Ann Arbor

Stout Systems expects 50% growth in tech staffing business

The job levees are giving way; you can tell by taking a close look at Stout Systems.The Ann Arbor-based technology staffing firm helped 30-plus highly skilled people transition into new work in 2010. It's also seen a rise in its own core staff to keep up with demand. In 2007, three people held executive and administrative roles. Today the firm has six full-time and one part-time positions to handle those duties. It's also is in the process of hiring another 1-2 people to augment that core staff."There has been an explosive demand for technical people," says John Stout, president and founder of Stout Systems. "There is a lot of pent up demand in the IT and software business. We have more job openings for us and our clients than we have seen in 10 years."Stout Systems either finds technical people or sends its own techies out to its customers to get jobs done. These workers cover all technology aspects, ranging from IT to software development. This year Stout expects a 50-percent sales increase."That represents a real growth in the demand for our services," Stout says.Source: John Stout, president & founder of Stout SystemsWriter: Jon ZemkeRead more about Metro Detroit's growing entrepreneurial ecosystem at SEMichiganStartup.com.

U-M startups dominate Clean Energy Prize competition

Start-ups from the University of Michigan swept the top spots in this year's Clean Energy Prize competition, including first-place winner CSquared Innovations.CSquared Innovations plans to take its $50,000 in prize money to help commercialize its lithium-ion battery technology and pump up its staff to 14 people this year. The U-M Dearborn spin-out is working through the U-M Office of Technology Transfer to build a faster, cheaper, laser-based method of making nano-structured materials and coatings for lithium-ion battery electrodes, solar cells, and industrial coatings. The technology could make the manufacturing process much less expensive. Nick Moroz, vice president of engineering and development for CSquared Innovations, says the Clean Energy Prize really helped his team gain confidence in its product and should help speed up the process of bringing it to market."We got a great amount of exposure and networking experience from it," Moroz says "There were a number of venture capital and angel investors there that started conversations with us."Among the focus areas of the start-ups participating were renewable energy, energy efficiency, smart grid technologies, environmental control technologies, plug-in electric vehicles, energy storage, and creating a mechanism to allow organizations to use their self-created biodiesel through fuel purchase agreements. Two-thirds of those 23 start-ups came from Ann Arbor.The other winners include Smart Energy (second place, $25,000) which is creating an innovative financing model to retrofit municipal buildings for energy efficiency savings. Third place ($10,000) went to Impact Card to develop a funding mechanism that aggregates consumer credit card reward points as project financing for renewable energy development. The last two first place finishers include Algal Scientific and Enertia, which are still developing their technology and gathering seed capital to commercialize their products.Source: Nick Moroz, vice president of engineering and development for CSquared InnovationsWriter: Jon ZemkeRead more about Metro Detroit's growing entrepreneurial ecosystem at SEMichiganStartup.com.

NetWorks Group evolves into IT and digital security, adds jobs

NetWorks Group got its start in 1997, primarily by helping companies get connected to this new mainstream thing called the Internet. Today the downtown Ann Arbor company has evolved into an IT and digital security firm."We specialize in solving difficult problems in regards to networks and security," says Steve Fuller, president and CTO of NetWorks Group. Some of those problems include a service called ethical hacking, where NetWorks Group will test security by hacking into a client's computer system. It also works to better align businesses with their IT needs, such as helping them determine which functions should be done in-house and which ones can be outsourced. "That part of our business has grown dramatically over the last few years," Fuller says. "We grew 125 percent last year."That allowed NetWorks Group to add two jobs in 2010, expanding its staff to 18 employees and a couple of summer interns. It has two openings currently for techies at entry- and senior-level positions.Source: Steve Fuller, president & CTO of NetWorks GroupWriter: Jon ZemkeRead more about Metro Detroit's growing entrepreneurial ecosystem at SEMichiganStartup.com.

