Archive for July, 2008

Pro-Baseball was the Minor League for Dykstra!

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Phillypreneur - Lenny Dykstra

For most professional athletes, playing in the pros is not only the pinnacle of their careers, it’s the pinnacle of their earning potential. The typical pro-athlete financial storyline goes something like this: Work really hard and overcome impossible odds to make it to the pros, sign a big contract, spend a lot of money, spend more money, retire, realize you’re spending is out pacing your income, star in regional cable commercials or land a gig as a local sports anchor, pray to God you have something left for the kids. Again, that’s most professional athletes. Lenny ‘Nails’ Dykstra is not most athletes.

For the Philly fans who lived through the glory days of the early 90’s (and the tragedy of 93), we’ll always remember Lenny Dykstra as the chaw chewing no-rules center fielder who lived the rock n’ roll life. He was put on probation by Major League Baseball for gambling. He crashed his sports car into trees and was charged with drunken driving. More recently, with the publishing of the Mitchel Report, he has been one of the bigger names associated with steroid abuse. After he retired at the ripe old age of 33 in 1996, it seemed to the ill informed masses that a professional career had run its course and a minor league sports anchor career was about to begin. Did we mention his nickname was ‘Nails’, as in the indestructible pieces of shrapnel that always seem to hang around no matter how many times you sweep the garage floor?

While the fans and the rest of the world were focused on the field and the possibility of a Phillies World Series, Dykstra was starting another career as an entrepreneur:

Dykstra’s original business venture, creating an enormously successful chain of car-wash and quick-lube establishments in Southern California. Dykstra chose car washes, he says, because of the automobile-centric culture in California, and because “it was a business that couldn’t be replaced by a computer chip.” He brought his own frustrated consumer experiences to bear in creating the business model, and eliminated many of the usual array of motor-oil choices—startup, high-mileage, various blends—from his inventory. “You get the shit out of the ground,” he said, referring to standard Castrol GTX, “or the shit made in the laboratory that’s the perfect lubricant” (Syntec). “Meaning, it’s either A or B. It’s not about the oil. It’s about the people. They got confused.” He stocked the places with baseball memorabilia and flat-screen TVs, and served free coffee (“the good kind”), so that customers would associate the experience with luxury rather than with cumbersome chores.

Finding business a natural fit, Nails expanded his repertoire and started playing the market. With his statistical mind sharpened from years of baseball stats, he became a natural day trader and quickly found himself in the rare and enviable position of making more money after his pro career then during it. Dykstra’s reputation and talent for investing eventually landed him a prestigious spot as a columnist on Jim Cramer’s popular investment website TheStreet.com. The entrepreneur in Nails hasn’t slowed down either. As of 2008 he’s stepped back from other commitments to focus on his next big venture, The Players Club:

Dykstra is launching a magazine, intended specifically for pro athletes, called The Players Club . . . The Players Club will be published monthly, and will be sent, free, to active professionals in each of ten sports, along with their agents, and club and league officials, for a total circulation of twenty thousand. It will be “photographically lush,” according to its editor, Randall Lane, and, to the extent possible, “peer to peer”—written by athletes. (The Utah Jazz forward Kyle Korver on video games, for instance, and the old Mets captain Keith Hernandez as food critic.) “It’s not just about the bling and the toys, though there’s some of that,” Lane told me. “There are all these hard-luck stories. We’re going to educate these guys to take advantage of this windfall. ‘Keep Living the Dream,’ that’s our working slogan.” Lane, who was once responsible for assembling Forbes’s annual list of top-earning athletes, is now the president of Doubledown Media, which publishes niche magazines for the extremely wealthy: Trader Monthly, Dealmaker, Corporate Leader, Private Air, and the Cigar Report.” - The New Yorker

As a Phillies legend (and Mitchel Report star) Dykstra has shown that a professional athletic career can be just the first step in a life long career as an entrepreneur.

Read more about Lenny and his latest entrepreneurial aspirations on The New Yorker website.

david Dave Speers is an online marketing consultant and start-up junky that has worked with a wide variety of Philadelphia businesses. Dave spends most his time annoying really smart people at Indy Hall co-working collaborative.

Philly FailCamp FTW!

