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後端工程師 & DevOps @創業家兄弟Kuobrothers Corp.
2022 ~ 2024
Senior Backend Engineer | DevOps | SRE
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黃季承 Backend Developer | DevOps [email protected]我從事 5 年的電商後端開發與 1 年的 DevOps 維運,並參與超過 4 年的 Scrum 敏捷開發。後端主要負責產品功能研發、後台系統開發與既有服務重構。曾參與生活市集即享券開發,負責與合作夥伴釐清事項、跟 PM 討論整合方式、設
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National Taipei University of Technology
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Marketing Manager @幫你優股份有限公司 BoniO Inc. / 閱讀優有限公司 TaaO Company Limited
2021 ~ 现在
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李佳謙 CHIEN LI Marketing Manager / BoniO Inc. Marketing Strategy | Customer Growth 負責品牌行銷,規劃產品銷售策略,推動品牌會員成長 熟悉市場、訂閱經濟、平台營運 以終為始策略型思考,帶領團隊有效達到營運目標 工作專長 用戶、營運成長數據指標分析 Operating Data Management ● 產品市場規模及用戶調
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淡江大學
英文學系
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行銷副理 / KOL Radar 行銷科技事業部 @愛卡拉互動媒體股份有限公司
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臺北市立大學
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智慧製造全端開發工程師 @聯華電子股份有限公司
2022 ~ 现在
AI工程師、機器學習工程師、深度學習工程師、影像演算法工程師、資料科學家、Machine Learning Engineer、Deep Learning Engineer、Data Scientist
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元智大學
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資深前端工程師 @辰凝有限公司
2022 ~ 2023
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Sosuke Guo 專職於網頁前端工程師近五年,擅於從0開始打造產品,有用Vue + Golang + Python自己打造產品的經驗。 前端工程師 Front-End Developer [email protected] 作品 - SocialPicMaker.com 製作精美Twtter card 的小工具網站 只要兩個步驟,輸入網址、點擊下載,即可完成 可以選擇黑白兩種介面佈
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4 到 6 年
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Algorithm Research & Development @適着三維科技股份有限公司 TG3D Studio Inc.
2021 ~ 现在
Software Engineer
一個月內
Patrick Hsu AI Research & Development As a seasoned AI engineer with six years of experience, I specialize in computer vision, 3D body model reconstruction, generative AI, and possessing some knowledge in natural language processing (NLP). | New Taipei City, [email protected] Work Experience (6 years) Algorithm Research & Design• TG3D Studio MayPresent A skilled engineer specialized in computer vision and generative AI with experience in developing and training AI models for digital fashion applications. Body AI: Virtual Try On Integrated cutting-edge technologies such as Stable Diffusion, ControlNet, and Prompt Engineering to create a sophisticated system for
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Image Processing
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4 到 6 年
國立台灣大學
生物產業機電工程所
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Avatar of Jimmy Lu.
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Lead of Country Product Manager @Asus 華碩電腦股份有限公司
2022 ~ 2023
Business Development / Product Manager / Product Marketing/ Strategy Manager
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Jimmy Lu (呂正彥) Senior Product Manager [Consumer Electronics Expatriate PM/Sales/BD] Entrepreneurship business development & management Leadership flexible & efficient international/cross-functional organizing Target-oriented project lead & SOP consolidation, product lifecycle management Begin with the end in mind Go-to-market execution Taipei, Taiwan < > London, UK https://www.linkedin.com/in/itsjimmy/ [email protected] Work experience Senior Product Manager [Consumer NB & Gaming ] • ASUSTeK Computer Indonesia JulDec 2023 | Jakarta, Indonesia Key responsibilities & Achievements - #business management #business development #team leading #cross-functional organizing
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Cross-Functional Project Management
Product Life Cycle Management
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正在积极求职中
全职 / 对远端工作有兴趣
4 到 6 年
國立陽明交通大學(National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University)
Bachelor of management , Management of Transportation and Logistics
Avatar of Ryan Po-Hsuan Chang.
Avatar of Ryan Po-Hsuan Chang.
資深全端工程師 @誠諾工程技術股份有限公司
2023 ~ 现在
Front-End / Back-End / Full Stack Web Developer
一個月內
張栢瑄 Ryan Po-Hsuan Chang 已有五年開發經驗,擅長使用Vue + TypeScript 和Laravel 來建構網頁系統,另外也有React 和Python 的開發經驗。喜歡挑戰新事務,不怕踩坑和重構,持續精進自己的技術。 Kaohsiung City, Taiwan https://ryanxuan930.github.io/ [email protected]技能 Frontend Nuxt (Vue 3) Next (React) Pinia TypeScript Tailwind CSS SCSS PrimeVue Next UI Backend
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JavaScript
Python
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正在积极求职中
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4 到 6 年
國立中山大學 National Sun Yat-Sen University
人文暨科技跨領域學士學位學程
Avatar of 楊晟.
Avatar of 楊晟.
運維工程師 DevOps @愛盛娛樂科技有限公司
2019 ~ 现在
Java 軟體工程師
一個月內
楊晟 運維工程師 DevOps New Taipei City, Taiwan 喜歡尋找程式碼中更優雅的做法,熱衷找到更高效率、更優雅的解決方案。 喜歡尋找 Solution,討厭遷就 Workaround https://www.cakeresume.com/sam0324sam 工作經歷 運維工程師 DevOps • 愛盛娛樂科技有限公司 七月Present - 全遠端 - (作品集) 使用 Java Quarkus 開發 RESTful API 後
JAVA
JavaScript
MySQL
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正在积极求职中
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4 到 6 年
National Kaohsiung First University of Science and Technology
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Paul Schuytema

I'm a creative generalist who has the honor of working as the Executive Director of the Economic Development Alliance of Lincoln County. 


