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Georgia Technology Summit 2025: Scott McMichael with Improving

April 24, 2025 by angishields

ABR-Improving-Feature
Atlanta Business Radio
Georgia Technology Summit 2025: Scott McMichael with Improving
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Georgia Technology Summit brings together 1000+ Georgia-focused technologists to network, learn, and engage with the latest trends in Georgia innovation. This year’s summit was held at the Woodruff Arts Center, a stunning and iconic cultural landmark located in the heart of Midtown Atlanta.

Scott-McMichaelScott McMichael serves as Managing Director of North America at Improving, supporting the enterprises and having oversight of Improving’s strategic service offerings.

His primary focus is growing and positioning the company for greater impact across North America to positively change the perception of the IT profession. This includes business development, delivery excellence, plus attracting and growing technology professionals by creating a great work culture.

Prior to working with Improving, Scott held multiple leadership positions for consulting organizations – President and COO at Innovative Architects, which was acquired by Improving in 2019, and VP of Operations & Delivery at American System Corporation/Thoughtmill. As an energetic technology leader, Scott is passionate about assembling dynamic teams that deliver enterprise platform solutions.

He is a Georgia native, having served the client and his community of North Metro Atlanta for his entire career. He serves on the Alpharetta Chamber of Commerce Board of Directors, and is an active member of Conscious Capitalism’s Senior Leaders Network. Scott is a graduate of Southern Polytechnic State University and resides in Milton, Georgia with his wife and four kids.

Connect with Scott on LinkedIn.

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Broadcasting live from the Georgia Technology Summit 2025 at the Woodruff Arts Center. This is Business RadioX. And now here’s your host.

Lee Kantor: Lee Kantor here broadcasting live from the Georgia Technology Summit 2025. So excited to be talking to my next guest, Scott McMichael with Improving Atlanta. Also on the Tag board of Directors and co-chair of today’s event. Welcome, Scott.

Scott McMichael: It is good to be here. And it’s an active scene here in the lobby, isn’t it, Lee?

Lee Kantor: Yeah, there’s a lot of energy, a lot of excitement. So many people, so many familiar faces. How has the event evolved since you’ve been involved with it?

Scott McMichael: So this year I had the opportunity to be co-chair, and about halfway through the process, Larry Williams, who’s CEO of Tag, said, hey, I got a great idea. Why don’t we get a head start and start planning next year as well? So we’re trying to to to get ahead of things for next year. But the when you think about the evolution, I think that, um, there was a topic out there in the world called AI, the quantum verse. How long were we going to be able to ignore that? Now no one’s running around a tag event giving you their tip top secrets or or sharing their intellectual intellectual property on, on fobs or or through through some sort of, uh, agent. But this is a this issue is a big economic issue. This issue affects how we see data centers coming into our local economy, this issue of how we tackle AI. Um, I’ll use the term inside of my own business. They who who, uh, harness AI win the day. And we’re in the technology business, so we have an obligation to help our clients understand at really every level of their business how they’re connected to AI. So as we look at it through the lens of tag, we don’t have a choice but to address this topic from really every single angle. And that’s how they’ve structured that content for our guest today.

Lee Kantor: Now, how do you help your clients kind of decide what should we lean into when it comes to AI and what should we say? You know what? This is a human to human interaction that we don’t want to, uh, avoid happening. We want more human to human interaction. So how do you kind of, um, I was talking to another guest, and I mentioned this, like, just because you have a hammer doesn’t mean everything’s a nail. You. Part of being smart about this is knowing when to use the appropriate tool for the appropriate work that needs to be done.

Scott McMichael: It is a great question, Lee. And and you can print this on a fortune cookie tag, but, um, make no assumptions about how the client and where the client places their intellectual value, right? So we’ve done business with a nonprofit to build a registration system that now incorporates AI to that, that organizes camps for kids. Well, it sort of seems like that’s been done or is available and off the shelf. And you could go to CompUSA and pull cellophane right off the shelf, right. But that interaction and how they work with sponsors, how they interact with parents, is what they think is their most special sauce, their most special intellectual property. So that’s what we really try to get to the core of is, is this what makes you different, or is this what you have to have? If you have to have it, then there probably is a hammer on the shelf. If this is something that makes you uniquely different, then how do we uniquely deploy this sort of product scenario that that separates you out in the market? Because without that differentiation, it’s just an expensive. How did we end up with this on our cap table?

Lee Kantor: And it’s one of those things like um, when it comes to at one point there was the technology of I’m going to call somebody and they’re going to route me five times through some phone tree, right. And at one point, that was supposed to be elegant, and at one point that was supposed to solve some problems, right? But it just frustrates their customers a lot of times. So how do you kind of prevent AI from being that?

Scott McMichael: It’s it’s the scenario was actually spoken about on our stage today with Brett Taylor, who’s an aficionado at this sort of user experience. Um, when I look at those differences, I sort of say, uh, the difference in yesterday’s technology or an IVR technology like that is, is something that you can draw out in a, in a serial process, right? We could workflow that we could understand it, we could comprehend it, comprehend it. We could, uh, put together the marketing people, the product people, the technology people. We all now understand that one comes before two and two comes before three. This isn’t how we think about things anymore in technology at all, right? That interwovenness that speed of experience is just expected from those clients. And so now when we think about, uh, artificial intelligence and these, uh, agentic workflows, doing some thinking for us, we really believe that some of that thinking is good thinking, that that ability for me to not have to go through three steps. Step two, step three, step four, but to be able to skip to step five and really get to the right best, uh, solution for my answer. Solution to my problem. And maybe or maybe not. Do I speak with an individual human? Um. Those humans, we hope, upskill and become more and more intelligent. More and more, uh, higher, high skilled, more and more knowledgeable of the thing that they’re trying to solve for us. You know, we’ve been talking about, uh, technology replacing human capital since I started in this business 30 years ago, just at the onset of the web. I’m not sure I’ve replaced any jobs so far, actually, but I hope I have upskilled jobs along the way.

Lee Kantor: Now, from an improving Atlanta standpoint, who is the ideal customer for you improving?

Scott McMichael: Uh, Atlanta is our local office. We are part of a now global organization, and we have found we have this conversation on a pretty regular basis. It isn’t based on an industry, a technology, a a choice of technology platform. For us, it is the innovators, the people who have already decided that they’re not just a, a, an organization who needs enabling technology, but they’re an organization that is a technology organization that whether they ship pallets or make candies or order, uh, or provide pizzas to parties, they’ve already decided that a technology connected supply chain is what will differentiate them. It’s in the core of their business. We don’t want to be fighting an uphill battle on. Are we sure we need an app? Did we ever need the website? If you think about prior, you know, major decisions. So for us it is. It’s the group that’s like we’re enthusiastic about making ourselves different and really of more value through technology, regardless of of industry or tech.

Lee Kantor: And then so what is that problem that they’re having that it’s just not working as well as they’d like, or they’re frustrated by some element of it where improving is going to be able to improve their situation.

Scott McMichael: It’s a good question. One of the first, uh, things that we find is people have a a good fear of technology debt lest don’t get behind the eight ball. Are we still, uh, staying competitive? Do we have the tool sets now that are at our fingertips, that only the largest fortune 1000 could have had access to before? Can we now be the right size fish in that right size pond and leverage enterprise technology and elevate ourselves? Let us sit side by side with the top fortune companies. And so those are great conversations to have.

Lee Kantor: So you focus on mid market. Is that kind of your.

Speaker4: I would say.

Scott McMichael: Upper mid market. Um but there is no client that has been too small or too large in the last uh in the last year. So uh, some of our competition has really focused in and decided that there is a, a profile of client. That is where they need to focus. It’s where they are best situated. It’s the right size problem, the right size budget. We haven’t made that step yet. In our business, you find that we are sort of what we call a global boutique. We want to deploy local, um, in-office if we can, collaborative product development and systems integration and a sort of in that boutique way, like you really are collaborating and arm in arm and building that next, uh, piece of technology, but then be able to deploy globally when it’s time or when it’s time for that total cost of ownership or when it’s time to get to some more, to maybe less innovation and more operational, uh, stages of your products development.

Lee Kantor: So what do you need more of? How can we help you?

Scott McMichael: That’s a great question. It is always a pleasure to have Business RadioX present, uh, promoting what it is we do, uh, in, in the technology community across not just Atlanta, but across Georgia. I think that the more my sort of I see this as my sort of second career in tag, um, where I am in my career and where I am in my community is we want to make sure that everybody understands that when they send their kids off to MIT and these in Stanford and all these great, uh, institutions, that they know that that educational system is just as strong right here. Um, I think sometimes in our technology organization in Georgia, uh, the kids driving down the road would say, I have no idea what’s going on on the other side of that concrete wall. I believe that where you can help us and where we need to help ourselves, is to promote that vitality of the technology market that is right within our reach, a growing, booming leading technology market across Georgia.

Lee Kantor: And then, like you said, cast that wider net and not define technology so narrowly.

Scott McMichael: Well said.

Lee Kantor: So if somebody wants to connect with you, whether it’s about tag, whether it’s about next year’s summit or improving Atlanta, what are the best coordinates for you?

Scott McMichael: Absolutely. Reach out anytime. Scott McMichael at improving. Com or hit me up on LinkedIn.

Lee Kantor: And then improving his website.

Scott McMichael: Improving. Com.

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

Scott McMichael: Thanks, man.

Lee Kantor: All right. This is Lee Kantor back in a few. At Georgia Technology Summit 2025.

 

Tagged With: Georgia Technology Summit 2025, Improving

Georgia Technology Summit 2025: Beverly Wright with Wavicle Data Solutions

April 24, 2025 by angishields

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Atlanta Business Radio
Georgia Technology Summit 2025: Beverly Wright with Wavicle Data Solutions
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Georgia Technology Summit brings together 1000+ Georgia-focused technologists to network, learn, and engage with the latest trends in Georgia innovation. This year’s summit was held at the Woodruff Arts Center, a stunning and iconic cultural landmark located in the heart of Midtown Atlanta.

Beverly-Wright-hsDr. Beverly Wright serves as VP of Data Science & AI at Wavicle Data Solutions, and Executive Director for Data Science & AI at University of Georgia, as well as Past President of INFORMS Analytics Society, Chair of Data Science & AI Society at Technology Association of Georgia, and host of TAG Data Talk podcast.

Beverly is a sought-after professional speaker at established conferences, presenting on topics related to data science, artificial intelligence, ethical AI, human-AI collaboration, consumer insights, and marketing analytics.

She operates a nonprofit that leverages data science talent, tools, and resources for community betterment, tackling tough issues like human trafficking, opioid and other addictions, mental health, and other causes.

Through University of Georgia’s Executive Education team, Beverly leads the data science & AI program conceptualization, development, staffing, delivery, and evaluation.

Beverly earned a PhD in Marketing Science, a Master of Science degree in Analytical Methods, and a Bachelor’s degree in Decision Sciences.

Beverly received Professional Research Certification from the Marketing Research Association, is currently a Certified Analytics Professional – Expert level from INFORMS, and regularly presents at professional and academic conferences, publishes articles in multiple business journals and conference proceedings, and maintains an active academic research agenda.

Connect with Beverly on LinkedIn.

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Broadcasting live from the Georgia Technology Summit 2025 at the Woodruff Arts Center. This is Business RadioX. And now here’s your host.

Lee Kantor: Lee Kantor here. Uh, live at the Georgia Technology Summit 2025. So excited to be talking to my next guest, Beverly Wright with Wavicle Data Solutions. Welcome.

Beverly Wright: Hey, thanks for having me.

Lee Kantor: Well, I’m excited to learn what you’re up to. Tell us a little bit about Wavicle Data Solutions.

Beverly Wright: Yeah, we are a consulting company. We do everything services wise between data and AI. We help our clients save more money and make more money.

Lee Kantor: That’s a noble goal. So, um, tell us a little bit about, uh, the Georgia Technology Summit. Why are you here? Like, what are you what are you up to here?

Beverly Wright: Yeah, well, the Georgia Technology Summit is the largest event for Technology Association of Georgia, and my involvement is multifold. Number one, I am the chair for the Tag Data Science and AI society, which is a kind of a special interest group within Tag. And secondly, I’m the co-chair for the um, Georgia Technology Summit itself. And then thirdly, I’m one of the presenters. I’m moderating a panel, which I’m super excited about.

Lee Kantor: So for folks who are maybe not as immersed in the technology world here in Georgia, but maybe they should be. Can you tell us a little bit about your experience working with tag and why tag is so important?

Beverly Wright: Oh my gosh.

Lee Kantor: Atlanta and Georgia as a whole.

Beverly Wright: Yeah yeah yeah. Glad I’m glad you asked. So the reasons to get involved in tag are so many especially. It helps you not just learn about what’s going on through the heavy content that we deliver through some of our events, but really engage, um, by putting hands on activities involved in our initiatives. So as a quick example, the data science and AI society. Um, we help people learn by doing called experiential learning, by, uh, presenting purpose projects over the summer that help nonprofits. So if you’re curious about what is this AI thing that everybody’s talking about, one of the ways you can really get hands on experience with it is, uh, to get involved in some of our nonprofit work where we’re helping others by doing our purpose projects. And then thirdly, um, just the community, such a tight knit community. I have a colleague who works at Google, and he moved to Atlanta to from Atlanta to New York recently. He came back, uh, last week just to visit. And he said, there is no tech community like the Atlanta tech community. So that’s the third reason.

Lee Kantor: Yeah. And could you talk a little bit more about that? Because I don’t, uh, we have interviewed a lot of people from all over the country, and I don’t think they, People understand that Atlanta is different when it comes to collaboration and community as compared to other markets. Can you talk about maybe other examples where you’ve seen people from elsewhere come here and say, this is definitely different. It feels different here.

Beverly Wright: Yeah, absolutely. I was talking to some colleagues from Dallas just two days ago, and they said, there is not a community like this, you know, anywhere in our area. Also, I have a second home in South Carolina near the Greenville area. Um, and it’s a similar kind of vibe that we it’s hard to find a community like this in other parts of the world. And thirdly, I had a friend who moved to Orlando recently and he said, I gotta move back. Like, I feel like there’s no it’s he’s trying to build a community like that. And, um, I think that at the core of it, I have to say is, um, I feel like our universities and institutes are at the core of it. Georgia Tech, the especially the Master of Science and Analytics program, they are really producing some heavy duty talent and create helping create this ecosystem. They’re a very important part of it, as are Kennesaw State, Emory, University of Georgia. Even so, the schools, I think, stimulate quite a bit, as well as the many startups that are here, just all tinkering away, trying to build their AI solutions.

Lee Kantor: Right. And it’s so important to have a healthy startup ecosystem because, you know, the ones that don’t work out, you need a place for those founders to bounce to somewhere else. So it’s not like one and done right. Where in some communities there’s not that density. So they they have an idea, they try to make it work, it doesn’t work. And then all of a sudden, you know, they’re doing something else, right? Where? Here. There’s a place for them to go.

Beverly Wright: Absolutely. Yeah. There’s definitely, uh, we embrace I mean, the companies in the area that I know of definitely embrace as much as they can, um, uh, the startup community to help get them engaged and help them get on their way.

Lee Kantor: So how important do you think is kind of the southern hospitality, just as part of the culture of being in the South and in Atlanta. Do you think that that’s also an element that creates kind of that collaboration?

Beverly Wright: For sure. I mean, if you look around, I wish you guys could see what we’re seeing right now. Those that are listening. But if you look around, I’m seeing more people, um, embrace each other with hugs. And you can tell that the smiles on the face, they were familiar faces. There are new people. Just the southern hospitality of the warmth, you know, in the tech community of greeting people. And especially it’s really interesting in data science and AI, where many of us are very heavily left brain. We’re statisticians, we’re computer scientists, we’re kind of nerdy, yet we’re still embracing the social charm.

Lee Kantor: Right? If there’s a level of that, the people make you feel comfortable faster, it’s like almost there’s a higher kind of degree of empathy and EQ, uh, in the group that makes people feel welcome.

Beverly Wright: Yes, absolutely. And you know what? That’s going to become more and more important as AI gets more and more integrated into our lives. The things that make us human are empathy, our caring, our connect, ability to connect with others. Those are the things that make us human. And we’re becoming becoming a much more salient as we move into the age of AI.

