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Michael Mazzocco with Greater Phoenix Equality Chamber of Commerce

May 18, 2023 by Karen

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Phoenix Business Radio
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Michael Mazzocco with Greater Phoenix Equality Chamber of Commerce

The Greater Phoenix Equality Chamber of Commerce (GPECC) is one of the oldest LGBTQ+ chambers in the country.

Founded in 1980 as the Camelback Business Association, we have grown and flourished in the valley of the sun for over 40 years now. GPECC-logo-1021-sq-BLK

We changed out name in 2000 to the Gay & Lesbian Chamber and then in 2020 we changed our name to the Equality Chamber to be more inclusive of the entire community.

GPECC promotes an equitable business community by supporting the interests of the LGBTQ+ businesses in the Greater Phoenix area.

We accomplish this by fostering business growth, visibility, connections, and professional development opportunities.

Michael-Mazzocco-Phoenix-Business-RadioMichael Mazzocco is the Board Chair for the Greater Phoenix Equality Chamber of Commerce who serves the LGBTQ+ business community.

Their mission of working towards an equitable business community thru values like equality, leadership, diversity, respect, and gratitude resonate with him.

He loves to find ways to help spread these values thru collaboration with other organizations around the valley. In addition to this board, Michael was appointed by the mayor to serve as the Vice-Chair for the Human Relations Commission for the City of Phoenix.

He also serves on the board of the Phoenix Gay Men’s Chorus that strives to unite, inspire, educate, and entertain its diverse audiences, members, allies, and supporting partners.

As well as the Arizona Costume Institute board which serves the Phoenix Art Museum to sustain their vast collection of fashion thru the ages. Michael is a Valley Leadership participant (Catalyze class 1 and Explore class 1) and has an obvious passion for being a change maker here in the Valley of the Sun.

His passion and volunteerism highlight his motto that if he has time to watch tv, he has time to change the world.

Michael is the owner of Michael Mazzocco Events, a bespoke events company started in 2017. He specializes in high-end event coordination and fundraising for many non-profits and arts organizations around the valley.

When Michael is not working on our community, he lives in Central Phoenix with his partner, Isaac and their adorable furry princesses, Vivienne & Alexandra.

Being a proud gay indigenous (Delaware Nation) small business owner, a passion for positive change and education is what drives Michael to do better and be better every day.

Follow GPECC on Facebook and Instagram.

Tagged With: GPECC, Greater Phoenix Equality Chamber of Commerce

Paloma Greenwald and Rob Buelow with AZNext and Laura Hemenway with Paradigm Solutions

May 17, 2023 by Karen

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Phoenix Business Radio
Paloma Greenwald and Rob Buelow with AZNext and Laura Hemenway with Paradigm Solutions
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Paloma Greenwald and Rob Buelow with AZNext and Laura Hemenway with Paradigm Solutions

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Arizona State University’s AZNext Program is a public-private partnership, funded by grants from the U.S Department of Labor designed to create a bold, innovative, and sustaining workforce development ecosystem that addresses the need for more skilled workers in IT, cybersecurity, and advanced manufacturing roles.

A groundbreaking collaboration between the W. P. Carey School of Business, Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering, and New College of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences, AZNext brings together employers, workforce development networks, economic development organizations, and industry partnerships to develop and execute work skills training programs.

Paloma-Greenwald-Phoenix-BusinessRadioPaloma Greenwald, RN BSN is a self-employed nurse consultant and alumna of the entry level Business Analyst course through AZ Next. Paloma brings over 2 decades of trusted public service as a registered nurse and military spouse.

As a native Spanish speaker from the desert southwest, first generation American, and ASU distinguished graduate, she delivers credibility as a subject matter expert in community health as well as military family issues. She is a candidate for a Masters in Public Leadership from the University of San Francisco.

Paloma invests time in multiple volunteer efforts because this impacts communities while nurturing servant leadership. Her commitment to lifelong learning benefits organizations such as Az Nurses Association (public policy committee), Az Public Health Association, HIMSS, Luke AFB Foodbank, Hiring Our Heroes Military Spouse Professional Network, Military Spouse Advocacy Network, Secure Families Initiative and Your Sure Foundation.

Connect with Paloma on LinkedIn and Facebook.

Rob-Buelow-Phoenix-Business-RadioRob Buelow is the Program Director for the AZNext Workforce Training Accelerator Partnership Grant. Teaming ASU with Industry/Community Partners to develop the next generation workforce in Advance Manufacturing and Information Systems.

Two years as Program Director with AZNext. Over 20 years of aerospace manufacturing industry experience in project and program management, process design and improvement, program implementations, team leadership, and business and customer management.

Follow AZNext on LinkedIn.

Paradigm Solutions LLC is a consultancy leading knowledge driven success through Technology and Business Transformation.

Paradigm Solutions’ portfolio includes Fortune 10, Small Business, Public, Private, Public Sector, and Non-Profit industry wide initiatives ranging from Assessment to Optimization to
Transformation.

Paradigm Solutions LLC is a privately held consultancy based in Scottsdale, Arizona.

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Laura-Hemenway-Phoenix-Business-RadioLaura Hemenway is Founder and Principal of Paradigm Solutions, a consultancy leading knowledge driven success through technology and business transformation.

Her technology career spanning over 30 years in roles as Developer, Business Analyst, Solution Architect, Project Manager, PMO Director, Strategy Executive, and Fractional/Interim CIO afford her the in-depth technical expertise and business acumen to communicate, collaborate, and drive results.

In addition to her drive to support art and culture access to the underserved, Laura generously shares her professional experience as an Arizona State University W.P. Carey School of Business Guest Speaker, AZNext Contributor, Title I School STEAM Supporter, Mentor, and SIM Arizona Board Member.

Connect with Laura on LinkedIn.

Tagged With: Business Analyst, business transformation, digital transformation, Fractional CIO, health policy nurse, Luke AFB, Military spouse employment, Project Rescue, strategy

EDI, Integrations and Accessibility E6

May 16, 2023 by Karen

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eCommerce Insights
EDI, Integrations and Accessibility E6
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EDI, Integrations and Accessibility E6

In this episode, atmosol spoke with Dave Malda from Jitterbit and Landon Shefts from accessiBe. We dove into the ever-changing world of eCommerce, shedding light on the critical areas of Electronic Data Interchange (EDI), integrations, and accessibility. Are you ready to stay ahead of the curve and thrive in the eCommerce landscape? Listen and learn.

You’ll discover the power of EDI, uncover the secrets to seamless integrations that empower your eCommerce ecosystem, and understand how to break barriers as accessibility matters.

Jitterbit is a software integration solution provider, empowering businesses to optimize their connectivity and scalability through a single integration and workflow automation platform. Jitterbit-logo-stacked

Jitterbit’s iPaaS (Integration Platform As A Service) offers hundreds of pre-built integrations that automate common business workflows, an easy-to-use interface that lets users quickly create integrations, and management tools that enable users to see everything in one place.

A low-code, cloud-native enterprise integration platform as a service built for IT developers and business users alike.

Dave-Malda-eCommerce-InsightsDave Malda is an experienced eCommerce ecosystem expert with nearly 20 years of experience in software development, marketing, and sales.

He is a passionate evangelist for smarter and more-connected eCommerce and omnichannel retail environments that put the customer experience at the center of every transaction, data transfer, and communication.

Follow Jitterbit on LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

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accessiBe is the market leader in web accessibility, providing an ecosystem of solutions for any business.

Our Mission is to provide an ecosystem of accessibility solutions to enable businesses of every size to create and maintain accessible and compliant websites.

accessiBe’s promise is to streamline website accessibility with accessiBe’s ecosystem of solutions powered by AI technology, to provide your users with an accessible and compliant website and to participate in making the internet an inclusive space for everyone.

Landon-Shefts-eCommerce-InsightsWith almost a decade of experience working with marketing and web development agencies, as well as experience with a leading E-commerce CMS platform, Landon Shefts has learned how agencies and business owners can make a great user experience for their clients’ and all users, no matter their ability.

He has a dedication to providing brands with the knowledge of why accessibility is important and how they achieve this goal.

Follow accessiBe on LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

About eCommerce Insights

eCommerce Insights is about bringing people together to discuss the vast landscape of eCommerce covering topics like technology, conversion optimization, branding, and marketing. The show focuses on how to build, manage and grow your online business using scientific and predictable methods thereby reducing uncertainty and risk. Our guests include vendors, merchants, experts, and technology partners shaping the world of eCommerce.

About Our Hosts

Ram-K-MohanRam Mohan is CEO and partner at atmosol, an ecommerce and technology company. He has spent over two decades in technology and eCommerce consulting helping companies ranging from small to fortune 100 achieve their business goals using technology.

