Business & Professional TH ENTREPRENEUR Mason Levey and Jordan Wolfe, both of Royal Oak, with Zach Lipson of West Bloomfield a a a 4 9 - • ♦ 4 a 4 Three young entrepreneurs plan cutting-edge business expo. Robin Schwartz Special to the Jewish News W ith Michigan's unemployment rate the highest in the nation, the auto industry reeling, home values plummeting and families hurting, the current economic forecast appears rather gloomy. But three young, homegrown, Jewish entrepreneurs see a silver lining amid the dark clouds. Jordan Wolfe, 26, and Mason Levey, 21, both of Royal Oak, and Zach Lipson, 23, of West Bloomfield, all of whom own their own Web-based enterprises, think now is the perfect time to promote new, high- tech businesses. "I really think this is a blessing in dis- guise. We can let the economy get us down and say, `Poor Michigan, poor Detroit, or we can work to fundamentally change the way we do business',' said Wolfe. The Indiana University graduate ini- tially did what so many other young professionals do — he moved away after college. But Wolfe recently left a job in San Francisco to return home to Metro Detroit. While contemplating ways to bring other young, Jewish 20-somethings back to town, he hooked up with Levey and Lipson. The trio put their heads together to plan TechNow09, an outside-the-box business networking event they hope will bring more than 400 young professionals and local business leaders together April 23 at the Royal Oak Music Theatre. "We saw a big opportunity here; we saw a void in the area',' explained Lipson, a graduate of the Eli Broad School of Business at Michigan State University. "This is not your ordinary business event': Lipson said. "We want to launch this movement and promote some for- ward thinking." Fred Marx of Bloomfield Hills, one of the founders of the Farmington Hills- based marketing and public relations firm Marx Layne, thinks the idea puts a mod- em spin on a traditional business gather- ing or speaker series. "People of this generation look at this type of event for networking opportuni- ties; there's a sociability that goes above and beyond a business conference:' Marx said. "While it might not employ the num- bers that we need, it's a terrific initiative for keeping young talent and individuals who can potentially build organizations and companies. It's incumbent upon us to find career opportunities so we don't continue to lose our college graduates to Chicago and other cities" Setting The Stage Planning the event was no small feat. The organizers put up $15,000 of their own money and launched a full-scale grass- roots effort. They spent countless hours making cold calls to various organizations, setting up meetings, lining up sponsors and speakers and even hiring a band to perform. "There are all these little pockets of really interesting people in the business community and creative community:' said Lipson. "Just through putting on this event, it's amazing the types of connec- tions we made and what we've accom- plished." The "biz kids" created an impressive lineup of featured speakers, including Chuck Newman, founder and CEO of ReCellular in Dexter, the country's largest cellphone recycler; Larry Freed, CEO of Ann Arbor-based ForeSee Results, which provides online customer satisfaction surveys; Jeff Bocan, managing director of Biz Kids on page A22 April 16 a 2009 A21