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Greater Perimeter Chamber Inaugural Annual Meeting: Toni Hannah with Georgia Power

March 3, 2025 by angishields

GPCS-Toni-Hannah-Feature
Chamber Spotlight
Greater Perimeter Chamber Inaugural Annual Meeting: Toni Hannah with Georgia Power
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The inaugural Greater Perimeter Chamber Annual Meeting celebrated the launch of a new era in business leadership across Sandy Springs, Dunwoody, and the broader Perimeter region. This pivotal event unveiled their bold vision for the future and clarified what the Chamber stands FOR: business growth, innovation, and collaboration.

Toni-HannahToni Hannah, External Affairs Professional with Georgia Power, is a results oriented External Affairs professional with fifteen+ years experience working with Fortune 500 companies.

She has a proven ability to work with executive management to effectively integrate strategic initiatives into business functions. GPC-Main-Logo

Connect with Toni on LinkedIn.

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Broadcasting live from the greater perimeter. It’s time for Greater Perimeter Chamber Spotlight. Now, here’s your host.

Lee Kantor: Lee Kantor here. Broadcasting live from the Greater Perimeter Chamber inaugural annual meeting. So excited to be talking to my next guest, the headliner. Today we have Toni Hannah with Georgia Power. Welcome.

Toni Hannah: Thank you so much. I’m excited to be here.

Lee Kantor: Well, Tony, I’m asking everybody and I’m going to ask you, why are you for the Greater Perimeter Chamber.

Toni Hannah: So thank you for asking that question. I met with Adam several months ago as they were talking about this, this new idea for merging the chambers. And I think it’s a wonderful idea. The reason that I’m for it is I’m for collaboration. I am for economic growth, I am for partnerships, and I am for seeing businesses succeed in the perimeter of the greater perimeter area. So that’s why I’m for it? Yes, absolutely.

Lee Kantor: Now, usually we ask our guests to tell us about their company. But your company is Georgia Power, and it’s kind of ubiquitous around here. So it’s hard to ask that question. But do you want to share anything about Georgia Power that maybe we don’t know, and maybe we don’t kind of appreciate that you’re doing behind the scenes that maybe we’re taking for granted, but you want to kind of spotlight it a little bit.

Toni Hannah: Sure. So when I gave my remarks earlier, everybody pretty much knows what we do. But I think one of the things that we love to highlight that people don’t understand that we do is what we call being a citizen wherever we serve. So we’ve got employees across the state that give so much in so many different ways, and people don’t know about that. So again, we’re a citizen wherever we serve. And of course we provide power and all that good stuff. But our company contributed. In 2023, our company contributed $34 million to various organizations which support education, communities in need and the environment. A lot of people don’t know that, and our employees actually give out of pocket in 2023, we gave 900,000, almost $1 million of our personal earnings to what we call our Club of Hearts campaign to support the organizations which are personally near and dear to our hearts. And then our volunteer organization, um, citizens of Georgia Power. We’ve got 11,000 members across the state and 38 chapters, and our employees volunteered more than 77,000 hours of their time to help communities and organizations in need. So a lot of people don’t think about us when we talk about giving back to the community. They think about us in terms of keeping the lights on. But I’m really proud of the work that we do to support our communities.

Lee Kantor: Now. Do you if you were to pitch other enterprise level organizations around the perimeter to get involved and to lean in like Georgia Power has, can you explain why that was important to you, and why it would be important for other enterprise level organizations to really kind of lean into this effort to create a more thriving, greater perimeter.

Toni Hannah: Absolutely. So I think about one of the things that I mentioned in my preliminary remarks, Georgia is growing like gangbusters. So many businesses want to be here. We’re like the number one state to do business in the country. And so as we have that growth, it’s obviously impacting perimeter. We’ve got a lot of opportunity here. And we need all businesses in the area to get involved, to have their say, to know what’s going on, to collaborate. And that’s why it’s important to be part of this.

Lee Kantor: And then so far, this is kind of the beginning. Obviously it’s the inaugural annual meeting. What are you most looking forward to as we continue the growth?

Toni Hannah: So looking forward to honestly having a seat at the table. Georgia Power is new in terms of supporting the perimeter, the greater perimeter chamber where a new member. And so getting to know other leaders. It’s interesting having a seat at the table when you hear what’s going on, what are the concerns, what are the challenges. How we can work collaboratively as a team, um, to come together. And so being at the table, you’re privy to those conversations, you’re hearing what’s happening. And you’re like, for me, I’m hearing what’s happening, but also I’m looking at how can I collaborate, how can I support. And so I think that that’s important.

Lee Kantor: So what are some of the ways you look most forward to supporting moving forward.

Toni Hannah: So really kind of gaining a better understanding of what’s currently happening, what the needs are, future growth potential? I know we’ve got some businesses up this way, um, that are making a positive impact, economic impact in terms of revenue and jobs. And so just being more tied in to see how I can, how I can support.

Lee Kantor: So what do you need more of? How can we help you? Do you need more connections with these leaders? What what could we be doing more to help you achieve what you’re trying to accomplish?

Speaker4: I think that’s great. I think, you.