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“The knowledge that you have emerged wiser and stronger from setbacks means that you are, ever after, secure in your ability to survive. You will never truly know yourself, or the strength of your relationships, until both have been tested by adversity. Such knowledge is a true gift, for all that it is painfully won, and it has been worth more to me than any qualification I ever earned.” - J.K. Rowling, Harvard Commencement Speech

It’s not something that your typical ego-centric entrepreneur wants to talk about; the fact that she/he has failed at one point or another. The evolutionary reality is that like the progression of life itself, failure is an essential ingredient of individual and organizational success. So this past Saturday a diverse group of innovators ranging from professors to programmers to graphic designers humbled themselves enough to get together to share, and more importantly learn from, one another’s mistakes.

Hosted at Indy Hall by Alex Hillman, Amy Hoy, Thomas Fuchs and Tony Bacigalupo nearly forty people came out to share in a the first Philly ‘fail session’.

Read more about the first FailCamp at IndyHall:

Alex Hillman’s recap
Kevin Lee, of Story Slam fame, gives his take on the unique session

“We took that feedback and, on the fly, spun out a new format to try. We set a 10 minute timer and asked people to share a problem/failure they were experiencing at this current period of time, and then within the same 10 minute window, gave the room an opportunity to speed-coach.” - Alex Hillmen

By the end of FailCamp it became obvious that we had tapped into something fundamentally ignored in the entrepreneur community; the fact that inventors and technology creators are constantly on the edge of failure and need help from their community to keep from going insane.

*FTW = For The Win
Suprisingly, Fail Whale didn\'t make it to FailCamp

david Dave Speers is an online marketing consultant and start-up junky that has worked with a wide variety of Philadelphia businesses. Dave spends most his time annoying really smart people at Indy Hall co-working collaborative.

Philadelphia nanotechnology startup gets new leadership.

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y-carbon nano technology company

Y-Carbon, Inc., a nanotechnology startup developing an innovative method of making and tailoring novel, nanostructured carbon materials with applications in energy storage, medical products, life science research, filtration and purification systems, announced today that Edward L. Erickson has been appointed CEO and a Director.

Mr. Erickson has served as president, CEO or director of a dozen such companies, four of which successfully completed IPOs during his tenure. He has raised more than $500M in equity and debt capital in both the private and public capital markets. Ed will serve Y-Carbon initially on a part-time basis pending completion of certain other entrepreneurial projects.

Y-Carbon, founded in 2004, is a materials science company with an initial focus in energy applications. Y-Carbon has obtained broad and exclusive rights to intellectual property in the field of carbide derived carbon (CDC), which is an innovative “tuneable” nano-porous, high specific surface area material invented by Prof. Gogotsi’s team in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at Drexel University. The company is currently based in the Philadelphia Keystone Innovation Zone (KIZ) and is a spin off from the A.J. Drexel Nanotechnology Institute. Y-Carbon is also a portfolio company of the Pennsylvania NanoMaterials Commercialization Center and The Nanotechnology Institute of Ben Franklin Technology Partners Southeastern Pennsylvania.

Read more about Erickson’s move to Y-Carbon CEO

david Dave Speers is an online marketing consultant and start-up junky that has worked with a wide variety of Philadelphia businesses. Dave spends most his time annoying really smart people at Indy Hall co-working collaborative.

Gary Busey on what it takes to be a successful entrepreneur

posted by B. Frank  |  Comments (3)

It’s Monday. We know. We feel it too. Here’s a little Monday morning medicine that will help chase away that weekend hangover: Busey (PS: it’s the strongest stuff we got).

And when you have a chance, check out all 40 Buse-isms. You can justify the time as an investment into your business education ;-)

b-frank Entrepreneur, Statesman, diplomat, educator, inventor, author, printer, philosopher, scientist, shopkeeper, musician, economist, public servant and American hero.

Why Two Engines Can Be Worse Than One

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Chinook \

In response to an alarming number of helicopter crashes, the U.S. Army once built a helicopter with two engines. In theory, this backup engine would reduce the number of crashes. If one engine went out, the pilot could simply turn the other engine on.

In practice, however, the dual-engine choppers actually had more serious accidents than single-engine versions. It turned out that having the option of engaging the second engine was diverting the pilots’ attention from the immediate challenge - landing safely. At the first sign of an engine malfunction, the pilots were taking their focus off flying the aircraft as they attempted to switch between engines. The second engine proved to be a dangerous distraction rather than a helpful option.

