| Follow Us:
Modernism in Michigan-Bloomfield Hills
Modernism in Michigan-Bloomfield Hills - David Lewinski Photography | Show Photo

In the News

1464 Articles | Page: | Show All

Could a Bloomfield Hills entrepreneur corner the suspender market?

Sometimes old timey is hip. The suspender business is booming for Sal Herman, who puts his money where his mouth is and wears the alternative to belts every day.
 
Excerpt:
 
"So intense is Herman's devotion to suspenders — and the 1% of the population he says wears suspenders — that he has turned them into an unlikely and thriving business. About 2,400 stores nationwide sell his suspenders.
 
And he's expecting a record-breaking season on his company's website."
 
Read the rest here.
 
 

Dearborn's Carharrt and Auburn Hills' Chrysler team up for "Imported From Detroit" work wear

It's all about the merch. Detroit-inspired fashion is "in" (along with local pride) and companies with Motor City roots aren't missing that fact.
 
Excerpt:
 
"Both Chrysler and Carharrt share a history in the industrialization of Detroit, and the country, for that matter. Both companies, in recent years, have embraced their Detroit roots and the associations that come with the Motor City pedigree. It’s appropriate they’ve teamed up for “Imported From Detroit,” a limited edition line of sturdy work wear that goes on sale today on the Carharrt website and at Carhartt’s Sullivan Center Store in Chicago."
 
Read the rest here.
 

Metro Detroit makes list of cities best oriented toward job growth

The Atlantic Cities offers a fascinating perspective on which metro areas are best at creating and sustaining job growth and hints at why. Top of the list includes San Jose, Austin, and Bajersfield. Big surprise, however, was both Grand Rapids (7th) and Metro Detroit's (10th) inclusion.
 
Excerpt:
 
"A recent analysis of competitiveness and job growth across U.S. metros conducted by Economic Modeling Specialists could not be more timely. It provides a detailed assessment of the metros that have generated the most robust job growth based on "unique regional factors rather than national trends." To do so, it conducted a shift-share analysis of employment trends for the 100 largest U.S. metros for the period 2010 to 2012. "
 
Read the rest here.
 

Crain's picks coolest Metro Detroit Companies to work for

So, the list was actually for all of Michigan and include 50 firms but the vast majority of the companies are located in Metro Detroit. Huzzah! Thinking of a job change? Maybe you should peruse Crain's list.
 
Excerpt:
 
"The companies offer perks like free pizza and frozen yogurt, flexible schedules, staff outings and wellness programs...
 
...Troy had the highest number of cool companies with 11, followed by Detroit with eight and Southfield with seven."
 
 
Read the rest here. Check out the list here.
 

Thrill to Detroit's film locations! Tour maps now available!

Transformners 3! Alex Cross! Detroit 1-8-7! The Giant Mechanical Man! The Michigan Film Office has put together a movie tour map of Detroit-area film locations. Get yours at the Convention and Visitor's Center.
 
Read all about it here.
 
 

Lawrence Tech plans to start shooting hoops again

It's been almost 50 years since they last put a team on the court but Lawrence Tech has decided to bring back its men’s and women’s varsity basketball programs.
 
Excerpt:
 
"In the 1940s, LTU helped change the pace of collegiate basketball with a run-and-shoot offense that made Hankins the top scorer among major college players in 1947-48. Denning was a post player with a devastating hook shot with either hand who later played for the Harlem Globetrotters and was drafted by the Baltimore Bullets (today the Washington Wizards).
 
That tradition gives Head Coach Tom Kempf of the men’s team and Head Coach Mary Pinkowski of the women’s team something to aim for, but right now they have to concentrate on the challenges of molding brand new teams with mostly freshman players."
 
Read the rest here.
 

Royal Oak sneaker sellers to become stars of Eminem-produced YouTube series

The owners of Royal Oak's Burn Rubber aren't only getting their own Internet program, it's being supported by the Michigan Film Incentive and produced by Detroit native son, Marshall Mathers (aka Eminem).
 
Excerpt:
 
"Detroit Rubber will follow Rick Williams and Roland “Ro” Coit, owners of the Royal Oak sneaker shop Burn Rubber. In addition to opening a new boutique, called two/eighteen, the show will highlight these Michigan entrepreneurs as they balance family, a growing business and day to day struggles. The show will be released on the premium YouTube channel Loud."
 
Read the rest here.
 

Wouldn't you like to be a Kresge artist fellow too?

Last week heralded the return of the Kresge Artist Fellowships. That means applications are now open for 18 artsy-fartsy types to receive $25,000 Fellowships in the literary and visual arts.
 
Learn more here.  
 
Apply here.   
 
Watch an awesome video about last year's fellows below.  

 

Haleem Ar-Rasheed, 2010 Kresge Artist Fellow in the performing arts from Kresge Arts in Detroit on Vimeo.


A tree grows in Oakland & Wayne County

Or rather more trees.

Michigan Green Schools within the Rouge River Watershed were given native trees of their choice to plant and nurture, helping to further green their communities.
 
