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Talkin’ Trash...

My first job in local government was as a recycling manager for Alexandria Virginia so I’ve been talking trash for years.  Trash also happens to be an issue that keeps coming up in Kent — so I thought I’d try to stir things up a bit and see if I could get some trash talk from you as well.

The issue is the trash collection “free for all” that we have here in Kent.  It’s the only place I’ve ever lived or worked where it was every house for themselves when it came to trash collection.  Don’t get me wrong, I’m a big fan of private sector competition but that’s not what I see happening here — it looks more like private sector chaos.  I’m sure I’m probably stepping on someone’s toes here but considering our very high rate of rentals, with move in’s and move out’s happening all the time, with trash sitting out every day of the week waiting for collection, doesn’t it make sense to raise the standard a little and bring some semblance of order to trash collection in Kent?

I’ve run trash collection operations with 15 fully automated and 7 semi-automated rear packer routes and we constantly benchmarked our costs of service against the private sector.  We always won.  We didn’t have to make a profit so we were tough to beat in price and service.  Trash is a commodity business so the margins are low which means the private companies make their money by rolling as fast as they can to generate large volumes – and service, while important, is secondary to speed and number of accounts.

This is compounded by the fact that trash haulers in cities like ours have customers spread all over and trust me, every minute spent traveling from one account to the next is non-productive, non-value added, dead revenue time. We did everything we could to cut out that dead time and I’m sure the private haulers do the same.  So what we get is higher prices due to the inefficient collection and trucks racing all over town, carrying heavy loads over our streets — not just once but up to 5 days a week, increasing traffic, and with all due respect to the good haulers out there, lower levels of service because they’ve go to hump as much trash as they can to stay in business and customer service just slows them down.

Not only we were cheaper in cities where we ran the trash collection, we were always ranked as the best service in the city.  I’d like to think that’s because we worked really hard to satisfy our customers but it’s actually more than that.  It’s a service that is a very tangible part of our lives.  Hopefully most of us won’t have to use police or fire services, but like clockwork, our trash service came by every week and provided a service right at their front door.  As a result people can see a direct benefit for their tax dollars.  For most of us the police and fire are like insurance — we need to pay to have them ready for us in case we need them but many of us will never need them directly so we don’t get that tangible sense of getting something in return for your taxes.  It’s human nature to want to see some service for your tax dollars and by setting up the private free for all we have here I think we’ve lost a chance to make an important weekly connection with our residents and their city government.

Before I go any further, let me say that I’m not advocating city run collections right now.  That’s a big jump from where we are today and as much as I’d like to do it, we’re not in a financial position to make that move.  However, there are steps in between that I think would give us a chance to do better than the way we do it now.  We need to look at bidding the service in franchise districts.  We could divide the city up into a quadrants and bid each separately so that we could keep multiple haulers in business but we would designate collection days in each quadrant so that we limited trash sitting out on the curbs to one day a week on any given street.

This would help us keep the renters from leaving huge piles for weeks on end and it would give our code enforcement staff the ability to know when trash should be out and more important when it shouldn’t which would allow them to issue more citations to get people to clean up our streets.  By giving the private hauler all the houses in a quadrant I honestly believe that prices will be more competitive because we’re cutting out the haulers dead revenue travel time and giving them the kind of customer density they need to make their money.

I’ve rambled a bit but it seems like the benefits are fairly obvious — am I missing something?

Let me know.  Thanks.

Northeast Ohio — the good and the less good ...

The “Voices and Choices” initiative that started over a year ago in Northeast Ohio has released its preliminary “Community Conversation Report.”  After listening to 13,000 people in Northeast Ohio, Voices and Choices has assembled a summary of what “we” in Northeast Ohio think about our region and it’s future.  It’s a very interesting snapshot of the good and the bad — or how about “less good” things – of our 16 county region.

You may not have had reason to notice but Voices and Choices has led the largest public input campaign in the history of this country right here in our own backyard.  To date, they’ve performed 3,000 one-on-one interviews, held 11 Leadership Workshops with 1,000 of the region’s business and community leaders, had 750 citizens attend their Regional Town Meeting, and received feedback from 13,000 citizens in their Community Conversation small group meetings.  That’s a lot of people with a lot of different perspectives, insights and ideas.

As you might imagine, that much talk generates a lot of noise so the first task was to cut through the noise and identify the important themes that connected this diverse group.   Here’s those results —


The Good
Here’s what “we” said was best about Northeast Ohio:

1. It’s About the People
When asked what makes Northeast Ohio special, many citizens report their deep attachment to the region because their “roots are here” and because they value their family and friends who live here. Many people say with pride that they were “born and raised here.” Others moved here – or moved back after having left – in order to be close to family and friends.

People talk about our culture and how Northeast Ohio residents treat each other. “Northeast Ohioans are genuinely friendlier than people from other places.” They will lend a hand to neighbors and those in need, smile and say hello to strangers and “keep an eye out” for each other. Many describe Northeast Ohioans as hardworking and helpful people.

Residents often comment on how much they enjoy the diversity in their communities. The types of diversity they mention are ethnic and racial, age, education, political persuasions, sexual orientation and religion. Many people enjoy learning about new cultures through dining, music and festivals, thanks to the region’s diversity.

2. Our Quality of Life: The Feel of the Place
People like the sense of belonging that they feel in Northeast Ohio. Many say they enjoy living in a place where they are known and where they know others. They treasure their involvement with churches, civic and fraternal organizations, school committees and sports teams. They like knowing what’s happening with the people in their community. They like having places to gather and see familiar faces as well.

Many people value the region’s education system, the range of job opportunities here, and feeling safe. They say that the region is a good place to raise a family with room for kids to play and opportunities for them to learn and develop talents. The moderate cost of living in the region is important to many people. Affordable housing is often cited as an asset, although it is also considered to be in too short supply.

People enjoy the diversity of communities in the region with large cities within easy reach of rural areas. One person described the region as: “Cities to cows in 20 minutes.”

3. Our Natural Surroundings
One of the reasons Northeast Ohioans love their region so much is because it’s so beautiful. Sunsets over the Great Lake, rolling hills, glowing fields of corn, deep silent white winters, and brisk, crisp deeply hued autumns all create a constantly changing view. There are quaint 19th century homes, impressive bank and government buildings, and churches and cemeteries fit for the movies.

Lake Erie has a special place in the hearts of Northeast Ohioans, although people value the many other bodies of water across the region as well. As one moves away from Lake Erie, the contours of the land and the scenic beauty of farms and still natural areas is anchoring and reassuring.

Farming is part of the fabric that makes Northeast Ohio what it is. Those who live in rural or farming areas appreciate the connection with the earth, the hard work, and the special community that agriculture fosters.

Finally, the weather is a constant topic of conversation. Whether one complains or praises, the changing seasons mark the passage of time, give variety to daily life, and sometimes provide us with the sense that we are all in this together.

4. Lots to Do
The number of local and world-renowned music, art and cultural institutions and venues in our region is phenomenal, and spread out through the region making them accessible to thousands of people of all ages. The array of available options suits every taste and budget. People enjoy the area’s restaurants and shopping.

Northeast Ohioans are loyal to their teams and vocal about it. The belonging we feel as fans, spectators or participants is a tie that binds us together. Youngsters participate in community and school teams that many find rewarding. In addition, there are loads of places to bike, fish, bowl, or enjoy the many recreational opportunities that come with a four-season climate. Amusement parks, zoos, wineries, libraries, tourist attractions and so much more are right in northeast Ohioans’ backyards.

People also appreciate the urban amenities of the region’s large cities.

5. Infrastructure
Northeast Ohio’s infrastructure makes it very accessible and easy to get around. People love that they can get across the entire region with ease and reach other major cities and travel destinations. Easy access to airports, highways, shopping, and arts and culture districts are important to many people.

By car, one can get to work, school and leisure activities quickly and with essentially no rush hour. The traffic conditions are particularly appreciated by people who have lived in other metropolitan areas. The availability of public transportation (rail and bus) systems are also appreciated by residents who use them.


