My interview on Fox Chicago: Cancer Patient Gets Life-saving Transplant From Unexpected Hero

Shalom Klein and Dr. Leonard Klein
Chances are you or someone you know has donated blood before, but have you ever thought of joining the bone marrow registry? One local man did and he recently got the call of a lifetime.

On Friday, a young man from Skokie prepped to save the life of a man he has never met. He will be a bone marrow donor for a patient dying of cancer and says their story will inspire you to think about doing the same.

Shalom Klein sees his doctor regularly for injections. The injections over four days are stimulating his stem cells so he can donate them to a complete stranger with acute myeloid leukemia–a form of blood cancer that without treatment could be fatal.

“What’s a little bit of pain relative to somebody’s life?” Klein says. “That’s a very easy sacrifice for me to make. I’m excited about it.”

Read more: http://www.myfoxchicago.com/story/23673042/cancer-patient-gets-life-saving-transplant-from-unexpected-hero#ixzz2hbjcCrlZ

Be The Match Bone Marrow

Join The Bone Marrow Registry

I am at Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge, IL right now beginning day one of two days of a bone marrow donation procedure. I got swabbed, and now will be be potentially saving someone’s life.

For thousands of critically ill blood cancer patients, there is a cure. And it could be you.

Make today the day you sign up to save someone’s life.Be The Match Bone Marrow

Marie Johns

SBA Deputy Administrator Marie Johns greets Jewish B2B Networking and the SBAC

Marie Johns

U.S. Small Business Administration Deputy Administrator Marie Johns provides greetings on behalf of the SBA to the delegation of business leaders in Washington DC from Jewish B2B Networking and the Small Business Advocacy Council on February 28, 2013.

City of Chicago Small Business event
I kicked off the event with a discussion of our resources for entrepreneurs
Shalom Klein

From the Skokie Review: Skokie’s Shalom Klein was ready to save a stranger’s life

by Mike Isaacs, read the full article here

Shalom Klein

Shalom Klein has done a lot in a short time at age 25, but saving a life isn’t one of them

That, though, is just what Klein was prepared to do after a routine bone marrow screening more than a year ago. They took a swab inside his mouth, and he forgot about even having done it until he received a monumental call upon coming out of a downtown meeting.

“I was walking down State Street, and I got a call from a Cleveland area code that I didn’t recognize,” he said. “My gut reaction was not to answer, but I picked up the phone and someone was telling me something about bone marrow.”

The call changed his life because it had the potential to save someone else’s life.

According to the National Bone Marrow Registry Program, about one in 540 registry members in the United States go on to donate bone marrow or peripheral blood stem cells to a patient.

“Because of the vast variation in tissue types, we can’t predict an individual registry member’s chance of donating to a patient,” the National Bone Marrow Registry Program states.

But Klein immediately knew he had a rare opportunity. He was told he was the only person in the registry who was a match for a male recipient. His biggest immediate challenge, he said, was to convince family, which he knew would eventually happen, but he was unwavering from the beginning in wanting to move forward.

“I like to think a lot of the things I’ve been doing have been good for the community and have helped people, but can I ever say I’ve actually saved someone’s life? No, I can’t,” he said.

Many people in Skokie and the surrounding area know Klein or know of him. He is involved in a remarkable number of activities that give back to his community, that help people find jobs, that help small businesses, that help the village with economic development, that help the ruling Caucus Party and more.

You won’t find anyone better organized with his time. Klein helps run Moshe Klein & Associates Ltd., his father’s Skokie bookkeeping and accounting firm for small businesses.

He has staged three major annual events in the area called The Business Event for small businesses and key speakers, drawing thousands of people. He chairs Skokie’s first Economic Development Commission and is a steering committee member and former chair of The Dempster Street Merchants Association. He also is pursuing an advanced degree in Jewish professional studies in business and administration. And on it goes.

But Klein was more than ready to add “bone marrow donor” to his tall resume all the while determined not to miss a beat in his busy schedule.

“I view this as a great opportunity to catch up on some of the work I wasn’t able to (get to),” he said about the two full days for which he was scheduled at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge. “I’m not scheduling any meetings at the hospital. That’s something different than my normal schedule.”

Those days were set for this week, but they never came to be. His procedure had been postponed twice before because of the recipient’s poor health — a rare occurrence, he was told. The Sept. 23 and 24 dates for the procedure, however, were looking good as they drew near. Then Klein received another message from the National Bone Marrow Registry Program that impacted him almost as much as that original call telling him he was a match.

“Regretfully, the patient’s condition has taken a negative turn and they are reporting that his kidneys are failing,” he told the Skokie Review, which was to attend his procedure and follow his status for a story. “At this point, they are not certain he will recover and will need my cells. Needless to say, I am devastated.”

