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Austin-based Gardenio Caters to Millennials Looking to Grow Their Own Food

Roman Gonzalez, founder of Gardenio, courtesy photo

At Brown University, Roman Gonzalez studied philosophy to understand big things like love and purpose.

He wanted to distill these difficult concepts and relate them in a way to make people’s lives better.

At the same time, he was working to reshape his relationship with food, and he learned that to make a good salsa, it was all about the ingredients. And there were all these different varieties of tomatoes. He became fascinated with the variety and breadth of nature and food.

“It made me really curious,” Gonzalez said.

He also started creating craft cocktails with different herbs, spices and barks.

“I would run around my neighborhood and I started smelling the jasmine. I noticed an orange tree. The world started looking different,” Gonzalez said. “All of sudden the world became very bountiful. When you talk to people who have been growing food for a while, they talk about the same thing.”

That planted the seeds for what would eventually grow into his startup Austin-based Gardenio, which is an online marketplace for gardeners aimed at Millennials and a “mission-driven company striving for a healthier, more sustainable world where anyone has access to the resources they need to grow their own food.”

Gonzalez, who has a background as a user experience designer, thought plants and gardening supplies were primarily being marketed to retired folks with straw hats and flowered shirts. With Gardenio, he wanted to create a better experience aimed at Millennials like himself.

“By connecting people to nature and to each other, I can have a really big impact in the world,” Gonzalez said.

Officially founded in 2017, Gardenio joined the DivInc Accelerator program, which focuses on helping founders from diverse backgrounds and women. It has established a young, creative, inclusive brand that celebrates diversity and cultural impact, he said.

Gardenio launched its first products in March of 2018. Gonzalez said he learned a lot from his early customers. He made improvements based on their feedback. Gardenio also has more than 30 people who work with the company as pro-bono consultants, who are 80 percent people of color and women and members of the LGBT community.

In April, Gardenio graduated from the Tarmac Accelerator and on August 16th, the company launched its mobile app.

Historically Gardenio has brought on new customers and built its community by throwing fundraising events, Gonzalez said. Long term the company plans to generate a lot of content and create videos and paid social ads.

This year, Gardenio also raised a pre-seed round of funding from  Austin angel investors Michael Barnes, founder and former CEO of Teacher Talent and Blanca Lesmes, CEO of BBImaging.

“I’ve known Roman for years and I’ve watched him methodically and obsessively build Gardenio from the ground up,” Barnes said. “When you see a strong tech professional become obsessed with a vision of the future that ties into an existential urge— to reconnect to the roots of our system of food— you know it’s got the right nutrients to grow into a huge business.”

Overall, the lawn and garden market is worth $49.9 billion with an annualized growth rate of 3.6 percent over the last five years, according to research firm IBISWorld.

Increasingly, Millennials are becoming an important part of that market as they embrace hobbies like gardening, according to Jennifer Mapes-Christ, manager of the consumer and commercial products team at The Freedonia Group. About 20 percent of consumers, ages 18 to 34, report gardening is one of their hobbies.

“With the rise of community gardens and community-supported agriculture, this group is interested in specialty gardening with heirloom seeds and gardening as a craft using specialty tools and taking care to create something unique,” Mapes-Christ said in a news statement.

Historically Gardenio’s business model worked by customers going to the website and ordering a grow box, a live organic plant, and the company sends them soil that is matched to the plant they are growing and a care guide that goes with that.

Now, Gardenio is shifting to a membership model and through the fall, it is taking pre-orders to launch.

“We will send you plant food in the amount you need it. Most people don’t know you have to feed your plants let alone knowing when to feed it,” Gonzalez said.

Gardenio is also launching Infinite lives so if a paying Gardenio member has a plant die for any reason – Gardenio will send a replacement plant.

“Gardeners grow,” Gonzalez said. “You don’t just do it once.”

Gardenio’s next big milestone is to have over 250 pre-order memberships and 5,000 people on its waitlist, Gonzalez said.

Gardenio was also a finalist in the startup category for a Mosaic Award, which celebrates diversity and inclusion in Austin’s startup community. The company competed against much larger ventures like Data.World, Aceable and Squareroot and The Riveter, which won the award.