In the past 25+ years, I’ve worked as an entrepreneur, economic developer, writer, teacher, software developer, computer game designer, concert promoter, musician and creativity trainer. 


Let's see what we can build together!

[email protected]
(541) 961-8800 

Depoe Bay, OR USA

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Skillsets


Business

Economic development, Entrepreneurship training, Strategic planning, Business plan writing (narrative and financials), Team management.


Communication

Writing (technical, nonfiction, fiction, grant, web, speech), Public presentation and speaking, Classroom instruction, Marketing, Research.


Technical

Computer programing (Php, Lua, MySql), Web development (html, JavaScript, CodeIgniter, WordPress, Bootstrap, etc.), Software design.


Creative

Game design (computer and board), Creativity training, Event and concert planning, Project design, Digital art (Pixelmator, Procreate), Video creation, Blues guitar, Cooking.

Phantoms on Main Street

I have long believed in the economic power of the arts and the creativity economy. When I learned of the formation of ART Toledo, I knew I had to get involved. The City of Toledo decided to look to the arts as a way to revitalize their historic Main Street. As we brainstormed in the first few meetings, I remembered a successful project I spearheaded back in Illinois: Phantom Galleries. The idea is to turn vacant storefront into vibrant, temporary art galleries. These galleries feature the work of local artists and also are a forum to showcase the business opportunities in those buildings. Together, we crafted the ART Toledo Phantom Gallery project and are currently showcasing the third round of regional artists and are also seeing new business startups as a result.

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Herding the Sponsorship Cats

Enterprise Zones provide a powerful business incentive to invest in growth that create jobs. Our Lincoln County Enterprise Zone was due to sunset in 2021. I have the privilege to serve as the Zone Manager and took on the task of getting our zone re-designated. Our zone is one of the most complex in Oregon, with eight co-sponsoring governmental units. I wrote the resolutions, educated the boards, commissions and city councils (many who were unfamiliar with this incentive in their own backyard), held public meetings and worked with the county's GIS team. In the end, we had all resolutions unanimously passed and also were able to expand our zone to include some vital property ripe for development.

Upping the Game

One of our key strategic initiatives in Iron County was to grow our tourism industry. We had the outdoor recreation assets, but marketing outside of the region was spotty and unprofessional. Our first effort was to dust off a borrowed ten-year-old trade show display and head for an outdoor recreation trade show in Milwaukee in early 2018. While we made a decent showing, the real magic of the show was studying the other location vendors. What was working? What wasn’t? How could we up our game? After that show, we developed a plan - it became a three year county-wide tourism marketing plan. We focused on professional printed materials (Visitors Guide and brochures), all created in-house. We linked those printed materials to our newly redesigned website at iron.org via QR codes. Then we created an amazing trade show booth - and worked on our presentation skills - human interaction, quality video, interest-specific slideshows on an iPad. In 2019, we hit shows in Chicago and also the world’s largest paddling expo called Canoecopia. Our floor presence was top shelf - one of the best of the shows - and we took folks from discovering Iron County to making the decision to visit, making the 2019 summer tourism season the best we had ever seen.

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One Part Professionalism, One Part Fun

When I started working for the ICECA in Iron County, Michigan (in the beautiful Upper Peninsula), I realized that job one was creating a plan. Six months of research later, and we had a five-year strategic plan towards economic vitality. From that came the realization that tourism, specifically, outdoor recreation tourism, was an essential aspect of our work. That lead to a three year, county-wide plan focusing on tourism marketing. That research made me realize that our digital image needed refinement - we needed to add both professionalism and fun into our online presence and marketing materials. That lead to a wholesale redesign of our annual Visitors Guide (and website at iron.org) as well as the creation of a series of memorable "Live, Work, Play" badges focusing on the recreation and professional opportunities in Iron County. And boy do those badges (printed as stickers) fly out the door at the trade shows we attend!

America's Best Communities

In 2015, we learned about the national competition hosted by Frontier Communications, Dish Network, CoBank and the Weather Channel. I sharpened my pencil and told the story of Monmouth. The contest was judged by a team of nationally-recognized economic developers, and in May of 2015, we were named one of the 50 national quarterfinalists - and one of only three communities named in the State of Illinois.

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Going Against the Collar Counties

In 2014, the State of Illinois threw a wrench on one of our few powerful economic development tools: our Enterprise Zone. All expiring zones would no longer be allowed to be extended. Instead, it was to be a free-for-all competition for just 49 new EZs in the State that would be activated on January 1, 2016. And this time, instead of just downstate communities applying, the competition was now open to the affluent suburbs of Chicago. Communities hired consultants left and right - we decided to go it alone. I drafted our application (150+ pages of narrative and planning) and worked with our City Administrator and Mayor to get all taxing bodies on board. And on December 17, 2015, the Director of the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity announced that we were recipients of one of the 49 prized new Enterprise Zones. Our grassroots effort trumped the consultants.

Third Place and Crucible

When I took the economic development job in Monmouth, I knew a large focus of my efforts would be on retail entrepreneurship downtown. I had business experience, but not retail experience, and I felt like I needed a laboratory to explore real world data. My wife, Susan, was interested in starting a new business, so we decided that a retail wine shop in downtown Monmouth was the perfect fit: bottled wine, wine by the glass and gifts - hitting all areas of retail. Market Alley Wines (marketalleywines.com) opened in 2011 to an astonished community - they had never seen such a beautiful shop in a small farm town. Now, eight years later, Market Alley Wines is still a fixture in the community (my wife sold the business in 2017) - a “third place” for friends across all economic and educational levels come together to talk, laugh and enjoy the ritual of fine wine. And along the way, I had access to priceless real-world data on how retail works in Monmouth, and we’ve used that data to help new businesses start, grow and thrive.