Toni Hannah: Know, events like today where you have the opportunity not not only to hear from great speakers, but to network to. I know people don’t like the word networking, but it’s building. It’s all about building relationships, right? And it is building relationships, establishing trust with each other. And again, just kind of hearing what’s happening and figuring out how to plug in and to support. And so I think in terms of how it’s like helping it’s reciprocal, how we can help each other, It’s just again, having a seat at the table, hearing about what’s going on, connecting with other leaders to make positive things happen moving forward.

Lee Kantor: Right. It’s like they said, the rising tide lifts all the boats. Absolutely. The more the area grows, the more that benefits Georgia Power. Absolutely. They’re I mean, they’re just built into the equation.

Toni Hannah: Yes.

Lee Kantor: So if somebody wants to learn more about what’s happening with Georgia Power or to connect or collaborate with you, what’s the best way to do that?

Toni Hannah: Absolutely. So you can go on to Georgia Power’s website, Georgia power.com. It’s easy to remember. Yes. Um, and then we’ve got information about like how to plug in the things that are top priorities with us right now. And then there is, I guess, an org chart, if you will, in terms of getting in touch with me personally, I am part of what they call the Metro North region, and my contact information is there as well.

Lee Kantor: Well, Tony, thank you so much for sharing your story today. You’re doing important work and we appreciate you. Thank you.

Toni Hannah: So much. Thank you for having me.

Lee Kantor: All right. This is Lee Kantor signing off.

 

Tagged With: Georgia Power

Plant Vogtle and Georgia’s Energy Future, with Kelley Balkcom, Georgia Power

January 29, 2025 by John Ray

Plant Vogtle and Georgia's Energy Future, with Kelley Balkcom, Georgia Power, on the GNFCC 400 Insider podcast with host Kali Boatright
North Fulton Studio
Plant Vogtle and Georgia's Energy Future, with Kelley Balkcom, Georgia Power
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Plant Vogtle and Georgia's Energy Future, with Kelley Balkcom, Georgia Power, on the GNFCC 400 Insider podcast with host Kali Boatright

Plant Vogtle and Georgia’s Energy Future, with Kelley Balkcom, Georgia Power (GNFCC 400 Insider, Episode 103)

In this episode of the GNFCC 400 Insider, Kali Boatright, President and CEO of the Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce, interviews Kelley Balkcom, Region Executive for Georgia Power. They discuss the pivotal role of Plant Vogtle in securing Georgia’s energy future, highlighting its significance as the first new nuclear unit built in the U.S. in over three decades. Kelley shares insights about her background, Georgia Power’s integrated resource planning, the challenges and successes of developing Plant Vogtle’s new units, and the importance of diverse energy sources. They also touch on Georgia’s distinction as the “best state to do business,” workforce development, and what North Fulton residents and businesses can expect from these advancements.

The GNFCC 400 Insider is presented by the Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce and produced by John Ray and the North Fulton affiliate of Business RadioX®.

Kelley Balkcom, Region Executive, Georgia Power

Kelley Balkcom, Georgia Power
Kelley Balkcom, Georgia Power

Kelley Balkcom serves as the Metro North Region Executive at Georgia Power Company where she manages external affairs for the Gwinnett, North DeKalb, North Fulton and Forsyth areas.

Prior to her current role, Kelley was leading the company’s Regulatory Affairs team. In this role, Kelley was responsible for developing and implementing regulatory strategies as well as building and maintaining constructive relationships with key external stakeholders impacting Georgia’s energy policy decisions. Key successful accomplishments include: 2022 Integrated Resource Plan, 2022 Rate Case, Fuel Case, Vogtle 3 & 4 Prudence Review, and 2023 Integrated Resource Plan Update.

Her career began at Georgia Power Company in 2003 in the sales organization. She was a member of the Key Account team, where she provided dedicated customer service and sales support to large business customers. Kelley has also worked within the Pricing & Rates organization, where she supported business customers with tariff analyses. In addition to her various marketing and sales positions, Kelley worked in the Customer Service Operations Financial Support organization, where she served as a financial comptroller, supporting statewide operations teams.

Over the years, Kelley has led various teams focused on providing technical analyses, customer service, sales and energy efficiency support to statewide residential and business customer markets. Prior to joining Regulatory Affairs, Kelley supported the Executive Vice President of External Affairs & Nuclear Development, where she was responsible for broad support of goal achievement among the organization’s cross-functional teams.

Born and raised in the Atlanta area, Kelley earned a B.B.A. in Finance from the University of Georgia in 2003. She received her M.B.A. from Mercer University in 2009. She participated in the inaugural Georgia Chamber High Potentials program in 2018 and recently served on the University of Georgia’s Board of Visitors. She is a member of Leadership Georgia’s Class of 2020-2021, a member of New Mexico State’s Center for Public Utilities and a participant in the Atlanta Women’s Foundation 2025 Inspire program.

LinkedIn

Georgia Power

High reliability, low prices, and high customer satisfaction are cornerstones of the Georgia Powers’s commitment to its customers, but its dedication extends beyond these principles. Equally committed to giving back to the communities it serves, the company continues to uphold its vision of being “A Citizen Wherever We Serve,” a philosophy established more than 100 years ago by its first president, Preston Arkwright Sr.

