NSWIB’s 4th Annual Taste of Success Fundraiser
March 23, 2009 by Northshore
Filed under Events
Title: NSWIB’s 4th Annual Taste of Success Fundraiser
Location: Turner Hill - Ipswich, MA
Description: North Shore Women in Business (NSWIB) presents the 4th Annual Taste of Success Fundraiser at Turner Hill - 3 Manor House Lane, Ipswich, MA - on May 21st, 2009 from 6pm-9pm.
This year the event will feature food from ten of the North Shore’s finest restaurants and caterers. The raffle baskets and silent auction items are even more extravagant and individually raffled baskets means the chances of getting the basket you want are higher.
The Annual Taste of Success is always an exquisite and eclectic evening of networking, socializing and food tasting with some of the North Shore’s finest business men and women.
Ticket are: $55 if purchased early before May 7th, or $65 up until the event.
If you have a raffle item you would like to donate (a great way to advertise your business), please contact Kerri L. Moses, CFP® at: kerri@cf-network.net
For more information, please contact Ipswich Clambake Company’s Functions Coordinator at: ipswichclambake@verizon.net
Start Time: 18:00
Date: 2009-05-21
End Time: 21:00
Chamber’s Women of Cape Ann Forum
March 20, 2009 by Northshore
Filed under Events
Title: Chamber’s Women of Cape Ann Forum
Location: Cape Ann Chamber - Gloucester
Link out: Click here
Description: The Cape Ann Chamber of Commerce Businesswomen present a panel discussion with an intriguing line-up of community leaders at the “Women of Cape Ann” forum on Wednesday, March 4th, 2009 from 5:30pm-7:30pm at the American Legion, 14 Church Street, Manchester-by-the-Sea.
The panelists are Massachusetts State Representative Ann-Margaret Ferrante, City of Gloucester Mayor Carolyn Kirk, Manchester Essex Regional School District Superintendent Marcia Adams O’Neil, Rockport Board of Selectmen Chair Sarah Wilkinson, and moderator Val Gilman of the Gloucester School Committee. Each will tell life stories illustrating how they got where they are today. A question and answer period will follow their presentations.
Take advantage of this opportunity; hear inspiring stories, network with the Businesswomen in a relaxing atmosphere, and enjoy an assortment hors d’oeuvre and beverages.
Admission is $25.
For more information, or to reserve tickets, please contact the Chamber at: (978) 283-1601, or email: info@capeannchamber.com
Start Time: 17:30
Date: 2009-03-04
End Time: 19:30
Women’s Economic Summit
March 20, 2009 by Northshore
Filed under Events
Title: Women’s Economic Summit
Location: Umass Lowell
Link out: Click here
Description: A unique event designed to provide focus where women have been, where we are now, and the new realities of women in the world of tomorrow.
Explore the evolution of women in the business and economic worlds - from invisible - to visible - to the actual control of wealth. Chart the progress and influence women have on the world today, and illuminate the economic power of women of the future.
For more information, or to register online, please visit: www.mvvf.org
Date: 2009-04-06
North Shore Chamber Business Leads Group
March 18, 2009 by Northshore
Filed under Events
Title: North Shore Chamber Business Leads Group
Location: North Shore Chamber - 5 Cherry Hill Dirve, Suite 100 - Danvers
Link out: Click here
Description: The North Shore Business Leads Group will meet Friday morning, March 20th, 2009 from 8am-9:30am at the North Shore Chamber, located in Danvers.
The meeting will involve opportunities to share a :60 second commercial and trade business cards with all. A great networking opportunity with referrals, leads, and more.
Tickets are $25.
For more information or to register for this event, please visit: www.northshorechamber.org
Start Time: 08:00
Date: 2009-03-20
End Time: 09:30
“Tips for a Successful Trade Show”
March 5, 2009 by Northshore
Filed under Events
Title: “Tips for a Successful Trade Show”
Location: Cape Ann Chamber - Gloucester
Link out: Click here
Description: The Cape Ann Chamber of Commerce, in cooperation with Sandler’s Sales, will present a free seminar titled “Tips for a Successful Trade Show” on Monday, March 9th, 2009 from 4:30pm-6:30pm in the Cape Ann Chamber Conference Room.
The seminar is designed to help those Chamber members who are taking part in the Home & Garden Show on March 28th-29th at the Gloucester High School Field House. During the interactive session guests will learn how to leverage time, money, and energy by having a specific plan and specific goals. They will also learn how to engage prospects and get them to talk and open-up, and how to separate their own business from the competition.
Space for the seminar is limited, and registration is recommended.
For reserve a space, or for more information, please contact the Cape Ann Chamber at: (978) 283-1601, email: info@capeannchamber.com, or visit: www.CapeAnnChamber.com
Start Time: 16:30
Date: 2009-03-09
End Time: 18:30
The North Shore’s Economic Future
January 12, 2009 by Northshore
Filed under Business
The way state representative Barry Finegold sees it, the North Shore economy can only go one way. The Massachusetts State Representative discusses the current state of the economy on the North Shore and the bright future for all of us ahead.

Barry Finegold at the Andover Fire Department
In my early twenties, i was willing, if not eager, to take risks. I maxed out credit cards so I could run for public office. I started a law firm with nothing but my degree and my partner. I bought my first piece of real estate because I always liked playing Monopoly, and I approached a gorgeous redhead in a crowded bar because I knew I had a hunch about this one. I took risks partly because I was young and partly because the economy of the times allowed me to.
Times have changed. I’ll admit, the current state of our economy makes me a little anxious. I’m a small business owner and husband to a small business owner. I’m a property owner and a dad who’s already thinking about how to pay for college for my two girls who haven’t even hit elementary school.
