Archive for April, 2009
Thursday, April 30th, 2009
By BOB LEWIS
Associated Press Writer
NEWPORT NEWS, Va. (AP) – In the midst of the worst economic funk since the Great Depression, blue-collar cities like this major manufacturer of aircraft carriers and submarines are in dire times.
But Newport News is not only holding on to its staple jobs, it’s landed commitments for corporate expansions expected to create 3,360 new jobs.
And they’re lucrative jobs too, with companies such as optics and graphics giant Canon, German auto parts maker Continental AG, and a joint venture between French nuclear power company AREVA and Northrup Grumman, owner of the massive shipworks that has been the city’s backbone for 140 years.
The public sector is in the game, too. The Department of Energy is investing $400 million into the massive atom smasher at Jefferson Lab and Fort Eustis is expanding to handle duties transferred there in the latest round of base realignments and closures.
Most of the jobs are expected go online over the course of 2009 and 2010, with construction of the new facilities slated to be the first jobs created.
Growth in a city that melds lunch-pail, unionized steelworkers and atomic science? What gives?
Several factors are in play, from aggressively pro-business state and local governments to a long and favorable track record with the city’s work force, said Old Dominion University economist and researcher Larry Filer. And then there’s just being in the right place at the right time.
“One thing that seems to be a recurrent theme here, particularly with the five projects from last year, is they were all by companies that have had a presence in Newport News for years,” Filer said after presenting results of a study he did on the economic benefits of the new projects.
“It seems that developing that relationship gives these firms a level of comfort and allows them to go to corporate headquarters and make a pitch to expand,” he said.
Filer’s study shows that by 2012, the incoming jobs will add $162 million in new compensation, and its ripple effect will yield tens of millions of dollars more. The new jobs will pay so well, Filer’s study estimates, it will boost the average weekly wage on the Virginia Peninsula from the present $711 to $916.
Access to job training at two of the region’s community colleges, Thomas Nelson and Tidewater, is a major incentive, said Christie Miller of the Virginia Economic Development Partnership.
Another asset the region offers for corporations with military and technology ties is a high number of military retirees.
“They have a military perspective, they’re highly skilled and a lot of them already have the security clearances some of these companies are looking for now,” Miller said.
As it has for 123 years, the shipyard anchors the Newport News economy. Its 19,000 employees are the lone supplier of aircraft carriers and one of only two makers of submarines on 550 acres spanning two miles of James River shoreline. It is Virginia’s largest industrial employer.
The steady demand for naval might immunizes defense contractor Northrup Grumman from some of the perils that have pushed automakers and other heavy industries to the brink of collapse.
Mike Petters, president of Northrup Grumman Shipbuilding, says the nature of the business helps, but local factors figure in, too.
The company and the United Steelworkers have enjoyed a peaceful, cooperative relationship since a 17-week strike 10 years ago, he said.
Alton H. Glass has been a member of USW Local 8888 for nearly 30 years, from his time as a welder on the shipyard production line through nearly two terms as president, and he agreed. The company listens to labor’s input and uses it in running the business, he said.
“There’s been an open line of communication since Northrup Grumman’s been here. We have labor-management meetings, and we all talk about where we’re going. That doesn’t mean we always agree on everything, but when you can talk with each other, you can resolve problems,” said Glass, whose union last fall signed a four-year contract with the company.
And then there are local governments long known for looking after its corporate constituents, Petters said.
“We’ve raised our hand on several occasions and said here’s a way you can help us develop a new product line _ new hiring requirements, new training requirements _ and they have been very receptive to those ideas,” Petters said.
Canon Inc. began the run of good fortune for Newport News in May, announcing a $600 million project to create 1,000 jobs in a new plant that will produce toner cartridges for its printers.
In September, Fort Eustis, new home to the Army’s Training and Doctrine Command, got $195 million to build the command’s new operations center and headquarters.