Less Good
When asked to discuss challenges facing Northeast Ohio, consensus on six overall themes emerged from these forums:

• Inequitable public school funding
• Government fragmentation and inefficiency
• Creating a 21st century workforce
• Racial isolation and income inequalities
• Uncompetitive business environment
• Sustainable land development

The following represents a more detailed summary of priority challenges identified by citizens and leaders at the Leadership Workshops and Regional Town Meeting:

Economic Growth and Employment Challenges

  • Education and training are not linked to the current and future needs of businesses
  • People and businesses are leaving our core cities while other communities are struggling to keep pace with population growth
  • There is not enough investment and overall support for local entrepreneurs and new small businesses
  • The local business environment is not competitive because of high energy costs, poor labor management conditions and other factors that deter businesses from moving here
  • Too many local industries are no longer competitive and need to be replaced with high growth, high-tech industries that can prosper into the future
  • There are not enough job opportunities paying good wages or offering good employee benefits
  • The core cities of Northeast Ohio have not been able to attract new immigrants like they once did in the past
  • Public attitudes in Northeast Ohio are resistant to change, new ideas, and new ways of working together
  • Many people do not have adequate access to jobs because the region lacks a regional public transportation system
  • Funding for public schools is inequitable across the region

Education and Skills Challenges

  • Funding for public schools is inequitable across the region
  • Education and training are not linked to the current and future needs of businesses
  • College education is not affordable or accessible enough
  • Parents are not adequately involved at school and at home
  • Student performance, achievement, and completion at the K-12 level is low
  • Public schools are not held to high enough standards of accountability
  • Too many public schools in inner cities do not provide enough students with high quality education
  • Public schools teach students to take tests instead of preparing them to think creatively and independently
  • The people of Northeast Ohio don’t place enough value on education

Equity and Fairness Challenges

  • There are not enough job opportunities paying good wages or offering good employee benefits
  • Northeast Ohio has growing income inequalities resulting in an increasing gap between the rich and poor and a greater concentration of poverty in core cities
  • Funding for public schools is inequitable across the region
  • Too many people do not have access to quality health care
  • Too many people do not have access to affordable and integrated housing
  • The region needs to acknowledge and address issues of racial segregation and discrimination
  • College education is not accessible or affordable enough
  • Many people do not have adequate access to jobs education, health care, and housing because the region lacks a regional public transportation system

Quality of Life and Place Challenges

  • People and businesses are leaving our core cities while other communities are struggling to keep pace with population growth
  • The region needs to balance economic development with environmental and natural resource preservation
  • There are not enough job opportunities paying good wages or offering good employee benefits
  • Northeast Ohio has growing income inequalities resulting in an increasing gap between the rich and poor and a great concentration of poverty in core cities
  • The region needs to acknowledge and address issues of racial segregation and discrimination
  • Northeast Ohio has a poor image outside the region
  • The local media creates negative impressions of Northeast Ohio by focusing its reporting on negative news about the region
  • Many people do not have access to recreational, arts, and cultural amenities across the region because they need better public transportation
  • There is not enough cooperation between communities within the region

Cooperation and Governance Challenges

  • Our region has too many local governments which leads to duplicated public services and higher taxes
  • Some political leaders resist change because it threatens their power base
  • Some communities resist change because they fear they will lose their local identity
  • Some communities that are doing well fear that cooperation with other communities will bring down their quality of life or quality of services
  • Public attitudes in Northeast Ohio are resistant to change, new ideas, and new ways of working together
  • People and businesses are leaving our core cities while other communities are struggling to keep pace with population growth
  • Not enough people get involved in the community to address public problems
  • The region needs a regional public transportation system
  • Too few people support efforts for greater regional cooperation because they lack information about its benefits
  • Too many local communities within Northeast Ohio compete against each other for the same businesses and jobs rather than cooperating

Where do we go from here?
After hearing the “voices” now the focus is on the “choices” that we face to make sure our region remains the kind of place we want it to be.

To see the choices and cast your vote follow this link choicebook

Change or Die...

Change or Die was the title of an article that I read in a business magazine recently that struck me for it’s insights into what it takes to keep companies prosperous.  Another reason that phrase caught my eye was because it was very similar to the quote offered by one of our City Blue Ribbon Panel members who when commenting on our budget situation said “I’m an anti-tax guy but after studying our city’s financial predicament for 10 months I believe that we have to raise taxes or else Kent will end up on death spiral.”  Whether it’s changing the course of a company or a community, it all comes down to our ability to lead and embrace change.

Here’s how I see it:  change is like anything else in life — the more you practice it the better you get at it — so every day I try to ask myself what did I do different today — or better yet, what’s different today because of something I did?  I’m not promoting change for sake of change on the really big important stuff but I do believe it’s important to practice changing the little things more often so we’ll be ready to handle the big things when they came along unexpectedly as they always seem to do.

I don’t believe that in something as complex as a city you will ever find a complaint-proof idea to change things.  The customer base is too broad to expect unanimous support.  Most of us understand that intuitively but as soon as an idea is proposed to change something out come the old perfecto-meter as our measure for support – and inevitably failing that standard too often we end up supporting doing nothing.

I have as high standards as the next guy — but it’s a standard that seeks excellence rather than perfection.  Excellence by definition means it’s a work in progress so rather than beating ourselves up trying to find that one elusive “perfect” fix, I’m a proponent for taking a good idea and making it great through exceptional execution — plan the work and work the plan.  That means you take your punches but that’s short term pain taken in the name of progress.

I’d argue that communities can suffer perfecto-phobia too and that’s partly why I thought I’d share this article on change.  The article suggests that 9 times out of 10 we’ll fail to do the things that we should do because of our inability to accept change.   I admit the title is a bit alarming but with our future at stake, maybe we need to be alarmed to improve our odds.


Change or Die

All leadership comes down to this: changing people’s behavior. Why is that so damn hard? Science offers some surprising new answers — and ways to do better.

From: Issue 94 | May 2005 | Page 53 | By: Alan Deutschman

What if you were given that choice? For real. What if it weren’t just the hyperbolic rhetoric that conflates corporate performance with life and death? Not the overblown exhortations of a rabid boss, or a slick motivational speaker, or a self-dramatizing CEO. We’re talking actual life or death now. Your own life or death. What if a well-informed, trusted authority figure said you had to make difficult and enduring changes in the way you think and act? If you didn’t, your time would end soon — a lot sooner than it had to. Could you change when change really mattered? When it mattered most?

Yes, you say?

Try again.

Yes?

You’re probably deluding yourself.

You wouldn’t change.

Don’t believe it? You want odds? Here are the odds, the scientifically studied odds: nine to one. That’s nine to one against you. How do you like those odds?

This revelation unnerved many people in the audience last November at IBM’s “Global Innovation Outlook” conference. The company’s top executives had invited the most farsighted thinkers they knew from around the world to come together in New York and propose solutions to some really big problems. They started with the crisis in health care, an industry that consumes an astonishing $1.8 trillion a year in the United States alone, or 15% of gross domestic product. A dream team of experts took the stage, and you might have expected them to proclaim that breathtaking advances in science and technology — mapping the human genome and all that — held the long-awaited answers. That’s not what they said. They said that the root cause of the health crisis hasn’t changed for decades, and the medical establishment still couldn’t figure out what to do about it.

Dr. Raphael “Ray” Levey, founder of the Global Medical Forum, an annual summit meeting of leaders from every constituency in the health system, told the audience, “A relatively small percentage of the population consumes the vast majority of the health-care budget for diseases that are very well known and by and large behavioral.” That is, they’re sick because of how they choose to live their lives, not because of environmental or genetic factors beyond their control. Continued Levey: “Even as far back as when I was in medical school” — he enrolled at Harvard in 1955 — “many articles demonstrated that 80% of the health-care budget was consumed by five behavioral issues.” Levey didn’t bother to name them, but you don’t need an MD to guess what he was talking about: too much smoking, drinking, eating, and stress, and not enough exercise.

Then the knockout blow was delivered by Dr. Edward Miller, the dean of the medical school and CEO of the hospital at Johns Hopkins University. He turned the discussion to patients whose heart disease is so severe that they undergo bypass surgery, a traumatic and expensive procedure that can cost more than $100,000 if complications arise. About 600,000 people have bypasses every year in the United States, and 1.3 million heart patients have angioplasties — all at a total cost of around $30 billion. The procedures temporarily relieve chest pains but rarely prevent heart attacks or prolong lives. Around half of the time, the bypass grafts clog up in a few years; the angioplasties, in a few months. The causes of this so-called restenosis are complex. It’s sometimes a reaction to the trauma of the surgery itself. But many patients could avoid the return of pain and the need to repeat the surgery — not to mention arrest the course of their disease before it kills them — by switching to healthier lifestyles. Yet very few do. “If you look at people after coronary-artery bypass grafting two years later, 90% of them have not changed their lifestyle,” Miller said. “And that’s been studied over and over and over again. And so we’re missing some link in there. Even though they know they have a very bad disease and they know they should change their lifestyle, for whatever reason, they can’t.”

Changing the behavior of people isn’t just the biggest challenge in health care. It’s the most important challenge for businesses trying to compete in a turbulent world, says John Kotter, a Harvard Business School professor who has studied dozens of organizations in the midst of upheaval: “The central issue is never strategy, structure, culture, or systems. The core of the matter is always about changing the behavior of people.” Those people may be called upon to respond to profound upheavals in marketplace dynamics — the rise of a new global competitor, say, or a shift from a regulated to a deregulated environment — or to a corporate reorganization, merger, or entry into a new business. And as individuals, we may want to change our own styles of work — how we mentor subordinates, for example, or how we react to criticism. Yet more often than not, we can’t.