As CEO, Ram leads atmosol’s eCommerce and SaaS services business working with our clients. In addition, he leads a team that runs an eCommerce portal in the meetings and events sector focusing on the EMEA market. He is also responsible for several SaaS products that are envisioned, built, and marketed by atmosol in different verticals and geographies.

Ram enjoys keeping up with and gaining a deep understanding of the latest trends in technology and eCommerce so he can help atmosol and our clients avoid hype and adopt trends that offer a tangible impact on our businesses.

Honey-OlesenHoney Olesen is the Director of Operations with atmosol and has substantial experience in leadership, management, operations, project management, digital marketing, human resources and data analysis. She deeply understands how businesses work and can take complex concepts and make them easy to understand for both employees and customers. She has worked at atmosol for over 11 years and has had the opportunity to work with some great brands and people in ecommerce, marketing and business.

Before entering the world of technology, Honey worked with some fantastic business owners in the building industry – soaking up knowledge of business day-to-day operations and growing her professional development.

She believes that in order for businesses to be successful, they need to have a clear mission and purpose, make sure the business goals are aligned with the values and stay focused on what’s important. She believes this is the same for individual success: find a place where your mission, purpose, goals, and values align with the company.

About Our Sponsor

Atmosol is a technology company working at the intersection of eCommerce and SaaS software. Our deep expertise in web development in addition to our long partnership with eCommerce platforms enables our clients to break through eCommerce platform barriers and build experiences that amaze their customers. Being in the eCommerce business ourselves running a meeting and events sales portal in the EMEA, we know the trials and tribulations our customers face firsthand.

In addition to eCommerce, we also build highly scalable SaaS products for our clients. We’ve also built and marketed our own successful SaaS products in different verticals.

Follow atmosol on LinkedIn, Twitter and Facebook.

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Tagged With: 508 Compliance, ADA compliance, Ecommerce Accessibility, eCommerce data integration software, eCommerce iPaaS, EDI integrations, ERP integrations, Website Accessibility, Workflow Automation Platform

Effectiveness and Efficiency Help Everything E44

May 16, 2023 by Karen

Phoenix Business Radio
Phoenix Business Radio
Effectiveness and Efficiency Help Everything E44
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Effectiveness and Efficiency Help Everything E44

On this episode of Collaborative Connections Radio Show and Podcast, we covered everything from capital and grants for small businesses, food insecurity and other social service needs, strategic implementation, the importance of efficiency and effectiveness for non-profits and businesses, and more.

Host, Kelly Lorenzen, was on-air with special guests Albert Loveland, CEO of Strabo; Deborah Arteaga, CEO at Tempe Community Action Agency, Inc. and Stephanie Hastings, CEO of Tax Day Baby.

They all shared so many wise words, great tips, and insights for businesses and organizations, that it is well worth listening to.

Thank you, KLM, for sponsoring the show.

Strabo helps clients in the areas of strategic implementation, capacity building, and effective performance conversations. This is primarily done through working with clients as a fractional chief of staff, helping clients evolve from change to the new normal.

Albert-Loveland-Phoenix-Business-RadioAl Loveland spent 15 years in the Credit Card industry, managing groups of over 100 lenders and leading an inventory management group in charge of allocating resources for over 500 analysts.

After leaving the corporate world, he has been a consultant, coach, and facilitator in the small business and nonprofit sectors. Through this experience, he founded Strabo with an understanding that an organization’s strategic plan is only as good as its ability to achieve it.

His mission is to partner with clients to help them develop people, create effective positions, and streamline procedures to drive desired performance.

Connect with Al on LinkedIn.

Tax Day Baby is the resource to bridge the gap between survive to thrive. Oftentimes for new entrepreneurs or those around 5 years in business, the struggle with building business credit, getting capital, and managing their books…can be a heavy weight on their minds. TDB-logo-Sq

We’re able to provide accounting support, education, implementation, and accountability to get your business growth goals in alignment with your revenue and cashflow.

We’re the “Dollar Doctors” for your bottom line, mapping out a clear plan for you to regain peace of mind and passionately play full-out. – Tax Day Baby, all things accounting…and more!

Stephanie-Hastings-Phoenix-Business-RadioStephanie Hastings is an accountant, financial consultant, professional speaker, author, trainer, wife, and mother. With more than 19+ years in various Executive Administrative roles, she struck out on her own to make a positive ripple effect by supporting individuals and small business owners with their finances and entrepreneurial dreams.

Stephanie’s business and financial expertise, along with her background in Hotel/Restaurant Management (HRM), has allowed her to humanize the numbers and relate to her audience and clients.

Stephanie’s a notary, a wedding officiant, and served on Northern Arizona University (NAU) Alumni Board. Through her various personal trials and triumphs, Stephanie has been able to hone her skills and gifts to grow a community of resources and affiliates. She knows how valuable it is to have a solid network that you can refer to and rely on. She is always learning and striving to do her best.

Connect with Stephanie on LinkedIn and Facebook.

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Tempe Community Action Agency is Tempe’s largest non profit social services agency. TCAA was established in 1966 and since then, has remained true to its core purpose to eliminate poverty and advance equitable communities. TCAA operates 8 unique programs.

These programs drive positive change in the areas of food security, housing stability, health and well-being, and economic empowerment among the more than 30,000 individuals served each year in communities across the East Valley.

Deborah-Arteaga-Phoenix-Business-RadioDeborah Arteaga joined Tempe Community Action Agency as Chief Executive Officer in 2016. She has dedicated a 30-year career to bettering lives for individuals and improving community well-being through leadership positions within corporate, nonprofit, and public-sector human service organizations.

In prior roles Deborah led programs that moved welfare recipients to work, helped women transition from prison, fostered senior independence, empowered domestic violence survivors, helped bring an end to homelessness, strengthened families, and fed the hungry.

She also launched a business which brought capacity building and successful proposal writing services over 8 years to organizations within and outside of Arizona. Influenced by her Hispanic heritage, Deborah works to promote inclusiveness and access for people from backgrounds of disadvantage and across all walks of life.

When not roughing it with her four children ages 17-31 years and her 3-year-old granddaughter, Deborah can be found painting, traveling, writing, or gardening.

Follow TempeCommunity Action Agency on LinkedIn, Facebook and Instagram.

About Collaborative Connections

The purpose of Collaborative Connections Radio Show and Podcast is to build a connected community, one collaborative show at a time. We highlight local non-profits, associations, small and family-owned businesses.

By bringing 4 like-minded people together for an hour of in-depth conversation, our hope is that they connect and collaborate in life and business in the future.collaborative-connections-Radio-Show-Podcast-logo1

About Our Sponsor

KLM is a business development firm helping entrepreneurs, small and family-owned businesses start, grow and scale through consulting, marketing and project management. Combining those three things has been a trifecta, or triple advantage to business owners.

Entrepreneurs & small business owners come to KLM for support in all areas of business. If you need to duplicate yourself in any area of your business, we can help. If we don’t do exactly what you need, we know someone who can.

Business owners can continue to do what they love while having the support they need when they need it, with the help of KLM. We help you figure out what needs to get done AND DO IT FOR YOU!

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About Your Host

Kelly-Lorenzen-on-Phoenix-Business-RadioXKelly Lorenzen, CEO of KLM, is an award-winning entrepreneur with over 15 years of business-ownership experience. She is also a certified project management professional.

Kelly’s expertise is in business development, customer service, marketing, and sales.

Connect with Kelly on LinkedIn, and follow KLM on Facebook, Instagram and YouTube.

Tagged With: Accounting, Bookkeeping, credit repair, emergency shelter, food pantry, grant writer, homeless, Human Services, social services, speaker, TCAA

Putting Love at the Center E21

May 15, 2023 by Karen

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Phoenix Business Radio
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Putting Love at the Center E21

“When we shrink fear what takes its place is love,” shares Renée Smith, CEO and Founder of the Human Workplace. She sees putting love at the center as her joyful assignment and she has built a thriving organization around it. What does love at work mean? Renée asked this as part of the primary research she conducted and found that love has many facets, including: respect, trust, kindness, compassion, equity, appreciation, justice and courage.

She loves Moshe Engelberg’s definition: “love is the energy that uplifts and connects.” How do we practice love at work? One way is to let love in and trust that what we need will be there. We only need to open our eyes to see and let go of our preconceived notions of what provisions should look like. Enjoy this episode of Rooted & Unwavering and experience the trust and confidence that comes online when we practice love. Reflects Renée: How on earth are we going to get results if we don’t care for each other?