As the largest subsidiary of Southern Company (NYSE: SO), one of the nation’s largest electricity generators, the company serves 2.5 million customers across all but four of Georgia’s 159 counties. Its foundation is built on value, reliability, customer service, and stewardship. Focused on delivering clean, safe, reliable, and affordable energy at rates below the national average, it maintains a diverse and innovative generation mix, incorporating nuclear, 21st-century coal, natural gas, and renewable sources such as solar, hydroelectric, and wind.

Dedicated to providing world-class service, the company consistently earns recognition from J.D. Power and Associates as an industry leader in customer satisfaction.

Website | LinkedIn | Instagram | Facebook | X (Twitter)

Topics Discussed in this Episode

00:00 Introduction to the GNFCC 400 Insider
00:42 Meet Kelley Balkcom: Georgia Power’s Regional Executive
02:56 The Significance of Plant Vogtle
04:54 Challenges and Triumphs in Nuclear Energy
06:15 Understanding Clean Energy and Nuclear Power
07:53 Georgia’s Diverse Energy Portfolio
13:07 The Future of Energy in Georgia
22:13 Workforce Development and Opportunities
25:09 Touring Plant Vogtle
26:59 Conclusion and Contact Information

About GNFCC and The GNFCC 400 Insider

Kali Boatright, President and CEO of the Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce (GNFCC)
Kali Boatright, President and CEO of the Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce

The GNFCC 400 Insider is sponsored by the Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce (GNFCC), and the host of the show is Kali Boatright, President and CEO of GNFCC.

The Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce is a private, non-profit, member-driven organization comprised of over 1,400 business enterprises, civic organizations, educational institutions, and individuals. Their service area includes Alpharetta, Johns Creek, Milton, Mountain Park, Roswell, and Sandy Springs. GNFCC is the leading voice on economic development, business growth, and quality of life issues in North Fulton County.

Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce, GNFCCAs a five-star accredited chamber, GNFCC’s vision is to be the premier organization driving member and community success across the region, and they are dedicated to pursuing this vision based on the guiding principles of advocacy, inclusivity, and operational excellence.

GNFCC promotes the interests of their members by assuming a leadership role in making North Fulton an excellent place to work, live, play, and stay. They provide one voice for all local businesses to influence decision-makers, recommend legislation, and protect the valuable resources that make North Fulton a popular place to live.

For more information on GNFCC and its North Fulton County service area, follow this link or call (770) 993-8806. For more information on other GNFCC events, follow this link.

Tagged With: energy in Georgia, Georgia Power, Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce, Kali Boatright, Kelley Balkcom, North Fulton, nuclear energy, nuclear power, Plant Vogtle, Workforce Development

Driving Economic Development in Roswell with Roswell Inc, with Steve Stroud and John Asbell

May 7, 2024 by John Ray

Steve Stroud and John Asbell, Roswell Inc.
North Fulton Business Radio
Driving Economic Development in Roswell with Roswell Inc, with Steve Stroud and John Asbell
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Steve Stroud and John Asbell, Roswell Inc.

Driving Economic Development in Roswell with Roswell Inc, with Steve Stroud and John Asbell (North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 768)

This episode of North Fulton Business Radio, hosted by John Ray, features an interview with Steve Stroud, Executive Director of Roswell Inc, and John Asbell, President of the Board at Roswell Inc and Manager of External Affairs for North Fulton and Forsyth at Georgia Power. The episode discusses the mission and impact of Roswell Inc, a public-private partnership focused on economic development in Roswell, Georgia. Steve Stroud shares insights into how Roswell Inc supports local businesses through understanding and collaboration, while John Asbell emphasizes Georgia Power’s commitment to fostering economic growth in the region. Success stories illustrate Roswell Inc’s role in attracting, retaining, and supporting businesses, highlighting the importance of infrastructure, strategic partnerships, and community engagement in driving economic development. The episode also touches on future projects and the unique challenges and opportunities of economic development in Roswell.

John Ray is the host of North Fulton Business Radio. The show is recorded and produced from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta.

Roswell Inc

As the economic and business development organization for the City of Roswell, Roswell Inc serves as a catalyst for a sustainable, innovative, and vibrant local business community. Their vision is for Roswell to be the best city in the region for innovative, community-minded businesses and entrepreneurs. As a 501(c)6 nonprofit, they have worked with the City of Roswell through a public-private partnership since 2012.

For small businesses and Fortune 500 corporations alike, Roswell Inc supports business success within the city through four core service areas:

  • Business attraction and recruitment
  • Business retention and expansion
  • Industry support
  • Business development

They believe that working in all four of these areas is essential to building a strong, vibrant, and sustainable economy, and this holistic view of economic development is at the heart of their organization. Whether your organization is preparing to launch, expand, or relocate, Roswell Inc opens the door for you.

Website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Instagram | X (Twitter)

Steve Stroud, Executive Director, Roswell Inc

Steve Stroud
Steve Stroud

Steve Stroud is the Executive Director of Roswell Inc, an organization dedicated to fostering economic development through a public-private partnership with the City of Roswell. With over 11 years in this role, Steve has led numerous initiatives to recruit, retain, and promote businesses within the city. Under his leadership, Roswell Inc has successfully marketed an expanded Opportunity Zone, increased the number of certified businesses, and launched various networking, educational, and informative programs aimed at assisting and retaining local businesses.

