S3 Recycling Solutions CEO Rod McDaniel (right) with S3 Chairman Darrell S. Freeman, Sr. at the company's new location in Springfield, Tenn.[/caption]
Based on the statistics, Rod McDaniel knows he was unlikely to become the CEO of a fast-growing electronics reuse and recycling company.
Born to a 15-year-old mom, the African-American man grew up below the poverty line in the Sudekum Apartments, a public housing project in Nashville, Tenn. He never went to college.
But while in high school, he obtained certifications to work on computers, and he began job shadowing an IT technician for Metro Nashville Public Schools. That helped him land a job immediately out of high school managing computers and networks for the school district. Later, he got a second job at S3 Asset Management, where he worked for years before he and other investors bought the company.
"Technology saved my life," the 31-year-old told E-Scrap News recently. "Growing up in the housing projects, the statistics say that more than likely you will not make it out. So technology was one of the things that helped me make it."
Today, McDaniel leads S3 Recycling Solutions, which provides data destruction, asset refurbishing and remarketing, and end-of-life recycling services for organizations. By weight, about 70 percent of what comes in the door is sold into wholesale or retail reuse markets. Roughly one-fifth of the reusable equipment undergoes light refurbishment before it's resold. The remaining 30 percent is manually dismantled, and the components are shipped for recycling by Dynamic Lifecycle Innovations, a Wisconsin-based processor with a facility in Nashville.
McDaniel said S3's robust and fast reporting - both in terms of inventory audit reports and certificates of destruction - differentiates it from competitors. "I think that's one of the ways that we're disrupting the electronics recycling industry," he said.
[caption id="attachment_10251" align="alignright" width="300"]
S3 Recycling Solutions CEO Rod McDaniel (right) with S3 Chairman Darrell S. Freeman, Sr. at the company's new location in Springfield, Tenn.[/caption]
Based on the statistics, Rod McDaniel knows he was unlikely to become the CEO of a fast-growing electronics reuse and recycling company.
Born to a 15-year-old mom, the African-American man grew up below the poverty line in the Sudekum Apartments, a public housing project in Nashville, Tenn. He never went to college.
But while in high school, he obtained certifications to work on computers, and he began job shadowing an IT technician for Metro Nashville Public Schools. That helped him land a job immediately out of high school managing computers and networks for the school district. Later, he got a second job at S3 Asset Management, where he worked for years before he and other investors bought the company.
"Technology saved my life," the 31-year-old told E-Scrap News recently. "Growing up in the housing projects, the statistics say that more than likely you will not make it out. So technology was one of the things that helped me make it."
Today, McDaniel leads S3 Recycling Solutions, which provides data destruction, asset refurbishing and remarketing, and end-of-life recycling services for organizations. By weight, about 70 percent of what comes in the door is sold into wholesale or retail reuse markets. Roughly one-fifth of the reusable equipment undergoes light refurbishment before it's resold. The remaining 30 percent is manually dismantled, and the components are shipped for recycling by Dynamic Lifecycle Innovations, a Wisconsin-based processor with a facility in Nashville.
McDaniel said S3's robust and fast reporting - both in terms of inventory audit reports and certificates of destruction - differentiates it from competitors. "I think that's one of the ways that we're disrupting the electronics recycling industry," he said.
S3 Recycling Solutions CEO Rod McDaniel (right) with S3 Chairman Darrell S. Freeman, Sr. at the company's new location in Springfield, Tenn.[/caption]
Based on the statistics, Rod McDaniel knows he was unlikely to become the CEO of a fast-growing electronics reuse and recycling company.
Born to a 15-year-old mom, the African-American man grew up below the poverty line in the Sudekum Apartments, a public housing project in Nashville, Tenn. He never went to college.
But while in high school, he obtained certifications to work on computers, and he began job shadowing an IT technician for Metro Nashville Public Schools. That helped him land a job immediately out of high school managing computers and networks for the school district. Later, he got a second job at S3 Asset Management, where he worked for years before he and other investors bought the company.
"Technology saved my life," the 31-year-old told E-Scrap News recently. "Growing up in the housing projects, the statistics say that more than likely you will not make it out. So technology was one of the things that helped me make it."
Today, McDaniel leads S3 Recycling Solutions, which provides data destruction, asset refurbishing and remarketing, and end-of-life recycling services for organizations. By weight, about 70 percent of what comes in the door is sold into wholesale or retail reuse markets. Roughly one-fifth of the reusable equipment undergoes light refurbishment before it's resold. The remaining 30 percent is manually dismantled, and the components are shipped for recycling by Dynamic Lifecycle Innovations, a Wisconsin-based processor with a facility in Nashville.
McDaniel said S3's robust and fast reporting - both in terms of inventory audit reports and certificates of destruction - differentiates it from competitors. "I think that's one of the ways that we're disrupting the electronics recycling industry," he said.
Categories