Venture Partners: A Q&A with Michael Godwin and Jason Townsend

The small scale of Michigan's venture capital community means many ground-floor opportunities for investment. Bay Area émigrés Michael Godwin and Jason Townsend of Resonant Venture Partners wax on the need for a new generation of VC investors and peek into the realm of "dirty tech".

Splink Media links area musicians and businesses

Vaughan Taylor, AKA Texture, worked the underground music scene in Ann Arbor for much of the last decade as an emcee and producer for locally renowned hip-hop crew Athletic Mic League. That experience, along with a degree from the University of Michigan and an MBA from the University of Central Florida, laid the groundwork for Taylor to launch Splink Media, a marketplace for linking artists and businesses.  "I noticed the strengths of independent artists were in their ability to organize and get followers," says Taylor, CEO and co-founder of Splink Media. "It's not in selling records."The Ann Arbor-based start-up provides a platform for companies to tap into the creativity of local artists for marketing campaigns and advertising while also promoting these artists. The 1-year-old start-up is allowing that access on an invitation-only basis while its team of four works out the last of the website's bugs. Taylor expects to open up the site to more people by this summer."We'd like to see this as a local ecosystem for local artists and businesses," Taylor says. "[This could] be like a phone book for local artists."Source: Vaughan Taylor, CEO and co-founder of Splink MediaWriter: Jon ZemkeRead more about Metro Detroit's growing entrepreneurial ecosystem at SEMichiganStartup.com.

Washtenaw Ave Arbor Hills Crossing development enters planning stage

The Arbor Hills Crossing mixed-use development is moving closer to rising on the vacant 7.45-acre site at the corner of Washtenaw Ave. and Platt Rd. after the plan was presented at a citizens outreach meeting last week. Ann Arbor's Campus Realty, together with Chicago-based North Shore Properties Group, is developing the project, which will go before the Ann Arbor planning commission in March, says Tom Stegeman, Campus Realty's development manager for the project. No cost figures are available yet, Stegeman says, as the project is still at the early architectural design and engineering stage. In the works is an approximately 90,000-square-foot mixed-use center that will be mostly retail, but will hold 10,000 square feet of flex space for either office or residential use, depending on market conditions. The four-building development will be mainly one level, but two of the buildings will have partial second stories. The developer is looking at national tenants and is in "preliminary but meaningful discussions" with regional and local businesses. While releasing specific operators would be premature, Stegeman mentions specialty retailers, apparel purveyors, and food providers as possibilities. Arbor Hills Crossing does not bill itself as a shopping mall or even a shopping center, he says. "With the high-quality architecture and the reasonable, kind of modest scale that we're going for, this is essentially a collection of smaller buildings that create a real sense of place on the site." The developer also plans to integrate the property with the city's push towards alternative forms of transportation. "Connectivity is the word," Stegeman says. "We've listened to the city and worked with our designers... We're certainly going to have bike racks and sidewalks and routing that will connect the property to the adjacent areas." Preliminary discussions with AATA regarding the placement of a bus stop on Washtenaw and an inset bus lane to prevent traffic backups have also been held. Groundbreaking will begin at the end of 2011 at the earliest, Stegeman says, and possibly not until early-to-mid 2012. Source: Tom Stegeman, development manager, Campus Realty Writer: Tanya Muzumdar

Ann Arbor City Council greenlights plot for potential new greenway park and arts center

Late last month the Ann Arbor City Council passed a resolution asking the Allen Creek Greenway Conservancy and the Arts Alliance to collaborate on making over a city-owned 2.2-acre property at 415 W. Washington between First and Third Avenues into a greenway park and arts center. The Allen Creek Greenway Conservancy an advocacy group for a multi-use greenway along the course of Allen Creek (much is now underground, except for a visible portion on U-M's golf course) from the U-M athletic complex to Argo Dam and the Huron River, accented by the city-owned floodway/floodplain parcel at 415 W. Washington. The conservancy is is in the process of applying for grants to cover the $300-500,000 estimated cost for the park portion of 415 W. Washington. This funding will not apply towards the art center component of the project, which Joe O'Neal, a director at the conservancy says is the province of the Arts Alliance. Sources: Joe O'Neal, director at the Allen Creek Greenway Conservancy; FEMA Writer: Tanya Muzumdar