Steve’s tenure at Roswell Inc includes overseeing more than 550 recruitment, retention, and expansion projects that have created or retained over 6,200 jobs, with notable projects such as the GM Innovation Center, GreyOrange, and the Southern Post mixed-use development. He has fostered open communication lines among business owners, developers, citizens, corporations, nonprofits, and various entities, enhancing the quality of the community.

An active community leader, Steve has served on numerous boards, including the Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce, North Fulton Community Charities, United Way of North Fulton, and Synovus Bank (Atlanta region). His earlier professional experience includes operating Stroud’s Printing & Design in Roswell for 30 years.

A lifelong Roswell native, Steve resides in the city with his wife and daughters. He attended Georgia State University, focusing on political science. Steve’s extensive board memberships and community involvement continue to play a crucial role in shaping the economic landscape and community development of Roswell.

LinkedIn

John Asbell, Manager for External Affairs, North Fulton and Forsyth, Georgia Power, and President of the Board for Roswell Inc

John Asbell
John Asbell

John Asbell is an experienced customer operations and external affairs professional with a demonstrated history of achieving successful business results in the utilities industry. With over 28 years at Georgia Power, he has held leadership roles in sales, customer service, and public relations, including responsibilities in call center operations, key account management, human resources, economic development, and government and community affairs.

In addition to his work with Roswell Inc, John has also been a vital contributor to numerous community and philanthropic efforts. He was named the first chairman of the board for THINC Academy, a school that focuses on machining and manufacturing education, in 2015. His work has led to significant recognition for Georgia Power’s support of legislative affairs in Forsyth County. Moreover, John has been active in the company’s employee volunteer efforts, participating in initiatives such as a Thanksgiving food drive in the North Fulton area and support for a veteran family.

John continues to impact his community and industry through his extensive involvement and leadership.

LinkedIn

Topics Discussed in this Episode

00:00 Welcome to North Fulton Business Radio
01:33 Introducing Roswell Inc: Driving Economic Development
01:58 The Mission and Impact of Roswell Inc
06:22 Georgia Power’s Role and Commitment to Roswell
10:11 The Broader Scope of Economic Development in Roswell
19:45 The Importance of Supporting Existing Businesses
21:17 Strategic Economic Development Insights
21:25 Attracting New Businesses to Roswell
22:28 Leveraging Regional Relationships for Growth
26:28 Future Developments and Infrastructure in Roswell
30:44 Success Stories and Economic Impact
36:33 Closing Remarks and Additional Resources

Renasant Bank and Casa Nuova Italian Restaurant support North Fulton Business Radio

Renasant BankRenasant Bank has humble roots, starting in 1904 as a $100,000 bank in a Lee County, Mississippi, bakery. Since then, Renasant has become one of the Southeast’s strongest financial institutions, with over $13 billion in assets and more than 190 banking, lending, wealth management, and financial services offices in Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia, and Florida. All of Renasant’s success stems from each of their banker’s commitment to investing in their communities as a way of better understanding the people they serve. At Renasant Bank, they understand you because they work and live alongside you every day.

Casa Nuova Italian RestaurantCasa Nuova is a proud family-owned and operated restaurant, serving classic, authentic and traditional Italian cuisine and top tier hospitality since 1998.

Casa Nuova is a cook-to-order kitchen, serving traditional fare including pasta, chicken, seafood, veal, vegetarian and gluten-free options, plus daily specials. They are a farm-to-table establishment, meaning that in the summertime, they cultivate their own vegetables in their garden, steps away from the restaurant, including tomatoes, corn, peppers, zucchini, sunflowers and more!

Celebrating more than 25 years, Casa Nuova has become a true staple in the Alpharetta area, serving more than three generations of families, including friends old and new, visiting near and far from all over the metro Atlanta area and beyond.

Website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Instagram

About North Fulton Business Radio and host John Ray

With over 760 shows and having featured over 1,200 guests, North Fulton Business Radio is the longest-running podcast in the North Fulton area, covering business in our community like no one else. We are the undisputed “Voice of Business” in North Fulton!

The show welcomes a wide variety of business, non-profit, and community leaders to get the word out about the important work they’re doing to serve their market, their community, and their profession. There’s no discrimination based on company size, and there’s never any “pay to play.” North Fulton Business Radio supports and celebrates business by sharing positive business stories that traditional media ignore. Some media leans left. Some media leans right. We lean business.

John Ray, Business RadioX - North Fulton, and Owner, Ray Business Advisors
John Ray, Business RadioX – North Fulton, and Owner, Ray Business Advisors

John Ray is the host of North Fulton Business Radio. The show is recorded and produced from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta. You can find the full archive of shows by following this link. The show is available on all the major podcast apps, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Amazon, iHeart Radio, and many others.

The studio address is 275 South Main Street, Alpharetta, GA 30009.

John Ray, The Generosity MindsetJohn Ray also operates his own business advisory practice. John’s services include advising solopreneurs and small professional services firms on their value, their positioning and business development, and their pricing. His clients are professionals who are selling their expertise, such as consultants, coaches, attorneys, CPAs, accountants and bookkeepers, marketing professionals, and other professional services practitioners.

John is the national bestselling author of The Generosity Mindset: A Journey to Business Success by Raising Your Confidence, Value, and Prices.