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Game Your Way Forward

In 2012, Western Illinois University economist John Gruidl and I began to explore the potential of a community development teaching game. We’d both worked with teaching games (often called “serious games”) for several years, and found that the ones that focused on economic and community development often had rather obvious biases in their message. What we wanted was an open game that simulated genuine community-level decision making and strategic thinking. 


In early 2013, we had our conceptual breakthrough and Up and Out: the Community Development Game was born. In the years that followed, we developed a hybrid board and web-based game experience that simulated multiple communities trying to grow within a county. The game was featured at several Midwest Community Development Institutes, as part of the Community and Economic Development Initiative of Kentucky (run by the University of Kentucky) and was adopted by Southeastern Missouri State University’s Extension program.

Deep Blue Innovators Blues Festival

Anyone who knows me knows I love the blues - both old-school Depression-era blues (which I love to play!) and new innovative blues. In 2007, I created the Deep Blue Innovators Blues Festival that brought world class blues acts to our little corner of the cornfields (in the historic old Rivoli Theatre). Throughout the years, the festival has brought in over 28 amazing acts - including both the Carolina Chocolate Drops and the legendary Bobby Rush - both right before they each won a grammy.

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Words on Pages

Over the years, I've done a lot of writing - both fiction and technical. When I started Magic Lantern Playware (my game development company), we bootstrapped that company by writing strategy guides on how to play the latest games (back then, titles like Quake 2, Dungeon Keeper 2, Septerra Core and Star Wars Episode One Racer, to name a few).


As I became a more experienced software developer, I started writing more technical books, including Game Development with Lua (with my then-technical director Mark Manyen) and Game Design: a Practical Approach.


I've been lucky that my technical books are still selling (it's a small royalty check each quarter, but folks are still buying them!), and they've been adopted as text books at several colleges. The two books mentioned above have also been translated into Portuguese, Korean and Chinese.

BaconFest!

I tend to lean towards crazy, audacious ideas and then try to make them a reality. So far, it's worked pretty well. A case in point is Monmouth's BaconFest (I bet you didn't know that Monmouth, IL is the bacon capital of the world? Yes, more bacon is produced there than anywhere else). 


I brought together a team of volunteers, we raised some cash and hosted an amazing bacon party featuring food vendors crafting insane bacon treats (Bacon cupcakes? Bacon apple pie? A bacon-wrapped turducken? Take my money!), a bacon eating contest (shown at right) and some killer bands - and sure enough - thousands descended on our town Square to pay homage to that delicious porky treat! The event is now on its fifth year and going strong.

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Covert Ops and Tom Clancy's Shorts

One of the coolest projects we got to do at Magic Lantern Playware (it was really the gig that launched our company) was to develop Covert Ops for Red Storm Entertainment. It was the third Rainbow Six title and the premise was simple: what if you were already a member of the Rainbow Six team - what would you need to learn to become the commander?


This title was heavy on infotainment - it had tactical missions, but you also got to learn all about weapons, terrorism and counter-terrorism. At the time, our included background material was one of the largest repositories of counter-terrorist info anywhere. And we got to meet Tom Clancy. At his house. He showed up in shorts (way too short shorts!). And we drank a bottle of scotch together (Tom, myself and our head writer Pete). He even ignored a call from Orin Hatch as we drank!

What Was I Thinking?

Several years back, we had a crazy idea: to take our Magic Lantern game engine (J5 - named after the Jackson 5) and use it to teach kids how to code games. We partnered with the local Extension folks and set up a 48-hour code-a-thon for high school kids. It was insane! The kids just mainlined Mountain Dew and donuts and I was a shambling wreck after 40+ hours and 20,000 questions about why this or that didn't work.


But some kids created genuine magic, and it lead directly to the creation of GameSmart, an "on rails" environment to teach game design and programming. It first ran on J5 and this Spring I converted it to Javascript using html5 canvas. I've had the pleasure to teach GameSmart to College for Kids students, in after-school clubs for high-achievers and also to autistic kids in junior high and high school. Who knew?

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Experience

Executive Director - Economic Development Alliance of Lincoln County, Lincoln County, OR — 2020-present

Oversee economic development for Lincoln County, OR, located on the Central Oregon Coast. Developing county-wide strategic plan focusing on multiple key pillars of economic development. Building partnerships and collaborative teams to enhance the economic vitality of the region. Entrepreneurial ecosystem building. Development of local, regional and coastal Blue Economy. Grant writing and grant management. Manage relationships with members and stakeholder governmental entities. Manage staff, report to board of directors.

Executive Director - Iron County Economic Chamber Alliance, Iron River, MI— 2017-2020

Oversee economic development and Chamber of Commerce for Iron County, MI, located in the western Upper Peninsula. Developing county-wide strategic plan focusing on business development, tourism, in-migration, education and asset development. Creating county-wide comprehensive tourism marketing plan. Manage staff, report to board of trustees and also oversee management of 32-site RV campground. Entrepreneurial mentoring and business coaching. Design and management of county-wide website focused on tourism marketing, Chamber services and economic development. Grant writing and grant management. Develop and implement an annual county-wide economic summit. Write monthly column educating community on economic development. Manage relationships with thirteen stakeholder governmental entities.

Director of Economic Development, City of Monmouth, Monmouth, IL— 2010-2017

Manage economic development and community development for entire city. Oversee zoning department. In charge of downtown revitalization and downtown strategic planning. Entrepreneurial mentoring and business coaching. Design, coding and operation of all city websites. Creation and maintenance of City’s custom web applications including property and business databases, commercial and rental inspection system and building permit system. Completed the IEDC Basic Economic Development Course in 2011.

