Driven By with Sam Coates

Sam Coates

Sharing experiences, insights, and the drivers behind why my guests have built what they have built and how this applies to what drives you.

  1. 6D AGO

    Building Jobs Where Everyone Else Left with Andy Kizzee

    Andy Kizzee didn’t set out to build a workforce model in one of Memphis’ most challenged neighborhoods. However, after moving into Binghampton and getting to know his neighbors, he began asking a different question: not just why people weren’t working, but what kind of work actually changes a life. A structural engineer by training, Andy spent six years in India before returning to Memphis with a conviction that a good job can solve more than just income: it can create stability, dignity and opportunity. Today, he leads the BDC Business Hub, an 80,000-square-foot recycling and logistics operation designed as a real job from day one. With almost no barriers to entry, the program hires individuals coming out of long-term unemployment, recovery and incarceration and puts them to work immediately, processing everything from streetlights and mattresses to large-scale e-commerce returns. Since launching, the Hub has hired 175 people and continues to grow through partnerships with major commercial and municipal projects. At the center of it all is a simple but powerful idea: work matters. Drawing on the concept of “gleaning” — leaving space for others to work alongside you rather than handing out aid — Andy has built a model rooted in dignity, not dependency. It’s not perfect, and it’s not easy, but it’s real. And in a city like Memphis, it may be one of the most scalable ways to create lasting change. Episode Highlights “God made us to work.”175 people hired through the BDC Business HubRecycling creates 7x more jobs than landfilling“Nobody joins because it’s a program. They join because it’s a job.”Peak volume: 40 trucks processed in a single week

    1h 4m
  2. JAN 8

    "Buried $500K Drug Cash, Prison Plea with God, Bootstrapped Boarding School" with Melvin Cole

    Some stories don’t fit neatly into a redemption arc. Melvin Cole’s is one of them. On the latest episode of Drive By with Sam Coates, Cole, founder of PURE Academy in Memphis, shares a raw, unpolished account of growing up in extreme poverty, entering the drug trade at age 11, surviving gun violence and ultimately choosing a radically different path. Raised by a heroin-addicted grandmother in South Memphis, Cole lost his sister as a toddler due to a medical misdiagnosis, experienced childhood sexual abuse and became a father at just 14. Survival wasn’t a philosophy: it was daily reality. Football once offered a way out. Cole earned a college scholarship and had NFL aspirations, until a drug deal gone wrong left him shot in the head and back. What followed was prison, where witnessing a brutal assault became a spiritual breaking point. In a moment of desperation, Cole made a promise: if he survived, he would dedicate his life to saving young men headed down the same road. When he was released after serving time for cocaine trafficking, Cole dug up more than $500,000 he had buried during his time dealing drugs, money he once saw as a retirement plan. Instead of returning to the streets, he used it to build PURE Academy, a year-round boarding school for at-risk Black boys in Memphis that focuses on discipline, structure, emotional intelligence, agriculture, academics and faith. Today, PURE Academy serves 61 students on full scholarship, operates on a $3.7 million budget and boasts an 83% college matriculation rate. Cole is candid about the challenges that remain — the temptation of his former life, frustrations with nonprofit systems and the emotional toll of leadership. But his mission is clear: remove boys from environments that trap them in cycles of poverty and give them the tools to build something better. This episode isn’t polished inspiration. It’s an honest conversation about trauma, responsibility, faith and what it actually takes to change outcomes: not just for individuals, but for communities. Episode Highlights “I Started Selling Drugs at 11 — Not to Rebel, But to Survive”Cole explains how poverty and fatherhood at 14 pushed him into the drug trade as a calculated business decision, not teenage rebellion.The Moment Prison Changed EverythingWitnessing a violent assault behind bars led to a desperate prayer and a life-altering promise that would shape PURE Academy’s mission.Burying $500K — Then Digging It Up for a SchoolThe drug money Cole once viewed as his future became the seed funding for a boarding school instead of a return to crime.Inside PURE Academy’s Daily DisciplineFrom 6 a.m. workouts and meditation to academics and agriculture, Cole breaks down how structure, not charity, changes lives.“You Feed One of Two Wolves”Cole speaks openly about the ongoing internal battle between his past and present, including why success doesn’t erase temptation — but purpose keeps him grounded.

    1h 10m
  3. 12/04/2025

    "Blue-Collar Kid, $20k in a Garage, Second Mortgage, Big Exits" with Gary Stavrum

    Our next Driven By episode features Gary Stavrum, a Memphis entrepreneur whose career reflects exceptional grit, discipline and vision. A Christian Brothers alumnus, Gary built three med-device contract manufacturing companies, two of which he has sold, beginning with a startup launched in a garage in Covington, Tennessee, funded with just $20,000. His first company grew to 128 employees and $18 million in revenue in under seven years, without raising outside capital. This success came despite extraordinary challenges, including the sudden incarceration of his only machinist shortly after Gary took out a second mortgage to fund the business. Gary and his team repeated this achievement twice more. He formally retired at 39 but has since remained deeply active, helping raise $38 million for Christian Brothers High School, chairing the Campbell Clinic Foundation, forging titanium orthopedic implants in New Hampshire and developing private duck hunting properties that host more than 100 guests each year. Episode Highlights: How a Covington, TN garage startup grew from $20k to $18 million in revenue in under seven years.The story behind building and selling three med-device contract manufacturing companies, all without outside capital.Why the 1990s–2000s Memphis med-device boom created a once-in-a-generation window for blue-collar entrepreneurs.Gary’s role in helping Christian Brothers High School raise $38 million, far surpassing the original $7 million goal.Gary’s unexpected “retirement” running titanium forging operations and developing private duck hunting properties hosting 100+ guests a year.

    1h 28m
5
out of 5
56 Ratings

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Sharing experiences, insights, and the drivers behind why my guests have built what they have built and how this applies to what drives you.

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