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Technology Business Innovation
           Transition Team Overview



1        Gray Transition: Technology Business Innovation   March 6, 2011
Process
We gathered more than 20 of the most respected business technology leaders in the region
  and asked them to help guide us to transform the District’s Technology Business Ecosystem

Group included:
 Serial Entreprenuers
 Venture Capitalists
 Angel Investors
 Gov 2.0 experts
 Digital Impressarios
 University Technology Incubation and tech transfer experts
 Government Technology and Gov 2.0 Leaders
 Workforce Development Experts
 Economists
 Visionaries


This group of technologists turned to the Internet to “crowdsource” ideas for the region by
   posing a series of questions on the Transition Team’s behalf on Quora a new Internet
   platform for harvesting knowledge out of a community of experts.

This is what we learned:



 1                         Gray Transition: Technology Business Innovation
Problem Statement
The District of Columbia has been consistently rated last,
  or near last, by independent studies of jurisdictions
  attractive to small technology enterprises.
Given that:
        60 to 80 percent of net new jobs are created by small
         businesses;
        technology is projected to be the second strongest job creation
         industry over the next seven years;
        the fact that DC is surrounded by attractive business
         technology ecosystems
The consensus of every member of the Technology
  Business Innovation team is that it is critical to the future
  of the city that this situation be remedied and that the
  District become a leader in technology business
  innovation
 1                    Gray Transition: Technology Business Innovation
Why are technology, entrepreneurial education and
    startups critical to District Job Creation?

    DC ranks 51st for high school graduates
    Between 2008 and 2018, the District of Columbia will
     create 225,000 job vacancies.                                    The District of Columbia’s rank in jobs forecast for 2018, by
    157,000 of these job vacancies will be for those with                                 education level.
     postsecondary credentials, 45,000 for high school              Education level           2018 Jobs                Rank
     graduates and only 23,000 for high school dropouts.            High school                 78,000                   20
                                                                    dropouts
    • 71% of all jobs in the District of Columbia (500,000
     jobs) will require some postsecondary training beyond          High school                155,000                   51
                                                                    graduates
     high school in 2018.
            Source: GU Center for Education and the Workforce      Some college, no           116,000                   51
                                                                    degree
    There is a common misperception that the next wave
                                                                    Associate’s degree          28,000                   51
     advanced technology R&D jobs require advanced
     graduate degrees
                                                                    Bachelor’s degree          188,000                   4
    According to the NSF, 71% of the 2.8 million jobs being
     created through advanced R&D programs will be ideal
                                                                    Graduate degree            211,000                   1
     for High School graduates with 2 years of post
     secondary education
    BOTTOM LINE: DC needs technology companies to create
     great jobs for our youth AND our Schools need to produce
     technically competent 2-4 year degreed students with 21st
     century skills in science, technology or entrepreneurship in
     order to move the city forward…

