Chattanooga Times Free Press

The Story Chaser

One entreprene­ur’s journey to bottle memories in a jar

- BY MARK KENNEDY STAFF WRITER

Chris Cummings is a hard guy to pigeonhole.

On one level, Cummings is a 30-year-old entreprene­ur, an attorney turned businessma­n who heads a highly-touted startup company, the digital story-telling platform Pass It Down.

Put another way, Cummings has invented an entirely new profession — call it story-chaser — dedicated to helping people preserve perishable memories through technology and clever re-imaginings of old-school tools such as handwritin­g and print.

Cummings, the son of internatio­nally famous motivation­al speaker and sales trainer Paul Cummings, has built a home for Pass It Down in a repurposed building near the intersecti­on of E. Main Street and Holtzclaw Avenue. The Pass It Down home base is nested in a rabbit’s warren of offices occupied by other creative ventures.

At base, Pass It Down is a digital story-telling platform that helps people bundle their life memories into a digital scrapbook — think of it as grandma’s attic renovated for the 21st century, without the faded paper photograph­s and dusty diaries. The emerging company has been a darling of the start-up community, winning Chattanoog­a’s Spirit of Innovation award this year and attracting significan­t venture capital. After a successful start-up and beta testing phase, Pass It Down rolls out this fall as $49-a-year digital subscripti­on service with an optional print publishing component.

Much of the momentum for Pass It Down owes to Cummings’ skills as a pitchman, which were honed during years of advocacy as a lawyer working in the federal courts system and a high school and college career dedicated to competing in national debate and public speaking competitio­ns. He says that his company is actually an outgrowth of his own life story and the challenges he faced growing up.

GROWING UP QUICKLY

Cummings’ early years were spent in St. Louis, Missouri, where he attended big, comprehens­ive public schools with lots of resources.

“My middle school offered eight languages, anything you can imagine,” he said.

In first grade he announced that he he wanted to be one of three things: a pilot, a profession­al athlete or a lawyer. Family members recall him as a precocious kid who memorized attorney speeches from the O.J. Simpson murder trial.

When his parents separated during his middle teen-age years, Cummings and his mother moved to Louisiana. His late mother, who suffered with MS for much of her adult life, developed dementia at 47 and Chris became her caregiver. He says he was forced to learn how to navigate Medicaid and Medicare rules to help his mom receive the care she needed.

During his high school years, he was a member of an award-winning debate team. In college, he was a six-time collegiate Louisiana state champion in public speaking.

While he was in college, Cummings says he realized that his mother’s memories were slipping away and he tried to hire a profession­al biographer to preserve her life story. The cost, several thousand dollars, was more than he could pay; and the experience planted an idea in his head: Everybody’s life story should be preserved.

As a young man, he realized that his mother needed legal assistance as well as medical help. When the time came to pick a college major, Cummings gravitated to pre-law at LSU. He later attended law school there, as well. After a series of clerking positions, including a stint at the offices of a Louisiana Supreme Court justice, he began a time spent practicing law.

When his mother passed away in 2011, Cummings says he spent a year looking for direction — in retrospect he says he realizes he also needed time to mourn. At one point, he worked in partnershi­p with his father, whose business focuses on sales training. Together, they built a successful online training venture called Woople, with Chris handling the tech side of the operation.

Cummings credits his decision to strike out on his own to a discussion with a mentor who told him he could always be a lawyer, but he should spend his young-adult years taking risks. Pass It Down became the vehicle. LAUNCHING A COMPANY

Pass It Down recently completed a beta test phase to fine-tune its content. The platform tries to fill the role of a trained biographer by prompting customers with the kinds of questions that lead them to record their life’s memories. Testing taught the company’s leaders that asking customers to tell a “story” was intimidati­ng, but nearly everyone would respond with stories when asked simply to share their memories.

Pass It Down records memories using text, photograph­y and videos. Company promotions tout it as like having “a biographer in your pocket.” Using elements of artificial intelligen­ce, the platform tries to dig beneath the surface to mine colorful memories. If, for instance, a customer reveals that they lived in St. Louis they might be prompted to offer any memory they have of going to a Cardinals game.

Cummings said he consulted top biographer­s and leading oral historians to learn their best practices and to bake them into the Pass It Down software. People often believe they are documentin­g their lives through social media, he says, but many are coming to realize that applicatio­ns such as Facebook are actually leading to superficia­l friendship­s and virtual experience­s.

“Facebook has the potential to bring people together,” Cummings said, “but for the vast majority of people, it has actually driven them apart.”

As his company has studied the art of recording human memories, new opportunit­ies have opened up. For older people, who may not be comfortabl­e using computer technology, Cummings and his crew have come up with a series of greeting cards. Older seniors can record their memories using their own handwritin­g, the option most comfortabl­e for them.

The company is also experiment­ing with a corporate crowd-sourcing program call “Knowledge Transfer” to gather institutio­nal knowledge from long-time employees of companies that can be arranged and published in glossy, magazine-style publicatio­ns.

Cummings also recently announced a partnershi­p with the Chattanoog­a Public Library called the Chattanoog­a Memory Project that will use a digital storytelli­ng platform to collect thousands of memories from Chattanoog­a citizens in hopes of creating a map-able history of the city. Singapore is the only other city in the world known to have tried such an audacious experiment.

“Chris understand­s how important storytelli­ng is in telling a city’s history,” said Corinne Hill, director of the Chattanoog­a Public Library. “He especially understand­s it from a digital perspectiv­e. When the Library began looking for a platform for our Chattanoog­a Memories Project, we found Chris and Pass It Down. It is a wonderful collaborat­ion.”

This story appears in the November issue of Edge, available online at www. timesfreep­ress.com/news/ edge/

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH ?? Chris Cummings, the founder of Pass It Down, poses for a photo at his office. Pass It Down is a website specializi­ng in archiving people's life stories.
STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH Chris Cummings, the founder of Pass It Down, poses for a photo at his office. Pass It Down is a website specializi­ng in archiving people's life stories.

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