Three New Companies Added to Greater New Orleans Digital Landscape

Continuing upon the momentum that inspired Entrepreneur magazine to praise New Orleans as a "blueprint for economic recovery" in 2009, Greater New Orleans, Inc. is pleased to announce three business expansions to the region. Through work with GNO, Inc. and local partners, Los Angeles-based Graphite, Manhattan-based Orphmedia, and Baton Rouge-based RallyPoint have all established offices in New Orleans.

While GNO, Inc. continues to focus on fundamental sectors like trade and energy, these three firms collectively reflect the organization's additional effort to diversify the region's economy into creative and digital media. "The New Orleans Region is uniquely positioned to attract creative professionals," says GNO, Inc. President and CEO Michael Hecht. "With our combination of rich culture, inexpensive business conditions, and best-in-class incentives, Greater New Orleans is evolving into a creative professional hub that will soon be competing with -- and beating -- places like Austin, Seattle, and Montreal. The result will not only be more, better jobs, but also an infusion of fresh talent and energy for the region."

Graphite is a full-service brand strategy and design agency with a prestigious client list, including Nike, Red Bull, and Incase. Co-Founder and Creative Principal Andy Rosenthal sees great business potential in New Orleans, and is excited to contribute to the region's entrepreneurial growth. "Many people, especially entrepreneurs and cultural creatives, are coming to New Orleans because it offers an ideal blend of creativity, inspiration, opportunity, and quality of life -- unlike anywhere else in the country right now," he says. "As a native Californian with a company based in Los Angeles and clientele on both the east and west coast, New Orleans is an optimal location for our growing agency."

Orphmedia specializes in providing custom web design and online marketing strategies for restaurants. Based in Manhattan with operations in Los Angeles, the firm works with businesses both large and small, and touts top chefs such as Bobby Flay, Kent Rathbun, Michael Mina, and Wolfgang Puck among some of its best-known clients. Peter Orphanos, the firm's founder, has an ambitious vision for his business in New Orleans. "With more restaurants and chefs than ever before, New Orleans, in our opinion, has become the premier culinary capital of the South," he says. But the city's storied restaurant scene was not the sole reason for the firm's expansion. Orphanos has taken note of New Orleans' efforts to build anew, and, like so many other creative professionals who have descended upon the region, wanted to become involved in the city's rebirth. "New Orleans has demonstrated its determination to grow and create a new bright future for itself," says Orphanos, "and Orphmedia wants to be a part of that."

RallyPoint is a crisis communications and workforce continuity provider. Drawing upon lessons learned in the chaotic aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, the company works with clients to ensure secure, uninterrupted communication at all levels of an organization in times of crisis and disaster. Claude Bethea, Founder and CEO of RallyPoint, sees the New Orleans region as an ideal fit for his business. "The need for better methods of communication and organization of information between public and private entities before, during, and after a disaster is quite evident, and what better place to build our company than from a city with such a great need," he says. The firm is also the first member of GNO, Thinc, a new offering of GNO, Inc. to provide competitively-priced Class A office space for firms exploring a move to the region. According to Bethea, GNO, Thinc has been instrumental in facilitating the company's expansion: "GNO, Thinc has been a blessing for us as we move forward in protecting and serving the 'Greatest' city in Louisiana."

The arrival of the three firms highlights a rapidly emerging creative and digital media presence in New Orleans. As co-founder and chairman of Trumpet, a New Orleans branding agency that also launches startups through its ventures unit, Robbie Vitrano has helped drive the new entrepreneurial culture of the region. "Wynton Marsalis famously said that New Orleans is 'where elegance met an undefined wildness to encourage the flowering of creative intelligence.' Our creative culture -- that gave birth to a signature cuisine, architecture, music, and an unmistakable celebration of humanity -- perhaps in the context of the last four years, perhaps for the first time, is being fully optimized as an economic multiplier," he says. Vitrano, who also co-chairs GNO, Inc.'s Creative Media sector, believes that the significance of continued development in New Orleans' creative and digital media industries stretches beyond the region: "The capital and emotional investment by these creative industry firms is validating New Orleans as an innovation laboratory in a national and global economy seeking reinvention."

By Darren Alberti of Greater New Orleans Inc

Louisiana Senate Passes Senate Bill 277 on Digital Interactive Media

The Louisiana Senate passed Senate Bill 277 on Thursday June 4, 2009. The bill will now be considered by the Ways and Means Committee of the Louisiana House of Representatives. The hearing has not yet been scheduled. An update will be provided on this blog when the meeting is scheduled.

We need everyone to send emails and make phone calls to their Representatives in the House expressing their support for Senate Bill 277 authored by Senator Duplessis and also expressing their opposition to Senate Bill 199 authored by Neil Riser.

SB 277 concerns tax credit incentives for businesses operating in the digital interactive media arena. The bill would provide tax credits for many types of software and web platform development. The objective of the bill is to increase the amount of such business being done in Louisiana and to increase the number of  software and web development and design jobs in the state.

The bill is a renewal of a program that has been in place for the past four years, but has been little used because it was previously limited to video games. The renewal of the program would include a modernization of the definition of digital interactive media and would place the level of tax credits granted on parity with the existing film tax credit program.

Senator Riser's Senate Bill 199 would not change the definition of digital interactive media to include software and web platform development and design generally. It would instead limit the coverage to video game development. LISTA is opposed to Senate Bill 199 by Senator Riser.

We need you to express your support for SB 277 and your opposition to SB 199 to all of your Representatives in the Louisiana House of Representatives. Every call and every email is important. A message to a Representative from a constituent voter will have a big influence on the legislator. The message can be limited to a sentence or two expressing your wishes. You can get the email address and phone number of  your representative at  http://www.legis.state.la.us/

For more information, the Saturday June 6, 2009 edition of the New Orleans Times Picayune includes an article describing SB 277 and its progress through the legislative process. The article was written by Times Picayune Capital Bureau Chief, Robert Travis Scott, and is entitled, Growth is sought in digital media

Erich P Rapp.