logo
Crandall receives Raymond P. Shafer Award

Crandall receives Raymond P. Shafer Award

Yahoo24-04-2025
CONNEAUT LAKE — Service is second nature for Dan Crandall, owner of Fine Print Commercial Printers. That was on banner display Wednesday night as Crandall, 67, received the Raymond P. Shafer Award at the Meadville-Western Crawford County Chamber of Commerce's Diamond Awards dinner at Hotel Conneaut.
'I'm looking around the room, and I'm realizing, everyone here is a winner,' Crandall said in his speech. 'Everyone here is great. That's what makes this community really go; you can't do it alone.'
Crandall moved to Meadville in his mid-20s after growing up in the Chicago, Illinois, area. Richard 'Dick' Lang of Dad's Dog Food was one of his first mentors, and Crandall had been in business just a few months when he received a call to meet with Lang.
'When you get someone like Dick Lang, that's kind of a big deal,' Crandall said. 'So I sat down, and he said, 'I gotta tell you something. I'm going to tell you how to be successful.''
The young entrepreneur was all ears — and lots of hair — as he took in Lang's words: ''You have to share. You have to share with your community. You have to share with your employees. You have to share with your family.' He said, 'If you live and work here and you derive your income from our area, you gotta give back.' … So I've always held that close to my heart. It's important.'
Crandall quickly became ingrained in the community.
Aside from owning a business, Crandall is also on the Active Aging board and the Iroquois Boating & Fishing Club board, is a member of the Meadville Coin Club, and is chairman of the ONE Federal Credit Union board. He has also held the positions of chairman of the Redevelopment Authority, and president of Rotary AM Meadville, Meadville Community Theatre and the Academy Theatre.
He's been involved in several community-based projects like rehabilitating dilapidated structures or organizing a coin show twice a year.
The award, created in 1991 and named after Gov. Raymond P. Shafer, recognizes an individual who has made a positive impact on the quality of life in western Crawford County through volunteer service. The award for distinguished community service is named after Shafer (1917-2006), the former governor of Pennsylvania, who also served as the state's lieutenant governor and Crawford County's district attorney.
Crandall's acceptance speech was riddled with his recognition of others, though. He applauded community figures like Andy Walker, Jackie Roberson, Heather Clancy-Young and Richard Friedberg for their mentorship and proper examples of being a community ally.
Aside from the pomp and circumstance, though, Crandall held up the little green trophy he received earlier that evening before the awards. It reads 'Greatest Grandpa.'
Crandall's voice cracked as he thanked his wife, Sue Crandall, and his stepdaughter, Makenzie Black, for their support and the support of his entire family.
'When I first got into business, I was motivated by money and I wanted to be successful,' he said. 'Now, I'm motivated by my grandchildren, one of whom is here tonight. He called me and asked if he could come, and I said, 'heck yea.''
His 8-year-old grandson, Pierce Buhman, then took to the stage to embrace his grandfather and take in the applause.
'My motivation now is to be a good guy so they think I'm alright,' Crandall beamed.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bell Potter Keeps Their Buy Rating on AML3D Ltd (AL3)
Bell Potter Keeps Their Buy Rating on AML3D Ltd (AL3)

Business Insider

time2 days ago

  • Business Insider

Bell Potter Keeps Their Buy Rating on AML3D Ltd (AL3)

Bell Potter analyst Daniel Lang maintained a Buy rating on AML3D Ltd today and set a price target of A$0.35. The company's shares opened today at A$0.34. Elevate Your Investing Strategy: Take advantage of TipRanks Premium at 50% off! Unlock powerful investing tools, advanced data, and expert analyst insights to help you invest with confidence. Make smarter investment decisions with TipRanks' Smart Investor Picks, delivered to your inbox every week. According to TipRanks, Lang is ranked #174 out of 9841 analysts. AML3D Ltd has an analyst consensus of Moderate Buy, with a price target consensus of A$0.38, implying a 13.43% upside from current levels. In a report released on July 8, Shaw and Partners also maintained a Buy rating on the stock with a A$0.40 price target. The company has a one-year high of A$0.33 and a one-year low of A$0.11. Currently, AML3D Ltd has an average volume of 2.45M.

Walmart Stock (WMT) is a Buying Opportunity as ‘Big Move Up' Awaits
Walmart Stock (WMT) is a Buying Opportunity as ‘Big Move Up' Awaits