“We’re this scrappy little team making waves,” Gonzalez said. “With very little resources we’ve been able to make some waves.”

Gardenio sees its competition as Home Depot, Lowe’s and other big box stores, which control 64 percent of the market for gardening plants and supplies.

“We’re not about giving you a million tomatoes we are about giving you the experience of having a relationship with a plant,” Gonzalez said.

Andrew Escher bought a large mint plant and got a small holy basil plant from Gardenio as a gift. He has both sitting on his porch still.

He likes Gardenio and would recommend it to a friend.

“They help me build confidence in my gardening ability, saved me time and mental energy to get things set up and I like the idea of growing my own food and herbs in the long run,” Escher said.

Gardenio addresses a big existential problem today, said Barnes, an investor.

”They say, “we are what we eat…” but if we don’t really know what we eat, can we really know who we are?” Barnes said.

GoFish Cam Provides a Fish Eye’s View of the Water

Ever wonder what’s going on underwater when you’re fishing?

That’s what piqued Brandon Austin’s interest.  He grew up fishing in Canada and Costa Rica and he always wanted to know what was happening in the water. So, he created a company to find out and became flounder of GoFish Cam.

“Growing up fishing, always like everyone else who has ever held a rod in their hands, I wondered what was going on underwater,” Austin said.

GoFish Cam is a small cylindrical wireless underwater video camera that sits on a fishing line near the lure and works with a mobile app and allows anglers to have a fish-eye view of the water.

“It’s become a great tool that every time you reel in, you have some insight into what’s going on,” Austin said.

Founded in 2015, GoFish Cam raised $750,000, according to CrunchBase. It was part of the Central Texas Angel Network’s portfolio as well as a member of Capital Factory’s accelerator program. Capital Factory also invested in the startup.

In March of 2018, Unorthodox Ventures acquired GoFish Cam and brought the organization inside its offices. That’s when Adam Kahn, sheepshead of operations and a member of Unorthodox Ventures’ The Kitchen, joined GoFish Cam to bring the product to an even larger market.

On this episode of the Ideas to Invoices podcast, Austin and Kahn talk about how customers are using the camera and plans for market expansion.

Early on, GoFish Cam effectively used crowdfunding to get its customers engaged early on and to raise money to manufacture the product. The company raised $101,000 from 563 backers during a 2015 Kickstarter project and $120,189 from 631 backers in 2017 from an IndieGoGo campaign.

In addition to anglers, the U.S. Navy Seals began using the GoFish Cam cameras for underwater research, Austin said. Other marine researchers also use the cameras, he said.

“That just shows you a cool part of the entrepreneurial journey, you develop your product for one use case and out of nowhere you find out that you accidentally developed it for something else,” Austin said.

The cameras have captured some amazing underwater footage and GoFish Cam has posted some of them to its YouTube channel on its website.

For more on the company, listen to the entire podcast. Also, please rate and review our Ideas to Invoices podcast on iTunes and support Silicon Hills News by becoming a patron on our Patreon site.

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Headphone Maker AfterShokz Moves from New York to Austin

Photo courtesy of AfterShokz

AfterShokz, which makes sports headphones that transmit sound via bone conduction, announced this week that it is moving its headquarters from New York to Austin.

The company is currently working out of WeWork University Park and plans to move to Domain Place, 10727 Domain Drive, in March of next year. AfterShokz plans to rent the second floor of the building.

AfterShokz, founded in 2011, plans to have 40 people by the end of the year and to more than double to 85 by the end of 2021.

Opportunity Austin, the Greater Austin Chamber’s five-county prosperity initiative, worked with AfterShokz on the relocation.

“Opportunity Austin is pleased that AfterShokz has chosen to relocate its corporate headquarters to Austin,” Austin Chamber Senior Vice President, Economic Development Charisse Bodisch said in a news release. “Job creators continue to see our region as an ideal location to find the talent, innovation, and collaborative community that will help them grow and thrive. The addition of 85 jobs over the next three years is another win for our community and the people who continue to look for opportunity and prosperity in the region.”