Klein was told things may turn around again, but the news hit him hard.

“I’ve really developed a strong sense of commitment for this individual who I have not and may never meet,” he said.

Getting word out

The moment Klein first discovered he was in a position to save someone’s life – all because of a painless and brief bone marrow screening – he wanted to get the word out to others.

He wanted to let his community know that joining the National Bone Marrow Registry can do so much with only temporary discomfort to the donor.

In weeks preparing for the procedure, Klein regularly gave blood. They first took 10 tubes of his blood, but then it became two or three tubes as the weeks went by. He says he felt no ill health.

“I’ll forget about it in a few hours,” he said just after giving three tubes of blood in only minutes. “I’m running an event in two or three hours. I just build (the blood draw) into my schedule, and I feel great actually.”

Had the procedure moved forward, Klein would have received injections the week before, preparing his system for the bone marrow transplant. Some side effects from the injections are often temporary aches and pains, sort of flu-like symptoms.

Those in the registry who match a patient are asked to donate either bone marrow, as Klein was asked, or cells from circulating blood (known as PBSC donation). Donating bone marrow is a surgical procedure done under general or regional anesthesia in a hospital. While a donor receives anesthesia, doctors use needles to withdraw liquid marrow from the back of the pelvic bone.

PBSC donation is non-surgical done in an outpatient clinic. PBSC donors receive daily injections of a drug called filgrastim for five days, to increase the number of blood-forming cells in the bloodstream.

Klein was set for his procedure for two full days. He would have slept at home at night and come back the following morning first thing. Once the procedure was completed, the medical team’s emphasis would immediately shift to transferring the bone marrow to the recipient as quickly and safely as possible.

“Sometimes that requires immediate air transportation, sometimes they jump in the car and get it out there,” Klein said. “The recipient’s health has been conditioned for this. If he’s been conditioned and doesn’t get the cells, it can be fatal.”

Following the procedure, there are temporary aches and pains for the donor, but they usually are back to full strength in short time. And they receive meticulous care from the hospital medical staff during those weeks.

“Some donors said the experience was more painful than they expected; others said it was less painful,” the National Bone Marrow Registry Program states. “Some donors describe the pain as similar to achy hip bones or falling on their buttocks. Others say it feels more like a strained muscle in the back. The ache may last a few days to several weeks.”

Klein knew little about the recipient he was prepared to save, which he understands is how it has to be.

Even at the National Bone Marrow Registry Program in Cleveland, they keep the information “very, very close to their chest,” he said. But had the procedure gone well, and had both parties been willing, he would have been able to meet the recipient a year later.

He is still hoping to have that opportunity — to save the life of a stranger who doesn’t feel like a stranger to him anymore. Being only one of 10.5 million or so in the national registry who matches a recipient creates a special bond whether the recipient is identified or not.

“This (was) such a unique experience,” he said. “The chance to save someone’s life is something not handed to most everybody, and I (realized) that.”

He still does. And he continues to hope that the chance has not passed him by forever.

Shalom Klein

TribLocal: Shalom Klein, Networking Maven

Shalom Klein

Shalom Klein, The Networking Maven
By Roberta Katchen Stein

Read the original post on TribLocal.com

Talking to Shalom Klein might catapult a job seeker into a nirvana where job layoffs are nonexistent, work opportunities abound, and the word “recession” is not in the English vocabulary.
Klein works diligently to turn his utopian vision for the business world into a reality for thousands of job hunters. His efforts have already led to dozens of formerly unemployed Chicagoans finding jobs over the past year! His venues also provide renewed hope to hundreds of other jobseekers.

Klein wears two hats. Not only does he serve as the business director for his family’s Skokie bookkeeping and accounting firm, MK & A Ltd., which helps small businesses with bookkeeping and accounting, and taxes, but he also serves as Chairman of Jewish B2BNetworking, an organization he founded less than a year ago. Klein doesn’t pocket one penny for his services. He uses any income from these ventures merely to cover costs.

Despite the Jewish Business2Business Networking name, the events are nonsectarian, and open to all.

The idea for these networking events occurred to Klein after he arranged a luncheon at “Slice of Life, “ a kosher restaurant in Skokie. His goal was to introduce a relatively small number of people to the family firm. Although approximately 20 were invited, 70 attended. Adding to his surprise, the group immediately and spontaneously began networking.

Reflecting on the luncheon, Klein said, “It didn’t take long to realize that all it takes to help a job-seeker land an interview is a connection.”

That realization eventually led him to launch “Jewish B2B Networking, now firmly established in Chicago, but also in St. Louis and Detroit.