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A Human Workplace is a boutique consultancy that guides leaders and teams who guide leaders and teams to make work more loving and human. The collective work of AHW’s affiliated practitioners and change makers is based on the pioneering research of Renee Smith, MSOD. She collected and analyzed the stories of hundreds of people from around the world to learn from their experiences of fear and love at work.

the message and practices shared by our Hosts, Coaches, and Consultants inspire, teach, and equip leaders, teams, and organizations to create workplaces that are high-performing and exceptional places to work. We offer talks, gatherings, workshops, coaching, consulting, and a global community to affirm and uplift human dignity and success at work, wherever that work takes place!

AHW centers the practice of love in the organization, first living into and exploring the benefits and opportunities as well as the challenges of working together in this way. Team members are experts in their fields from a variety of backgrounds and industries who are committed to changing the way organizations and teams work for good. Their unique cultural programs and resources are based on both their research and experiences with teams; you won’t find these anywhere else.

A Human Workplace offers consulting, coaching, learning, and facilitation to inspire, grow and strengthen your human workplace. Work is a central part of life and no one should have to leave their humanity at the door as they enter the workplace. Instead, AHW helps teams move away from being mechanistic, de-personalized and toxic to being human-friendly, uplifting, healthy places. This more human organization is both good for people and good for business. That’s A Human Workplace!

Renee-SmithRenée Smith (she/her) is the founder and CEO of A Human Workplace, a boutique consultancy that guides leaders and teams to make work more loving and human. This is based on her primary qualitative research collecting and analyzing stories of hundreds of people to learn from their experiences of love and fear in the workplace.

Prior to launching AHW as the pandemic began, she served in the Governor’s Office as Director of Workplace Transformation for the State of Washington, a position created for her to focus on bringing more loving, respectful, inclusive, compassionate experiences to state government teams. She also led award-winning culture change work as Director of Organization Development for the Department of Enterprise Services.

Smith has spoken to hundreds of audiences in ten countries, is a prolific blogger, is published in several journals, and has appeared on numerous podcasts effectively making the business case for love. Smith earned a Master of Science in Organization Development from Pepperdine University and a Lean Six Sigma Black Belt from the University of Washington. She researches, writes, teaches, and advises clients from her home in the Pacific Northwest of Washington State.

When she is not traveling, she enjoys sculling on the Puget Sound, drawing with oil pastels, concocting craft cocktails for friends, and hosting “Grandma Camp” in the summer and “Reindeer Games” in the winter for her grandchildren.

Connect with Renée on LinkedIn and follow AHW on Facebook and Instagram.

About Rooted & Unwavering

Peace, Compassion, Wisdom, Purposefulness, Creativity and Strength come online in us when we deeply connect with the true, unwavering greatness that lives within ourselves and others.Rooted-and-Unwavering-Tile

In this podcast and radio show, Hylke Faber, seasoned transformational coach and author of the award-winning Taming Your Crocodiles series, engages in deep inquiry with leaders from all walks of life about courageously connecting with our true selves, others and the world at large.

How do we stay connected to our true selves and our greatness, especially when we are challenged? How do we rest in the heart, also when our mind keeps us restless? What becomes possible when we truly stay committed to our own and others’ best selves, also when we don’t feel it? How do we practice staying connected to our true selves, in the midst of our busy lives?

Join us and leave inspired to act on your heart’s greatness and that of the people around you.

About Our Host

Hylke-Faber-headshotFor as long as he can remember Hylke Faber has been curious about what this life is about. His ongoing inquiry has become his work: helping people individually and collectively to discover what is possible in life and express that authentically and fearlessly.

Hylke started his work life with Towers Perrin as consultant and then as Partner with Strategic Decisions Group, serving a wide range of industries, including financial services, manufacturing, consumer electronics and life sciences companies. A major shift occurred during this critical phase of his life. He had become the typical, hard-charging, 16-hours-a-day strategy consultant, and was burning out at a rapid clip.

When he discovered meditation, everything changed. He was so taken by his new discoveries that he chose to bring to business what he was learning: that there is a way we can have it all – we can be fulfilled, do work we love, and create extraordinary results with others. He thinks of it as creating a sense of ease in business.

He learned how to coach and facilitate human transformation completing his coaching certification with Newfield Network and by working at Axialent, the culture and leadership company. After a few years, he founded Co-Creation Partners together with other leaders in the field of transformation and personal development. Then he formed Constancee to help people grow by creating the conditions where deep personal, interpersonal and organizational shifts happen routinely.

He leads Growth Leaders Network, the culture and team development consultancy. He has also taught coaching at Columbia Business School Executive Education and has contributed to Harvard Business Review. He is currently teaching a course on Climate Conscious Leadership at Arizona State University. His award-winning book, Taming Your Crocodiles: Unlearn Fear & Become a True Leader, was published by Dover in 2018.

His next book, Taming Your Crocodiles Practices for Leadership Depth, came out in 2020. Besides helping others grow, which he loves, he is a trained opera singer, enjoys hiking and writing, is an avid reader, in particular of biographies, and is always in the process of growing himself. He integrates all of what he learns in his work with executives.

Connect with Hylke on LinkedIn.

About Our Sponsor

Realizing Your Greatness

We are a team of experienced facilitators and coaches dedicated to helping individuals, teams and organizations thrive by helping them recognize their innate greatness and putting it to work.

    • Executive Coaching: we work with clients individually to help them connect to their calling and use every challenge as an opportunity to help them grow more into what makes them great.
    • Team Performance: we help teams evolve to their next level of excellence, connectedness and impact by working on the root drivers of team performance.
    • Culture Development: we help organizations to evolve their culture by creating clarity about where they aspire to go, and by building role models, coaches and systems that catalyze people being energized to work the new way.
  • Key Notes: we deliver powerful speeches at conferences and other events that help audiences become energized, more connected to themselves and each other, more open to discovery and ready to commit to the next stage of learning in their career and life journeys.

Growth Leaders Network (GLN) serves Fortune 500 companies, smaller organizations and non-profits globally.

GLN clients report that we catalyze significant business transformational impact and profound shifts in people, team and organizations at the root cause level.

Learn more about the Growth Leaders network here.

 

Tagged With: compassionate organizational culture consulting, employee engagement strategies, human-centered leadership, making the workplace more human, workplace well-being consulting

Episode 106: How Culture Drives Financial Performance

May 11, 2023 by Karen

Phoenix Business Radio
Phoenix Business Radio
Episode 106: How Culture Drives Financial Performance
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Episode 106: How Culture Drives Financial Performance

Join host Jennifer Drago as she interviews Denise Boudreau, president of Drive, and learn how organizations can measure and improve their culture to improve recruitment and retention of team members. Even more importantly, Denise shares the drivers of culture and what simple daily actions can have a dramatic impact on your organization’s culture.

Leaders in any industry will be intrigued by Denise’s takeaways on the importance of focusing on your organizational culture and how culture drives your organization’s performance on key metrics including employee engagement, client satisfaction, safety, productivity, and profitability.

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Drive helps senior living and healthcare organizations improve recruitment and retention through organizational culture. Drive will help you improve recruitment, staff retention, and employee engagement with a rock-solid company culture that staff love!

A toxic work culture rots organizations from the inside out… Every year, countless organizations lose millions of dollars due to bad culture. But it gets worse: poor culture also repels top-tier talent, kills workplace productivity and taints customer experience.

Our services: • Create a better work culture through our Culture Assessment. It takes a data-driven, strategic approach to transforming your culture into one that attracts happy, productive staff. And keeps them there. • Develop fundamental leadership skills that keep your staff engaged and you at your best as a leader through on-demand courses, Executive Coaching and Emotional Intelligence Coaching. • Inspire through presentations, speeches and keynotes at your meeting or conference that influence, motivate and connect deeply with your audience.

Denise-Boudreau-ScottDenise Boudreau, MHA, LNHA, is President of Drive, which helps healthcare and senior living organizations measure and improve their culture, resulting in improved recruitment and retention.

A former nursing home and assisted living administrator, she is a serial volunteer serving on numerous state and national boards. Denise received her Bachelor of Science in Gerontology from the University of Scranton and her Master in Health Administration from Cornell University where she currently works as a student mentor.

She is proud to share that she started off her career as a dietary aide and nursing assistant.

Follow Drive on LinkedIn and Facebook.

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:05] Welcome to Senior Living Visionaries, a podcast for senior living leaders who are looking to stay ahead of the curve in the industry. On this show, we feature leaders and innovators in senior living who are pushing the boundaries and creating new effective services and solutions. And now, let’s settle in as host Jennifer Drago connects us with today’s guests.

Jennifer Drago: [00:00:30] Well, hello and welcome to Senior Living Visionaries broadcasting live from the Phoenix Business RadioX studio right here in Phoenix, Arizona. And we showcase the leaders in innovative, my goodness, innovators in the field who are shaping the future of senior living. And today is no exception.

