Tyler Rowan knew how to win. No, scratch that. He had no idea how to win. But he knew how to know how to win, if that makes sense. howTyler was famous for caring about his people. He somehow knew the names of each of the four hundred men and women who worked at Detroit Nanobiotics (NYSE stock ticker DNBX, currently valued at $781.44/share but predicted to grow forever by any analyst who had eyes). He’d started the firm in his parents’ basement, building it into a research powerhouse, until he finally flat-out bought a whole wing of the razed-and-rebuilt Packard Biotechnical Research Park just north of Downtown, right by the big tree farm where the Gratiot Tram Line met the Conant. The scientists and HR types lived right there in the high rises of Indian Village or the mini-estates of Po