Tagged With: Business Development, business expansion, business recruitment, business retention, Casa Nuova, Casa Nuova Italian Restaurant, economic development, Georgia Power, industry support, renasant bank, Roswell, Roswell Inc., Steve Stroud

Deon Tucker, Regional Director for Georgia Power

December 1, 2023 by Mike

Celebrating Powerhouse Women
Celebrating Powerhouse Women
Deon Tucker, Regional Director for Georgia Power
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Amanda Pearch Marmolejo and Deon Tucker

Celebrating Powerhouse Women salutes and recognizes women who are making an impact, whether it’s in business, philanthropy, public service, or elsewhere.

Deon Tucker/Georgia Power

Deon Tucker is the Regional Director at Georgia Power. She leads the company’s external affairs activities for DeKalb, North Fulton, Gwinnett, Forsyth and Rockdale counties. She also provides leadership and support for power delivery, customer service, sales, and community and economic development to bring value to customers.

Deon began her career with Georgia Power in 1994 as a temporary customer service representative. Since then, she has held various positions throughout the company — including human resources associate, scheduling analyst, customer service supervisor, assistant to the manager of customer field services, field operations and development manager, region customer service manager and sales and service manager for Georgia Power’s statewide, 24-hour call center.

Additionally, Deon is active in the community and currently co-chairs the Forward Macon campaign, an economic development effort of the Macon-Bibb County Chamber and is a graduate of the Atlanta Regional Commission’s Regional Leadership Institute, the Georgia Academy for Economic Development and Leadership Henry.

Deon holds a bachelor’s degree from Georgia State University and a Master of Science in Organizational Leadership from Troy University.

Celebrating Powerhouse Women is presented by

Tagged With: amanda pearch, Amanda Pearch Marmolejo, Celebrating Powerhouse Women, Deon Tucker, Georgia Power, powerhouse women, women business leaders, women executives, Women in Business

Jeff Butterworth, Area Manager for Georgia Power & Brock Evans, Vice President of Property and Casualty for USI

August 29, 2022 by Amanda Pearch

Forsyth Business Radio
Forsyth Business Radio
Jeff Butterworth, Area Manager for Georgia Power & Brock Evans, Vice President of Property and Casualty for USI
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 Jeff Butterworth of Georgia Power & Brock Evans of USI 

 

Brock Evans of USI 

USI is a leading local and national insurance brokerage and consulting firm delivering customized property and casualty, employee benefits, personal risk, and retirement solutions throughout the United States. Brock’s team analyzes client business issues and challenges leveraging USI ONE™, a proprietary platform integrating analytics, networked resources and strategic planning to deliver highly customized solutions with economic impact.
Experience the USI ONE Advantage® and learn how our Select practice offers highly specialized solutions and services to identify, quantify and eliminate exposures for total cost of risk management. To learn more about USI, our capabilities, and our resources, please contact brock.evans@usi.com

 

Jeff Butterworth of Georgia Power

Jeff Butterworth currently serves as a Georgia Power Area Manager. In this role he is the lead manager of region operations, sales, customer service, economic and community development, and external affairs activities in Cherokee and Forsyth Counties. Jeff is actively involved in the community and feels fortunate to work for a company that has a passion for the communities they serve. At Georgia Power, he has served many years as a mentor for company employee resource groups and is a past president of a local Citizens of Georgia Power employee volunteer chapter where he led more than 100 member volunteers to raise funds and impact the community through service projects. Jeff’s almost 25-year career with Georgia Power began in the field as a meter reader. Since that time and across the state, he has held roles in leadership and increasing responsibility across external affairs, sales/key accounts, customer service, storm restoration, compliance, revenue protection, and training and development.

Connect with us on Social Media @forsythbrx

SPECIAL THANKS to our Forsyth Business RadioX Studio Print  Partners:

Broadcasted LIVE from the Forsyth Business RadioX Studio in Cumming, Georgia

Hosted & Produced by Amanda Pearch

Tagged With: amanda pearch, Brandywine Printing Inc, Brock Evans, community, Cumming, Derek Brooks, energy, Forsyth, ga power, Georgia Power, insurance, Jeff Butterworth, USI Insurance

Rome Floyd Chamber Small Business Spotlight – A Celebration Of The Recent Membership Drive

August 25, 2021 by angishields

RomeFloydChamber
Rome Business Radio
Rome Floyd Chamber Small Business Spotlight - A Celebration Of The Recent Membership Drive
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2021-08-24 Rome Chamber Picma

Tagged With: Accounting Solutions, Alma Roman, Alma Roman McCool, Cassandra Wheeler, Evie McNiece, Farmers Insurance, Georgia Power, Greater Community Bank, Hardy Realty, Hardy Realty Studio, J.J. Johnson, LaDonna Collins, Maximum One Community Realty, Michele Rikard, Rhonda Wallace, Rome Floyd Chamber, Rome Floyd Chamber of Commerce, Rome Floyd County Business, Rome Floyd County Commission on Children and Youth, Rome Floyd Small Business Spotlight, Rome News Tribune, Smoothie King, Smoothie King of Rome, Stephanie Nichols, Thomas Kislat

Workforce Development Taskforce, with Misty Fernandez, Georgia Power, and Samir Abdullahi, Select Fulton

March 1, 2021 by John Ray

Misty Fernandez
North Fulton Studio
Workforce Development Taskforce, with Misty Fernandez, Georgia Power, and Samir Abdullahi, Select Fulton
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Workforce Development

Workforce Development Taskforce (GNFCC 400 Insider, Episode 58)

The Greater North Fulton Chamber’s Economic Recovery Task Force was created to connect businesses and jobseekers to much-needed resources. Misty Fernandez, North Fulton Area Manager for Georgia Power serves as the Chair of the Chamber’s Workforce Committee. Samir Abdullahi is the Deputy Director of Economic Development for Select Fulton and also serves on the Workforce Committee.