AfterShokz’s sports headphones are sold on Amazon and in 15,000 stores worldwide. The company sold 1.5 million wireless headphones in 2018.

“AfterShokz is a fast-growing company, and we needed to find a city for our corporate headquarters that could support the expansion of our brand,”  Kimberly Fassetta, CMO, AfterShokz, said in a news release. “Austin’s energy, culture, talent pool and community of leading technology innovators and thriving outdoor brands are what drew us to the city.”

Photo courtesy of AfterShokz

ICON Partners with Mobile Loaves & Fishes to Build 3D Printed Homes for Austin’s Homeless Population

Austin has a homeless problem.

ICON, an Austin-based startup that makes large scale 3-D Printers to build homes, has a solution.

The company this week unveiled a 3D printed Welcome Center in partnership with Mobile Loaves & Fishes, a nonprofit organization that provides shelter to Austin’s homeless population.

ICON constructed the 500 square foot building in less than 27 hours, according to the company. It used one of ICON’s Vulcan II printers, which the company unveiled during South by Southwest at its corporate headquarters last March. Cielo Property Group commissioned the printer to print affordable housing in Austin.

The building is part of Mobile Loaves & Fishes Phase II development for Community First! Village, which rents affordable homes to men and women coming out of chronic homelessness. The next phase adds 24 acres to the development, which now totals 51 acres, which will have a total of 500 homes.

ICON plans to break ground on six more 3D printed homes for the development by the end of the year.

ICON 3D Printing for the Homeless in Austin

ICON, the construction technologies company shifting the paradigm of homebuilding using robotics, software and advanced materials, partnered with Mobile Loaves & Fishes (MLF), the Austin non-profit widely known for its compassionate service to the area’s homeless community.

Carey Smith Launches Unorthodox Ventures in Austin to Invest in Startups with Great Products

Carey Smith, founder of Big Ass Fans and founder of Unorthodox Ventures, courtesy photo.

Carey Smith sold Big Ass Fans, the company he founded in Lexington, Kentucky, for $500 million in December of 2017 and then moved to Austin.

He bought Lance Armstrong’s 8,800 square foot home near downtown in 2018 and launched Unorthodox Ventures, an Austin-based business incubator and VC firm that invests in innovative companies with great products.

Smith runs Unorthodox Ventures with a small group of former employees, known as the Kitchen. They are headquartered in an office park off Friedrich Lane in South Austin.

Smith sat down earlier this week with Silicon Hills News to talk about Big Ass Fans and Unorthodox Ventures on the Ideas to Invoices podcast.

A former air conditioning salesman, Smith saw a big opportunity to create an industrial fan business in 1999. At first, he called the company HVLS Fan Company, but his customers kept calling the headquarters and asking if they were the company that made the big ass fans. Smith decided to rebrand. He even went down the road apiece, as they say in Kentucky, and found Fanny, the company’s donkey mascot. They took a picture of her and used it as their logo. And instead of CEO, Smith became the CBA or Chief Big Ass of Big Ass Fans.

“What we had going for us, our customers named the company,” Smith said. “And though it was a little cheeky, the word ass is used in the Bible 46 times, there wasn’t anything really nasty about it.”

Big Ass Fans grew from six employees to more than 1,200 employees and revenue hit $265 million a year under Smith’s direction. The company made the fans in the U.S. to control production and reduce the chance intellectual property might be stolen in China. He also opened operations in Australia, Malaysia, and Singapore as he grew international sales.

When he started the company, Big Ass Fans had no competitors. When he sold it, he had about 100 competitors. But Big Ass Fans still controlled about 80 percent of the market even though its fans were twice as expensive as some of its competitors, Smith said. The company built long-lasting quality fans that met a market need, Smith said.

To make sure the company maintained its culture as it grew, Smith said he made sure to compensate people well. He paid salaries about 40 percent on higher than the average wage in the state of Kentucky and 30 percent above the standard wage for the U.S. He also paid annual bonuses to everyone in the company. And he created sports teams and family-oriented events. He also had a stock appreciation rights program.

When Smith sold the company, he wrote checks totaling $50 million to his employees from the C-suite down to the production team.