Business Insider

time6 days ago

  • Business Insider

Walmart Stock (WMT) is a Buying Opportunity as ‘Big Move Up' Awaits

Shares in U.S. retail giant Walmart (WMT) were lower today despite one media personality declaring that it was a buying opportunity. Elevate Your Investing Strategy: Take advantage of TipRanks Premium at 50% off! Unlock powerful investing tools, advanced data, and expert analyst insights to help you invest with confidence. Make smarter investment decisions with TipRanks' Smart Investor Picks, delivered to your inbox every week. Ideal Buy Jim Cramer, the host of Mad Money on CNBC, didn't exactly wow his audience by declaring that Walmart was the number one brick-and-mortar retailer, but what he said next will have pricked up some ears. This is what Cramer said: 'This is a slow time for Walmart stock, but Lang (Bob Lang, founder of and the author of Know Your Options) says that makes it the ideal time to buy the stock. The price action here has been sideways, with the stock stuck in the range of $93 to $100 for the last few months. Lang thinks that Walmart's simply digesting its big move up from the April lows. That makes some sense to me. It was a gigantic gain. He'd be a buyer on weakness.' Let's look at the Walmart stock price chart for the last few months. We can see that since the start of the year, the stock is up just 5%. Over the last three months it is up around 4%. Tech and Tools It's been a challenging period for the stock and other consumer-facing peers. That's down to price rises as a result, arguably, of President Trump's tariff policies as well as having to handle a drop in consumer sentiment. It is also facing increased competition from the more premium end of the grocery and food market as, despite the challenges, shoppers look for more premium alternatives such as Amazon's (AMZN) Whole Foods. Walmart has also been making moves to attract more rural shoppers as well as increasing its technological capabilities. This includes the use of drones and AI tools for shoppers. The forecasts for the business look positive, but investors need to be wary of those macro economic challenges and the continued uncertainty around tariffs. Is WMT a Good Stock to Buy Now? On TipRanks, WMT has a Strong Buy consensus based on 28 Buy ratings. Its highest price target is $120. WMT stock's consensus price target is $111.33, implying a 17.44% upside.

Exclusive: Ambrook raises $26.1 million Series A to provide farmers and ranchers with better accounting software
Exclusive: Ambrook raises $26.1 million Series A to provide farmers and ranchers with better accounting software

Yahoo

time01-07-2025

  • Yahoo

Exclusive: Ambrook raises $26.1 million Series A to provide farmers and ranchers with better accounting software

When I meet Chase Crandall, he's putting up a barbed wire fence. Even on Zoom, the Wyoming sky is clearly in the background, with an expanse of ranch land stretching out into the distance. Crandall is a sixth-generation rancher, who's tending to land that was originally settled by his ancestors in the 1850s—but is thinking proactively about technology in 2025. 'Typically, ranchers are fairly cheap and careful about spending money,' said Crandall. 'And we try to be the same. We try to be as low-cost and run as efficiently as possible.' Farming has historically been technologically-forward, from the invention of the plow in ancient Mesopotamia to the implementation of the mechanical reaper in the Industrial Revolution. So, Ambrook—the accounting software startup that Crandall uses and the reason we're talking—is part of a long tradition of farming-focused tech. Ambrook was built expressly with American agriculture and industry in mind, filling a gap that existing software like QuickBooks leaves on the table, said Mackenzie Burnett, CEO and cofounder at Ambrook. 'Farms are in this delta where they are unusually complex for their size and revenue profile,' said Burnett, whose parents are both plant health specialists at the USDA. 'The mom and pop shops are generally doing pretty thin margins, and they are running on software that's built for less complex businesses. They tend to be what we kind of call multi-P&L, dealing with multiple revenue lines. Oftentimes a lot of farms have to vertically integrate in order to just make the margin profiles work.' Founded in 2021, Ambrook has raised a $26.1 million Series A, Fortune has exclusively learned. Thrive Capital and Figma's Dylan Field (via Field Ventures) led the round, with participation from existing investor Homebrew. BoxGroup, Designer Fund, Mischief, and Not Boring are among Ambrook's new investors in this round, bringing the company's total funding to $29 million. Farming is complex, Burnett says, because inventory (like livestock) has a literal lifecycle—it is born, grows, and dies. 'Most folks in tech have an idea of how complex a factory floor is in manufacturing,' said Burnett. 'But farming involves biological factors, in the sense you have inventory that is born, grows and dies. That is a huge complication, and understanding how to manage that isn't something that QuickBooks—or even a lot of SaaS software—is built for. It's built with a different kind of professional in mind.' Ambrook's rise comes at a 'challenging' time for farming in America, one that's trending towards seeing 'fewer farmers who are larger, more sophisticated, more specialized, and more consolidated,' said Jonathan Coppess, former administrator of the Department of Agriculture's Farm Service Agency. 'Farming, like the rest of the economy, is facing real uncertainty around technological advancements,' Coppess wrote to Fortune via email. 'What will be the impact of artificial intelligence, advanced robotics, etc.? Add to that the political and geopolitical uncertainties (from tariff conflicts to wars) and those of climate change. The risks and uncertainties are magnifying in real time, making it very difficult to make any predictions, or to have confidence that trends of the past are indicative of the future.' So, what does it take to keep a family farm a thriving business? Generational planning, for one—Calvin Crandall, the ranching family's patriarch, placed the land in a perpetual trust a few years ago, ensuring the land would stay together (and, by extension, a viable business) across future generations. Efficiency and margins matter, especially when it comes to tracking inventory that grazes, gives birth, and dies. 'What Ambrook solves for me is time management,' said Chase. 'Everything's live, and I don't have to manually update anything. Our margins matter, because there's so much you can't control. Can't control the cattle market, which can get crazy and sometimes you just have to take the price you can.' How many cows do the Crandalls have anyway? Calvin drives by while Chase and I are on a Zoom, and stops to chat. I ask. The two tell me with mirth and kindness that the question is quite a faux pas. 'That's like me asking you 'how much money do you have in your bank account right now?'' Chase laughs. His dad jumps in: 'You've got some money in your bank account, and we've got some cows on our land!' See you tomorrow, Allie GarfinkleX: @agarfinksEmail: a deal for the Term Sheet newsletter here. Nina Ajemian curated the deals section of today's newsletter. Subscribe here. This story was originally featured on Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store