Lee Kantor: When it comes to that, can you share a little bit about your take on when it comes to AI that a lot of folks? Ai is new for them and they’re implementing it maybe for the first time at this level. How do they do it in a way where it’s not kind of a blunt instrument where it’s like, oh, I don’t have to have any humans anymore. This is just going to solve that kind of human relationship, uh, challenge that I have.

Beverly Wright: Oh, boy. This is a this is a big question. How much time do we have? No. Um, but let me just give you a quick background on that. So I’m working on a paper right now with two other coauthors. One of them is, um, my dear colleague Shannon Harlowe, and it’s about the convergent and divergent nature of AI. There are people that have worked in data their whole careers, like myself, like I graduated in 91 with decision sciences, so that was very rare. There were six people in my graduating class.

Lee Kantor: Not anymore.

Beverly Wright: Not anymore. And there were only three schools that had a program like that. Um, and now those those kinds of people that grew up from data and analytics and data science and now AI there, converging into AI, they sort of know what’s in the black box. You have a whole nother group of people that’s much larger that are divergent, where they’ve always worked in some other era area, you know, like if you all of a sudden said, I want to start using AI and those are sort of divergent. They’re they’re coming in from the outside, if you will. So those are sort of the immigrants and the native. So if you’re an immigrant, we welcome you. I mean, I don’t know the ins and outs of my vehicle, but I still drive it every day or most days. We welcome you. However, we also caution you as to. My advice would be to connect with those that are the natives like, understand their perspective, get connected with those who are engaging from a standpoint of development and that they know what’s in the black box.

Lee Kantor: Because sometimes I think when a new technology kind of arrives on the scene, you know, it’s that old saying, like when you have a hammer, everything’s a nail.

Beverly Wright: Right now, all of a sudden everybody has a hammer.

Lee Kantor: Right? So now I have an I hammer and I’m going to use it for everything. And I don’t have to think anymore because AI is going to do that for me.

Beverly Wright: Well, there is some concern about that, right? Right. We don’t want to turn our brains off, but the there’s more and more research to talk about how this is impacting us cognitively as well. That means, you know, from a cognitive mental compared to affective, which is your emotional, which is also impacting you there. And then your cognitive, which is the third dimension of a human that has to do with your, um, behavioral aspect. So it’s impacting us from all three dimensions. But I would certainly encourage anyone that’s interested in tinkering and learning more. Number one, definitely don’t turn the brain off. This is a tool. You know, a lot of people thought we were doomed when calculators came out, right? Exactly. That’s what I tell everybody.

Lee Kantor: I’m like, yeah. When I was a kid, they said no calculators. Like they thought that was going to be, that no one could do math anymore.

Beverly Wright: Right? Right, right. Well, we have seen a decline in that, I mean, and number. So don’t let yourself, you know, kind of don’t let the AI lead you. You know, you need to be the one that’s dominating. And um, secondly, be involved, like get involved, learn some things. And, you know, at a minimum, listen to tag data talk which exactly which is our podcast around tag. You know Technology Association of Georgia tag data talk.

Lee Kantor: And when it comes to Wavicle, what is kind of the problem that your prospective clients are having where Wavicle kind of can help?

Beverly Wright: We can solve so many types of problems. It’s a it’s very interesting. The majority of our work is actually around data data engineering, data structure, data architecture, getting data right. But the data science and AI section of our of our work, it can solve all kinds of complex problems. So to give you a quick example for a retailer that sells beverages, um, if they’re interested in knowing like what are people saying about us? How are people talking about us? How do they feel? What’s their sentiment? Um, what are some of the areas of opportunity that we can improve? Because obviously you want to make everything great for everybody, but you got to prioritize. You don’t have unlimited funds. So through data science and AI, you can gather that information just by scraping the web and gathering comments that people have made about you on something like a Google review. And that can be done fairly easily. That would help drive a business decision about how to better serve their customers.

Lee Kantor: So is it industry agnostic? This would work in any industry, yes.

Beverly Wright: Um, Wavicle works with all different kinds of industries. Um, we we don’t do as much in government or nonprofit. We do some still. Um, but the majority are fortune 500 companies. Uh, McDonald’s is a very good client of ours. We’re headquartered in Chicago. And the second one that is, um, I believe in Tennessee is pilot the flying J. Pilot flying J. Yeah. Yeah.

Lee Kantor: They’re all over the place.

Beverly Wright: Yeah, those are our top two clients. So we’re solving all kinds of problems from them for them regularly.

Lee Kantor: So if somebody wanted to learn more about Wavicle, uh, what is the best way to connect? What’s a website?

Beverly Wright: Yeah, Wavicle Datacom is our website. You can also always reach out to me. Beverly Wright I’m on LinkedIn. Um, kind of kind of hard to miss me if you put in Beverly Wright data.

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

Beverly Wright: Absolutely. Thank you so much for having me.

Lee Kantor: All right. This Lee Kantor back in a few. A Georgia Technology Summit 2025.

 

Tagged With: Georgia Technology Summit 2025, Wavicle Data Solutions

Georgia Technology Summit 2025: Laura Gibson-Lamonthe with Georgia Fintech Academy

April 24, 2025 by angishields

ABR-Georgia-Fintech-Academy-Feature
Atlanta Business Radio
Georgia Technology Summit 2025: Laura Gibson-Lamonthe with Georgia Fintech Academy
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Georgia-Technology-Summit

Georgia Technology Summit brings together 1000+ Georgia-focused technologists to network, learn, and engage with the latest trends in Georgia innovation. This year’s summit was held at the Woodruff Arts Center, a stunning and iconic cultural landmark located in the heart of Midtown Atlanta.

Laura-Gibson-LamontheAs the Executive Director of the Georgia Fintech Academy, Laura Gibson-Lamothe’s primary objective is to drive meaningful impact within the industry through the implementation of a comprehensive diverse talent development program.

The Georgia Fintech Academy focuses on educating and empowering the next generation of fintech professionals by fostering collaboration with 26 institutions aligned with the University System of Georgia, as well as private universities and HBCUs. Our commitment extends to creating academic pathways to fintech at the secondary level, strategically cultivating a reservoir of talented individuals poised to shape the future of the industry.

Connect with Laura on LinkedIn.

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Broadcasting live from the Georgia Technology Summit 2025 at the Woodruff Arts Center. This is Business RadioX. And now here’s your host.

Lee Kantor: Lee Kantor here, broadcasting live from the Woodruff Arts Center for the Georgia Technology Summit 2025. So excited to be talking to my next guest, Laura Gibson-Lamonthe. And she is with the Georgia Fintech Academy. Welcome.

Laura Gibson-Lamonthe: Thank you. So happy to be here.

Lee Kantor: Well, I’m so excited to learn what you’re up to. Uh, catch us up. Tell us about the Georgia Fintech Academy. How you serving, folks?

Laura Gibson-Lamonthe: Yes. So we are a talent development initiative within the University System of Georgia, serving all 26 public facing institutions across the state with a fintech curriculum. And so we’re not only providing this the skills and education for our students, but helping them navigate pathways into this industry. So it’s an exciting opportunity to join industry at events like this one. Um, and so we’re here today with several students representing a number of different universities, giving them access to the network and the insights from a technology perspective right here, live in action on campus here at the Woodruff Center.

Lee Kantor: So fintech is one of the, uh, hubs that we have here in technology in the metro Atlanta area. How do you develop the, uh, curriculum for your academies? Are you partnering with the enterprise organizations, like what does that kind of collaboration look like?

Laura Gibson-Lamonthe: Yeah, I like to say we are in lock step with the industry. The industry is evolving so quickly. It’s such a dynamic, uh, field and an exciting time around innovation. And so for us to innovate on the curriculum and how we deliver it means that we have to continuously refine and ensure that we have a close understanding of where the industry. Trends are heading and how we can best provide some of that education in. The curriculum. And so we work with a lot of our partners and have developed a routine where we’re reviewing the curriculum. We’re allowing industry to opine upon that curriculum, and then we’re making curriculum enhancements along the way. And so it’s it’s been exciting to to come and attend these events where, you know, people are showcasing real time some of the technology developments that they have on their radar. And we’re already, you know, writing down notes, um, have conversations, follow ups, obviously, I and embedded payments and some other trends are at the forefront of conversations. We now have to kind of take that back into our, our our mothership. I say, and dissect what that means from an education perspective and ensure that our curriculum is reflective of what the industry is doing and focusing on.

Lee Kantor: So, uh, tell us a little bit about the student who is attracted to this. Like, when does their interest begin? Is it something that you have to even start thinking about? Let’s create some curriculum for elementary and middle and high school.

Laura Gibson-Lamonthe: Yes, yes. So we work closely with the Department of Education. We have students that are taking under the dual enrollment program, uh, focused uh, classes on fintech. Uh, but then outside of that, we’re also providing some exposure early on. I think one of the things that’s a prerequisite to fintech is financial literacy. Um, which is a whole nother conversation we should have in the future. Right. But for math, I mean.

Lee Kantor: That’s critical for even if you’re not going to pursue it as a career, that just that kind of base education is invaluable.

Laura Gibson-Lamonthe: Yep. And I think financial literacy is almost the gateway to fintech for me personally, financial literacy and having to overcome some challenges, um, that I’ve had navigating, you know, just being a consumer, um, and someone who is, you know, starting to earn money and learning how to, you know, best, manage money. It it opened the doors to conversations around the technology that’s providing solutions and services for people to, uh, basically transact, uh, financially. And so for me, it became a career through my financial literacy journey. And I think for students, it’s about educating them about, you know, traditional finance, um, you know, best practices. And it kind of opens that door for, hey, there’s a career in this industry for me, right?

Lee Kantor: My dream is if education could explain to a young person the power of compounding, if they could just do that at a super young age. Um, I think it’s a game changer.

Laura Gibson-Lamonthe: Yes, it is. And I think one of the things that’s really exciting for me is to start seeing some of the students who are taking that, uh, extra step to become founders. So they’re identifying the pain points and the challenges through that financial literacy journey to say, I actually want to be a part of the solution, um, and bring that to the table. So it’s not necessarily just traditional pathways. We’re also focused on entrepreneurship as well.

Lee Kantor: So now, um, has how long has the academy been around?

Laura Gibson-Lamonthe: We’re about to celebrate our five year anniversary. So super excited. 10,000 students.

Lee Kantor: 10,000 students. Yeah. I mean, can you imagine 10,000 people going through the how? That’s so important.

Laura Gibson-Lamonthe: It is, it is. And it’s it’s all happening right here in Georgia. So we’re getting major focus from some of our competitors. And I think, you know, states outside of the state of Georgia that are looking in, uh, at the success of the program and what we’ve been able to achieve. But our focus now is, is really emphasizing the need for jobs, um, internships, full time placement. Obviously, the market is is, you know, taking a shift lately. And our focus is really trying to identify where those opportunities are and help students get placed in them. So we’re constantly facilitating those conversations with companies.

Lee Kantor: Now, has there been any, uh, graduates that have gone on either to start their own business or any kind of success stories you can share?

Laura Gibson-Lamonthe: Yeah, I think one of my favorite success stories, um, only because I’m here in the, uh, the Georgia Technology Summit, uh, last year at, uh, one of the other partner events, Fintech South, we had a student who was literally manning the table, the booth in the expo hall for Truist. Uh, and that student was a recent graduate of the Georgia Fintech Academy. We also had around 30 students attending that event, just as, uh, registrants for and participating in that event. They saw her and were like, that’s what we want to get to. We want to be on the other side working and representing that Truist brand. And I think for me, that was a full cycle of seeing that student, obviously, um, for me seeing her sophomore, junior, senior year and then now working as a career professional at Truist. But then seeing the students who were reflecting on that near peer as a as a goal for what they were aspirational.

Lee Kantor: And now it’s real.

Laura Gibson-Lamonthe: Exactly, exactly. And then the other.

Lee Kantor: Could be you.

Laura Gibson-Lamonthe: Yes, exactly. It could be you. It’s attainable. I think so many times students see, especially at these conferences, they see the executives. Right. You know, folks who are more, you know, tenured and senior in their roles. And it’s a little bit out of touch, right?

Lee Kantor: They don’t see they don’t connect the dots how that’s kind of viable for them. But when they see somebody they know or seen around, all of a sudden they’re there. Yep. Then why not me?

Laura Gibson-Lamonthe: Yes, yes. And we talk about representation that really matters. Representation means a lot of things. Um, it could be, you know, something where it connects with the student and they can they can now kind of realize that that goal and that, that focus. So, um, those opportunities are there’s so many of them that I’ve come across and watching students, you know, get on the stage and represent their own brands as entrepreneurs or as another one. Um, and we’ve had students that, you know, apprentice with some startups here in the state. Um, you know, we’ve had students go over and work at the Atlanta Tech Village, which is doing exciting things here in Atlanta and Georgia as well. Um, and so being able to see them shine in different ways, in different capacities and kind of broaden their horizons as far as where their career pathway could lead them has been been really rewarding.

Lee Kantor: So what do you need more of? How can we help you?

Laura Gibson-Lamonthe: Yes, I need jobs. I need job. Job jobs, I need internships. I’m looking for internships and and and jobs. Full time placement opportunities. These roles, um, vary. I think in the fintech space, people think, you know, traditionally data science, cybersecurity. But we have, you know, students that are navigating pathways towards product, uh, management, product development, project management, marketing, even, um, consulting sales. There are so many different segments in this space. And I think for our students, we’re we’re now looking at, uh, just the industry much more broadly. And so for for folks who are in an organization who are looking for early talent, um, and not just early talent, we also have, uh, folks that are continuing ed, they have, you know, more years of experience under their belt who are coming back into the academic fold to, you know, continue to refine their skills. And so we do have a growing portfolio of experienced professionals and some that are just embarking on their journey at the early talent stage.

Lee Kantor: Now, um, why was it important for you? Are you attending the event here or are you did you bring some students with you?

Laura Gibson-Lamonthe: I did bring some students with me. Um, and they’re they’re being good. They’re in the the main session right now and the main stage. Um, you know, we actually had a pep talk coaching session where we did kind of, like networking best practices, how to maximize what you’re getting out of this event. And so they’re they’re out here, um, meeting and learning and soaking up everything they can. Um, and so for us, it’s been, you know, kind of helping facilitate the, the networking, getting them warm and comfortable in this space. I think this also gives them an opportunity to demonstrate what they’ve learned, since they don’t necessarily get that, they get that with their peers. But to put them in a in an immersive experience where we are putting them, you know, with a couple of hundred or more, uh, professionals is is something that really gets them to, to get that practice and that skill refined.

Lee Kantor: So when you’re working with enterprise level organizations, or I’m sure you’re open to having conversations with startups as well. Yeah. Who at that organization is the right person for you to talk to? So you can explain the value of collaborating?

Laura Gibson-Lamonthe: Yeah. I think, you know, initially we start off with a lot of the folks in the talent space, air recruiting. Um, but for me, it’s really been, uh, extremely beneficial to, to meet with the folks that are on the tech side. You know, tech managers, leaders who are driving the talent acquisition strategy versus the execution of that strategy. So if you are anyone that’s influencing, uh, the plans for scalability within your organization when it comes to human resources and, and, and the people within your organization, that’s that’s who I really want to talk with. Um, for us, it’s going beyond the fact that you might have an immediate need to start starting to get more strategic about future state and what your growth goals are. Um, because those change over time and as we talked about earlier, the economy and where it stands today, and it’s a luxury to really invest in early talent, but it’s an imperative, uh, for the sustainability of any organization, no matter what stage you are in. Um, a matter of fact. So I think for having that conversation really requires leaders who are transforming and building and developing their organizations.

Lee Kantor: So if somebody wants to learn more, what’s the best way to connect with you or somebody on your team?

Laura Gibson-Lamonthe: Yes. So I would recommend going to our website, Georgia Fintech Academy. Org or you can find me on LinkedIn Laura Gibson Lamoth. Um, or if you just look up Laura Gibson, I pop up, uh, as well. Um, but we are always active. Um, you can find us at a lot of the industry events, uh, coming up, um, as well as, uh, some of the things that we’re doing on various campuses. So look out for us on on either channel.

