Day: August 15, 2013

Age 24 | Sleeve a Message | CEO

I am a Chicago native that made my way to St. Louis. At the age of 10, I came up with the idea to place messaging on coffee sleeves. During my academic experience, I learned what it would take to make a disposable sleeve that was able to relay an updated message after studying the infamous and archaic newsvendor dilemma. Sleeve a Message was born out of a South City basement. I built a custom coffee sleeve printer, “RumpleSleeveSkin,” and grew the business to more than 100 clients relationships throughout North America in the first year.

Where did you go to high school?

New Trier High School in Winnetka, Ill.

College?

Washington University in St. Louis, Olin Business School class of 2010, B.S.B.A. in finance and health-care management.

What is the one thing you hope to accomplish in your career?

I hope to start a private equity group.

What is your most rewarding volunteer experience?

Teaching English in the new territories of Hong Kong to a class of 20 10-year-olds.

What is one thing your co-workers may not know about you?

I like YoYos and want to open up a chain of restaurants that exclusively sell pot stickers.

Source: http://www.bizjournals.com/stlouis/print-edition/2012/07/13/david-dresner.html

Sleeve a Message CEO David Dresner

Sleeve a Message CEO David Dresner

The business of printing may still be eating the trail of dust left behind by the digital age, but one St. Louis start-up is aiming to make digital printing a viable strategy in a world dominated by Twitter. Based out of T-RExSleeve a Message has developed an up-to-the-minute printing process that enables coffee shops to keep their drink sleeve messaging timely and relevant.

Unlike most sleeve printing services, Sleeve a Message has no ordering minimum and has reduced the industry standard four week lead time down to only seven days. Orders can even come with variable prints, allowing multiple messages to be shipped per case. These innovations give business owners a greater range of flexibility when it comes to ordering time sensitive promotional coffee sleeves and coasters, saving them both time and money on inventory.

Sleeve a Message Coffee Sleeve Printing Turns Coffee Sleeves into an Artist's Canvas

Sleeve a Message Coffee Sleeve Printing Turns Coffee Sleeve into an Artist’s Canvas

Sleeve a Message founder David Dresner said his inspiration for the company came from as far back as his childhood. “I was ten. I was at a hotel in California on vacation and we had ordered Chinese food,” said Dresner. “We had coffee cups on the table and I was wondering, ‘Why not put fortunes on the sleeve?’” Dresner said the idea stuck with ever since, even as he was in business school studying the news vendor dilemma — a problem in which the amount of newspaper inventory can be difficult to determine due to uncertain daily demand.

“Coffee sleeves suffer the same thing,” explained Dresner, pointing to Valentine’s Day promotions as one of the best examples. “You might sell 1,000 or 2,000, but they’re not relevant the next day. The only way to cure that is to print at the point of sale.”

Dresner’s answer to the dilemma is the Sleeve a Message centralized sleeve printer — the RumpleSleeveSkin, as he’s named it. The printer can produce 500 sleeves a minute and handle a variety of up to 20 different labels per box. It even keeps count of how many sleeves printed off, auto-ordering more when necessary while taking into account lead time. With more than 200 coffee shops and college campuses around the US already onbaord, the St. Louis company is set to sign up some major chains going into 2013, including Panera and Anheuser-Busch.

In the future Dresner plans to make the Sleeve a Message product into a “drinkable channel,” where business owners can schedule RSS feeds onto static packaging. The goal for Sleeve a Message is to bring its innovative printer into each cafe, giving business owners the power to disseminate live campaigns on the spot.

Sleeve a Message was responsible for setting up T-REx’s in-house cafe, Jurassic Perk, which caters to the startups operating out of the downtown coworking space. When asked about his affinity for puns, Dresner said it’s all part of the creative nature of his business. “We want to make people laugh, that was really my inspiration,” said Dresner. “When I’m in a coffee shop and see people lift up their coffee and read it and get a little smile, that joy lights me up. If I can make somebody laugh or smirk I feel like I’ve won.”

By:

Corey Cummings

Corey is a graduate of the University of Wisconsin in Madison where he received degrees in English and Creative Writing. He currently lives in Chicago and enjoys alternately obsessing over video games that aren’t out yet and crazy gadgets he can’t afford.

Source: http://techli.com/sleeve-a-message