CEOs are supposedly the prime change agents for their companies, but they’re often as resistant to change as anyone — and as prone to backsliding. The most notorious recent example is Michael Eisner. After he nearly died from heart problems, Eisner finally heeded his wife’s plea and brought in a high-profile number-two exec, Michael Ovitz, to alleviate the stress of running Disney. But Eisner proved incapable of seeing through the idea, essentially refusing to share any real power with Ovitz from the start.

The conventional wisdom says that crisis is a powerful motivator for change. But severe heart disease is among the most serious of personal crises, and it doesn’t motivate — at least not nearly enough. Nor does giving people accurate analyses and factual information about their situations. What works? Why, in general, is change so incredibly difficult for people? What is it about how our brains are wired that resists change so tenaciously? Why do we fight even what we know to be in our own vital interests?

Kotter has hit on a crucial insight. “Behavior change happens mostly by speaking to people’s feelings,” he says. “This is true even in organizations that are very focused on analysis and quantitative measurement, even among people who think of themselves as smart in an MBA sense. In highly successful change efforts, people find ways to help others see the problems or solutions in ways that influence emotions, not just thought.”

Unfortunately, that kind of emotional persuasion isn’t taught in business schools, and it doesn’t come naturally to the technocrats who run things — the engineers, scientists, lawyers, doctors, accountants, and managers who pride themselves on disciplined, analytical thinking. There’s compelling science behind the psychology of change — it draws on discoveries from emerging fields such as cognitive science, linguistics, and neuroscience — but its insights and techniques often seem paradoxical or irrational.

Look again at the case of heart patients. The best minds at Johns Hopkins and the Global Medical Forum might not know how to get them to change, but someone does: Dr. Dean Ornish, a professor of medicine at the University of California at San Francisco and founder of the Preventative Medicine Research Institute, in Sausalito, California. Ornish, like Kotter, realizes the importance of going beyond the facts. “Providing health information is important but not always sufficient,” he says. “We also need to bring in the psychological, emotional, and spiritual dimensions that are so often ignored.” Ornish published studies in leading peer-reviewed scientific journals, showing that his holistic program, focused around a vegetarian diet with less than 10% of the calories from fat, can actually reverse heart disease without surgery or drugs. Still, the medical establishment remained skeptical that people could sustain the lifestyle changes. In 1993, Ornish persuaded Mutual of Omaha to pay for a trial. Researchers took 333 patients with severely clogged arteries. They helped them quit smoking and go on Ornish’s diet. The patients attended twice-weekly group support sessions led by a psychologist and took instruction in meditation, relaxation, yoga, and aerobic exercise. The program lasted for only a year. But after three years, the study found, 77% of the patients had stuck with their lifestyle changes — and safely avoided the bypass or angioplasty surgeries that they were eligible for under their insurance coverage. And Mutual of Omaha saved around $30,000 per patient.

Framing Change

Why does the Ornish program succeed while the conventional approach has failed? For starters, Ornish recasts the reasons for change. Doctors had been trying to motivate patients mainly with the fear of death, he says, and that simply wasn’t working. For a few weeks after a heart attack, patients were scared enough to do whatever their doctors said. But death was just too frightening to think about, so their denial would return, and they’d go back to their old ways.

The patients lived the way they did as a day-to-day strategy for coping with their emotional troubles. “Telling people who are lonely and depressed that they’re going to live longer if they quit smoking or change their diet and lifestyle is not that motivating,” Ornish says. “Who wants to live longer when you’re in chronic emotional pain?”

So instead of trying to motivate them with the “fear of dying,” Ornish reframes the issue. He inspires a new vision of the “joy of living” — convincing them they can feel better, not just live longer. That means enjoying the things that make daily life pleasurable, like making love or even taking long walks without the pain caused by their disease. “Joy is a more powerful motivator than fear,” he says.

Pioneering research in cognitive science and linguistics has pointed to the paramount importance of framing. George Lakoff, a professor of those two disciplines at the University of California at Berkeley, defines frames as the “mental structures that shape the way we see the world.” Lakoff says that frames are part of the “cognitive unconscious,” but the way we know what our frames are, or evoke new ones, springs from language. For example, we typically think of a company as being like an army — everyone has a rank and a codified role in a hierarchical chain of command with orders coming down from high to low. Of course, that’s only one way of organizing a group effort. If we had the frame of the company as a family or a commune, people would know very different ways of working together.

The big challenge in trying to change how people think is that their minds rely on frames, not facts. “Neuroscience tells us that each of the concepts we have — the long-term concepts that structure how we think — is instantiated in the synapses of the brain,” Lakoff says. “Concepts are not things that can be changed just by someone telling us a fact. We may be presented with facts, but for us to make sense of them, they have to fit what is already in the synapses of the brain. Otherwise, facts go in and then they go right back out. They are not heard, or they are not accepted as facts, or they mystify us: Why would anyone have said that? Then we label the fact as irrational, crazy, or stupid.” Lakoff says that’s one reason why political conservatives and liberals each think that the other side is nuts. They don’t understand each other because their brains are working within different frames.

The frame that dominates our thinking about how work should be organized — the military chain-of-command model — is extremely hard to break. When new employees start at W.L. Gore & Associates, the maker of Gore-Tex fabrics, they often refuse to believe that the company doesn’t have a hierarchy with job titles and bosses. It just doesn’t fit their frame. They can’t accept it. It usually takes at least several months for new hires to begin to understand Gore’s reframed notion of the workplace, which relies on self-directed employees making their own choices about joining one another in egalitarian small teams.

Getting people to exchange one frame for another is tough even when you’re working one-on-one, but it’s especially hard to do for large groups of people. Howard Gardner, a cognitive scientist, MacArthur Fellow “genius” award winner, and professor at Harvard’s Graduate School of Education, has looked at what works most effectively for heads of state and corporate CEOs. “When one is addressing a diverse or heterogeneous audience,” he says, “the story must be simple, easy to identify with, emotionally resonant, and evocative of positive experiences.”

In Louis V. Gerstner Jr.’s successful turnaround of IBM in the 1990s, he learned the surprising importance of this kind of emotional persuasion. When he took over as CEO, Gerstner was fixated on what had worked for him throughout his career as a McKinsey & Co. consultant: coolheaded analysis and strategy. He thought he could revive the company through maneuvers such as selling assets and cutting costs. He quickly found that those tools weren’t nearly enough. He needed to transform the entrenched corporate culture, which had become hidebound and overly bureaucratic. That meant changing the attitudes and behaviors of hundreds of thousands of employees. In his memoir, Gerstner writes that he realized he needed to make a powerful emotional appeal to them, to “shake them out of their depressed stupor, remind them of who they were — you’re IBM, damn it!” Rather than sitting in a corner office negotiating deals and analyzing spreadsheets, he needed to convey passion through thousands of hours of personal appearances. Gerstner, who’s often brittle and imperious in private, nonetheless responded admirably to the challenge. He proved to be an engaging and emotional public speaker when he took his campaign to his huge workforce.

Steve Jobs’s turnaround at Apple shows the impact of reframing and telling a new narrative that’s simple, positive, and emotional. When he returned to the company after a long exile, he recast its image among employees and customers alike from a marginalized player vanquished in the battle for market share to the home of a small but enviable elite: the creative innovators who dared to “Think different.”

When leaders are addressing a small group of people who have a similar mind-set and shared values, the reframed message can be more nuanced and complex, Harvard’s Gardner says. But it still needs to be positive, inspiring, and emotionally resonant. A good example is how chairman and publisher Arthur Sulzberger Jr. rescued The New York Times from crisis. Former editor Howell Raines had alienated much of the newsroom’s staff, undermining its communal spirit with a new culture of favoritism. Raines fell when a star reporter he had shielded from criticism was exposed for fabricating news stories. The scandal threatened the famed paper’s credibility. Gardner says that Sulzberger successfully reframed the narrative this way: We are a great newspaper. We temporarily went astray and risked sacrificing the community spirit that made this an outstanding place to work. We can retain our excellence and regain our sense of community by admitting our errors, making sure that they don’t happen again, and being a more transparent and self-reflecting organization. To achieve these goals, Sulzberger replaced Raines with a new top editor, Bill Keller — a respected veteran who reflected the lost communal culture — and he appointed a “public editor” to critique the paper in an unedited column. Now, Gardner says, “the Times is a much happier place and the news coverage and journalistic empire are in reasonable shape.”

