Friday, July 3, 2009, 11:50PM ET - U.S. Markets Closed for Independence Day - Observed.
New technologies, a proliferation of resources, and a disenchantment with the corporate world are making Generation Y the most entrepreneurial in history. From magazine publishing to delivering fresh-baked cookies, the rising business stars named to our annual 30 Under 30 list are transforming existing industries and blazing trails with new ones:
#1: Ben Kaufman, MOPHIE
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Age: 20
Location: Burlington, Vt.
2006 Revenue: $1 million
Employees: 14
Year founded: 2005
What it does: Mophie makes cases, splitters, arms band, and clips for the iPod. The iPod accessory market may be crowded these days, but Kaufman's goal is to turn Mophie into a
community-based product-development company that will solicit ideas for all kinds of new products -- not just iPod add-ons -- from a 50,000 member online user base. He's got $2
million in venture capital and a former top exec from Burton Snowboard on board to help him do it. Revenue is expected to hit $5 million this year.
#2: Sean Belnick, BIZCHAIR.COM
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Age: 20
Location: Kennesaw, Ga.
2006 Revenue: $24 million
Employees: 75
Year founded: 2001
What it does: At 14, Sean Belnick started a direct-shipping company for office furniture from his bedroom -- with $500. The company now stocks many of the products it sells in a
new 327,000-square-foot warehouse in Canton, Ga., and has branched out into home furniture, medical equipment, and school furniture. Notable clients include the Pentagon,
Microsoft, and "American Idol."
#3: Bo Menkiti, THE MENKITI GROUP
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Age: 30
Location: Washington, D.C.
2006 Revenue: $640,000
Employees: 10
Year founded: 2004
What it does: A Harvard MBA, Bo Menkiti sold his own home in the capital's Columbia Heights neighborhood to launch an urban real estate development, brokerage, and sales firm
aimed at first-time buyers in the underserved middle market. In less than three years, his team has developed 33,000 square feet of residential and commercial property and
brokered more than $60 million worth of real estate in the region. What's next for Menkiti? Developing a new 30-unit affordable housing building from the ground up.
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More from Inc.com:
The Entrepreneurial Agenda The Next Big Ideas Start-Up Secrets |
#4: Sam Altman, LOOPT
Age: 22
Location: Mountain View, Calif.
2006 Revenue: undisclosed
Employees: 30
Year founded: 2005
What it does: Loopt software provides location-based functions for cell phones, allowing users to see where their friends are on a map. The software also sends text alerts when
friends come in close proximity to one another, and can search for nearby restaurants. It'll even tell you what spots your friends have tagged as favorites. Loopt's service is
currently available on Boost Mobile, and is expected to launch on Sprint and other carriers within months. Altman says he wants to bring the Internet out of the home and into
the wild. "The company's mission is to enhance, improve, and make more of real-world interaction," he says.
#5: Katie Kerrigan, KATHRYN KERRIGAN
Age: 27
Location: Libertyville, Ill.
2006 Revenue: $57,000
Employees: 1 full-time, 2 part-time
Year founded: 2005
What it does: When Kerrigan, a former college athlete, entered the professional world, she was discouraged by the lack of stylish shoes for tall women. At six-feet tall with a
size 11 shoe, she began looking for solutions. While getting her MBA, she drafted a business plan for a company that sold dress shoes to women with larger feet -- sizes 10 and
above. In 2005, Kerrigan launched her website, KathrynKerrigan.com, where other women like herself can find everything from stylish high heels to trendy flats. Kerrigan works
with a craftsman in Italy to create her original designs. Her shoes can be found in boutiques nationwide and in her new flagship store, which opened this year in Libertyville,
Ill. Sales are expected to quadruple this year.
#6 - #8: Byron Myers, Ali Perry, and Brenton Taylor, INOGEN
Ages: 27 (Myers), 25 (Perry), and 26 (Taylor)
Location: Goleta, Calif.
2006 Revenue: $15 million
Employees: 100
Year founded: 2001
What it does: Winning a business plan competition at the University of California Santa Barbara prompted these friends to take their idea for an oxygen concentrator and actually
form a company. Perry's grandmother complained about the bulkiness and inconvenience of her old oxygen machine, so the trio designed their compact device to filter out the
nitrogen from room air, eliminating the hassle of having oxygen tanks delivered. Inogen's machine can also be plugged in anywhere or used on the go with a rechargeable lithium
ion battery. The company has sold more than 10,000 devices.