“We minted 13 multi-millionaires and 15 millionaires and about 120 more people that walked away with significant amounts of money,” Smith said.

“In terms of building a culture, the name of the game, it all comes back to Kindergarten you treat people the way you would want to be treated,” Smith said. “You treat people as equals and people appreciate that and respect that.”

Big Ass Fans also put a premium on customer service.

Smith also bootstrapped the company. He tells entrepreneurs now that there is a time and a place for money. But many times, raising money from investors is a mistake because the entrepreneur loses control of the company, Smith said.

After selling Big Ass Fans, Smith decided to found Unorthodox Ventures because he enjoys building businesses and helping other entrepreneurs. It’s an intellectual exercise he enjoys, he said.

“What amazes me is how many young people there are that are very bright and very driven. And I think we at the company here, have something to offer those people because we’ve done it,” Smith said.

It took 20 years to go from zero to $500 million, Smith said.

“We can help them get to that point faster,” he said. “If you inject capital and knowledge at the right points, you can slice time off that venture.”

At the end of the day, Smith wants to make sure the entrepreneur has a sizable chunk of the company they started.

To date, Unorthodox Ventures has invested in Tushy Bidets and it acquired Austin-based Go Fish Cam earlier this year.

He invested in Tushy Bidets because it’s a superior way of disposing of waste, Smith said. In his facilities in Lexington for the fan company, he installed bidets for everyone.

“Americans, interestingly enough, are not on the cutting edge of the bathroom,” he said.

Tushy Bidets has a great product and Unorthodox Ventures is happy to be investors in the company, Smith said.

Unorthodox Ventures looks for good products which have a good market and customer demand, and the right founders, Smith said.

“We think it’s very important to have the right individuals,” Smith said.

Smith also likes to see entrepreneurs who are fully committed to their startup and product.

“You’re looking for people that are looking to change their lives and change other people’s lives and are willing to give up a comfortable day job to do it,” Smith said.

Smith went decades without a paycheck.

“I didn’t think about money, I’m not that driven by that,” he said.

The company always showed a profit, but he used to tell people that if he had a dollar left over at the end of the year, he missed an opportunity to invest it in the company.

“We plowed all the money back into the company,” he said.

Business is a higher calling than just making money, Smith said.

“What makes business interesting is it’s an incredible intellectual journey,” Smith said. If you do it right, you can make it a cool experience for a lot of people, he said. And if you sell the business, you need to share the profits with the people who helped you build it, he said.

But wait, there’s more – listen to the entire podcast. Also, please rate and review our Ideas to Invoices podcast on iTunes and support Silicon Hills News by becoming a patron on our Patreon site.

ContentATX Focuses on Storytelling and Communication Skills

What’s Your Story

Did you know communications is one of the top skills gaps in Austin, according to LinkedIn? And Social Media is also in the top 10.  

ContentATX, a third annual conference put on by Silicon Hills News, can help close the gap on those skills for creatives, startups, entrepreneurs and other businesses. The fun, day-long conference will teach new ways to communicate and provide an opportunity to network with some of the best in the business in Austin.

The event takes place, Sept. 14th from 9 a.m. until 3:30 p.m. at Galvanize at 119 Nueces in downtown Austin. Thank you to our sponsors: Galvanize,  RetailMeNotSANA BenefitsEgan NelsonSilicon Hills Lawyer, and Zoho and there’s still room for one more.

Lyn Graft, author of Start with Story and founder of Storytelling for Entrepreneurs, will kick off the event in the morning with an hour-long talk providing tips people can use to create better stories. He has interviewed more than 500 of the top entrepreneurs in the world including Starbucks, Whole Foods, LinkedIn, Paul Mitchell, Dropbox, Zappos, and The Knot. He’s also an entrepreneur who has started eight ventures and organizations. His ventures have been featured in the Wall Street Journal, New York Times and Inc. Magazine. He’s raised more than $10 million and generated millions in revenue for his companies in the last two decades. And through all his ventures, he has discovered “Your story is your power.”

