Tim Trummer Resume

tim.trummer@gmail.com    312 725 9948

#250 2506 N Clark Street  Chicago, IL 60614

 

Employment

Freelance Writer and Business Development Consultant  Chicago, IL   2006 - 2010

Beginning as a freelance business planner for venture capital firms, and building on my education and business experience, I have significant experience in web site content, marketing materials, solicitation letters, journalism, editing, and business planning.  The range of my work includes stock analysis, real estate, personal finance, science, technology, solicitation materials, and green issues.  Presently involved in the startup of several technology and marketing companies.

 

Small Business IT Consultant   Deerfield, IL   1993 - 2006

Provided trouble-free computing that met the specific needs and abilities of small business owners.  Service included hardware and software evaluation, installation, and maintenance; secure networking and internet access; web site development providing specific communication and marketing benefits. 

 

Sales Account Manager   Deluxe Media   Northbrook, IL      1982 - 1993

 Managed the $80 million Paramount Pictures Home Entertainment account.  Previous positions for Deluxe were Product Manager (packaging issues for Hollywood movie studios) and Manufacturing Manager, Packaging.

 

Manufacturing Manager   Superior Tea & Coffee   Chicago, IL

Manufacturing Supervisor   Johnson & Johnson Baby Products Company   University Park, IL

English Teacher and Coach   Rock Island Alleman High School   Rock Island, IL

 

Education

Northwestern University    Kellogg School of Business     MBA 

University of Chicago    Department of English    MA

Augustana College    Rock Island, IL    BA

Simple Guide to Text Messaging

A Simple Guide to Text Messages

from Optit.com

If you are not familiar with text messaging, you may think of it as an annoyance.  Kids and young adults sit at home or in public places and type away on their cell phones - what can they all be saying that’s so important?  

The fact is that text messaging has rapidly gained widespread acceptance all around the world as a quick and inexpensive way to communicate.  According to CTIA, an international wireless communications organization, Americans alone are sending 600 billion text messages annually as of mid-2008.

The advantages of communicating via text message are pretty straightforward once you think of them in the right way.  

  • “Texting” provides a quick and simple way to connect with another person who has a cell phone.  Most young people almost always have their cell phones with them.
  • Texting is more mobile and more immediate than email.
  • Text messaging is less intrusive than a phone call.  Phone calls interrupt activities, and you can’t take a phone call in many situations.  A text message is something you can read unobtrusively and respond to now, or later. 
  • Text messaging is short by design and by nature.  Texting doesn’t take up a lot of time.  Phone calls are long and can demand your complete attention. 

Young people increasingly prefer text messages to phone calls because they do not demand an immediate response, they do not require a lot of time and effort, and they do not call for one’s complete attention. 

 

What is a text message?  By the commonest definition, text messaging is the delivery of short, readable messages between cell phones.  It is called “text” messaging because the entire message is made up of text – no photos, sounds, or other things typically embedded in email, for example.

The rules of text messaging allow for only 160 individual characters – letters, numbers, punctuation, or symbols like ”&” common to keyboards.  Spaces count too. 

The previous paragraph consists of exactly 160 characters. 

So, you can see why text messages are filled with shortned spellings of words, little smiley face things made out of characters, and acronyms like “ttyl” for “talk to you later.” 

Text messages are short and deliver a simple message.  We all like that. 

 

Some technical information.   Without going into much detail, text messages as you know them are sent through your cell phone –obviously - and are distributed by your cell phone provider to the SMS, or Short Message System.  That’s why you will sometimes see text messaging referred to as SMS text. 

You may also see the acronym MMS, which is the Multimedia Messaging System.  This system delivers multimedia messages, and is only available on the latest 3G or Third Generation networks, and does not have the simplicity and the power of immediacy that SMS texting provides.

While most of the texting that we see on a daily basis is of the my-phone-to-your-phone type, it is also possible to send the same text message to many phones from one origination point. 

This is the service that Opt It provides. 

When you use the Opt It Mobile service, you access the service through what is called a web interface, or a web-based platform.  This means that you go to a secure page or internet address on the Opt It site that belongs to you alone.  You reach the page by signing in from the Opt It home page with your unique user name and password.  You can do this from anywhere that you have an internet connection – your place of business, your home, your iPhone or Blackberry, or from Mexico.

Once you reach your page, the process is simple. 

You decide to which of your customers this message will be delivered.  This may be all of them, or just some of them, depending upon how you learn to segment your database over time.  (One simple way would be by gender.)  Then, you compose a message of 160 characters or fewer.   You won’t have to count.  We tell you when you are out of space. 