Misty and Samir joined the host of “The GNFCC 400 Insider,” GNFCC CEO Kali Boatright, on this edition of The GNFCC 400 Insider, presented by the Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce and produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®. John Ray and North Fulton Business RadioX served as the media sponsor for this event.

Samir Adbullahi, Deputy Director, Select Fulton

Workforce Development
Samir Abdullahi, Select Fulton

Samir Abdullahi is Deputy Director of Economic Development at Select Fulton.  It is Fulton County, Georgia’s economic and workforce development initiative that drives collaboration among public and private partners in order to generate inclusive growth, opportunities, and prosperity for the Metro Atlanta region.

Select Fulton does this by fostering the creation of middle and high-skill jobs in our key industries, preparing our residents for those opportunities, and accelerating the growth of connected and sustainable commercial development. Additionally, Select Fulton provides collaborative economic development leadership to promote a globally competitive, prosperous, and growing Fulton County economy to improve the wellbeing of our residents and communities.

Company website, LinkedIn

Misty Fernandez, Georgia Power

Misty Fernandez
Misty Fernandez, Georgia Power

Georgia Power is the largest subsidiary of Southern Company, one of the nation’s largest generators of electricity. The company is an investor-owned, tax-paying utility, serving 2.3 million customers in 155 of 159 counties in Georgia. Georgia Power’s rates remain well below the national average.

Misty Fernandez is an energy industry professional with 20+ years of experience across the customer service, environmental compliance, and charitable giving arenas. As an Area Manager for Georgia Power Company, she collaborates with business and community leaders in lifting and growing the communities where they live, work, and serve.

Company website, Select Georgia website, LinkedIn

About GNFCC and “The GNFCC 400 Insider”

Kali Boatright, President and CEO of GNFCC

“The GNFCC 400 Insider” is presented by the Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce (GNFCC) and is hosted by Kali Boatright, President and CEO of GNFCC. The Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce is a private, non-profit, member-driven organization comprised of over 1400 business enterprises, civic organizations, educational institutions and individuals.  Their service area includes Alpharetta, Johns Creek, Milton, Mountain Park, Roswell and Sandy Springs. GNFCC is the leading voice on economic development, business growth and quality of life issues in North Fulton County.

The GNFCC promotes the interests of our members by assuming a leadership role in making North Fulton an excellent place to work, live, play and stay. They provide one voice for all local businesses to influence decision makers, recommend legislation, and protect the valuable resources that make North Fulton a popular place to live.

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Decision Vision Episode 30: Should I Implement a Sustainability Program in My Business? – An Interview with Troy von Otnott, Massive Technologies

September 5, 2019 by John Ray

Decision Vision
Decision Vision
Decision Vision Episode 30: Should I Implement a Sustainability Program in My Business? – An Interview with Troy von Otnott, Massive Technologies
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Mike Blake and Troy von Otnott

Decision Vision Episode 30:  Should I Implement a Sustainability Program in My Business? – An Interview with Troy von Otnott, Massive Technologies

How do I start a corporate sustainability program at my company? What do the insurance markets reveal about the necessity of a sustainability program for my business? The answers to these questions and more are covered by Troy von Otnott, Massive Technologies, in this important discussion with host Mike Blake. “Decision Vision” is presented by Brady Ware & Company.

Troy von Otnott, Massive Technologies

Troy von Otnott

Troy von Otnott is the CEO of Massive Technologies, a clean technology and sustainability consulting company in Atlanta, Georgia. Massive is currently pursuing business opportunities in commercial/industrial solar asset financing and deployment in Puerto Rico, development of graphene-enhanced ballistic products for the U.S. and Canadian militaries, and is currently consulting with a major Chinese investment bank on a strategic plan to significantly reduce China’s carbon emissions and pollution by helping to transition some of  their electric generation assets from coal to cleaner burning natural gas.

For more information, you can email Troy directly.

Michael Blake, Brady Ware & Company

Mike Blake, Host of “Decision Vision”

Michael Blake is Host of the “Decision Vision” podcast series and a Director of Brady Ware & Company. Mike specializes in the valuation of intellectual property-driven firms, such as software firms, aerospace firms and professional services firms, most frequently in the capacity as a transaction advisor, helping clients obtain great outcomes from complex transaction opportunities. He is also a specialist in the appraisal of intellectual properties as stand-alone assets, such as software, trade secrets, and patents.

Mike has been a full-time business appraiser for 13 years with public accounting firms, boutique business appraisal firms, and an owner of his own firm. Prior to that, he spent 8 years in venture capital and investment banking, including transactions in the U.S., Israel, Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus.

Brady Ware & Company

Brady Ware & Company is a regional full-service accounting and advisory firm which helps businesses and entrepreneurs make visions a reality. Brady Ware services clients nationally from its offices in Alpharetta, GA; Columbus and Dayton, OH; and Richmond, IN. The firm is growth minded, committed to the regions in which they operate, and most importantly, they make significant investments in their people and service offerings to meet the changing financial needs of those they are privileged to serve. The firm is dedicated to providing results that make a difference for its clients.