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

Laura Gibson-Lamonthe: Thank you for having me.

Lee Kantor: All right. This is Lee Kantor back in a few at Georgia Technology Summit 2025.

 

Tagged With: Georgia Fintech Academy, Georgia Technology Summit 2025

Georgia Technology Summit 2025: Reggie Marable with Sierra

April 24, 2025 by angishields

ABR-Sierra-Feature
Atlanta Business Radio
Georgia Technology Summit 2025: Reggie Marable with Sierra
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Georgia-Technology-Summit

Georgia Technology Summit brings together 1000+ Georgia-focused technologists to network, learn, and engage with the latest trends in Georgia innovation. This year’s summit was held at the Woodruff Arts Center, a stunning and iconic cultural landmark located in the heart of Midtown Atlanta.

Reggie-MarableReggie Marable, Head of Sales at Sierra, is a dynamic sales leader with P&L responsibility and global leadership experience.

His passionate leadership style inspires collaboration, trust, and creativity. Reggie has led $400 million+ sales organizations while developing solution-selling leaders who deliver results.

Connect with Reggie on LinkedIn.

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Broadcasting live from the Georgia Technology Summit 2025 at the Woodruff Arts Center. This is Business RadioX. And now here’s your host.

Lee Kantor: Lee Kantor here. So excited to be broadcasting from the 2025 Georgia Technology Summit. And so excited to be talking to my first guest today, Reggie Marable with Sierra. Welcome.

Reggie Marable: What’s up. How you doing? It’s great to be here.

Lee Kantor: Well I am doing well. I’m so excited to learn what you’re up to. Before we get too far into things. Tell us about Sierra.

Reggie Marable: Yeah, excited to tell you about Sierra. So Sierra is a startup that we’re based in San Francisco. Um, we’ve been out of stealth for a little over a year, but we’ve been a company for two years. And what we do is we create customer facing AI agents that represent a company’s brand, and they’re integrated in all parts of the customer experience. And these agents are very sophisticated. They can think and reason like human beings. They speak multiple languages. They have emotional intelligence. And then we interconnect to systems of record and sources of data. And these agents can actually take action on your behalf 24 seven so it allows a brand to put their best sales representative and their best customer service agent in front of their customers 24 over seven and allow them to do self-service.

Lee Kantor: So what was the genesis of the idea? How did this come about?

Reggie Marable: Yeah, our company was founded by two incredible technology legends, Bret Taylor, who’s actually doing the keynote today. He’s the former co-CEO of Salesforce, and currently he’s the chairman of the board for OpenAI. And then also Clay Bavor, who is the number two executive at Google who ran Google Labs, which is all there at the time. All their forward thinking bets, technology bets for the company. So two great founders came together and wanted to capitalize on the power of this amazing technology, and our first focus is improving the customer experience.

Lee Kantor: And then who is the target? What size companies are you focusing in on?

Reggie Marable: We pretty much focus on, um, companies that are financial services, healthcare, telecom, technology companies, consumer electronics, uh, travel, tourism, hospitality. Uh, so just think of anything like where you live, work and play and where you’d want to interact with a brand. Those are the companies that we focus on.

Lee Kantor: And then is there a size or is this for enterprise only or is it for any size company?

Reggie Marable: We’re primarily focused on enterprise. But you know, as we continue to grow and make traction, we will be, um, pretty much working with all types of companies, uh, big, small, but primarily focused on the enterprise. But we are evolving our platform to do a lot of self-service. So we will be expanding into mid-market and SMB down the line. But right now we’re primarily enterprise.

Lee Kantor: So what is kind of the pain that these enterprise organizations are facing where Sierra is like the kind of the dream come true problem solver for them.

Reggie Marable: A great question. I just think about how you interact with the brand. I think a lot of brands want to interact with their customers. They just can’t afford to. So I think the main frustration people have is they wait on hold. And then because of the great Resignation, you’re interacting with an agent that has, um, pretty, pretty low tenure. Um, and then there’s a lot of, uh, you know, back end chair swiveling. So the customer experience is not ideal for a lot of brands. So our vision and our goal is to help improve the customer experience by providing a consistent, delightful experience and allowing, uh, businesses to interact with their customers 24 over seven.

Lee Kantor: Now, is it going to kind of get rid of the dreaded phone tree? You know, press one for this, and then you’re going down the series of really bad questions that aren’t really solving my problem, just frustrating me. And then when I finally get to somebody that’s supposed to help, I have to explain it all again.

Reggie Marable: Absolutely. So our our agents, um, pretty much are the front door of the customer experience. And we can interact with your customers in an authenticated experience where we know who you are and we know everything about you, and also in an unauthenticated experience. But we’re the front door of the experience. These agents, you can talk and chat with them. They’re very delightful. Uh, once again, they can think and reason like human beings and and you’re actually able to have a conversation and explain what you need. And then our agents, because they have access to the systems of record, um, they’re able to quickly resolve your issue, um, recommend a product, help you with your subscription, uh, help you troubleshoot a technical issue, so forth and so on.

Lee Kantor: So how quickly does when you’re explaining this to a prospect, how quickly does that aha moment come?

Reggie Marable: Fairly quickly when I can, um, paint the vision where your customers have the ability to interact with you 24 over seven, and it’s going to be a delightful, consistent experience, and they’re going to be able to handle whatever they need 24 over seven, um, on their own time. And they don’t have to wait on hold, and they can speak with someone that can actually handle their issue.

Lee Kantor: Right. But right now they’re moving from something that’s clunky and inelegant to possibly yours. Somebody sold them that clunky thing and used similar words that you’re using. So when do they kind of get that feeling of home? This is different. This is is that something immediate?

Reggie Marable: It’s the power of large language models. A lot of the quote unquote chat bots and ivrs are built off of older technology. Um, this technology has only been around for, um, you know, a little over two years. So it’s the power of this new technology, the power of large language models and the way AI works, it allows you to have very delightful conversational experiences with your customers. Um, and it’s not rigid. It’s not structured. It’s pretty much open form. And that’s the power of this new technology that our platform is built on.

Lee Kantor: And how quickly will a customer be able to implement this once they raise their hand and say, yeah, I’m in.

Reggie Marable: Depends on the complexity of what they want Sierra to build. But we’ve had one of our customers, Casper. I’m sure you’re using Casper mattresses. We were able to build and put their agent on live production and go live in less than a month. Um, some customers that really want to build very complex, uh, multi-step use cases that could be anywhere from 2 to 4 months, but we’re able to move incredibly fast. Um, because what we do is we have a forward deployed engineering model where we provide a dedicated product manager and a dedicated engineer that seamlessly integrates into your technology team and helps you build these agents so we can move as fast as our customers are able to to move once again, we can we can get an agent live as quickly as a month. Uh, sometimes it takes longer. It depends on the complexity.

Lee Kantor: So why was it important for your firm to, um, get involved with the Georgia Technology Summit and sponsor.

Reggie Marable: A great question. So we have expanded to the East Coast. Um, we’re growing at a very rapid pace, and we made the decision to make Atlanta our East Coast headquarters. So we’ve opened a very large office in beautiful Midtown Atlanta, which is not too far from here. And being that we’re going to be a significant, uh, company in this in the city of Atlanta, we felt it was important to become a member of Tag. Support. Tag. And also our co-founder, Brett Taylor is doing the keynote today. So Tag is a very important and influential organization in Atlanta, especially in the technology scene. And we wanted to be part of that.

Lee Kantor: So what is, um, the reputation of Atlanta and tag, you know, from the West Coast kind of point of view?

Reggie Marable: Yeah, Atlanta has quickly emerged as one of, uh, the best technology cities, um, in North America. Uh, shout out to, uh, mayor, Mayor Dickens, who’s really been focused on making Atlanta a technology hub. There’s a lot of great technology companies like Google, Microsoft, Salesforce, meta, now, Sierra that have big presence here in Atlanta. And then also there’s a lot of like great institutions. There’s a lot of great talent in Atlanta. There’s a lot happening in this market. So we felt it was really important for Sierra to be part of Atlanta and also partner with Tag. But being a San Francisco based company in Silicon Valley, Atlanta is really emerging as a technology technology city. And we wanted to be here.

Lee Kantor: So how do you kind of how do you see the difference between the way that we’re doing kind of technology and the ecosystem we’ve created here as compared to the West Coast?

Reggie Marable: Yeah, I think Atlanta is still, um, still fairly fairly, uh, still up and coming when you when you think about Silicon Valley, you know, Silicon Valley is kind of been like the hub and heart of technology worldwide where you’ve got, you know, all these incredible companies that are being created. There’s a lot of VC investment firms that are funding these companies, and we’re starting to see a lot of that happening in Atlanta, like there’s a lot of new companies being created here. There’s a lot of innovation. There’s a lot of support from the VC community to help these companies get off the ground. So I think Atlanta could very well be a force, but I think still, Silicon Valley is the heart and soul of technology and new innovation, right?

Lee Kantor: Like there’s a lot more density there than there is here. Um, in terms of number of firms and VCs that are there. Is there anything like what do you need more of? How can we help you at Sierra?

Reggie Marable: Well, once again, we just we want to be part of the Atlanta community. We’re going to be very active in Atlanta. So just partnering with Tag and helping to increase our awareness, we’re going to be doing a lot of hiring. So just letting people know that we’ve got great, uh, positions here. We’re a fast growing company. We’re going to revolutionize how people interact with brands. And we’re hiring sales professionals, sales engineers, agent Asian engineers. So we’re looking for great people. So I think Tag can help increase our brand awareness in the market and help us find some of the best talent in the world to work at Sierra.

Lee Kantor: So right now, talent is a priority.

Reggie Marable: Absolutely. Uh, there’s you can never find enough talent, especially for a fast growing company. So we’re looking for great people, but we’re also looking to establish ourselves in Atlanta. There’s a lot of incredible companies that we feel we can help us leverage this technology to improve their their customer experience. And we really want to make an impact here, not only with hiring people, but also helping a lot of companies that are, you know, that are creating in Atlanta that have big presence in Atlanta. And everyone like, uses these brands and they’re they’re part of the Atlanta community.

Lee Kantor: And so you’re looking also to, um, have conversations with customer experience officers at some of these enterprise companies in Atlanta and the southeast.

Reggie Marable: Absolutely. Customer experience officers, technology leaders. Once again, we believe, uh, Sierra, we are the front and the lead of helping companies use this powerful technology to improve how they interact with your customers. And we want to help all the companies in Atlanta and all the companies in the southeast take advantage of this amazing technology.

Lee Kantor: And if somebody wants to learn more, what’s the website? What’s the best way to connect?

Reggie Marable: Yeah, the best way to connect is to go to Sierra II. And I’ll actually spell the name s I e r a I plenty of information on our website. And there’s also a Learn More tab where you can just fill out some information and we’ll reach out and connect with you. But we’d love to talk to you. Once again, we feel that Sierra is a force. We can help companies improve their experience, and we’re here in Atlanta to help.

Lee Kantor: Well, Reggie, thank you so much for sharing your story today. You’re doing important work and we appreciate you.

Reggie Marable: Thank you. It’s an honor to be here and look forward to a great day at the conference.

Lee Kantor: All right. This is Lee Kantor back in a few. At Georgia Technology Summit 2025.

 

Tagged With: Georgia Technology Summit 2025, Sierra

Jake Kane with PM Harbour

April 24, 2025 by angishields

HBR-PM-Harbour-Feature
Houston Business Radio
Jake Kane with PM Harbour
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Jake-KaneJake Kane is the Founder and CEO of PM Harbour, a firm specializing in mega project delivery, EPC execution, modularization, and strategic consulting.

With a global career managing high-profile industrial and commercial projects, Jake is a trusted expert in project execution, risk management, scheduling, and contract strategy. His leadership has guided both owners and contractors through complex project lifecycles, helping to prevent issues before they arise—or recover projects already in distress.

In his conversation with Trisha Stetzel, Jake shared how PM Harbour provides fractional project management and consulting services to smaller construction and engineering businesses. He explained how his team bridges the gap between small contractors and large EPC firms by offering expertise in contract management, risk mitigation, and staff training. PM-Harbour-logo

Jake also opened up about his entrepreneurial journey, sharing both challenges and success stories, while emphasizing the power of outsourced project management in improving outcomes for smaller firms.

Connect with Jak on LinkedIn.

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in Houston, Texas. It’s time for Houston Business Radio. Now, here’s your host.

Trisha Stetzel: Hello, Houston. Trisha Stetzel here bringing you another episode of Houston Business Radio. It is my pleasure to introduce this guest. By the way, another amazing introduction from John Brocato. He is amazing at connecting me with people that are doing great things in our community. Jake Kane, founder and CEO of PM Harbour. Welcome to the show.

Jake Kane: Hi, Trisha, thanks for having me. I’m really excited to be here with you today.

Trisha Stetzel: Yeah, I’m excited to have this conversation today, Jake. So before we jump into it and PM Harbour, I’d love to know more about Jake. So tell us about you.

Jake Kane: Um, so passionate about, uh, project management, construction and creating things, um, where they haven’t been in the past. I think it’s part of the progress that drives our world forward and passionate about making that happen.

Trisha Stetzel: Yeah, I love that. So how did you how did PM Harbour come to be?

Jake Kane: So it’s a it could be a bit of a long story, but the slightly abridged version is I’ve been working in project management for engineering, procurement and construction, uh, projects, EPC projects in the industry world now for over a decade. Um, started doing that down in Corpus Christi, building offshore oil and gas platforms. Um, and before too long moved up to Houston to take a larger role supervising the engineering and procurement projects, um, for some large EPC companies. Uh, spent some interesting time doing internal consulting on strategically critical projects for them. Basically, projects that were too big to fail or had already started going sideways and they needed help recovering. Um, and eventually that organization asked me to help them shift their systems and restructure to be more successful at avoiding the problems they had encountered in the past. Unfortunately, I ran into too much red tape and bureaucracy to make some of the changes we needed, and that led me to the idea that I could do some of this stuff on my own. Um, and not only just that, um, but serve a broader sector of the industry, smaller companies, smaller contractors that wouldn’t normally be able to afford us or make sense to afford the high level project management experience. So given that I started PM Harbour, um, the summer of 2023. So we’re just about two years old now. Um, and things are going well, we’re, we’re we’re growing into new markets and new client pools. Um, and excited about the opportunity to help people achieve, uh, new and better results.

Trisha Stetzel: Yeah. Fantastic. I love that, Jake. And you were telling me before we started recording today that some a big project that you had worked on may have, may have just come down the ICW in my neighborhood recently. That’s really cool. So you’re working with some really big firms and you’re also working with some smaller businesses. So I’d love to talk more about this idea of fractional project management and consulting. So can you tell me a little more about that? We’re seeing a lot more fractional businesses out there. I didn’t even know this existed, which is why I want to talk about this today. Yeah.

Jake Kane: I don’t think you’re alone in not realizing that project management fractionalization, um, is a possibility as we talk to more and more clients. Um, it’s things that they haven’t really considered a lot in the past. So. So PM Harbour is a project management services and consulting company. Um, that’s our tagline. But essentially what that means is we can break down portions of project management and execution and make them available on a fractional basis. So where a company, a large EPC company, may be able to afford a 150 and 50 to $200,000 a year. Project manager and keep them busy full time. A lot of smaller specialty contractors or fabricators in the Gulf Coast, um, don’t have the high level work that requires that year round. When they win that surprise contract, um, or that complicated project, uh, they, they have the opportunity to reach out to us and we can make the experienced staff available to them on a 5 or 10 hour a week basis. Um, or whatever’s really needed to help them accomplish their, their goals and overcome the challenges they’ve got going.

Trisha Stetzel: So tell me more about the companies from a small business perspective. Tell me more about the companies that, you know, have to give names, but the types of companies that you’re interfacing with for fractional project management.