I’m your host, Jennifer Drago, fresh off vacation. And apparently, I haven’t let my mouth know that it’s time to come back from vacation. I’m a strategy consultant and CEO of Peak To Profit Consulting, where we help senior living organizations with their strategic and business planning.

And today’s guest is Denise Boudreau. I’m so happy to welcome her here. She is the president of Drive. And Drive is an organization that helps health care and senior living organizations measure and improve their culture, resulting in improved recruitment and retention.

Denise is a former nursing home and assisted living administrator, as well as a volunteer serving on numerous state and national boards. She received her Bachelor’s in Gerontology from the University of Scranton and her Master’s in Health Administration from Cornell University, where she currently works as a student mentor. Important work. She is proud to share that she started off her career as a dietary aide and nursing assistant. So culture from the ground up, it sounds like. And I’m so excited to welcome you here. Welcome, Denise.

Denise Boudreau: [00:01:56] Thanks so much. I’m excited to be here.

Jennifer Drago: [00:01:58] Yeah. And tell us a little bit more about your organization and what you do.

Denise Boudreau: [00:02:02] Yeah. So we help take what is really this sort of, I call it woo woo, or this esoteric topic of culture and really bring data to it. So oftentimes people will say, I have a great culture, or my culture is not so good, it needs some help. And if you ask, how do you know that? People often say, I can feel it in my gut, or I just know it in my bones.

You think about how important culture is. It drives occupancy and turnover and revenue. Literally, every single outcome in an organization. And we’re using our gut to figure out if it’s working or not working. You’d never roll into owner’s meeting or a board meeting and say, we had a great financial quarter. I could feel it in my gut. I didn’t look at any numbers. I didn’t look at any data. I just know it. Right.

Jennifer Drago: [00:02:57] It feels great.

Denise Boudreau: [00:02:57] That would not fly.

Jennifer Drago: [00:02:59] That’s important. That’s important. So I love the idea that we can measure culture and we’re going to talk about that a little bit more, but explain your definition of culture as it pertains to senior living. And I know it’s really important from the recruitment and retention of employees, but I imagine it also affects our residents the way that we’re viewed in the community. So tell me more about how you define culture.

Denise Boudreau: [00:03:24] Yeah. So culture from the staff side is how we work around here. And from the resident side, it would be how we live. And there’s culture everywhere in your life. There’s a culture at your college that you went to. There’s a culture at the place of worship you might go to. In your neighborhood, right, there’s culture and micro cultures everywhere.

And the workplace or living place or a place where people are getting services is no different. And it’s basically just the attitudes, behaviors or the customs that are shaping the decisions. I was not in Tahiti and my mouth is still on vacation, but it shapes the decisions of everybody. So the people working in the organization and the people living there, how we interact with each other, what we do or don’t do is all being shaped by the culture.

Jennifer Drago: [00:04:25] Okay, perfect. That is a great definition. So knowing that senior living providers right now are experiencing significant staffing shortages, it seems like the perfect time to work on culture. However, when you’re short staffed, sometimes it’s hard to devote time to important things because you’re so strapped for time, right? So what would you say to a senior living CEO that says, I don’t have time to work on culture?

Denise Boudreau: [00:04:52] Yeah. You’re working on culture, so you’re working on it, you’re filling open positions, you’re dealing with customers. Maybe it’s residents, families, whatever, clients, whatever you call the people that you are serving and supporting and caring for. You’re dealing with their complaints. You’re probably dealing with financial issues because you’re spending so much money on turnover or an agency or maybe lack of occupancy because of the experience people are having there.

So you’re spending time on it. It’s whether it’s intentional or not. You can’t not have a culture. There’s a culture in your organization and you are intentionally shaping it or somebody else is shaping it. And that might be it’s in good hands and lots of times it’s not in good hands.

And people are creating cultures where it’s harder to recruit because people see what’s happening there and don’t want to be part of it. People might come to work for you and leave very quickly. I hear a lot of that lately, more so than ever. Or people might say this is not the place for me, I don’t want to work here. That’s all culture at work. So you intentionally shape it or you respond to the fact that you’re not intentionally shaping it.

Jennifer Drago: [00:06:07] So it’s always the right time to work on culture, it sounds like.

Denise Boudreau: [00:06:12] Yeah, Yeah. It’s like what’s the best time to plant a tree, right? That saying. Yesterday, last week, or if not today, right. You can start. People sometimes think about culture, and it feels like just so overwhelming. It’s boiling the ocean kind of. And it doesn’t have to be this huge and it shouldn’t be this huge pendulum shift. It can be small intentional changes, or it may be things that you’re doing that you just need to do a little bit more of each day.

And those behaviors are adding up to your overall culture. Culture is not that huge once a year party or if people say, we have a great culture, we raffle a car off to staff. That’s not culture, right? It’s not foosball table in the break room. It’s these small little behaviors that people are noticing and modeling themselves after that are adding up to the culture.

Jennifer Drago: [00:07:08] I’m glad you said that, because I do believe that for many executives and again, executives in a senior living organization or in health care, I know you work in health care, too. Those are really hard jobs and lots of things flying at you, especially when you’re trying to deal with a customer culture. And I shouldn’t have used your word. You’re trying to deal with your customers and their satisfaction, your employees and their satisfaction, regulatory issues. I mean, just they pile on.

And so, it can truly seem overwhelming when you say, oh my gosh, I want our culture to be better. Where do I start? So if you were to — you mentioned small behaviors or small actions can have a big impact. If you were to give our audience today just one takeaway, of one thing, they could do differently that could have a really positive impact on their culture, what would you say that might be?

Denise Boudreau: [00:08:02] Yeah. So when we measure culture, the number one value we’ve seen from our research and the number one value or behavior that we’ve seen from our research that makes a difference, starting foundational is respect. And so no organization could go wrong by focusing more on that value or behavior of respect. After that, it’s employee recognition. After that, it’s accountability. After that, it’s coaching and mentoring. But those things all build on a value of respect.

Employee recognition. A lot of times people focus on that and it’s fabulous. Usually organizations, you can’t give too much thanks or praise. But if you don’t feel respect, it’s like, Jennifer, you don’t think I respected you, and then I come over and tell you how fabulous you are, it seems pretty fake and it doesn’t really feel genuine. Right. And it doesn’t really mean much to you.

And respect, as that foundation, will always serve you and your organization. And we measure culture for a reason so we can see specifically what is needed in each organization and even each site. If you’re in a multisite organization, you know this. Every site has its own little microculture and even every department kind of has it and even shifts have it.

But overall, when we take all of our data and put it together, what we know is that respect is that number one thing. And so if I were you or your listeners, I would be thinking, well, what does that mean? I’m so glad you kind of asked. Right? It means that we, when we ask staff this, what does respect mean to you? It means to people knowing my name, saying hello to me, asking how I am.

Jennifer Drago: [00:09:51] That’s pretty simple.

Denise Boudreau: [00:09:53] Yeah. Like the bar is down here. They’re asking for, say hello, ask me how I’m doing. Show me that I actually matter to you is what people are asking for.

Jennifer Drago: [00:10:04] Wow. Wow. Really achievable. Really doable. That’s great. Yeah. And you’re right, it’s foundational that I was thinking about places where I’ve received recognition, but sometimes that day to day respect isn’t there. And you’re absolutely right, it feels disingenuous. Oh, okay, yeah, I get it. You’re checking a box now, but yeah, but you dismissed me yesterday when I was trying to tell you about a challenge that I’m having in my department. Yeah.

Denise Boudreau: [00:10:33] Exactly. And then the coaching and mentoring people create these incredible programs. Is coaching and mentoring bad? No, absolutely not, but people spend so much time creating these careers like all this other stuff. And if you don’t feel respected again and I come to you and say, hey, Jennifer, you know what, I think you’d be great in this role. You’d be like, oh, now you’re trying to push me out of my job, right?

As opposed to, we have a strong relationship and you’re going to know that I’ve got your back and support you and want you to be the best that you can absolutely be. That’s a very different answer if you want to be part of this program or whatever career ladder that we’ve created.

Jennifer Drago: [00:11:08] Sure, Sure. So I had a question set aside for you about what are the drivers of company culture? Are those the same things we just talked about and are they all truly individual in terms of how we individually treat each employee or? Yeah, tell me more.

Denise Boudreau: [00:11:26] Yeah, yeah, yeah. Great question. You can see I get excited about this. So people come with their personal values in them, what’s important to them. When they can show up true and authentically themselves, they do better, and your organization does better.

What does that mean? Humor and fun. Super important to me, right? So I want to be able to kind of have fun at work and joke around with people. Right? Do I have to be the class clown and get no work done? Nope. But it’s going to be important to me that that part of my personality can come out.

