.

Stone: I like it. Because you want to get it out of their head, right? It’s not, “look how smart I am in my head and let me show you these smart theories that I have.” I need real data from real people that have actually touched this and used this and have an opinion that matters and not me and my buddies in a conference room brainstorming amongst ourselves.

Bob: You must have read a little of this book, because you really have hit the heart of it. It’s every business plan ever written looks brilliant and every entrepreneur’s idea ever hatched is brilliant to that entrepreneur. That’s nice, but as Steve Blank loves to say, “No business plan ever survives its first contact with the customer, because the customer didn’t read it, didn’t know they were supposed to buy three of them for themselves, one to give as a Christmas present. One to save for the end of the world or a rainy day. Customers do what the hell they want. If you don’t’ understand what they’re going to do, it’s all fairytales.

Stone: Right. It’s like Mike Tyson says, “Everybody has a plan until I hit them in the face.”

Lee: So what’s next for you? You got another book coming out? You’re going to put some energy into developing a new course curricular, or what do you got in mind?

Bob: I’m not quite sure yet. We are still in… The book is out about a little less than 18 months. It’s about a third of the way through being published all over the world. It’s been out. It’s out now in seven or eight languages. Brazilian Portuguese comes out next week. Spanish comes out first week of October. It’s a best seller in Russia, in China, and Japan already. We have about eight or nine more countries yet to go. We already have a fabulous four-and-a-half hour absolutely free online course, which is Steve in a nine-part customer development series on udacity.com. There’s no advertising. It’s not selling anything. We try to open source everything we do and make sure that it’s out there and available for the entrepreneurial community.

I think my next two personal projects, I do a lot of international training of teams of startups, 20 or 30 teams at a time. I’ve done that a couple of times in Latin America. I’m going back to Moscow in October for round 4. I have one of those brewing in Poland. One in Brazil. Oh, and a big one is supposed to start right in January in Mexico where we try to torture 25 startup teams at a time and get them to businesses with traction in 8 or 10 weeks. It is the most exciting fun thing for an old guy to do to watch the lights go on. Have a team report back in week 6 that they just got their twelfth customer, or in one of the groups I did with the government of Columbia where we only work on startups that can walk past their customs dog.

Stone: But the book works for every kind of business though, right?

Bob: Entrepreneurs are creative, assertive people, but out of 25 teams, eight of the teams had customer revenue in eight weeks. I was just so amazed and so proud. And that 8 weeks is what startups often spend writing the stupid business plan that’s a whole bunch of fairytales anyway.

Stone: Yeah, it must be so rewarding for you to see this book become the defacto owner’s manual for startups all over the world like this and how much of the economy is going to be built on the backs of these entrepreneurs, because that’s what’s going to get us out of this tough economic time.

Bob: I hope you’re right. I mean I worry that a lot of people today call themselves entrepreneurs mostly because they can’t find a job with a W2 and healthcare and…

Stone: Well, they used to call themselves consultants. Now they call themselves entrepreneurs.

Bob: Right, and we always forget that a critical piece of an entrepreneur’s DNA is passion and tenacity, and willingness to work 80, 90, 100 hours a week, week after week after week, because they believe in what they do, and they have confidence that those ridiculous work hours are getting them somewhere.

Stone: Right.

Bob: And now you have this crop of entrepreneurs who say, “Well, this is a 9 to 5 job and because I’m taking risks, I deserve to be rich. Look, it worked for Mark Zuckerberg.” I think there’s going to be some kind of a shake out here as the true entrepreneurs rock it forward and some of the others hopefully get that 9 to 5 job at a bank or an insurance company or wherever they’d be much more truly, honestly comfortable.

Stone: All right. Where can our listeners get their hands on this book if they don’t have it already? And where can they go to learn more about this entire body of work?