Performance Principle: In a crisis, too many options can cause paralysis. When coaching individuals who have an immediate problem, help them to pick one strategy that they will stick to for the short term. This keeps them focused and gets them working toward a solution. Later, the strategy can be modified or even abandoned. But often, people need to work rather than think their way out of trouble.

A question: Do you have people who are paralyzed by too many potential solutions to a pressing problem? If so, how can you help them to choose and stick to one strategy that will get them moving forward?

erich Eric has 18 years of experience in recruiting, coaching, and motivating business people. Previous to founding his firm Clarius, Eric was an executive recruiter, working with Fortune 500 and mid-market companies to identify and recruit CFOs, Controllers and financial staff for their organizations.

Yo Philly: Meet the founder of Ticketleap.com - Chris Stanchak

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Anyone who has ever been in charge of organizing and managing ticket sales for anything larger than a 4th grade trumpet recital can tell you it’s a confusing pain in the arse. Now, move that process online, multiply the ticket buyers by a hundred and add in some government privacy protection laws and you’ve got a hot mess on your hands. Enter Ticketleap.com, the simple app for selling tickets online. Philly’s own Ticketleap.com has been making the ticket selling process easier for a couple years now and has recently expanded their services to the hugely popular social network website Facebook.com . I interview Chris Stanchak, founder of Ticketleap.com, to get an update on the Facebook App, why he started a company in Philly and how they’ll take on the ticketing giant Ticketmaster.

When you have a chance, check out Chris’s Top Ten Ways to sell more tickets.
or this other uppity profile on Chris with it’s fancy-dancy lights and ‘impressive’ equipment: (We prefer to keep it real here in Philly ;-) )

david Dave Speers is an online marketing consultant and start-up junky that has worked with a wide variety of Philadelphia businesses. Dave spends most his time annoying really smart people at Indy Hall co-working collaborative.

Philly: The Incredible Shrinking City?

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Continuing a long-running downward trend, Philadelphia lost more residents between 2000 and 2007 than any U.S. city except hurricane-ravaged New Orleans, newly released estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau show.

Population in the city decreased from 1,517,550 to 1,449,634 in the seven years, a loss of nearly 68,000 people, according to Greg Harper, a demographer for the bureau.

That drop of 4.5 percent represents the largest percentage loss in population of a top-25 U.S. city between 2000 and 2007, figures show.

Philadelphia’s population peaked at 2,071,605 in 1950, and has dwindled ever since. The city’s current population is the lowest since the start of the 20th century, when the number of residents increased from 1.3 million in 1900 to 1.6 million in 1920, figures show.” - courtesy of the Philadelphia Inquirer

You know what a Phillypreneur thinks during times like these? That’s right, CHEAP PROPERTY! Now is the time to grab up as much property as possible before this half century depopulation trend completely turns (with economic and environmental incentives driving people back into the city, it’s already starting!). Get a piece of the action now before it’s too late.

b-frank Entrepreneur, Statesman, diplomat, educator, inventor, author, printer, philosopher, scientist, shopkeeper, musician, economist, public servant and American hero.

Phillypreneur Graves overcomes violence to become Every Day Hero

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La\'Monte Graves

Entrepreneur and philanthropist La’Mont Graves is working on a show [about every day heroes]. Growing up poor in South Philadelphia, Graves’ life consisted of “getting beat up at home by my father and then dodging gang fights at school.” Many cold, winter nights were spent sleeping in the park with his mother and two siblings. But Graves rose above the nightmare to become a successful corporate event planner and founder of the DreamLink Foundation, which supports needy families in four cities (Philadelphia, Atlanta, Miami and Los Angeles) with clothing, food and educational assistance. DreamLink was the launching pad for “Everyday Heroes”, an uplifting new TV series in which La’Mont Graves honors individuals who have overcome tremendous challenges and who are working selflessly to help others.

- Courtesy of Urban Thought Collective
Read more about Graves’s new show, Every Day Heroes
Read more about the specifics of LG’s entrepreneurial journey

b-frank Entrepreneur, Statesman, diplomat, educator, inventor, author, printer, philosopher, scientist, shopkeeper, musician, economist, public servant and American hero.

Phillypreneur lessons from Ben: No Capital is No Excuse

posted by David Speers  |  Comments (1)

ben franklin money

The following is an excerpt from Bizcovering’s inspiring article on Six Excuses That Must be Discarded to Become a Millionaire.