Jake Kane: Yeah. So we still serve a lot of the owners and owners rep roles. Um, and the large EPCs and specialty consulting work, which is really my specific background. But the area I’m excited about and we’re growing into is supporting, um, disadvantaged businesses or smaller businesses that may be pursuing work for larger projects. Um, typically a lot of um, airport construction projects or data center projects may have objectives for achieving certain percentages of smaller, disadvantaged business scope. Um, and some of those contractors do great work but aren’t experienced at executing complex or larger contracts. Um, and that’s where we can really kind of come in and help bridge that gap. Um, explaining to contractors and helping them digest what’s all of the obligations in those larger contracts, be it pre-construction deliverables, um, or estimating in a manner they’re not used to estimating. Um, and then comply with the overall, either the bidding process or the execution of the contract. So allowing people that build good work to work on higher spec or higher complex projects than they would normally be comfortable undertaking on their own.

Trisha Stetzel: Okay. So if I I’m I’m a layperson at this. So my question is you’re connecting the people who are doing the work with these smaller businesses. Right. So you you actually are the not the negotiator, but the one that’s making things happen, right? Uh, because you’ve got your hands in both wheels. Yes.

Jake Kane: Yeah. So it’s worked both ways so far. Um, because because of our large experience and connections with the EPC contractors, sometimes they’ll come for us, come to us and ask us for help identifying a small business that does precast concrete.

Trisha Stetzel: Okay.

Jake Kane: We have some of those connections and bring them to some of our clients and help them comply with the bid process. Alternatively, we have some small contractors that we know that reach out to us and say we’re interested in trying to pursue X project or X work. Can you help us comply or network into it? Um, our value add isn’t really on the brokering of deals. Um, but much more on the execution side because that’s what drives all of us individually. Um, but you’ve got to win the work to be able to execute.

Trisha Stetzel: Sure, absolutely. And what about you really do play this role in protecting protecting these companies, right. As you’re talking between these larger EPCs or these companies that are going to do the work and the work that the entrepreneur or the small business owner needs. So how are you helping navigate those conversations or protecting that company? Who’s getting the work done by these larger EPCs?

Jake Kane: Yeah, that’s that’s actually one of the major motivations for reaching out and trying to help serve some of the smaller contractor community. Unfortunately, when I worked for the larger EPCs and owners, um, I saw over and over again many circumstances where smaller contractors were more or less bulldozed or bullied by the contractor and their lack of understanding by it. Um, and we want to make sure that we provide the skill set and knowledge to those smaller contractors, so that doesn’t have to happen going forward. Um, so the way we do that is really by empowering our experienced project managers that have sat on the other side of the contract and allowing them to serve directly, the smaller contractors making contract cheat sheets, um, or obligation lists. Um, so that there’s no question at the end of the day, did you fulfill all the contract obligations to get your retainage value? Um, or helping contractors do risk and opportunities workshops, looking through the contract and knowing where their opportunities for additional recovery are and where their opportunities or risks are from. Um, not being able to apply change orders, um, based on the way the contract is structured.

Trisha Stetzel: So I’m a small business owner listening to the show today. What I love the idea of fractional project management. So what what could I use your Services for. As a small business owner.

Jake Kane: So if a small business owner is already pretty aware of where their. I’ll say weaknesses are or internal challenges is better politically correct terms there. Um, we are very good at adept and adept at, um, helping you come up with systems, policies, procedures and or trainings to cover up those areas. So we had a client who said our client, our, their client was wanting a, um, logic link construction schedule, which they’d not developed in the past. So in that circumstance, we helped them two different ways. One, we built them the schedule, um, for this first client. And two, we provided a training to their project management, um, showing them how to do this for themselves going forward. Um, so it’s really coming down to identifying the challenges or shortfalls. And then from there we’ll come up with different, um, solutions or custom solutions, to help bridge that gap.

Trisha Stetzel: What types of industries like entrepreneur industries, if you will, are you interfacing with regularly?

Jake Kane: We. So we work primarily. Our expertise is in the heavy industrial world. Um, so a lot of smaller fabrication shops, um, skill building shops, um, or other industrial equipment, as well as um, on site contractors, specialty contractors. Um, for foundation work, roofing contractors. Um, those types of smaller contractors in the area or in the vicinity, uh, are kind of where we spend most of our time interfacing right now.

Trisha Stetzel: Okay. And the needs of those companies, I get how you’re interfacing with them, right? You’re protecting them. You’re helping them with change management. Maybe they have a particular project that they need help with. Um, what are you finding you’re spending the most time doing with these companies that you’re interfacing with?

Jake Kane: It’s a lot of education, which is great because that’s that’s a passion of mine. And most of our project managers is, is, you know, teaching a man to fish or a woman to fish. Um, we spend a lot of time doing the education. Um, and then the biggest needs that we’ve seen are really on the contract management side. Um, the, the bigger the owner, sometimes the bigger the contract, and and the more pages included. Uh, there’s more hidden opportunities and gotchas. Um, and so combing through those things and making sure everybody understands what’s actually in there.

Trisha Stetzel: Okay. Yeah, that’s a difficult thing to do as a business owner, right? It’s not my it’s not the thing. It’s not the thing that I excel at or I’m excellent at. It’s the thing that I’m probably not very good at. So I need somebody. Right? Like. Like you. Like Jake, like PM Harbour to come in and help me with that contract negotiation or at least understanding the contract. Right. Uh, and what that looks like.

Jake Kane: So a contractor that recently we talked to, um, had already started doing the work and was looking to send their first invoice, and it was rejected because on page 99 it talked about the first requirement for invoicing was providing of a certified bond. They had the bond, but they didn’t provide it and so their invoice was rejected. Okay. Small things like that that can really derail small contractors as they try to balance their cashflow. Um, it’s it’s unfair and not really the intent of the requirement there. Um, and so those are areas where we can help cover up some of those issues.

Trisha Stetzel: Oh, my. Yeah. And which I don’t know any business owners that are going to read 125 page contract and actually understand it. I’m not saying they wouldn’t read it. They might, but actually understand everything that’s in there. Right. And the language in there. Um, you’re providing such a valuable service to these small business owners, these entrepreneurs. We didn’t talk about really the investment or the cost associated with hiring someone who isn’t doing fractional work right. It’s very expensive to hire someone to do what you’re doing as an employee into my business. So having the ability to bring someone on fractional is really helping save a lot of money. So can we can we talk a little bit about that? I mean, when I talk dollars and cents, but it’s huge, right? For a small business owner.

Jake Kane: We’ve we’ve seen a number of of frankly horror stories from um, the the massive imbalance in supply and demand, especially in the Gulf Coast region, um, for experienced project managers, um, the oil and gas industry is great for a lot of things, um, and has served this region fantastically well. Um, and it’s afforded a lot of individuals to have great lifestyles, but it is also driven up the cost of experienced, highly technical and competent individuals, um, where project managers routinely here can cost between 150 and $250,000 per year from a salary based perspective, and that doesn’t cover the rest of the benefits and other burdened obligations. Um, and for smaller contractors, that’s a lot of times insurmountable. Um, fortunately, they don’t need project managers 40 plus hours a week, typically. Um, and so it doesn’t necessarily make sense to carry that burden on your books year round. And then, of course, there’s the risks associated with mis hires, um, or planning to hire somebody on a specific timeline where projects get delayed and you might miss that hire um, or that individual, um, takes another job opportunity. Uh, and you have a job posting that stays open for months at a time. Meanwhile, you’ve got ongoing contract obligations. So it’s it’s difficult to do just in time delivery with your, your staff. Um, and so the fractional aspect, it’s people are used to it on in many other areas from, you know, HR to uh, comptrollers and accountants. Um, Um, it’s it’s a new, newish spin on some of that old modeling, um, bringing it to the project management world.

Trisha Stetzel: Yeah. How how amazing is it to have such skilled project managers and the service that you provide at your fingertips? Right. And not somebody that you have to put in your office and pay 40 hours a week, but a partner that you can use in your business. Right. Um, with PM Harbour. So if listeners are already interested in connecting with you, Jake, how do they find you? What’s the best way to connect?

Jake Kane: So PM Harbour h a r b o u r spelled the British way. Um, it’s not a particularly interesting story there. Um, but that’s our website. Pm Harbour. Com. Um, you can find us on LinkedIn. We post a number of lessons learned and other blogs, um, that have touch on topics like contract management and change orders. Um, and then you can always email myself directly at Jake j e dot k e Any that pm harvard.com.

Trisha Stetzel: Harbour with a you.

Jake Kane: Harbour with a you.

Trisha Stetzel: You may have to come back so I can dig around at that story.

Jake Kane: It has to do with domain name availability and and not being able to buy the English or the American spelling version of that. So that’s maybe something that’ll resonate with a lot of small business owners. As you you find odd constraints you didn’t expect.

Trisha Stetzel: Uh, yes. Absolutely. I love that’s a fantastic story. I think that’s great. We, uh, many of us have felt that same pain with our domain names.

Jake Kane: Yeah. And having worked internationally and for a British company, and I have no issues with, uh, spelling things the British way. Yeah.

Trisha Stetzel: Absolutely. All right. We talked a little bit about before we started recording this morning about the, uh, veteran space, because I have a lot of friends in that space. Uh, I am a veteran. I own two businesses, and many of the listeners are also veteran business owners. So what would you like to say to them today?

Jake Kane: Um, one, first and foremost, you know, thank you for your service and dedication to to the country and our society. Um, it’s incredibly important subsect of of our community as a whole. Um, and I appreciate all the efforts that others do to support the industry. Um, and two, you know, if you have a contracting business, um, or something adjacent to it, um, or are going to be building a capital project, a new building, um, or something along those lines, and you’d like to have a conversation. Please reach out to us. Um, there’s a number of large construction projects that have, um, incentives and advantages for veteran owned businesses, and we’d love to help make sure that you’re able to compete for that work. And then once you’re successful competing for the work, um, execute the work excellently.

Trisha Stetzel: Um, yeah. That’s fantastic. So, Jake, do they need any particular certifications, uh, to start with?

Jake Kane: Um, so it’ll be a little bit specific to the industry that they’re working in. Um, assuming that they’ve already started their, their contracting business and they’re up and running, um, there are some veteran owned, um, business certifications, I believe it’s mostly state by state, which is a little odd. Um, but it’s similar to the small business and disadvantaged business areas. Um, I’m not firsthand an expert in that, but if there are questions there, we can absolutely help people figure out and navigate, uh, unfortunately, that bureaucracy, um, to, to achieve whatever certification they need.

Trisha Stetzel: Fantastic. By the way, uh, the Houston Regional Veterans Chamber of Commerce is trying to make that change. We’ve got some bills that are running up, uh, in Texas, uh, up in Austin right now where we’re trying to figure some of that stuff out and make some changes. And then if Texas can do it, maybe we can get it done in other places. Right? Which is really important.

Jake Kane: Um, I’m glad to hear that because it’s working across state lines. There’s nothing like trying to figure out another state’s regulations, rules, requirements, certifications, etc. the the easier it is for the smaller businesses to to do their good work wherever it’s required.

Trisha Stetzel: Absolutely. Okay. So that brings me to my next question. Then you had shared with me that you had a project that was coming out of Lake Charles. So talk to me about the work that you’re doing outside. I mean, you do work. Where?

Jake Kane: Where? So we serve clients. I’m gonna say internationally, primarily, it’s North America. And even inside of that, it’s primarily the Gulf Coast region. So the project I mentioned was, um, we served as a owner’s representative. So working for the owner, upholding that contract. Those modules were fabricated in Lake Charles, Louisiana, and then barged, probably not too far from from your facility, um, over to Bay city, Texas. Um, and recently that facility just got started up and is now making a specialty chemical that’s utilized in Plexiglas and bone cement. Um, so that was that was an exciting one. Um, we’ve got work that’s going on a new project that hopefully will be commissioned very shortly. That’ll be outside of Phoenix in Arizona. Um, the owner is located here in Houston, and engineering and procurement will be, um, all over North America. So we’ve got project managers in 4 or 5 different states. Um, and try to work where we need to be when we need to be there.

Trisha Stetzel: That’s fantastic. So by the way, my listeners outside of Texas, you can still reach out to Jake because he may be able to handle your project.

Jake Kane: Absolutely.

Trisha Stetzel: I know that you’re really passionate about about bringing this big, big business experience to smaller businesses because of where you come from and your background and the things that you love to do. And I really appreciate that you’re bringing all of that experience and expertise to small businesses as a fractional project management company, um, with PM Harbour. What would you say has been the biggest challenge for you in building this fractional project management and consulting business?

Jake Kane: So the probably the biggest initial challenge is I am not or was not an entrepreneur. Um, so networking in developing some mentors, learning all those things that you don’t know until you run into it. Um, that was a pretty initial big challenge, um, that we’ve, we’ve pushed through. Um, which has been great. Um, I’ve really enjoyed the, the learning stage of that. Um, market wise, the biggest challenge we have is helping contractors and companies understand that outsourcing, project management or some project management functions, um, is a possibility and is even a good idea. Our biggest competitors are self-performance, which is the way things have always been done. So we have a hurdle with most of the conversations we undertake of, well, I understand how you’ve always done things. Has that always been excellent and why is that the way that we need to do things going forward, or are there other opportunities? So, you know, change is never comfortable for some individuals. In some companies, especially when project management is so core to, uh, profit and losses of a lot of projects and, and companies. Um, and so that that hurdle has been one that we’ve been successful in, in demonstrating our value add um, and convincing companies to try to do things a little differently going forward than they have in the past. But that’s been a large challenge.

Trisha Stetzel: Yeah. If you if you continue to do the things you’ve always done, you’re going to get the same results, right? And change is hard. We all struggle with it. But I love the idea that you’re willing to just sit down and have a conversation. Let’s talk about the value that outsourcing project management can bring. Right. And we all know as business owners, or if we don’t know, we’ve at least heard it, we may not have internalized it, that we need to outsource the things we’re not good at. Right. And we need to focus on the things that we’re excellent at so that we can deliver a great product. So if you’re not good at project management, which most of us are not as business owners, we got into the business we’re in because we love doing fill in the blank, right? Uh, walking dogs, building driveways, building buildings, whatever that looks like. But we’re not great at project management, which is the perfect opportunity to reach out to Jake and have a conversation with him. So, Jake, as we get to the back end of our conversation, I’d love for you to share a success story with the listeners.

Jake Kane: So the project that I mentioned a minute ago about, uh, in Arizona. Um, that was a younger company. I’m not going to say a startup, but a younger company that had a asset they wanted to develop and a concept of how to develop it and understood the market, but did not understand the project life cycle and everything in between. Um, and as with all young companies, cash flow is always a challenge. Fortunately, I got introduced to them early on and was able to work with them and support them throughout this year, year and a half exploratory phase in a fractional perspective where they were able to save on bringing on a full time practitioner, um, and utilize our services as needed. Um, to finish their project concept, um, develop their final investment decision deliverables so they knew how long the project was going to take and how much it was going to cost. Um, and then eventually go back to the board for final funding, um, which we look like we’re about ready to achieve now, which is excellent and very exciting. So without the fractional perspective, uh, their commitment to the project execution side would have been dramatically more expensive for a year and a half as they were trying to figure out what they were going to do and how they were going to do it. Yeah.

Trisha Stetzel: And it may not have been successful because we all know when you get into that money pit, it’s really, really hard to continue moving forward. Right.

Jake Kane: When you’re running in the red or you’ve got a cash rundown curve as as many small business owners do have taped to their wall. Um, anything you can do to defer some of that cost or make sure that the cost is well utilized, um, is a major advantage.

Trisha Stetzel: Yeah. Fantastic. So, listeners, the lesson here is let the experts do that work. People like Jake. Jake Kane with PM Harbour willing to have a conversation with you about your project and see if it might make a good partnership. Jake, thank you so much for being on the show with me today.

Jake Kane: Thank you for having us.

Trisha Stetzel: Absolutely. We share your contact information one more time, please.

Jake Kane: Yes. Please visit our website PM Harbour. And that’s with a U. Um, as well as our LinkedIn, where we post our lessons learned and other blog posts that may be relevant. Um, and if you’d like to reach out to me directly, it’s jake.com. Look forward to hearing from you guys.

Trisha Stetzel: Yeah. Fantastic. Kane with a K and Harbour with a U. Yes.

Jake Kane: Perfect. Ironic because I’m very bad at spelling, so I pick things that need to be spelled out specifically.

