Group Y Network

Posts Tagged ‘Member Profile’

Zach Lyons – President and Creative Director of ChopShop

Friday, June 18th, 2010

group Y Member Profile: Zach Lyons – President and Creative Director of ChopShop

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Interview by Jennifer Kalban

What is your name and title?
Zach Lyons, President and Creative Director of ChopShop

What did you into the action sports industry?
I grew up skateboarding and snowboarding and have always had a passion for action sports. I was drawn to the self-expression and creativity at the core of the industry and naturally gravitated to work that involved the action sports lifestyle.

Before ChopShop what other companies and projects were you involved in?
Before ChopShop – prior to seven years ago – I was a freelance editor working in LA and OC and met my partner Ken Anderson during that time.

How did you get started?
My last year of college, I got bitten by the film bug and found a way to gain experience by getting involved in the industry any way I could. I started to take classes specific to editing and landed my first couple of jobs with small production companies near school in Colorado. Since the industry there was small, I set about to meet people in California and from those connections started freelancing in Los Angeles. At that point I started to build a career for myself.

Tell us what your role is at ChopShop, why you decided to found ChopShop and how it all got started:
My role as Creative Director includes oversight of all creative for each and every project plus I’m also involved in a variety of aspects on specific projects.

An opportunity presented itself to create a company that worked with advertising agencies, non-endemics as well as action sports endemics and that company was ChopShop.

 

Steezy Riders

Steezy Riders

How many people are on the staff?
We have six people on staff in addition to my partner Ken Anderson and myself and we rely heavily on freelance talent.

Who are some of the clients you work with?
Our portfolio includes work for brands including Boost Mobile, FUEL TV, Nike, PacSun, Quiksilver, Red Bull, Sole Technology, Virgin Mobile; and advertising agencies – Team One’s client Lexus and O’Leary & Partners’ clients AAA, Kawasaki, Oroweat and Fantastic Sams.

You guys do everything from commercials to full-on TV specials for FUEL TV. Do you have crews that specialize in each division or is it all pretty similar?
We try to build a creative team that will meet the specific needs of a project. Each project is different and needs vary from project to project; we match our crews with the demands of the project.

To read the rest of the interview, go to groupYnetwork.com

Dustin and Dylan Odbert – Founders of ambsn

Saturday, June 5th, 2010

group Y Member Profile: Dustin and Dylan Odbert – Founders of ambsn

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Interview by Jennifer Kalban

Name and Title:

Dustin and Dylan Odbert, co-founders of ambsn

When did you start ambsn and what sparked its creation?

Ambsn was started back in Sept of 2001 to raise money for our friend Cameron Clapp who was hit by a train one night and lost both of his legs and his right arm. Dylan who was a sophomore in high school at the time raised over $2000 selling T’s that read “Cant stop the Clapp” and donated all of the money to Cameron to help cover his medical expenses. As Cameron recovered we started noticing a following for ambsn in our local town of Arroyo Grande so we kept making small runs of Ts and selling them to our friends. Dylan graduated high school in 2004, I dropped out of Cal Poly SLO and we introduced the line at the September 2005 Agenda show when it was in a parking lot across from ASR.

How did it grow into a full-fledged business?

Neither of us have a schooled business background so from 2005 to 2008 we didn’t worry about silly things like coachella1Balance Sheets, P&L statements, or Income statements all we concentrated on was getting what we thought was cool different product in stores. We floated that way for about 3 years and in January of 2008 we were lucky enough that Dick Baker took notice of us and our brand with the encouragement of Mike Hischier and Gary Ward. Dick visited our booth during that January’s ASR and asked Dylan and I a bunch of basic business questions that we had no idea how to answer. He invited us down to meet for breakfast at his home in San Clemente and it was at that famous red booth at the Baker house where we were taught apparel business 101. With the help of Dick and gun for hire Bob Mignogna we got ourselves organized and structured into a true business.

Tell us what your roles are at ambsn?

We have been a two-man show for the last 5 years. I talk a lot so it was just natural that I would handle sales, PR, marketing and event planning. Along with that I take care of all of the administrative tasks that come with running an apparel business. Dylan is our creative director and designer as well as sourcing and production manager. We both handle shipping, receiving, and warehousing.