         4                          Gray Transition: Technology Business Innovation
Operating Assumptions
       Short Term – Spark Innovation
           The city faces enormous budgetary challenges today
           Many of best initiatives would be low or no cost or could leverage the DC’s unused
            resources
           The Obama administration recently kicked off Startup America
           Short term we recommend aggressively rolling out and marketing a series of low cost
            initiatives marketed as “Startup DC”
       Medium Term – Address Drag on the Ecosystem
           It is critical that the city invest in technical and entrepreneurial education of its youth
           It is critical that the city update its laws, regulations and policies to shed its reputation as
            hostile to small innovative businesses
           We recommend that the Gray administration create a comprehensive plan and
            permanent entity for encouraging technology business innovation
       Long Term – Continuously invest in technology business
        ecosystem
           Having addressed short and medium term priorities, the District will be well positioned to
            compete regionally, nationally and internationally when the economy comes back
           By this time the District should have a comprehensive strategic plan to invest
            continuously in:
               Having at least one nationally recognized research University inside the city in key government
                service verticals
                The ongoing education of youth and emerging workforce in math, science, technology and
                entrepreneurship
               Permanent high technology resources, campuses and capital equipment to attract the best R&D
    1           and scientific talent in the world to locate their companies inInnovation of Columbia
                                   Gray Transition: Technology Business the District
DC SWOT Analysis
Strengths:
   There is a thriving if underserved entrepreneurial tech ecosystem already in DC
   Ability of StartUps to work with Government is one of strongest competitive advantages of DC location
   Federal laboratories and major technology early adoptors are here (NRL, NASA, NIST, NSF, DoD, NIH,
      NASA)
   Regional University programs are solid and UMD has one of the top engineering schools in country
   DC is vibrant, attractive world class city that can attract talent from around the world
Weaknesses:
   DC Gov has never had a comprehensive strategy for technology business innvoation and must catch up
   Reputation is that DC is unreceptive to entrepreneurship and does not promote it in education and job
      training
   DC does not currently provide competitive services to startup ecosystem (access, capital, mentors, and
      incubation)
   Entrepreneurs are are afraid to locate in DC because of DCPS high dropout rates and poor workforce
      readiness
   No world class engineering programs in the city and workforce ill prepared for technical/scientific careers
Opportunities:
   Easy for Gray administration to take leadership position in tech business innovation as compared to
      predecessors
   Tight alignment with Education and Job Creation reform
   Challenging economy creates an opportunity to gain ground on region as investment has been stifled
   Low or no cost initiatives can be undertaken through creative leveraging of underutilized District assets
Threats:
   Budget crisis becomes so distracting that city is not able to execute new important long term programs
   Business Technology Innovation becomesTechnologyalong socio-economic, racial or geographical lines
                          Gray Transition: politicized Business Innovation
Technology Business Innovation Policy Goals
        Incentivize technology entrepreneurship
           Startup incubation
           Capital availability
           Market DC proximity to federal customers

        Reduction of drag and business inhibition
           Reduce regulatory burden
           Eliminate regressive business taxes
           Provide strategic tax incentives

       Education and workforce development
           Entrepreneurship Education
           Technology workforce development
           Higher Education technology transfer


    1                      Gray Transition: Technology Business Innovation
Policy Goal One: Incentivize technology
  entrepreneurship
             • Launch startup.dc.gov and announce intent to be a national and regional leader in technology business
               innovation
             • Develop/source a location for start-ups to cluster in. This building/block/zone should include an incubator
               for tech startups, as well as co-working facilities for freelancers and individual entrepreneurs.
             • Sponsor a formal matching system for entrepreneurs to meet the right investors coupled with mentorship
               program powered by seasoned entrepreneurs.
Short Term   • Announce and fund robust and effective curriculum and after-school programs with DCPS to build the
               engineering base from an early age. Invest more in technology and entrepreneurial curriculum for all age
               levels.
             • Encourage capital formation by providing tax incentives to investors: tax creditsfor investing in start-ups
               and lowering DC’s capital gains tax to make it the lowest in the region.
             • Setup a Capture Team for securing grants, federal funds, and all manner of free money for start-ups to
               leverage. DC Gov handles the process, finds the teams, and start-ups build the solutions.
             • Grow the available talent pool by aggressively partnering with university Computer Science programs, and
 Medium        by launching a national PR campaign highlighting DC base tech start-ups.
  Term       • Work on convincing large, innovative companies to put satellite offices in DC
             • Leverage StartUp America funding opportunities to attract investment in the District
             • Create permanent entity tasked with incentivizing and investing in technology entrepreneurship in the
               District
             • Invest strategically in facilities and advanced equipment to make available to R&D companies in the
               District
             • Match Iuniversities and government labs creating Intellectual Property with startups interested in tech
               transfer
             • Consider possibility of creating advanced R&D startup incubation facility focusing on attracting
Long Term      businesses to the District leveraging SBIR and STTR programs to fund commercialization.
             • Create SBIR or other investment arm of the DC government to invest capital in local entrepreneurs
               alongside of professional
             • Consider self-employment assistance from US Department of Labor– (DE, ME, MD, NJ, NY, OR, PA all
               offer) Allows people to collect unemployment benefits if they are starting new businesses.

