Name: Luke Jacobson
Job: CEO, Moment Skis
Home Base: Reno, Nevada
Age: 32
Education: Mechanical engineering degree from the University of Nevada, Reno
Luke Jacobson was in college in Reno, Nevada, when a friend told him about a guy named Casey Hakansson, who worked as a mason but was also building skis in a small snowboard factory in town. Jacobson showed up at the factory one day and asked if he could work for free. 鈥淢y intention was to learn how to make skis so I could eventually go and get a job working at a ski company,鈥 Jacobson says. He never left.
Together, the two guys built , an independent ski brand launched in 2005 that still makes its skis on U.S. soil in the company鈥檚 factory outside Reno. Hakansson recently stepped away from the brand to run another company, and Jacobson, who officially became Moment鈥檚 CEO in 2016, is now at the helm. Today, Moment makes several thousand pairs of skis each year, having doubled production in 2017 from the year prior. Not to mention that on February 21, halfpipe skier and Reno resident David Wise an Olympic gold medal on a pair of Moments.

We called up Jacobson while he was working a ski grinder to talk about his secrets to being a good boss and what a skier does during a low-snow winter.
On Getting Hands-On at Work: 鈥淲e get dirty here. We鈥檙e behind ski grinders and epoxy and welders and ski presses. We keep a pile of dirty clothes ready because there鈥檚 fiberglass all over. This isn鈥檛 like we鈥檙e designing skis and outsourcing it to some other company to make. A lot of people think we鈥檙e just watching ski movies and chilling out. But this is blue-collar, old-school American factory work for ten hours a day.鈥
On How Moment Skis Has Changed Since Its Early Days: 鈥淥ur accounting back then was so disorganized. We didn鈥檛 intend for it to become a business at the beginning. When Backcountry.com wanted to place an order, we barely had a price sheet. We didn鈥檛 know what we were doing. But today, we鈥檙e still making skis for our friends, ourselves, and our athletes. We make skis because they鈥檙e new and fun, not because they鈥檙e going to sell. But every year, we鈥檙e becoming better at business.鈥
On Becoming the Boss: 鈥淚鈥檓 now 100 percent responsible for all the financials. I鈥檓 better at QuickBooks than ever before. Being at the top of the food chain at work means everyone鈥檚 problems become my problems. Sometimes that鈥檚 a personal problem; sometimes it鈥檚 a broken machine. It鈥檚 definitely a growing experience.鈥
On His Favorite Skis: 鈥淥ne of my favorite skis is still the . I鈥檓 still really proud of the triple camber we came up with. It鈥檚 still our bestseller. We just tweaked it for next year, and it made me fall in love with that ski all over again. I love how it charges. It has such a solid edge, but when you slip the ski out just right, it can feel playful, too. I don鈥檛 think there鈥檚 one ski that can do it all, but I think this one is the closest we鈥檝e come to that.鈥
On the Hardest Thing About Designing Skis: 鈥淲hen revisions don鈥檛 work out, that鈥檚 the worst and best part. You spend all this time and it comes out and it feels just worthless. It鈥檚 frustrating in the moment, but afterward it鈥檚 how you grow as a business and how you learn to be a better manufacturer. It鈥檚 those mess-ups that teach you to improve.鈥
On Why Moment Calls Reno Home: 鈥淚 love that Reno鈥檚 so accessible. I like rock climbing, and Yosemite isn鈥檛 far. There are cool restaurants and nightlife. I鈥檓 not a city person, but I can definitely put up with Reno. It feels like a city, but you don鈥檛 have to pay for parking.鈥
On What He Does When the Snow Doesn鈥檛 Fall: 鈥淚t鈥檚 still nice to get out for a ski tour even when it hasn鈥檛 snowed. Otherwise, I鈥檒l hit the rock climbing gym, and I have an airplane, and flying is my biggest addiction outside of skiing.鈥
On a Useful Habit He鈥檚 Adopted: 鈥淧eople make fun of me for it, but when I go to restaurants where I know I like something, I don鈥檛 even look at the menu. I just get that same thing every time. As soon as I find something I like, I don鈥檛 go perusing the menu or changing my toothpaste. I keep it simple.鈥
On the Most Fulfilling Part of His Job: 鈥淲e like making things here. When you make something and it skis how you intended it to, that鈥檚 exciting. But I think one of the most fulfilling things is when you鈥檙e out skiing and someone you don鈥檛 know is on Moment skis and they鈥檙e talking about how much they love them. When you see a stranger who鈥檚 excited about something we work on every day, that鈥檚 the best part.鈥