Bob: Well, they can get the book, the easiest place of all amazon.com. It’s in eBook and it’s in a physical book. The greatest resource of all is www.steveblank.com, which has hundreds and hundreds of articles, hundreds of links to resources for entrepreneurs, like free tools for everything from online research or wire framing or AB testing, and links to hundreds, if not thousands of powerpoint text, videos, lectures, things like that. It’s an incredible treasure trove for entrepreneurs. There’s no ads on it. There’s not paid links or anything. This is Steve’s entrepreneurship. It treated Steve real well. This is his gift back to the entrepreneurial world that helped his launch eight startups, a couple of them sort of traveling to the moon.

Stone: But if they want to learn more about you, you have doorfrontstartups.wordpress.com?

Bob: Yeah, well doorfrontstartups or bobdorf.co is more about just me.

Lee: All right. Bob Dorf, co-author and author and inspiration to all of us. Thanks so much for joining us.

Bob: My pleasure. Thanks for having me.

Lee: All right. I think that’s a wrap. Lee, Stone Payton for Lee Cantor, the entire Business RadioX family, we will find you again in the morning from the floor of CED Tech Venture 2013.

Filed Under: Newsroom Tagged With: Bob Dorf, Eric Reis, Steve Blank, The Lean Startup, The Startup Owner's Manual

Whitney Wilson with LEGOLAND Discovery Center, Stacy Weenick with Taste of Atlanta, Terry Carver with Bricktop’s, Kit Cummings with Power of Peace Productions, Inc. – Buckhead Business Radio

October 7, 2014 by Rich Casanova

 

Stacy Weenick, Terry Carver, Kit Cummings, Whitney Wilson
Stacy Weenick, Terry Carver, Kit Cummings, Whitney Wilson

 

Whitney Wilson/ LEGOLAND Discovery Center 

Marketing Manager

Buckhead Business Radio 10-07-14 Whitney Wilson 1Enthusiastic and dedicated professional, with two years working for Merlin Entertainments, the second largest global entertainments company. With experience in all Operational and Marketing aspects of the business, I strive to achieve maximum guest satisfaction, optimization of all Marketing channels and the personal career development of the Marketing team. I enjoy working in a fast-paced and energetic environment. In my career at Merlin Entertainments have demonstrated excellent customer service and problem solving skills, and have developed a passion for the entertainments industry.

– Source, develop and execute promotional partnerships.

– Work with the Finance Department to develop annual visitor budget.

– Oversee Trade Sales activity, group bookings, hotel relationships, and 3rd party partnerships.

– Oversee social media activity and initiatives.

– Oversee the development and execution of all community events, both on site and off site.

– Develop and track ticket products to ensure daily, monthly and annual targets are achieved.

– Develop online digital marketing strategies and relationships.

– Actively manage and monitor online social review sites.

– Responsible for the creation and execution of the annual marketing plan.

LegoLandDiscoveryCenter.com     LinkedIn   Twitter     Facebook     

 

Stacy Weenick/Taste of Atlanta

Event Manager

Buckhead Business Radio 10-07-14 Stacy Weenick 1Taste of Atlanta packs the bold flavors, colorful personalities and vibrant energy of an entire city into 10 blocks in Midtown Atlanta. The three-day festival explores the city’s unique neighborhoods by sampling tastes from the chefs and bartenders that give each area its own creative energy. Since its inception in 2002, Taste of Atlanta has become an annual pilgrimage for thousands of food, wine, beer and cocktail lovers from across the country. Festival attendees bring their adventurous appetites and experience a full range of flavors, from time-honored Southern classics to innovative dishes that are destined to be the next culinary trend. Patrons also enjoy interactive cooking demonstrations on four main stages, live entertainment and family-friendly activities for food lovers of all ages. Taste of Atlanta supports several Atlanta non-profit groups, including Share Our Strength’s Cooking Matters, Atlanta’s Table, Georgia Organics and Hospitality Education Foundation of Georgia and ProStart®. Indulge in the city’s flavors Friday through Sunday, October 24-26 in Midtown at Tech Square to truly savor what makes Atlanta the food capital of the South.


www.TasteofAtlanta.com     LinkedIn     Twitter     Facebook

 

Terry Carver /Bricktop’s

General Manager

Buckhead Business Radio 10-07-14 Terry Carver 1

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

www.BrickTops.com     LinkedIn

 

Kit Cummings/Power of Peace Productions, Inc.