 8                          Gray Transition: Technology Business Innovation
Policy Goal Two: Reduction of drag and
  business inhibition
             • Survey regional startups and technology companies and survey them about why they chose to locate in
               MD and VA
             • Survey advisors, investors and lawyers about why they are advising startups to locate in MD and VA
             • Reach out to District entrepreneurs and learn where dealing with the Dc gov causes pain, cost and
Short Term     frustration
             • Put together plan to address concerns and publicize plan to address through dc.gov and town halls

             • Partner with the city council to identify bad legislation and create a plan for making DC entrepreneur
               friendly
             • Bear down with DCRA and other agencies to streamline processes for starting ventures in DC
             • Introduce legislation giving the mayor’s office authority to reduce taxes and create incentives on par with
               programs offered at surrounding jurisdictions
             • Systematically eliminate or change legislation that is overtly hostile to startups and technology business
 Medium        formation
  Term       • Do a public outreach campaign locally, regionally and nationally regarding commitment to StartUp DC
             • Consider elimination of gerrymandered tech tax incentive programs. They don’t work. Incentive startups
               throughout city

             • In the long term the District will need to work on policies to RETAIN the technology companies it attracts
             • It is a point of pride in the District that we have the most labor friendly worker’s compensation, insurance,
               and liability policies and regulations of any jurisdiction in the United States
             • If we intend to retain technology companies we incubate it will be important for the District Government to
Long Term      either refactor these policies or counteract them with a clearly articulated set of compensatory incentives
               for large government shareholders




 9                         Gray Transition: Technology Business Innovation
Policy Goal Three: Education and workforce
  development
             •Announce effective curriculum and after-school programs with DCPS to build the technical base from an early age.
             •Take a field trip to GW, UMD, MTech, NVTC, TedCo and CIT to look at some of their programs as best practices.
             •Focus on improving Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) opportunities to bring more training
              and entrepreneurship education to schools at all levels
             •Tap into existing networks of entrepreneurial talent to provide mentorship and access for aspiring entrepreneurs and
Short Term    technologists: NFTE, GWU office of entrepreneurship, UDC center for urban entrepreneurship, MTech, Dingman
              Center, Social Matchbox, Tech Cocktail, Affinity, DC E-week, EO, YPO, Vistage and Sptringboard.
             •Coordinate with UDC and Community college to prepare for
             •Introduce entrepreneurial educational models directly to the schools (e.g. NFTE, Year Up and the Youthbuild Model)
             •Integrate Entrepreneurial leaders into the classrooms to bring real life mentoring and access to learning of the
              business world
             •Bring Career Technology Education to the forefront with required courses that include: decision making, problem
              solving, financial literacy, STEM skills and Entrepreneurship for all DC youth.
 Medium      • Integrate internships especially at the college level to make learning relevant and practical.
  Term       •Build an Adopt a Class Model to connect businesses to schools through Public/Private partnership model
             •Indentify STEM aptitude at an early age and deliver specialized educational opportunities to help resident youth
              reach full potential


             •Invest more in technology and entrepreneurial curriculum for all age level including establishment of at least one
              world class engineering and technical University program
             • Augment traditional teaching at DCPS through online education for specialized technical education for DC youth
             •Build a culture around entrepreneurship (small business is a proven motivator for high school students) that is linked
              to high school graduation and college attendance.
             •Establish a pipeline or pathway model (e.g. NFTE Pathway model) from middle school to high school with
Long Term     programming that includes Dual Enrollment College Credit to incentivize graduation and college attendance.
             •Create 2 year technical degree certificate programs at UDC and the new community college in support of staffing
              startup ecosystem as it grows from StartUp DC programs




 10                          Gray Transition: Technology Business Innovation
Request for Immediate Action
The recommends the following immediate action:
       Appoint an internal champion for this initiative (DM of Economic Development? Office of Planning?
        DCRA?)
       Establish website and branding for startup.dc.gov and announce intent to be a national and
        regional leader in technology business innovation
       Identify an underused or unutilized property belongning to the DC govennment and turn it into a
        temporary technology incubator through a public private partnership with a local devloper.
        (unoccupied school such as Stevens or an unopened library or unoccupied office space)
       Sponsor a formal matching system for entrepreneurs to meet the right investors coupled with
        mentorship program powered by seasoned entrepreneurs. Leverage this matching system both for
        entrepreneurs and workforce readiness
       Announce intention to establish effective curriculum and after-school programs with DCPS to build
        the engineering base from an early age.
       Begin surveys of local and regional businesses to identify legistlative and regulatory changes
        needed to improve DC’s reputation as a technology business innovator
       Launch at least one innovative tax incentive program to encourage investors to consider StartUp
        DC and get engaged.
           DC govt could offer an investment tax credit to DC residents investing in DC start ups. Credits might be structured to
            enable a near zero sum game for the DC tax coffers in the short term.
           For example, DC resident invests $10k this year in a DC company and is able to deduct a $2.5k tax credit in each of the
            next four years. The start up receiving the investment puts it to work immediately to hire and grow which creates tax
            reveunes (pay roll, rent related, incremental sales taxes, etc).