What do your daily routines look like? Take us through it:

Dustin: It really depends on the day of the week, but we try and start every morning off with a 20 minute meeting just to find out where each others heads are at and how we can make the day run as smooth as possible. For me Mondays and sometimes Tuesdays are AR/AP days, so I will spend those two days pushing paper, making sure all of our bills are paid and our accounts are current. The rest of the week is spent either shipping product, checking in on stores, making sure our sections are cherry and that the shop kids are stoked on ambsn.

Dylan: My day is usually consumed by sampling and production tasks. As much as I would like to spend all day every day designing product there is always some sort of production or sourcing issue to deal with so that forces me to do a majority of my design work at night. I am on the road in LA a few days a week visiting our factories making sure our projects are running smoothly.

classreminder31How many people are on the staff and what are their roles?

Well we currently have an awesome intern on staff by the name of Katie Redmond. She has just graduate from the Otis School of Design and has sort of been bouncing around helping us wherever we need her, but mostly getting tech packs pumped out and other things that bog us down. We have also hired a rep that is doing a great job of servicing our Orange Co and LA North accounts which is awesome and also brought on a Mid Atlantic Rep to start growing that region for us. That has taken a ton of stress off of me because it has allowed me to pay more attention to other territories.

To read the rest of the interview, go to groupYnetwork.com

Josh Lewis – Marketing / Communications Specialist at Malakye

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

group Y Member Profile: Josh Lewis – Marketing / Communications Specialist at Malakye

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Interview by Jennifer Kalban

Name & Title:
Josh Lewis, Marketing/Communications Specialist at Malakye

Tell us a little bit about yourself
Let’s see, I’ve been skating for nearly 22 years; I shred pow; I knar waves; I love my family, wife and kid; I BBQ in the summer; and I hibernate in the winter.

What type of music do you listen to?
Quite frankly, I listen to a whole lot of everything, and then some. If I’m rockin’ out playing pool in The Man Room (my man cave), I’ll usually roll with classic rock or oldies. If I’m feelin’ spunky, who knows, maybe I’ll whip out Big Poppa, Jeezy, KISS (…Love Gunnnnn!!!), Metallica, Beastie Boys, The Grouch, Beatles, Ghostface, N.W.A., Sublime, Slayer, Run DMC or Grandmaster Flash. It just varies.

At the office, I’m pretty religious about comedy radio on iTunes. It plays the in the background pretty much all day, every day. Starting your day out with the likes of Doug Stanhope, Dane Cook, Chris Rock, Eddie Murphy Crank Yankers, and especially David Cross, you can’t go wrong.

What sports are you actively involved in?
I don’t know about sports, but I’ve been skating since I found my uncle’s Nash board in my grandma’s garage when I was 8 years old. He also had an orange, plastic banana board I used to skate as well. Soon after, my mom bought me my first complete, a New Deal Douglas slick with Gullwing Sidewinder 2 trucks and 56mm Slimeball Hairball wheels, and I was hooked.

Skating eventually led me to getting sponsored by ATM Skateboards, C1RCA flow for five some odd years, and a few shops including JBS in Chino, Doheny Board Center in Dana Point, and others. A HUGE thanks goes out to John and Kevin Falahee, Leah, Bertino, Steelman and Will at JBS. You guys kept me skatin’ throughout the years, and for that I’m truly grateful.

Check out old school video of Josh

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What drew you into the action sports industry?
If you’ve ever watched Point Break…you’ll know.

Before you were at Malakye what other companies and projects were you involved in?
Well, I was on the Man-Am program for a while after high school, and after kicking ass skateboarding and ruining my ankles in the process, I realized I needed a backup plan. I went to Long Beach State and got my degree in journalism (PR emphasis) with a minor in marketing.

After that, Animal Chin led me to the path of the one-and-only resource for jobs, news and business-to-business services in the action sports, outdoor and lifestyle industries (aka Malakye.com). Once I heard of this one-and-only resource for jobs, news and business-to-business services in the action sports, outdoor and lifestyle industries, I attended Malakye’s ShmoozaPalooza job fair at ASR San Diego. While at the Shmooz, I met Chad Mihalick, the founder of Malakye. After planting the seed, I applied for a position on Malakye a few months later, and the rest is history.

