
Rounding The Bases With Joel Goldberg
566 episodes — Page 12 of 12

Episode 116: Bob Page, University of Kansas Health System CEO
There are so many similarities between the sports world and the medical field, especially baseball. Both industries rely heavily on a team. Both involve superstars (doctors, home run hitters, etc) and incredible behind the scenes role players. University of Kansas Health System CEO Bob Page helped his organization transform into a champion in the same way the Kansas City Royals emerged from last place to first place.

Episode 115: Luke Wade, KC Crew
Luke Wade wanted to find a place for his friends to play sports in downtown Kansas City. What started as a fun hobby turned into a successful and growing business with multiple activities throughout the area.

Episode 114: Trevor Flannigan & Scott Hansen, Professional Chats
Professional Chats started with need in family orthodontic practice managing online chat and couldn’t find vendor to do excellent job interacting with patients. Launched a service for orthodontics. Began with lead generation in mind but having quality people that could answer questions became important for generating revenue and brand recognition. 150 clients after first year. Started with 1 employee, at 70 now and hope to be at 150-200

Episode 113: Reinhard Mabry, Alphapointe CEO
Alphapointe is a not for profit founded in 1911 with mission to provide employment and rehabilitation for people who are blind. Goal of helping people who are blind find sustainable jobs for themselves and their family. Serve close to 2,000 people a year. Also have sewing operation providing uniforms for the military, tourniquets, office products, writing instruments and injection molding for prediction bottles for the VA and Express Scripts.

Episode 112: Tyler Nottberg, U.S. Engineering
US Engineering is a mechanical contractor.Started as metal working shop in the 1850s in Germany and moved to the US in the late 1800s when they moved to KC. Tyler studied languages, classics, political science in Vermont. Father passed away in 1997 and the company passed out of the family for the first time. Tyler decided to come home to KC in 2005 and started working for US Engineering and started learning about the company and construction. Eventually became project manager, learned the business.

Episode 111: Erica Brune, Lever One CEO
Erica Brune is CEO of Lever One, a PEO providing payroll, employee benefits and employee relation issues for clients. Thought would be broadway star, worked in NYC acting & at a law firm. Grew career organically. Aggressive traits she has now in the business world are the same she had deep inside her when looking for acting jobs first think in the morning. Message to young professionals and teens: Don’t be afraid of hard work. Working hard is ok. It is the key to success. Can reach Erica at www.lever1.com

Episode 110: Cliff Pemble, Garmin CEO
Cliff grew up Montana. First job was with King Radio in Olathe as a software engineers. Met eventual founders of Garmin at King Radio, Gary Burrell and Min Kao. Garmin does everything from dogs to airplanes. Five different business segments. Have product lines in each. Over 12,000 employees in 32 countries. Being employee number six, still try to think of it as a small culture.

Episode 109: Laura Steward, Video Fizz Founder
Video Fizz is a platform stitching pictures and videos together with an evolving customer base. Laura has a background running large teams, most recently running a genomic sequencing business for GE in Houston and managing their oncology clinical trials business in California. Just received $250,000 award from Missouri Technology Corporation. Goal in five years to have platform serving multiple verticals. If not acquired, hope to be a large company serving many verticals. www.videofizz.com

Episode 108: Blake Miller, Homebase Founder
We are getting closer to living like the Jetsons in 2018. Entrepreneur and innovator Blake Miller started learning how to program and code as a young kid. Now in his 30's, he's helping to change the landscape of city living with technology that will affect our lives.

Episode 107: Dr. Ramon Corrales, Integral Mastery Center CEO
Ramon coaches people and tries to help people get the best out of themselves and their employees. He works with leadership teams to create cultures . His company is Wisdom Hunger. How we gather info is unique. Can measure skill sets and instincts that effect companies, sports teams and students Links involving Ramon: www.wisdomhunger.com www.kolbe.com

Episode 106: Ryan Maybee, Manifesto, Rieger Hotel Grill
What kind of life and business lessons can be learned from a bartender and restaurant owner? In Ryan Maybee's case, numerous tips on leadership, culture, building a brand and more with stories dating back to the prohibition era.

Episode 105-Mike Maddox, CrossFirst Bank CEO
A conversation about the similarities between business, sports and leadership with a bank CEO who used to star on the basketball court.

Episode 104-Sly James, Kansas City Mayor
A conversation with the mayor of Kansas City. Sly James talks about the vote for a new airport, politics at the city level compared to nationally, his military background, kneeling in the NFL, baseball and more.

Episode 103-Drew Meyerowich, Holland 1916
Lessons in leadership from a former colonel in the U.S. Army who's now a chief operating officer of a manufacturing company.

Episode 102-Gary Henson, Tortoise
Gary Henson has spent a career in the finance and investment world. He's now added a bigger and more significant challenge to his life's work in fighting the drug company lobbyists and tackling the opioid epidemic.

Episode 101-Danny O'Neill, The Roasterie
Danny O'Neill began air roasting coffee beans out of his basement in 1993. Now he runs a massive operation that's growing by the day. The "Bean Baron" has used many of the lessons he learned in sports to thrive in the business world as the founder of the Roasterie.