DIG Insurance & Business Magazine Spring 2019 | Page 5

BE INTENTIONAL A t Deeley Insurance Group, we’ve been talking a lot about what this means. How do we make intentional decisions? What impact do our choices have on our community, and how can we deepen our connections with our team and our customers by leading with purpose and creating pathways for them to make a difference? We’re proud to make a difference in a place where people might not expect: the insurance industry. Our passion is to create pathways for your future by reducing risk and helping you make the most of what life gives you. As businesses, we face external forces— the economy, consumer demand, market shifts. These variables require us to be intentional about the decisions we make for our organizations. Focused It was March 15, 2005, and the former Peace Corps volunteer was following a dream to “bring the world to this community through coffee.” Some of those first customers still frequent Rise Up’s first location, which has evolved from the mobile “coffee shack” Cureton started with a $16,000 loan. “When I think back to the early times, thank goodness we were naïve enough to try this! This concept was so out-of-the-ordinary for the area, so different.” But it was a mainstream thing out West. Cureton traveled through Montana, California, and Oregon after his time in the Peace Corps and he thought, “Why not?” He decided to bring the concept back home. Today, Rise Up has 127 employees and roasts up to 7,000 pounds of coffee every week. opened Rise Up Rehoboth Beach, their ninth location. Business expansion means dealing with “stuff ” that Cureton didn’t plan for when he opened the first coffee shack 14 years ago. He relies on Deeley Insurance Group to advise him on risk exposure and provide programs that give back to his employees, such as health insurance. “I appreciate the expertise they have in areas where we do not have expertise—and frankly don’t want to,” Cureton says with a laugh. “They help control the variables to protect us from things we don’t even know about, and that gives us peace of mind.” “We are truly living the coffee dream,” Cureton continues, adding that growth is inevitable. “If you think about it, 99.9 percent of humanity currently does not drink Rise Up Coffee, so we have our work cut out for us. Our online store is thriving, and there is much to be excited about.” > BE INTENTIONAL. FIND YOUR PURPOSE AND BUILD YOUR PATHWAY. leadership and thoughtful direction are ultimately what guide a business toward success, and we’d like to share some of those stories with you. GROWING A DREAM “The reason I got into this business was the global connection, the culture of growing coffee,” says Cureton, “and I thought maybe one day we would be the ones making those connections and friendships in other countries. And, sure enough, that is what has happened.” Cureton and his team travel to coffee- growing countries in South America to visit farmers. “We committed ourselves to fair-trade coffee from the get-go,” he says of this intentional decision. His team sees the Rise Up company motto as a way of life: Grown by friends. Roasted by friends. Enjoyed by friends. Tim Cureton remembers the very first customer Rise Up Coffee served from a tricked-out trailer rigged up in a parking lot in St. Michael’s, Maryland. Cureton says Rise Up is as proud of its people as it is of its coffee. The business has provided career pathways for individuals who are passionate about Rise Up’s mission. This spring, they 5