“Story runs through the very fabric of everything we do as entrepreneurs, whether we realize it or not,” Graft writes. “It is used in every facet of your business-from getting press, to fundraising, to closing sales, to recruiting people to work for you for free, to getting a partner to help you launch a start-up or convincing your spouse to let you take out all the savings to chase your dream.”

Graft is also hosting a “Create Your Story” workshop on Sept. 30th to Oct. 1st at the Hickory House in Barton Springs. That workshop, which has limited tickets, is designed specifically for founders that want help creating and telling their story.

In addition to Lyn Graft, the event features Rusty Kocian, a designer at argodesign, presenting on Designing for Love.

And Thom Singer, a professional speaker and host of the podcast: Cool Things Entrepreneurs Do, will provide insights on adventures in podcasting. He has been podcasting for more than 5 years and has created more than 500 episodes.

Michelle Breyer and Jim Spencer will talk about creating new media startups and media innovation in Austin. Both have had successful exits from media companies they created. Breyer co-founded Texture Media which recently sold to Essence Magazine. Spencer founded Newsy, which E.W. Scripps Company acquired for $35 million in 2014.

Other speakers include Joshua Lee, founder of StandOutAuthority, Jane Ko, creator of a Taste of Koko, Brittany Daniels, YouTube Expert, Noelle Buhidar, host of RetailMeNot’s The Real Deal, Geoffrey Brown, social media expert with Go Daddy and Daniel Sandoval, a consultant with Austin-based Greenleaf Book Publishing, an independent publisher and distributor dedicated to empowering authors

Only three last-minute tickets and one sponsorship still available on Eventbrite. See you on Saturday!

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Top September Tech Events to Attend in Austin

This month marks the start of Fall and that so far is just a date on the calendar as 90 plus degree days continue to be the norm. That’s about 10 degrees higher than normal, according to local metrologists.

But alas as Fall approaches, Austin’s startup activities also heat up. This month features Silicon Hills News’ third annual ContentATX event at Galvanize on Sept. 14th focused on storytelling for entrepreneurs and content creators. Only a few tickets remain.

And later on, is one of the all-time favorite events – Austin Startup Week. Silicon Hills News covered the first one in 2011 as the OG tech media news startup in Austin and we’ll be there to cover this year’s stellar lineup of events also. We love September because it’s also the month we launched eight years ago – when Austin’s technology community was much smaller.

And for those interested in Austin’s growing Space industry, check out our event: SpaceATX on Nov. 6th at the Blanton Auditorium. We’re having a flash sale this weekend only for $5 tickets to the event. If you haven’t kept pace with the space news, this is the event to get caught up on what’s happening in this growing industry in Austin and Texas overall. Also, NASA announced recently that it is opening the International Space Station for commercial space travel, according to Business Insider. And a San Francisco-based nonprofit organization called Open Lunar Foundation made up of tech executives and engineers – some with former ties to NASA, announced its plans to establish a colony on the moon, according to an article in Bloomberg.

Sept. 9th

Austin Fast Start: Mobility Innovation Pitch Event

When: 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.

Where: Austin Central Library, 710 W. Cesar Chavez St., Austin, TX

Why: The Austin Young Chamber hosts Austin Fast Start, a pitch competition with a purpose. Every quarter, we will hear from a new industry and award an unrestricted cash prize and other opportunities to turn these dreams into realities. This quarter is Mobility Innovation. For more info.

Sept. 9th

CoFounder Meetup with William Hurley, aka Whurley

When: 6:30 p.m. to 9 p.m.

Where: Capital Factory – Voltron Room, 701 Brazos St Austin, TX

Why: This monthly meetup features networking and a keynote talk by Whurley. For more info.

Sept. 11

Startup Grind Austin Featuring Ryan Merket, Partner at Firebrand Ventures

When: 6 p.m

Where: Capital Factory, 701 Brazos St., Austin, TX

Why: For its Fireside Chat, Startup Grind Austin welcome Ryan Merket to the stage in September! Ryan is a Partner at Firebrand Ventures, a seed-stage VC firm, serial entrepreneur, angel investor, and previously held key roles at Facebook, Reddit, and Amazon. For more info.

Sept. 12th

Austin Tech Happy Hour

When: 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.

