M3 Today Magazine M3 Today Magazine Fall 2018 | Page 7

using the emerging market to rally and come together. Ancillary services have put on strong educational programs. Even Michigan’s LARA is being proactive in reaching out to the community. And of course, networking companies have formed and drive community events. The founder of Cannabiz Connection Michigan, Jamie Copper, has a tagline that summarizes it all: “It takes a village to build a business in the cannabis industry.” But as in most emerging markets, many of these groups and activities are not coordinated. It hurts the cause of setting up the stage for everyone’s success. First to address this challenge head- on was a local company, Cannabis-Aid. Its founder, Thomas Tong, comes from a blended background of big business in high compliance sectors, technology, and government service. Mr. Tong preaches “community before competition,” stating that “to have a strong state market, we need to build our community across business, industry, and government. We need to collaborate and collectively create a strong state market. It will not happen by accident.” His top person, David Brisbois, comes from the music industry, where community and networking is the anchor. “We all have our responsibilities and contributions,” David expressed with enthusiasm. “Whether it be a local government ensuring a healthy local presence; a licensee operating a proactive, compliant, and transparent operation; a state regulator establishing policies that makes everyone win—patient, licensee, [] investor, or [even] an established winning product or service from out of state—we all must come together. We know this.” Cannabis-Aid (www.cannabis-aid.com) has created Michigan’s first Commercial Cannabis Conference & Expo as a state initiative to help pull the community together and to lead to a faster maturing of Michigan’s emerging market. Strategically positioned on October 30th & 31st, the conference acts as the last major springboard before the November 6th vote. As a cost-recovery event, it’s designed to keep event prices low so that all community members can be involved, from “opt-in” government employees and new and aspiring licensees to patients and caregivers. Given that the profit motive for the event has been removed, the conference’s sole focus is on creating relationships. “We are proud of the state conference we designed,” Thomas explained. “Our focus on profound relationships and our stand for a healthy and strong commercial cannabis industry in Michigan is being received well.” In fact, feedback is coming from other states saying they need to do something similar. Businesses love the conference design, as it’s all about connecting. All major sponsors are assigned their flagship Conference Chaperones, each of whom creates a relationship plan for everyone you need to meet at the conference, then virtually introduces you to this group a few days before the conference, and finally, when you are at the conference, physically makes sure you meet these people. Everything at this conference is designed to cause connections, from the Expo and Mixer to the speed-meeting session. Even their rest area has a “relationship rule”— if you sit, you must talk to someone. As Brisbois states, “This is not a standard industry conference. We have purpose. And also has a related community program: • The first is Incubator for Opportunity. This program brings together proven products and services with real customers who can use them. The customers get a great deal, and the company gets entry into Michigan’s market. • Ordinance 2.0 is a collective framework across “opt-in” local governments to share, reuse, and drive consistency across participating local municipalities. It makes it easier for local governments, while helping companies expand to other parts of Michigan and not have a completely different set of local ordinances to comply with. • Care Connect & Stay is a program meant to offer hosting for out-of- town guests who prefer to stay with a local Michigander. Maybe a patient needs to medicate privately, or a local businessperson wishes to host an incoming industry leader. So why is the conference being held in October? Simple: being local to Michigan and having a pulse on the market, slow EVERYTHING AT THIS CONFERENCE IS DESIGNED TO CAUSE CONNECTIONS, FROM THE EXPO AND MIXER TO THE SPEED-MEETING SESSION. EVEN THEIR REST AREA HAS A “RELATIONSHIP RULE”—IF YOU SIT, YOU MUST TALK TO SOMEONE. AS BRISBOIS STATES, “THIS IS NOT A STANDARD INDUSTRY CONFERENCE. WE HAVE PURPOSE. AND PURPOSE CAUSES COMMUNITY.” CANNABIS-AID DESCRIBES IT AS A STATE-INDUSTRY COMMUNIT Y EVENT. purpose causes community.” Cannabis-Aid describes it as a state-industry community event. The conference is designed and being implemented as a Class A event, with organizers stopping at nothing to reflect the promise of Michigan’s cannabis and hemp markets. The conference theme is “We are stronger together.” That theme pervades everything, from the background to the way the conference is set up to the end result. For any serious player in the cannabis space, the event is one that shouldn’t be missed. As a community event, the conference 7 licensing processes were anticipated. Thus, it made sense to have the conference later in the year after more licenses had been approved. Furthermore, many of the stakeholders in the industry are just now being identified, so it paid to wait for greater market opportunity to become available. Want to get involved? Remember— your volunteering, tickets, sponsorship, and booths make the event cost- recovery possible. For more, visit www.cannabis-aid.com or send an email to [email protected].