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Saint Anthony Park : Innovation + Job News

24 Saint Anthony Park Articles | Page: | Show All

July events: bootstrappers, bioscience BBQ, pub standards, grain exchange, more

Pub Standards MN
Thursday, July 14, 6�8 p.m.
Psycho Suzie's
1900 Marshall Street NE, Minneapolis

Join in the monthly meet-up of Pub Standards MN to "drink, talk shit, complain, and commiserate" with other web professionals, as their website states.


Annual UEL Summer BBQ
Wednesday, July 20, 3�6:30 p.m.
University Enterprises Laboratories
1000 Westgate Drive, St. Paul
Free

Call 651-641-2804 or email [email protected] to rsvp for this annual gathering at the biosciences research center and early-stage company incubator.

Creativity in the Digital World � MIMA event
Wednesday, July 20, 5:15 p.m.
McNamara Alumni Center, U of M Campus
200 Oak Street SE, Minneapolis
Free to $45

Heath Rudduck, chief creative officer at Campbell Mithun, will present at this event from the Minnesota Interactive Marketing Association (MIMA). Registration and cash bar at 5:15 p.m.; presentation at 6 p.m.; networking, food & cash bar at 7 p.m. Pre-register for $40 (free for MIMA members and students) or walk in for $40�$45.


Hacks/Hackers Twin Cities
Hacked! - Why You Should Care about Privacy in Social Media
Thursday, July 21, 6 p.m.
Public Radio International
401 Second Ave. N., Suite 500, Minneapolis

Join the newly established Hacks/Hackers Twin Cities for a conversation about privacy and security in social media.


Bootstrappers Breakfast
Thursday, July 28, 7:30�9 a.m.
Wilde Roast
65 SE Main St., Minneapolis
$10
Early stage technology startups compare notes on operational, development, and business issues with peers who "eat problems for breakfast." Moderated by start-up lawyer Kevin Spreng.


CoCo/Project Skyway Grain Exchange opening party
Saturday, July 30
400 South Fourth Street
details TBA

The early news is that CoCo and Project Skyway will celebrate the opening of their Minneapolis space at the Grain Exchange on July 30. Watch for details on their websites.


Visit Tech.MN for a full listing of tech-related events.

Ximedica expanding med device development business to St. Paul

Ximedica (pronounced "Zye-medica") is already established near one medical device hotspot (Boston) and is now expanding to another: the Twin Cities.

"Minneapolis is the hub of so many medical device companies and the hub of so many of our customers," says Sandra Weiss, director of marketing for the Providence, Rhode Island-based firm.

Ximedica provides up-front research, design, strategy, product development and introduction, and many other services to medical device and consumer healthcare companies.

The new office will be located in the University Enterprise Laboratories (UEL) Center, near University Avenue and Highway 280.

The company will be hiring locally, says Weiss--a key part of maintaining the presence and trust with local partners that the company has established on the East Coast for nearly 25 years.

"We're [hiring locally] so we can continue to maintain that service, we can continue to earn that trust locally, just like we've done in Providence," says Weiss, who notes that the Twin Cities is also a hub of academia and research related to the industry.

Ximedica does not have a solid target for the number of employees there, but it is "actively recruiting" and "aggressively hiring," says Stephanie Chamberlain, human resources manager for Ximedica.

As of mid-June, the staff count was one: Director of Human Factors Industrial Design David Copeland. His team will eventually include a director of engineering; senior level mechanical, software and electrical engineers; and program managers.

The Minnesota facility is expected to be at full capacity this fall, according to a press release, and Ximedica is also expanding its Providence location to 100,000 square feet of "integrated product development space."

Source: Sandra Weiss, Ximedica
Writer: Jeremy Stratton

Zipnosis growing nationally after 3,500-patient pilot

When it comes to medical diagnosis and treatment, one generally doesn't want the doctor to "phone it in."

That is changing with the advent of companies like Zipnosis. The St. Paul-based firm facilitates online diagnosis and treatment of common health needs like colds, flu, allergies, common infections, tobacco cessation, and more.

For a $25 fee, registered patients can complete an "adaptive online interview" about their ailment. The information is sent digitally to a local, board-certified and licensed clinician, from whom the patient receives a diagnosis, treatment plan, and prescription if necessary, within an hour, between the hours of 8 a.m. and 8 p.m.

Zipnosis was co-founded in late 2008 by CEO Jon Pearce, then an MBA student at the University of Minnesota.
The company now has six employees, including corporate officers with experience at notable local health care and IT organizations.

Zipnosis completed a year-long, local pilot in early May, partnering with Park Nicollet to provide diagnosis and treatment to approximately 3,500 patients--about 30 percent of them in rural Minnesota.

Pearce says the pilot answered the questions: "'Can we deliver the care effectively? Can we deliver it safely? What sort of marketing responses work?' You get a really good idea for how the business works," he says.