Where: The Dogwood Rock Rose, 11420 Rock Rose Ave #130, Austin, TX

Why: This is Austin’s oldest continuous tech happy hour and it features great networking with Austin’s tech community. For more info.

Sept. 14th

ContentATX3

When: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Where: Galvanize, 119 Nueces Street., Austin, TX

Why: Silicon Hills News is hosting its third annual conference on storytelling for entrepreneurs and content creators. For more info.

Sept. 14th

2019 Austin Blockchain Conference

When: 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.

Where: Engineering Education and Research Center (EER)

2501 Speedway, Austin, TX

Why: Texas Blockchain and the McCombs Blockchain Initiative invites you to attend The 2019 Texas Blockchain Summit hosted on campus at UT Austin. The focus of this conference is to showcase the work happening in the blockchain space here at UT Austin, the surrounding area, and industry as a whole. We are excited to bring together great minds to highlight the rapid innovation being done in academia, startups, and enterprise. For more info.

Sept. 16th

Social Global Austin Pitch Event

When: 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.

Where: Capital Factory, 701 Brazos St., Austin, TX

Why: Hosted in 25 cities across 5 continents, and culminating in a final competition and 3-day immersive educational boot camp in Silicon Valley, SoGal Foundation is excited to host the largest global startup pitch opportunity for women and diverse entrepreneurs worldwide. At each regional competition, startups will be judged by an all-star panel of investors who are committed to investing in early-stage startups. For more info.

Sept. 17th

Cowork + Chill: Entrepreneur’s Edition by Reset

When: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Where: Reset@Tillary Kitchen and Bar, 3201 E. Cesar Chavez St., Austin, TX

Why: In true Austin style, we’re bringing together our community of entrepreneurs and adding some fun to your workday. Make Tuesday more awesome – come enjoy a day of working, meeting new entrepreneurs, and connecting over some local, Austin eats. For more info.

Sept. 17th

Data, Privacy, Freedom & Ethics Debate

When: 6:15 p.m. to 8 p.m.

Where: Austin Central Library, 710 W. Cesar Chavez St., Austin, TX

Why: Austin Forum: “Our world is increasingly digital and connected, and data is being produced at extraordinary, exponentially increasing rates. As a result, data analytics and artificial intelligence are enabling improvements in everything from product design to business operations, from customer experiences to civic engagement.” For more info.

Sept. 17th

Powerup Talk with Evan Loomis of ICON

When: 4:00 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.

Where: Capital Factory, Voltron Room, 701 Brazos St. Austin, TXW

Why: Hugh Forrest of SXSW talks with Evan Loomis, one of ICON’s co-founders, about its revolutionary 3D printing approach to housing that is affordably-priced and changing the paradigm of home construction. Loomis will also share insights from his entrepreneurial journey. For more info.

Sept. 19th

Zuora’s Subscribed Austin Tour

When: 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Where: Driskill Hotel, 150-172 Old Pecan St., Austin, TX

Why: Subscribed is where the Subscription Economy comes to life with real-world examples and practical guidance for companies to get ahead in the age of digital disruption. For more info.

Sept. 19-21st

Creatives Meet Business Experience

When: 8 a.m.

Where:  Springdale General, 1023 Springdale Rd, Austin, TX

Why: A three-day conference centered around learning and connecting for artists, creatives, freelancers, and small business owners. For more info.

Sept. 22-26th

Austin Startup Week

When: Kicks off Sunday with Youth Entrepreneurship Day

Where: Capital Factory, 701 Brazos St., Austin, TX

Why: A packed scheduled of all kinds of events related to the startup scene in Austin. For more info.

Sept. 23rd

Women in Tech Summit

When: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Where: Capital Factory, 701 Brazos Street,1st Floor – Voltron, Austin, TX

Why: The summit is a day full of programming to help inspire, engage and elevate female entrepreneurs and tech professionals. For more info.

Upcoming events:

Oct. 17thMassChallenge Texas Austin Awards Ceremony

Nov. 6thSpaceATX

Nov. 13-14 TimeMachine 2019

Nov. 19th InnoTech Austin

Facebook Opens New Office in Downtown Austin

Facebook officials and invited dignitaries dedicating the new Austin office

Facebook put a high-tech twist on the old tradition of a ribbon-cutting.