Ann Arbor considers motorcycle/moped parking strategy

Come spring, two-wheeled transportation will be driving downtown Ann Arbor. On an ongoing basis, the Ann Arbor Downtown Development Authority (DDA) has been observing areas of heavy bicycle use to determine where to install bike racks and bike hoops. And in a more recent sign of the times and an extension of the DDA's successful on-street bike racks program, DDA staff has been monitoring motorcycle and moped use to bolster its case for the installation of on-street motorcycle and moped parking this spring.To encourage more eco-friendly motorcycle and moped use and expand the menu of options available for getting downtown, the DDA transportation committee will take up this issue at its March board meeting, says Amber Miller, a planning and research specialist at the DDA.In one possible setup, four on-street parking spots would be divided into four spaces each, at a charge of one-quarter the rate, Miller says. The $1.20 hourly rate for a car would equate to 30 cents an hour per motorcycle or moped. Exact locations are yet to be determined and depend on the DDA's mapping of high-usage areas, vetting from the transportation committee, and subsequent feedback from area business owners. Spots using e-park machines would be likelier candidates, she says, because those machines are already configured to handle multiple spaces. Such a parking scheme has already been successfully deployed in San Francisco and Boston. Mopeds and motorcycles can already dock for free in parking structures and lots, but those tend to attract commuters, Miller says, while "the on-street spaces hopefully will target a higher turnover crowd, people that are coming down to dine, or go to an entertainment venue, or pop into a coffee shop.""When we hit it on the mark like we did with the on-street bike racks you actually get more accessibility out of that space, because rather than just serving one car, we can serve four mopeds with high turnover," Miller envisions. "It's been very beneficial to both businesses and customers."The DDA welcomes public input on motorcycle/moped/bike parking via an online request form. Source: Amber Miller, planning and research specialist at the DDAWriter: Tanya Muzumdar

SPUR Studios opens second space in Pittsfield Twp

In a monument to visual artists, last weekend SPUR Studios opened a sister location to its successful Ypsilanti set of private workspaces for creatives. SPUR Studios - Number Two occupies the front of the building housing the Color Express print shop at 625 State Circle in Pittsfield Township. The 1,500-square-foot space is currently leasing six studios ranging from 150-350 square feet apiece, with room to build out for a seventh. There is a one-year minimum lease requirement. Space constraints mean the new locale is for visual artists only, whereas the Ypsilanti location is split between artists and musicians, says James Marks, founder of SPUR Studios and custom screen printing venture VG Kids.About 20 artists, mostly photographers and graphic designers, attended an open house held on February 12. FLY Children's Art Center will be moving its commissary in and there is interest in several other units, according to Marks.While the current number of locations can still be counted on one hand, Marks would like to add more over time. "It's definitely on my mind to open something larger in Ann Arbor if this works. We've considered other locations in Michigan and ultimately other locations outside of Michigan. But...," he qualifies, "one step at a time.""There's a new change of habits as the creative economy is becoming a larger piece of the overall economy, and different people are reacting to that in different ways," Marks feels. While there are membership situations where artists can rent space in an open room, as of yet there are no similar options, he says.  With this set-up, "you would come in, you would remodel it, you would make it your own. You could bring clients in there, but in an overall building that's made of like-minded people."Source: James Marks, founder of SPUR Studios and VG KidsWriter: Tanya Muzumdar

A Hand Made Business

Siobhan Lyle always wanted a place where artisans and crafters could gather, learn and share. So, she did what any good maker does: she made her own. The Blue House is Ann Arbor's go-to destination for hand-crafted hipness, building a community where do-it-yourself doesn't necessarily mean do it by yourself.

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