Both clinical quality and patient satisfaction were high, says Pearce--in the mid-to-upper nineties (in terms of percentage) for safe and effective treatment and in terms of positive patient responses to a survey. More than 30 percent of patients served have used Zipnosis more than once, Pearce notes.

With the success of, and lessons learned from, the pilot, "We said, 'OK, we think it's ready to move into multiple states at this point,'" says Pearce. They wasted no time; Zipnosis expanded its services to two other states, Colorado and Washington, on May 15. Pearce expects to add others by the end of the year. Zipnosis has even drawn international interest, which they have had to turn down in this early stage. "We're not quite there," says Pearce. "[With] six people [it's] a little hard to tackle some of the other countries."

Here at home, Pearce anticipates Park Nicollet will remain a long-term partner in Minnesota. The company will similarly partner with local clinics and practitioners in other states, he says.

Pearce said he expects Zipnosis to add employees as the company grows and expands its reach.

Zipnosis can offer two types of service in partnering with providers, according to Pearce: practitioners can use the company's online "turnkey solution, right out of the box," he says, or it can "help them create an identity for their system" using the platform and technology.

"So far most people � have used the off-the-shelf product, because it seems to work fairly well," says Pearce.


Source: Jon Pearce, CEO, Zipnosis

Writer: Jeremy Stratton

Synovis Life Technologies named Manufacturer of the Year, projects $80-85 million revenue for 2011

St. Paul-based Synovis Life Technologies received the Manufacturers Alliance Association's 2011 Manufacturer of the Year Award not so much for what it creates, but how it produces it.

The diversified medical device company makes implantable biomaterials, devices for microsurgery, and tools used in surgical repair and reconstruction of soft tissue damaged or destroyed by disease or injury.

The annual award, now in its 15th year, recognizes companies that use lean tools and techniques in their manufacturing. Synovis won in the mid-sized manufacturers' category.

""We started looking at lean five or six years ago," says Brett Reynolds, Synovis' chief financial officer. Synovis switched to the Kanban (or "just-in-time") product scheduling system, reducing its on-hand stores of inventory from 17 weeks to just eight weeks.

Furthermore, work cells organized by product line increased efficiency, says Reynolds. As a result, Synovis has been able to stay in its 65,000-square-foot facility despite an average annual growth of 25 percent over the past five years, and its on-time shipping rate has gone up to virtually 100 percent, says Reynolds.

The MAA award recognizes not only innovation in manufacturing, but a company's willingness and efforts to share those ideas and practices within the industry, something Reynolds says Synovis has been active in doing.

Its operations team shares ideas at conferences, and companies and educational groups tour the facility to see the manufacturing process, he says.

Synovis was founded in 1985 with $300,000 in revenue, a number that grew to almost $69 million last year, says Reynolds, who expects $80�85 million in 2011. Of its 300 employees, 200 work in St. Paul at University Avenue and Highway 280 on the border of Minneapolis.

Source: Brett Reynolds, Synovis Life Technologies
Writer: Jeremy Stratton

LocaLoop partnership will bring fast, affordable internet to remote areas

St. Paul-based LocaLoop is reaching across the globe--to Israel--to bring 4G broadband internet to rural and under-served areas of the Midwest.

LocaLoop announced last week a strategic marketing and technology agreement with the Israel-based network hardware firm Runcom. LocaLoop's cloud technology business management Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) platform, called aLoopNET, will be deployed using Runcom equipment.

LocaLoop founder and CEO Carl-Johan Torarp invented LocaLoop's 4G Mobile WiMAX/LTE enabling technology and founded the company in 2003 to provide products and solutions for 4G mobile broadband internet designed for the rural markets of the world.

On its website, LocaLoop states that it answers the question: "How can you build a profitable business delivering high-quality Broadband Internet service at an affordable subscriber price in low density areas both at home and on the go?"

The platform's cloud computing architecture is key to that, as it makes deployment of a virtual network operations center affordable for broadband internet service providers.

LocaLoop's target market is the approximately 50 million people in under-served and rural areas of the U.S. alone, according to its website.

The partnership with Runcom is "much more than a marketing and technology agreement," said Torarp in a press release. "Together we are able to deliver a powerful turnkey 4G wireless network solution with capabilities that we could not achieve individually."

The two companies will focus on the nine-state region of the upper Midwestern U.S. initially, and it may be the first of more joint ventures for LocaLoop. The company states on its website that it is currently in a testing phase on its own live 4G network and will begin roll-out with rural joint venture partners in the U.S. during midyear 2011.

Source: LocaLooop
Writer: Jeremy Stratton


Peapods natural toy store moves to 3,000 sq. ft. St. Anthony Park location

Peapods, like a lot of its customers, is experiencing a growth spurt.