Decision Vision Podcast Series

“Decision Vision” is a podcast covering topics and issues facing small business owners and connecting them with solutions from leading experts. This series is presented by Brady Ware & Company. If you are a decision maker for a small business, we’d love to hear from you. Contact us at decisionvision@bradyware.com and make sure to listen to every Thursday to the “Decision Vision” podcast. Past episodes of “Decision Vision” can be found here. “Decision Vision” is produced and broadcast by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®.

Visit Brady Ware & Company on social media:

LinkedIn:  https://www.linkedin.com/company/brady-ware/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bradywareCPAs/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/BradyWare

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bradywarecompany/

Show Transcript

Intro: [00:00:01] Welcome to Decision Vision, a podcast series focusing on critical business decisions, brought to you by Brady Ware & Company. Brady Ware is a regional full-service accounting advisory board that helps businesses and entrepreneurs make vision a reality.

Mike Blake: [00:00:20] And welcome to Decision Vision, a podcast giving you, the listener, clear vision to make great decisions. In each episode, we discuss the process of decision making on a different topic. Rather than making recommendations because everyone’s circumstances are different, we talk to subject matter experts about how they would recommend thinking about that decision.

Mike Blake: [00:00:37] My name is Mike Blake, and I’m your host for today’s program. I’m a Director at Brady Ware & Company, a full-service accounting firm based in Dayton, Ohio, with offices in Dayton; Columbus, Ohio; Richmond, Indiana; and Alpharetta, Georgia, which is where we are recording today. Brady Ware is sponsoring this podcast? If you like this podcast, please subscribe on your favorite podcast aggregator. And please also consider leaving a review of the podcast as well.

Mike Blake: [00:01:01] So, our topic today is sustainability programs. And whether the issue or the conversation has revolved specifically around global climate change, whether it has been around local pollution, whether it’s been about economic sustainability and recycling materials, whether it’s been about land conservation, some elements of the environmental movement and, by extension, sustainability, I think, is in everybody’s corporat⁠e⁠—everybody’s consciousness.

Mike Blake: [00:01:35] And maybe it’s considered polarizing, maybe it’s not, but it’s not something that nobody has an opinion on. And there’s a sense that companies have⁠⁠—at a minimum, all companies have an opportunity to be constructive in terms of environmental sustainability, and how they impact the environment, and what their footprint looks like, and are they reinvesting back what they’re taking out of the environment to conduct their commerce?

Mike Blake: [00:02:03] And then, I think where there’s a disconnect is, what is the obligation of the corporation to, somehow, either ameliorate the impact that they themselves have on the environment, or even to be a net positive contributor to the environment, even beyond whatever impact that they have? And I don’t think it’s fair to say there’s a right or wrong answer to the question. But if you’re a business leader, you’re faced with the question of, should we be doing something to be promoting the environmental, ecological sustainability of our business? Should we be doing more than we’re already doing? Or in some cases, are we doing too much? Should we be scaling it back? Because there can be a cost to this, at least, in the short term.

Mike Blake: [00:02:50] And that’s particularly noteworthy in the public markets where the public markets reward investors. Frankly, they reward managers based on short-term metrics and short-term gains much more than they do long-term metrics and long-term gains. And so, to some extent, there actually can be a fundamental financial and economic disconnect that maybe, otherwise, prevents some behavior that managers, in fact, would like to do but, somehow, feel constrained.

Mike Blake: [00:03:23] And so, the decision really that’s, then, put before us as business leaders is, should we be thinking about the environment more? Should we be thinking about the environment around us, not just as a publicity exercise, but is this something that we can and should be building into our business plan? And most importantly, we’re often told that there’s a palpable cost, there’s a tradeoff that, well, you can plant some trees, you can save a polar bear, you can help rising sea levels, but this is going to cost you something to do that. And maybe we’re going to challenge a little bit of that perception today or maybe we’re going to confirm it. And that’s about as much as I know. So, I’m going to stop talking about that myself and bring on our guest.

Mike Blake: [00:04:12] I’m very pleased to introduce Troy von Otnott. Troy is the CEO of Massive Technologies, a clean technology and sustainability consulting company here in Atlanta, Georgia. Massive Technologies serves as a consultant to renewable energy and sustainability-focused companies. The company also facilitates sustainable mineral and fuel commodity transactions on behalf of a large Chinese investment bank, helping to mitigate their pollution and climate change challenges, which we know are myriad. And we probably don’t know the full story because they’re not exactly the most transparent country in the world when it comes to their own issues. Troy is also the ambassador for Cleantech Open, a national nonprofit program that encourages entrepreneurs to develop technologies to address environmental sustainability challenges. Troy, welcome to the program. Thanks so much for coming on.

Troy von Otnott: [00:05:02] It’s great to see you, Mike.

Mike Blake: [00:05:04] So, we almost missed the podcast because we are talking so much before the podcast. You got so many interesting things to talk about. And I’m going to dive right into what was a fascinating backstory that I did not know. How did you become engaged as you have been with the sustainability? This is not something you necessarily grew up from as a kid thing thinking, “I’ve got a—this is my thing,” right?

