Carolina Connect Conference Convenes
Entrepreneurs, Investors and Bankers in Asheville on September 11
Asheville, NC (PRWEB) August 29, 2008 -- The Asheville Hub announced
today that entrepreneurs and the investors they want to court will
be in Asheville on September 11 for Carolina Connect, a conference
that provides professional development to entrepreneurs and networking
opportunities to entrepreneurs and investors from across the Southeast.
Carolina Connect is presented by the Blue Ridge Entrepreneurial
Council, an initiative of the AdvantageWest Economic Group.
An estimated 275 entrepreneurs, investors and bankers will convene
in Asheville at the Grove Park Inn on September 11 for Carolina
Connect. The day-long event will include tracks for angel investors,
start-ups and companies in high growth mode. For more information
or to register, visit www.brecnc.com.
Why a Growing Number of Entrepreneurs Are Choosing Asheville as
Their Launching Pad
The late Bob Moog, who created a new world for musicians when he
invented the Moog synthesizer, was innovative, fearless, persistent
and passionate about his pursuits. He was a driven entrepreneur,
yet he chose to live in Asheville, NC, where he built his own house,
baked bread, dug in his garden and enjoyed the Blue Ridge Mountains
as he built his company, Moog Music.
Silicon Valley has Sand Hill Road and all the venture capital firms
that are clustered there, but a number of entrepreneurs are emulating
Bob Moog and betting they, too, can turn their start-ups into winners
in Asheville. As much as they crave success, they also want the
balance in their lives that this progressive and creative city in
western North Carolina offers.
Infinity Learning Solutions Turns Heads
Russ Stinehour, whose Infinity Learning Solutions (ILS) is turning
heads with its DigitalChalk product, exemplifies Asheville's entrepreneurs.
He's a serial entrepreneur who has lived in San Jose, Atlanta, Raleigh
and a number of other cities, but once he and his family found Asheville
a dozen years ago, they put down stakes permanently.
His first company in Asheville, CrossLogic, had 45 employees and
more than $5 million of annual revenue by the time he and a partner
sold it in 2005. By 2007, he was back at it, working with a small
team to create DigitalChalk, a course delivery system giving corporate
training professionals and university instructors the ability to
develop courses that synchronize video to slides, images and webpages
through a browser interface.
Just over a year old, ILS's nine employees (www.digitalchalk.com)
have validated their product offering, started growing their revenue
and their client base significantly, and chalked up some big wins.
Stinehour is proudest so far of the steps ILS is taking to bring
better accessibility to online video training to those with disabilities.
Initially his company has partnered with the National Institute
on Disability and Rehabilitation Research (NIDRR), Hunter College
and IBM Research to produce the first ever automated transcription
service for video-based online learning so that closed captioning
is available to the hearing impaired. Hunter College, part of City
University of New York, is the first customer for this service.
Stinehour's next goal is to provide better accessibility for the
visually impaired.
Stinehour knows the pursuit of venture capital funding would be
easier in Silicon Valley or the Research Triangle, but he cherishes
raising his family in the Blue Ridge Mountains, where Asheville
offers a lively environment with a smaller town feel and he can
have a balanced life.
"I still work very hard, but I've learned that when you are
working an endless string of 100 hour weeks, something is going
to crash and burn," Stinehour said. "Enjoying my home
in Weaverville just outside of Asheville with my family gives me
the ability to have more thought time and as a result, I'm able
to focus where I need to and make clearer decisions."
One of Money Magazine's Best Places to Live and Launch
Money magazine recognized Asheville's advantages when it ranked
the area one of the best places to Live and Launch earlier this
year, citing Asheville growing number of software and digital media
companies, as well as the Blue Ridge Entrepreneurial Council. BREC
(www.brecnc.com), which presents Carolina Connect, offers education
and networking opportunities, and connects entrepreneurs with western
North Carolina's two angel investor groups, the Blue Ridge Angel
Investor Network (www.brainnc.com) and the Inception Micro Angel
Fund (www.imafwestern.com).
Money also cited the National Climatic Data Center, the anchor
of the federal government's presence in Asheville. NCDC (www.ncdc.noaa.gov),
the world's largest active archive of weather data, provides access
and stewardship to the U.S. resource of global climate and weather
related data and information, and assess and monitor climate variation
and change. Through the Centers for Environmental and Climatic Interaction,
or CECI (www.climatealive.org), Asheville is bringing additional
climate-related government organizations and private companies to
Asheville.
Thanks in large part to NCDC's presence, Asheville is in the middle
of a high tech corridor that links Washington, D.C., South Carolina's
Upstate, Atlanta, Huntsville, AL, and the Oak Ridge National Lab
in eastern Tennessee. There is as much bandwidth available as any
company or government agency could want.
The Technology Commercialization Center (www.abtech.edu/sbc/tcc)
is another big draw for entrepreneurs in Asheville. This partnership
between Asheville-Buncombe Technical Community College (A-B Tech)
and Tech 2020, which is associated with Oak Ridge National Laboratory,
works with entrepreneurs on their critical development issues. The
focus is on preparing company management teams for sustainability
or investment by capital financiers. During the past two years,
TCC has assisted approximately 60 companies towards sustainability.
"The Technology Commercialization Center has done a great
job of helping us analyze the market and figure out where our focus
should be," said Russ Stinehour. "We have a better mousetrap,
but we had to focus our message to reach the corporate and university
sectors."
The universities and colleges that populate western North Carolina
help entrepreneurs, too, in terms of services and the employee pool.
Within Asheville are UNC Asheville, Warren Wilson College and A-B
Tech. Nearby are Appalachian State University and Western Carolina
University and a number of colleges.
Stinehour has mentored UNC Asheville students and hired students
from UNC Asheville, A-B Tech and Western Carolina University. ILS
also maintains close ties with North Carolina State University,
where the company's chief technology officer, Troy Tolle, is a Distinguished
Alumnus of the College of Engineering. Tolle was keen on working
in Asheville when Stinehour hired him to work at his first company.
The Asheville Hub
The Asheville Hub (www.ashevillehub) sparks collaborations within
and across Buncombe County's technology, sustainability, rejuvenation,
creativity, land/agriculture, manufacturing and enterprise clusters
so Asheville and the surrounding area may benefit from emerging
opportunities. The Hub's Technology Cluster is pursuing specific
strategies for economic development, encouraging start-ups to work
with the Technology Commercialization Center and bringing attention
to the Asheville area's growing technology community.
For more information, contact Nancy Foltz, Asheville Hub, at 828/628-6825.
# # #
This press release has been reprinted from PRWEB per the terms
and conditions of the copyright notice.
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