🔰New concept art 🔥 —————————— Would you 💯 buy a t-shirt 👕 with this design? Let us know in the comments, and we just might order a test batch 😜 —————————— #yeg #yegapparel #edmontonmade #jdm #jdmlover #madeinyeg #makesomethingyeg #tshirt #tshirtdesign #datsun #240z #240 #groatroadgrandprix #nissan #yegcars #780tuners #nismo #yegarts (at Groat Road)
Flat-track Racers throw down at the Edmonton Motorcycle Show
For the first time ever, the Edmonton Motorcycle show brought flat-track racing inside it’s walls. Paired with the now annual motocross freestyle show, the flat track racing was easily worth the cost of admission for the whole bike show.
While the track was small, and didn't provide the typical spectacle of the sport, it was a very intimate look at one of the most accessible forms of motorsport in the world.
Myself and U Auto Know are proud to announce a sponsorship agreement with Tony Koch.
We’re very excited to be announcing our new content program! Tony Koch will be one of our brand representatives, giving us the unique opportunity to capture some behind the scenes footage in what we believe is the coolest speed shop in the city, SSS Motorsports.
With Tony Koch joining our team, we look forward to bringing you exclusive behind the scenes content from Western Canada’s grassroots drifting scene!
To stay updated, and receive exclusive content and offers, subscribe to our mailing list!
Day #4 of the Parkallen mural project. Myself and Kaylen (my trusty assistant) have completed 9 of the 18 panels. If you're in the area come on by the community league! #canada150 #makesomethingyeg
Check out @makeityeg showcasing the #makesomethingyeg spirit. ・・・ Partnered with @citylabyeg EPL and @whatiscurio, they have some incredible volunteers installing a mural on the north side of the Milner Library! Head on down and check it out! It's almost done! #yeg #yegdt #makeityeg (at Stanley A. Milner Library)
Stephanie Enders, Project Manager - Bottom Line Productions, helps share the Startup Edmonton story and the stories of our members with the larger community. Stephanie shares some of her thoughts on the intersection between arts and entrepreneurship.
Some of my favourite moments spent with founders at Startup Edmonton are hearing the origin stories of their products, companies and ideas. I want to hear about the setting, feelings and memories of when these brave folks thought that they could offer something unique to the world, solve a problem or inspire action - but it’s really hard to get to these moments with founders. I get great elevator pitches, polished presentation decks, young folks with impeccable style and delivery, but short on heart & soul.
It breaks my heart a little to say this, but when founders eat, sleep and breathe their startup they can get a bit boring.
One of the ways to battle this boredom is to commit to consuming great creative content. Ken recently posted about the importance of collaboration between the arts and business communities. I feel the benefits can go deeper, that when you invest in consuming creative work it makes you more open to creativity in your own professional practice. It gives your startup-focused mind an exciting place to release all the stress, possibilities and plans, without any risk.
Creative inspiration provides moving examples on how to share the origins of your startup in ways that connect to your customers, investors and team in the same way your favourite artists' songs, books, films and paintings connect with you.
Here are three recent examples of how creative content has inspired my work with Startup Edmonton:
David Mitchell’s The Bone Clocks
Mitchell’s novels experiment with non-linear storytelling, characters and places that echo through multiple story lines, and the intersection between the personal, mystical and scientific. He trusts the reader to invest in his characters and embrace the challenging nature of his writing and format.
For me, his work highlights that technology founders should celebrate the complexity of their work. They have the ability to empower supporters by sharing their discovery process - explaining how foundational knowledge combines with inspiration to create solutions.
Serial
The blockbuster podcast Serial, from the team at NPR's This American Life, has captured the imagination of millions of listeners and content creators with dozens of blogs, sub-reddits and podcasts following along to solve this real-world, teen-angst-filled, 90s-pop-culture-soaked murder mystery.
Sarah Koenig, Host and Executive Producer, and her team use sound to their advantage. Everything on-air is in service to the medium: an original score from Mark Henry Phillips and Nick Thorburn; repetitive audio cues to prepare the listener to focus on new details or a recap from a previous episode; and environmental noises that make the listener feel like they are in the moment with Sarah and her subject, rather than listening to a conversation taped months or weeks before.
Serial is a perfect example of how the medium, pace and tone you choose have as much impact on your audience as the story you are telling. It challenges me to explore new ways of communicating with our Startup Edmonton members and supporters: to ask what format would best serve the story I want to share, rather than what format am I most comfortable working in.
FKA Twigs
Any title comes with assumptions. FKA Twigs: R&B artist, video girl, girlfriend-of-famous-actor…. all add up to a pretty specific list of expectations. Her music explores and defies the expectations of these assumptions.
In the startup community there is an abundance of titles with corresponding expectations: founder, technical founder, female founder, hacker, angel investor, mentor…
Contradiction, personal legend and reinvention are just a few elements of FKA Twigs' recent rise that can inspire the way we talk and share our experiences of startup culture: the contradictions between the technical and non-technical can make your origin story more layered; a single moment of inspiration, or in Startup Edmonton’s case a cocktail napkin with an ambitious future plan doodled at drinks, can be a defining moment that inspires investors; and a startup doesn't have to get everything right in order to share an experience or start a conversation with customers.
These are just a few example of how artists have inspired me to think in new ways about my work. In today’s culture-of-busy, never-ending-deadlines, and the added pressure for entrepreneurs of building companies from the ground up, it’s important to make time for creative experiences that challenge, inspire and entertain.
Wondering where to start? Make Something Edmonton presents Sound, Light & Motion at the Winspear Centre on December 8. This Make Something Edmonton experience brings dozens of makers and artists together to celebrate our Edmonton-ness. Tickets are just $8 ($5 for students) and are on-sale now!