Crain's Cleveland Business

Page 1

AN INTRODUCTION New Crain’s group publisher Jim Kirk greets readers in Cleveland.

AKRON: Student housing building will convert to market-rate apartments. PAGE 33

PAGE 6

CRAINSCLEVELAND.COM I JANUARY 18, 2021

EDUCATION

University’s prison program is embroiled in controversy

ROCKET RISE REAL ESTATE

Most of Ashland’s 2020 undergrad enrollees are distance learning inmates

SPORTS BUSINESS

’Now the fun begins’ for fast-growing BoxCast $20M Series A round will accelerate growth

BY AMY MORONA

BY KEVIN KLEPS

Kristen Haley Theriot made her first and only visit to the campus of Ashland University in December 2018. She left with a purple blanket, a portfolio with the school’s logo and an associate’s degree. The 33-year-old’s classes were completed far from the small campus, though. Theriot took them from a Louisiana prison, where she was serving time for armed robbery. “I was able to accomplish one of the things I thought I’d never be able to accomplish ever in my entire life,” she said. The majority of the 6,350 undergraduates enrolled in Ashland’s courses this past fall are in prisons across 10 states and in Washington, D.C. No other college is in as many different prisons in as many other states. Its closest national competitor enrolled fewer than half of the students Ashland did last year. The private Christian university nestled in the middle of Ohio is now a giant in America’s prison education landscape. Its rise has come with a hefty dose of criticism. “There has to be a quality of that journey for people that builds their confidence and their skills, and that’s oriented toward degrees that are going to be valued out in the workplace,” said Ann Jacobs, who has worked for decades in the sector in New York state. “I’m not sure that anything about the way Ashland approaches this is going to produce that result.”

Rocket’s top human resources executive confirmed the broad strokes of the company’s growth plans during a recent interview. “This a testament to our commitment to Cleveland,” said Mike Malloy, whose formal title is chief amazement officer. He said Rocket routinely weighs adding jobs in Cleveland against hiring in its hometown, bulking up a mortgage banking center in Phoenix and recruiting remote workers. Now, through what he described as a “partnership” with the city, Cleveland stands to notch more wins.

Prior to the pandemic, BoxCast, in the words of board member Mike Marchetti, “was on a great sales great trajectory.” The Cleveland company’s revenue and customer base were increasing, and a 2019 acquisition strengthened a core component of its business. But COVID-19, Daily with large in-person events put on hold and more people staying home, sped everything up for a business that prides itself on delivering high-quality, easyto-use streaming services. In December, BoxCast raised $20 million in Series A funding. At the time, the company had 56 employees and revenue had tripled in the last year. By the end of 2021, BoxCast expects its headcount to reach at least 100. “We’d be lying if we didn’t say that behaviors around COVID match quite well with livestreaming technology,” said Sam Brenner, the company’s chief operating officer. Later this year, as COVID-19 vaccines are more widely distributed and conditions improve, in-person gatherings will increase. Still, Gordon Daily, who co-founded BoxCast in 2013, is confident that demand will continue to rise. “It’s not like it’s going to drop off,” said Daily, the company’s CEO. “The customers we have, none really stop streaming once they start streaming, because people really start to depend on it.”

See ROCKET on Page 36

See BOXCAST on Page 36

See ASHLAND on Page 36

Rocket Mortgage employs nearly 700 people in Cleveland, at offices in the Higbee Building downtown. The Detroit-based company plans to double that in the next five years, in a deal that hinges on securing incentives from the city, state and JobsOhio. | ROCKET COS.

Mortgage giant eyes 700-job expansion in downtown Cleveland BY MICHELLE JARBOE | Rocket Mortgage, the mortgage

giant formerly known as Quicken Loans, is eyeing an expansion that would bring 700 new jobs to downtown Cleveland over the next five years. The Detroit-based company already employs nearly 700 people at its Cleveland office, a mortgage banking hub tucked inside the Higbee Building just off Public Square. Local economic development officials have been working on an incentive package to double that headcount in a deal that would create more than $50 million in additional payroll and bring welcome investment to a central business district grappling with fallout from the pandemic.

NEWSPAPER

VOL. 42, NO. 2 l COPYRIGHT 2021 CRAIN COMMUNICATIONS INC. l ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

P001_CL_20210118.indd 1

FOCUS | LEGAL AFFAIRS  The elephant in the boardroom: Thinking about mandatory vaccinations? You might want to think again. PAGE 8 Legal workforce: The non-attorney job market is rolling with changes in technology. PAGE 10

1/15/2021 3:19:21 PM


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Crain's Cleveland Business by Crain's Cleveland Business - Issuu