About Jim Wiegand
Highlights of 24 years experience in public
companies and the securities industry:
I took my first business public in an IPO
at age 29. The goal was to raise money. After
many years of raising money, and then loosing
it manufacturing solar collectors, when "Solar
Tax Credits" ended, I discontinued operations.
I became a stock broker and introduced my
clients to small, often high risk companies.
Many were similar in size to the public company
I founded. I quickly learned that for shares
to perform long term, each public company,
whatever its financial performance, must
successfully interface with the research,
trading and sales functions performed by
investment banking firms.
A decade later and somewhat wiser, I "cleaned
up" my inactive public company, held
a meeting for the 2,200 plus shareholders
and ultimately "reverse merged"
it with a private high tech venture. The
surviving entity, TELEGEN started trading
on the NASDAQ Small Cap and is now trading
on the OTCBB under the symbol "TEGN".
Being public has helped Telegen's founder,
Jessica Stevens, raise over $10,000,000 for
development of her unique flat panel display,
soon entering production. See www.telegen.com
I am not a lawyer, however, I have worked extensively with SEC lawyers to stay within the complex
web of securities laws. Please do not rely
on this web site for specific legal advice
regarding your business and the various state
and federal securities laws.
If you control a qualified business, I can
discuss strategic planning, and within the
limits expressed above, corporate and securities
law. If we discover a mutual interest, I
can transfer control of a clean shell and
through an SEC attorney, facilitate required
legal filings and related tasks to initiate
public trading in the shares of your business.