Founder & President

Buckhead Business Radio 10-07-14 Kit Cummings 2Born and raised in Atlanta, Kit has been involved in the field of personal development and leadership for over two decades. Kit earned a BBA in Marketing from the Terry School of Business at the University of Georgia, and he also holds a Master of Theology. Kit founded Power of Peace Project, Inc. and Power of Peace Productions, Inc. and brings his experience working in some of the most dangerous areas in the world– to bring about organizational CHANGE in your community. Kit has inspired people to aim higher in places as far away as Africa, Asia, Latin America and Europe, and recently completed speaking tours in South Africa, Mexico, Honduras and Ukraine.  Kit has negotiated peace between rival gang leaders in dangerous prisons and recently spoke at the Gandhi Global Peace Summit in Durban, South Africa. Having taught in some of the toughest environments in the world, he now brings his dynamic message to schools, prisons, churches, corporate events and seminars. Kit has authored four books.

www.PowerofPeaceProject.com     LinkedIn     Twitter     Facebook

 

BBR Wall of Fame #35

 

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Loretta Lepore with MediaBar Services, Erica Danylchak with Buckhead Heritage Society, Kevin O’Malley with B2BCamp and Will Geer with Callaway Geer – Buckhead Business Radio

September 30, 2014 by Rich Casanova

Will Geer, Kevin O'Malley, Loretta Lepore, Erica Danylchak
Will Geer, Kevin O’Malley, Loretta Lepore, Erica Danylchak

 

Loretta Lepore/MediaBar Services

Princpal

Buckhead Business Radio 09-30-14 Loretta Lepore 1Loretta Lepore is the founder of strategic communications firm, Lepore Associates, LLC and is a principal in MediaBar Services, a media coaching and presentation training consultancy.

Loretta’s career spans more than two decades as a journalist and network news anchor, gubernatorial spokeswoman and consultant to corporate, entrepreneurial and non-profit clients. She has managed a diverse client portfolio with interests ranging from healthcare to technology to transportation. Loretta has leveraged her expertise in public strategy, crisis & issues management as well as message development, media relations, interview coaching and presentation training to help her clients achieve their business goals.

During her tenure with the national law firm McKenna Long & Aldridge LLP, she designed and executed communications and crisis management strategies on behalf of lawyers, lobbyists and their clients. Appointed by Governor Sonny Perdue, Loretta led Georgia’s effort to re-energize its brand and she managed the subsequent launch of the nationally acclaimed Georgia logo, website, and global commerce and tourism advertising campaigns. While serving as the Governor’s press secretary, she was the administration’s primary spokesperson and the chief communications liaison with the White House planning team for the G8 Summit, which drew thousands of global journalists to Sea Island. Loretta worked for CNN, NPR, Westwood Radio Networks and local stations in Washington, D.C. and Florida.

www.MediaBarServices.com     LinkedIn     Twitter

 

Erica Danylchak/Buckhead Heritage Society

Executive Director

Buckhead Business Radio 09-30-14 Erica DanylchakErica Danylchak was appointed Executive Director of the Buckhead Heritage Society in January of 2010. Ms. Danylchak earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in History from Boston University in 2001 and a Master of Heritage Preservation degree from Georgia State University in 2008. Ms. Danylchak has previously worked at the Kenan Research Center at the Atlanta History Center and at Easements Atlanta, Inc. and has served as a Research Fellow for the Georgia Historic Landscape Initiative. In 2009, Ms. Danylchak received the Jenny D. Thurston Memorial Award from the Atlanta Urban Design Commission for her contributions to historic preservation in Atlanta.

www.BuckheadHeritage.com     Twitter     Facebook

 

Kevin O’Malley/B2BCamp

Lead Host

Buckhead Business Radio 09-30-14 Kevin O'Malley 1Over 15 years of Product Management & Marketing experience. I enjoy learning new methods of Product Management and Marketing that improves the speed and accuracy of creating predictable and scalable demand.  Specialties: Product Management, Product Marketing, Strategy, Business Development, Event production and management, B2B Marketing, Sales Development and Demand Generation.