To read the rest of the interview, go to groupYnetwork.com

Stephanie Weber – Account Executive at SnL Communications

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

group Y Member Profile: Stephanie Weber – Account Executive at SnL Communications

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Interview by Jennifer Kalban

Your name and official title

Stephanie Weber, Account Executive at SnL Communications

Tell us a little bit about yourself

I grew up in Portland, Oregon. I learned to surf on the OR coast and started going to the Paskowitz surf camp in San Onofre every summer – I was hooked and my friend and I stayed longer and longer every summer so eventually they started letting us start working there. I wanted to move down here as soon as I was done with school and work in action sports and try to make surfing and skateboarding, which I was obsessed with, part of my job. I went to University of Oregon in Eugene and graduated from the journalism school with a major in journalism and public relations and minors in communications and business.

Before SNL Communications what other companies and projects were you involved in?

I worked at Nike in the PR department during my senior year of college and for a bit right out of school. It was a hard decision to leave an amazing company with an insane campus like that to move down to Southern California and try to work within the action sports industry. I ended up just moving down here and with some helpful advice from Chad from Malakye and from the Communications director at Quiksilver found out that SnL was the go-to PR agency in the industry. I started working there with lots of fun events and companies and it ended up being a great fit – I work with some super fun and creative clients right now.

Tell us what your role is at SNL Communications.

I’m an account executive and I work on both the fashion and action sports sides of the agency. I work with Fire, a junior sportswear line, little dresses and rompers and stuff. So last week I was in New York for media appointments out of their NY showroom, meeting with the Glamour fashion editor and previewing the newest collections to her… and with Teen Vogue, In Style, Lucky – those fashion magazines and editors. Then 3 days later, I shift and I’m headed down to TransWorld for group Y and working on behalf of relevant clients to that industry like Lightning Bolt and ERGO. I work on six different clients right now: Fire, adidas Accessories, adidas Swimwear, ERGO, Lightning Bolt and K. Bell – thankfully Allie, the junior AE on these accounts, is super smart and on it.

To read the rest of the interview, go to groupYnetwork.com

Cat Schnaidt – Assistant Buyer at Zappos.com

Saturday, February 6th, 2010

group Y Member Profile: Cat Schnaidt Assistant Buyer at Zappos.com

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Your name and official title

Cat Schnaidt, Asst. Buyer at Zappos.com @zapposcatattack

Before Zappos what other companies and projects were you involved in?

I worked at Vestal for a year before moving to Vegas, and prior to that worked with X-Games in their production department on the research team for summer and winter games. My first industry gig was interning with Kim Stravers at Sg Magazine during college, which definitely helped influence my decision and passion to work in the action sports industry. I’ve also been involved with B4BC (Boarding for Breast Cancer) for the past 6+ years and try to volunteer with them as much as possible when I can get out to the events.

What sports and hobbies are you actively involved in?

I grew up in Oregon near Mt. Hood, so snowboarding is my fave. I love all the board sports, but it’s hard to get out there as much as I used to now that I live in Vegas. Get stoked on being outside and traveling, and am usually MIA on the weekends in the summer here. Also huge music and art fan, so I’m always trying to hit up shows in Vegas or wherever I’m at-usually Southern California or Portland.

What does your daily routine look like … take us through it?

Oh man..no day is ever the same for me! But for the most part it usually involves waking up at 5:30 to run with my dog, Monster or RedBull for breakfast, get going on emails, analyzing business with brands, start checking twitter and facebook throughout day to see what’s going on, and working on new orders for future seasons. I’ll usually have a rep in at least a couple times a week, so I’m in a lot of meetings checking out new product or brands and working with reps on our biz. A lot of times our reps will stop in just to say hi too and grab lunch or ice cream sandwiches with us, which always stokes me out. Afternoons usually involve a team or company meeting, maybe some beach ball volleyball down our team row, more email catch up and maybe a team happy hour.

