Monday, July 11, 2011

The Business of a Marathon

<strong>Cincinnati Flying Pig Marathon, Cincinnati</strong> | 05.01.11 8:27 A.M.

A look at the companies that provided the finishers medals, recycling bins, timing, and heat-reflective blankets to the 14th annual Flying Pig Marathon in Cincinnati

Finishers' Medals
Each of the 30,000 runners who took part in the 14th annual Flying Pig Marathon and accompanying relay, half-marathon, 10K, and 5K races received a 3-ounce medallion featuring a grinning pig with wings. CEO Sharon Janis-Rochford co-founded Maxwell Medals & Awards of Traverse City, Michigan, in 1975. Today, it has 30 employees and makes medals, plaques, pins, patches, and trophies for some 7,500 customers worldwide.

Recycling Bins
On race day, runners and spectators threw more than a ton of bottles, cans, and other recyclable materials into 75 green cardboard recycling bins provided by Rumpke Recycling, which also hauled away the refuse. Brothers William and Bernard Rumpke founded Rumpke's parent company, Rumpke Consolidated, in 1932. Now headed by William's son, Bill, the $450 million Cincinnati company has 2,300 employees and recycles some 250,000 tons of trash each year.

Timing and Results
When Amy McDonaugh, the top female finisher, crossed the finish line of the marathon, her time of two hours, 58 minutes, and 14 seconds was recorded by End Result of Bettendorf, Iowa. The company recorded runners' times using radio-frequency identification tags tied to their shoes and antennas embedded in mats along the marathon route; the technology allows End Result to provide live updates via text message and on the Flying Pig website. Runner Mike Ducy founded the 17-person company in 1982 and sold it to three of his employees, Josh Drew, Kevin Jandt, and Tim McKinnon, in 2009.

Heat-Reflective Blankets
Runners often have a hard time retaining body heat after a race. At the finish line, Flying Pig participants received heat-reflective polyethylene blankets made by Advanced Flexible Materials in Petaluma, California. David Deigan, an avid runner, founded Advanced Flexible Materials in 1980. Today, his roughly $5 million company has five employees and provides blankets to 400 races, triathlons, and cycling events around the world, including the New York City and London marathons.



Charisma Carpenter Hilarie Burton Kelly Carlson Sara Foster Natassia Malthe

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