B2BCamp (www.b2bcamp.com) is a user organized gathering focused on improving B2B marketing & sales with next generation tools and techniques. The event is an unconference meaning that there are no “attendees” because everyone participates in some manner. B2BCamp is a self-organizing collaborative event that is rewarding, fun and a totally cool experience!

www.B2BCamp.com     LinkedIn     Twitter

 

Will Geer/Callaway Geer

Owner and Managing Partner

Buckhead Business Radio 09-30-14 Will Geer 1Will Geer is a founding partner of Callaway Geer, LLC, a firm of Certified Public Accountants and advisors located in Atlanta, Georgia. Mr. Geer performs construction, governmental, franchisor, and not-for-profit audit and accounting functions, consults on tax matters and controversies, and provides forensic and valuation services for its clients. Mr. Geer is responsible for creating both the tax practice, audit practice and forensic accounting practice within the firm. Prior to founding his firm, Mr. Geer worked for a large regional accounting firm and worked for a United States Bankruptcy Trustee in the Southern District of Georgia.

Mr. Geer has been engaged in forensic matters, economic damages and valuation tion services for litigation, tax controversies and financial statement reporting. His Litigation and testimonial experience ranges from business valuation, debt confirmations, bankruptcy, eminent domain, forensic accounting, economic damages, life care plan valuations divorce, criminal matters, governmental forensic audits, governmental service, delivery strategies, construction, tax and financial statement reporting.

Since 1999, Mr. Geer has been involved in more than 175 litigation matters in federal and state matters. He is typically hired in litigious matters with high probability of ending with a judicial hearing. He has testified by way of deposition or court testimony more than 125 times in his career. Mr. Geer has worked with various legal disciplines and professionals, allowing him to expand his knowledge base. A list of attorney references can be made available upon request. His continued involvement with a traditional Certified Public Accounting firm provide him with continued working knowledge of tax law, AICPA Professional Standards and a continued breadth of working knowledge in the area of accounting. Mr. Geer presently serves on the Peer Review Committee of the Georgia Society of Certified Public Accountants. As a partner in the firm, he is required to maintain continuing professional education credits in the area of accounting, audit and taxation. He continues to share this breadth of knowledge with his traditional and forensic clients.

www.CallawayGeer.com    LinkedIn

 

Buckhead Business Radio 09-30-14 Group 2

 

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Special Episode: “Atlanta Realtor Radio” Gloria Williams and Joe Grier with PEMCO Realty, Beth Cruikshank with Cruikshank Ersin, LLC and Mike Rose with WR Starkey Mortgage – Buckhead Business Radio

August 21, 2014 by Rich Casanova

Buckhead Business Radio 08-21-14 Group 1
Gloria Williams, Beth Cruikshank, Joe Grier, Mike Rose (Show Host)

 

Gloria Williams/PEMCO Realty

Managing Broker

Buckhead Business Radio 08-21-14 Gloria Williams 1

Responsible for establishing and managing a residential brokerage focused on Senior Sales, REO and short sales. By recruiting REALTORS, implementing procedures and processes, monitoring real estate  transactions and Client service and increasing business development. I have represented homeowners,  buyers and Investors in the purchasing or selling of real estate in Metro Atlanta since 2006. I am short  sale certified by the National Association of Realtors and the CDPE Institute. I am a Bank of America  Preferred Agent. I have Successfully closed dozens of short sales helping home owners avoid foreclosure.