Klein’s efforts have snowballed, starting with a variety of networking events. After a networking event held at the Evanston Public Library held two days before Christmas, he quickly learned to prepare for a large attendance. Although the event was anticipated to draw about 70 people, it amazed Klein that more than 100 appeared.

Other networking events are planned through October.

Klein also created an interactive website, www.JewishB2BNetworking.com, where people can join, create profiles, search for jobs, register for the networking events, and post to a blog. This site currently boosts 12,000 subscribers and averages 200 job listings.

In addition, Klein debuted a new publication, “The Jewish Business News,” in January 2011 in both on- and offline formats. Its current circulation boasts 15,000 subscribers.
As Klein continues to add new features, he is beginning to host free teleseminars, starting with one called, “How to Build a Step By Step Selling System That Brings You All the Customers You Want” in April.

Even Senators Dick Durbin, Mark Kirk and Jan Schakowsky are participating in a one-day mega event planned for the fall. It will be an O’Hare-area daylong business exposition and trade show. This event, offered free of charge to those registering in advance, will include a resume-writing workshop, a boot camp for job seekers, and much more.

When asked about his inspiration to create these networking opportunities, Klein said, “I was taught from a young age that the highest form of charity is helping someone to earn their own livelihood so that they’re able to support themselves. Having established relationships with thousands and thousands of businesses, I have sent many people their way. I’m a recruiter’s best friend.”

A second source of inspiration comes from his membership at a Skokie synagogue, Congregation Or Torah. He said, “I enjoy an excellent relationship with Rabbi Zvi Engel, the rabbi at this temple. He is a source of encouragement and inspiration for the work I am involved in.”

Seeing a successful match between job seekers and employers, he said, “I’m thrilled every time I walk into a Starbucks and see an employment connection that I facilitated ‘schmoozing’ and keeping the networking chain going. That feeling of making a successful connection gives me a positive boost of energy that offers more motivation for the hard work of coordinating events and the relationships that come from them.”

Read the original post on TribLocal.com

How To Run A Successful Small Business In Illinois - 2013

How To Run A Successful Small Business In Illinois – 2013

Join us on October 3, 2013 at 5:30pm for a FREE evening of information and networking. You will hear short presentations from well known experts in the following areas important to any small business owner:

How To Run A Successful Small Business In Illinois - 2013

– Taxes for Small Business

– Small Business Insurance Concerns

– Legal Issues Facing Entrepreneurs

– Cash Flow and Receivables

– Sales and Networking Skills

– Government Resources for Business

 

A lively open networking opportunity will be available after the presentations. You will have a chance to meet other small business owners and to speak with the presenters one/one about any questions that you might have. 

 

FREE Registration:

http://www.jewishb2bnetworking.com/business-event/how-run-successful-small-business-illinois-2013-0

 

Sponsored By:

Weiss Properties

Shalom Klein LinkedIn

The Best Networker I Know

Thanks, Jeff Segal, for the very kind blog post. See the original blog here.

Ask any startup founders how they met, and you’ll probably hear something along the lines of “Well, I knew a guy who’d worked with her, then we ran into each other at TechCocktail and she introduced me to …”

The startup community is networking nirvana.

Yet the best networker I know doesn’t run a startup. He works for a Skokie-based family accounting firm. But—in his spare time—he leads a networking group that’s grown from zero to more than 18,000 members in just two and a half years.

shalom-klein

The group is Jewish B2B Networking, and its founder is a soft-spoken guy named Shalom Klein, who claims, “Really, I can only take credit for setting up the coffee and cake at our events.”

That’s a lot of coffee and cake. Jewish B2B hosts events nearly every week, in the city and suburbs, with anywhere from handfuls to hundreds of attendees. New postings pepper their job board daily, and they’re busy planning for their second annual business leaders’ trip to meet with administration officials and legislators in Washington.

And it all started from a single lunch. Klein explains, “I realized many of our clients, friends, and family needed to meet each other, so I planned a lunch at Slice of Life restaurant in Skokie. While I expected 20 people to attend, 75 people turned out. I walked into my neighborhood Starbucks the following day and saw three meetings going on from the day prior.”

A startup that grew so quickly from 75 users to 18,000 would probably be in line for some serious funding, but Jewish B2B is strictly a non-profit enterprise. Many of their events are free, and, in case you’re wondering, you don’t have to be Jewish to join.

“Business owners and job seekers—both Jewish and people from all faiths—are finding out about our resources, educational programs, and events, and are taking advantage,” says Klein. “Tens of thousands of business connections have been formed, and hundreds of jobs have been filled.”

Like most successful entrepreneurs, he makes it sound simple, even inevitable.

But building a network with the size and impact of Jewish B2B, in just two and a half years—in his spare time—makes Shalom Klein a networker extraordinaire.

See the original blog here.