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Ever wonder how a porta potty cleaner could become a YouTube star? For this episode, Daniel Harmon sits down with YouTube star, Stuart Edge. Stuart tells us how an internship with OraBrush and a meeting with Devin Graham helped Stuart garner over 500M views of his videos online. He also shares with us the lessons he has learned on his way to the top. 2:45 From Porta Potties to Harmon Brothers12:40 The podcast episode that changed Stuart’s life16:50 How a Youtuber get together changed his life19:45 Why Stuart is returning to his YouTube channel21:50 How Stuart finds creative ideasYou can find links to Stuart Edge’s YouTube channel below.If you’re interested in learning more about Harmon Brothers, you can grab a copy of our book at harmonbrothersbook.com Don’t forget to like, subscribe, and share. Episodes published every Tuesday at 6 am EST. We’ll see you on the next one.Find Stuart Edge here:YouTube.com/stuartedge
Welcome to RIMScast. Your host is Justin Smulison, Business Content Writer at RIMS, the Risk and Insurance Management Society. This week, Justin Smulison’s friend and colleague, Stuart Ruff-Lyon, joins the podcast! Stuart is the Vice President for Event and Education at RIMS. He has worked in the events and hospitality industry since 1998 and joined RIMS in 2012 as Director of Meetings and Events, and was promoted in 2016 to his current position. He is also a Certified Meeting Professional (CMP) and a certified Digital Events Strategist (DES). In this episode, Justin and Stuart talk about the RIMS Annual Conference 2019 in its entirety and all of the great things that are on the way, April 28th - May 1st. He and Justin discuss both the opening and the closing keynotes speakers, the fantastic opening reception, and some of the hugely popular meetups and presentations from last year that will be making a comeback this year. Stuart also gives a glimpse of all of the cool events that RIMS will be hosting later in the year, after the conference. Key Takeaways: [:15] About the upcoming RIMS Annual Conference. [:30] About today’s guest, Stuart Ruff-Lyon. [1:00] Stuart describes what is new for the upcoming RIMS Annual Conference 2019. [1:45] Some of the presentations Stuart is most looking forward to. [2:22] About the accompanying RIMS Conference app. [3:37] What led to the selection of Dr. Erin Meyer for the opening keynote? [4:48] Why Stuart believes that having an icon such as Billie Jean King as the closing keynote speaker is important for attendees and the risk management community. [5:50] Stuart describes the hugely popular diversity meetup at last year’s conference. [6:45] Stuart gives his suggestions on how you can follow along with the conference if you cannot attend this year. [7:35] Additional RIMS events in the coming year. [8:30] Global events RIMS is planning. [8:53] About the Grand Slam opening reception at this year’s conference on April 28th. [9:50] Why Boston is such a great city for RIMS Annual Conference. [10:42] Justin thanks Stuart for joining him this episode! [10:56] If you have any questions about this year’s conference, email CST@rims.org. Feedback or suggestions, you can email Justin at Content@RIMS.org! Mentioned in this Episode: RIMS 2019 Annual Conference RIMS 2019: Trending Now Sessions Dr. Erin Meyer RIMScast episode with Dr. Erin Meyer: “Cross-Cultural Expansion and Collaboration with Dr. Erin Meyer” Risk Management Monitor’s Q&A with Erin Meyer The Culture Map (Intl Ed): Decoding How People Think, Lead, and Get Things Done Across Cultures, by Dr. Erin Meyer Billie Jean King RIMS NeXtGen Forum: June 14th, 2019 in New York City RIMS ERM Conference 2019: Nov. 4-5 in New Orleans — Submit a session by April 19th Upcoming RIMS events Questions about the RIMS 2019 Annual Conference? Email CST@rims.org Want to Learn More? Keep up with the podcast on RIMS.org and listen on iTunes. Have a question or suggestion? Email: Content@rims.org. Join the Conversation! Follow @RIMSorg on Facebook and Twitter, and join the RIMS Group on LinkedIn. Follow up with Our Guest: Stuart Ruff-Lyon’s LinkedIn
Focus and listen. It’s what I had to do after my conversation with Stuart. I went back to the beginning of it, listened and learned. He is not only a great storyteller but a teacher too. Stuart is the Founder and CEO of Narrative Science, a company that interprets millions of data sources and transforms it into insightful, natural language narratives. His industry and brand are cutting edge and AI is certainly part of the now and the future. But just as important, I loved his vision of wanting to be “the somebody else,” the client that was being served, which led to an abrupt change in careers (the story is worth listening to). You will also appreciate and respect the business business opportunity he got from a CEO after seeing him (and really only him) on countless Saturdays in the office. Podcast Notes: Stuart’s career from Miami Accounting major from Miami and started working for PwC. Went to Vanderbilt Law School and was a corporate lawyer for three years. Frankel got an opportunity with a client to work on a project that excited him. After a couple months, Frankel got word that the project was canceled. Took some time to figure out exactly what he wanted to do from there. Coming into the office on a Saturday? In office every Saturday 9am-3pm. The only other person who would come in was the CEO. If you work a little harder than the other person, this can give you a significant advantage over them. Why Stuart got the promotion He was the youngest people there and the CEO thought that younger people would understand and adopt emerging tech and things better. He had been bugging him in the past 6 months about implementing new ideas. He was there and showed up even on the weekends and the CEO felt he could do this job Take the risk. When the project was canceled, he had the choice to go back and practice law or to discover another area of business he was interested in. Frankel didn’t look at what the next three years would be, but he looked at what the next 30 years could be. Working in AI (Artificial Intelligence), there’s always two sides... Creation of technologies: this is where a lot of work is being done by large companies (Google, Microsoft, etc), but also smaller companies. Market adoption: this is the harder step because it takes a lot for people to adopt and like the technology. Always be in a learning mindset. Read everything. Listen to a lot of podcasts. Surround yourself with people of very different backgrounds. Learning doesn’t stop at 22.
