Rust Belt Startup

Rust Belt Startup

Reconstructing Remarkable - Website Development, Digital Strategy, Video, and the $100 Cup of Coffee based in Utica NY

  1. What Upstate New York Can Learn from Upstate Sweden | Zack Schuman

    2D AGO

    What Upstate New York Can Learn from Upstate Sweden | Zack Schuman

    In this episode, I’m joined by Zack Schuman, a public affairs scholar at Hamilton College, to explore what he learned after spending a full year living and researching in Sweden with his family. Zack’s research focuses on how communities actually work — especially in rural and peripheral regions — and how entrepreneurship, institutions, and culture shape economic life outside major metro areas. While in Sweden, he studied how small regions support lifestyle businesses and social enterprises, how immigration reshapes local economies, and why quality of life often takes precedence over high-growth startup culture. This conversation dives into: Why Sweden isn’t built around “unicorn” startups — and why that matters How social safety nets change the way people think about risk and entrepreneurship The role of universities as anchor institutions in small and rural regions • Immigration, diversity, and the creativity required to deliver social services The difference between being welcomed and truly belonging What it means to leave community work — and return with new perspective This isn’t a conversation about copying Sweden’s model wholesale. It’s about asking better questions: What makes a place work? Who gets to participate? And how do small businesses, institutions, and people quietly build culture over time? If you care about community development, entrepreneurship outside big cities, higher education, or the future of places like Upstate New York, this episode will give you a lot to think about. Rust Belt Startup · Zack Shuman

    42 min
  2. What Transportation Really Says About a Community | Matt VanSlyke

    JAN 19

    What Transportation Really Says About a Community | Matt VanSlyke

    In this episode, I sit down with Matt Van Slyke, founder of Utica Bike Rescue, to talk about bikes, mobility, walkable cities, and why transportation is really about participation and freedom. Utica Bike Rescue has redistributed thousands of bikes over the past decade — helping people get to work, school, and medical appointments — but Matt’s work goes far beyond bike repair. As a transportation planner, he helps us understand how infrastructure shapes daily life, community connection, and opportunity. In this conversation, we explore: 🚲 What Utica Bike Rescue actually does — and how the model works 🏙️ Why walkable and bikeable communities create stronger civic life 🚗 The surprising reality of car access in mid-size cities like Utica 🧠 Why mobility = freedom, especially for people without reliable transportation 🔌 Utica Bike Rescue’s new electric mobile bike repair van and what it unlocks 👥 How everyday people can support better transportation and community design This episode isn’t just about bikes — it’s about how we design places that invite people to participate, connect, and belong. Learn more or get involved: https://uticabikerescue.org If you enjoyed this conversation, like, subscribe, and share it with someone who cares about community, cities, or local impact.   Additional Links: Ryan Interviewed on the Love Living Local Podcast > The Hospitalitarian Podcast > Rust Belt Startup · What Transportation Really Says About a Community | Matt VanSlyke

    57 min
  3. Good Bread, Good Data, Better Lending: Reimagining Access to Capital

    12/04/2025

    Good Bread, Good Data, Better Lending: Reimagining Access to Capital

    In this episode, I sit down with Noa Simons, founder and CEO of Good Bread, a new kind of small business lender working to reinvent how entrepreneurs access capital. If you’ve ever tried to raise money—through banks, credit unions, investors, or anywhere in between—you know it’s never one-size-fits-all. Even in communities with great lending institutions, many founders still fall through the cracks. Noa’s on a mission to fix that. Good Bread is a startup blending technology, psychology, and trust to create a more human, accessible path to capital. One of the most fascinating pieces of their approach is the Boss Index—a behavioral data tool her team uses to understand creditworthiness far beyond a traditional credit score. In this conversation, Noa and I dig into:   Why access to capital is so difficult for so many entrepreneurs How her co-founder relationships were built and how she’s raising her own investment dollars How behavioral data can create more equitable lending What a “human-centered” underwriting model actually looks like The role trust plays in entrepreneurship and local economies Why overlooked regions (like ours) are full of untapped possibility   If you’re interested in startups, money, trust, or building meaningful businesses in emerging regions, this episode is for you.   Rust Belt Startup · Good Bread, Good Data, Better Lending: Reimagining Access to Capital Podcast Highlights

    58 min
  4. A Sustainable Fundraising Playbook for Non-Profits with Lara Sepanski Pimentel (Osa Philanthropy)

    06/16/2025

    A Sustainable Fundraising Playbook for Non-Profits with Lara Sepanski Pimentel (Osa Philanthropy)

    Fundraising expert Lara Sepanski Pimentel, founder of OSA Philanthropy and former Peace Corps volunteer, joins me to unpack what makes a nonprofit—and any mission-driven venture—truly resilient. Drawing on field lessons from community-development work in rural Central America and a decade inside U.S. nonprofits, Lara explains why “capacity” — the people, processes, and systems behind the programs — must come before the next big grant push. In this conversation you’ll learn: Peace Corps principles in practice – how asset-based thinking, local ownership, and radical resourcefulness translate into stronger donor relationships and staff culture. The “capacity first, cash second” framework – diagnostic steps to spot operational gaps before chasing new money. Fast vs. slow money – a pragmatic playbook for raising six figures quickly through warm individual donors while laying groundwork for longer-cycle institutional funding. Reframing the ask – shifting from “begging for help” to “offering investment” so donors see themselves as partners, not patrons. Running a location-independent consultancy – Lara’s approach to managing global contractors, Zoom-first client work, and family life across continents. Nonprofit earthquake preparedness – why diversified revenue and data-driven dashboards are the new insurance policy in a volatile funding landscape. Rust Belt Startup · A Sustainable Fundraising Playbook for Non-Profits with Lara Sepanski Pimentel (Osa Philanthropy)

    1h 9m
5
out of 5
23 Ratings

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Reconstructing Remarkable - Website Development, Digital Strategy, Video, and the $100 Cup of Coffee based in Utica NY

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