Radical Change

Reframing alone isn’t enough, of course. That’s where Dr. Ornish’s other astonishing insight comes in. Paradoxically, he found that radical, sweeping, comprehensive changes are often easier for people than small, incremental ones. For example, he says that people who make moderate changes in their diets get the worst of both worlds: They feel deprived and hungry because they aren’t eating everything they want, but they aren’t making big enough changes to quickly see an improvement in how they feel, or in measurements such as weight, blood pressure, and cholesterol. But the heart patients who went on Ornish’s tough, radical program saw quick, dramatic results, reporting a 91% decrease in frequency of chest pain in the first month. “These rapid improvements are a powerful motivator,” he says. “When people who have had so much chest pain that they can’t work, or make love, or even walk across the street without intense suffering find that they are able to do all of those things without pain in only a few weeks, then they often say, ‘These are choices worth making.’ ”

While it’s astonishing that most patients in Ornish’s demanding program stick with it, studies show that two-thirds of patients who are prescribed statin drugs (which are highly effective at cutting cholesterol) stop taking them within one year. What could possibly be a smaller or easier lifestyle change than popping a pill every day? But Ornish says patients stop taking the drug because it doesn’t actually make them feel any better. It doesn’t deal with causes of high cholesterol, such as obesity, that make people feel unhealthy. The paradox holds that big changes are easier than small ones.

Research shows that this idea applies to the business realm as well. Bain & Co., the management consulting firm, studied 21 recent corporate transformations and found that most were “substantially completed” in only two years or less while none took more than three years. The means were drastic: In almost every case, the CEOs fired most of the top management. Almost always, the companies enjoyed quick, tangible results, and their stock prices rose 250% a year on average as they revived.

IBM’s turnaround hinged on a radical shift in focus from selling computer hardware to providing “services,” which meant helping customers build and run their information-technology operations. This required a momentous cultural switch — IBMers would have to recommend that a client buy from competitors such as Hewlett-Packard and Microsoft when it was in the client’s interest. But the radical shift worked: Services have grown into IBM’s core business and the key to its success.

Of course, radical change often isn’t possible in business situations. Still, it’s always important to identify, achieve, and celebrate some quick, positive results for the vital emotional lifts that they provide. Harvard’s Kotter believes in the importance of “short-term wins” for companies, meaning “victories that nourish faith in the change effort, emotionally reward the hard workers, keep the critics at bay, and build momentum. Without sufficient wins that are visible, timely, unambiguous, and meaningful to others, change efforts invariably run into serious problems.”

Supporting Change

Even when leaders have reframed the issues brilliantly, it’s still vital to give people the multifaceted support they need. That’s a big reason why 90% of heart patients can’t change their lifestyles but 77% of Ornish’s patients could — because he buttressed them with weekly support groups with other patients, as well as attention from dieticians, psychologists, nurses, and yoga and meditation instructors.

Xerox’s executives learned this lesson well. Four years ago, when the company was in crisis, they came up with a new vision that required salespeople to change the way they had always worked. “Their whole careers, salespeople had done one thing,” says James Firestone, president of Xerox North America, who leads a sales force of 5,400. “They would knock on doors, look for copiers, see how old they were, and sell a refresh. They knew how to do that.” The salespeople had such predictable routines that they could plan their days, weeks, even years. It was comforting. But it just wasn’t succeeding any longer.

Under the new strategy, the salespeople were supposed to really engage with customers so they could understand the complexities of how their offices operated and find opportunities to sell other products, such as scanners and printers. Maybe they would find that the customer actually needed fewer machines that could do more than the old ones had. Learning about the client’s needs meant that the sales reps had to take a lot more time and talk to more people about broader issues. It undermined the cozy predictability of their routines. The reps became anxious, Firestone recalls. “They’d say, ‘I know how to sell and make a living the old way, but not the new way.’ ”

Their anxiety was compounded by the fact that Xerox lagged in giving them the support they needed. It often took a couple of months before the salespeople received their scheduled training in the new approach. And it took two years before the company changed its incentive pay system to fit better with the new model, in which the reps had to invest a lot more time and effort before they signed deals. Eventually, though, the change effort, by expanding the sales focus to a larger range of products, helped Xerox avoid bankruptcy and return to profitability. “People need a sense of confidence that the processes will be aligned internally,” Firestone says. “For large companies, this is where change usually fails.” Even if change starts at the top, it can easily die somewhere in the middle. That’s why Xerox now holds “alignment workshops” that ask middle managers — the people who make processes work — to outline the ways its systems could inhibit its agendas for change.

This Is Your Brain on Change

Are most of us like the fearful copier salespeople who dread disruption to their routines? Neuroscience, a field that has exploded with insight, has a lot more to say about changing people’s behavior — and its findings are guardedly optimistic. Scientists used to believe that the brain became “hardwired” early in life and couldn’t change later on. Now researchers such as Dr. Michael Merzenich, a professor at the University of California at San Francisco, say that the brain’s ability to change — its “plasticity” — is lifelong. If we can change, then why don’t we? Merzenich has perspective on the issue since he’s not only a leading neuroscientist but also an entrepreneur, the founder of two Bay Area startups. Both use PC software to train people to overcome mental disabilities or diseases: Scientific Learning Corp. focuses on children who have trouble learning to read, and Posit Science Corp. is working on ways to prevent, stop, or reverse cognitive decline in older adults.

Merzenich starts by talking about rats. You can train a rat to have a new skill. The rat solves a puzzle, and you give it a food reward. After 100 times, the rat can solve the puzzle flawlessly. After 200 times, it can remember how to solve it for nearly its lifetime. The rat has developed a habit. It can perform the task automatically because its brain has changed. Similarly, a person has thousands of habits — such as how to use a pen — that drive lasting changes in the brain. For highly trained specialists, such as professional musicians, the changes actually show up on MRI scans. Flute players, for instance, have especially large representations in their brains in the areas that control the fingers, tongue, and lips, Merzenich says. “They’ve distorted their brains.”

Businesspeople, like flutists, are highly trained specialists, and they’ve distorted their brains, too. An older executive “has powers that a young person walking in the door doesn’t have,” says Merzenich. He has lots of specialized skills and abilities. A specialist is a hard thing to create, and is valuable for a corporation, obviously, but specialization also instills an inherent “rigidity.” The cumulative weight of experience makes it harder to change.

How, then, to overcome these factors? Merzenich says the key is keeping up the brain’s machinery for learning. “When you’re young, almost everything you do is behavior-based learning — it’s an incredibly powerful, plastic period,” he says. “What happens that becomes stultifying is you stop learning and you stop the machinery, so it starts dying.” Unless you work on it, brain fitness often begins declining at around age 30 for men, a bit later for women. “People mistake being active for continuous learning,” Merzenich says. “The machinery is only activated by learning. People think they’re leading an interesting life when they haven’t learned anything in 20 or 30 years. My suggestion is learn Spanish or the oboe.”

Meanwhile, the leaders of a company need “a business strategy for continuous mental rejuvenation and new learning,” he says. Posit Science has a “fifth-day strategy,” meaning that everyone spends one day a week working in a different discipline. Software engineers try their hand at marketing. Designers get involved in business functions. “Everyone needs a new project instead of always being in a bin,” Merzenich says. “A fifth-day strategy doesn’t sacrifice your core ability but keeps you rejuvenated. In a company, you have to worry about rejuvenation at every level. So ideally you deliberately construct new challenges. For every individual, you need complex new learning. Innovation comes about when people are enabled to use their full brains and intelligence instead of being put in boxes and controlled.”

What happens if you don’t work at mental rejuvenation? Merzenich says that people who live to 85 have a 50-50 chance of being senile. While the issue for heart patients is “change or die,” the issue for everyone is “change or lose your mind.” Mastering the ability to change isn’t just a crucial strategy for business. It’s a necessity for health. And it’s possibly the one thing that’s most worth learning.

Alan Deutschman is a Fast Company senior writer based in San Francisco.

Old Hotel Chapter 112...

The Old Hotel made the news again this week as the current owner reached terms with the city granting him the next 2 months (until the end of the year) to make repairs to the building in return for the city agreeing to stop the current foreclosure action on the building.  Part of the deal was to allow a thorough inspection of the building by the city — including an evaluation by a structural engineer — in order to establish the condition of the building.  Determining the condition is critical for the city as it wrestles with the question of whether to seek court action to tear the building down, seek to foreclose on the property, or work with the owner to make the building economically viable again.

The saga of the old hotel goes way back to when the upper floors of the building were first condemned in 1979.  Since that time some $500,000 in liens have been placed against the property by the county court for the failure of the former owner to fix public safety deficiencies.  Over the last couple of years the current owner was trying to sell the building “as is” rather than seeking to repair it and fill it with tenants. However, after two or three deals fell through, the owner still had the liens to deal with and was facing a recent decision of the City Council to foreclose on his property.

The combination of those factors led the current owner to come to City Council and ask for Council’s consideration to put a stop to the pending foreclosure action against him in order to give him a few more months to take a run at repairing the hotel.  He told Council that he had been in the “sell” mode for years but now he’s ready to be in the “fix” mode.  After much deliberation, city staff and Council agreed to allow him until the end of the year to prove his intent to actually start to rehabilitate the building.

The owner indicated that he would have the roof replaced in October and then he planned to shift his attention to the interior of the building where he would clear out debris and remove non-loading bearing walls so that he could begin to bring prospective tenants through to show and market the building.