Technical Director, The Breakthrough Foundry, LLC, Monmouth, IL— 2013-2017

Technical director (and programmer) for The Breakthrough Foundry - a bootstrap company developing an online project management and collaboration solution for professional creatives. Designed software, developed initial application, managed programming team in Nepal, managed Monmouth College students in programming fellowship program for BTF. Awarded provisional patent for online collaborative team project management.

Technical Director and Programmer, Grow Your Yields, LLC, Monmouth, IL— 2012-2013

Initial technical director and programmer for Grow Your Yields (which has since become the Farmers Business Network). Designed initial web portal for farmer data input. Managed team of three independent contractor programmers. Position was contract-based.

Extension Specialist, University of Illinois, Monmouth, IL— 2005-2010

Manager and programmer in the Office of Creative Software Development. Managed in-house team of four and coordinated with campus-based teams. Development of Going Solo (and online business simulation), Generic Curriculum Widget (a collaborative textbook authoring system), MarketMaker (a national platform to facilitate the farm-to-plate economy) and GameSmart (a tool to teach game development and programming to kids grades 6 through high school). Delivered programs and curriculum on entrepreneurship, writing, game development, physics and creativity.

Programming Consultant, Illinois Institute for Rural Affairs, Monmouth, IL— 2004-2010

Worked with the Illinois Institute of Rural Affairs (through a USDA grant) to develop BasicSite, a custom PHP/MySQL Content Management System to develop websites for rural municipalities, Chambers of Commerce and economic development organizations. Developed and launched (and trained staff for maintenance) over 25 websites using BasicSite.

President, Magic Lantern Playware, Monmouth, IL— 1998-2005

Producer, manager and programmer on 20+ software titles released by Red Storm, Infogrames and eGames. Over a million units sold-through. Developed the third Rainbow Six title and the two official Survivor games (based on the reality TV show). Managed two offices (Monmouth and Dallas) and team of 17.

Project Leader, 3D Realms, Garland, TX— 1996-1998

Project leader, designer, writer and script programmer for the Prey project. Managed team of twelve developers. Earned “game of the year” awards at E3 in 1997 and 1998.

Lead Designer, FASA Interactive, Chicago, IL— 1996

Lead designer for MechWarrior 3 game project until company was acquired by Microsoft.

Freelance Writer and Editor— 1992-2007

Wrote weekly columns for local newspaper, reviews and features for Compute, Omni and other publications, technical books for CNET, Prima, Sybex and Charles River Media. Over 200+ published articles, 10+ published books.

Contributing Editor for Game Design, Computer Gaming World Magazine— 1992-1996

Wrote monthly “Hex, Bugs and Rock ‘n Roll” column for national magazine, ad-hoc editing and management tasks, traveling special feature reporter.

Director of Student Publications, Monmouth College — 1992-1996

Directed student workers on newspaper, creative arts magazine and yearbook. Managed budgets, printing logistics and technology. Managed both paid and volunteer workers. Taught journalism, multimedia and creative writing classes.

Assistant Director of Public Relations, Monmouth College — 1992-1994

Assisted with writing, layout and production of alumni magazine as well as the weekly faculty newsletter, photography and press release writing.

Teaching Assistant, University of North Carolina at Greensboro — 1991-1992

Teaching assistant to Fred Chappell in the Department of English, lectured, developed tests, graded tests and papers.

Grant Assistant, University of North Carolina at Greensboro — 1990-1992

Graduate assistantship. Responsible for proofing and review of faculty grant applications, data entry and grant progress tracking.

Education

Master of Fine Arts, University of North Carolina at Greensboro, 1992

Studied under Fred Chappell and served as his teaching assistant. Studied science fiction writing, screen writing, the literature of Hemingway and Fitzgerald and Mesoamerican archeology. Worked in office of Research Services for assistantship. Thesis was the novel "Abacus" (the first few chapters published in Aboriginal Science Fiction).

Bachelor of Arts, Miami University, 1990, Summa Cum Laude

English major with focus on science fiction literature and creative writing. Also studied high-fire ceramics and middle-eastern architecture. Served as assistant editor to College of Fine Arts alumni magazine.

Awards

2012 - Western Illinois University ACET Distinguished Speaker Award

2010 - USDA - NIFA Partnership award

2006 - National Association of Development Organizations Web Innovation Award

2006 - Illinois Development Council Business Partnership Award

2004 - Monmouth Chamber of Commerce Citizen of the Year

2002 - Governor’s Entrepreneurial Success Award

Grantsmanship

Grant writing and administration, over $4.5 million in successful funding.
  • Oregon Ocean Innovation Hub, SBA Congressionally Directed Spending award, $1,000,000
  • Community Connector, City of Newport & Ford Family Foundation, $80,000
  • Rural Opportunity Initiative, Business Oregon, $60,000
  • Shared Strategic Plan Website Project, Cascades West Economic Development District, $5,900
  • Oregon Prospector Project, Cascades West Economic Development District, $4,450
  • Blue Economy Sector Survey, Yaquina Bay Economic Foundation, $5,000
  • ART Toledo Way-finding Signage, Yaquina Bay Economic Foundation, $1,500
  • Tourism Website Project, WUPPDR, $6,500
  • Iron County Economic Summit, Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development, $30,000
  • Building Grant Fund, City of Monmouth, $600,000
  • Backpack Program, Rotary Foundation, $6,000
  • Monmouth Economic Development - Cloverleaf Project, Illinois DCEO, $650,000
  • Monmouth Economic Development - Cloverleaf Project, Illinois Department of Transportation, $1,000,000
  • Warren County Virtual Museum, Illinois Broadband Innovation Fund, $15,000
  • America's Best Communities - Monmouth, Frontier Communications, $60,000
  • Georgia's Creative Economies, State of Georgia, $90,000
  • South Carolina Shrimp Producers, Clemson University, $11,000
  • Monmouth Phantom Galleries, Illinois Power, $2,800
  • Prairie Tech Learning Center, Edward Arthur Mellinger Foundation, $40,000
  • Prairie Tech Learning Center, Illinois DCEO, $65,000 
  • Prairie Tech Learning Center, Illinois DCEO, $65,000 
  • Patton Block Center, Illinois DCEO, $150,000
  • Monmouth College Academic Program Enhancement, Carver Foundation, $750,000