The tech giant lit up a giant Facebook thumbs-up Like button with local dignitaries to officially open its new office in downtown Austin Wednesday morning.

“Thank you to our community partners. I hope you know we are as invested in this community as we are in this building, and we can’t wait to continue to grow our relationship with all of you, here in Austin ” said Katherine Shappley, Facebook’s Austin Head of Office.

At the event, Shappley spoke along with Mayor Steve Adler, Texas State Senator Kirk Watson, and Austin Community College President Richard Rhodes. A few hundred people attended the ceremony.

“I want you to know that this city loves Facebook,” Mayor Adler said. “And I love this space.”

Mayor Steve Adler speaking at the opening of Facebook’s new Austin office

Facebook’s space is about so many things that are important in Austin including technology, creativity, innovation, and taking risks, Adler said. It’s also focused on community and fostering connections, he said.

Also, at the event, Austin Community College and Facebook announced a partnership for new digital marketing courses at ACC.

“We are so excited to be a partner with Facebook,” said Rhodes, ACC President, and CEO. Facebook pledged $60,000 for the program.

“It really paves the way. It removes the roadblocks and allows students, entrepreneurs, young businesses to access this service and to get the digital marketing skills necessary,” Rhodes said.


Austin Community College President Richard Rhodes

Classes on social media marketing and digital media strategy at ACC start October 14 and are offered through the college’s continuing education division. The program is part of Facebook’s pledge to train one million people and small businesses across the U.S. in digital skills by 2020.

After the formal part of the new office dedication. Facebook provided tours of its new office, which are hip, filled with natural light, open, and decorated with unique artwork done by local artists.

On the 15th floor, Facebook set up formal information stations on topics such as data for good, stories, town hall, Instagram and more.

Facebook also has a giant “What’s on Your Mind?” white-board wall for employees to write on. The non-digital communications platform featured all kinds of comments like “Justin + Chloe, Def Leppard Rocks, Jasmine was here and where’s the snacks.”

Facebook Austin’s Wall

Another board advertised amenities such as massages on the 24th floor, a cyclist on the 6th, plant tonics on 10th, and Goga Yoga on 17th.

Facebook occupies 256,500 square feet or 11 floors of a new skyscraper at 607 W. 3rd St. It’s part of a bustling tech hub in the Second Street District which has seen several new skyscrapers open in the past three years including Galvanize’s building a block away, followed by Google’s headquarters on the next block.

In 2014, Facebook held a small business training seminar at the Austin Music Hall, which was demolished a few years ago to make way for the tech skyscrapers that occupy the space today.

And in the age of digital everything, it’s kind of fun to see two tech giants communicate with each other using post-it notes.

Post-It Note Art on a window in Facebook’s Austin office

With yellow post-it notes, the workers at Facebook posted a dinosaur and a Sup G? message on the floor to ceiling windows facing their friends who work at Google in the skyscraper across the way. Google posted a duck with the message What’s quacken FB?

The Facebook space, which spans floors 14 to 24, can accommodate up to 1,550 employees. Facebook currently has 1,200 employees in Austin. The Austin office is Facebook’s fourth-largest office in the country.

Just like the Austin technology community, Facebook has seen dramatic growth in its business. Facebook opened its first Austin office in May of 2010 with just seven employees.

One of the kitchens in Facebook’s new Austin office

The Austin office has all kinds of amenities to keep tech workers happy including three full service kitchens, ten outdoor decks and terraces, ten micro-kitchens, a fitness center with locker rooms, bike storage, a pop up local shop for Austin vendors to sell products to employees, a recreation room, library, and a music room with keyboard, drums, guitars and more. Facebook also has its own laundry service for employees and a mailing center on-site.

Facebook’s offices feature 14 art installations from its Artist in Residence program.

On the 15th floor, Artist Dennis McNett created “Golden Eagle, Grandmother Medicine,” a magnificent wall-sized mixed media mural. In mythology, the golden eagle is supposed to carry the medicine of integrity, McNett said.