The owner acknowledged that he will need to replace the windows and repair the brick masonry — which he reports he’s planning to do early next year.

The plans sound good but the proof will be in the progress of the work.  Seeing the worker on the roof yesterday is a good sign that the owner intends to honor his word.  The building needs a lot of repair work — probably in the neighborhood of $1 million dollars — so it could take some time to develop a business plan to make that figure work.

The question that the inspection should help answer is whether the building has enough time left in it.

Middlebury Road Bridge — Progress Update...

Construction has continued to make good progress on the new Middlebury Road Bridge despite less than ideal weather conditions.  Knock on wood, the bridge is still on track to be open before the end of the year and if all goes well it could be as early as December 1st.  In preparation for the grand re-opening, the residents in and around Middlebury Road have asked for a traffic calming meeting with city staff on November 9th at 7 pm in the Shelter House at Fred Fuller Park.  The city has already installed a couple of new stop signs along Middlebury Road but the residents have requested consideration of other measures to minimize the traffic impacts in their neighborhood.

Here’s a picture of the installation of the second truss structure taken on October 24th:

You’re looking at the two pieces of the superstructure of the bridge being installed.  For all practical purposes the superstructure will be set this week and then the crews can begin installing the floor beams which will be bolted into place.  Once the beams are secured, carpenter crews will take about a week to set the forms and then another week to lay down the reinforcing steel in preparation for the concrete to be poured in place.

To ensure the integrity of the concrete, temperatures will need to stay above freezing for at least 7 days after the pour.  The concrete work will extend into the approaches at both ends of the bridge where it will be tied back into new asphalt that will transition into the existing roadway elevation.

The weather remains the wild card but under normal conditions, there should be enough good weather remaining to get all the work done by the end of November.  That being said, I spoke with the Kent State University architect earlier this week and he noted that he went back and checked the weather for the last 4 months and found more days of rain than dry days during the normal business week — which is never a good thing for construction projects – so given the actual conditions we’re fortunate to be as close to being on-schedule as we are.


NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEETING

October 24, 2006

Re: Neighborhood Traffic Committee Meeting

Dear Middlebury Road Traffic Calming Committee Member:

This letter is to invite you to a committee meeting discussing the traffic calming options for the Middlebury Road neighborhood. Please join us on November 9, 2006 at 7:00 p.m. at the Shelter House at Fred Fuller Park.

If you have any questions about this meeting please feel free to contact the Community Development Department at (330) 678-8108.

Sincerely,

Heather Phile

Sin Tax Concept...

As the city looks seriously at our revenue challenge, more and more people have been asking me about the prospect of pursuing a “sin tax” in Kent.  After all, Cleveland built Jacob’s Field from a sin tax passed in 1990, and there’s a new one on the ballot this year to fund the arts — so why don’t we look at it one to raise the revenues we need to keep Kent the vibrant community we want it to be.  Sin taxes raise revenue by imposing excise taxes on liquor and tobacco which happen to be a couple of the most popular commodities in our college town and also contribute to a lot of our city service calls, e.g., police and fire.  The idea behind sin taxes is to couple bad behavior with public good.  Can it work here?

What is a sin tax?
Sin tax is a phrase for a tax specifically levied on certain generally socially-proscribed goods – usually alcohol and tobacco. Sin taxes are often enacted for special projects – American cities and counties have used them to pay for stadiums – when increasing income or property taxes would be politically inviable. The proper name for such taxes is sumptuary tax

How does a sin tax work?
Sin taxes are a means of introducing a price signal to customers in the form of a price charged for a given commodity, that also indicates a message intended to produce a particular result. In other words, it’s a value laden tax that says if you consume this product you should pay more because it has some consequences that are viewed as bad for the public good.  It’s a free country, so you can still choose to consume these products but you owe it to the rest of us to pay more.

How does a sin tax get passed?
It turns out that in Ohio only counties can adopt sin taxes.  So the city of Kent cannot pass one — we’d have to convince the Portage County Commissioners to adopt a sin tax county wide.  I think a lot of people see the relevance of sin taxes in Kent — we have a large student body population that like most college towns drink alcohol which contributes to late night service calls for city police and fire — but that same statement cannot be generalized to the rest of the cities and townships in Portage County, so I’m not sure support for the concept extends much beyond Kent’s borders.

In other states that I’ve worked in we’ve been able to go to the state legislature to seek special authorities in cases like this to allow a city, under a special circumstance for a special reason, to be granted the authority that is typically only available to counties.  That may be one way to pursue a sin tax for Kent.

Things to keep in mind
The logic behind a sin tax seems self explanatory — a city that has a large student body probably has higher than normal service demands so the students need to ante-up.  But it’s important to remember that while the students don’t currently pay a direct special tax of fee, their tuition supports the faculty and administration of Kent State that contributes more in income taxes overall than the students create in additional services on the city.  In other words, while the arrival of 24,000 students in our city each year increases our cost for city services, the revenues generated from Kent State contribute more than their fair share to pay for those extra services.

That’s not to say the idea doesn’t have merit but we need to keep the discussion on the facts.

I’m not sure a .25 cent increase in the price of drinks would make much of a difference in alcohol consumption in Kent but again we have to be sensitive to the segment of our business community that makes it’s living off of those drink sales.  Kent’s night time businesses are thriving and in an era when every job counts we don’t want to lose those night time jobs either.


You can read more about issue 18 on the Cuyahoga County Ballot that proposes to increase the price of a pack of cigarettes by .30 cents to fund the arts in the county.

Cleveland Plain Dealer
September 20, 2006

Columnist Dick Feagler writes “We need to live up to our heritage. We have cultural marvels here that few towns our size can boast. We don’t want to lose them.”

Read the full article here:
http://www.cleveland.com…

Reporter Mark Urycki covers our Kick-off meeting
WCPN/90.3
September 19, 2006

Listen here: http://www.wcpn.org/mp3/2006/0919issue18.mp3

‘Yes’ on Issue 18
THE PLAIN DEALER
September 14, 2006

‘Yes’ on Issue 18; Greater Cleveland’s treasured arts resources are in peril; a 10-year tax on cigarettes will stave off irreparable loss.

The Cleveland metropolitan area is a treasure trove of art and artists: The internationally renowned Cleveland Orchestra and Cleveland Museum of Art, a bevy of bustling theaters, opera, dance and more. Yet many of these organizations are dancing for their fiscal lives. Unlike other major metropolitan areas, Cuyahoga County gives the arts only a little support. Now there is a way for voters to right that wrong. County residents should support Issue 18 in the Nov. 7 election. If approved, the 10-year tax would add 30 cents to each pack of cigarettes, raising about $20 million annually for a worthy cause.

Many smokers and their allies in the tobacco industry are sure to object. And we agree: This particular tax is not ideal, especially since it forces a shrinking minority to pick up the tab for supporting the arts. Smoking exacts a horrible financial toll on the county’s budget.

The commissioners point out that smoking related diseases among the poor drive up costs at county-supported MetroHealth Medical Center. But the value of the arts community to all of Northeast Ohio is simply immense. The arts inject about $1 billion annually into the area economy and support hundreds of good-paying jobs. Ticket sales and grants pay most of the freight, but arts groups desperately need bolstering from other quarters. Property owners, already strangled by taxes, must be concerned with providing basic county services. If this tax passes – and it should – the arts council that the commissioners established must be a good steward of the funds. Yes, some organizations are desperate for dollars. But the county must resist the temptation to resuscitate those that have flat-lined. A far better idea would be to plow into a trust fund a portion of the anticipated $200 million to be collected during the next 10 years. That way, the county will have money on hand in lean times, or if an extraordinary expenditure is required. A decade is also long enough to lay the groundwork for a future arts levy, involving the surrounding counties, that would create wealth and spread the pain far better than does this single-county cigarette tax. But that’s down the road. For now, it’s important to shore up arts organizations in Cuyahoga County. Issue 18 is one way to do that.

Franklin Square Deli — Best Kept Secret #944...

One of the things I love about Kent is the fact that there’s interesting people with interesting stories in the least expected places all over town.  Most of us don’t know about them because we don’t take the time to look — so as the new guy in town I get to play the role of Indian Scout who runs out ahead and reports back what he finds.  Kent’s a treasure hunt with unique and quirky tid bits tucked in behind every turn — and the more you look the more you find.  In a city of best kept secrets Kent’s cast of characters, including Carl Picelle owner of Franklin Square Deli in downtown Kent, won’t disappoint you.

Franklin Square Deli
Here’s what you probably already know
Franklin Square Deli established itself twenty years ago, 1983, at its present central location, downtown, on the corner of Water and Main Streets.  The Deli style restaurant was a natural succession to a similar operation located in neighboring Ravenna’s downtown district, which operated for five years.  From the beginning, the menu focused on fresh, cut to order sandwiches, made directly in the approving view of the customer.