Trisha Stetzel: That’s fantastic. Again, thank you for spending the time with me today.

Jake Kane: Thanks, Trisha.

Trisha Stetzel: That’s all the time we have for today’s show. Join us next time for another amazing episode of Houston Business Radio. Until then, stay tuned, stay inspired, and keep thriving in the Houston business community.

 

Tagged With: PM Harbour

Aaron Novinger with Interstate Business Management

April 24, 2025 by angishields

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Aaron Novinger with Interstate Business Management
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Aaron-NovingerAaron Novinger is a strategic advisor with Interstate Business Management. Aaron discussed his small business accounting firm and his second heart project, which involves a bicycle ride from Dallas to Washington, DC, to raise awareness and funds for families affected by Ponzi schemes.

He shared his experiences from previous rides, including the emotional impact on people he met and the challenges he faced, and outlined his strategy for the upcoming ride. Aaron emphasized the importance of having a great team and encouraged others to get involved in various aspects of the project, including organization, PR, and social media.

Connect with Aaron on LinkedIn.

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in Houston, Texas. It’s time for Houston Business Radio. Now, here’s your host.

Trisha Stetzel: Hello, Houston. Trisha Stetzel here bringing you another episode of Houston Business Radio. It is my pleasure to introduce you to Aaron Novinger with Interstate Business Management. Aaron, welcome to the show.

Aaron Novinger: Hello, Trisha. How are you?

Trisha Stetzel: I’m very excited. So first I want you to introduce yourself. And then we’re going to jump into this really cool event that you’re doing.

Aaron Novinger: Okay. Okay. Yeah. Uh, well, my wife and I, uh, for years have run a small business accounting firm, Interstate Business Management. Uh, and it’s just small business accounting and consulting. We’re one of the few owners of accounting firm that we’re actually not accountants. We’re small business owners. So we have a really, really good handle on what our business owners need. And, uh, but thank you for talking about a Separate Heart project. That’s my first heart project is our small mom and pop owners. But the second heart project. Um, I’m so excited that you decided to hang out and chat for a few minutes about it.

Trisha Stetzel: Yeah, absolutely. So, Aaron, when you and I spoke last week, I got really excited about this crazy thing, this crazy idea, right, of you riding a bicycle halfway across the country. Can you first, before we even get into what it is that you’re doing, can you talk about Ponzi relief first and really this heart project that you have, and then we’ll jump into this crazy idea of riding a bicycle across the country.

Aaron Novinger: Yeah, yeah. And it really came, uh, because what we do at the firm, we do complex planning, um, from an accounting perspective. And so we work closely with financial advisors, and they handle the investments, we build the plan. And so I’ve sat across the table from so many of these individuals. And one of our advisors, his broker dealer, had a company that got investigated as a Ponzi, and it ruined everybody’s life. People feel it’s always the investor, which is horrible, but it also ruins the advisors life. They lose everything. And so I just had this. And the weird thing about me is I only move based off of burdens. Okay. So all of a sudden it’s somebody has to do something for these people. Somebody has to do something. And then I just sit and pray about it, sit and pray about it. And and then I wait. And that’s the thing about God’s timing is I have to wait so I can have the right idea. But if it’s the right idea at the wrong time, it’s the wrong idea. And so, uh, how this crazy thing came to be was a couple years ago, hanging out with a good friend of mine, RJ and RJ. Every, you know, every year, a couple years, he does this big cross-country motorcycle ride where he and thousands of motorcycle guys ride their their There are motorcycles all into Washington, D.C. on Memorial Day. It’s like this huge cross country motorcycle thing. And as he’s talking, and this is how my my crazy ass ideas work, okay, as he’s talking, I, I’m like, okay, I think I’m supposed to ride a bicycle from Dallas to D.C..

Aaron Novinger: It just it just starts. I just start having this thought as he’s talking. Okay. Now, the thing about my crazy ideas and I’ve had lots of them. I get the vision first, and then I have to wait for the provision. The provision always comes later. Okay, so I just get this idea. I don’t know how I’m supposed to do it. Okay, what I’m about to tell you is not even 1% exaggerated how the provision came to be. Okay. Because as soon as I get the idea, the next week, I’m on the phone with my executive coach, Lauren, and I’m like, Lauren, look, I got this crazy idea. And Lauren’s really main job is to help me take this pile of hay, you know, and separate it and help me make sense of what I need to do next. Because anytime you know anything about A.D.D., everything is overwhelming. Okay. And so I’m like, Lauren, look what? I’ve got this idea. I have no idea what I’m supposed to do with it. I said, but I feel like I’m supposed to ride my bicycle from Dallas to Washington, DC to raise a lot of awareness and fundraising for these amazing families that were affected by this Ponzi. And she goes, you know, and anytime I it starts with, you know, I know God’s about to open doors. I just just watch.

Aaron Novinger: So she goes, you know, I’ve got a good friend of mine, Tracy, and she rode her bike from California to New York to raise a lot of fundraising and awareness for diabetes. And she actually got on the Doctor Oz Show. I can connect you guys, and she can kind of give you some assistance. And I was like, what? What? Okay. And then and then I’m like, okay, mind you, you understand there’s only I don’t know what half dozen people, period, that have done something crazy like this. And so I’m like, okay, I said, but okay, great. That’s amazing. Where does she live now? You know, I live in Dallas Fort Worth, okay? And she’s like, oh, she lives in Fort Worth. What? So I talked to Tracey. Okay. Wait until you hear this. I’m kind of a psychopath. I’ve done a lot of endurance events. Okay, so I saw my very first mile when I was eight years old. Okay? It was the only sport I could do, um, because of my severe chronic asthma. Um, that didn’t activate asthma attacks, so I just swam, and so. But I’ve done, I don’t know, a dozen, two dozen, um, 100 plus mile bike rides, stuff like that. And so I’m, um, I’m talking to I’m talking to, to Tracey. And now, mind you, if I, if I do like, 150 mile bike ride, that takes me five months to train for that one day pedaling, I don’t know, 100 and 250 miles. Okay.

Aaron Novinger: This is 4 to 5 weeks of pedaling about 100 miles a day. Okay, so I am panic stricken. Okay. And the thing about me is I have two insane phobias, like ridiculous phobias one spiders. I literally, my wife intentionally puts spiders all over the house during Halloween because she knows I hate them. Okay. But just as much as I’m afraid of spiders, I have an equal phobia of being unprepared. Okay, so the only thing I’m thinking about for this bike ride is training. I am panicked about this. And the first time I talked to Tracy hand to Bible, it’s not even 1% exaggerated. I said, Tracy, I’m panic about the ride. What do I do? You know, what’s the training look like? And she says to me, what training? I swear to God. She says, what training? And I said, well, okay, clearly, where’s Ashton? Because I’m being punk’d. Clearly we know we’re talking about training. And she said, well, you know, I’m diabetic, I’m type one diabetic. And so she said, um, I’m active. I have to exercise every day to stay alive. And she said, but you have to understand something. And when she told me this, it was so profound. And we talked about this last week and she said, you know, um, she goes, let me ask you something. When you were 12 years old and your parents kicked you out of the house because I was Gen X, and she goes, and your parents kicked you out of the house and made you go play all day Saturday.

Aaron Novinger: How much training did you need to go ride your bike all day Saturday? And I was like, well, none. She goes, this is just a Saturday morning bike ride. And I was like, oh my God. Even as I say it, I know this sounds weird. My internal energy just calmed down a little bit. It’s very weird how mental reframes have the power. Does that make sense? But reframes can literally change you with one sentence. And so I was like, wow. She goes, you have to understand this is not a race. You’re done when you’re tired. And she said, you have to understand with me, it took her three months to go from and her deal was between the bridges. So she went from the Golden Gate Bridge to the Brooklyn Bridge. Okay. And now her next event. She’s also a psychopath. She’s like, probably ten, 15 years older than me. Okay. Is from Washington to Key West. Oh, that I swear. Okay. So, like, everything she does. And so what’s really cool about trace is, um, she was supposed to be dead by age 20, uh, because of her diabetes. And so every ten years that she lives, she goes and does a huge endurance event to celebrate another ten years of living. And so, um, it’s beautiful. It really is. And so that’s really how this crazy thing started and was birthed. And Tracy and her husband Fred, because everybody thinks. Because it’s just me and my wife.

Aaron Novinger: This is not a group event. It’s just she and I. Okay. Most people think the toughest thing is what I have to do. That is false. Okay. The toughest thing for me. Like Saturday, when you train for this, it’s 2 to 3 hours. Once I get closer to the event, I’ll be three hours on an incline treadmill. I’m now two hours on a steep incline treadmill, so most of my hard work is conditioning for the ride. Once I start the ride. Come on, man, it’s just pedaling, okay? It’s pedaling. And I got my earbuds in and I’m just chatting with people. Or I’m listening to podcasts and listening to your pod. Whatever. I’m just listening to podcasts, you know? And so. But Rebecca is the secret to the entire ride. Like Tracy’s husband Fred was mine. And so because she’s the navigator. So when we leave, she rides ahead of me, and I’ll. I’ll bike 10 to 20 miles, catch up to her. And, um, once I hit, like, around 4 to 5 hours, probably about four hours. That’s when she starts taking my temperature. How are you feeling? You want to go another ten miles? Sure. So then we’re very, very careful about where I’m at and my energy levels. And then whenever I feel like Tracy said, whenever you feel tired, just stop, man. Just stop. And during the day, if you feel tired, stop. She goes, this is not a race, right? And I can’t even tell you, especially for the first week, because you’re building up the momentum And, you know, as soon as before you even get into Oklahoma or you’re in Oklahoma the whole time, you’re like, oh my God, dude, every day of this.

Aaron Novinger: But you have to. Again, it’s all about mind control, right? So it’s looking in the mirror, man. Today is just a side. I’m on a bike ride. And the crazy thing, Trisha, is that I’m not kidding. The amount o that I get very emotional about this because, um, I’ll give you a perfect example. Uh, when we were in, um, Missouri and I stopped in cases. And if you go north, you know, cases is like the gas station up north. Okay. Um, and so they just introduced their new Hawaiian roll sliders. Okay. Pork sliders. And so I’m at this Casey’s, and, um, I get to the line and grab the last three pack, and there’s a a husband and wife behind me. Now, you have to understand, you’ve been to the website. You saw last year’s bike. Okay, uh, nobody that sees this bike doesn’t stop and want to have a conversation about it. Okay. This year’s bike mindbender. It looks like a blue Batmobile. So this year is going to be a thousand times better. Okay. But I’m in this case. He’s like, oh, are you riding that bike? And I was like, yeah, that was me. And they’re like, so what are you doing? I’m like, I’m riding my bike for charity. Cross country to help some people affected by a Ponzi scheme, financial crime.

Aaron Novinger: And she starts tearing up, bro. I swear to God. And she said her dad was affected by the same thing. The company he worked at his whole career. Um, the CFO, he had a pension and he was due to retire, and the CFO gambled their pension fund away. And he said, literally, his dad had nothing, and one of his coworkers committed suicide. Bro. This is the reason. The thing about financial crimes and Ponzi schemes. There is no crime. No crime that has more silent victims than this one crime. Not one. Because every single person that gets affected is so embarrassed and ashamed of what happened to him. Like they think it’s their fault, man. These are the sneakiest snakes on the planet. They are experts and they are sociopaths. They literally have no feeling for what they do to other people. They don’t care. And so, um, for me when especially I was just telling somebody earlier when I’m back because I intentionally go out of my way when I do this bike ride, you know, a direct route is straight through the Ozarks. Oh hell no. Okay. I already have to hit the Appalachian Mountains in Pennsylvania. I am not going to do that. Okay. So I go out of my way. And Tracy, my gal, she said, look, I’m going to tell you right now, she goes, because her previous career was TV. And she said, I’m telling you right now, you have to get PR in one of three markets and that really carries your campaign.

Aaron Novinger: She said, LA, Chicago or New York? And she said it was her, um, press that she did in Chicago that the Doctor Oz Show picked up in New York. And so I said, okay, what I’ll do is, first of all, um, people don’t know this about me, but I’m literally the laziest person I know. Okay. So I literally if something’s like, okay, you need to do this, but that takes extra effort. I’m like, right, so how do we not do that? And so I said, okay, what I’m going to do, I’m going to bike north to avoid the Ozarks. Okay, so 35 up. Okay. And then once I hit 70in Missouri. Right. So. And I hit 12 big cities along the way just to just bullhorn these amazing families and what we can do for them and what laws can we change to save them. And so I go up and I hit, uh, once at Kansas City, I hit I-70 and I start going east and I go through central Missouri. A lot of my family lives in central Missouri, so we all hang out for a day or two, and then I get to Saint Louis, and then I go north to Chicago. Okay. So I go out of my way about 600 miles for Chicago. And last year, the Chicago Sun-Times did a huge piece on me, and it was amazing. Those two ladies, you’ll see, go to Chicago Sun-Times and you’ll see pictures.

Aaron Novinger: Because these ladies followed me on the freeway. They would ride ahead of me. And when I come up, they were just taking pictures. They’ve got pictures of me, and it’s amazing. On the freeway in Chicago, downtown. And there’s Amazon 18 wheelers next to me because I rode the freeway. So they were five feet away from me. Right. And so but people don’t get it, man. Especially when you ride a bike. Especially that bike. Yeah. The safest place for you to be is on a 8 to 10 foot, you know, shoulder with the rumble strips. That’s your invisible wall. People are like, are you scared? No, no, no. I get petrified because every Mayberry police in every little town pulls you over. You can’t be on the highway, boy. And I’m like, okay, well, actually, here’s the laws. Okay. I have every law of every state. Here’s the law. But cops do not know the law. Their job is to enforce what they have been told is the law. And it’s always the Department of Transportation’s that tell them. And Tracy told me because Tracy rode the freeway. And she goes, trust me, you will get pulled over by Mayberry police. Load the bike up. Take it up ten miles. Unload. Keep going. Right. So there’s, like, a way to navigate this. You see what I’m saying? So it’s been a huge, huge learning curve. And, um, I’m so excited about this year’s bike ride because we got so much of it figured out for last year.

Trisha Stetzel: Okay. So let’s talk dates and how people can get engaged. Like, how can you? What do you need along the way? So let’s talk dates and how can we help?

Aaron Novinger: Absolutely. Uh, May 26th, you’ll see on the website like the website is Ponzi relief.org. And so when you go to the website, you’ll see right now it says, um, May 19th I shifted it down. One week we found out our godson is graduating. And so we got to beat his graduation. And so, um, we’re going to leave one week later, and then we’re heading to the Capitol. So May 26th is really when we’re going to head out. And you’ll see when you go to Ponzi relief, there’s a place that says like, um, apply now. Like we actually have a box of how you can help, right? So look, this is about, um, organization. This is PR, this is, uh, helping us with social media. Um, there’s you can see there’s like 8 or 9 different things that we need help with. And trust me, the thing about this is to do something great requires a great team. Okay. And and when we started this thing, there was no idea this was going to be a annual ride. I only got the vision for one ride. And the crazy thing about how God works. By the way, just so you guys all know, this dude will not swing the door wide open of the vision he’s got for you because you will turn tail and run the other way. He cracks the stupid door one inch at a time. Okay, so this this damn door got cracked just long enough for me to do this bike ride. Okay, halfway through the ride, my wife Rebecca says, I figured it out, and I was like, what do you mean you figured it out? She goes, I figured out the purpose of this ride.

Aaron Novinger: It’s to plan the ride. I said, oh my God, I think you’re right. I think this has to be an annual thing. I think this has to be an annual thing until we see real change. And to me, this is not about just saving form 4684, which is doing so much help. Um, it’s an immediate, um, income credit for these affected. And this is this is important, Trisha, because I think it’s important people realize that whenever somebody goes through a hurricane and trust me, where you at? You get lots of them. Okay? The thing is, is hurricanes are devastating. Both things can be true at the same time. You can go through a devastating hurricane, but you can also see and spot the beauty of the rainbow after the hurricane. Okay, both things can be true. And so form 4684 is the rainbow. After the hurricane, it was put in place specifically for Covid relief and it expires at the end of this year. It’s the first time, and the only time in history that victims have been able to write off actual losses from a Ponzi scheme or financial crime, never been able to do that before. And that happens. It expires in this year. It’s unbelievable. And again, it’s not like it replaces the money they lost. But this is a beautiful rainbow after the devastation of the hurricane. You see what I’m saying?

