Try GOLD - Free
Alertmedia – Don't Start a Business Unless You Have a Mission To Build It On
Inc.
|May - June 2020
Brian Cruver was a cocky, 29-year-old, freshly minted MBA who thought he had landed in the big leagues when he took a job in 2001 — at Enron.

Within months, he witnessed the energy company once regarded as an innovative dynamo implode amid fraud allegations. He was laid off with thousands of others. The experience has colored everything he’s done since then.
“Everyone else went on to their next corporate job,” Cruver says. “But I ended up writing a book [Anatomy of Greed], which was turned into a CBS movie.” He’s sitting in a conference room at AlertMedia, the Austin-based emergency-communications software startup he launched in 2013. It was during his book hiatus that he had an epiphany: “I realized I could go start companies of my own that do great things. I decided that every company I’d start would be the anti-Enron.”
AlertMedia is one of the fruits of that decision. In 2009, Cruver co-founded a company called Xenex Disinfection Services, which makes a germ-zapping robot (see “The Germinator,” page 22) designed to reduce hospital-acquired infections that is now on the frontlines of the Covid-19 battle. Before that were Giveline, a software firm that helps nonprofits raise money, and some other companies that he and a business partner, Morris Miller, invested in. “They didn’t all work out,” Cruver says. “I learned lots of lessons.”
This story is from the May - June 2020 edition of Inc..
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,500+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Inc.

Inc.
How I Beat the Odds to Create a New Kind of Event Company
It’s never too late to win big. That’s the way Derek Gwaltney, 52, thinks about both life and his event company, Atlas Experiences.
4 mins
Fall 2025

Inc.
THE TRICKY BUSINESS OF BEING AN IMMIGRATION ATTORNEY IN 2025
As sweeping changes reshape the immigration system, a wave of demand is fueling legal tech startups, boutique law firms, and social media-savvy lawyers.
7 mins
Fall 2025

Inc.
Marina Khidekel
As your company grows, you'll add new products. Here are common traps to avoid.
5 mins
Fall 2025

Inc.
Karen Dillon
Being on a winning streak is fun. But be careful you don't get addicted to chasing success.
5 mins
Fall 2025

Inc.
STRESS TEST
With lucrative deals from Nvidia and OpenAI and a market value that has crossed $75 billion—as well as over $8 billion in debt—CoreWeave is a driving force in the AI boom.Amid growing competition, does the company have what it takes to sustain its meteoric rise?
12 mins
Fall 2025

Inc.
How We Built an Allergy Business on Reddit and YouTube
Like millions of Americans, Aakash Shah, 31, has struggled with allergies, leading to itchy eyes and congestion for the software engineer.
4 mins
Fall 2025

Inc.
FOR GROWTH COMPANIES, A MESSY TRADE WAR THREATENS PROFITS
There’s a new normal in what it takes to lead and grow a business. And Inc. 5000 CEOs have been learning to adapt on the fly.
10 mins
Fall 2025

Inc.
A First-Class Idea
How Shenique Sparks turned her luxury travel side hustle into a big business.
4 mins
Fall 2025

Inc.
The Mother of Reinvention
Everything is perfectly in place for Joy Mangano's second act with CleanBoss, including her partnership with co-founder Pitbull.
4 mins
Fall 2025

Inc.
VIVA RAW
Jennifer Wu and Zach Ao Hillsborough, North Carolina Three-year growth rate: 5,670%
3 mins
Fall 2025
Translate
Change font size