Artist Dennis McNett created “Golden Eagle, Grandmother Medicine” on display on the 15th floor of Facebook’s new office

Hypergiant Industries Creates Augmented Reality Helmet for Military, Police, and Firefighters

Ben Lamm, CEO and Co-Founder of Hypergiant Industries

Hypergiant Industries has created a smart helmet prototype designed to keep the military, police, firefighters and other first responders safe.

The space-age helmet, called Project Orion, comes equipped with night vision, infrared, thermal imaging and more. Its display screen also provides users with all kinds of information that might be useful in an emergency.

 “I’ve been long focused on improving the safety of members of our military,” Hypergiant Industries CEO Ben Lamm said in a news statement. “For years, I’ve patented products to help improve the lives of people fighting for our country. Project Orion is, in my opinion, our best product yet, specifically designed to ensure that soldiers and those entering dangerous environments have the tools needed to be kept safe.”

The lightweight helmet is like Google Glass on steroids. It uses augmented reality information overlay and its core function is “to provide shape and object classification and detection, as well as masking and highlight,” according to a news release.

The helmet’s features include 5k resolutions with 200-degree field of vision, high resolution binocular optical input, multiple spectrum sensor arrays including infrared, night-vision, thermal, etc. It has multiple display modes, and features hand tracking and gesture-based input and it can stream video.

The helmet also collects information from mounted sensors and networked data sources. It can integrate with external data sources including GPS data, mission briefing, and more.

 “In times of stress and when lives are on the line, more data is not helpful. What is most helpful is decision-quality integrated information presented at the right place, at the right time. The results could mean more lives saved and mission accomplished!” Lance Lord, a retired four star general and Hypergiant Industries advisory board member, said in a news release. “Hypergiant Industries’ system will match integrated situational information to a decision-maker’s cognitive framework needs. This type of leading-edge technology is what we need to continue to push safety and innovation boundaries.”

The prototype helmet is being considered for development next year.

Founded in 2018, Hypergiant Industries has offices in Austin, Dallas, Houston, Seattle and Washington, DC.

The Founders of Tequila Sheela Created an Award Winning Organic Tequila

Sheela Marshall and Natalie Merrick founded Tequila Sheela, a tequila company, in 2014. 

Sheela’s always had a passion for tequila. When she went to India to visit her mother, she paid $35 for a shot of tequila at a hotel. She didn’t like it and she thought she could create a better tequila. She did research and found out that India consumed a lot of alcohol. That sparked her interest in starting a tequila company to import tequila to India.

Sheela shared the idea with her best friend Natalie and they decided to launch Tequila Sheela together.

But India turned out to be a much more difficult market than they anticipated. So, they turned their efforts on marketing their brand in Texas.

“We have a very clean tequila, it’s sourced from a single plant, the blue agave,” Merrick said.

Tequila Sheela also doesn’t use any pesticides or chemicals on its plants or in the processing of its Tequila, and it is certified organic, Merrick said.

And in 2016, Tequila Sheela won a double gold medal for its Sheela Reposado Tequila, and Silver Medals for its Sheela Blanco Tequila and Sheela Anejo Tequila in the San Francisco World Spirits Competition. 

That is quite an accomplishment and something Tequila Sheela is proud of, Marshall said. The organic tequila is made on a small family farm in the state of Jalisco, Mexico. It took years for Marshall and Merrick to negotiate the business and launch the brand but since they launched they have found great success in the Texas market. 

And before they named the brand, Tequila Sheela, they did not know Country Singer Bobby Bare had a Tequila Sheila song about an outlaw in Mexico who dons a dress to get away from the Federales with the popular refrain “Pour me another tequila, Sheila.”  Sheela hopes to meet him one day – perhaps at Luckenbach.

The two female founders have faced many challenges in growing the business and increasing brand awareness, but they’ve also had quite a few big wins in the process. Tequila Sheela is available through Total Wine & More, and other retailers as well as bars and restaurants. 

One of the biggest challenges is it’s hard to get people to believe that two women own a tequila company, Merrick said. Tune in to the full podcast on Ideas to Invoices to learn more about their entrepreneurial journey.

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