Should you combine deadlifts with an extensive yoga routine? What’s the easiest test ot identify the next NHL superstar? And how do you recruit subjects for a sex mechanics study? Get the answers to these questions and more in this episode of the Flowgrade with the go-to-expert for biomechanics of the spine Dr. Stuart McGill. Dr. Stuart M. McGill is a professor of spine biomechanics at the University of Waterloo, Canada. Besides attention-grabbing studies like the one described above, Stuart treats a multitude of professional athletes from various sports. With more than 30 years of clinical research and three major books under his belt, Stuart is one of the go-to-doctors for professional athletes, sport teams, and other high performers with back pain. He occasionally shares athletes with another expert in the field and a former guest on the Flowgrade Show, Kelly Starrett (LINK TO THE EPISODE). In this interactive episode (Stuart helps me to fix my posture with one easy trick), you will learn why Stuart has mixed feelings about MMA, the easiest test to identify the next NHL superstar and why powerlifters should avoid doing yoga an. You will also learn a couple techniques from Stuart’s book Back Mechanic to optimize your posture on the spot. Enjoy! --- Find all the show notes, quotes and links of this podcast here: https://www.flowgrade.de/en/stuartmcgill --- SHOW NOTES: 1:00 - Why Stuart introduces himself as a plummer 3:00 - Mixed feelings about MMA and ultimate fighting 5:10 - Why the NBA has better tests than the NFL 10:40 - An easy test to find the next NHL superstar 12:20 - Why powerlifters shouldn’t do yoga 20:45 - The hardest book Stuart has ever written 23:40 - How to fix your posture with some easy exercises 27:50 - On longevity and how to train in different life stages 33:30 - What Stuart would recommend his younger self 38:45 - On recruiting participants at latin dance schools Find more quotes and links of this podcast here: https://www.flowgrade.de/en/stuartmcgill
On this week’s episode I spoke with Stuart Frost, Managing Partner & CEO at Frost Data Capital, as the last interview in our series on Remote Monitoring. Stuart is a highly successful, serial high-tech entrepreneur with more than 20 years' experience in the technology market, having been founder and CEO of 2 companies before working at Microsoft. Stuart founded Frost Data Capital, a combined incubator and venture capital firm, in 2011. To date, at Frost DC, Stuart has founded 27 Big Data analytics companies, of which 19 are still in operation, 5 of those being in healthcare. In our conversation, Stuart and I discuss: Stuart’s background and how he came to found Frost Data Capital Frost’s Approach and it’s process and principles Parallel entrepreneurship Why Stuart is focused on Big Data How Frost Data Capital’s investment in Sentrian came to be and how Sentrian works What Sentrian does differently that made Stuart say “yes” How Sentrian leverages Big Data Where Stuart sees the remote monitoring space going in the future Frost Data Capital’s recent partnership with DST and it’s importance in the value-based healthcare space Connect with Stuart: LinkedIn Learn more about Frost Data Capital: Website Twitter Links mentioned in the show: Sentrian Frost Data Capital YouTube series Frost Data Capital Investors Parallel Entrepreneur Frost Data Capital Incubator Model Connect with Healthbox Follow us on Twitter Subscribe and leave a review in iTunes Have guest suggestions or topic ideas for the podcast? Send them to us at ideas@healthbox.com Listen to his episode on iTunes, SoundCloud, or Libsyn
Stuart Epps is a legendary UK-based record producer, who has worked with the likes of Elton John, Led Zeppelin, Oasis, Robbie Williams, Bill Wyman, and Twisted Sister. Earlier this year, Stuart announced that he’s now working with independent artists remotely. When we learnt that, we had to interview Stuart for the podcast to find out the details. Listen to this WeSpin Recipes episode to learn the amazing story of Stuart and the artists he has worked with, why there are fewer truly successful bands these days, and what his new production company EMP offers to indie musicians. Some of the topics covered in the episode: - Stuart Epps: from ‘60s to nowadays. - How the industry has changed over the past decades. - In the new era, “music still has to be great”. - Why Stuart doesn’t get excited hearing new music as often as he did in the past. - The level of dedication you need to achieve success. - What assistance you can get from Stuart’s production company. Go to http://wespin.co/wsr52/ for the show notes and http://getacard.wespin.co/ to learn how to get a free WeSpin postcard by supporting the podcast.