    1                                Gray Transition: Technology Business Innovation

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DC Technology Business Innovation recommendations

  • 1. Technology Business Innovation Transition Team Overview 1 Gray Transition: Technology Business Innovation March 6, 2011
  • 2. Process We gathered more than 20 of the most respected business technology leaders in the region and asked them to help guide us to transform the District’s Technology Business Ecosystem Group included:  Serial Entreprenuers  Venture Capitalists  Angel Investors  Gov 2.0 experts  Digital Impressarios  University Technology Incubation and tech transfer experts  Government Technology and Gov 2.0 Leaders  Workforce Development Experts  Economists  Visionaries This group of technologists turned to the Internet to “crowdsource” ideas for the region by posing a series of questions on the Transition Team’s behalf on Quora a new Internet platform for harvesting knowledge out of a community of experts. This is what we learned: 1 Gray Transition: Technology Business Innovation
  • 3. Problem Statement The District of Columbia has been consistently rated last, or near last, by independent studies of jurisdictions attractive to small technology enterprises. Given that:  60 to 80 percent of net new jobs are created by small businesses;  technology is projected to be the second strongest job creation industry over the next seven years;  the fact that DC is surrounded by attractive business technology ecosystems The consensus of every member of the Technology Business Innovation team is that it is critical to the future of the city that this situation be remedied and that the District become a leader in technology business innovation 1 Gray Transition: Technology Business Innovation
  • 4. Why are technology, entrepreneurial education and startups critical to District Job Creation?  DC ranks 51st for high school graduates  Between 2008 and 2018, the District of Columbia will create 225,000 job vacancies. The District of Columbia’s rank in jobs forecast for 2018, by  157,000 of these job vacancies will be for those with education level. postsecondary credentials, 45,000 for high school Education level 2018 Jobs Rank graduates and only 23,000 for high school dropouts. High school 78,000 20 dropouts  • 71% of all jobs in the District of Columbia (500,000 jobs) will require some postsecondary training beyond High school 155,000 51 graduates high school in 2018.  Source: GU Center for Education and the Workforce Some college, no 116,000 51 degree  There is a common misperception that the next wave Associate’s degree 28,000 51 advanced technology R&D jobs require advanced graduate degrees Bachelor’s degree 188,000 4  According to the NSF, 71% of the 2.8 million jobs being created through advanced R&D programs will be ideal Graduate degree 211,000 1 for High School graduates with 2 years of post secondary education  BOTTOM LINE: DC needs technology companies to create great jobs for our youth AND our Schools need to produce technically competent 2-4 year degreed students with 21st century skills in science, technology or entrepreneurship in order to move the city forward… 4 Gray Transition: Technology Business Innovation
  • 5. Operating Assumptions  Short Term – Spark Innovation  The city faces enormous budgetary challenges today  Many of best initiatives would be low or no cost or could leverage the DC’s unused resources  The Obama administration recently kicked off Startup America  Short term we recommend aggressively rolling out and marketing a series of low cost initiatives marketed as “Startup DC”  Medium Term – Address Drag on the Ecosystem  It is critical that the city invest in technical and entrepreneurial education of its youth  It is critical that the city update its laws, regulations and policies to shed its reputation as hostile to small innovative businesses  We recommend that the Gray administration create a comprehensive plan and permanent entity for encouraging technology business innovation  Long Term – Continuously invest in technology business ecosystem  Having addressed short and medium term priorities, the District will be well positioned to compete regionally, nationally and internationally when the economy comes back  By this time the District should have a comprehensive strategic plan to invest continuously in:  Having at least one nationally recognized research University inside the city in key government service verticals  The ongoing education of youth and emerging workforce in math, science, technology and entrepreneurship  Permanent high technology resources, campuses and capital equipment to attract the best R&D 1 and scientific talent in the world to locate their companies inInnovation of Columbia Gray Transition: Technology Business the District