Service

  • Oregon Coast Community College - 2023-present (School Board, Zone 3 - elected position)
  • Oregon Cascades West Loan Program Review Subcommittee - 2021-present (Member)
  • Newport Chamber of Commerce - 2021-present (Board of Directors)
  • South Valley/Mid-Coast Economic Recovery Team - 2020-present (Member)
  • SBDC Advisory Committee - 2020-present (Committee Member)
  • Cascades West Economic Development District - 2020-present (Vice-chair)
  • Mid-Coast Water Planning Partnership - 2020-present (Industry/Economic Development Chair)
  • Yaquina Bay Economic Foundation - 2020-present (Board of Directors)
  • ART Toledo - 2020-present (Committee Member)
  • WUPPDR - 2019-2020 (Board of Commissioners)
  • Upper Peninsula Economic Development Association - 2018-2020 (Board of Directors)
  • Friends of Heritage Trail - 2018-2020 (Executive Committee) 
  • Iron County Parks and Recreation Committee - 2018-2020 (Committee Member) 
  • Recreation Association of Iron County - 2018-2020 (Board Member) 
  • Upper Peninsula Collaborative Development Council - 2017-2020 (Board Member)
  • Western UP Regional Prosperity Alliance - 2017-2020 (Iron County Representative) 
  • 708 Board (Warren County Mental Health) - 2016 (Board Member)
  • Rotary - 2001-2017, 2021-present (President, 2015-2016)
  • Monmouth Business Council - 2010-2017 (Director, 2015-2017)
  • Workforce Investment Board of Western Illinois - 2014-2017 (Board Member) 
  • PUSH (Presidents United to Solve Hunger) 2014-2017 (Committee Member)
  • Zoning Board of Appeals, City of Monmouth - 2002-2010 (Chair, 2005 - 2010)
  • Entrepreneurship Center - 2002-2008 (Board Member)
  • College for Kids, Monmouth College - 2002-2009, 2016 (Instructor) 
  • Game Developers Conference, 1997-2012 (Creativity Trainer)


References and full CV available upon request.

简历
个人档案

Paul Schuytema

I'm a creative generalist who has the honor of working as the Executive Director of the Economic Development Alliance of Lincoln County. 


In the past 25+ years, I’ve worked as an entrepreneur, economic developer, writer, teacher, software developer, computer game designer, concert promoter, musician and creativity trainer. 


Let's see what we can build together!

[email protected]
(541) 961-8800 

Depoe Bay, OR USA

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Skillsets


Business

Economic development, Entrepreneurship training, Strategic planning, Business plan writing (narrative and financials), Team management.


Communication

Writing (technical, nonfiction, fiction, grant, web, speech), Public presentation and speaking, Classroom instruction, Marketing, Research.


Technical

Computer programing (Php, Lua, MySql), Web development (html, JavaScript, CodeIgniter, WordPress, Bootstrap, etc.), Software design.


Creative

Game design (computer and board), Creativity training, Event and concert planning, Project design, Digital art (Pixelmator, Procreate), Video creation, Blues guitar, Cooking.

Phantoms on Main Street

I have long believed in the economic power of the arts and the creativity economy. When I learned of the formation of ART Toledo, I knew I had to get involved. The City of Toledo decided to look to the arts as a way to revitalize their historic Main Street. As we brainstormed in the first few meetings, I remembered a successful project I spearheaded back in Illinois: Phantom Galleries. The idea is to turn vacant storefront into vibrant, temporary art galleries. These galleries feature the work of local artists and also are a forum to showcase the business opportunities in those buildings. Together, we crafted the ART Toledo Phantom Gallery project and are currently showcasing the third round of regional artists and are also seeing new business startups as a result.

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Herding the Sponsorship Cats

Enterprise Zones provide a powerful business incentive to invest in growth that create jobs. Our Lincoln County Enterprise Zone was due to sunset in 2021. I have the privilege to serve as the Zone Manager and took on the task of getting our zone re-designated. Our zone is one of the most complex in Oregon, with eight co-sponsoring governmental units. I wrote the resolutions, educated the boards, commissions and city councils (many who were unfamiliar with this incentive in their own backyard), held public meetings and worked with the county's GIS team. In the end, we had all resolutions unanimously passed and also were able to expand our zone to include some vital property ripe for development.

Upping the Game

One of our key strategic initiatives in Iron County was to grow our tourism industry. We had the outdoor recreation assets, but marketing outside of the region was spotty and unprofessional. Our first effort was to dust off a borrowed ten-year-old trade show display and head for an outdoor recreation trade show in Milwaukee in early 2018. While we made a decent showing, the real magic of the show was studying the other location vendors. What was working? What wasn’t? How could we up our game? After that show, we developed a plan - it became a three year county-wide tourism marketing plan. We focused on professional printed materials (Visitors Guide and brochures), all created in-house. We linked those printed materials to our newly redesigned website at iron.org via QR codes. Then we created an amazing trade show booth - and worked on our presentation skills - human interaction, quality video, interest-specific slideshows on an iPad. In 2019, we hit shows in Chicago and also the world’s largest paddling expo called Canoecopia. Our floor presence was top shelf - one of the best of the shows - and we took folks from discovering Iron County to making the decision to visit, making the 2019 summer tourism season the best we had ever seen.

