BCBusiness

April 2015 30 Under 30

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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Portrait: adam blasberg As part of this year's 30 Under 30 pack- age—celebrating the best and brightest of the Millennial crowd—we asked a series of 10 questions. They ranged from the light and frothy ("what song is playing on your device right now?") to the slightly more probing ("who inspires you to succeed?"). The final- ists' responses, which you'll find excerpted in the main feature (starting on page 29), are by turns amusing and touching. And surprising and humbling—particu- larly in response to the question: "What is your biggest regret?" The number one answer from our aged panel of entrepreneurs? That they didn't get their business started sooner. Yes: being a rock star businessperson at 25 or 28 is fine and all, but what a shame it had to come so late in life. This anxiety about time, and time wasted, is telling. Theirs is a genera- tion inculcated with the importance of rapid-fire accomplishment. No matter what you read of the Millenni- als—whether it's keeping them moti- vated as employees or engaged as consumers—the words "speed" and "instant gratification" pop up. This is no surprise: they are digital natives, raised in the Internet age when every- thing you could ever want is available almost instantaneously. Should their careers, their business ambitions, be realized any differently? As I contemplate that question, I'm reminded of my friend Michael Harris's recent Governor-General's- winning book, The End of Absence. The premise of Harris's book is that a subset of the Millennial generation— those straddling the age of 30, as he is—are the last to remember what life was like before the Internet came along and changed our brains forever. They remember (the older ones in particular) what it was like to wait for a train and be alone with your thoughts—no Angry Birds to play or Facebook status to update. They were OK—some more so than others, admittedly—with simply let- ting time pass. Unproductively. Different readers will take different things from this package of high-achieving Millenni- als. The stories are inspiring, to be sure. But for me, there's a bit of wistfulness involved: remembering a time when being "lost" in your 20s wasn't a four-letter word. C O N T R I B U T O R S Matt O'Grady, Editor-in-Chief mogrady@canadawide.com / @bCbusiness A shutterbug since he was 10, photographer Paul Joseph has worked on nearly 300 BCBusiness stories since 2002. He says he especially likes doing portraits and meeting the people in them—see the ones in this year's "30 Under 30" package (p.29)—but "just give me a camera, give me something to do, and I'm happy." FEBRUARY's most popUlAR stoRiEs on BcBUsinEss.cA B.C.'s Most Loved Brands This might be the most B.C. mansion ever Best Cities for Work in B.C. What B.C.'s highest paid public servants made last year What's killing downtown Victoria retailers /marketing-media /real-estate /careers /finance /industries 10 BCBusiness aPril 2015 In "Water, Water Everywhere?" (p.15), former Canadian Press reporter Dene Moore looks at B.C.'s new Water Sustainability Act. "I don't think we really have a grasp of how reliant we are on water and how much we use so it was interesting to me that the province is trying to grapple with that, " she says. Moore lives in the South Cariboo and relies on well water. Kids These Days editor's desk In MAY Speaking of the Internet age, tune in for next month's first-ever feature report on social media in B.C.

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