2011 -2012 REALTOR, Keller Williams Realty, Cityside, Smyrna, Georgia  I represented buyers & sellers of real estate in the State of Georgia. I re-designed my personal marketing strategy to include establishing a database of 2,000 real estate agents and 750 sphere of influence contacts  Certified as a Corporate Relocation Specialist & Seniors Real Estate Specialist

2006 – 2011 REALTOR, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage, Atlanta, Georgia  Representing buyers & sellers of real estate in the State of Georgia. Named Rookie of the Year 2006,   Selling over $1,000,000 in real estate within 8 months of service. Certified as a Corporate Relocation   Specialist & Seniors Real Estate Specialist. Many of my clients were seniors or their families, selling   Family-owned property or probate related property.

2003 – 2005 Director of Marketing AccuClean, Inc.  Managed new business development, database management, prepared internal and external   communications, Created quality-control inspection system & new employee orientation. Established  purchase order system, Attended networking events for trade associations. Managed human resource  records, assisted in the hiring of Employees. Prepared and monitored procurement bids for federal and  state contracts. Generated over 1 Million dollars in revenue for this start up, commercial janitorial service  company.

2000-2003 Corporate Sales Manager, Intercontinental Hotel Group Prepared and monitored online contract bids. Identified and exposed corporate meeting planners  to the Crowne Plaza, Holiday Inn Atlanta Airport North and the Holiday Inn Select. Established  relationships with potential corporate clients through sales calls, social events, networking events, and  participating in trade shows. Planned and coordinated marketing events. Responsible for selling the  largest corporate meetings at the Crowne Plaza and the Holiday Inn Atlanta Airport.

EDUCATION  Bachelor of Science, Speech Pathology & Audiology – Kent State University  Marketing (MBA Program) – Georgia State University  Certified Distressed Property Expert, Seniors Real Estate Specialist

AFFILIATIONS Providence Baptist Church, Atlanta Board of Realtors, National Board of Realtors, Georgia Board of Realtors, Toastmasters International

www.PemcoRealty.com     Linkedin     Twitter     Facebook

 

Joe Grier/PEMCO Realty

Realtor

Buckhead Business Radio 08-21-14 Joe Grier 1

Joseph is an Atlanta native with over 25 years of experience working with buyers, sellers and investors.

www.PemcoRealty.com     Twitter     Facebook

 

Beth Cruikshank/Cruikshank Ersin, LLC

Attorney/Owner

Buckhead Business Radio 08-21-14 Beth Cruikshank 1Beth Cruikshank is one of the owners of Cruikshank Ersin, LLC. They are located in Sandy Springs on the  corner of Roswell Road and Hammond Drive. They are a general practice with a focused area on real  estate. Beth has been in the real estate industry for over 15 years. She started her career as a paralegal  while she attended Georgia State Law School at night. She received her Bachelor of Arts from Clemson  University. She has worked for 3 of the largest real estate firms in the Metro Atlanta area before opening her  practice with her law partner, Abby Ersin. Abby has also been in the industry for a substantial period of  time. Beth has worked in both the default industry practice as well as retail and commercial. Both Abby  and Beth have extensive knowledge on real estate matters, contract disputes, landlord/tenant issues,  estate planning, civil litigation and even some criminal defense work. They are always happy to discuss your matter with you to determine how they may be able to move  effectively assist you and/or your client. They believe in giving access to your file 24-7. Their website  gives a good understanding of their practice. Please check it out at www.cruikshankersin.com or call them  at 770-884-8184 for your consultation.

www.CruikshankErsin.com     Linkedin     Twitter     Facebook

 

Mike Rose/WR Starkey Mortgage (Show Host)

Sr. Loan Officer

Buckhead Business Radio 08-21-14 Mike Rose 2Currently, a Senior Loan Officer with Starkey Mortgage.  He was a successful loan officer for many years with both Wells Fargo and Bank of America. His business network include real estate agents, financial planners, builders and many satisfied clients. He has closed millions of dollars worth of loans and helped many people purchase their first home. In 2008 and 2009, he reached Platinum Club status as in the top 5% of producers for Bank of America.   Before starting his career in mortgage banking, he worked primarily in talk radio broadcasting As a producer, talk host and finally Program Director at News Radio WGST in Atlanta, Mike has proven experience in creating the best radio programming in the business.  He spent many fun years as part of the team that helped to create brand names out of radio personalities such as consumer guru Clark Howard, Neal Boortz, Sean Hannity, and Kim Peterson . In 1999 and 2000, Mike took on the challenge as General Manager of the eclectic Voice of the Arts, 1190 WGKA.   Mike is also a radio personality in his own right.  He hosted the daily issue oriented talk show, on Talk Radio 1340, WALR-AM .  Creative Loafing readers voted The Mike Rose Show the “The Best Radio Show to Seek Out” in 2003.