#9: Raj Lahoti, ONLINE GURU
Age: 25
Location: San Diego
2006 Revenue: $11.5 million
Employees: 15
Year founded: 2003
What it does: After a few years dabbling in Internet domain acquisition and traffic brokering, Raj Lahoti set out to build up one of his brother's domains in order to provide
meaningful content in an area that, well, generally lacks it. DMV.ORG, the "Online Unofficial Guide to the DMV," aggregates information from the (often dreaded) Department of
Motor Vehicles in each state -- all in one place. Users can access information on everything from applying for a license to ordering a driving record, without the aggravation of
standing in the DMV's endless lines.
#10 - #12: Geoff Cook, Dave Cook, Catherine Cook, MYYEARBOOK.COM
Ages: 29 (Geoff), 19 (Dave), and 17 (Catherine)
Location: New Hope, Pa.
2006 Revenue: undisclosed
Employees: 25
Year founded: 2005
What it does: A social networking site for teens, myYearbook.com was hatched around the family dinner table by siblings Catherine and Dave two years ago. With older brother
Geoff now on board, the site has since grown from a single high school to more than 3 million members and more than 4.5 million visitors a month, ranking it third among all
social networking sites in the United States, behind MySpace and Facebook.
Read more about the "Top 30 Entrepreneurs Under 30" at Inc.com
#13: Brian Taylor, Kernel Season's
#14: Miles Munz, Interviewstream
#15: Randy Bitting, Interviewstream
#16: David Levich, Icedoutgear.com
#17: Dan Gershon, Icedoutgear.com
#18: Eric Liberman, Icedoutgear.com
#19: Ben Goldhirsh, Good
#20: Seth Berkowitz, Insomnia Cookies
#21: Alison Barnard, In-Jean-Ius
#22: Will Pearson, Mental Floss
#23: Mangesh Hattikudur, Mental Floss
#24: Nick Kenner, Just Salad
#25: Rob Crespi, Just Salad
#26: Hayden Hamilton, Greenprint
#27: Benjamin Sann, Bestparking.com
#28: Jason Wright, Feed Granola Co.
#29: Jason Osborn, Feed Granola Co.
#30: Alexis Demko, Lil Bogies
See today's average rates across the country.
| Loan Type | Today | Last Week |
|---|---|---|
| 30 Year Fixed | 5.34% | 5.46% |
| 15 Year Fixed | 4.86% | 4.86% |
| 1 Year ARM | 4.07% | 4.04% |
| 30 Year Fixed Jumbo | 6.51% | 6.51% |
| 5/1 ARM | 4.56% | 4.79% |
| 3/1 ARM | 5.39% | 5.18% |
| Loan Type | Today | Last Week |
|---|---|---|
| $30K Home Equity Loan | 8.37% | 8.34% |
| $50K Home Equity Loan | 8.23% | 8.20% |
| $75K Home Equity Loan | 8.22% | 8.18% |
| $30K HELOC | 5.06% | 5.04% |
| $50K HELOC | 4.80% | 4.78% |
| $75K HELOC | 4.80% | 4.79% |
| Loan Type | Today | Last Week |
|---|---|---|
| 36 Month New Car Loan | 7.14% | 7.15% |
| 48 Month New Car Loan | 7.30% | 7.31% |
| 60 Month New Car Loan | 7.39% | 7.40% |
| 36 Month Used Car Loan | 7.77% | 7.78% |
| 48 Month Used Car Loan | 7.89% | 7.90% |
| Card Type | Today | Last Week |
|---|---|---|
| Balance Transfer Credit Cards | 10.14% | 9.98% |
| Low Interest Credit Cards | 10.41% | 10.41% |
| Business Credit Cards | 11.41% | 11.24% |
| Cash Back Credit Cards | 11.56% | 11.20% |
| Reward Credit Cards | 12.10% | 12.03% |
| Instant Approval Credit Cards | 12.99% | 12.49% |
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