FIRM RAISES $38M TO FUND STARTUPS North Coast Ventures tapped more than 200 investors to create two new funds.
SMALL BUSINESS: Pandemic exposes fragility of local child-care industry. PAGE 10
PAGE 7 CRAINSCLEVELAND.COM I FEBRUARY 7, 2022
‘THE OPPORTUNITY IS ’
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Dragon Seats on quest to grow bench business BY JOE SCALZO
The most successful bench-warmer in the NFL is a 69-year-old Clevelander who flies helicopters in his free time, calls sleep a “waste of time” and who runs his company
with the energy and the work ethic of a 29-year-old, mainly because he believes he has a good 40 years still left in him. “I’ll work until I’m 110,” said Frank Floyd, who then grinned and nodded to his kids. “Until they tell me to go.”
Floyd is the founder, CEO, president and chairman of Bourne Creation L.L.C., a holding company that designs, manufactures, sells, distributes and services heated — and, as of last fall, air-conditioned — benches under the name Dragon Seats.
Those benches can be found on the sidelines of 21 NFL teams, not to mention dozens of college football stadiums, college baseball dugouts, golf courses, tennis courts, ski resorts and anywhere else where you might want to heat (or
cool) your backfield — or your backside. See DRAGON SEATS on Page 20 A Cleveland Browns Dragon Seats bench at FirstEnergy Stadium. | DRAGON SEATS
Nonprofits look to aid minority developers
Strong manufacturing M&A market continues
BY MICHELLE JARBOE
BY RACHEL ABBEY MCCAFFERTY
Two Cleveland nonprofits hope to help minority real estate developers scale up, with a new training program that, they say, must be part of a broader systemic shift. Cleveland Development Advisors and Village Capital Corp. are exploring the potential for a local version of the Equitable Development Initiative, an effort born in Detroit in 2018. Created by Capital Impact Partners, a nonprofit lender based in
Washington, D.C., the program is designed for minority developers with some experience in the industry. Participants not only take classes but also work with mentors and get assistance finding financing for deals. The local push, toward a program launch this year, reflects a growing recognition that there are few developers in Cleveland who identify with the communities where they’re building. See DEVELOPERS on Page 21
NEWSPAPER
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A rendering shows one of the early homes planned at the Allen Estates, a project in Hough being tackled by two Black, female developers. | UBIQUITOUS DESIGN
THE
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It’s a good time to want to sell a manufacturing business. Or to buy one. The local M&A market is “robust” in all verticals, said Ben Cooke, shareholder in the corporate transactions group with Wickens Herzer Panza in Avon. There’s strong demand from private equity, he said, and the demographics are ripe for sales, as owners reach an age where they want to exit their businesses.
“The competition for deals right now is just remarkable,” he said. Deal volumes and values were both up significantly in 2021 in the industrial manufacturing and automotive space, according to PwC’s 2022 M&A outlook for the sectors. Part of the reason for this growth was “pent-up demand,” said Michelle Tomchak Ritchie, U.S. industrial products deals leader with professional services firm PwC. And See M&A MARKET on Page 19
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