Annual ranking showcases the 100 fastest-growing inner city businesses in America.
SAN DIEGO, CA – Initiative for a Competitive Inner City (ICIC) and Bloomberg BusinessWeek released the 2010 Inner City 100 list of the fastest-growing inner city companies in the U.S. Red Door Interactive from San Diego ranked 32 on this year’s list. The Inner City 100 program recognizes successful inner city companies and their CEO’s as role models for entrepreneurship, innovative business practices and job creation in America’s urban communities.
The rankings for each company were announced at the Inner City 100 Awards Dinner on Wednesday, May 5, 2010 in Boston, MA. Winners attended a two-day event featuring seminars for Inner City 100 owners and managers at Harvard Business School, a reception at the Boston Public Library and an Awards Gala that drew more than 800 guests.
The Inner City 100 list provides unmatched original data on the fastest growing inner-city businesses in the U.S. In the last 12 years, 607 different companies have earned positions on the Inner City 100, collectively generating more than $27.2 billion in revenues and creating nearly 72,000 new jobs.
For the 2010 list, a record number of nominations were received. Winners represent a wide span of geography, operating in 58 cities and 34 states. The 2010 Inner City 100 winners grew at a compound annual growth rate of 37 percent and an average standard growth rate of 340 percent between 2003 and 2008. Collectively, the top 100 inner city businesses employ 10,700 employees and have created more than 6,300 new jobs between 2004 and 2008.
“We are delighted to celebrate businesses like Red Door Interactive that are playing a critical role in revitalizing America’s urban communities. Through their achievements, the Inner City 100 winning companies exemplify America’s remarkable potential and the road to future economic recovery,” Mary Kay Leonard, ICIC president and CEO. “These extraordinary companies demonstrate the market possibilities that exist within our inner cities. If we can leverage these possibilities, we can create jobs, income and wealth for local residents and produce the next chapter of American innovation and opportunity.”
Eighty-five percent of companies expect steady growth and 27 percent expect their revenues to grow more than 30 percent. Individually, the median Inner City 100 Company’s revenues were $6.6 million. This year’s winners have a median employee turnover rate of less than 8 percent and 96 percent of them provide health insurance to their workers.
“It’s a great honor to be named to the Inner City 100 list for the second straight year and as we continue to expand, it’s our goal to continue providing productive environments for all of our team members in places that best suite their lifestyle and location preferences,” said Reid Carr, President for Red Door Interactive. “We currently have offices in downtown San Diego and Denver as well as a Southern California coastal location in Carlsbad. The key to making it all work seamlessly is the investment in technology that allows our employees the opportunity to work close to a beach, mountain or urban setting. Hiring talented individuals who are passionate about their work allows us to provide these work environments.”
The list is proof of concept that doing business in an inner city area holds a distinct competitive advantage. ICIC has been studying the economic condition of the largest 100 American cities for more than a decade and is working to revitalize inner cities across the country.
Highlights of the 2010 Inner City 100 list include:
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Notes:
To qualify for the Inner City 100 list, companies were required to have at least 51 percent of their operations located in an economically distressed urban area; have at least 10 full-time employees; and a five-year operating sales history that includes at least $200,000 in revenues in the first year of consideration, an increase in year five sales over year four sales, and fifth-year sales of at least $1 million. For the 2010 list, ICIC looked at total revenue growth from 2004 to 2008, and the specific rankings were based on these growth rates. An economically distressed urban area is defined by ICIC as having a 50 percent higher unemployment level, 50 percent higher poverty level, and 50 percent lower median income than the metropolitan statistical area.
Inner City 100 Sponsors: Bank of America, Chevron Corporation, Goldman Sachs and Staples Foundation for Learning.
About Red Door Interactive
Headquartered in San Diego, Red Door Interactive Inc. manages clients’ online presence by analyzing their unique challenges, advising them on Internet-based solutions and implementing strategies to help them along their path toward e-business. Clients include Rubio’s, Souplantation & Sweet Tomatoes Restaurants, eSet, Cricket Communications, and California Avocado Commission. Find out more about Red Door Interactive at http://www.reddoor.biz
Media Contact:
David Oates
Stalwart Communications
david@stalwartcom.com
858.750.5560
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