www.MikeRoseMortgage.com     Linkedin     Facebook

 

BBR Wall of Fame SE 08-21-14

 

Buckhead Business Radio 08-21-14 Group 3 Buckhead Business Radio 08-21-14 Group 5

Buckhead Business Radio 08-21-14 Group 6 Buckhead Business Radio 08-21-14 Group 4

 

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Pamela Hogan and Sharon Spicer Evans with Georgia Institute of Cosmetology & Esthetics, Bob Bronaugh with Smart Choice Agents Program, and Karen V. Mills with Mills Law Associates

July 18, 2014 by Mike

Tess Turrin, Pamela Hogan, Bob Bronaugh, Karen Mills, Sharon Spicer Evans, Angel Nowlin
Tess Turrin, Pamela Hogan, Bob Bronaugh, Karen Mills, Sharon Spicer Evans, Angel Nowlin

Pamela Hogan & Sharon Spicer Evans/Georgia Institute of Cosmetology & Esthetics

The Georgia Institute of Cosmetology & Esthetics, the leading and growing cosmetology and esthetics schools in Metro Atlanta, is pleased to announce plans to rename the prestigious facility during a Grand Re-Opening event on Saturday, July 19, 2014 from 10am – 4pm. Located at 495 Indian Trail Road, Lilburn, GA 30047, the renamed Hogan Institute of Cosmetology & Esthetics (HICE) is offering 50% off all services during the re-opening event. VOD Photography will also be onsite at the re-grand opening event to offer discounted photo sessions, including family or individual photo sessions.

Bob Bronaugh/Smart Choice Agents Program

Bob Bronaugh, Smart Choice Agents ProgramSmart Choice is a network of over 3,500 independent agents and over 80 insurance carrier partners. They provide independent insurance agents with access to top-rated markets, product training, and sales and marketing support – and they’re the only no-fee program of its kind.

Whether you’re a start-up agent, a former captive agent, or an experienced agent, Smart Choice can give you the support and markets you deserve. They provide service from coast to coast, in over 41 states, with access to personal, commercial, life and health markets, and customized business solutions guaranteed to make you a competitive agency.

Karen V. Mills/Mills Law Associates

Mills Law Associates, LLC. is a woman-owned boutique law firm based in Atlanta, GA. The firm specializes in business and corporate transactional law, contracts law and technology law. Our attorneys provide practical advice on issues related to entity formations, contract terms and conditions, corporate acquisitions and divestitures, equity and debt financing, corporate governance and other general corporate matters. As a thriving entrepreneur, the Managing Member of Mills Law Associates leverages her engineering, legal and entrepreneurial experiences to provide practical insight to help those individuals and entities to achieve significant personal and professional objectives.

Alcohol Administrative & Regulatory Law

June 17, 2014 by emilyrowell

 

Emily Rowell (Host), Eleanor Benson, Tommy Williams, Nancy Palmer, Taylor Harper
Emily Rowell (Host), Eleanor Benson, Tommy Williams, Nancy Palmer, Taylor Harper

Taylor HarperTaylor Harper/Taylor, Feil, Harper, Lumsden & Hess, P.C.

Taylor Harper with Taylor, Feil, Harper, Lumsden & Hess, P.C.  Mr. Harper’s practice involves all aspects of commercial litigation, including contract disputes, restrictive covenants, trade secrets, business torts, insurance coverage, landlord/tenant issues, premises liability claims, secured transactions and real estate litigation.  His firm has a heavy focus on the hospitality and beverage alcohol industries. Specifically, Mr. Harper assists breweries, wineries, distilleries, importers, brokers, wholesalers, hotels, restaurants, package stores, and others in beverage alcohol administrative and regulatory matters at the federal, state, and local levels.