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One Part Professionalism, One Part Fun

When I started working for the ICECA in Iron County, Michigan (in the beautiful Upper Peninsula), I realized that job one was creating a plan. Six months of research later, and we had a five-year strategic plan towards economic vitality. From that came the realization that tourism, specifically, outdoor recreation tourism, was an essential aspect of our work. That lead to a three year, county-wide plan focusing on tourism marketing. That research made me realize that our digital image needed refinement - we needed to add both professionalism and fun into our online presence and marketing materials. That lead to a wholesale redesign of our annual Visitors Guide (and website at iron.org) as well as the creation of a series of memorable "Live, Work, Play" badges focusing on the recreation and professional opportunities in Iron County. And boy do those badges (printed as stickers) fly out the door at the trade shows we attend!

America's Best Communities

In 2015, we learned about the national competition hosted by Frontier Communications, Dish Network, CoBank and the Weather Channel. I sharpened my pencil and told the story of Monmouth. The contest was judged by a team of nationally-recognized economic developers, and in May of 2015, we were named one of the 50 national quarterfinalists - and one of only three communities named in the State of Illinois.

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Going Against the Collar Counties

In 2014, the State of Illinois threw a wrench on one of our few powerful economic development tools: our Enterprise Zone. All expiring zones would no longer be allowed to be extended. Instead, it was to be a free-for-all competition for just 49 new EZs in the State that would be activated on January 1, 2016. And this time, instead of just downstate communities applying, the competition was now open to the affluent suburbs of Chicago. Communities hired consultants left and right - we decided to go it alone. I drafted our application (150+ pages of narrative and planning) and worked with our City Administrator and Mayor to get all taxing bodies on board. And on December 17, 2015, the Director of the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity announced that we were recipients of one of the 49 prized new Enterprise Zones. Our grassroots effort trumped the consultants.

Third Place and Crucible

When I took the economic development job in Monmouth, I knew a large focus of my efforts would be on retail entrepreneurship downtown. I had business experience, but not retail experience, and I felt like I needed a laboratory to explore real world data. My wife, Susan, was interested in starting a new business, so we decided that a retail wine shop in downtown Monmouth was the perfect fit: bottled wine, wine by the glass and gifts - hitting all areas of retail. Market Alley Wines (marketalleywines.com) opened in 2011 to an astonished community - they had never seen such a beautiful shop in a small farm town. Now, eight years later, Market Alley Wines is still a fixture in the community (my wife sold the business in 2017) - a “third place” for friends across all economic and educational levels come together to talk, laugh and enjoy the ritual of fine wine. And along the way, I had access to priceless real-world data on how retail works in Monmouth, and we’ve used that data to help new businesses start, grow and thrive.

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Game Your Way Forward

In 2012, Western Illinois University economist John Gruidl and I began to explore the potential of a community development teaching game. We’d both worked with teaching games (often called “serious games”) for several years, and found that the ones that focused on economic and community development often had rather obvious biases in their message. What we wanted was an open game that simulated genuine community-level decision making and strategic thinking. 


In early 2013, we had our conceptual breakthrough and Up and Out: the Community Development Game was born. In the years that followed, we developed a hybrid board and web-based game experience that simulated multiple communities trying to grow within a county. The game was featured at several Midwest Community Development Institutes, as part of the Community and Economic Development Initiative of Kentucky (run by the University of Kentucky) and was adopted by Southeastern Missouri State University’s Extension program.

Deep Blue Innovators Blues Festival

Anyone who knows me knows I love the blues - both old-school Depression-era blues (which I love to play!) and new innovative blues. In 2007, I created the Deep Blue Innovators Blues Festival that brought world class blues acts to our little corner of the cornfields (in the historic old Rivoli Theatre). Throughout the years, the festival has brought in over 28 amazing acts - including both the Carolina Chocolate Drops and the legendary Bobby Rush - both right before they each won a grammy.

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Words on Pages

Over the years, I've done a lot of writing - both fiction and technical. When I started Magic Lantern Playware (my game development company), we bootstrapped that company by writing strategy guides on how to play the latest games (back then, titles like Quake 2, Dungeon Keeper 2, Septerra Core and Star Wars Episode One Racer, to name a few).


As I became a more experienced software developer, I started writing more technical books, including Game Development with Lua (with my then-technical director Mark Manyen) and Game Design: a Practical Approach.


I've been lucky that my technical books are still selling (it's a small royalty check each quarter, but folks are still buying them!), and they've been adopted as text books at several colleges. The two books mentioned above have also been translated into Portuguese, Korean and Chinese.

BaconFest!

I tend to lean towards crazy, audacious ideas and then try to make them a reality. So far, it's worked pretty well. A case in point is Monmouth's BaconFest (I bet you didn't know that Monmouth, IL is the bacon capital of the world? Yes, more bacon is produced there than anywhere else). 


I brought together a team of volunteers, we raised some cash and hosted an amazing bacon party featuring food vendors crafting insane bacon treats (Bacon cupcakes? Bacon apple pie? A bacon-wrapped turducken? Take my money!), a bacon eating contest (shown at right) and some killer bands - and sure enough - thousands descended on our town Square to pay homage to that delicious porky treat! The event is now on its fifth year and going strong.

