Clearstead
Senior Managing Director, Partner - Clearstead
C.h. Dean Sep 2006 - Mar 2008
Research Analyst
Education:
University of Cincinnati 2006 - 2007
Master of Science, Masters, Finance
The University of Toledo 2002 - 2006
Bachelors, Bachelor of Science In Business Administration, Finance
Brightergy - Greater Boston Area since Nov 2010
CEO
Atlas Properties Feb 2004 - Nov 2010
Principal
Silicon Solar Housing Solutions Inc. Jan 2006 - Sep 2007
Co-founder
Education:
Texas Christian University - M.J. Neeley School of Business 2003 - 2007
BBA, Triple major in Finance, Accounting, Entrepreneurial Management
Interests:
entrepreneurship, alternative energy, social entrepreneurship, sustainability, TCU football, reading, technology, investing, 49ers.
Honor & Awards:
123rd fastest growing private company in US.- Inc Magazine- 2009
Global Student Entrepreneur of the year Award, 2005
Fort Worth 40 Under 40- 2008
Ingrams 20 in their 20's- 2010
Featured in several publications such as Entrepreneur Magazine, Fortune Small Business, Young Money, Yahoo Finance, Entrepreneur Start-Ups, etc.
SydneyMy career has revolved around shaping, communicating and growing ventures and organisations - applying expertise and experience at bringing together ideas... My career has revolved around shaping, communicating and growing ventures and organisations - applying expertise and experience at bringing together ideas, people and resources.
My professional attributes include creativity, strategic and emotional intelligence, collaborative business development...
Mosquitoes like dark contrasting objects, said Adam Blake, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Washington. What the recent paper that came out of the lab kind of showed is that its also some of the longer wavelength colors. So thats your oranges, your reds are also really attractive
Date: Jul 05, 2024
Category: Health
Source: Google
Eighty KC buildings will go solar in ambitious city effort
Adam Blake, CEO of Brightergy, said the payback for solar energy was now outrageously good, and if the price of solar panels continued to decline, the panels should still be economical even when the incentives are gone.