I’m creative, right? I want to bring that to work. Does that mean if I’m the CFO that I get to use creativity all the time in my job? Hopefully not, but maybe there’s something I could be doing outside of my normal role that might bring out that creative. Maybe it’s just some interactions with residents. Or maybe I want to do something for staff that helps be part of a committee that helps bring out that creative side. So certainly, everybody is wired. So knowing what’s important to people personally, credibly important.

Organization also has a culture which is shaped by values. So there’s what’s happening day to day. And I always like to think about it sort of the what’s happening at 3:00 in the morning when a nursing assistant is walking into a resident’s apartment or a resident’s room, when people are interacting with each other and there’s no supervisor or boss “around”. Right.

That’s what culture is. And so are those values and behaviors that are being lived, things that are supporting what we want for outcomes or the things that are working against us, blame and bullying and gossip. And sometimes those things show up when we measure culture. Lots of times we see blame and bullying on the list of current culture values.

People also tell us what they want, which is I always consider the magic question what they want out of their culture. And I love looking at that list. You know what the number one value that people want? And the question, by the way, is if we were performing at our best as an organization, what are the values that you’d want to see and people pick from this list, they pick ten things. You know, the number one answer is on that desired culture?

Jennifer Drago: [00:13:41] What is it?

Denise Boudreau: [00:13:42] Accountability. And I see it. All these reports we get back and every time it’s still amazes me though. Accountability. So when we think that people don’t want structure and that people kind of just want to do whatever they want to do, that is not true. People, when they think about the best organization, they think about a high accountable organization.

And that doesn’t mean, okay, go fire everybody now and go write everybody up. It means personal accountability. How can I own my job? How can I help you as my coworker be more accountable, and you help me because we’ve got each other’s backs. We’re not blaming and bullying. We’re helping each other be the best we can possibly be.

And because of that all, all of that support, that accountability, our organization is being the best that can possibly be. So there’s lots of sort of factors that come into culture, but there are themes that we see across the board for organizations in senior living and aging services and health care.

Jennifer Drago: [00:14:43] Yes. I love that you shared with us kind of the number one value that organizations aspire to be in your survey, or aspire to have, and that is accountability, because I talk a lot about accountability in some of the work that I do, too. When an employee works in an organization or a department where accountability isn’t important or isn’t enforced, and they’re working really hard to do their job and the person next to them isn’t, that is so demoralizing. And so it does not inspire people to want to stay and to continue to do a good job.

And that’s just one aspect of it, right? We need accountable leaders who walk the talk and do what we ask them to do to help clear, sometimes a leader’s job is clearing the obstacles out of the way. Right. And helping me manage this challenge that I’m dealing with. And if they don’t, if our leaders don’t follow through, same thing, just really challenging from an employee standpoint. So I love that theme. I think it’s so important.

Denise Boudreau: [00:15:51] And it goes back to the not having time piece. Right. So would you ever say our occupancy is at 50 percent? We just really don’t have time to talk to people to help them move in here. Right. That’s just, you know, oh, yeah, we’re 50 percent over budget this month. Yeah, we just don’t really have a time to look at those numbers and make sure we’re in budget.

But somehow culture, which both drives occupancy and revenue and expense, all of it, we get to say we don’t have time. So the organizations that we see do the best with culture are those organizations that have high accountability, where the leader has said the CEO or the owner, whomever has said, my expectation is that we — we actually ask people to commit 10 minutes a day. That’s literally it, 10 minutes a day. My expectation is that you are going to do these 10-minute a day tasks or assignment.

And sometimes they take no extra time. So when you’re walking around and talking to people, asking a certain question or whatever it might be, they take no extra time because you’re walking around anyway and talking to people, hopefully. But that accountability, to your point for leaders as well, to culture and what they find in the end is, my gosh, my life’s better as a leader because of this. I’m less putting out fires and more doing the work I’ve always wanted to do.

Jennifer Drago: [00:17:09] Right, Right.

Denise Boudreau: [00:17:10] So it’s a win-win overall, but it’s hard for people to see that, especially in the beginning. But it was true for me when I was an administrator, when I focused on culture, I lived this stuff. When I focused on culture, my job became so much more rewarding because I was doing what I got into the field to do which was support people and not running around like a chicken with my head cut off all the time.

And even though, my last role as an administrator was 12 years ago, so people said it was different. It was different, but turnover was still over 100 percent in that setting. We we didn’t lose a nursing assistant voluntarily in almost three years.

Jennifer Drago: [00:17:50] Wow.

Denise Boudreau: [00:17:51] Can you imagine?

Jennifer Drago: [00:17:52] Wow. That’s amazing.

Denise Boudreau: [00:17:54] Voluntarily for almost three years. And then therefore, you’re able to do so many things that you want to work on rather than that just kind of chugging along on the hamster wheel.

Jennifer Drago: [00:18:06] Right. If nothing else, right, retention is a time suck and a money suck. Right? We know that. So if we can improve retention alone, it’s worth the 10 minutes a day to focus on culture, right?

Denise Boudreau: [00:18:19] Yes, it is.

Jennifer Drago: [00:18:20] Yeah. I love that you’re breaking down for us how simple it can be to really improve our culture. And you’ve already shared with us that your company helps organizations measure their culture. Is that — I’m sure we’ve all been — I’ve never been in an organization that has tried to measure culture. So I want to learn more about that. But tell me how that is different also from measuring employee satisfaction.

Denise Boudreau: [00:18:47] Yeah, yeah, that’s a great question. So culture is driving satisfaction and driving, even employee engagement. So a lot of places are measuring employee engagement. Employee engagement is how we feel about how things work around here. Culture is actually how we work around here, or even we do it sometimes with residents to how we live, right?

And so it’s not just my boss seems to care about me as a person. No, they don’t seem to care about me as a person. There’s job insecurity here. There’s confusion. There’s blame. And now we have an insight into why I don’t think my supervisor seems to care about me as a person. So it’s driving employee engagement. It’s driving all those outcomes.

And like you, I had not heard about measuring culture. I guess it was probably, I don’t know, six, seven years ago now. You mentioned I do a lot of work with Cornell, and I was up there presenting and someone was presenting before me on measuring culture. And I thought, I’ve never heard of this. Like I want to attend this. And she works with high end hotels. Actually, she works with us now, but she works with high end hotels, Ritz, Four Seasons, so forth. And when they were struggling with occupancy at the hotels, the first thing she would do is measure the culture of the staff.

And so I thought, I have got to bring this to our field. And interestingly, three questions. What are your top ten personal values? And I shared a little bit about that. When you show up authentically, you at work, you do better, organization does better.

Thing that’s really neat about this, too, though, are people are changing their job ads. We have a woman that increased her — she’s a director of HR. She increased her applicant pool by over 1,200 percent. I did the math like ten different times, 1,200 percent.

Jennifer Drago: [00:20:30] Wow.

Denise Boudreau: [00:20:30] By taking her Indeed ad and writing it to how people were wired in her organization. So she looked at those personal values and wrote an ad to them and spoke. So people are reading this ad and saying, that’s me, I belong working there.

Jennifer Drago: [00:20:47] What a great idea. What a great strategy.

Denise Boudreau: [00:20:50] Ain’t that cool? I know. And I said like the perfect thing to kind of think about with that is I love everybody in our field, but sometimes I read these ads and I just want to cry because you can take one name out and put another organization’s name in and it’s the same ad.

But if you are selling a Ferrari and you’re selling a minivan, you could in essence, say they’re both vehicles, right? They’re both getting you from point A to point B, but a Ferrari ad is written very different from a minivan ad, and neither one is right or wrong. You’re just going after a different audience. And so it’s the same thing with our job ads, right? Are we writing in a way so if I read an ad that was kind of fun and I’d be like, oh, that’s the place for me, right, they get me.

And so there are things that are the same in every organization compassion and caring to the things we see in almost all the personal values in the organizations where we measure culture. But then there are a lot of things that are different. So humor and fun sometimes shows up. Positivity sometimes shows up. Person values, sometimes it doesn’t. So that’s the first question. What are the top ten personal values?

The second question are what are the top ten values or behaviors that you see in this organization? So what are you seeing today that’s the current culture? And then a list of words. And then, as I said before, the magic question, and I’ve done engagement surveys, I did engagement surveys for years. I usually sat on a shelf, but that’s because I didn’t ever had a destination.

And the destination is that desired culture question. If our organization was performing at its best, what are the top ten values or behaviors you would want to see? And now I’ve not only had everyone, because when we just measure engagement sometimes or do these surveys or whatever it might be, it’s kind of like people vomit on us, everything that we’ve done wrong or everything we’re doing now. And we have to guess what they want.

