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Saturday, July 11, 2009

Entrepreneurs from Uptown aim to sell 1 million t-shirts

They hope to unite entrepreneurs under a common slogan -- and then give a ton of money to charity.

— Recent Southern Methodist University grads Blaine Iler and Ben Hurt took their diplomas and went bright-eyed into the world, ready for 9-to-5 employment. What you're about to hear is all to familiar: Despite their experience and excitement, Iler's job offers didn't pan out like planned. Hurt was equally jaded. The economic downturn hit their generation especially hard, yet the tireless twosome weren't prepared to take it.

Blaine Iler, left, with partner Ben Hurt, say, "Entrepreneurship is the answer."
Blaine Iler, left, with partner Ben Hurt, say, "Entrepreneurship is the answer."

They looked to their entrepreneurial ventures from college. Many have taken this route: Statistics from the "Kauffman Index of Entrepreneurial Activity" show that the Dallas-Fort Worth area in 2008 had 420 entrepreneurs per 100,000 people. In comparison, Houston has significantly fewer. Dallas also outranks the Texas average.

Iler and Hurt decided there had to be “at least a million people” who were experiencing their plight. And the number stuck. “You don't have to accept things,” Iler says. “You can start a business. And oh, by the way, you can start it with a philanthropic purpose. There's got to be a million people thinking the same way.”

The giving-back mentality has defined their new business, launched July 4. Dare to Give, as it's called, aims to sell 1 million t-shirts with a slogan that reads “life. liberty. happiness.” They leaned on past businesses -- both the success of Iler's software biz called BravoLog and the failure of Hurt's past t-shirt biz – and decided they had the know-how to make this thing work.

“We like to learn by doing,” Iler says. “And we made mistakes in our other businesses. But wouldn't it be great if we could have everyone in America united around making things better, thinking outside the box, and helping philanthropically?” By wearing the shirt, they hope people will view it as an outward symbol of success through entrepreneurialism. Iler and Hurt are selling the shirts for $17.76 -- a throwback to the American Revolution -- to unite 1 million people under the entrepreneurial umbrella.

Here's the logo for the t-shirt.
Here's the logo for the t-shirt.

And now the numbers: Half of their profits will go to a variety of charities. Iler says philanthropy is “one of the things that makes this country great.” He's been a volunteer EMT for several years and recently joined a prison entrepreneurship group, where he'll teach inmates to write business plans if they choose to start their own business when they're released. His partner, Hurt, has also been heavily involved in volunteerism, and the two decided that their business would only succeed if it proved to other entrepreneurs that humanitarianism is as important as hard cash.

The kickback for Iler and Hurt, if they sell 1 million shirts and give half to charity, is around $5 to $7 million after taxes.

About 50 shirts have been sold thus far. Iler has an agreement with the American Heart Assciation and plans to establish national partnerships with other charities. They'll give a direct contribution as shirts are sold -- as opposed to paying out after they're all sold. He also wants to do several iterations of the shirt, changing it up for college students at SMU, or for St. Patrick's Day, or for a Susan G. Komen event, for instance. (All big Dallas things, as you know.)

So here starts their big push as they share their message: “This is a story of two college kids facing a recession and doing something about it -- instead of sitting back and waiting for things to get better,” Iler says. “Entrepreneurship is the answer.”



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Russ Vandeveerdonk, says:

FANTABULOUS! Way to go Blaine and Ben, good stuff men. This is just a start, I can see and feel it. Good luck, onward and upwards! I support your cause!

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5 months ago
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Scott Doyle, says:

<img src="http://img12.imageshack.us/img12/9498/underpantsgnomesplan.jpg">

Doesn't seem very entrepreneurial to be on exactly the same wavelength as a million other peeps starting a business.

Guess I fail to see how buying a t-shirt is supposed to help anybody feel better about the economy. Other than the people you're buying it from, of course.

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5 months ago
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Kirby, says:

More cowbell.

Anonymous

5 months ago
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Lisa Lawrence Merritt, says:

I would charge $19.95/ cost of shirt plus $1. to charity per shirt.

Free ad via Pegs exposure, et al and you're golden.

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5 months ago
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Jesus Valadez, says:

So uh... what are so great about these shirts?

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5 months ago
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OEsophagus, says:

Tired of looking at these tools...

Anonymous

4 months, 4 weeks ago
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What do you think?

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