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Tag: son

Tokyo Smoke Opens New Dispensary – Queen West, Toronto

Tokyo Smoke is a pre-legalization cannabis culture brand, founded in 2015. They made the transition to the legal market when Canada federally legalized. The brand was founded by father and son duo, Alan & Lorne Gertner. Since its inception, it was a welcome standout in the Queen West community. This morning (March 12th, 2020 for […]

The post Tokyo Smoke Opens New Dispensary – Queen West, Toronto appeared first on Higher Mentality.

The secret life and death of secret languages

“Yet our language may be at its richest and most powerful when it is driven underground.”David Robson, BBC. Linguist Abbie Hantgan was already...

Female Founder Series: Meghan Rowe of White Leaf Provisions

Meghan is the Co-Founder & CEO of White Leaf Provisions, a regeneratively farmed, organic, GMO-free family food line. As a result of living...

This Founder’s Story Will Inspire You

This post was originally produced for Forbes. Download the podcast via Apple Podcasts, Google Play or Spotify. In 2008, Aussie Daniel Flynn came across...

Two MIT seniors named 2020 Marshall Scholars

Talya Klinger and Steven Truong are MIT’s newest Marshall Scholars. The students are recipients of the prestigious British government-funded fellowship,...

Biological engineer Paul Blainey creates new tools to advance biomedical research

Microfluidics — the science of manipulating tiny amounts of fluid through channels — has been widely used in fields such...

Expectation vs. reality: AI narratives in the media

In a futuristic city far, far away lives a utopian society of wealthy citizens who lead carefree lives, unaware of the workers who...

Mike Welch – A Legend Passes On

It took me a few days to even think about a world without Mike Welch.  Mike was truly a special man.  He was special not in a flashy way but special in a very specific way; he made everyone's life a little bit better.  He was a friend to me, a business mentor to me, a supplier in some instances and he was a model of community involvement for the community my family lived in for so many years.  He made our life better.

I feel a need to tell the story of how Mike and I met and started working together.  In 2004 I was the General Manager of a the Ford Service Parts Business working for Schneider Logistics (SLI).  Ford was building out their Daily Parts Advantage service model and asked SLI to somewhat replicate what we were already doing for GMSPO.  As the GM I had to find dedicated carriers to make all the deliveries nationwide to almost 5K dealers and we were having trouble finding a carrier in Evansville, Indiana.

Luckily, I had an acquaintance who used to sell truck parts but now owned a company called Segmentz.  They were a very small LTL company and at the time Ford wanted to really look at costs and so we took a chance on this small, unknown and very inexperienced company.  Right after we contracted with them they purchased Express-1 from Mike Welch.  This acquisition is what made Express-1 a public company and it turns out the only real profitable part of the merger / acquisition was the part we contracted with for the Ford Service Parts. 

This caused Mike to become President of the combined company and they shed just about everything that was Segmentz.  This is how I met Mike.  I was living in Novi, MI and Green Bay, WI at the time.

Fast forward to 2005 and I had decided to leave SLI and went to Whirlpool in St. Joe Michigan.  One morning I went to get my haircut and who was in the barber chair but Mike Welch!  I was shocked as I really had no idea they were based in Buchanan.  We talked a lot and it turns out Mike was deeply involved in my son's school and he was a great expedite provider to Whirlpool.  This meant I was able to rekindle both our professional work and our personal relationship.   So, what did I learn from Mike:

  1. He was a humble man and he taught me the art of humility.  While being wildly successful in the logistics business he never sought the spotlight.  He made his business better, he took care of his associates and he made his customer's businesses better. 
  2. He taught me about giving back.  While he clearly made a lot of money when he sold to XPO he always took care of the community.  He always was there when we needed him for the boys and girls clubs, the Lakeshore Foundation and anything else which would make the community better.  He was always there.
  3. He never forgot his friends.  While I considered him a friend I would not say we were super close however every time I saw him you would think we had been friends since grade school.  He always had time and he always engaged.
  4. Finally, he was a great businessman.  He was an entrepreneur, he served his customers, he was proud of what he built and he always was innovating.  I learned a lot about just down to earth business concepts from him.
So, we in the logistics and supply chain world lost a great one.  While the company (Express-1) was not as big, I would put Mike up with Don Schneider, J.B. Hunt and all the greats of our industry.  

Mike, you will be missed by all... God Bless you and your family and I hope to see you again...

Read about the history in Mike's own words at this Interview by the Wall Street Journal.

Turning The Block With Lyft: Interview With Solve.Care CEO Pradeep Goel

Blockchain centric startup Solve.Care is blazing a new trail for care coordination by combining the data from patients, providers, employers, and insurers into...

Come together: using AI to enhance creativity

When the bombs fell down on Guernica in 1937, Picasso was in Paris. He was working on a mural for the Spanish pavilion...

How Do I Reach a New Audience and Grow My Fan Base? – Karl Kesel Hotseat [MasterMind Session]

Karl Kesel’s (Section Zero) projects have raised over $100,000.00 on Kickstarter, but he’s struggling to grow his fan base and reach a new...

A Game of Tones: creating fictional languages

WARNING: Spoilers ahead!It’s over. After eight seasons, Game of Thrones has come to an end. We saw two queens fall from grace, while...

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