The natural toy and baby care store moved into a new, bigger space last week in the St. Anthony Park neighborhood of St. Paul.

Co-owner Dan Marshall says when the store's Snelling Avenue lease ran up, they wanted to buy a building instead of rent, in part so that they could make their retail space as environmentally sound as possible.

They settled on a former hardware store at 2290 Como Ave. The 3,000-square-foot store is about 50 percent larger than its previous Snelling Avenue location. It also moves them from a busy commercial corridor to a cozier feeling neighborhood, which they hope will appeal to customers.

"We were really drawn to the idea of being part of a community of small businesses and giving people more than one reason to come to the neighborhood and shop with us," says Marshall.

Peapods, which has eight employees, is known for carrying products like wood toys, cloth diapers and organic clothing. Marshall says they avoid selling things like mass-market plastic toys and instead focus on more environmentally friendly items.

Marshall is also known for his active role in the Handmade Toy Alliance, which is seeking to reform the testing and regulations for small, independent toy retailers and manufacturers.

The new store opened on January 6. Marshall says official grand opening events will be planned after they finish setting up and settling in.

Source: Dan Marshall, Peapods Natural Toys & Baby Care
Writer: Dan Haugen

Scales Advertising projects $500K-$1M growth, sees signs that strategy is sticking

You may not have heard of Scales Advertising, but if you buy office supplies from 3M, odds are you've seen their work.

The under-the-radar St. Paul agency does design, packaging and advertising for a variety of 3M products. Other clients include Scotch, C.H. Robinson Worldwide and the Minnesota High Tech Association.

Scales recently announced the hiring of a new associate creative director, Peter Winecke, and also a new client, Red Wing-based Capital Safety.

The nearly 40-year-old company touts a focus on "becoming part of our clients' daily operation, knowledge base and potential."

"We're going after business from a more integrated standpoint versus just a project-by-project basis," says marketing director Holli Maines.

And it appears to be working. The company's revenue was around $6.5 million last year, and they expect to improve on that by between $500,000 and $1 million this year.

Maines says what helps set the agency apart is its range of in-house services, which include strategic planning as well as packaging design and production, photography and international file preparation.

Source: Holli Maines, Scales Advertising
Writer: Dan Haugen

St. Paul solar installer says sales are up 50 percent from a year ago

A Twin Cities solar installer hit a growth spurt in 2010 thanks to lower prices and new rebates.

Innovative Power Systems
, which installs solar electric and solar thermal panels, as well as wind turbines, says sales are up about 50 percent compared to this time last year.

The company's growth had previously been averaging about 15 percent to 20 percent.

Sales manager Jamie Borell says the cost of solar electric panels has been cut in half over the past few years. Meanwhile, new state and federal incentives are covering more upfront costs.

The changes are making solar projects more accessible to middle-class budgets, he says.

"I think there's a growing awareness, as well, about where our electricity comes from, and people want cleaner options for their electricity," says Borell.

Since this time last year, the company has grown from 14 employees to 23 (including outside sales reps) and moved from southeast Minneapolis to the western edge of St. Paul. The new office and warehouse space gives it better freeway access and more room to grow.

Meanwhile, there's more competition for the 20-year-old solar pioneer. Borell estimates the number of solar installers in the Twin Cities has grown from about half a dozen a few years ago to more than 50 today. One factor besides the prices and rebates: the recession has pushed some electricians to update and diversify their skills with renewable energy.

Source: Jamie Borell, Innovative Power Systems
Writer: Dan Haugen

St. Paul co-working center kicks off Startup Saturdays theme

Starting your own company doesn't have to mean working alone.

A St. Paul co-working center recently kicked off a new Startup Saturdays theme. The 3rd Place, 2190 Como Ave., is one of two co-working centers that opened in the city earlier this year. The other is CoCo in Lowertown St. Paul.

Co-working centers are meant to be an alternative to the kitchen table or coffee shop for self-employed and telecommuting professionals, who typically pay a membership fee for access to a workstation, Internet connection and other office amenities.

The 3rd Place, a project of the social-media marketing firm Monkey Island, centers on the hope that a handful of aspiring tech startups will decide to take their projects out of the garage or basement and into its co-working space one day a week.

The sessions are free during the month of May. Amenities include high-speed wi-fi, whiteboards, and a conference room with a projector, but co-founder Zack Steven said the real reason to participate is the chance to be around other startup-minded people.

The real benefit is getting to "talk to people who have done it, and are doing it, and dedicate time to it so you can actually find out if what you're working on is worth while from a market/business standpoint," Steven said.

So far, Startup Saturdays have no formal program or curriculum � participants just show up between 9 and 5 � but Steven said they're talking with local tech groups about possibly developing sessions specifically aimed at entrepreneurs.

Source: Zack Steven, The 3rd Place
Author: Dan Haugen
24 Saint Anthony Park Articles | Page: | Show All
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