Trisha Stetzel: Yeah absolutely. All right. So the goal $1 million.

Aaron Novinger: For this for these, for these star grower Ponzi the last two years. This ride is dedicated to the victims of the star grower Ponzi scheme. My goal is to raise $1 million for them, for them. And I feel like between them and I’ve got a couple churches and nonprofits that are, um, were like, like wanting to help as well. So I feel like if we could raise $1 million for them, I feel like, um, we can do a really good job of pretty much making those victims whole. And then next year, we’ll go find another one. But I can’t leave the star grower until we raise the money. And for me, every year, I want to get it to the point where every year we have a new, um, Ponzi that we’re really pushing for the year, and we have more families that we want to help and save and give them some type of retirement other than, um, every minute of every day, stress and anxiety. You actually watch these retirees, and I’m not kidding. There’s the person before and after the Ponzi, because usually they are so medicated they literally change for them to not go crazy. It is the worst thing you’ve ever seen. And I, I what I tell everybody is you back, back in the 80s. Remember those like, little red things. And you put that little disk in and you click it. Yeah. Every minute of every day, their faces keep clicking in front of my face. The only way this dude sleeps, we got to make them whole.

Aaron Novinger: That’s my only job. It’s my only focus. And the crazy thing was, I was leading this earlier. Whenever I’m pedaling, once you get to, like, halfway through Missouri and you start going east, you will pick up some of the Ozark. Okay? And you think those are mountains until you get to Pennsylvania. Okay. And so you’re pedaling. And once I got to Pennsylvania and I started doing the hills, there was so many times where I’d be pedaling and I’m like, I can’t, I can’t. You’ll see. I wear a shirt and it says pedaling for and I. And every day I put a piece of masking tape. Tape of a husband and wife and how much money they lost. And as I’m pedaling, I swear to God, I look down and I pat them and it like, gives me supernatural strength, man. It’s really, really weird. And so, um, every minute of every day is for them. Everything we do is for them. You know, I try very hard. Um, that’s why I never talk about my accounting firm, ever. I don’t want this to ever seem like I’m trying to cross promote. I don’t I just want to take care of them, man. I think they’re worth it. I think they’re amazing people. And I don’t think anybody should have that happen to a man. I’m just being honest with you, you know? You can tell I get really emotional about this stuff, but to me, it’s, um, it’s my heart project, right?

Trisha Stetzel: Yeah, absolutely. Thank you for, uh, being so vulnerable and showing emotion because it it shows how important this is to you and the whole reason when we talked last week why I wanted to have you on the show, I could see, I could hear, not see because we were on the phone, but I could hear the passion in your voice. So folks who are listening, how you can get involved, go to Ponzi Relief org, scroll down and you’re going to find three boxes. There’s a space to donate. There’s a space to spread the word on social media, and there’s also a way to join the team and see if there’s a way to help support Aaron on his ride with Rebecca, who is his pace setter. That’s what I decided.

Aaron Novinger: She’s your pace. I love that pace setter. She’s the pace setter and the navigator. That’s right.

Trisha Stetzel: Yes, I love that. So as we start to wrap up today. Aaron, thank you again for being on the show today and caring so much about these people who deserve deserve what you’re giving them, right? They absolutely do. And, uh, I can’t wait to see the pictures from this year. You’re going to start your ride on the 26th.

Aaron Novinger: Yes.

Trisha Stetzel: From the Dallas Fort Worth area. Yeah. You’re going to go all the way to Chicago.

Aaron Novinger: To Chicago?

Trisha Stetzel: Of Missouri. Right. And then you’re going to go all the way to DC. This is.

Aaron Novinger: So exciting. Um, it’s going to be awesome. And, um, I can’t wait because, um, I’ve got so many of the contacts and stuff of all the hard work that we did last year. Uh, so this year, I think I can’t say the word fun because it’s usually not, but I if I could say it’s going to be fun, um, it’s going to be awesome. It’s going to be awesome. And you, my dear, are absolutely amazing. Thank you, uh, for giving voice to this. Um, you’re so busy. And, um, and of course, you know, there’s a huge love for the military and the navy and. Come on, man, uh, trust me, you and I could talk for three hours. Um, about awesome stuff. And I’m sure we will.

Trisha Stetzel: Yeah. Oh, yeah. We’re definitely having another conversation about weight.

Speaker4: Um, you know, you’re amazing.

Trisha Stetzel: When you have a break in your, uh, ride.

Speaker4: Maybe.

Trisha Stetzel: Circle back and just have a conversation about how your ride’s going.

Aaron Novinger: No way. That would be amazing.

Trisha Stetzel: My husband is from the Chicagoland area, so he’s got family in Chicago and Iowa. Would love to maybe just catch up with you, uh, on your ride. That would be awesome.

Speaker4: Okay, I would love it.

Trisha Stetzel: There’s also a Facebook page. It is listed on the Ponzi, uh, relief org page. But just if you want to go straight to Facebook, it’s called pedaling for Ponzis. And you can join the group there and keep track of Aaron’s journey. Aaron Rebecca’s journey on the way to DC. Aaron, thank you so much for being on the show today. I can’t.

Speaker4: Wait to.

Trisha Stetzel: Hear all of the amazing people who get involved in this journey that you’re taking. Thank you for doing this amazing work for these people who really, really, I am sure are thankful that you’re out there giving back in such a way.

Aaron Novinger: That’s awesome. Thank you so much for allowing this to even happen. It’s only through you, um, and people of influence is the only way that the word gets out. So, um, thank you so much.

Trisha Stetzel: Thank you. Aaron, I appreciate you. And that’s all the time we have for today’s show. Join us next time for another amazing episode of Houston Business Radio. Until then, stay tuned, stay inspired, and keep thriving in the Houston business community.

 

BRX Pro Tip: Don’t Hire Based on an Interview

April 24, 2025 by angishields

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BRX Pro Tip: Don’t Hire Based on an Interview

Stone Payton: And we are back with Business RadioX Pro Tips, Lee Kantor and Stone Payton here with you. Lee, what are you learning, what are you feeling about hiring or interviewing someone?

Lee Kantor: What I’ve learned, especially doing so many interviews with so many people in HR, in today’s world where there’s so much remote work and people are contract, it is so much more effective rather than hiring based on any type of an interview or a resume, hire based on actually them doing some work. You know, hire them for a project, because resumes don’t tell you the truth, they tell you what someone says they can do. But a project is going to show you what they can actually do.

Lee Kantor: So, a pre-interview project, to me, will give you a better taste of the truth and gives you a real world look at how a person thinks, how they solve a problem, how they communicate, how they follow through, all this stuff you want to get right when it comes to hiring. So, in an interview, a person can say anything. Some people are really good at interviewing, some people are super persuasive. But a project is really a lie detector test.

Lee Kantor: And in today’s world where you have to trust, but you also have to verify, it’s just a more effective and efficient way to make sure you’re getting the right candidate for the job. And this is going to also filter candidates who are truly interested and willing to engage. You’re not just hiring a skill. You’re hiring commitment, curiosity, someone who’s going to work in real conditions, not just how they’ll talk about it.

Lee Kantor: And you can still interview them after the project. I’m not saying not to interview them after the project. But it’s a lot easier to interview somebody after they’ve done something. That way, it’s not hypotheticals or fluffy interviews. You have something real to talk to them about. So, my recommendation is start with a project before an interview.

BRX Pro Tip: Leveraging Occams Razor

April 23, 2025 by angishields

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Stone Payton: And we are back with Business RadioX Pro Tips, Stone Payton and Lee Kantor here with you. Lee, I remember hearing about this maybe high school, maybe it was early in college, but how does this Occam’s Razor apply to the business world?

Lee Kantor: Well, I’ve been studying a variety of mental models lately, and Occam’s Razor is always used as an example of a mental model. And Occam’s Razor for people who don’t know, it’s a mental model that says the simplest solution is usually the best one. That’s the premise.

Lee Kantor: So, what happens when you learn about mental models, and this one in particular, all it’s saying is, okay, when I’m faced with a decision, I want the correct decision, so I want to be able to cut through the noise and focus on the fewest assumptions in the most direct path.

Lee Kantor: And in business, a lot of times we don’t do that. We’re kind of overthinking or we’re adding kind of more complexity to make a decision because it seems like, you know, we’re covering all of our bases. Instead, sometimes it’s best to go, well, what would be the simplest solution that would solve the problem? You know, instead of a 12-step process to solve the problem, what’s a two-step process? Is there a straight line here instead of this curvy line? Is there a way of kind of just simplifying something? Does it have to be as complicated as we’re making things and just start trying to prune steps of things?

Lee Kantor: Like get down to the heart of what you’re trying to do? What’s the one thing, that if we do this one thing that that’s going to move the needle right now? Get rid of everything else. Get focused. So, Occam’s Razor kind of forces you to cut through that kind of clutter and just focus in on the best possible solution in the most straightforward way.

Lee Kantor: Now, it’s not really being simplistic, it’s just being efficient and effective. So, try it on. You know, next decision you got, just try to eliminate all the complexity and focus in on the shortest distance between two lines, you know, one straight line.

Kenny Larson and Josh Priniski with Slumberland Furniture

April 23, 2025 by angishields

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Kenny-LarsonKenny Larson is the President & CEO of family owned Slumberland Furniture. Slumberland is a top 25 home furnishing’s company with 125 corporate and franchise stores throughout the mid-west. The Larson family is also heavily involved in commercial real estate with close to 4 million square feet owned and managed.

Kenny graduated from Wheaton College with a BA in Economics and Theology and then Arizona State with an MBA in Marketing. He joined Slumberland the fall of 1990 and held many positions before becoming President in 2008. Slumberland continues to be focused on developing strong people who understand the company’s mission, live out our values and execute on an excellent customer experience every day.

Kenny has been married to Monica (a very talented artist who teaches, collaborates & creates her own work) for the past 38 years. They have two boys one who is a chef in St. Paul and the other joined the Slumberland Marketing team in 2025.

Josh-PriniskiJosh Priniski is the Vice President of Franchise at Slumberland Furniture, a family-owned company with locations across 12 states in the heart of the country. A proud Midwesterner, Josh grew up in the region and earned his B.S. in Philosophy from the University of Wisconsin–Oshkosh—a degree that laid the groundwork for thoughtful problem-solving and people-centered leadership.

With a diverse background spanning both retail and hospitality, Josh brings a practical, hands-on approach to business strategy and franchise development. He is particularly passionate about helping others achieve success and translating that success into meaningful contributions within their communities.

Outside of work, Josh enjoys life at home with his wife and two teenagers—who keep things lively. He believes that whether in business or at home, success begins with listening, learning, and leading with intention.

Connect with Josh on LinkedIn.

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Coming to you live from the Business RadioX studio. It’s Franchise Marketing Radio. Ready to revolutionize your franchise with AI? Franchise now empowers franchises with advanced AI solutions, automatic processes, and enhanced marketing strategies. From personalized customer interactions to predictive analytics, we help you harness AI to drive growth and efficiency. Transform your franchise with the power of AI. Visit Franchise Now to learn more and take your business into the future. Now here’s your host.

Rob Gandley: Welcome back, everybody to Franchise Marketing Radio, where we spotlight the most dynamic minds and franchising leaders who are building brands, growing communities, and reshaping the future of business ownership. On today’s episode is no different. I have with me Kenny Larson, he’s the CEO of Slumberland, and I also have with me the brand’s VP of Franchise development, Josh Priniski. So welcome to the show, gentlemen.

Kenny Larson: Hey, good to be here.

Josh Priniski: Thank you.

Rob Gandley: So before we dive in, I always like to kind of tie things up for the audience so they really understand you. And we do have an audience across the country. And I know maybe your brand isn’t as well known in certain places, but certainly I know it is in certain states. So be good to kind of share with the audience a little bit about the brand. And Kenny, it’s been part of your life, right? It was started by, I believe, your father. So you could maybe tell us that the story, how this has developed. I know the franchising started much later than the original business, and that I think was 2008. You’ll correct me to get that right, but could you give us a little background and how this whole thing started and where this brand is today?

Kenny Larson: Yeah, super interesting story started in 1967. I think at that time it probably was the first mattress specialty store. So my dad and a couple other guys had a idea to do things a little bit differently. And so that we’ve made it. We’re now into our 58th year I think is really, really cool. And obviously being my dad, I was really young at the time but don’t know life without Slumberland. Through the years, I would say we’ve been very entrepreneurial. Started adding a couple of key categories. The first one was sleep sofas. Early on felt that brand names were really important. So coming out of the mattress business, we learned that lesson early. And Ken wanted to not just add recliners. It had to be La-Z-Boy. And so we added La-Z-Boy to the mix. There was probably a leap of faith on their part to say, we’re going to put our chairs in a mattress store, which there weren’t a lot of them at that time. But they did it. And, you know, one of the things that it speaks to Rob is we’re still with La-Z-Boy today. We’re their largest customer. So we have done since that time over $1 billion worth of La-Z-Boy.

Kenny Larson: And we we we continue to value that relationship along with some of the early ones like Sealy that has been there from the beginning. You mentioned the franchising piece. Actually early on we started franchising in the mid 70s. So Ken saw it as an opportunity to grow faster than he could otherwise. And as you know, mid 70s franchising was still relatively new as a concept and has built that out. And you know, real testament is we still have a few of our original franchisees still with us after changing store size concept and all of all of that over the years. Today we’re more of a full line furniture store. And if you walked into one of the stores, it would look like a more of a furniture store with a strong emphasis on mattresses. But that’s still our, you know, our key category, our heritage. You mentioned the footprint. We’re in 12 states based here in Minneapolis, Saint Paul, but we go as far west as Billings, Montana, down to Wichita, Kansas, and then up to Benton Harbor, Michigan and the 12 states in between that are where we’ve got our footprint today.

Rob Gandley: I love it, I love it. That’s America right there. That’s beautiful. So and I know, like you covered a lot of ground in that answer. Um, and I know I want to get in a little bit about the heart behind the brand. Right. So you you did mention franchising, and I was way off. I thought it started later on, but it started way back in the 70s. And yeah, that was like the the beginning of, like really formulating what is a franchise supposed to be structured as and how to do it right and make sure that and that’s why I love franchising because it is it is built for, you know, everybody to to kind of, you know, get the most out of the relationship and, and you know, so I think prior to that it probably didn’t have as much structure. But yeah, you’ve seen it all then you’ve seen it since the beginning. So but but before I dive into the community aspects and the heart of your brand, um, I want to understand a little bit about the decision to franchise. Like, what was that about you and your dad and your family? Because there’s that connection. Not only did you build an incredible company, right, and a brand and you mentioned things like these, these like La-Z-Boy being with you since the beginning, being their best customer. I mean, that that does say a lot to be anyone’s biggest customer and for that long. So from that side of things, you guys have clearly have a certain way, uh, to, to run a business. But what was it about the franchising side where you’re really extending that to other people to become part of this family? How is it in your dad’s mind and your vision of doing that? Like, that’s early on to, like, like talking about being an early adopter. So tell me more about the thought behind becoming a franchise and how that’s impacted the brand.

Kenny Larson: Yeah, I think, you know, Ken has always had a mind towards growth, mind towards continuing to ask the question of what’s next. Um, I think when we first began franchising and Rob, I was not part of those early conversations because I think I was ten years old, but I think he he really saw it as an opportunity that had something special with this concept of Metro specialty store and wanted to take it further out. So there. I know at the beginning a large part of it was growth. I do know one of the things that was really important to Ken was the, you know, the values of the company, which is everything from certainly honesty and integrity, treating people with love, dignity and respect. And one of the key questions we had to answer with that is how do we continue to grow, if that’s important to the brand, how do we continue to extend that with franchisees coming in? So there was a big part of at the beginning, making sure we were partnering with the right people that weren’t not only going to be good store operators. That was that was a for sure. But also we’re going to be aligned with those values and the way that we did it. So I think early on with Ken recognizing that those those values are still in place today and the way that we really try to approach the business. So I think just foundationally, you obviously need to have a business concept that works. You need to be able to support it. But I think you also need to have the, you know, the values associated with that to be able to continue to grow into into the future.

