UPDATE: October 27

Damond Nollan, Aaron Averill, and Sean Wilson at SCALE
Pictured: Damond Nollan (speaking) and Aaron Averill at SCALE

Mas Sato and Jay Mebane
Mas Sato talks to Wil Weldon (with his back). Jay Mebane, a panelist, in the background

Group Shot at SCALE
Everyone sat in a circle, a DK roundtable tradition and a good way to bring everyone into the discussion

UPDATE: October 23

Recap of our talk is posted here.

Scale participating panelists
Panelists Sean Wilson and Emily Bloom chat as people arrive for SCALE. Far right is Vandana Dake.

Scale participating panelists
This Thursday, seven amazing people from the local business community will share their experiences on growth.

SCALE is the first open, free roundtable discussion in Durham on the topic.

Why are we hosting this?

SCALE: a roundtable on growth. Thursday, October 20, 6pm at Rigsbee Hall

We now have 7 panelists!

THIS Thursday! 6 pm at Rigsbee Hall in downtown Durham.

SCALE: a roundtable
:: Thursday, Oct. 20
:: 6:00–7:30 pm
:: Rigsbee Hall
:: 208 Rigsbee Avenue, downtown Durham

RSVP here: http://scaledurham.eventbrite.com/

The panel:

Jay Mebane | Thundershirt/First Analytical Labs/Arcametrics
Jay Mebane has been the owner/operator of multiple start-up companies. Currently he is co-owner/CFO of Thundershirt, LLC, co-owner of First Analytical Labs, and co-owner/CFO of Arcametrics.

Previously Jay was a corporate finance attorney for Moore & Van Allen, PLLC, one of the largest law firms in the Southeast. Following his time spent as a practicing attorney, Jay was co-owner and President of Rapidata.net, an online healthcare market research firm that was acquired by Greenfield Online.

Jay holds a B.A. and MBA from Duke University and a JD from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

Emily Bloom | Viget Labs
Emily Bloom is the Regional Director at the Durham office of Viget Labs, a hybrid web development shop and design agency. She also helps organize Refresh the Triangle, a monthly gathering of local web professionals. Emily is passionate about people, technology, and milkshakes.

Ann Woodward | The Scrap Exchange
Ann May Woodward has been in the reuse industry for over 15 years, and is the current director of the Scrap Exchange, a non profit creative reuse center located in Durham, NC.
The organization’s mission is to promote creativity, environmental awareness and community through reuse.
She is also an artist, likes to pick up garbage, and participate and create events where people can interact, learn something and hopefully change the way they look at resources and consumption.

Sean Wilson | Fullsteam Brewery
Sean Lilly Wilson is Fullsteam’s founder and Chief Executive Optimist. He founded and led both Pop The Cap and PermitBeer, two beer lobbying organizations that have opened up economic markets to North Carolina’s craft beer industry. He holds both an MBA and Master of Public Policy from Duke University. Sean has ten years restaurant experience, including three years at Durham’s renowned Magnolia Grill.

Neil Lancia | A Small Orange

Vandana Dake | Alliance Architecture

Aaron Averill | Zone Five Software
Aaron Averill spent 15 years as a software developer at several major corporations including SAS before his entrepreneurial spirit led him to set out on his own in 2009. His company, Zone Five Software, created SportTracks, an application for athletes to track and analyze their workouts. More recently he co-founded Bullocity, a property development company that is renovating a historical commercial building in downtown Durham, which he hopes to lease to startup tweeners looking for flexible work space. In his free time, Aaron is also pursuing a master’s degree from NC State.

AND YOU

Everyone’s welcome to join the conversation. Whatever your view of growth and scale, please be prepared to share it. The aim is to learn from all different forms of growth and stories people have around them.

RSVP

Event is free with RSVP. RSVP on Eventbrite:

RSVP

Discussion questions

Q1. What are the criteria for deciding when to grow? When to scale back?
Q2. What stories do you have about something that worked well?
Q3. Lessons learned from an attempt to grow that didn’t work?
Q4. How do you see “growth” as an objective in 2011, vs., say the 1980s or 1990s?

Feel free to leave your A’s in the comments below.

Background

If you still have the time, energy and curiosity to fill, here’s Akira’s 5-minute diatribe.

Popularity: unranked [?]

2 Responses to “Scale”


  1. Gravatar Icon 1 Sean Lilly Wilson Oct 22nd, 2011 at 8:36 am

    Thank you for hosting us, Akira! The session was great fun and very insightful.

  2. Gravatar Icon 2 Ron Clabo Oct 24th, 2011 at 5:03 am

    Thanks Akira! It was a fun session and a great oppertunity to meet other entrepreneurs. I’m curious what your takaway was with regard to scaling your own venture?

    -Ron

Leave a Reply








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DK in 20 seconds



Welcome to Design Kompany.

We exist to help you realize your fullest potential as a small business, using dialogue as a key tool to discern your clear, authentic brand message.

If you value thoughtful conversation, accuracy, and exquisite solutions arrived upon through solid design thinking, you might like DK.

We've done naming, branding design, and message design to help people express a strong core identity. But it has to be based on passion. Smaller companies are a great match for DK, because we love talking marketing and strategy with those owners, whose values and affinities often set the company culture's tone.

We work remotely with people anywhere in the world who are: aware, awake, curious, and respectful of the design process, which we think sets the stage for great design when done well. Talk to us! We're listening. -Dipika


Things we like to write about? Travel, art, architecture, museums, and cafes. Design, materials, design thinking, but more than anything else, process. We like to say, "Trust the process." It really makes a big difference if you start with a fresh page, and think together with us on where and what you can become.

Trains are good, too. Small comments on parenting, or what other people are doing, and what other people are saying about creativity, and the creative process, and a shift from the industrial way of thinking towards more free-form association that jogs new waves of thought --- all of that is DK's beat.

Plus we'll write about people we meet, things we learn, and all the cross-cultural and multiple dimensions of interpretations. We have another blog getting going just to consider dialogue design.

But to make this blog easier to sift, here are the topics we're slotting our blog posts within:

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CONTACT DK

Design Kompany is in Durham, NC.

PO Box 1512
Durham, NC 27702
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o. 919.886.6332
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