How many people are on the staff (Zappos & Rideshop) and what are their roles (Rideshop)?

Currently we have about 900 people at our Zappos HQ here in Vegas, and 6 on our Rideshop team. Within the Rideshop we have specific buyers for different categories-shoes, clothing, accessories, and boards/hardgoods.

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Tell us about Rideshop?

The Rideshop http://rideshop.zappos.com/ is a specialized part of Zappos.com that focuses on the action sports lifestyle. We all have a passion for the industry and the brands we work with, and are constantly working with our reps and vendors on ways we can stoke our customers out. We work with a wide variety of brands to offer special product for our customers, whether it be a limited edition or special collabo piece that nobody else carries, extra inventory in product every other shop is sold out of, or just a bigger selection of product, we want to represent our brands as best as we can on the site.

To read the rest of the interview, go to groupYnetwork.com

Aaron Levant Co-Founder of Agenda TradeShow

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

group Y Member Profile: Aaron Levant Co-Founder of Agenda TradeShow

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Your name and official title

Aaron Levant, President & Co founder of AGENDA, LLC. @AgendaShow

Tell us a bit about Agenda Show and how it got started

Agenda got started in 2002 when me and my old partner Luis Pulido had a brand called GrnAppleTree. we were attending other shows like ASR and we were generally unhappy with the trade show options for new brands at a time. We were doing something different and something that had a higher design aesthetic, the shows at that time where doing nothing to cater to us from a price and environmental standpoint. In September 2002 we decided that we would launch our own show and we pulled together 30 of our friends and launched Agenda in January 2003 in the back of a restaurant in Long Beach, CA at the same time as ASR…. The rest is history.

Before Agenda what other companies and projects were you involved in?

Before Agenda I started as an Intern at an LA street-wear label GAT/ Milk Distribution, witch later became GrnAppleTree. I was interning there from age 16 when I was kicked out of high school. I worked my way up the ladder at that company, from intern to graphic designer, to sales all the way to minority partner over 5 years before launching Agenda together with Luis Pulido GAT founder. Along the way Luis gave me the opportunity to launch my own skate/surf label through Milk Distribution called “Matador” with my best friend Trace Marshall. Trace Marshall later went on to launch the high end surf labels Gonz and Warriors of Radness with Freshjive founder Rick Klotz. Luis and I parted ways a few years back and he still runs GrnAppleTree to this day. After parting ways with Luis I formed a new partnership with my cousin Seth Haber,whom I am partners with to this day.

What advantages do you feel you have over the more established trade shows?

Agenda has numerous advantages over the bigger shows. The number one thing is that we get “it”and we don’t feel that any of these other shows do. We understand the market and we are leading, while everyone else is following. When we see a change that needs to be made we make it in a timely manner. We react at the speed of the market and thats why we have the competitive edge. Other shows see a clear problem or change in the market but cant make the proper changes for years. Such as adjusting to the new needs of the brands/buyers whether it be dates, trends or new product categories.

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Being a smaller trade show, is it easier or harder to deal with the economic changes? How have you dealt with the climate so far?

We are not a Smaller trade show because we can’t get bigger, we are smaller by choice. We do not allow crap into our show and if that makes us smaller then thats a good thing to me. Agenda is invite only and we only have the best of the best from each category. If you make a skateboard pogo stick or you are Ed Hardy then go to another show because Agenda is not for you. As far as the economic side of your question we have been doing great and having double digit growth every season, we have been seeing the upside of the bad economic times. The reason being is brands are changing their patterns and trying new things like Agenda and dropping out of the stagnant shows. The days of doing things the same way just because thats the way they have always been done are over.

To read the rest of the interview, go to groupYnetwork.com

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group Y is the original and leading collective of professionals focused on Action Sports, Youth Marketing and Entertainment. Based in Southern California with a growing national reach, group Y boasts an active membership of the best and brightest these industries have to offer. Sharing insights from key decision makers at key brands, past speakers have included experts from companies such as Quiksilver, Burton, Oakley, Target, and ESPN. Through our events, outreach and on-line presence, group Y takes the work out of strategic networking and strengthens our entire industry in the process.

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