And so there’s no more guessing. There’s a destination which makes a difference because then we can create a roadmap. When you don’t have a destination, you ain’t getting anywhere, right? You’re going to be where you’re at and guessing where you should go. So those are the three questions, personal values, current culture values, and desired culture values.

Jennifer Drago: [00:22:54] And once you do desire culture and you know where you’re headed, and I’m sure you then work with the organization on, okay, what does this look like? What do we do to get there? Do you go back and measure a year later to say, are we better?

Denise Boudreau: [00:23:07] Yes, yes, yes, yes. Because you want to know the things you were doing are making a difference. And actually, the cool thing about this tool, too, is recently, a few years ago, they added a diversity, equity, and inclusion values in there. They’re just mixed in with all the other words.

You can see sometimes organizations unconscious bias shows up. Sometimes retaliation shows up. So you can get a measure on those diversity, equity, inclusion initiatives that so many organizations are working on right now. So we go back a year later and you’re able to see, okay, we brought down the confusion, we brought up the accountability. Right? So we know we’re going on the right track. And then we see what that current priority is.

The nice thing about this tool, too, is once again, culture feels like this boiling of the ocean. But when you have that data, you can clearly look at it and it becomes so apparent the three or four top things that you need to work on. So you could pick one of those from that.

So if we’re going to focus on accountability first, or maybe we’re going to focus on our leadership development around certain topics, it becomes very clear what we can focus on instead of taking on a lot of things and getting nothing done. And we see by measuring it a year later, are we making a difference? Are we moving a needle?

And the organizations that are actually committing to do this work, they are moving the needle. They’re saying, I’m better off committing a few minutes a day to something positive. And that’s usually fun and interesting and feels good than I am to just constantly putting out fires and being in this sort of rat race that people find themselves tied into.

Jennifer Drago: [00:24:47] Perfect. My final question for you is, and we’ve talked about it in kind of abstract terms so we know that culture drives retention, our ability to recruit and retain, I should say, it can drive occupancy, our resident satisfaction, our staff engagement, all the things we’ve talked about. I feel in my gut that culture increases financial performance of an organization. But is there any research that bears that out that shows that that’s true?

Denise Boudreau: [00:25:16] Yeah. So we actually have a white paper on our website that, this is fascinating, it is a multi site organization and we measured their culture at all their different sites. And the occupancy, the VP of Sales and Marketing was in the room when we were giving them the results, and we would say this site’s got a really strong culture. And she said, oh, they’re always full too. And these guys are kind of struggling a little bit more. Yeah, they struggle with their occupancy and census too.

And then sort of as we went along, it was like, wait a minute. And so we gave it to a researcher who looked at it. And what we found was this is the same organization. So when you think about intentionality around culture, this is why it’s so important that everyone’s not just doing their own thing, that we’re being intentional about it.
The occupancy in the struggling sites was 66 percent on average. The occupancy at the thriving cultures at those sites, the average was 94 percent.

Jennifer Drago: [00:26:15] Wow. Wow.

Denise Boudreau: [00:26:16] 66 and 94 percent. We know turnover, right, so labor is our biggest cost. We know turnover is 38 percent lower, strong cultures compared to weak cultures, 38 percent lower turnover. And I always tell people, if you have 38 percent lower turnover, guess what you get? You get 38 percent less positions to fill, too, right? So now you’ve improved your recruitment by 38 percent.

And that’s got real numbers to it. It’s certainly filling those open positions. I find there’s a huge cost. And sometimes people don’t think about this. Leaders running around to fill those open positions. Leaders that you’re paying a lot of money to doing jobs of people that make a very different salary. And is it great to pop in once in a while and help and assist? Absolutely. But to be paying somebody the salary that they should be making and not focusing on what they should be doing, right, is a complete waste of money. So it’s money out the window in so many different ways.

Productivity, we’ve tied through research the amount of, I call it energy in the organization, the limiting values and behaviors in the organization, whatever that percentage of limiting behavior. And the organization, whatever that percentage is, that has also been researched and studied to show that that is also the amount of unproductive time in an organization.

So if we have 20 percent limiting values in an organization, we have 20 percent unproductive time. Do you know what that means? That means if your labor budget is $10 million, 20 percent of that $2 million is unproductive time and add to it the turnover cost, right? That’s totally separate. And that’s because there’s confusion. I don’t know what I’m doing. And so I’m redoing work or I’m making mistakes or I’m not talking to you because I know you blame me for stuff. So I don’t tell you something that I should tell you that might help have a better outcome for someone, right? So it’s a lot of time wasted when we don’t have strong, thriving cultures.

Jennifer Drago: [00:28:15] And that accountability is missing too.

Denise Boudreau: [00:28:19] Which all adds up to dollars at the end. So you take occupancy, you take turnover, you take the ability to recruit. Even safety is related to this. Literally, every single outcome revenue has been for years, decades, they’ve shown revenue tied directly to culture. And all of these outcomes depending on am I being intentional or am I saying I don’t have time for that, right, I don’t have the time to invest in that.

Jennifer Drago: [00:28:44] So I’m a strategist. I’ve been chief strategy officer of organizations and in the strategy world for years. And there’s this saying out there that culture eats strategy for breakfast. And I believe it, but tell me how you think a good culture helps your strategy.

Denise Boudreau: [00:29:00] I think culture and strategy can sit down and have breakfast together.

Jennifer Drago: [00:29:04] Oh, that’s a nice way to say it. I’m going to start quoting you.

Denise Boudreau: [00:29:08] Don’t quote me. I read it in a book. But yes, right. But I read that and I was like, it’s so true because people kind of go back and forth, right, which is one important, more important. But if you look at your strategic plan, there is nothing on there. I can absolutely 100 percent guarantee it, there’s nothing on there that does not take a strong culture to accomplish. There’s nothing on there that won’t happen easier, faster, with less mistakes, with better outcomes, with a strong culture. Right.

Everything takes culture in order to happen. Whatever is on that plan, whether we’re opening up a new campus, we’re doing a new service line, whatever it takes culture to accomplish that, or it’s going to be culture that could kind of puts the nail in the coffin. We know from lots of research that acquisitions and mergers with so many places are going through right now, you probably see a lot of that in your work, the number one reason they don’t work, culture.

Jennifer Drago: [00:30:07] Culture. Yes. I was just —

Denise Boudreau: [00:30:08] And so we have a pool that compares them but people guess at it.

Jennifer Drago: [00:30:13] Yeah. They use their gut when they can actually measure it. So yes.

Denise Boudreau: [00:30:17] Yeah, yeah. We’ve got a really cool tool that actually shows you here’s where the cultures will match, here is going to be the problems, the red flags, so you can get ahead of it.

Jennifer Drago: [00:30:26] Yeah. So awesome. Yeah. I just came back from Leading Edge California. And we did a session on sustainability where folks were talking about affiliations, mergers, different things that they had gone through, and that came up again and again as the cultures have to match or they have to be at least close so that the organizations are compatible. So something else I didn’t know that you do that your organization does is help organizations that are considering that to figure out where they’re a match or whether they’re a match, perhaps. Is that correct?

Denise Boudreau: [00:30:58] Yeah. Yeah. And on either end, right, it might be we’ve gone down that road already. Okay. But now you can intentionally say, you know what, that change we’re going to make is going to be a little bigger of a deal than we’re anticipating. Or, you know what, we can say we’re making that change and link it to something that the team members wanted.

And we kind of say this is in your desired culture and guess what? We’re doing this thing to help with that, right? So it can be done for the positive, too. It doesn’t just have to be kind of playing defense. I should not be making sports analogies. I am not a sports person. We can — yeah, yeah. We can kind of get ahead of it a little bit.

Jennifer Drago: [00:31:37] Perfect. Well, Denise, I want to thank you so much for all the wisdom that you shared with us today. I’ve learned so much. And tell our audience, if you would, how they can get in touch with you, how they can learn more about your organization.

Denise Boudreau: [00:31:50] Yeah, absolutely. Our website is cultureoutcomes.com. So it’s culture and then outcomes, O-U-T-C-O-M-E-S.com. And you can click on there to connect with us and learn more about what we do. You can also send an email to info@cultureoutcomes.com. We’d be happy to tell you about measuring culture or send you any of the resources, that white paper I mentioned is on there, and lots of other resources that you can connect with.

Jennifer Drago: [00:32:21] Perfect. And we’ll put all the links in the show notes so everyone can have access. And I know you’re on LinkedIn and very active and your company Drive also has a company page that you can follow, so that’s awesome. Well, thank you so much for your time today, Denise, and for sharing all the wisdom around culture and why we should really pay attention to it.

Denise Boudreau: [00:32:42] Fabulous. Thanks for having me.

