Jay Newton-Small is the CEO and Co-Founder of MemoryWell.
What led you to start working in digital/media publishing?
My father had Alzheimer’s and I was his primary caregiver. A few years ago, when I moved him into a community, they asked me to fill out a 20-page questionnaire about his life. This made no sense to me. First of all, I have terrible handwriting! Secondly, I was a professional writer at the time and I found the questions impossible to answer — I challenge anyone to describe their parent’s 50+ year marriage in four lines; and third, who was going to read and remember 20 pages of hand-written data points for the 150+ residents in that community? I handed in the form blank and instead wrote down his story. They loved it. They remembered it, told each other about it. MemoryWell was born. We now have a network of more than 450 journalists across the country writing senior life stories with the aim of improving connections and care. All of our stories are hosted digitally and families can add their loved one’s favorite music, movies, arts and readings to build out a whole timeline of their loved ones’ lives.
What does a typical day look like for you?
Perhaps it’s my journalism background, but every day tends to be different. We’re a startup so I wear many hats, being an editor, writer, CEO, sales person, manager, marketer, and fundraiser — so every day entails multiple demands!What does your work setup look like? (your apps, productivity tools, etc.)
Right now we use Basecamp to track all of our stories and nimble to track sales. That’s changing as we grow. We’re switching to our own custom content management system and likely sales forces to track sales.What do you do to get inspired?
When my dad was alive, I visited him! Now, it’s the time I spend in assisted living and continuing care communities listening to amazing senior stories that otherwise might get lost to time.





