A recipe for turning Pokemon Go into a job?

If the dream is to make a living doing what you love, a Georgia grocery store produce manager thinks he got a jump start by noticing Pokemon Go long before it was a craze.

The smartphone game only launched in July. But about 10 months ago, 32-year-old Vic Holden of Marietta heard a news report about plans for the app and quickly launched an unofficial Facebook page: @PokemonGoATL.

“I like Pokemon, and I wanted to play with a lot of other nerds,” Holden told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

But now he's fielding calls from local businesses, nonprofits and others looking for good ways to connect with the game's followers in Georgia.

Holden connected with three other metro Atlantans — Caity Cooperrider, Victor Potter and Chris Stauffer — to volunteer to organize gatherings. Eventually, they hope to hold competitions and turn their organizing into full-time paying work.

Find out what they think their chances are and how they're helping one popular Atlanta development that hopes to soon capitalize on Pokemon Go, in my latest Unofficial Business column on MyAJC.com.