Northside Networking Group Chicago

Always good to be back in people meeting mode. Thanks to Northside Networking Group, moderated by C.J. Jelinek, for another stellar speed networking event hosted by a number of area chambers of commerce including West Ridge, Uptown, Edgewater, Andersonville, and Rogers Park.

This business get-together took place at Mysore Restaurant on Devon Street featuring vegetarian cuisine from India. The savory pancake was very good as was the lentil dish and curry with rice.

I kicked off the event with a nice chat with Robert Taylor from Republic Bank.

This was a great opportunity to meet a number of new people as well as say hello to a few “old” friends, Bernie Small, Joe “the Plumber,” Tom Stuenkel, John Golden, Kate Alpert, Mike Shapiro, Mark Hernandez, and Marty Becklenberg to name a few.

New contacts included insurance professionals Mary Jane Alagheband, Benjamin Neikrug, and Jennifer Winterburn; Regina Rodriguez-Martin the “Content Conductor,” Dick Freund of Chemcraft Industries providing cleaning supplies; Nancye Rivera bookkeeping services, Diane Mardavich massage therapy, Angie Bender interior designer, therapist Joslyn Jelinek, and Joseph Szuba providing cost reduction services to help businesses save money on infrastructure costs.

Paloma Vargas from Fizz Word of Mouth Marketing stood out with her pitch for Burrow, the luxury couch for real life. Paloma mentioned that Burrow will bring a couch to a local event for the purpose of promoting word of mouth promotion. Very innovative and grassroots. I love it!

Nice to see that Chicago Children’s Choir is doing community outreach. I am acquainted with this organization through my wife Julie, who is the director of The Lake Shore Music Studio providing piano lessons for all ages. Many of her young music students, over the years, have been involved in the CCC as well.

Very happy to meet fellow audiovisual creative Michael Rataj of Bulb Brain Creative. I am always looking for ways to collaborate.

Finally thanks to David Levine from  Illinois Nut & Candy for supplying each of us with a delicious chocolate business card. This idea is just in time for the holiday season look for more information at http://raisingthecandybar.com .

This will not be my last networking event of the year but still a good time for my blog readers to consider your plans for expanding your network in 2019.

I am hoping to work with Scott Winterroth at CreativeYearEver.com to create some kind of business expansion workshop in January or February. In the meantime, you can get a jumpstart by downloading his workbook or signing up for his kickoff event.

Midwest Writers Association is planning to have me give a “How to Use Video” workshop probably at the Skokie Library in February.

As always consider reading my book or signing up for one of my online courses.

Look for my theater reviews at ChicagoTheaterandArts.com and be sure to visit ChicagoBroadcastingNetwork.com to see interesting activities and people in Chicago.

My video production portfolio is at RenoWeb.net .

 

 

 

 

Don’t Let This Old Hippie Die

This week the Chicago Reader offered a feature story on the plight of the Heartland Café. It seems that the Rogers Park institution is having significant cash problems due in part to the economy and access to reasonable loan terms. Not to mention that perhaps many of us have taken it for granted, assuming it would always be there. It may be that the management team is not the most sophisticated as owner Michael James eludes to in the article, but I come to praise Caesar and avoid having him buried.

 I find it interesting that some businesses, perhaps particularly restaurants and cafes take on a persona of their own and seem to exist beyond the scope of their owners whose role becomes more that of caretaker. These rare institutions (for lack of a better term) are housed within a building but exist also as a community. Patrons contribute to the ambience and become players in the theater of life upon the stage that the institution provides. In fact Michael James says in the Reader article that the Heartland functions as a kind of community center. To say that the Heartland is a restaurant is to reduce it to the simplest terms. The Heartland is a place but it is also a state of being that most people recognize even on their first visit. It is performance art with a decades long run.

For some of us who have been visiting the Heartland, well, since its inception, it is our first apartment, it is our old friends, it is in my case my first business that was just down the street on Glenwood, it is our youth, it is our optimism, it is our hope for the future. I find comfort knowing that the Heartland is there because after about 30 years it is still serving up strong brew to young minds. Politics aside I am referring to a place that encourages artistic thought and diverse community.

My love and admiration for the Heartland is not purely nostalgic, though in a rapidly changing world and in a city with a strong tradition for tearing down the old to make way for the new, the Heartland is a touchstone for many who have wandered in and found a welcoming sense of place that is closer to a public park then it is to a mere restaurant. Young people and those with an artistic or political mission still seem attracted to this spot on the planet. Yes I find comfort in the fact that it is one of only a handful of places in the city that looks pretty much as I remember from my youth. Though fashions have changed the people look ageless and eerily familiar.

Here are some ideas, Read the Reader article to understand the problems or visit heartlandcafe.com. Owner Michael James is open to expert advice if you have it to offer. He suggests that access to favorable long term financing would help, if you have the proper connections. If you are in Chicago just go have lunch or dinner sometime in the next 14 days. Cash flow always helps. If you have friends in Chicago encourage them to do the same. Imagine if a thousand returning patrons showed up in the next month and spent $15 or $20.  Retweet this article or spread the word in your own way.

A few years back when I met a friend from High School and I told him I lived in Roger Park he said, “Oh! That’s where old hippies go to die.” Oddly I took that as a compliment. Don’t let this old hippie die. Do what you can to help the Heartland.