Mr. Harper graduated from Georgia State University College of Law where he was a member of the Moot Court Board as well as the Student Trial Lawyers Association.  During law school, Mr. Harper received several accolades including the Honors Award for Excellence in Litigation, the Nai Award for Achievement in Advanced Evidence, the C.A.L.I. Award for Excellence in Advanced Evidence, the Weltner Inn of Court Star Pupil Award and Scholarship, and the Patrick Wiseman Award for Most Dedicated Moot Court Member.  Additionally, during his second year of law school, Mr. Harper was chosen as one of seventy-five students nationwide to participate in the United States Army JAG Corps Internship Program.  Mr. Harper earned his undergraduate degree in Political Science and International Affairs from Georgia State University where he was graduated with honors.

When not lawyering, he serves as president and chairman of Maji Mazuri USA, Inc., a non-profit organization which raises funds to support projects based in Nairobi, Kenya. He is also a member of the Rotary Club of Buckhead, and he serves on the City of Dunwoody Board of Ethics. Mostly, though, he enjoys spending time with his wife and son and their two labs.

Website     Twitter     LinkedIn     Facebook     AVVO

 

 

nancy palmerNancy Palmer/GA Craft Brewers Guild

Nancy is the Vice President of the Georgia Craft Brewers Guild  and the founder and president of Cork & Key beverage consulting company. Founded in 2010, the Guild is organized to promote, protect and further, in every lawful manner, the common interests of the members and the licensed brewing industry in Georgia.  Nancy Palmer is a perennial student of the beverage industry, having spent a decade exploring all facets of the business.  Though she’s concentrated on wine for most of her career, she’s found tremendous pleasure in learning about both beer and spirits.  Her favorite aspect of the business is certainly education – she enjoys making the complicated and often intimidating world of high-end beverage accessible and interesting for anyone with any background.

Nancy’s career began while working for Five Points Bottle Shop in Athens, Georgia. After graduating from the University of Georgia she worked at several establishments not only waitressing and bartending, but also conducting many wine classes at area restaurants.  She then went on to become the wine buyer for Athens’ largest volume package store, Five Points Bottle Shop West. After a very successful stint there, she moved on to try her hand at the distribution side of the beverage business. She worked for Avant Partir representing the best international wine portfolio in the state and became familiar with the best restaurants and shops throughout Georgia and South Carolina.

Website      Twitter      Facebook

 

 

IDCTommy Williams/Independent Distilling Company, LLC

Tommy Williams is the Chief Operating Officer of Independent Distilling Company, LLC located in Decatur, GA. IDC is the first legal distillery in the Metro Atlanta Area since Prohibition. Along with his business partner Michael Anderson they are focusing on whiskey and rum at the moment and have begun shipping to their distributor for introduction into the market. The first product they are selling is Hellbender a copper pot distilled corn whiskey, the Rum will be available later this summer.

Website     Facebook

 

 

 

 

EleanorEleanor R Benson/Moondog Growlers

A lawyer by training, Eleanor became interested in craft beer back in law school when craft beer meant only Anchor Steam, Sierra Nevada & Sam Adams. Twenty years later – she had the opportunity to enter the craft beer business as the co-owner of Moondog Growlers. With three locations and over 100 taps – she is keenly aware of the changes in the craft beer industry as well as the challenges facing brewers and retailers of craft brews.  Her love of special beer began way back in the late 80’s while attending GSU law school. Her study group was made up of her beer tasting buddies (fortunately), and together—between bar review sessions—they blind-tasted an array of types and styles of beer (little did she know back then that she was preparing for a career that’s a far cry from practicing law). Eleanor has enjoyed successful careers in law, marketing, and interior design, so she jumped at the chance to combine her background and creativity with one of her favorite hobbies – craft beer.

Website    Twitter      Facebook

 

 

 

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