Rob Gandley: I love what you said because, you know, I think the number one piece of advice and I don’t specifically work in the franchising of businesses, but I have a lot of friends that that work in that side of it where they help a business owner like your dad way back then, you know, nowadays. Well, then he was a pioneer, but like, now it’s a hey, here’s how you do it. Here’s the pathway to follow. And one of the main pieces of advice that is always given to an emerging brand and a visionary, or an owner or a founder is you’ve got to take what’s in your heart and somehow, you know, get that over to the franchise owner and it has to be aligned. And if it’s not aligned, that is one of the biggest reasons franchisors can’t get past, say, ten units, right? Or just don’t get off the ground and don’t, you know, hit that level of success that you guys have hit. And just because of bringing people in that are aligned, just knowing that he thought that way originally is pretty. It’s pretty profound because that is one of the main pieces of advice we have to, you know, don’t just go for that first person or someone who’s ready to make the investment right. You really have to think about that. So that’s brilliant.

Kenny Larson: And I think with that, I’d love to tell you we were perfect throughout the years in identifying and making sure that that was in place. You know, there there there are times that that hasn’t been the case. But we continue to say that this is important, who we are. And some of the some of the transitions that have taken taken place have been because of that. There just wasn’t the alignment.

Rob Gandley: Yeah, yeah. You gotta, you know, it’s a pruning in the tree does happen. Things change too. Yup. And, uh, it’s just it’s just having that thing that that that thought process as a leader, I appreciate that. It’s why I love the industry. It usually works pretty well because of those reasons. So anyway, let’s dive into okay, being a franchisee, we’re going to talk more about the business side. But I really think the heart for a lot of brands that I talk to is these business owners really become connected to their communities. They become leaders. And it’s one of the fulfilling things about it is that, you know, if you’re running a sizable business like your operations and you’re in the community, there’s impact there, right? And obviously, being able to be proactive and and structure some ideas not only for your franchisees to think about, but just just in general, uh, just being a good business leader. But you do have some programs that you work with them on. And one of them, I think is 40 winks. Right. And I wanted to see Josh, if you could share more about that. But more than just the program itself, what’s behind that? And how do you try to use those types of programs and others so that the franchisees, the owners there in those markets can really connect with not only consumers in the market, but other businesses and make an impact.

Josh Priniski: Yeah, absolutely. I think I’ll let Kenny speak a little bit more to the history of how 40 winks got started and, and kind of the family enterprise behind that. But what I’ll say is on on the franchise side, we really do from the very beginning, make this part of part of our message, part of what we do overall, uh, as we bring talk to franchisees that are coming into the system and then make it part of our daily, daily speak ever, every day. Right. And so as we’re talking about giving to the community and connecting with community, and that’s that’s part of the beauty of franchising, right, is that you have, uh, you know, at Slumberland, right? We’ve got owner operators living in the communities. And so you, you work where you live and you make connections, and and being part of the community becomes just incredibly important. And so to have resources like 40 winks as a foundation to sort of lean on and say, this is something we can stand for, uh, to be able to give, uh, beds to kids and, uh, to, uh, to help in the community in the area that’s needed most. Uh, it’s just it’s incredibly impactful. But again, I’ll let Kenny speak a little bit more to the history of that.

Kenny Larson: Yeah, I would say Rob mentioned the values at the beginning. One of them is that, uh, we were we do give back to the community. We have an aggressive goal every year that it’s 10% of our profits go back to communities. And that’s something that has been in place from the beginning. One of the things that we recognized is that there’s a, you know, a tremendous amount of need with, uh, too many kids sleeping on the floor. It ties to our key categories. So we set up a foundation called 40 winks. The sole purpose is to give mattresses through different charities to kids that are sleeping on the floor. And, um, we want to make sure that that’s happening not only in the corporate markets, but also, give the opportunity to make that happen in the franchise markets, too. So, um, the Larson family takes care of all admin expenses, everything associated with that foundation. So 100% of the dollars that get donated to this foundation go back, go to a mattress so the kids, we can leverage that as much as we can. To Josh’s point, to Josh’s point on the on the franchise piece, one of the things that I should have said at the beginning, we do have corporate stores and we do have franchise stores. It’s about 55 corporate, 70 franchise round numbers, and we’ve got a lot of just phenomenal store managers, and they do incredible work every day. But I would tell you, they can’t have the same impact in the community by saying, I’m the franchise owner of this one. It’s just it’s just a different message. And we have a lot of our store managers that are active with 40 winks. They’re serving on the chamber. They’re part of it, and we encourage that as much as we possibly can. But I would just tell you, it’s different when you’re when you’re the owner of that location or locations and you’re part of the community. So I think it’s a it’s it’s a tremendous part that. Franchise franchisees need to leverage because it is it’s a tremendous impact.

Rob Gandley: Yeah, I look at it as this is kind of marketing. I like to do, you know, uh, giving back first, I think the, the uh, the previous, say, 30 years with all this technology that’s come into our lives very much it’s become, you know, a results in advanced world. And that’s just good marketing. Um, because of the change in the way we kind of give people like with software or even Google using Google search. Right? A tool like that, that’s. Yeah, it’s free. You know, just use it. Well, it’s not really free in a sense, But but that’s the way consumers think today. And so I think having programs that make it natural to just represent the brand in the way that you talk about those values, it kind of makes second, make buying furniture secondary. It’s like, yeah, absolutely. Yeah, sure. Let me just find the right the right piece of furniture. But I absolutely love doing business with someone that thinks about kids first. Right. So I mean, it’s such a profound way to just be the right business owner. And you’re right, as a business owner, you do have the opportunity to to lead in your community in that way. So so it is a valuable business tool. Go ahead.

Kenny Larson: Yeah. And it starts within our mission. Um, you know, we really look to try to improve people’s lives and strengthen our communities. And with some of the products like mattresses, there’s a direct connection when we ask the right questions and get people sleeping on the right mattress. When you’re sleeping better, your life is better. I mean, that’s physically, emotionally, I’d say spiritually. There’s a lot of things that just come better with that. Um, but as we talk about strengthening our communities, we certainly there’s jobs and there’s great product values, but we want to have a piece that we’re we’re active and we’re trying to make make the community better. And one of our big ideas is we believe that a community, a city town is going to be better if there’s a slumberland there. So that’s part of what we’re really excited about. Every time we open up a new location, it’s just not another location because we’re, you know, we’re able to sell more. It’s we’re making another community better.

Rob Gandley: Yeah, yeah. And there’s a lot of a lot of wisdom in what you were sharing earlier about giving back and, you know, really being doing it with intention in the right purpose. Um, and, you know, 10%, that’s a that’s a big chunk to commit, right? And, um, but that’s, uh, that’s powerful. And I think that just helps everybody in the brand. So I’m glad that you lead that way. So anyway, let’s talk about growth though. Let’s let’s talk about we just talked about some very important. So then the question is how do you approach, you know, launching the next location and how can you kind of keep an eye on this quality, this, this integrity that we talked about and this mission? In other words, what you just said, you want the franchise owner to have the same exact feeling like, man, I can’t wait to make that impact in my community. So how do you scale your business plan for growth but also keep that balanced out? And I think, Josh, maybe you’ll maybe you could take and then Kenny, you could follow up.

Josh Priniski: Yeah. Happy to. Rob I think uh, it’s a great question. And I think that when you have core values that really are core to your business. Right. And you really do, um, you know, everyone in the organization believes that, you know, we need to lead with honesty and integrity, that we need to have love, dignity and respect, that we need to work with excellence. Right. These things that are just part of our core values, they end up becoming less of a hindrance to growth and sort of the roadmap for growth, right where you can you can lean on your core values and say, this is this is who we want to be. This is who we are. And so as we look to say, hey, we want to engage in adding additional franchisees. We want to make sure that we have the right people coming into our system. We look at that and we say, can can we be honest with with them and say, here’s where the opportunity is. Can we look at our supply chains and our marketing opportunities and say, hey, are we would we be able to work with excellence if we added these seven additional markets right, in these additional states? Right. Those if you if you use the values in those ways to say, you know, we’ll always check ourselves in those with those things to make sure that we are able to execute with love, dignity and respect in all of our conversations with our franchisees, both the ones that want to come on, but the ones that we’re that that are in our system now.

Josh Priniski: Right. Every every time you make a change, every time you add a location, um, it’s a, it’s a, it’s a big deal for the entire system. And to, uh, be aware of that and to be aware of the impact and to make sure that every, every, uh, change that we make and everyone that we bring on and, uh, is, is, is further furthering the mission and not just sort of, uh, making us a little bit like, alright, can we do this one? Can we do this one? How do we just keep grow, grow, grow. It’s like, no, we’ve got the values. And then we say, hey, you know what? Maybe, maybe in order to bring on the next 20 stores, we need to do x, y, Z in order to do it. Excellent. Right. And so then that, then that creates the roadmap, uh, to be able to do that. So it ends up being less of a hindrance and more of a, of a map. Right. A guidepost to how to, how to do that.

Rob Gandley: Yeah. So you have a lot of intention like with the way you expand, you kind of know where where the options are, what the best options are. It may take you a while to get there, but you already have the intention. Um, how how do you. So for anyone just zeroing in and listening, thinking about, you know, the idea of of getting involved with the furniture industry, how, first of all, what are sort of the criteria? What what would you be looking for if someone is listening, who is that other than the the the values part right and the alignment part? What are you looking for otherwise for a franchisee? And how do you how do you train them and bring them in either way when they come into the system?

Josh Priniski: Yeah, absolutely. We you know, the the one of the things we’ve seen with a lot of our, the franchisees that are in our system, as Kenny mentioned, we have a number of people that have been around with us from the very beginning. Right. And so we’ve got a lot of history, but we also have a number of people that have come into the system a lot of different ways. And, um, you know, I it you don’t have to have a furniture background, right? You don’t have to have a real estate background with a big, you know, 400, you know, four, four, 40,000 square foot building. Right? You, uh, you can come you can come into this, uh, really just, again, the values being important, but also the willingness and the desire to, uh, to, to to, you know, a lot of our stores are owner operated, right? So the really get into the business and, um, and actually manage the sales teams and engage with the customers and understand the operations and the. You know, there are a lot of, uh, complexities sometimes to owning a bigger retail retail store, right? Especially you sell it today and you deliver it tomorrow. And there’s all of those things. Of course, we help with all of that, right? As as the franchisor, we provide lots of really good systems. But someone coming into the system that’s just really hungry to learn, right? Really hungry to, uh, engage and uh, and to and of course, then, uh, engage with their community. Those become the become the roadmaps right there. There’s obviously plenty of opportunity for people to invest in the system and find a manager to do all of that for them. Right. But, uh, where we found really good success is to have people who are just really hungry, hungry to learn, hungry to engage and, uh, and utilize the systems.

Rob Gandley: Yeah. I was just thinking, as you were answering that, you know, just personally, um, and I’m not shopping as much as I have in the past, you know, for for my homes and different things, I have different lifestyles I’ve lived through, but I just remember raising my kids, and one of our favorite things to do was to go to furniture stores and just check things out. I like the environment. I like the environment of most of them. If they’re well done, you know? Uh, but I could see what you mean by wanting to be a part of that and wanting to be more involved with your employees and your client, your customers, and interacting with the community. Right. It’s a place, it’s community.

Josh Priniski: No, that’s exactly it’s such a fun space to be. Right. Because you walk into a furniture store and and, you know, again, it’s not a it’s not a, you know, fast food, right, where everything’s just quick, quick, quick, right. Like, let me get this. Let me do that. It’s a space to think about your home, right. You know, where are you going? To relax in your home. How are you going to to, uh, sleep better at night, right. These are these are all very aspirational things. And so, uh, whether you’re looking for something to take home today or you’re looking for something that’s going to sit, you know, you’re going to pass down from generations right in your dining table or, you know, like there’s there’s just a lot of aspiration, a lot of desire that people have when they walk into furniture stores and to be a part of that energy, right? And to be a part of engaging with customers and helping them improve their lives. Right. I think is, uh, it becomes a big part of it’s sort of just naturally dovetails into everything else that we do.

Rob Gandley: Yeah, yeah, yeah. One of the yeah.

Kenny Larson: One of the things that we, we really try to think about with the, the products that we offer is to think as big as possible. So as Josh mentioned, the dining table, you know, it’s not just a place where you eat. It’s a place where some of the most important family discussions take place. It’s where Homework’s getting done. It’s where, you know, bills are paid. That may not be the most fun part, but, you know, it’s like it’s a big part of the family’s home. And the sectional isn’t just a place to sit. It’s like where families come together and they watch movies and they sporting events. And when we start thinking about it in those terms, it’s a real privilege to be able to interact with people and then literally come into their homes. We do the delivery and to be able to set that up and to see the impact. And it’s. I don’t know, it’s one of the things that gets me excited every day coming in.

Rob Gandley: Yeah. Yeah. It’s everyday life. It’s it’s such a big impact. Like you said, these things you use every single day of your life, some of them, and they become integral to your lifestyle. So it’s very cool. Um, so I want to I want to get into innovation a little bit because like, I don’t I don’t want to under I want to underscore a little bit the, I mean the, the undertaking that you guys, you know, you make it look easy, right? So we just talked about someone coming in. They really have a background in furniture, uh, running a furniture operation. So you’ve got the roadmap to make that happen. If they’ve got the right, uh, you know, call it DNA to, to do it. Um, but there’s got to be a lot that goes into that operationally. Right? You’ve got a lot of smart people and you guys have processes. So tell me a little bit about technology, a little bit about innovation, how you’ve used it, uh, through these years and how you plan to use it. Now, we we know there’s a lot of new technology in front of us every day. We hear about AI a lot. Don’t know if you guys how you’re thinking about that right now, but at the end of the day, thoughts on innovation? How have you do you have some specific examples, uh, that you could share that have really made not only it better for your franchisees, but better for your clients alike and customers?

Kenny Larson: I’ll go. I’ll go first. Josh, we can tag team this one. You know, coming out of the I’ll start in one key, which is just a a big challenge for the industry is supply chain coming out of the pandemic, uh, which blew up literally everybody’s supply chain. We took the opportunity to completely redo it. And today have built, um, multiple tools within there to make sure that we’ve got the product flowing that we need. Now, if we don’t, I wouldn’t say we’re perfect, but we’re really leaning into it and we’re really at the front edge as we’ve kind of built out not only the process for it, but the data that we need, where we’re going to be able to start leveraging some of the AI tools to do it even better. And I think over the last couple of years, we certainly haven’t had an eye towards our data to be able to get us ready for all the automation that’s coming. And I think the, the, the back end work is some of the, you know, the least sexy part of it. But if you don’t have really pristine data, the AI tools just don’t work like it’s going to just give you not only inaccurate but potentially damaging. So it has been a really a long roadmap over the last two, three years trying to get us to that point. And we’re really on the front end where we’re mentioned supply chain, where we’re going to be able to start leveraging some of those things. Josh has been involved in a couple of those those efforts too. So you want to share Josh?

Josh Priniski: Yeah, I’d, you know, even just dovetail um, of course supply chain has been a huge one. Right. But one of the things, you know, we, uh, you know, we don’t make any of our own of our own furniture, right? We partner with people like La-Z-Boy, right? People like Sealy. Uh, and so those connections within those, those supplier networks and those, uh, not only on the supply chain side, but also on the marketing side, right. And on the e-commerce side and on all of these different areas where, um, the building of the connections between the different teams and the different systems to make sure it feels seamless. Right. As you said, that kind of everything is, is taken care of and using that data right across systems to make sure that we can make not only really good, really good decisions within individual departments, but to really make it feel like everything is working is working together. And that, again, when you don’t own every part of the system, right? It really means that you have to you have to be, uh, responsible and really, uh, and take seriously what your, your role is in partnerships, right, with, with people that you bring into your system and that work alongside you and make sure that you’re open and honest about what you need out of that system, and how we need different partners to work together. Right, in order to, to, to bring these things together. And I think that’s one thing that we’ve been able to, to manage really well, and we’re continuing to be on that journey. But ultimately having that vision towards what do we want this to look like. So that way to your point, Rob, things, things will continually change, right? Ai is going to change a lot of things. Uh, technology is going to change, but if you’ve got the structure in place, then you just are able to sort of implement them going forward. And we really feel like we’ve got a good system that we’re that we’re building to be able to do that into the future.