  • 6. DC SWOT Analysis Strengths: There is a thriving if underserved entrepreneurial tech ecosystem already in DC Ability of StartUps to work with Government is one of strongest competitive advantages of DC location Federal laboratories and major technology early adoptors are here (NRL, NASA, NIST, NSF, DoD, NIH, NASA) Regional University programs are solid and UMD has one of the top engineering schools in country DC is vibrant, attractive world class city that can attract talent from around the world Weaknesses: DC Gov has never had a comprehensive strategy for technology business innvoation and must catch up Reputation is that DC is unreceptive to entrepreneurship and does not promote it in education and job training DC does not currently provide competitive services to startup ecosystem (access, capital, mentors, and incubation) Entrepreneurs are are afraid to locate in DC because of DCPS high dropout rates and poor workforce readiness No world class engineering programs in the city and workforce ill prepared for technical/scientific careers Opportunities: Easy for Gray administration to take leadership position in tech business innovation as compared to predecessors Tight alignment with Education and Job Creation reform Challenging economy creates an opportunity to gain ground on region as investment has been stifled Low or no cost initiatives can be undertaken through creative leveraging of underutilized District assets Threats: Budget crisis becomes so distracting that city is not able to execute new important long term programs Business Technology Innovation becomesTechnologyalong socio-economic, racial or geographical lines Gray Transition: politicized Business Innovation
  • 7. Technology Business Innovation Policy Goals Incentivize technology entrepreneurship  Startup incubation  Capital availability  Market DC proximity to federal customers Reduction of drag and business inhibition  Reduce regulatory burden  Eliminate regressive business taxes  Provide strategic tax incentives  Education and workforce development  Entrepreneurship Education  Technology workforce development  Higher Education technology transfer 1 Gray Transition: Technology Business Innovation
  • 8. Policy Goal One: Incentivize technology entrepreneurship • Launch startup.dc.gov and announce intent to be a national and regional leader in technology business innovation • Develop/source a location for start-ups to cluster in. This building/block/zone should include an incubator for tech startups, as well as co-working facilities for freelancers and individual entrepreneurs. • Sponsor a formal matching system for entrepreneurs to meet the right investors coupled with mentorship program powered by seasoned entrepreneurs. Short Term • Announce and fund robust and effective curriculum and after-school programs with DCPS to build the engineering base from an early age. Invest more in technology and entrepreneurial curriculum for all age levels. • Encourage capital formation by providing tax incentives to investors: tax creditsfor investing in start-ups and lowering DC’s capital gains tax to make it the lowest in the region. • Setup a Capture Team for securing grants, federal funds, and all manner of free money for start-ups to leverage. DC Gov handles the process, finds the teams, and start-ups build the solutions. • Grow the available talent pool by aggressively partnering with university Computer Science programs, and Medium by launching a national PR campaign highlighting DC base tech start-ups. Term • Work on convincing large, innovative companies to put satellite offices in DC • Leverage StartUp America funding opportunities to attract investment in the District • Create permanent entity tasked with incentivizing and investing in technology entrepreneurship in the District • Invest strategically in facilities and advanced equipment to make available to R&D companies in the District • Match Iuniversities and government labs creating Intellectual Property with startups interested in tech transfer • Consider possibility of creating advanced R&D startup incubation facility focusing on attracting Long Term businesses to the District leveraging SBIR and STTR programs to fund commercialization. • Create SBIR or other investment arm of the DC government to invest capital in local entrepreneurs alongside of professional • Consider self-employment assistance from US Department of Labor– (DE, ME, MD, NJ, NY, OR, PA all offer) Allows people to collect unemployment benefits if they are starting new businesses. 8 Gray Transition: Technology Business Innovation
  • 9. Policy Goal Two: Reduction of drag and business inhibition • Survey regional startups and technology companies and survey them about why they chose to locate in MD and VA • Survey advisors, investors and lawyers about why they are advising startups to locate in MD and VA • Reach out to District entrepreneurs and learn where dealing with the Dc gov causes pain, cost and Short Term frustration • Put together plan to address concerns and publicize plan to address through dc.gov and town halls • Partner with the city council to identify bad legislation and create a plan for making DC entrepreneur friendly • Bear down with DCRA and other agencies to streamline processes for starting ventures in DC • Introduce legislation giving the mayor’s office authority to reduce taxes and create incentives on par with programs offered at surrounding jurisdictions • Systematically eliminate or change legislation that is overtly hostile to