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Covert Ops and Tom Clancy's Shorts

One of the coolest projects we got to do at Magic Lantern Playware (it was really the gig that launched our company) was to develop Covert Ops for Red Storm Entertainment. It was the third Rainbow Six title and the premise was simple: what if you were already a member of the Rainbow Six team - what would you need to learn to become the commander?


This title was heavy on infotainment - it had tactical missions, but you also got to learn all about weapons, terrorism and counter-terrorism. At the time, our included background material was one of the largest repositories of counter-terrorist info anywhere. And we got to meet Tom Clancy. At his house. He showed up in shorts (way too short shorts!). And we drank a bottle of scotch together (Tom, myself and our head writer Pete). He even ignored a call from Orin Hatch as we drank!

What Was I Thinking?

Several years back, we had a crazy idea: to take our Magic Lantern game engine (J5 - named after the Jackson 5) and use it to teach kids how to code games. We partnered with the local Extension folks and set up a 48-hour code-a-thon for high school kids. It was insane! The kids just mainlined Mountain Dew and donuts and I was a shambling wreck after 40+ hours and 20,000 questions about why this or that didn't work.


But some kids created genuine magic, and it lead directly to the creation of GameSmart, an "on rails" environment to teach game design and programming. It first ran on J5 and this Spring I converted it to Javascript using html5 canvas. I've had the pleasure to teach GameSmart to College for Kids students, in after-school clubs for high-achievers and also to autistic kids in junior high and high school. Who knew?

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Experience

Executive Director - Economic Development Alliance of Lincoln County, Lincoln County, OR — 2020-present

Oversee economic development for Lincoln County, OR, located on the Central Oregon Coast. Developing county-wide strategic plan focusing on multiple key pillars of economic development. Building partnerships and collaborative teams to enhance the economic vitality of the region. Entrepreneurial ecosystem building. Development of local, regional and coastal Blue Economy. Grant writing and grant management. Manage relationships with members and stakeholder governmental entities. Manage staff, report to board of directors.

Executive Director - Iron County Economic Chamber Alliance, Iron River, MI— 2017-2020

Oversee economic development and Chamber of Commerce for Iron County, MI, located in the western Upper Peninsula. Developing county-wide strategic plan focusing on business development, tourism, in-migration, education and asset development. Creating county-wide comprehensive tourism marketing plan. Manage staff, report to board of trustees and also oversee management of 32-site RV campground. Entrepreneurial mentoring and business coaching. Design and management of county-wide website focused on tourism marketing, Chamber services and economic development. Grant writing and grant management. Develop and implement an annual county-wide economic summit. Write monthly column educating community on economic development. Manage relationships with thirteen stakeholder governmental entities.

Director of Economic Development, City of Monmouth, Monmouth, IL— 2010-2017

Manage economic development and community development for entire city. Oversee zoning department. In charge of downtown revitalization and downtown strategic planning. Entrepreneurial mentoring and business coaching. Design, coding and operation of all city websites. Creation and maintenance of City’s custom web applications including property and business databases, commercial and rental inspection system and building permit system. Completed the IEDC Basic Economic Development Course in 2011.

Technical Director, The Breakthrough Foundry, LLC, Monmouth, IL— 2013-2017

Technical director (and programmer) for The Breakthrough Foundry - a bootstrap company developing an online project management and collaboration solution for professional creatives. Designed software, developed initial application, managed programming team in Nepal, managed Monmouth College students in programming fellowship program for BTF. Awarded provisional patent for online collaborative team project management.

Technical Director and Programmer, Grow Your Yields, LLC, Monmouth, IL— 2012-2013

Initial technical director and programmer for Grow Your Yields (which has since become the Farmers Business Network). Designed initial web portal for farmer data input. Managed team of three independent contractor programmers. Position was contract-based.

Extension Specialist, University of Illinois, Monmouth, IL— 2005-2010

Manager and programmer in the Office of Creative Software Development. Managed in-house team of four and coordinated with campus-based teams. Development of Going Solo (and online business simulation), Generic Curriculum Widget (a collaborative textbook authoring system), MarketMaker (a national platform to facilitate the farm-to-plate economy) and GameSmart (a tool to teach game development and programming to kids grades 6 through high school). Delivered programs and curriculum on entrepreneurship, writing, game development, physics and creativity.

Programming Consultant, Illinois Institute for Rural Affairs, Monmouth, IL— 2004-2010

Worked with the Illinois Institute of Rural Affairs (through a USDA grant) to develop BasicSite, a custom PHP/MySQL Content Management System to develop websites for rural municipalities, Chambers of Commerce and economic development organizations. Developed and launched (and trained staff for maintenance) over 25 websites using BasicSite.

President, Magic Lantern Playware, Monmouth, IL— 1998-2005

Producer, manager and programmer on 20+ software titles released by Red Storm, Infogrames and eGames. Over a million units sold-through. Developed the third Rainbow Six title and the two official Survivor games (based on the reality TV show). Managed two offices (Monmouth and Dallas) and team of 17.

Project Leader, 3D Realms, Garland, TX— 1996-1998

Project leader, designer, writer and script programmer for the Prey project. Managed team of twelve developers. Earned “game of the year” awards at E3 in 1997 and 1998.

Lead Designer, FASA Interactive, Chicago, IL— 1996

Lead designer for MechWarrior 3 game project until company was acquired by Microsoft.

Freelance Writer and Editor— 1992-2007

Wrote weekly columns for local newspaper, reviews and features for Compute, Omni and other publications, technical books for CNET, Prima, Sybex and Charles River Media. Over 200+ published articles, 10+ published books.

Contributing Editor for Game Design, Computer Gaming World Magazine— 1992-1996

Wrote monthly “Hex, Bugs and Rock ‘n Roll” column for national magazine, ad-hoc editing and management tasks, traveling special feature reporter.

