Author: B. Frank

Meet the Maestro of Malls, Joseph Coradino

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courtesy of Philly.com

Joseph F. Coradino

Age, birthplace: 56, South Philadelphia

Occupation: President, PREIT Services L.L.C. and PREIT-Rubin Inc, the companies that handle leasing and redevelopment of 38 malls and 13 shopping centers (Cherry Hill, Plymouth Meeting, etc.)

Hometown: Philadelphia

Education: Urban studies, Temple University; master’s in urban planning and finance, University of Arizona

Personal: Wife, Dawn, a trained opera singer and music teacher; one daughter, 17, who just got her driver’s license.

Management Style: “Inclusive and driven.”

Hobbies: “Working out keeps me sane; cooking keeps me connected to my roots.”

Quote: “My takeaway is you can get more done as an entrepreneur than a bureaucrat. . . . That you can accomplish things.”

Read more about Coradino in the business section of Philly.com

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

Gary Busey on what it takes to be a successful entrepreneur

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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.

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.

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.

How will the trend toward ‘walkable urbanism’ effect Philly?

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  • Subprime crisis transforms American suburbs to wastelands of crime, poverty
  • Survey finds 40 percent of homes in certain cities want walkable communities
  • Arthur C. Nelson projects surplus of 22 million large-lot homes by 2025
  • Experts project low-income families will be pushed out to suburban fringe

This change can be witnessed in places like Atlanta, Georgia, Detroit, Michigan, and Dallas, Texas, said Leinberger, where once rundown downtowns are being revitalized by well-educated, young professionals who have no desire to live in a detached single family home typical of a suburbia where life is often centered around long commutes and cars.

Instead, they are looking for what Leinberger calls “walkable urbanism” — both small communities and big cities characterized by efficient mass transit systems and high density developments enabling residents to walk virtually everywhere for everything — from home to work to restaurants to movie theaters.

So what does this mean for Philly? Most likely it means more and more suburbanites and would-be suburbanites will be moving into Center City and ‘Near’ Center City neighborhoods to escape the financial black hole of large properties and white picket fences. So what does that mean for Phillypreneurs? Buy property now! When looking for new business opportunities, think of what suburbanites are comfortable with. Could they bring their love of grass and green space with them? Will we see urban garden centers popping up? Will WaWa make a new resurgence in the city? Who knows for sure, but rest assured the city and it’s demographics are changing and ripe for some entrepreneurial ingenuity to guide it.

Read the full story on CNN.com

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

Want to expand your customer base in Philly? Think International

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The United States Department of Commerce Office of Travel and Tourism Industries (OTTI) announced on Friday that Philadelphia hosted a record-breaking 550,000 international visitors in 2007, an increase of more than 100,000 from the previous year. Philadelphia is one of only two cities that reached a record level of international visitors in 2007. Seventy-five percent of the new visitation was driven by a sharp increase in the number of travelers from the Philadelphia Convention & Visitors Bureaus (PCVB) primary target markets of the United Kingdom, Germany, and France.

Read more about the land mark achievement.

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