And in October, AREVA NP and Northrup Grumman sealed a partnership to build components that will go into nuclear power plants to be built in North America. It will generate 540 new jobs in the next four years.
But most of those jobs haven’t arrived yet. And until they do, Newport News continues to feel the pain of rising unemployment.
Virginia’s jobless rate was 7 percent in February, nearly double the 3.8 percent rate from a year earlier. For the Hampton Roads area, which includes Newport News, the February jobless rate was 7.2 percent. And for the city of Newport News, it was 8.5 percent.
“In Hampton Roads, it’s mixed. There are other places, though, where it’s not even mixed, it’s just been problematic,” Gov. Timothy M. Kaine said.
Posted in Economic Development, TechJobs, Virginia | Comments Off
Thursday, April 30th, 2009
WASHINGTON, D.C. – As Congress continues working to construct legislation aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions, legislators on the House Small Business Committee today discussed how entrepreneurs and family farmers can play a role in addressing climate change, as well as the effect emission reductions could have on the small business economy.
“The science is clear: from rising sea levels to changing weather patterns, climate change is occurring,” said Chairwoman Nydia M. Velázquez (D-NY). “Entrepreneurs everywhere are stepping up to address this problem by investing in a green economy.”
During the hearing, witnesses and lawmakers argued that there is a clear need for Congress to pass legislation, in order for a climate change policy to be crafted correctly.
Velázquez said that if the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) moves forward alone to regulate carbon under the Clean Air Act, it would likely create difficulties as the agency would be using statutes crafted nearly forty years ago for different purposes.
“The Clean Air Act is a landmark environmental law that has served us well for nearly four decades, but it simply was not written with the complexities of climate change in mind,” Velázquez said.
“The reforms needed are sweeping, and Congress must craft a policy that takes small business needs into account.”
With their innovation and ingenuity, small businesses are leading developers of cutting-edge “green” technologies. Lawmakers noted today that entrepreneurs make up 90 percent of the renewable-energy sector that is harnessing wind and solar power, as well as producing biofuels.
The renewable-energy and efficiency sectors are leading a new wave of growth, and are expected to account for 1 out of every 4 jobs by 2030.Small businesses are also instrumental in efforts promoting energy efficiency in both existing and new buildings.
“Green entrepreneurship holds enormous potential for the lagging U.S. economy,” Velázquez said.
“Capping carbon emissions will not only protect our environment, but create an enormous market for the renewable energy and energy efficiency technologies being developed by our nation’s entrepreneurs.”
Click here to view video of the hearing:http://tiny.pl/zph5
Posted in Economic Development, Energy, Government/Defense, Washington, DC | Comments Off
Thursday, April 30th, 2009
ARLINGTON, VA – Demand for Internet-enabled televisions is growing rapidly, according to a new study by the Consumer Electronics Association (CEA).
The study, Net-Enabled Video: Early Adopters Only?, found that about half of prospective TV buyers say they are likely to purchase an Internet-connected TV.
The study reveals numerous ways consumers would use an Internet-enabled TV.
Nearly half (48 percent) of U.S. online adults would use their web-enabled TV to find out more information on upcoming shows and identify a song that played during the show. Forty-four percent also would use the web to find out more information about the actors featured on-screen.
Having anytime-access to content, and accessing the Internet and television broadcasts together were the top benefits of an Internet-enabled TV, according to consumers.
“As we saw at the 2009 International CES, Internet-enabled devices are taking the consumer technology experience to the next level, and nowhere is this more pronounced than with television,” said Shawn DuBravac, CEA’s economist and director of research.
“Consumers want more from their TV experience and marrying traditional television with Internet access is providing the next frontier of the television experience.”
The study also found that most adults are already online while watching TV.
Almost a third of online adults (30 percent) say they always or usually surf the Internet while watching television and another third (32 percent) say they sometimes do.
Consumers are increasingly willing to shift online activities to the TV. Watching online video has the highest potential conversion rate (62 percent) followed by weather updates (59 percent) and playing online games (57 percent).