The popular Italian style full loaf submarine sandwiches have been the mainstay of the business for the entire duration.  Year upon year, nearby Kent State University students and faculty have found their favorite delicatessen craving at “The Deli.” Sometimes featuring as many as fifty different sandwiches on the menu, you can always find a favorite amongst traditional servings such as piled sky high juicy Rubens or a deli mainstay, soft fresh bagels, packed with your favorite ingredients and made to your exacting standards.   Franklin Square Deli grew up on 7-day a week service to the community and remains open 360 days of the year, closed only for major holidays.  Alcohol is not favored at the restaurant, so a fun, family atmosphere is always present.

Menu


Finding the most ‘sub’sational sandwich in Kent

Dan Stroble, Daily Kent Stater

Posted: 7/26/06

Sub sandwiches are one of the most common and inexpensive foods available, especially in a college town. For the fifth installment of Rate It!, I visited three restaurants that specialize in subs to find out which has the biggest, most flavorful Italian sandwich.

I chose to review one local shop and two franchises to decide which is better – a unique, small-town atmosphere or a run-of-the-mill chain restaurant.

Franklin Square Deli

Franklin Square Deli has been a local favorite for more than 20 years. So it is no surprise that it is my top choice as well.

Franklin Square Deli’s subs are made the way a sub should be. The seeded bun was loaded with seasoned, tender meat and crisp vegetables. Customers may choose to heat up their subs as well. At $4.80, the sub was worth every penny.

Franklin Square Deli

Location: 108 S. Water St.

Hours: Monday to Saturday, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Sunday, 12 p.m. to 6 p.m.

Stater rating (out of five): *****

Service was fast and friendly, and the workers asked each customer how everything was as they left the restaurant.

The racing art and photography displayed on the walls are fun and interesting, even for those who are not racing fans. To go along with the theme, there are also stipple drawings by Kent artist Jerry Gambaccini for sale, and customers can always expect a televised race. It was nice to be able to enjoy my sandwich in a fun and friendly environment.

And on a nice summer day, customers can take their sandwiches outside to one of the tables under the shade.

However, although the tables on the sidewalk are a nice touch, they are a little too close to sidewalk and street traffic. But this is a very minor gripe of a nearly perfect eatery.

The combination of delicious sandwiches, good service and a unique racing theme will have customers speeding back to Franklin Square Deli often.



Here’s the Interesting Part of the Story –
Carl Picelle, owner of Franklin Square Deli in downtown Kent, has a passion that goes beyond sandwiches and subs. He also loves cars – fast ones. Picelle competes in Amateur Club Racing, driving a red 1985 Porsche 944 boasting the logo from his business. He said unlike NASCAR, where cars race around an oval track, club racing involves driving on actual roadway with hairpin turns, hills, and dips. He said the average race is between 60 and 80 miles, but the track itself is only two or three miles long; so each race involves 20 or more laps.

He said road racing has its roots in Europe and the sport is very popular there. He said the interest is similar to America’s interest in NASCAR. “This type of racing is less about speed and more about skills, such as maximum braking and cornering,” Picelle said, “My car can reach speeds of 135 mph, but I only go that fast on the straightaways.”

Picelle said he took special courses to get his competition license, which he just obtained last year. Since then, he has competed in 11 races throughout the region; including Ohio, Indiana, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. “I got interested in racing when I was 12 and my best friend’s dad took us to the Mid-Ohio Sportscar Course in Lexington,” he said. “I have been a spectator ever since, but it’s always been my dream to participate.”

Picelle said there are different divisions and various classes within the divisions. He races with the Porsche Club of America in the club racing division’s stock class. He said it took him six races before he won three out of the last four races he competed in, including taking first-place in both the sprint and 90-minute endurance competitions at Road America in Wisconsin over Labor Day Weekend.

He shyly admits his impressive record that includes three first-place finishes, three second-place finishes, and finishing in the top 10 in the remaining five races. “The first time I raced, it was such a rush. I was really nervous but the danger aspect disappeared as soon as I took the wheel,” Picelle said. “But nothing could compare to the feeling I had when I won my first race. To see that checkered flag, that was a great feeling.”

His passion has been passed on to his fiancee, Valerie Mazzola. Picelle said she travels with him to all the races and has begun performing crew duties, such as taking measurements and temperatures and keeping statistics. He also said Mazzola uses his car to compete in Auto Cross racing, which involves timed events in large parking lots. She is the current leader in the ladies class where they compete. He said there is no money involved in amateur racing but winners get either a trophy or certificate. He said he hopes his collection keeps growing. “This is an expensive sport and I can’t compete as much as I would like because of the expense, but I love every minute of it,” he said. “this is a dream come true.”

His love of racing is reflected in his restaurant’s decor – pictures or race cars and sports cars adorn the walls. And in case you were wondering, those pictures were done by a Kent Artist, Jerry Gambaccini, but he’s a best kept secret for another day.



Send me your own favorite best kept Kent secret and I’ll get it posted!  Thanks.

Retention Matters...

Smells Like Student Spirit

In different blog posts I’ve tried to point out a few of the assets we have in Kent –  the Cuyahoga river, an authentic downtown,a legacy of a live music, top-notch public schools, an edgy arts and culture scene, intimate events and festivals, proximity to the Akron and Cleveland, and of course, Kent State University.

I’ve noted that Kent State is the largest employer in Kent; it’s the biggest attraction in town (in terms of the people and dollars it brings to our economy); it’s name recognition is world-wide (you can’t pay for that kind of advertising); and it produces thousands of prospective new business owners every year many of whom choose to get started right here in Kent.

Despite all this talk of the importance of Kent State — which most people agree with — we still tend to talk about “students” in the third person — usually prejoratively after there’s been some late night problem.  But the students, like any demographically defined group of people, are more than the sum of their parts — they are individuals full of dreams, aspirations and hopes for their future.  And they are willing to work hard to make that future happen.  Maybe it’s time we tap into that student spirit and get it working for Kent’s future.

Businesses, non-profits and cities all over this country have been tapping into students for years and it’s time to get that bandwagon rolling here in Kent.  I’m not talking about tapping the typical buying and spending power of students (although that’s a force to be reckoned with as well), what I’m talking about is  tapping into the brainpower (and horsepower) of students in what amounts to “student consulting” services.  In academic circles it’s called “service” or “experience based learning” –  businesses call it internships — but I call it a great deal for everyone involved.

Students get a chance to tackle real world problems that become the centerpiece of their resumes and local businesses frankly get cheap labor.  But there’s more to it than that.  It’s about the connections it builds between the students and the local community.  It’s a chance for students to walk in the shoes of local businesses and for local businesses to put a name and a face to that amorphous blob we call students.  It’s in those real person opportunities that we build new perspectives and appreciation for one another.

More face time won’t make all the late night nuissances go away but over time if we can change the way we (the amorphous blob called community) see them (the amorphous blob of students) and change the way they see us, behavior changes are bound to follow  – not because of stricter penalties or more police — but because we come to realize that we share a place that has plenty of room for all of us.  As long as we’re here together doesn’t it make more sense to work together to make Kent a great place for all of us.  In the end isn’t that what we all want?

This is about finding commonalities in shared purposes.  For the university, it’s all about retention of students.  Studies show that the more connected a student feels and the broader the experience a student gains during their years on campus the more likely they will stay.  For the city it’s all about retention too.  It’s retaining those students to choose to live and work in Kent after they graduate.

Retention Matters.

What started me on this whole kick was an article I read recently that talked about how traditionally stodgy businesses are actively reaching out to tap into the creative insights of inexperienced youth. These companies were finding that creativity loses its freshness after years of corporate education so they wanted a bunch of greenhorn students giving them advice.  And guess what — it worked.

And when things work, I immediately want to steal — I mean adapt — the idea to Kent.  Here’s a few examples to chew on:



From FastCompany Magazine, July/August 2006

When Hasbro wanted a hand lifting its decades-old My Little Pony toy line out of the realm of kitsch last year, it turned to a tiny Brooklyn, New York, creative agency called Thunderdog Studios. The result: a New York gallery show full of Ponies, each uniquely decorated by a different woman artist.

Now, that was cool. Which is exactly what Hasbro was after. The question: Why did a $3 billion toy giant with 6,000 employees need the help? Even Thunderdog, now preparing to freshen up the toy giant’s Transformers line, is at a loss, sort of. “We’re all very young. When we’re in the boardroom, we feel like, ‘What are we doing here?’” admits president Tristan Eaton. “We’re waiting for them to realize we’re just a bunch of kids.”

We should’ve seen this coming. For decades, business pundits (and, okay, we) have lauded the merits of lean, flexible organizations: Embrace the activities that truly add value; jettison everything else. And companies have done so, outsourcing their IT departments, human resources, copy shops, even manufacturing and distribution.