Here’s my favorite example from Excuse #3: I Have No Capital

Another poor man who captured the world’s imagination was Benjamin Franklin, American statesman, writer and inventor. He was the youngest child in the brood of 16. Though his parents owned a candle shop in Boston, Massachusetts, the mean income could not support comfortably with the whole family. Young Benjamin did not think much of food and what to eat because he had been told not to do so, he hardly eat delicious food. His older siblings had large appetite and would jam the table even before Ben could occupy his chair. When he realized that his father could no longer afford to send him to school, he decided to work in his brother’s printing shop. Much of his earnings went to books. He adored poetry and short stories. Amidst poverty, young Ben dreamed big things; he practiced writing, though he did not know the very basic of that profession. Then his brother started beating him cruelly, this prompted Ben to run away, with little bucks left in his pocket, he stole down to Boston harbor and went to New York City. Ben had nothing except clean t-shirt and the pants he wore. In New York, he was not accepted for any work, so he went to Philadelphia, because he had no money to pay for the transportation, he endured the long miles walking the rocky roads and sleeping at the fields at night, by the time he reached Philadelphia he was tired, dirty and hungry.

Benjamin accepted odd jobs and work day and night until he earned enough money to support his schooling. Later in his colorful journey, he founded his own printing shop, invented the first gas stove, published stories and became America’s most celebrated statesman.(trivia: When Benjamin owned a company, he noticed a young man, 14 years his junior, who was prone to failures despite his aggressiveness in work, though this young man armed with undisputed talent, intellect and strengths, he was easily intimidated and discouraged with slightest mistakes. Benjamin decided to train this man and making his own struggles in life as example, he taught him how to conquer odds, the result was remarkable, this man became an asset of the company which later on made him a successful professional, he later on quit his job and joined politics, but the great lesson Benjamin Franklin taught him never fade in his mind and he used it as his springboard as he soared high in his career. That young man was none other than James Madison, who became the fourth US President. It’s amazing to know that his great teacher in life was a poor stow away boy from Boston who once endured walking a rocky road, tired and dirty just to reach his dreams.

david Dave Speers is an online marketing consultant and start-up junky that has worked with a wide variety of Philadelphia businesses. Dave spends most his time annoying really smart people at Indy Hall co-working collaborative.

Scientology Centers aside, Hollywood is good to Philly(preneurs).

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Philadelphia goes all Hollywood

There haven’t been any sightings of Tom Kat wearing Ryan Howard jerseys, but that doesn’t mean Philly hasn’t gotten all uppity and gone Hollywood. Ever since the PA lawmakers signed into effect Act 55 of 2007, Creativity in Focus, a plethora of Hollywood Production Studios have descended on Philly and the surrounding burbs, including M. Night Shyamalan’s “The Happening,” “The Lovely Bones,” staring Mark Wahlberg, “Happy Tears,” staring Demi Moore and Parker Posey, “The Dream of the Romans,” staring Lauren Graham and Jeff Daniels, and “Transformers II” with Hollywood ‘It boy’ Shea Leboeuf.

According to the PA Department of Community and Economic Development reports, the tax credit has resulted in more than $300 million in direct economic activity in Pennsylvania, which has created an estimated 4,355 jobs and generated nearly $20 million of new tax revenue.

Here’s exactly what the tax credit provides:

Effective July 1, 2007, Pennsylvania provides a 25% Film Production Tax Credit for film production expenses incurred in the Commonwealth. The transferable tax credit is available for feature films, TV shows and series, and commercials intended for a national audience. In order to qualify for the tax credit, 60 percent of the total production expenses must be incurred in Pennsylvania. No more than $75 million per year can be awarded” - courtesy of Greater Philadelphia Film Office

The best part: The budget for the tax credit was renewed for 2009! Score.

Note to Phillypreneurs:
If you want in on the cash cow of major motion picture production, there are a lot of opportunities for the industrious. A need for traditional services like craft services (catering on set) , courier services, location scouting and lodging management all come with the big budget caravan. Considering how huge these film budgets are and that they will pay almost anything to keep they’re high-end cast and crew happy, there are plenty of more entrepreneurial opportunities.

More about the PA Film Production Tax Incentive:
Innovation Philadelphia
Greater Philadelphia Film

b-frank Entrepreneur, Statesman, diplomat, educator, inventor, author, printer, philosopher, scientist, shopkeeper, musician, economist, public servant and American hero.