“Consumers are already using the Internet while they watch TV. The next frontier is to create a seamless experience bringing the two together,” said DuBravac.
“Consumers want a variety of content that they can access anytime. An Internet-enabled TV is perfectly positioned to provide consumers with exactly what they are looking for in their next television experience.”
Online: www.CE.org
Posted in Internet/New Media, Studies, surveys, reports, Virginia | Comments Off
Thursday, April 30th, 2009
DESTINY, FL – Dominion Development Partners has signed a partnership agreement with Destiny, Florida to create the Alternative Energy Industrial Park at Destiny.
The park is expected to attract alternative energy technology companies to America’s first eco-sustainable city, said Anthony V. Pugliese, III, managing partner and CEO of Destiny.
The initial 500-acre phase of the Alternative Energy Industrial Park at Destiny is planned to include a research and development Campus housing a technology incubator, distribution center, and an academic village and training center.
The park is projected to ultimately generate thousands of higher paying “green collar” jobs, Pugliese stated.
Future phases will include energy generation assets to power the city, and may include ethanol and biodiesel processing as well as pyrolysis, gasification and other “waste-to-energy” facilities.
The “power island” will deliver surplus green energy to the transmission grid utilizing various “smart-grid” technologies.
The Alternative Energy Industrial Park at Destiny is designed to attract companies that are seeking to develop and manufacture new, clean technologies.
These businesses will benefit from the synergies of co-location to reduce their start-up and operating costs. Initially, the park is expected to attract alternative energy businesses including solar power and fuel cell companies.
“To prove a true sustainable city can and should be built in America, we have decided to do the hard part first. We have challenged our team to build a state-of-the-art industrial park filled with clean technology tenants, with a small comparable carbon footprint,” Pugliese stated.
Construction of the Alternative Energy Industrial Park at Destiny is anticipated to begin in 2012, pending Destiny receiving land entitlement from the appropriate agencies.
Destiny, Florida spans 64 square miles, or 41,300-acres, and includes more than 25,000 acres of preserved, open space in southern Osceola County, less than one hour from Orlando.
Online: www.destinyflorida.com
Posted in Economic Development, Energy, Florida | Comments Off
Thursday, April 30th, 2009
ATLANTA – Global Payments Inc. (NYSE:GPN) has closed on its $75 million acquisition of Russian firm ZAO United Card Service.
Global Payments CEO and Chairman Paul R. Garcia said, “Russia continues to be one of the worlds’ fastest growing payments markets. UCS provides us with a direct merchant acquiring platform for long-term growth in Russia and a foundation for other direct acquiring opportunities in Central and Eastern Europe.”
Posted in Acquisitions, Georgia, Internet/New Media, IT | Comments Off
Thursday, April 30th, 2009
By Allan Maurer
RALEIGH, NC—Although Time-Warner Cable says North Carolina municipalities that have already put high speed municipal broadband systems in place would be “grandfathered” into bills being considered to limit the ability of cities to launch their own Internet, phone and cable TV services, that may not be so, says Wilson City Attorney Jim Cauley.
City spokesperson Brian Bowman, who runs a blog (http://savencbb.wordpress.com/) about Wilson’s superfast 10/10mb broadband service and the the incumbent’s efforts to legally limit city competition, says City Attorney Cauley tells him Wilson would not be exempt from the bill after all.
Cauley was not available for comment when we called this morning, but a Time Warner Cable spokesperson and an NC Cable Association spokesperson both told TechJournal South previously that Wilson, Salisbury and other NC municipalities with systems or plans in place for providing their own broadband would not be affected by the bill.
The NC legislature’s utility committee did not consider the bill (HB 1252) Wednesday, but Bowman says he understands it will when the committee meets next Wednesday, “Although that hasn’t been confirmed,” he adds.