Our economy has changed and the evidence is crystal clear on the North Shore. But transition is a powerful force and the evolution is often painful as jobs move from one sector to another. We’ve been here before. Where the fishing in Gloucester and manufacturing industries in Lynn once dominated, we now see bio and high-tech firms, life science, and alternative energy research facilities sprouting along our coastal communities. Further inland, Andover’s Smith and Nephew continues to grow where corporate giant Lucent once reigned supreme, and upon entering the North Shore from the south, Nuvera Fuel Cells is poised to try on the shoes of the late Wang and Digital.
The way I see it, our national economy is in the midst of a transition more than it is on a decline. And while the kinks that are inherent in change are causing some pressure in the
Commonwealth and across the nation as a whole, I steadfastly remain optimistic. Tax revenues and unemployment levels will be challenged in the coming months in our region, but will not be nearly as damaging as they are in places like Michigan and the manufacturing Midwest. Massachusetts is hard at work to find ways to alleviate the effects of the downturn by investing long-term in job growth. But most of all, we’ve got our feet dipped in several different pools. Our interests here in the Commonwealth are diversified and that’s a good thing. In fact, our state earned top honors in the Beacon Hill Institute’s Eighth Annual Competitiveness Report, which measures all states’ abilities to attract and retain businesses while maintaining a high standard of living for all residents. The report, released in mid-November 2008, found that Massachusetts ranked first in the percentage of the population with health insurance, the ratio of physicians per 100,000 residents, the percentage of students proficient in math, patents per 100,000 residents, and science and engineering graduate students per 100,000 residents. The report also points to Massachusetts’ high total of grants from the National Institute of Health and prominent high-tech workforce as reasons Massachusetts moved from second to first in this survey.
As a property owner of both residential and commercial real estate, I’ve been sweating jelly beans with the rest you. However, when I walk around Newburyport, for example, I can’t help but marvel at what developer Steve Karp has bought and the transformations he’s already begun to initiate in the town. Some of the best real estate deals he made that actually positioned him to continue to buy today, were struck during our last economic downturn. Where there is change, there is often opportunity, and on the North Shore, we have the ingenuity to realize both. Karp recently spoke to a group of commercial real estate brokers and one great line rang true. “Many of you have told me that you wished you would have bought what I did in the early ’90s,” he said. “Well, here’s your chance.”
There are ways in which we can help ourselves, as well, especially when it comes energy. As a nation, we cannot continue to consume 21 million barrels of crude oil per day. With the atmospheric rise in gas prices during the summer of 2008 and the heightened focus on the environment and global warming, hybrid vehicles are becoming less of a novelty and more of a necessity. In order to keep up, US-based automakers have a choice to make: offer a hybrid or alternative fuel vehicle or risk obscurity. The Finegold family now drives one hybrid car and we’re in the market for another. It is important that we lead by example here on the North Shore and ride out the aches and pains of transitioning into the green technology of tomorrow. Companies like All-Pro Solar and Olympic Engineering of Haverhill, as well as Powerhouse Enterprises of Lawrence and many other green technology companies in our region, are helping to ease this transition and helping us to become a region of job growth for years to come.
Besides the lawyer, businessman, and family hats, there is one more that I wear. I am a State Representative. In turn, each day as I balance meeting payroll at the law firm, shuffling the kids to and from activities, and being sufficiently present for my wife, who keeps us all together, I’m also working to help balance the Commonwealth’s past with what I deem to be a very exciting future. In the Legislature, we have taken steps to guard against downturns and stabilize our economy. The Commonwealth had built up a balance of $2.25 billion in the stabilization fund, which is over a half-billion more than the state had when we entered the last economic downturn. In 2006, the Legislature passed an economic stimulus package designed to make investments to promote job creation, economic stability, and competitiveness in the state’s economy, and we took steps to help cities and towns save money by allowing municipalities to join state’s group insurance commission and enter the state’s pension system. On October 3, 2008, Business Week Magazine’s “States with the Worst Budget Shortfalls” listed twenty states. Massachusetts was not one of them. While we may not have seen the worst of this economic downturn, precautionary measures like those above will help to ensure both a softer economic blow and a swift recovery for our state.
Like many of you, my 401(k) has slipped down to what feels like a 201(k). Those old credit cards from my youth are finally paid off, but my family has cut back on some of our extras and I’m cooking dinner a lot more. While we may have changed the way we do things in the Finegold household, I can’t help but ask myself, “When it’s for the betterment of the economy, the environment, and the future for my kids, what’s so wrong with change?” So, now as I fill up at the pump, I remember the transitions that I’ve bounced back from, that our country and our state have bounced back from. I remember even before I honed my business chops and entered public service, what it was like to be a kid in the ’70s, waiting in the back of my parents’ Plymouth Duster, wondering if we’d ever make it to the front of the gas line. A few decades later, I can say that after taking a few risks, we did make it. We lived to work another day and the sun rose again. And in a few decades more, that same sun might just power my daughter’s first car, on her way to work on the North Shore. —Barry Finegold
Latitude Sports Clubs
January 12, 2009 by Northshore
Filed under Business, Profile, health
Once upon a time, working out at the gym meant one of two options: pumping iron for men and Jazzercise for women. Read more
Saving the Environment and Your Bank Account
January 12, 2009 by Northshore
Filed under Business
How the North Shore is protecting Mother Earth and its bottom line. Read more
The Fine Art of Banking
September 27, 2008 by Northshore
Filed under Business
If you were to invest in an oil painting for your home or office, you would take into account your color scheme, décor, taste, and budget. Read more
Anne Segal
September 20, 2008 by Northshore
Filed under Profile
The legal system today may not offer all that much to sing about. And yet, Marblehead’s Anne Segal is able to find reason to sing. In fact, she has been doing so for some time. Read more



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