Starting a sustainable Web design company that grew alongside the Internet boom, a local couple was recognized by a national LGBT organization as pioneers of the green movement.
Mia, left, and Tracy Levesque display the plaque they received as finalists for the National Gay & Lesbian Chamber of Commerce’s Wells Fargo Business Owner of the Year.
The Internet is full of sparkly pop-up ads, embedded videos and rich graphics. But there was a time when it wasn’t the colorful, easy-access browser of today.
“When I met Mia in 1992, she had a computer and, I mean, by today’s standards, it was a Windows machine, but she was able to do things with it. We got e-mail,” Tracy Levesque said of her wife and co-owner of the custom Web design company, YIKES.
The duo from Third and Carpenter streets, who officially started their homegrown company in ’96, worked to provide access to the World Wide Web for all.
“At WHYY, I saw the first Web-based browser, Mosaic. It was the precursor to Netscape. It was the first graphical browser,” Tracy said. “The nice thing about us is we’ve really grown with the Web. We got into it really early and experienced all of the incarnations and new features as they happened.”
Their precocious nature, along with being formerly of the IT department at the University of Pennsylvania, gave them the drive they needed to set up a business that has adhered to the same principles since its inception.
“It is people, planet, profits, in that order,” Mia Levesque said.
This philosophy recently got the members of the Philadelphia Sustainable Business Network named one of three finalists in the 2009 National Gay & Lesbian Chamber of Commerce’s Wells Fargo Business Owner of the Year Award.
The distinction, which showcases lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered business owners making advances in their fields, brought three trailblazers from around the nation to Washington, D.C.
“It was very fancy,” the Levesques said of the Building Museum fete and dinner held Nov. 6, during which the women lost out to retirement communities RainbowVision Properties-owner Joy Silver.
“I think it is great that we can show other businesses that you can get recognition for doing these [sustainable] practices that are fundamentally important,” Mia said. “I was really happy about that, in our getting the runner-up honors.”
“We recycle, we compost here in the office and it’s taken away by bicycle,” Tracy said. “We try and be all green, we print on all recycled paper and we use 100-percent renewable energy.”
Along with keeping their planet in high spirits, the Levesques make sure their eight employees are looked after.
“When I was in high school, I told myself I would make a commitment to the environment … and when we started our company, there wasn’t a name for it then, but this is what we were committing to,” Tracy said. “We wanted to create the world that we wanted to see.”
Moving to Queen Village in ’90, Mia, a Connecticut native, walked into her local video store at Fourth and South streets and met Tracy in ’92.
“After I graduated Temple [University] at age 18 in ’88, I worked at TLA Video, that’s also where I met Mia. She was a customer,” Tracy said. “That’s also why it’s so sad that it closed recently.”
Tracy, with a radio, television and film bachelor’s degree, and Mia, a UConn grad with a degree in French, bonded over a shared interest in the fledgling World Wide Web.
“I think our motivation was to bring the Internet and e-mail to people,” Mia, 44, said. “[The Internet] was an amazing thing. I don’t think we knew where it was heading, we didn’t have that kind of foresight, but we knew it was amazing and people should be able to use it.”
Soon after they met, the couple and a co-founder, who has since moved back to Switzerland, laid the groundwork for the still-strong Web design company that has weathered the Internet bubble and the current recession with flying colors.
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