Phones are ringing in Wilson
In one of the most recent posts on Bowman’s blog, he also notes, “Phones are ringing in Wilson. There’s a new poll about HB 1252 that is apparently designed with leading questions about municipal broadband.
It includes questions that, as a friend put it, can’t possibly be answered correctly without siding with certain cable and or telco providers.
“I’m guessing a couple of the industry execs will use it this week to convince lawmakers that Wilson citizens don’t need their system,” he writes.
Bowman says that questions are framed in such a way that only one answer is likely. One question, for instance, asks, “Do you think it’s right to collect taxes from a business and then use that money to compete against the business?”
The automated polling calls have also been made in Salisbury, NC, according to reports.
Bowman says his blog averages from 1,000 to 4,000 hits a day and had 12,400 hits last Friday.
Debate not limited to NC
The debate over whether municipalities should provide broadband services as a utility is not limited to North Carolina by any means.
Bristol, Virginia’s municipal fiber-optic network landed the city on the Intelligent Community Forum’s top seven “most intelligent cities” list, the only U.S. city to do so. Kentucky and other Southeastern states have also had their successes with municipal broadband, while other states, such as South Carolina, have already erected legal barriers to such efforts.
The publication “Government Technology” discusses Bristol’s system here: http://tiny.pl/zphq in an article called, “Municipal Broadband Efforts Succeed Despite Wi-Fi Meltdown.”
While some municipalities did have troubles in attempting to provide free Wi-Fi services, often in partnership with private providers, the issue here is different and as Bowman points out, times have changed. “People seem to understand the importance of broadband now,” he says.
California-based broadband industry analyst Craig Settles says that often cities are more nimble at providing the updated high speed infrastructure for broadband services than incumbents.
In a blog post titled “N. Carolina’s Fight for Broadband is the U.S.’ Fight, (http://roisforyou.wordpress.com) ” he outlines community efforts not just in Wilson, but also in Rutherford, Polk, Craven, and Madison Counties in Western NC.
“Municipal broadband…has quite a few stellar successes in North Carolina and elsewhere to recommend it,” he says.
Settles tells TechJournal South the incumbents, the large telcos and cable companies, are hampered by three things: their administrative infrastructure and the limitations and expense of their technologies. “All three make it difficult for them to match government efforts,” he says.
At one time, he notes, railroad company executives could not envision the railroad industry supplanted by airlines, but it happened for one simple reason, he says. “Trains can’t fly.”
Additional resources:
Previously on TechJournal South: For more perspective on the incumbents’ position:
http://techjournalsouth.com/news/article.html?item_id=7334
Excellent resource with extensive links on municipal broadband efforts:
Baller Herbst Law Group:
http://tiny.pl/zj3s
States that have already passed laws limiting municipal broadband:
State Barriers to Community Broadband Services
http://tiny.pl/zj36
Wikipedia entry on municipal broadband
http://tiny.pl/zj33
Municipal Wireless Snapshot report:
http://www.successful.com/msp/snapshot-4-09.pdf
Fast Company: Time Warner’s Antics in Wilson, NC Give another reason to snip the cable:
http://tiny.pl/zj37
List of municipal broadband network organizations.
http://tiny.pl/zj34
An older, but contrary view from the Reason Foundation:
Municipal broadband fails again
http://tiny.pl/zphh
Posted in Government/Defense, Internet/New Media, Kentucky, Legal, North Carolina, Virginia | Comments Off
Thursday, April 30th, 2009
ATLANTA – Platinum Equity has acquired a majority stake in Canvas Systems, a global supplier of used and refurbished enterprise-class IT equipment and services.
Platinum acquired the controlling interest from OHC, LLC, an Atlanta-based company that also owns global IT consulting group Corus360.
OHC will maintain a minority interest in Canvas.
Terms of the transaction were not disclosed.
Canvas’ products include refurbished networking, storage, server and IP Telephony equipment from manufacturers such as IBM, HP, Sun, and Cisco. Canvas has over 3,500 customers in more than 65 countries, ranging from mid-sized businesses to Fortune 500 companies.