Jennifer Drago: [00:32:43] You bet. You bet. So this has been another episode of Senior Living Visionaries, where we honor and feature the innovators and executives and advisors who are really shaping our industry for the better. I hope you’ll join us for future episodes.

And you can also subscribe to be on the list to receive information about new episodes as they become available at seniorlivingvisionaries.com or subscribe on your favorite podcast platform. Thanks so much. I’m Jennifer Drago and I’ll see you next time.

Outro: [00:33:19] You’ve been listening to the Senior Living Visionaries podcast and radio show where we showcase the leaders and innovators in the industry who are pushing the boundaries and setting the stage for the future in senior living and services. Join us next time as we share the bold ideas and breakthroughs of the industry’s most forward thinking leaders here on Senior Living Visionaries.

 

About The Show

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Senior Living Visionaries is a podcast and radio show curated specifically for leaders in the senior living industry. Our guests are among the best and brightest executives, advisors, and service providers in senior living.

These industry leaders have consistently implemented creative solutions, new customer services, and targeted financial strategies resulting in long-term brand impact and increased revenues.

About Your Host

0217JenniferDrago00654squareWith 30 years of experience working with mission-driven organizations in senior living and healthcare, Jennifer Drago is an executive leader who brings creative, out-of-the-box strategies to help organizations amplify their impact and skyrocket their revenues.

As an award-winning strategist, best-selling author, and certified business coach, Jennifer helps corporate leaders and small business owners develop and implement a laser-focused business vision and strategy so they can earn more and amplify their impact.

Jennifer holds a bachelor’s degree in Finance, a master’s degree in Health Services Administration and an MBA from Arizona State University. She is a Life Fellow of the American College of Healthcare Executives.

About Peak to Profit

Peak to Profit serves senior living, healthcare and nonprofit organizations, helping them identify and execute revenue and growth opportunities through strategic, financial and operational consulting. Our core purpose is to help mission-driven organizations amplify their impact by serving more clients and increasing their financial resiliency.

Our proprietary Peak Performance Assessment provides an objective evaluation of your organization on six key dimensions, identifying areas that need improvement and highlighting growth opportunities. With the assessment results, we help you implement an Impact Roadmap – a clear, measurable action plan to execute your strategy.

Learn more at PeaktoProfit.com.

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Tagged With: Coaching, Culture, Employee Engagement, fully staffed, Healthcare, recruitment, retention, senior living

Beyond Business: Building Relationships and Growing in the Community

May 11, 2023 by Karen

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Phoenix Business Radio
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Beyond Business: Building Relationships and Growing in the Community

This House Show with Alison Stine and Travis Meyers went beyond the conversation of their job titles and the work they do in business. The common threads that continued to appear between them both in the conversation was community involvement, growing real relationships, and having deeper connections that help support the growth of business.

We are a studio that focuses on building relationships through real connection and this show was a beautiful example of that. Yes, we had the opportunity to learn about what Alison and Travis do for business and the importance of having a financial advisor and an estate planning attorney. We also had the chance to learn about them as people growing real relationships, getting involved in the community, and building partnerships together.

This is a great episode to listen in on if you are wanting to go beyond transactional business. If you are wanting to hear about the importance of growing in the community and building real relationships- then this episode is for you. If you would benefit from hearing other leaders in the community discuss the importance of focusing on yourself and not just adding clients to your business- then this is the podcast for you.

Stine Wealth Management has a focus on putting clients first. Alison enjoys building long-term relationships with her clients and loves to see their plans unfold and adjust as time goes on. She meets with clients face-to-face (or virtually) to help them plan their financial futures. Stine-Wealth-Management-logo

Alison has much experience in retirement planning, risk management, tax-efficient strategies, and helping clients through the 3 phases of wealth: accumulation, distribution, and wealth transfer.

We always begin with an Initial Consultation to learn more about the prospective client’s financial situation and goals as well as explain our process. From there, we go through a 3 meeting process to fact-find, present a plan, and implement recommendations. Alison prides herself on educating her clients and communicating regularly.

Alison-Stine-Phoenix-Business-RadioAlison Stine is the Founder of Stine Wealth Management located in Scottsdale, AZ. Alison has been a Financial Advisor for over a decade.

She has been named a 2019 and 2020 Five Star Wealth Manager in the Phoenix Magazine and Forbes, 2021 KNOW Women Honoree, 2022 Under 40 in Wealth Management award – American Bankers Association, 2022 Most Admired Leaders – Phoenix Business Journal, 2022 Business Woman of the Year Finalist – Tempe Chamber of Commerce, 2022 Wildcat Career Champion Award – UArizona Eller College of Management, and 2023 100 Women to KNOW in America – The KNOW Women.

Alison loves to give back and get involved within the community. She is the President of the University of Arizona Alumni Association PhoenixCats Chapter raising scholarship dollars for future Wildcats.

Alison is very involved with the Tempe Chamber of Commerce and currently serves as the Chair of the Women in Business Council bringing together women through various programs. Alison is a graduate of Class XXXVII of Tempe Leadership and has been a mentor through New Pathways for Youth for 7 years.

When she is not working/volunteering/networking you can find her spending time with her husband Billy and their dog Jordy.

Connect with Alison on LinkedIn and follow Stine Wealth Management on Facebook and Instagram.

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The Law Office of Libby Banks is a law firm that focuses exclusively on the areas of Estate Planning, Probate and Trust Administration. They work to prevent the problems caused by an unplanned, or poorly planned, estate.

Their clients range in age from 18 to 98. Some have large families. Some have small or no families but consider their pets their children. Client assets range from a house, a car and a small bank account to large businesses and multiple rentals and properties around the United States.

When you engage The Law Office of Libby Banks, you can be assured knowing that your estate is being handled by a highly experienced, seasoned legal team. They take great pride in serving their community and giving their clients peace of mind through some of the hardest moments of their lives.

Travis-Meyer-Phoenix-Business-RadioTravis Meyers joined the Law Office of Libby Banks in September of 2021 as an associate attorney. Travis is passionate about helping people use the law to protect families and give their loved ones peace of mind through careful planning and preparation.

Travis started his career as a litigator, working as a prosecutor in the Maricopa County Attorney’s office and representing individuals as a disability advocate in Social Security disability hearings.

As a litigator, Travis developed the valuable skills of listening, developing strategies and using the law to benefit clients. Travis uses those skills every day at the Law Office of Libby Banks to help clients achieve the goals they set for their estate plans. Travis is always diligent, friendly, and passionate in helping clients.

When Travis is not working, he enjoys playing the piano, golfing, and spending time with his family.

Follow The Law Office of Libby Banks on LinkedIn and Facebook.

About Our Guest Host

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Kindra Maples  is spartan racer, past animal trainer, previous magician’s assistant, and has a weakness for Oreo cookie shakes. Her journey working with people actually started working with animals as a teenager (don’t worry we won’t go that far back for her bio).

She worked for over 15 years in the zoo industry working with animals and the public. Her passion of working with animals shifted into working with people in education, operations and leadership roles. From there her passion of leadership and helping people develop has continued to grow.

Then came the opportunity for leading  the Culture Crush Business Podcast and she jumped on it. Leadership, growth, and strong company cultures are all areas that Kindra is interested in diving into further.

Tagged With: Estate Planning attorney Arizona, Female Financial Planner, Financial Advisor Scottsdale, Investment Advice, Libby Banks, retirement planning, tax planning, Trust attorney phoenix, trust attorney Scottsdale

Broken Open E20

May 9, 2023 by Karen

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Phoenix Business Radio
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Broken Open E20

We connect to our deeper selves by letting go of our attachments to what is not true and by allowing our true essence to come to the foreground of our experience. We discover this connection to our deeper sense of being by taking the seat of the observer and watching how our small self keeps contracting around images we have of ourselves, others and the broader world, to the exclusion of the broader, wider reality that is always here.

Rooted & Unwavering host Hylke Faber and Growth Leaders Network coach Rick Gage review the past 7 podcasts and reflect together on what we can learn from Augusto Muench, President of Boehringer Ingelheim Central America, Mexico and Caribbean, Valerie Bemo, Deputy Director at the Gates Foundation, Gaurav Bhatnagar, CEO of CoCreation Partners, Olena Sergeeva, Yaryna Klyuchkovska, both from Ukraine, Karen Nowicki, INudge coach, James Christensen, CEO of Gateway Bank and Bert van de Hoek, CEO of the Trimbos Institute.

How can practicing Truth, Love and Service help us connect us more deeply to our true selves?

Growth Leaders Network is a team of experienced facilitators and coaches dedicated to helping individuals, teams and organizations thrive by helping them recognize their innate greatness and putting it to work.

Rick-Gage-HeadshotRick Gage:  Executive Change Agent | Architect Builder of Culture & Community | Leadership Coach & Facilitator.