Rob Gandley: Yeah. And I I’ll tell you, I, I wouldn’t necessarily say it this way, but I would say that Covid was probably a good thing in the sense that you responded in a way that then gave you a chance to clean it, kind of clean up, do some house cleaning, and actually get ready for 2022. When ChatGPT was released and I was someone involved in AI prior to that. Um, but I’ll tell you, that made it very clear very early on what companies would have to do. And it’s what you said. If you don’t have the data structured in a certain way, you can’t make it accessible and usable and, and make get the the impact that you would want to get for anything that is real internal, right. So you’ve got to start to restructure and look at your data and your integrations and your partners. And and now you’re taking the lead. You’re being a thought leader. And that’s what we need. I mean, for for those that are going to really transform at the pace where it makes sense, they’re the ones that are doing what you’re doing, right. The ones that are already already doing it. So it’s perfect positioning for you guys because you’ll be able to pivot as things start to present, you know, opportunities present themselves and make sense for your for your people. But what if you guys were to sum it up right now just on that one point of, say, AI, is there something you had on your mind? Let’s just take franchisee onboarding and training and support. Any thoughts there on how you might use AI? Or maybe it’s in marketing on the e-commerce site? Any thoughts there on how you might leverage some things? Or are you and have you been testing things or what are your thoughts?

Josh Priniski: Yeah, I’ll tell you. You know, there’s there’s a lot of really fun tools emerging around, uh, sort of training and onboarding and different capabilities that we’ve been looking at, um, sort of leveraging partnerships, right, to take advantage of, uh, to, you know, have we’ve got lots of training content, of course. Right. And lots of onboarding documents and lots of videos and everything across the sun. Right, to help people, uh, get up to speed with what we do, both on the corporate side and on the, on the franchise side. And, um, again, some of these AI tools that are coming out to be able to just get the question in the moment, right, to say, hey, help me see, uh, you know, I need to I need to to learn this real quick thing about this, this particular sofa or this particular process or how, you know, how far are my deliveries go or any of those sorts of things, right, to be able to, you know, ChatGPT style, right? Be able to go in, but look at the at the content and um, again, to Kenny’s point, it takes building that content over a long time and making it consistent, which has been on has been on our radar such that we can again, they’ll still work to do, but to be able to leverage those tools and put them in the hands of our franchisees. So that way they can again, there’s plenty that we’ll do here at HQ to leverage those. But, um, at the store level, um, and at the owner level, to be able to leverage those and to, to learn the systems really well and ultimately learn their data really well. Right. There’s a, there’s a lot and we’re, we’re we are, uh, continually evaluating those for sure.

Rob Gandley: Uh, it’s nonstop. Right. But believe me, you want to focus on the things that you could see that, okay. This can make an impact. It makes the franchisees life better. It makes the consumers better. Whatever. Can you see it? Because otherwise there’s a lot of noise and a lot of change. Right? But you’re hitting all the right things. And it’s about that data being structured in a certain way. Right. It can reference it. But if you don’t have great training data, then it wouldn’t be that good. Right, right. Give me the wrong answers to the outdated question, right? Or whatever. But anyways, yeah.

Kenny Larson: One.

Rob Gandley: Of.

Kenny Larson: The things we’re wrestling with too, and it kind of goes back to our values. Rob, you know, our the experience we create with our customers is really important to us. We use Net Promoter Score. Uh, today we’re maintained over 85. I think we’re one of the best in retail. And that’s for our home delivery or for our, um, salespeople, our contact center. But as you think about AI, there’s a lot of extensions now into the contact center. And we’re we’re trying to understand that we’re playing around with it. We’re doing some testing with it, but it would be one of those if we took a step backwards from our customer experience of what they’re getting, that it’s not as good. I don’t doubt that it’s going to get there at some point, but I those are the things you need to say. What’s important to you as a company? And for some people, the customer experience, the way we’ve defined it may not be as important. It may be more transactional and that’s okay. There’s lots of ways to. There’s lots of ways to do business. But we know the things that’s really important to us, and we just need to make sure that it’s in alignment with that.

Rob Gandley: Yeah, I bring up sometimes, uh, there’s a quote, Jeff Bezos has a quote, um, I’m not going to get it. All right. But it’s just basically someone asked him, you know, oh, this high tech stuff. And, you know, Jeff, what do you think in ten years will be the big thing or the important thing? And he’s like, well, I don’t know what it’ll be like in ten years. But I know what won’t change in ten years. And that is why our customers want their packages faster, you know, or they you know what I mean? And that’s if we can keep doing that, then whatever it takes to do that. So it’s not so much the tool, it’s the impact. That’s right. Yeah. And I think relationships are still like no matter what happens in the coming decades, relationships will still be there. It’ll. In fact, I hope the idea of all this is that I can remove some of the burdensome administration and just the grind work of things, so that you can literally spend more time out on the floor and literally talking about things like you said, like, hey, let’s talk about kitchen tables. And, you know, kind of get in the mindset of, why would you eat? How are you going to use it? And I know you guys probably do that anyway, but I mean, there would be no shortage of time if you could remove some of the other things.

Rob Gandley: And to me, again, it’s all about relationships. So that’s what I like to see. Yeah. Well great. All right. Well, let me, uh, as we kind of approach the end of the show, I want to make sure we have plenty of time to talk about how you guys are leading your brand. Right? As you said, it makes a big impact. It’s making an impact in all the owner’s lives. All the all the employees, all the all the people in the communities, all the children, which is pretty cool. Um, tell me a little bit about leadership. Um, what do you think? You know, if you could. And I’ll start with you, Kenny. Is there anything you can point to in your, in your career as as being CEO that you’ve learned, right? Any, any any one thing that you look back on and say this is this is tried and true for me, and I always follow this.

Kenny Larson: Well, that’s a big one, Rob. So I’ll I’ll.

Rob Gandley: Be a lot of them. Maybe pick one good one.

Kenny Larson: A lot of them. You know, I think one of the things that’s really important is to. Understand who you are first. That self-awareness piece. And to lead through that to the best of your abilities. I think it’s really hard to do some things that, um, don’t resonate with yourself personally. So I had a unique challenge coming up, following my dad, who was maybe one of the best people persons ever. Um, he just was he was really, really strong. And we have really a lot of similarities, but there’s differences too. So one of the things I had to figure out certainly was my voice in terms of how we do that. But also, I knew I needed to be aligned with the values that were set. Like, I didn’t have the ability to just change those because that wasn’t. So I had a decision to say, can I? Am I aligned with that? But now I need to figure out what’s the best way for me to articulate those. And I think that’s one of the things that I would encourage any leader that it needs to be from a place that’s genuine with conviction and that you can lean into it. And as I said before, there’s lots of ways to be successful. There’s lots of different values that you can identify, but they need to be yours. And then you need to figure out building out your team and having the right people part of it. Because I would be the first. First to say it is not all about me. I can’t be everywhere. I can’t do everything. But I need to set the stage for the for the leaders like Josh to be able to do the work in their areas.

Rob Gandley: Yeah. Yeah. And I and I gotta say, I haven’t known you long, but I’ve noticed in our interactions you’re very much that way as a leader, and the way you interact with Josh and the way you, you know, you guys do things together. It’s very much about empowering others around you. And I, I think the best leaders in the world are surrounded by really smart people, and they kind of like, look at themselves like, man, I’m lucky. Yeah.

Kenny Larson: Absolutely.

Rob Gandley: And you must, like, I’ve heard from a lot of, uh, CEOs of brands like. And Josh, you probably feel the same way. It’s like the franchisees you get to work with, right? You bring some of these people in and and some of these businesses, you learn from them too, right? And what a what a powerful way to keep growing. Right? Right. I mean, Josh, what are your thoughts?

Josh Priniski: Yeah, absolutely. And and I think the when you get to work, you have the opportunity to work with franchisees, with independent business owners. There’s just a wealth of knowledge there. Right. And and expertise and and to Kenny’s point, right. When you when you know who you are, right. And you get a bunch of business owners that also know who they are, right, They bring lots of different perspectives to the table. And, um, the beautiful part about being a franchisor is you get to, you know, sort of leverage all of that knowledge and work together and, and figure out how to grow the brand together. And that’s and that’s amazing. And, and I would say one of the biggest things that I’ve learned through that is to is to always assume whenever you’re communicating with people and you’re having conversations, you know, you’re not always going to agree with everyone all the time, right? You know, that’s the part about about leadership is it’s not always it’s not always, you know, just straight cut and dry. It’s not a straight path all the time. Right. But when you’re having any conversation to both listen actively of course.

Josh Priniski: Right. But also just it’s always healthier to assume best intentions. Right. Assume that when you’re having conversations with people that they’re coming at it from from a place of goodness, right, that they’re really trying to achieve, well, right, to do the best by themselves, their family, their community, right. Their business. Uh, and again, you may not always agree, but when you assume best intentions and some of those roadblocks that end up, that sort of sit in the way of future growth and future conversations. They sort of move out of the way, right? Because then you can come at it from the same place. And I think, you know, again, you can’t can’t lead anybody if there’s no one following. Right. So you have to you have to make sure that you’re, that you’re understanding that everyone, everyone that you’re talking, whether you’re leading directly or you’re just helping to kind of bring everyone together, that you’re just assuming that we’re all coming from the same spot. Uh, and then you and then you. It’s much easier to move forward.

Rob Gandley: I love that. Thank you. Thank you. Because I do think, I mean, obviously you have to work through conversations, but I and I think we all experience this where, you know, you have these conversations with folks and there’s this sort of wall, there’s this sort of, you know, blockage of, you know, we’re animosity or what have you. And it’s like, no, don’t approach it that way, approach it from we all want the same end goal, which is to be successful, help the customer be, you know, be better at what we do. So at the end of the day, get their focus there. And that that would make any conversation a bit easier to get through just approaching.

Josh Priniski: Exactly. And when you have things like core values and missions that are just, you know, they’re they’re set in stone and it’s what you do, right? It makes it easier for everyone to just come back to the source. Right? Because we all know where we started, right? And so then it makes it easier to just assume that we’re coming from the same spot, even if we don’t agree in the moment. Right.

Rob Gandley: I love it, love it. So I wanted to just ask one quick question, uh, before we do wrap things up officially. But I want to make sure because I know this type of business is a big operation. You said earlier that, uh, you know, it could be different types of people, right? It’s not necessarily someone who has previous experience in retail or in furniture industry. Is there something that you want to make sure that anybody’s out there thinking or wondering, you know, is this a fit for me? Is there anything you want to remove, or just make sure there’s no preconceived notions about how they could get into it? Also being very transparent at the same time. Is there anything that you find when you have your initial conversations that is usually not known by the other party, and you kind of clear it up real quick. But is there anything you want to make sure that you clarify about the opportunity and and so that no one has any preconceived notions like, oh, I could never do that. I don’t want to have these limitations when they shouldn’t be there. So what would you say to that? Yeah.

Josh Priniski: Yeah, I would say, you know, we’ve we’ve, uh, we’ve we’ve had lots of opportunities to have these, you know, we go to franchise shows and different things, right? And people walk up to the booth and say, oh, owning a furniture store like that seems like a really big endeavor, right? And, um, and and it’s true. Right. There’s there’s some complexity to that. But, uh, one of the beauties is you’re not opening a furniture store alone, right? That’s why you become part of a franchise. Right? And so, um, while there are complexities about, you know, how do you get the furniture and how do you how do you get it into your customer’s home? And how do you know what to sell and what customers? You know, what’s inside this couch cushion, right. And all of those things, frankly, you don’t need to come with any of that knowledge, right? You you just need to come and be willing to work with customers, be willing to engage in your community. We take care of getting the furniture to your store. We take care of sourcing and supplying and providing marketing and doing all of these things. We handle it right. And so while you need to operate your business right, you don’t really just need to be willing to be engaged and willing to learn. But it’s not necessary that you know how to go source product from overseas. Right. Or or figure out, you know, like none of those things, like, we take care of all of it. And so really, that’s where I said people can come from, from all different backgrounds. And as long as you’re willing to engage and willing to learn, right. Um, the, the again, it’s a big square foot. Right. But it’s ultimately it’s really just the process of taking care of people and, uh, and taking care of your own people and taking care of customers in the right way. And and we do really try to help with, with most everything else.

Rob Gandley: I, I’m just thinking about myself. So I do the podcast as you’re on it right now. So, you know, if you said to yourself, I’m going to start a podcast or be in a podcasting business, it’s obviously one of the things is you don’t mind talking and meeting people, right? But I feel like that very same essence would work in a furniture store environment. You know, it’s really that sort of connection, right? More than the other obvious things like, oh, no, I don’t know what to do to source the furniture kind of thing.

Kenny Larson: Right. Yeah. We’re going we’re going to talk to you right after this wrap about opening one in Colorado.

Rob Gandley: Yeah, we need one. We need some competition. So, yeah, it’d be good. Well, that that’s tremendous. I wanted to kind of just make sure that the audience knew how to get Ahold of you guys or the brand, but. But, Kenny, before. Before I let you go is there. I like to ask leaders like you this question. Is there anyone other than your dad? And maybe it’s your dad, but who who is one of your mentors? Or is there anyone in franchising? Is there a lesson that they kind of left with you, that you kind of hit you and you kind of still think about it today sometimes?

Kenny Larson: Um, yeah. There’s been a lot of people over the years. Rob. It’d be hard not to point to my dad because, you know, obviously from the beginning was there watching it. And I would tell you, I’ve got three brothers and a sister, two are involved in the business, two are not. There was never any pressure that you had to be part of it. And all of us are wired really differently. But I would just tell you, for me, growing up in it and watching it, I knew at a young age this is what I wanted to do. So I’ve been doing it for a long time now. And it’s been it’s been it’s been awesome. I think one of the things that Ken just did a great job with is, you know, creating that environment to say, be here if you want, but also then the opportunities. So over the years, I got exposed to all sorts of things, probably earlier than maybe I even should have given what my title was. So between whether it was people on the marketing side or research side, people that were on the, you know, the, um, I’ll say the business improvement and the operations or process side, I did get exposed to a lot. And, you know, I I’d be the first to say there were tons of people that, uh, gave me a lot of, uh, gracious leeway as I was coming up.

Rob Gandley: Yeah. That’s beautiful. So what would be, um, the the best way if someone is now now that we’ve tipped them over the fence. Right. What’s the best way to get Ahold of you guys? Uh, if someone would be interested in learning more.

Kenny Larson: I’m happy to. I’m happy to talk to anybody. But Josh can give on our website. There’s an easy way on Slumberland. Com, there’s a franchising piece to it, too, that if there’s anything there. But, uh, feel free to give them my mobile number. Rob, when we’re done. I know I love talking to people.

Rob Gandley: You got it? You got it. Well, and then slumberland is a slumberland.com, right I think.

Josh Priniski: Yeah, that’s that’s exactly right. And I’d say check us out. Right. Slumberland com. It’s just as, as the retail site. You can see what we’re all about. You can see what we offer and all of those things. And then of course, there is a franchising page right on the home page, right in the upper left hand corner. You can get to franchising opportunities. And all of my contact info is right on that page as well.

Rob Gandley: I appreciate it. Thanks guys, and I always encourage folks to reach out and learn more because again, that first level of consulting that all of you guys are generous enough to give, you know, for anyone that says, I think this might be for me, it’s always great to talk to people like Josh, so take advantage of that can help you understand the big picture of his industry and others in the franchise world. So, uh, it’s been great having you guys on the show. I really appreciate it.

Kenny Larson: Yeah, I enjoyed it a lot. Thanks, Rob.

Josh Priniski: I appreciate it.

Rob Gandley: Thank you. Just want to thank the audience as well and encourage you to share the the episode if you found value. And bye for now.

 

Tagged With: Slumberland Furniture

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