Green Business

By ANNE FILIPIC
January/February 2012

Woman business owner creates clean energy jobs by being bold.

Wendy Jameson’s life slogan is “Fear Mediocrity: don’t be afraid to be bold,” a motto that Jameson and her partner in Colnatec, Scott Grimshaw (whom she met on Twitter), established. Jameson has always been an individual who stands out from the crowd and takes risks each and every day, the epitome of an entrepreneur. She is a former business consultant and coach with 25 years experience in sales, marketing and business strategy for growth companies. A wife and mother of two boys, family has always been an important part of Jameson’s life, too. But they are not the only people she calls family—the nine employees who work for Colnatec care for each other and believe in the success of the company as much as she does.

Colnatec (http://colnatec.com/) is a woman-owned “greentech” company from Gilbert, Arizona that designs and builds thin film process control sensors for nanotechnology manufacturing. They have developed and patented groundbreaking film thickness measurement products for making solar cells, mobile displays, optics and flexible lighting and electronics that increase production yields and decrease manufacturing costs.

The holder of eight patents, they are recipients of a U.S. Department of Energy award for a revolutionary sensor to be used in manufacturing CIGS solar cells. This sensor will enable manufacturers to achieve cell and module efficiencies well beyond current capability. Colnatec is also one of eight winners of the Arizona Innovation Challenge grant program, which was established through $1.5 million in funds provided to Arizona to promote innovation, specifically in the technology sector, and encourage export manufacturing. These funds have enabled Colnatec to purchase production machinery, finalize product development and market globally.

“The funding we’ve received has been like a shot in the arm—a significant morale boost,” says Jameson. “It’s proof our science is sound, but even more importantly, that others believe in us, too. It gave us not only confidence, but also hope that we really could achieve our dreams.”

Bridging U.S.-India Relations

Anne Filipic is the deputy director of the Office of Public Engagement at the White House.

 


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Photograph courtesy Wendy Jameson.

Photograph courtesy Wendy Jameson

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