LA-based Platinum Equity (www.platinumequity.com) is a global M&A firm specializing in the merger, acquisition and operation of companies that provide services and solutions to customers in a broad range of business markets, including information technology, telecommunications, logistics, metals services, manufacturing and distribution.
Online: www.canvassystems.com
Posted in Acquisitions, Georgia, IT | Comments Off
Thursday, April 30th, 2009
CHARLOTTE, NC – Charlotte-based software distribution company Cutting Edge Technologies has sold to an unnamed privately-held company, according to VR Mergers & Acquisitions Charlotte.
Terms of the transaction were not disclosed.
VR Charlotte (www.vrcharlotte.com) assisted in all phases of the transaction, from the initial analysis to marketing the business, to negotiating the sale and all the way through closing.
Online: www.vrcharlotte.com
Posted in Acquisitions, IT, North Carolina | Comments Off
Thursday, April 30th, 2009
BOSTON, MA – The National Venture Capital Association has released a “Four Pillar Plan” to ignite the initial public offerings markets.
The plan, released at the NVCA annual meeting in Boston, calls for new partnerships, new paths to liquidity, less regulation and changes in tax laws.
The plan suggests that problems in the venture markets may be systemic rather than just recessionary.
The NVCA points out that VC firms must face fewer choices in the number of investment banks and accounting firms that help launch IPOs.
The “Four Horsement” boutique investment banks of the 1990s, for instance (Alex Brown, Hambrecht & Quist, Montgomery Securities and Robertson Stephens) which specialized in IPOs, no longer exist, the NVCA notes.
“Against this backdrop, the NVCA believes that the venture capital industry must do more to promote alternative ecosystem partners while engaging with existing members to identify ways to better serve the needs of emerging growth companies,” the organization said.
“The consensus is that the most significant improvement to our capital markets will only be achieved if both the private sector and the government address the breakdowns that have occurred within their respective systems,” said Dixon Doll, a co-founder of the NVCA and its chairman.
For more see: http://tiny.pl/zpmz
Posted in Events, IPOs, Studies, surveys, reports, venture capital report | Comments Off
Wednesday, April 29th, 2009
By Ron Price
When it comes to creating a strategy for your business, it is rarely wise to move forward with just one carefully thought out course of action. Instead, it is wiser to encourage vigorous debate and develop several alternatives as part of the strategic discussion.
The best scenario is to have three to five alternatives that are all so good that you experience a lot of angst over which one to choose. This process provides several benefits; among them are better critical thinking, increased creativity, and a number of alternatives to choose from as the future unfolds.
Unfortunately, many organizations don’t value this approach and they quickly move strategic discussions toward consensus. As a result, these organizations often end up caught by the marketplace when circumstances change.
While their strategy may have been great at the time they created it, factors outside of their control can change the dynamics of their business and, without alternatives that were developed in their strategic planning process, they cannot respond quickly enough to leverage an opportunity or avoid a significant threat.
In order to remain relevant and effective, businesses need some way to monitor both the execution of their strategic plan and the changing environment in which they do business. With these management tools providing input in real time, organizations can quickly adjust course as circumstances present new opportunities or threats.
A simple model made up of “Four Ps” can help companies create this advantage. These Ps are Perceptions, Performance, Purpose and Process.
Perceptions
There are six different stakeholder groups you should be listening to periodically to determine whether you’re moving in the right direction.
These six groups are:
1.Customers: How your customers see you is critical to any organization. Since not all feedback systems work equally to uncover customer perceptions, you should use a variety of feedback systems. Some examples are suggestion cards, phone calls, emails, interviews, focus groups, and so on.
2.Employees: You should to track your employees’ level of engagement and satisfaction. Again, you should use a variety of feedback systems to gauge their perceptions. Your employees have a big impact on your long-term performance, especially when you’re trying to execute changes in strategy.
