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Local 'hidden tech' entrepreneurs
meet at GCC- March 29, 2005
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Businesses say shared work space, telecommunications
service needed
by Richie Davis
Recorder Staff |
GREENFIELD - To call Paul Hake, at 22, an entrepreneur, might seem
a bit grand.
Yet as a partner in Paul Hake Productions, a business he created in
November, he's already compiled an impressive list of credentials,
including developing prototypes of five games for Hasbro's Tiger Electronics
division, as well as multi-media work for Fidelity Investments.
"One of the big issues for me is getting health insurance, as
a small company," said Hake, a University of Massachusetts graduate
who moved here from Rhode Island to be with his fiancée. He
was among 50 small scale, technology-related businesses to attend
a recent meeting of the Pioneer Valley's "Hidden Tech" business
group at Greenfield Community College's downtown center.
Like the other small start-up businesses, which included research
services, a voice-over recording artist, a conference planning service,
and graphic designers, Hake's small operation pointed to the need
for a shared "incubator" space where the tech-savvy business
could not only share facilities and support service but also "bounce
ideas off each other. "
"Without this (cross-pollination provided by the two-and-a-half-year
old organization, which now boasts about 600 members) we wouldn't
know who else was out there," said Hake. "It's like a chain-reaction,
networking with other people, and it opens up more doors."
Other needs expressed by the business people - from a Gill-based "Shop
Western Mass." e-commerce
business to nationwide voiceover artist Jill Connolly of Shelburne
Falls - were better telecommunication services in -the region, tax
and legal advice, as well as training.
"It was probably the tip of the iceberg," said Ann L. Hamilton,
president of the Franklin County Chamber of Commerce, which co hosted
the event. "It was fascinating to see how broad the scope of
this group is. They all have the potential to grow, and to work with
local companies, as they get known."
The significance of such "hidden tech" looms ever-larger,
Hamilton said, as giant employers downsize, steal away to other regions
or countries or disappear altogether. In fact, 75 percent of Pioneer
Valley businesses employ 10 or fewer people, she reported.
Christopher Sikes, executive director of the Valley Enterprise Fund,
said, "This area's always been a breeding ground for micro-enterprise.
Technology is advancing to the point where individuals can make a
living out of their own homes doing some pretty powerful things."
Although there are potential spaces for more "incubator spaces"
like the Greenfield Venture Center, it's hard to find the public financing
now to develop them, Sikes said.
Patricia Crosby, who heads the Franklin Hampshire Employment and Training
Board, showed up at the gathering to stay in touch with emerging businesses
but said she was blown away by "the energy in the room, the youthfulness
and new ideas" she found at Wednesday's event.
Some of the businesses are already at the point of needing to employ
workers, Crosby said.
"They've been telling us for more than five years that the workplace
is changing," she said. "But this is the first time I've
seen that made real. Increasingly what you are is what you can do.
If you can promote it, you don't necessarily need the big, paternal
company. That may not be available, and this may be the way to make
your own niche."
On the Web: www.hidden.tech.net
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