But this is something different, and more sinister. Companies are outsourcing cool. They’re paying other companies–smaller, more-limber, closer-to-the-ground outsiders–to help them keep up with customers’ rapidly changing tastes and demands. Talk about a core competency! It’s like farming out your soul–or at least, asking someone what you should wear in the morning.

It’s happening because technology allows ever shorter design and manufacturing cycles–in turn forcing more-fleeting half-lives for anything deemed “cool.” So our friends at Time Inc.’s Fortune have hired hipster ad shop Strawberry-Frog “to contribute some strategy on how to best position the Fortune brand,” according to The New York Times. A magazine spokeswoman says it’s a “small research project.” (Fortune to StrawberryFrog: “Honey, should I wear the gray suit or the brown suit today?”) Mitsubishi Motors recently did the same.

“We surround them and give them a hug; it’s a process we call ‘total engagement,’” says StrawberryFrog president Scott Goodson. It’s not clear how literal he’s being about the hug. “When we started [at Mitsubishi], they had dissatisfied dealers, apathy in the organization, no sense of spirit. The mission we came up with was to fight boredom. It was a movement to make a more dynamic organization.” (StrawberryFrog to Mitsubishi: “Oh, dear, don’t wear that old thing again.”)

There’s something ageless about this: One generation has looked to the next for advice on cool for as long as there have been out-of-it parents. But seeking advice is one thing; letting an outsider set your agenda is another. Doing so forfeits control of your brand to someone who doesn’t own it; it turns you from a creator into a distributor, which is a pretty low-value activity to base a business on. Martin Lindstrom, whose 25-person consulting firm, Brandsense, helps 11 of the world’s 100 largest companies keep their brands cool, says, “I’m surprised when they come to us, because they should have structures built in to inform and shape their brand in those fundamental ways.”

They don’t because staying cool is difficult work. It requires constantly scanning the horizon and taking gambles. And that’s scary. “People in huge corporations are afraid of being fired,” says Lindstrom. “They don’t dare take those risks anymore. The only way they can get a mandate to do this is by taking the risk outside of the company.”

The question: Can big companies find their inner Thunderdog? Can they create internal structures and processes that let them recognize, and embrace, cool on their own? Some already have. Procter & Gamble’s Tremor is an in-house “word-of-mouth marketing” division that continually tests new ideas and products (80% of them for non-P&G clients) with a network of 220,000 teens. And in April, P&G launched Vocalpoint, intended to do the same thing with a universe of 600,000 mothers.

“I’m surprised when they come to us. They should have structures built in to inform and shape their brand.”

To get closer to customers and speed the feedback loop, Samsung’s U.S. marketers established relationships with some 1,500 Web sites that serve its target markets, from fly-fishing sites to the home pages of rock bands. When designers in Korea give the word that a new product is on the way–often with only a few months’ warning–marketing puts out the word through its network. Presto! Instant product launch.

It’s a promising approach to the challenge of keeping up with one’s customers. Cool, even. So, your choice: Farm out what most makes you distinctive to a bunch of kids in Brooklyn–or do the hard work of figuring it out yourself.



University City Models

USC Marshall School
Each semester, the Student Consulting Association gives its members the opportunity to work with a team of USC students to learn about consulting by helping a client solve a problem. In the past, the Program’s consulting teams have helped small businesses and non-profits with product development, business plan writing, and market research tasks.

These projects are valuable opportunities for motivated students to accelerate their intellectual and professional development and to become better-equipped to make the difficult career decisions they will face when they graduate. Also, by helping local businesses and non-profits, the Consulting Projects Program allows USC students to contribute to the development of the school’s surrounding community.

The objective of the Student Consulting Program is to help students determine if they want to pursue a consulting career and to help them build the knowledge and capabilities they need to be a strong candidate for a consulting job. The program does this by providing students with real-world experience helping a client solve a business problem.

Duke Fuqua Student Consulting Program
The goal of these programs is to provide businesses and students the opportunity to work together solving real-life business challenges.
About 800 daytime students attend Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business, who on the average have worked (5+) years since receiving their undergraduate degree before coming to Duke. The expertise from this pool of talent, combined with the resources of Duke, allows the Student Consulting Program to provide consultation in most functional areas. The list includes, but is not limited to, the following:

  • Marketing
  • Management Information Systems
  • Manufacturing
  • Financial Planning and Control
  • Risk Analysis
  • Inventory Control
  • Accounting Systems/ Business Ratios
  • Human Resources
  • Strategic Planning
  • Production Scheduling
  • Growth Management
  • Operations

Duke offers a variety of programs based on your company’s needs:

Student Consulting for Small Businesses

The Fuqua Student Consulting Program (FSCP) offers confidential business assistance to qualified local companies. This program is specifically designed for small companies in the Triangle Area which do not have the resources to perform or pay for these services.

Student Consulting for Small Minority-owned Businesses

The Minority Business Consulting Program (MBCP) offers confidential business services to qualified local ethnic minority-owned companies. This program is specifically designed for small companies in the Triangle Area which do not have the resources to perform or pay for these services. The program is supported by The Fuqua School of Business and the North Carolina Institute for Minority Economic Development and funded by corporate grants.

Student Consulting for Nonprofit Organizations

The FCSP offers consulting help to nonprofit organizations. Each year about 20 percent of the Small Business Consulting Program is composed of nonprofit organizations. Nonprofit organizations should use the same applications as the small business applicants.

Midsize Companies ($5MM to $500MM) – Strategic Planning Practicum

At the conclusion of this two term course, the firm receives a strategic plan with an objective overview of the company along with plans and strategies for the future. The end product will be a complete written strategic business plan and a formal presentation to the company at the end of the course.

The report will include:

  • background of company
  • analysis of industry (environment)
  • identify principal competitors
  • size of market
  • growth potential of market
  • organizations
  • operations
  • conclusions
  • recommendations
  • implementation plan

Vanderbilt University
Student Consulting

Owen students—from full-time MBA to MS Finance to Executive MBA—bring years of valuable work experience to the table. In conjunction with faculty advisors, Owen students offer consulting capabilities and the strategic skills to address your business challenges.

There are three ways to engage a Vanderbilt Owen consulting team:

  • Consulting for Class Credit
    The Vanderbilt Owen curriculum offers special-designation courses that allow students to handle corporate assignments in return for class credit. There is no charge to the company to participate. The optimum time to staff these assignments is in January of each academic year with projects that last no longer than four months.
  • Owen Consultants for Hire
    You provide the challenge; we supply the consulting team that can best satisfy your requirements. There is no seasonality to these assignments—your “for hire” project can start and stop at your discretion, even if it does not coincide with our academic calendar. We will work with you to determine a budget, timeline, and team.
  • Executive MBA Business Strategy Project
    A hallmark of the Executive MBA Program is the group strategy project, completed in the year-long Business Strategy sequence during the second year of the program. Students work in teams to create a strategic business plan for your company. This is a unique opportunity to use strategic senior-level talent at no cost to your company.

Vanderbilt Video

University of Iowa
The University of Iowa believes in providing undergraduate and graduate students with real-world learning experiences through the entrepreneurship program. During the fall and spring semesters, interdisciplinary student teams are formed to complete advanced business projects for aspiring entrepreneurs and early-stage companies in the region. These projects typically include market assessments of new technology products or services, strategic planning, financial forecasting, and business planning. This initiative provides a valuable educational opportunity to UI entrepreneurship students while offering area companies quality business consulting services.

The Duquesne University School of Business offers a Business Consulting course in which students act as consultants to assist regional small businesses with various issues for one semester. This unique program is designed to promote entrepreneurship in Western Pennsylvania by matching the company’s business consulting needs with the business development skills of Duquesne University business students.

BUSINESS SOLUTIONS FROM DUQUESNE BUSINESS STUDENTS

Course Instructor:
Mary T. McKinney, Ph.D., Director,
Duquesne University Chrysler Corp. Small Business Development Center

HOW DOES IT WORK?

  1. Students select cases – all are not selected but SBDC assistance is available
  2. Formulate the business issues with the CEO/Senior Executive
  3. With frequent client/professor interaction:
    • Develop the methodology
    • Conduct the necessary research, and analysis, and draw conclusions
  4. Deliver the recommendations in a final report and presentation to client/professor.

A student or student team can provide the assistance necessary to position small businesses as key players in today’s competitive environment. The program has proven effective in helping small businesses identify and solve managerial problems, in addition to improving the operations of the businesses. The solutions provided by the students offer new and innovative ideas to help businesses grow.

The Community Consulting Institute is a student-based consulting program managed by the Coleman Entrepreneurship Center, and administered by faculty through entrepreneurship courses. Student teams are matched with clients that are small businesses or community organizations facing a particular strategic challenge (i.e.: how to increase sales, improve profitability, hire the right staff, analyze the competition, etc.).

During a 10-week academic quarter, students engage in client meetings, market research, strategy formulation, and team workshops. The end result is a deliverable that helps address, analyze, and offer potential solutions for the client’s strategic challenge. Examples of deliverables include a feasibility study, marketing plan, strategic assessment, or market study.