Excerpt:
 
"The tree species offered were all native to Michigan and included red bud, red oak, red maple and sugar maple. The trees were 1.5 inch caliper and depending on the variety, 5’-12’ in height. Wayne County offered trees to 83 recognized schools within the Wayne County portion of the Rouge watershed and Oakland County offered trees to 43 schools."
 
Read the rest here. And here.
 
 
 

Detroit Venture's Josh Linkner calls out Silicon Valley

Former ePrize founder and CEO and local entrepreneurial guru takes a sharp needle to the Silicon Valley's over-inflated bubble and extolls the virtues of growing a company in Detroit.
 
Excerpt:
 
"Many people think the Valley is the best place to start a digital/tech company. While there have been no shortage of successful start-ups in Silicon Valley, I argue that many of those ventures succeeded in spite of their location. For me, this “best place” logic makes no sense. In the Bay Area, there is more competition for everything – talent, funding, office space, resources, etc.  What kind of investment tip is “buy high, sell high?” As an entrepreneur, it’s difficult enough getting a company off the ground; why make your work any harder than it already is? Give yourself more leeway – pay fewer dollars for higher-grade intellect, make a splash in the media because you’re the big fish, and get the investment community to notice you and the traction you’re making. Why over-pay just to blend in? When you’re swimming in a vast ocean filled with other startups, you need herculean accomplishments to stand out any more than the next guy. Every single day. Good luck with that."

Read the rest here.

Sterling Heights and Troy singled out for their biz dev virtues

In an eCities study, eight Michigan communities were singled out by U-M Dearborn's iLab for their innovative approaches to business development. Sterling Heights and Troy made sure Metro Detroit was properly represented.
 
Excerpt:
 
"Eight communities across the state of Michigan are top performers at fostering entrepreneurial growth and economic development, according to the annual eCities study. The study, conducted by iLabs, University of Michigan-Dearborn’s Center for Innovation and Research, identified Alpine Township, Grand Blanc, Grand Rapids, Imlay City, Meridian Township, Midland, Sterling Heights and Troy for their incentives, innovative programs and best practices geared toward business development."
 
Read the rest here.
 
 

WSJ says Detroit's Corktown is the place to be

The mainstream media has honed into the gradual right-siding of Detroit's status as a city worth taking note of... but usually misses where stuff is actually happening. This time the WSJ does a pretty good job.
 
Excerpt:
 
"Young entrepreneurs have homed in on Corktown's main drag, which is now dotted with small businesses: a nationally acclaimed barbecue joint, a burger bar, a craft-cocktail nightspot and a hip coffee shop. A few boutiques selling sports apparel and vinyl records have sprouted along blocks that were once largely shuttered.
 
"When the bike racks are full, you know things are humming," said Dave Steinke, owner of the new Mercury Burger Bar, who plans to open an Italian restaurant on Michigan Avenue next month. "When you see some strollers on the street, you know they'll be back again and again.""
 
Read the rest here.
 

Southfield's Benzinga featured in Windows 8

Not that Metro Detroit's Benzinga needed validation, but becoming part of Windows 8 is a pretty hefty endorsement of what this dynamic Southfield Company is doing.
 
Excerpt:
 
"Benzinga, which has a multiyear contract with Microsoft Corp. to provide the Windows 8 Bing Finance section with content, is featured alongside larger media companies such as Reuters, Bloomberg and The Wall Street Journal.
 
"They're billion-dollar companies," Raznick said. "We're in a good mix."
 
Benzinga also has contracts to provide content to Ameritrade.com, Tradestation.com and Forbes.com."
 
Read the rest here.
 

Best places to survive Metro Detroit's zombie apocalypse

Zombies are the new black. BUt where do you run to when granny starts craving your brains? Here's a list that's pretty good... but for some you better bring plenty of food and ammo with you.
 
Excerpt:
 
Grosse Pointe Yacht Club
 
Boasting a 187-foot steeple for monitoring any unauthorized visitors, many potential escape boats, three restaurants and four bars — this place could be a zombie survivalist’s dream. With access to fresh water and fishing on Lake St. Clair, a long-term stay wouldn’t be out of the question. Let’s hope we only need to lay low for six months or so for the zombies to either die of hunger or exposure.
 
Check out other great survival tips here.
 

Metro Detroit tech entrepreneur says region needs to be more experimental

David Tarver turned a basement business beginning into Telecom Analysis Systems, which was sold in 1995 to multinational British firm Spirent. He's written a book about his business philosphy and will be a speaker at Friday's TEDx Detroit.
 
Excerpt:
 
"“It’s very appropriate,” Tarver said. “Because there are a lot of needs that you can see in and around Detroit, and a lot of times we get hamstrung addressing those needs and being concerned with whether they’ll be successful or not. What we need is 100,000 experiments.”
 
Not all of the experiments will be successful in classic terms, he said, but all of them will help point to what should be done next, at the very least helping future generations."
 
Read the rest here.
1464 Articles | Page: | Show All
Share this page
0
Email
Print
Signup for Email Alerts