Once you have the message and a list of recipient cell numbers, you decide to send the message now, or at some later time that you specify.  Opt It takes over at that moment, and either sends the message immediately, or sends it at the precise minute you determined. 

You can schedule multiple messages at one time to be delivered at various times in the future.  This process gives you flexibility and complete control.

We hope it goes without saying that if you send out a message offering half price drinks, you need to let the bartender know too.

How do you collect the cell phone numbers?  Your organization will do that in the traditional ways that you have collected street and email addresses.  You may think that customers will be reluctant to give up their cell phone numbers, but people are increasingly willing to do so.  This is what is called an “opt in.”  They choose to belong to your text message program with the understanding that you will only send them useful messages, and with the further understanding that they can easily “opt out” at any time.

 

Who uses text messaging?  It’s true that text messaging is used primarily by young people.    Cell phone users under the age of thirty – also called Millenials or Generation Y – live in an always-on, always-connected world.  It’s a world they’ve always known.

While this constant bombardment with information may appear overwhelming and even wrong to older generations, it seems normal to them.  They are much more willing to “opt in” to receive text messages from commercial parties than earlier generations are.  They particularly are eager to receive messages from commercial parties if those parties provide value.

Value may consist of a number of things. 

·         Information itself may be valuable – a particular artist is appearing at a club this evening.    “I’m glad I know this.”

·         Dollar discounts may provide value – this weekend a particular item is 2 for 1 at a clothing store.  “You showed me the money!”

·         Exclusivity is an upscale value - today only individuals on our text list receive 25% off.   “I’m special.”

·         Social benefits like belonging or close association are highly valued – our rooftop deck is reserved this evening only for you and your friends who receive this message.   “I belong here.”

·         The benefit of NOW, or immediacy, is valuable – this thing is taking place now, and only you know about it.  “Let’s go, it’s happening!”

Marketers who create value in this way will find receptive audiences for their messages, and will potentially tap into the entire personal network of each recipient.  “Viral” messages are called that because they spread rapidly through people who are connected to one another.  

If marketers provide value to one customer, that customer is likely to spread the word, and they have the tools to do so.  Text messaging is a highly viral medium.

EE Career

A Positively Charged Future for Electrical Engineers

The latest Department of Labor forecast is for flat job growth for engineers in the coming decade.  However, the outlook is more promising for electrical engineers.  First, the 2008 forecast did not take into account the infrastructure spending that has been approved in the interim, and that spending will have a positive effect on all engineers.  Second, it does not acknowledge that EEs are one of the growth occupations within the field of engineering.

As part of the 2009 stimulus package the Department of Energy now has $11 billion to spend on the development of the “smart grid” that is supposed to augment or replace parts of the existing electrical grid that many citizens see as vulnerable and unreliable.  Debating whether the “smart grid” is a good idea or not misses the point for us – some of that cash is going to be spent on engineering and engineers.

That $11 billion is part of a larger $70 billion in spending and tax breaks for energy projects, some of which will go to solar and wind farms.  Even the Army is looking at developing energy farms on their so-called “buffer lands” which separate their facilities from the public. 

The new push for electric cars may also build demand for electrical engineers as neighborhoods are retrofitted for home “refueling” of electric cars.  What is the likelihood of electric cars taking on a more prominent place in American transportation?  Ask fired General Motors CEO Rick Wagoner, who lost his job when his plan for transforming GM was deemed not aggressive enough. 

In addition to energy, more traditional areas of electrical engineering continue to push limits.  One of those areas is the basic research, design, and fabrication of integrated circuits. 

In 2008 we had the pleasure of talking to Voya Markovick, the Senior Vice President and CTO of Endicott Interconnect in Endicott, New York.  A veteran of IBM, Mr. Markovick is an old world gentleman with an eastern European accent who runs one of the premiere research and development efforts in the electronic packaging industry.    In what is still quaintly known as the printed circuit board industry, Mr. Markovick and his engineers create tiny substrates on which electrical circuits can be printed in ever smaller spaces, increasing their speed while diminishing their size.  Phrases like “thermoplastic resin” and “micro atomics” fill his conversation as he talks about things like printable nanocomposites that require deep thermal cycling. 

Our talk was informative and cordial until we asked a dumb question, which was whether he believed we were reaching the end of the line in terms of making things infinitesimally smaller and endlessly powerful.  Mr. Markovick was momentarily offended and sputtered, “We are in R&D!  We don’t believe in such things!”  Luckily, our response was to laugh, nervously, and then he laughed too.  This passion to push limits and barriers is one of the great assets of electrical engineers, and engineers of all kinds.  “We are not pessimists,” Mr. Markovick concluded.