My passion is unleashing human potential in the workplace and beyond. Very early in life I got to see truly transformational leaders up close and personal.

I became fascinated by the powerful impact they had in the lives of people around them. Since early elementary school I have aspired to be a leader who makes a difference.

In school, I led informally and as an elected student leader. A book about servant leadership was a key influence that shaped how I have approached the role of leader. That passion carried forward into the majority my career where my greatest fulfillment was the positive team environment I could create for my team.

I’ve had the opportunity to lead in some of the great global companies of our time over the last 40 years. Working for companies with deep roots in Japan, Germany, India, France and the United States gave me an appreciation for the powerful role culture plays – both within an organization in the society that surrounds the organization.

After climbing the corporate ladder there came a point where it all shifted for me. What had driven me up to that point no longer seemed to matter. An extended sabbatical gave me the chance to think deeply about what I wanted to do and more importantly who I wanted to be. From that time forward I have been moving into deeper and deeper alignment between my work with who I authentically am.

My father taught me very early that with privilege comes responsibility. I’ve worked hard to use my voice to amplify the voices of those often not fully heard. Advocating for women is something I’ve been doing my whole life. Accepting and celebrating difference has always been easy and natural for me. I just love people. And in recent years, I’m humbled as I learn about the ways I still fall short and how much more there is to do for people of color and all marginalized communities.

My work now with Growth Leaders Network provides such rich and rewarding opportunities to engage deeply with clients who want to grow as leaders, build stronger teams and transform workplace cultures. Beyond GLN, I also am honored to lead mindful communities like the Organizational Mindfulness Network (OM Network) and support transformational teams like the one at A Human Workplace. In all of these ways I can help create the context in which every person can thrive.

Beyond work, being with my sweetheart and six grandchildren is what brings me joy. I’m working to see the world through the wonder of a child’s eyes and the wisdom of grandfather eyes.

Connect with Rick on LinkedIn.

About Rooted & Unwavering

Peace, Compassion, Wisdom, Purposefulness, Creativity and Strength come online in us when we deeply connect with the true, unwavering greatness that lives within ourselves and others.Rooted-and-Unwavering-Tile

In this podcast and radio show, Hylke Faber, seasoned transformational coach and author of the award-winning Taming Your Crocodiles series, engages in deep inquiry with leaders from all walks of life about courageously connecting with our true selves, others and the world at large.

How do we stay connected to our true selves and our greatness, especially when we are challenged? How do we rest in the heart, also when our mind keeps us restless? What becomes possible when we truly stay committed to our own and others’ best selves, also when we don’t feel it? How do we practice staying connected to our true selves, in the midst of our busy lives?

Join us and leave inspired to act on your heart’s greatness and that of the people around you.

About Our Host

Hylke-Faber-headshotFor as long as he can remember Hylke Faber has been curious about what this life is about. His ongoing inquiry has become his work: helping people individually and collectively to discover what is possible in life and express that authentically and fearlessly.

Hylke started his work life with Towers Perrin as consultant and then as Partner with Strategic Decisions Group, serving a wide range of industries, including financial services, manufacturing, consumer electronics and life sciences companies. A major shift occurred during this critical phase of his life. He had become the typical, hard-charging, 16-hours-a-day strategy consultant, and was burning out at a rapid clip.

When he discovered meditation, everything changed. He was so taken by his new discoveries that he chose to bring to business what he was learning: that there is a way we can have it all – we can be fulfilled, do work we love, and create extraordinary results with others. He thinks of it as creating a sense of ease in business.

He learned how to coach and facilitate human transformation completing his coaching certification with Newfield Network and by working at Axialent, the culture and leadership company. After a few years, he founded Co-Creation Partners together with other leaders in the field of transformation and personal development. Then he formed Constancee to help people grow by creating the conditions where deep personal, interpersonal and organizational shifts happen routinely.

He leads Growth Leaders Network, the culture and team development consultancy. He has also taught coaching at Columbia Business School Executive Education and has contributed to Harvard Business Review. He is currently teaching a course on Climate Conscious Leadership at Arizona State University. His award-winning book, Taming Your Crocodiles: Unlearn Fear & Become a True Leader, was published by Dover in 2018.

His next book, Taming Your Crocodiles Practices for Leadership Depth, came out in 2020. Besides helping others grow, which he loves, he is a trained opera singer, enjoys hiking and writing, is an avid reader, in particular of biographies, and is always in the process of growing himself. He integrates all of what he learns in his work with executives.

Connect with Hylke on LinkedIn.

About Our Sponsor

Realizing Your Greatness

We are a team of experienced facilitators and coaches dedicated to helping individuals, teams and organizations thrive by helping them recognize their innate greatness and putting it to work.

    • Executive Coaching: we work with clients individually to help them connect to their calling and use every challenge as an opportunity to help them grow more into what makes them great.
    • Team Performance: we help teams evolve to their next level of excellence, connectedness and impact by working on the root drivers of team performance.
    • Culture Development: we help organizations to evolve their culture by creating clarity about where they aspire to go, and by building role models, coaches and systems that catalyze people being energized to work the new way.
  • Key Notes: we deliver powerful speeches at conferences and other events that help audiences become energized, more connected to themselves and each other, more open to discovery and ready to commit to the next stage of learning in their career and life journeys.

Growth Leaders Network (GLN) serves Fortune 500 companies, smaller organizations and non-profits globally.

GLN clients report that we catalyze significant business transformational impact and profound shifts in people, team and organizations at the root cause level.

Learn more about the Growth Leaders network here.

The Power of a Positive Personality E2

May 5, 2023 by Karen

Ep.2PowerofPositivePersonalityChrisRoe
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The Power of a Positive Personality E2

Emmanuel and Angela chat with entrepreneur Chris Roe to discuss how we can harness the power of positivity to maximize our opportunities in life and business.

Chris has been a talent manager for 26 years. He’s worked with award-winning artists and nominees throughout his career in the entertainment business. And his clients include the legendary Motown singer Martha Reeves, who has recently been nominated for a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Chris discusses how the startup success of his business was driven by a positive mindset and the unwavering belief that he can achieve everything he sets out to do.

Tune into this episode if you’re an entrepreneur wanting to hear inspirational advice and anecdotes about how positivity and enthusiasm can open doors for you. You’ll also pick up tips on how to get motivated, boost your self-esteem, and why you shouldn’t accept no for an answer until you’ve exhausted all possibilities.

Other highlights include the importance of preparation and learning if you want to seize opportunities that come your way.

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Chris-Roe-More-Details-PleaseChris Roe has been a talent manager for 26 years. He’s worked with award-winning artists and nominees throughout his career in the entertainment business.

His clients include the legendary Motown singer Martha Reeves, who has recently been nominated for a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Follow Chris on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

About Your Hosts

Emmanuel-Williams-2x2Emmanuel Williams, CEO and co-founder, DetailXPerts

With a background in engineering, Emmanuel built DetailXPerts around a sophisticated steam cleaning process that saves water and sanitizes.

As a leading authority on green cleaning practices, Emmanuel has dedicated his career to promoting environmentally friendly cleaning methods in the auto detailing and commercial cleaning industries.

He is also passionate about supporting local communities and mentoring entrepreneurs seeking sustainable franchise opportunities.

Angela-Williams-2x2Angela Williams, President and co-founder, DetailXPerts

Angela has a deep understanding of business and all things entrepreneur related. Her expertise includes Information Technology, Financial Systems, and Accounting.

She is a certified Project Management Professional, too. Her insights and experience drive the success of DetailXPerts, a thriving eco brand. Angela is always active in an evolving business landscape, from championing green tech to building strong client relationships. She’s also dedicated to mentoring franchisees from startup to success.

Together, Emmanuel and Angela bring a wealth of knowledge and experience to the table and are excited about talking to other entrepreneurs and leaders who share their passion for inspiring listeners on More Details, Please.

About Our Sponsor

DetailXPerts is a mobile detailing, truck wash, and commercial cleaning company that brings eco-friendly and efficient services to socially conscious customers. Its unique steam cleaning technology guarantees a deeper clean and continues to drive innovation in three competitive markets.

The company started as a steam cleaning car wash in 2002 and established its first car wash franchise in 2008. Now DetailXPerts has franchise units operating nationwide and in other water-stricken areas in the world.

At DetailXPerts’ core is the triple bottom-line philosophy of people, planet, and profits. Every day, the company strives hard to make the world a better, greener place while providing jobs to those in need and earning some profit in the process.

The company motto is “We bring a greener clean”. And it fulfils its promise thanks to green tech, mobile units, and on-demand services prioritizing customer convenience and sustainability.

Follow DetailXPerts on LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

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Tagged With: Chris Roe Management

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