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Irvine Business ~ From neighborhood stores to global companies. By Ian Hamilton, the Orange County Register

Archive for the 'solar' Tag

How do you name your business?

November 2nd, 2009, 1:39 pm by Josh Lake
Editor's note: This is part of an ongoing series chronicling the triumphs, challenges,  failures and questions facing one Orange County startup, the 532 Development Group, written by the founders themselves with as much openness as competition allows.  If you're new to the series, start here and come back.

Josh Lake, co-founder of the 532 Development Group.

Editor’s note: This is part of an ongoing series chronicling the triumphs, challenges, failures and questions facing one Orange County startup, the 532 Development Group, written by the founders themselves with as much openness as competition allows.  If you’re new to the series, start here and come back.

As every startup begins, it inevitably faces a somewhat unimportant, yet fun question: What do you name the company? I say somewhat unimportant because although Nick and I both feel that the ultimate success or failure of our company does not hinge on the name, we do want  the name to meet a few criteria.  When you look at some of the most successful companies or brands of our times, there are several prevailing models.  Three of the most prolific are:

  1. Simple names that include their industries and/or location (i.e. British Petroleum and Bank of America)
  2. Inclusive names (i.e. General Electric and Home Depot)
  3. Unique (or even fabricated) names (i.e. Microsoft or Google)

This list was a good start, but we decided that our name must also create personal accountability (something we take pride in as entrepreneurs).  In other words, it should be something that we have a vested interest in.  This concept is a fourth prevailing model where the names of the founders are often used (i.e. Goldman Sachs, McKinsey, Disney).

So, we set off with a single criteria: “simple, inclusive, and unique, yet creates accountability.”  At first we pursued the simple laundry list of superlatives and common names including Alta, United, Global, Apollo, and Beacon, but these definitely weren’t unique.  Possessing the last names of “Lake” and “Haschka,” we decided that while it was great to have some “skin in the game” with our names (and dignities) on the line, this was not a simple or aesthetically pleasing moniker.  Names like “renewables, “clean tech,” and “energy” while inclusive, were anything but unique.  Finally, we thought back to our days at MIT, where numbers literally create a way of life (even the majors are referred to by number!). As roommates, we referred to our residence as 532 (our street address). Perfect! Afterall, this was where we frequently discussed our latest business pursuits and built our passion for entrepreneurship.  After a bit more noodling over whether we would be 532 Management Services, -Consulting Services, or -Technology Group, we decided to go with the latter since it seemed the most broad and ambiguous.  Afterall, we weren’t quite sure what we were going to do anyhow.  And with that, 532 Technology Group was born!

How important is a name for the success of startup?

Did we follow the right “criteria?”

What other “criteria” should we have followed?

How much time is too much time to spend in naming the venture?

Charge your cell phone using light, courtesy SunCore

October 14th, 2009, 6:54 pm by Ian Hamilton

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SunCore is a little known Irvine-based company that’s on the cusp of shipping some potentially revolutionary technology.

SunCore’s products charge cell phones using light.

That’s “light” power and not “solar” power.

What’s the difference? SunCore, a five-year-old company, has patent-pending technology for absorbing light along with a “high-rate charge transfer” that makes it possible to charge a cell phone using room light, sunlight, or any light. Their systems get power from the entire spectrum, all the way up to ultraviolet and all the way down to infrared and are efficient enough to charge a cell phone in a normal room, according to SunCore CEO Steve Brimmer.

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SunCore's upcoming Novacell external solar charger. You can plug in a mobile device and charge it via a USB connection. China gets it first, though. Photo courtesy SunCore.

According to SunCore, the company is preparing an $800,000 test order of its external Novacell chargers for China Mobile that will be followed by a $21 million order if the product is successful. Yes, China and their millions of built-in customers get this tech first.

Novacell is an external charger that will power mobile devices via a USB connection. That’s the connection found on most cell phone chargers today.

That’s not all SunCore is working on.

Read the rest of this entry »