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Outdoor industry used pandemic to evolve, thrive – BizWest
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Slideshow: BusinessDen’s overnight DenX Retreat at Devil’s Thumb Ranch
Andi Sigler, Owner of VIVE Float Studio and Sarah Lyman, VIVE Float Studio
Samantha Baldwin of BusinessDen and Ashley Cawthorn of presenting sponsor Berg Hill Greenleaf and Ruscitti
Sally Berg of presenting sponsor Berg Hill Greenleaf and Ruscitti
Sally Berg of presenting sponsor Berg Hill Greenleaf and Ruscitti
Jenni Kelly and Colleen Merrill of sponsor Anchor Engineering
Danielle Barbeau, Owner and CEO of The River Yoga led classes for the retreat.
Fireside chats about marketing, staffing and more.
Monday night s panel discussion was led by Samantha Baldwin, Director of Events at BusinessDen. Panelists included Danielle Barbeau, owner of The River Yoga, Suzanne Fanch, owner of Devil s Thumb Ranch and Andi Sigler, owner of VIVE Float Studio.
The ongoing pandemic has created a wealth of interest from venture capital investors and the broader public in what biotech companies are able to achieve if it’s flush with resources.
That was the sentiment of a group of Boulder area biotechnology industry leaders, who met virtually at BizWest’s CEO Roundtable on the biotechnology industry Tuesday morning.
Steady stream of investor dollars
Biotech was one of the few industries that was relatively unaffected from a financial standpoint during the pandemic, and multiple companies marked significant financial milestones just in the past few months. Edgewise Therapeutics Inc. (Nasdaq: EWTX) raised $202.4 million in late March after filing for a confidential initial public offering, and SomaLogic Inc. agreed to go public via a special purpose acquisition company merger in a deal that would add up to $651 million to the company’s balance sheet this year.
As Northern Colorado climbs out of the COVID-19 pandemic doldrums, local real estate experts are left wondering when workers will return in person to the office and whether the virus has caused a permanent shift in commercial real estate markets.
Similar concerns exist regarding the retail sector, and while the residential sector is red-hot, there are significant headwinds related to the rising cost of land, water and construction materials, Northern Colorado real estate pros said Tuesday during BizWest’s virtual CEO Roundtable.
Citing an internal survey, CBRE broker Peter Kelly estimated that about 90% of workers will be back at work in some fashion in the next year.
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