startups and technology business Medium formation Term • Do a public outreach campaign locally, regionally and nationally regarding commitment to StartUp DC • Consider elimination of gerrymandered tech tax incentive programs. They don’t work. Incentive startups throughout city • In the long term the District will need to work on policies to RETAIN the technology companies it attracts • It is a point of pride in the District that we have the most labor friendly worker’s compensation, insurance, and liability policies and regulations of any jurisdiction in the United States • If we intend to retain technology companies we incubate it will be important for the District Government to Long Term either refactor these policies or counteract them with a clearly articulated set of compensatory incentives for large government shareholders 9 Gray Transition: Technology Business Innovation
  • 10. Policy Goal Three: Education and workforce development •Announce effective curriculum and after-school programs with DCPS to build the technical base from an early age. •Take a field trip to GW, UMD, MTech, NVTC, TedCo and CIT to look at some of their programs as best practices. •Focus on improving Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) opportunities to bring more training and entrepreneurship education to schools at all levels •Tap into existing networks of entrepreneurial talent to provide mentorship and access for aspiring entrepreneurs and Short Term technologists: NFTE, GWU office of entrepreneurship, UDC center for urban entrepreneurship, MTech, Dingman Center, Social Matchbox, Tech Cocktail, Affinity, DC E-week, EO, YPO, Vistage and Sptringboard. •Coordinate with UDC and Community college to prepare for •Introduce entrepreneurial educational models directly to the schools (e.g. NFTE, Year Up and the Youthbuild Model) •Integrate Entrepreneurial leaders into the classrooms to bring real life mentoring and access to learning of the business world •Bring Career Technology Education to the forefront with required courses that include: decision making, problem solving, financial literacy, STEM skills and Entrepreneurship for all DC youth. Medium • Integrate internships especially at the college level to make learning relevant and practical. Term •Build an Adopt a Class Model to connect businesses to schools through Public/Private partnership model •Indentify STEM aptitude at an early age and deliver specialized educational opportunities to help resident youth reach full potential •Invest more in technology and entrepreneurial curriculum for all age level including establishment of at least one world class engineering and technical University program • Augment traditional teaching at DCPS through online education for specialized technical education for DC youth •Build a culture around entrepreneurship (small business is a proven motivator for high school students) that is linked to high school graduation and college attendance. •Establish a pipeline or pathway model (e.g. NFTE Pathway model) from middle school to high school with Long Term programming that includes Dual Enrollment College Credit to incentivize graduation and college attendance. •Create 2 year technical degree certificate programs at UDC and the new community college in support of staffing startup ecosystem as it grows from StartUp DC programs 10 Gray Transition: Technology Business Innovation
  • 11. Request for Immediate Action The recommends the following immediate action:  Appoint an internal champion for this initiative (DM of Economic Development? Office of Planning? DCRA?)  Establish website and branding for startup.dc.gov and announce intent to be a national and regional leader in technology business innovation  Identify an underused or unutilized property belongning to the DC govennment and turn it into a temporary technology incubator through a public private partnership with a local devloper. (unoccupied school such as Stevens or an unopened library or unoccupied office space)  Sponsor a formal matching system for entrepreneurs to meet the right investors coupled with mentorship program powered by seasoned entrepreneurs. Leverage this matching system both for entrepreneurs and workforce readiness  Announce intention to establish effective curriculum and after-school programs with DCPS to build the engineering base from an early age.  Begin surveys of local and regional businesses to identify legistlative and regulatory changes needed to improve DC’s reputation as a technology business innovator  Launch at least one innovative tax incentive program to encourage investors to consider StartUp DC and get engaged.  DC govt could offer an investment tax credit to DC residents investing in DC start ups. Credits might be structured to enable a near zero sum game for the DC tax coffers in the short term.  For example, DC resident invests $10k this year in a DC company and is able to deduct a $2.5k tax credit in each of the next four years. The start up receiving the investment puts it to work immediately to hire and grow which creates tax reveunes (pay roll, rent related, incremental sales taxes, etc). 1 Gray Transition: Technology Business Innovation