3.Vendors: In the old world, companies didn’t care what their vendors thought of them. But in the new world, everyone is connected and part of a greater whole. In developing flexibility with your strategy, all of your relationships are potential assets that you can draw upon to execute or change your strategy when it’s necessary.
So understanding how your vendors perceive you is important. Do they view you as one of their prime customers, or as one of the troublesome ones?
4.Regulators: Depending on your industry, you have different guidelines to follow. Sometimes those guidelines play a significant role in strategy. Therefore, know how your industry’s regulators view you.
5.Owners or shareholders: Whether your company has one or several major investors, you need to fully understand how each perceives the organization. Since the person or people who hold the purse strings play a major role in the company, they have dynamic relevance in terms of strategy.
6.Community: This could include the Chambers of Commerce, the media, the other significant businesses in the area, or even the government. How these outside groups view your company can significantly impact your strategy.
Performance
Performance relates to the following four questions:
1.How are we doing implementing and executing on our strategy, including the goals and the timelines? Are we ahead? Are we behind? Are we performing according to plan or are we in some way out of sync with the plan?
2.What are the current economics of our business? Has anything changed from what we assumed when we created our strategic plan?
3.What are the operational results that we’re producing? If you break these down to business units or individual strategies or functions, figure out the actual operational results you’re getting. You may be doing a great job executing on your strategy, but it may not be producing the results you anticipated.
4.How are we performing relative to the performance agreements that we established in the organization? The performance agreements are the specifics of the operational plan that were created in the strategy. How are you lining up with the milestones for specific initiatives? Or what’s happening with the consequences? Are you getting greater or lesser results than expected?
Purpose
When you review your purpose as an organization, you need to ask the question, “What has changed?” or “What is or will be changing in the environment?” Your answer should impact the way you look at your vision or your long-term goals for the organization. The goal is to look for new opportunities or to identify what threats may be emerging because of changes in the environment.
Continually ask, “What has changed internally since we met last?” Do we have some new strength that we didn’t have before? Did we obtain some new equipment, technology, or intellectual property? Did we get some great talent that we didn’t have before that should be impacting our strategy? Has there been a new limitation that’s emerged since we last looked at this scorecard?”
Based on your answers, you should review whether you still have the right strategy, goals, or timelines. You also have to determine what you can redefine and adjust in your plan to improve in any of the areas you’ve analyzed. Finally, you need to ask yourself, “Where should we focus our improvement efforts to create new value in the future?”
Process
All work is a process. It’s a series of tasks combined to achieve a particular goal. Such is the case with strategy as well. There are steps you go through, there are people involved, and there are processes you have to look at to determine where you can improve your implementation and in what order of priority.
Are you creating waste? Is there rework? Are there inefficiencies in your various processes? Are the processes really creating the results you’re looking for? How are you doing tactically? How are you improving your processes? How should you adjust your resources?
Finally, you should be asking how you can create the sense of urgency and the accountability to ensure superior execution of your plan. You may have a great plan, but if you don’t have the right sense of urgency or the right level of accountability in the execution of it, a great plan poorly executed still produces poor results.
Keep Score for Better Results
Good strategic thinking and monitoring takes the four Ps into consideration. It’s about constantly looking at your environment and adjusting your plan as necessary. Developing this kind of monitoring system, along with a more robust development of alternatives in strategy moves you away from rigid organizational charts toward more team-based environments.
As a result, you’re better able to adapt your strategy to the environment while it’s changing. When you implement the four Ps into your organization, you keep your strategy fresh and don’t become stagnant or obsolete in the implementation of your plan…or in the marketplace.
Ron Price is the founder and CEO of Price Associates, a company dedicated to helping business leaders and entrepreneurs solve problems, identify solutions and implement change in strategy and performance. Ron is the author of “Finding Hidden Treasures,” a series of essays with action steps to aid readers in mining their own inner talents.
For more information, visit www.Price-Associates.com
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