In their final MBA course students are required to participate in a Consulting Project that allows them to apply what they have learned to an actual business problem or opportunity. Students work in teams of 3-5 students with managers and/or owners of local organizations. The Consulting Projects include written and oral presentations to business sponsors.

Some of the organizations that benefited from participating in a Consulting Project with the School of Global Management & Leadership MBA team projects are:

  • AlliedSignal
  • APS
  • Dial Corporation
  • General Motors
  • Honeywell
  • Lockheed Martin
  • MortonSalt
  • PETsMART
  • Phoenix Day Care
  • Phoenix Suns Team Shop
  • U.S. West
  • U-Haul International

Dartmouth University
Thank you for your interest in working with the Tuck Student Consulting Services (TSCS). TSCS is a student-run organization at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth that organizes graduate business students to volunteer their time to help local businesses and non-profit initiatives with consulting projects.



The city is trying to do its part.  I’ve done a bunch of student class projects and I had an intern last semester and interviewed another one this week for this semester.  Everywhere I can I’m looking for opportunities to put students to work for the city and guess what — they’re looking for the exact same thing.  So get on board before this train leaves you and your business behind.

Kent State Impact on the City Budget...

Whenever the topic of the city’s financial problems are discussed, inevitably someone will suggest that our problems have occurred because our largest employer — Kent State University — doesn’t pay property taxes as a public institution and yet it  brings students into Kent that end up being large consumers of city services.  As attractive as that hypothesis may sound, the data proves otherwise.  As a matter of fact, when we ran the numbers it turns out that the economic benefits derived from just the income taxes paid by the 3,000+ faculty and the administrators exceed the value of city services used by over $1 million dollars.

In the course of studying the City’s financial situation, one of the areas of particular interest was understanding where our revenues came from and where they were being spent.  One of our goals was to cluster revenues and expenses according to categories of customers, e.g., households, apartment buildings, retail, manufacturing, etc.  Kent State University is so large that it is in a category all by itself.

The idea behind this effort was to better understand our cash flow as a city by overlaying the diversification of our revenue base with service consumption patterns.  That’s a fancy way of saying that we wanted to be able to compare how much was being contributed by whom, with how much services were being used by whom.



Side Comment on Revenue Diversification

Ideally, just like in our personal investments, we want to have as much diversification in the city’s revenue base as possible so that we can avoid the volatility that comes from being overly dependent on any one category.  People have a high expectation for the availability and continuity of city police, fire and safety services so government needs to have enough diversification to be able to compensate for unexpected economic downturns in any one particular sector.

With that in mind, it turns out that the City is very heavily dependent upon Kent State revenues.  Over 70% of the income tax revenues received by the City come directly from Kent State.  That’s dangerously high and would normally be considered too high a risk but the good news for the City is that universities tend to be fairly recessionary-proof and they don’t tend to be outsourced, relocated , merged or shut down — so the typical risks of this high a dependency is less relevant.

Kent State University revenues may not grow at a fast rate but they have also not declined and as a result they have provided a stabilizing influence on our cash flow.  And that’s exactly what has happened as Kent based manufacturing jobs have declined over the last decade – the steady revenues from Kent State have been there to help us bridge over the tax loss with neglible impact on service levels.



Tax structures will largely determine who pays what and in Ohio the income tax is far and away the single most important revenue source for local government so that means that jobs — business activity — contributes the greatest revenue.  That holds true in Kent with 90% of our tax revenue coming from income tax.  Don’t get me wrong — every penny of property tax counts too — but for all practical purposes it is a very small revenue source for the City.

That’s why a minimum wage job actually contributes more revenue to the City than many single family homes in Kent.  And if you think about it most of those minimum wage jobs are probably filled by and were created to serve Kent State students.  In a more thorough study we would factor in all the secondary business activity that is in Kent because of the University such as these fast food jobs.  Studies in other university cities indicate that for every dollar the university spends it generates anywhere from 1.5 to 4 times more in secondary economic benefits, e.g., gas stations, food marts, car repair, etc.  For simplification purposes we decided to not even count those multiplier effect benefits – that’s another study for another day — but they are real.

Getting back to just direct tax revenues – 90% of our City tax revenues come from income tax and 70% of our income tax comes from Kent State University.   What that means is that the business sector — which in our case is dominated by Kent State — subsidizes city services provided to residential property owners in Kent.  So while it is true that Kent State doesn’t pay property tax, the loss of that revenue has neglible impact on city revenues compared to the significant impact of Kent State income tax receipts.

Here’s a summary of the actual numbers calculated using 2005 dollars:

Income Tax Revenues Received from Kent State University  =  $3,450,000
Cost of Kent State/Student Related Fire Calls                           =  (    350,000)
Cost of Kent State/Student Police Related Calls                       = ( 1,300,000)
Miscellaneous Other Costs Related to University                     = (    100,000)

Net Kent State Impact on City Revenues                            = $1,700,000



We also examined what our revenues would look like if Kent State University wasn’t here and the land was developed with a combination of commercial/industrial and residential property.  Again, the numbers came back with the City receiving about $1 million less in revenues if the university land was developed in the same proportions of business to residential units as the rest of the City.

In the business world companies perform similar exercises under the title of “Customer Profitability Analyses.”   In building these customer profiles companies calculate who contributes how much and who consumes how much.   Historically the rule of thumb followed the 80/20 rule – 80% of your profits come from 20% of your customers.

A new book (called Angels and Demons) took this analysis even further and found some excellent case studies that showed how 150% of your profits come from 20% of your customers – they are the Angels. The Demons are those 20% of your customers who actually lose you money equal to 150% of your profit.

From a purely financial perspective, Kent State University is clearly one of our Angels.

Progress vs. Preservation...

Progress vs. Preservation
One of the hardest parts of building a community is maintaining that delicate balance between honoring the past and making the changes that need to happen to ensure a better future.  Just look at all the debate that swelled up around the new library and the old church building next to it.  It’s a classic example where one person’s blight is another’s timeless architecture.  Good luck arbitrating that discussion.

Preservation vs. Progress:  How do you pick?
The rhetorical answer is that you shouldn’t have to pick — these priorities should be complementary, not exclusive of one another.  In principle that sounds great but try telling that to your 90 year old grandma after she chains herself to the front stoop to stop the bulldozers of tomorrow’s development and see how far you get with either grandma or the bulldozer operator.

These sorts of issues push people way back into their corners and that gives them a chance to build up a good head of steam as they come racing out to fight at the sound of the bell.   The reason these issues seem to agitate us so much is that they rub our core values up against each other which creates friction, which increases heat, which can lead us to boil over.

Values can have some logic behind them but that’s not a prerequisite so usually there’s very little room for reasoned discussion based on facts.  This is one of those “because I said so” diatribes that drove us insane as kids and we tend to react in the same way as adults when we hear that kind of explanation.

I’m anxious for a team of  biologists to report that they’ve found the gene sequence that influences our time orientation – predisposing us as natural historians or futurists.  Until then I guess we take it one day at a time trying to decide individually and collectively when a “piece of history” has outlived its relevance.

I’ve heard it said that just because something is old doesn’t mean it has historical value. I’d say that most of us know people that fit that description and it wouldn’t be a stretch to say the same about buildings — at least until we’re asked about one of our favorite buildings and then logic is relegated to the back seat behind our emotionally based values.

I certainly don’t pretend to have the cure to this malady but I do have a strong sense that it’s like asking which half of the brain is better — the right or left?  The last time I checked we need them both to enjoy a meaningful life and I’d say the same for preservation and progress.  I’ve reconciled myself to the fact that this will always be an inherently messy debate so I try to not let the tension get to me but it can still be very stressful.

Iin the field of psychology there are clinical instances where anxiety and despair have disrupted the functional link that connects subjective past, present, and future. The individual is unable to conceive of his life as a whole. It is helpful for therapists to understand the specific way a client has organized himself with respect to time, how this pattern may have become disrupted, and how therapy can help restore the sense of continuity from who one has been to who one is now and who one will yet become.

Community is the ultimate expression of individuality so perhaps what’s true for us individually is true for us collectively.  To that end it’s no surprise that so many cities are now trying to re-create old town squares and that developers are building neo-traditional homes with front porches and other architectural features that hark back to earlier days.

It’s always important for any community – even if it’s a new one or has been around for 200 years – to have a sense of place. You can’t separate a community from its history.  But likewise I’ve heard it said that the only thing more important than where you came from is where you’re going.

Here’s a few  old photos of Kent employees building the city that we enjoy today that Mr. Steve Hardesty, Water Plant Manager, had saved in his files and was kind enough to share with me.  I thought you’d enjoy them as well and as you do I hope you’ll have a new appreciation for everything these people did to make Kent what it is today and ask yourself what are we doing to pass that legacy on to the next generation of Kent kids.

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