FYI: The Talk of the Inc. 500
Inc.'s editor recounts what all the buzz was about at this year's Inc. 500 conference and lists the most memorable quotes from both attendees and guest speakers.
There's always a lot of music at our annual Inc. 500 conference, but this year's event in Nashvillerocked the house. The festivities got under way with country-music star Jo Dee Messina and wrapped upwith the Pink Flamingos, the official band of the Inc. 500.
Overall, the 17th Inc. 500 conference proved to be one of our liveliest, most upbeat ever,thanks in no small part to the hospitality shown by Governor Don Sundquist and his fellow Tennesseans. Funaside, the conference gave us a chance to find out what's on the minds of some of the country's mostdynamic company builders.
This year, like last year, the number one topic of discussion was the continuing shortage of goodpeople--indeed, of any people--available to be hired. The labor squeeze just keeps getting tighter, with theresult that companies are going to extraordinary lengths to attract and retain employees, as you can seefrom the accompanying conference notes.
Meanwhile, a new challenge has arisen: the burgeoning world of E-commerce. Bear in mind that acompany has to have been in business for at least five years to qualify for the Inc. 500, so thecompanies at the conference typically were started seven or eight years ago--that is, before the Internetboom. As a result, talk focused on the efforts of successful, established growth companies to adapt to thedigital economy. Appropriately enough, the conference was kicked off by a presentation on that subject byTed Leonsis, group president of AOL Interactive Properties.
Life in the fast lane
Highlights from our annual Inc. 500 conference
"When Microsoft came at AOL, people asked me if I was afraid of Bill Gates. I said I was more afraid ofJerry Seinfeld. We could actually see how the number of people on-line would plummet between 9 and 9:30on Thursday nights. Fortunately, the numbers always picked up about 9:40 or so, when people went backon-line to talk about what Kramer had said, or whatever."
--Keynote speaker Ted Leonsis, group president of AOL Interactive Properties, former president ofAOL Services Co.
OH, LORD, WON'T YOU LEASE ME A BMW
Jim Bernard, CEO of U.S. Energy Corp., inAlpharetta, Ga., named his number one problem: finding people. He's turning business away for lack of staff.His number two problem? Deciding how fast to grow, and what it will cost--but that really gets back toproblem number one, he said.
So he's considering every available option, including equity participation. The competition, he says, isbrutal. There's a software company down the street from him that gives every employee, even thereceptionist, a BMW. The company leases the cars, but the employees have them for their own personaluse. You go by the company, and you see 45 brand-new BMWs in the lot. And this is in Georgia....
SILK PURSES FROM SOWS' EARS
Like many companies, Research Triangle Consultants setup a recruiting team in response to the labor shortage. The team worked so well that president and CEO JeffLeRose turned it into a profit center: the three recruiters now help the company's clients with their hiring.
"When you get yourself in shape for a climb, you spend several hours a day working out on aninclined treadmill with a heavy pack strapped to your back. You look goofy. You smell. It's an ugly scene. That's always true. The road to success is not pretty. When you get to thetop of the mountain, you look beautiful, but it's all the other stuff that gets you there, and it's realugly."
--Keynote speaker Jamie Clarke, adventurer, author, and entrepreneur, on the preparation for hissuccessful ascent of Mount Everest in 1997
"Revenues are just a distraction."
--Keynote speaker Ted Leonsis quoting the founder of an Internet company with no revenues thatAmerica Online recently bought for $400 million
SEEING THE LIGHT
Don Dennis, president and CEO of AVT Inc., in Littleton, Colo., said hewas a "total non-believer" in E-commerce until recently. The General Electric veteran first sat up and tooknotice when he saw an article in an industry publication about GE's plans to move all procurement to theInternet, amounting to about $1 billion in on-line sales.
Read more:
Sign-up for our Finance Newsletter
ADVERTISEMENT
FROM OUR PARTNERS
ADVERTISEMENT
Select Services
- Forced to pay more?
- Salesforce costs up to 65% more than Microsoft Dynamics CRM. Compare.
- Collaborate in the cloud with Office, Exchange, SharePoint and Lync videoconferencing.
- Begin your free trial at Microsoft.com/office365
- Get on the same page
- Show and tell by sharing your screen instantly at join.me. Free.
- Shred No-Handed!
- Hands Free Shredding From Swingline Lets You Do More Productive Things!
- Winning new customers?
- SMB experts share their secrets at PersonallyPB.com/smb
- Turn Fans into Customers
- Social Campaigns from Constant Contact. Sign up now - it's free!


