
Do good by doing well. The new social enterprise taking that to heart with a first of its kind tele-legal service is TurnSignl, with an on-demand app that facilitates and records real-time interactions between drivers and law enforcement during traffic stops.
CEO and General Counsel Jazz Hampton joins the show to chat about building the bike as they were riding it, and how investors, individuals, companies, media, and police officers are responding to their service.
In this episode, you will learn:
- What it means to grow responsibly
- Why if you’re proud of your first product, you did something wrong
- How a culmination of the right people and experience can change the model of an archaic industry
- How 3 co-founders determine responsibilities
- How raising money while running a business is two separate jobs
- How pricing your product too low can make users think it doesn’t provide value
- How bringing in an expert can help avoid irreparable damage
- How TurnSignl is using social media in an unexpected way in its B2B approach
- How police officers are responding to TurnSignl
- How being in-person has made a difference for a startup that launched virtually
- How to choose which skills to bring to the table and which to delegate
- Why you should document who reaches out to you when you’re starting a business
This episode is brought to you by The Jed Mahonis Group, where we make sense of mobile app development with our non-technical approach to building custom mobile software solutions. Learn more at https://jmg.mn.
Recorded June 17, 2021 | Edited by Jordan Daoust | Produced by Jenny Karkowski
Show Links
TurnSignl’s website | https://turnsignl.com
Contact Jazz | info@turnsignl.com
JMG Careers Page | https://jmg.mn/careers
Email careers@jmg.mn
Connect with Tim Bornholdt on LinkedIn | https://www.linkedin.com/in/timbornholdt/
Chat with The Jed Mahonis Group about your app dev questions | https://jmg.mn