Director of Student Publications, Monmouth College — 1992-1996

Directed student workers on newspaper, creative arts magazine and yearbook. Managed budgets, printing logistics and technology. Managed both paid and volunteer workers. Taught journalism, multimedia and creative writing classes.

Assistant Director of Public Relations, Monmouth College — 1992-1994

Assisted with writing, layout and production of alumni magazine as well as the weekly faculty newsletter, photography and press release writing.

Teaching Assistant, University of North Carolina at Greensboro — 1991-1992

Teaching assistant to Fred Chappell in the Department of English, lectured, developed tests, graded tests and papers.

Grant Assistant, University of North Carolina at Greensboro — 1990-1992

Graduate assistantship. Responsible for proofing and review of faculty grant applications, data entry and grant progress tracking.

Education

Master of Fine Arts, University of North Carolina at Greensboro, 1992

Studied under Fred Chappell and served as his teaching assistant. Studied science fiction writing, screen writing, the literature of Hemingway and Fitzgerald and Mesoamerican archeology. Worked in office of Research Services for assistantship. Thesis was the novel "Abacus" (the first few chapters published in Aboriginal Science Fiction).

Bachelor of Arts, Miami University, 1990, Summa Cum Laude

English major with focus on science fiction literature and creative writing. Also studied high-fire ceramics and middle-eastern architecture. Served as assistant editor to College of Fine Arts alumni magazine.

Awards

2012 - Western Illinois University ACET Distinguished Speaker Award

2010 - USDA - NIFA Partnership award

2006 - National Association of Development Organizations Web Innovation Award

2006 - Illinois Development Council Business Partnership Award

2004 - Monmouth Chamber of Commerce Citizen of the Year

2002 - Governor’s Entrepreneurial Success Award

Grantsmanship

Grant writing and administration, over $4.5 million in successful funding.
  • Oregon Ocean Innovation Hub, SBA Congressionally Directed Spending award, $1,000,000
  • Community Connector, City of Newport & Ford Family Foundation, $80,000
  • Rural Opportunity Initiative, Business Oregon, $60,000
  • Shared Strategic Plan Website Project, Cascades West Economic Development District, $5,900
  • Oregon Prospector Project, Cascades West Economic Development District, $4,450
  • Blue Economy Sector Survey, Yaquina Bay Economic Foundation, $5,000
  • ART Toledo Way-finding Signage, Yaquina Bay Economic Foundation, $1,500
  • Tourism Website Project, WUPPDR, $6,500
  • Iron County Economic Summit, Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development, $30,000
  • Building Grant Fund, City of Monmouth, $600,000
  • Backpack Program, Rotary Foundation, $6,000
  • Monmouth Economic Development - Cloverleaf Project, Illinois DCEO, $650,000
  • Monmouth Economic Development - Cloverleaf Project, Illinois Department of Transportation, $1,000,000
  • Warren County Virtual Museum, Illinois Broadband Innovation Fund, $15,000
  • America's Best Communities - Monmouth, Frontier Communications, $60,000
  • Georgia's Creative Economies, State of Georgia, $90,000
  • South Carolina Shrimp Producers, Clemson University, $11,000
  • Monmouth Phantom Galleries, Illinois Power, $2,800
  • Prairie Tech Learning Center, Edward Arthur Mellinger Foundation, $40,000
  • Prairie Tech Learning Center, Illinois DCEO, $65,000 
  • Prairie Tech Learning Center, Illinois DCEO, $65,000 
  • Patton Block Center, Illinois DCEO, $150,000
  • Monmouth College Academic Program Enhancement, Carver Foundation, $750,000

Service

  • Oregon Coast Community College - 2023-present (School Board, Zone 3 - elected position)
  • Oregon Cascades West Loan Program Review Subcommittee - 2021-present (Member)
  • Newport Chamber of Commerce - 2021-present (Board of Directors)
  • South Valley/Mid-Coast Economic Recovery Team - 2020-present (Member)
  • SBDC Advisory Committee - 2020-present (Committee Member)
  • Cascades West Economic Development District - 2020-present (Vice-chair)
  • Mid-Coast Water Planning Partnership - 2020-present (Industry/Economic Development Chair)
  • Yaquina Bay Economic Foundation - 2020-present (Board of Directors)
  • ART Toledo - 2020-present (Committee Member)
  • WUPPDR - 2019-2020 (Board of Commissioners)
  • Upper Peninsula Economic Development Association - 2018-2020 (Board of Directors)
  • Friends of Heritage Trail - 2018-2020 (Executive Committee) 
  • Iron County Parks and Recreation Committee - 2018-2020 (Committee Member) 
  • Recreation Association of Iron County - 2018-2020 (Board Member) 
  • Upper Peninsula Collaborative Development Council - 2017-2020 (Board Member)
  • Western UP Regional Prosperity Alliance - 2017-2020 (Iron County Representative) 
  • 708 Board (Warren County Mental Health) - 2016 (Board Member)
  • Rotary - 2001-2017, 2021-present (President, 2015-2016)
  • Monmouth Business Council - 2010-2017 (Director, 2015-2017)
  • Workforce Investment Board of Western Illinois - 2014-2017 (Board Member) 
  • PUSH (Presidents United to Solve Hunger) 2014-2017 (Committee Member)
  • Zoning Board of Appeals, City of Monmouth - 2002-2010 (Chair, 2005 - 2010)
  • Entrepreneurship Center - 2002-2008 (Board Member)
  • College for Kids, Monmouth College - 2002-2009, 2016 (Instructor) 
  • Game Developers Conference, 1997-2012 (Creativity Trainer)


References and full CV available upon request.