Troy von Otnott: [00:05:27] No, not at all. In fact, I’m from New Orleans. And as you know, Louisiana is one of the largest oil and gas production states in America and a petrochemical production center as well. And so, being an environmentalist in Louisiana is kind of weird, and you’re thought of as a bit of an outlier.

Mike Blake: [00:05:50] Small club, right?

Troy von Otnott: [00:05:51] Yeah. And so, it’s not something that I ever thought about being involved in. In most of my adult life, as I was mentioning before the podcast began, I spent most my life doing event production. New Orleans produces a lot of events, and I was enjoying that career. But in 2005, my world and all my fellow citizens in New Orleans worlds changed due to the impacts of Hurricane Katrina. And we lost a lot. We lost over 2000 lives, billions of dollars of property value. And I, personally, lost an entire career.

Troy von Otnott: [00:06:34] And so, it was at that moment that it made me start to reflect and think about why was this particular storm more damaging, more impactful than others. And after doing a substantial amount of research, I started to understand a little bit more about global climate change and felt like I needed to direct my talents and my skills to try to play a small role and do something to have an impact and try to rebuild the city in a more sustainable way.

Mike Blake: [00:07:09] And I mean, it really was a much more impactful storm because let’s face it, New Orleans gets hurricanes, right? I imagine—I don’t know, I grew up in Boston, we got one hurricane every 20 years, and it’s a category one. I imagine, New Orleans, wake me when it’s a Category IV, and then I’ll start to get excited.

Troy von Otnott: [00:07:26] Absolutely. The complacency for Hurricane Katrina was staggering. In fact, on a personal basis, my sister, and my niece, and nephew were very complacent. And as much as I had a bad feeling about this one and begged them to leave with me, they decided to stay. And for about two weeks after the storm landed, they were lost, lost in the system. And I thought they were dead because the ranch home that they were living in, in a suburb of New Orleans, had about three feet of water over its roofline. And fortunately, they were able to swim to the only two story home on their street and were rescued by helicopters. You probably remember those images from television.

Troy von Otnott: [00:08:08] So, it was, personally, a devastating experience and literally made me just want to completely change gears, switched direction, and try to see if I can add value to figuring out solutions, and become a part of the solution, instead a part of the problem.

Mike Blake: [00:08:26] So, I’ll interject. They said that humor is tragedy plus timing. We’re talking about this before. And I thought I was in Connecticut when this happened. I was not. We, actually, just moved to Atlanta. And when Katrina happened, it occurred at the same time as Dragon Con happened. And I remember being at Dragon Con. For those of you not in Atlanta, that’s basically our Comic Con. So, if you’re into dressing up as a Wookie, Dragon Con is for you, right, Labor Day weekend. And I was actually in a bar. I was not in costume. I don’t do that. But there are actually a couple of folks that had fled the city. And I was sitting next to this guy and he was—we’re watching on TV as they’re doing—just as you said, they’re pulling people out.

Mike Blake: [00:09:10] And here’s a guy whose life is completely uprooted. He’s watching it being uprooted in real time. And in the background behind him, there are storm troopers. There are people in Star Trek uniforms, Battlestar Galactica, Japanese Anime, everything you can possibly imagine. I’m thinking, “Boy, this poor guy next to me must think he cannot catch a break in any—” Either that or he thinks he actually fell asleep somewhere on the road, and he’s still dreaming. It’s a very odd juxtaposition. So, you-

Troy von Otnott: [00:09:44] By the way, not quite as odd as you being an esteemed accountant by day, father of dragons by night, so.

Mike Blake: [00:09:48] There you go, there you go. So, you had the shift, It made a huge impact on you. And was your family okay by the way? I didn’t ask you about that.

Troy von Otnott: [00:10:01] Yeah. Everyone survived. And lost property, but property can be replaced. In fact, that’s exactly what the first thing I did is I started working with the local city planning commission to work on building code improvements because we needed to build structures that we’re going to be able to sustain a Category IV or Category V storm. We don’t have a lot of those structures in New Orleans. We’ve got 150-year-old structures that, actually, did survive the wind loads from the storm but didn’t survive being submerged in 12 feet of water for two to three weeks.

Troy von Otnott: [00:10:34] So, I started building sustainable housing. We created a modular home company and was very successful. And ironically, I wanted to try to build a highly efficient and energy-efficient home. And we accomplished that after a couple of iterations working with our manufacturer. But I got to a point where I couldn’t make the home any more energy-efficient without adding some form of renewable energy. And so, I started doing some research and looking for a solar energy company. And lo and behold, there was not one in the entire state.

Troy von Otnott: [00:11:12] So, I started researching why that was the case. Why is California, why is New York and Northeast leading in the early stages of solar energy development, but we weren’t? I mean, we’re an energy production state, but we’re producing fossil fuels, not clean energy, and that didn’t make any sense to me. So, I worked with a group of of caring and passionate environmentalists, and we actually drafted a bill, which was a Louisiana renewable energy tax credit bill. And when I say we had no idea what we were doing, we really didn’t know what we were doing. But we were bull in China cabinets, and we were just committed to getting it done. And at the end of the day, at the next legislative session, we wound up passing a clean energy bill that in recent memory, none of the politicians could remember when a bill actually passed unanimously in the state legislature. They thought it was like a unicorn, it didn’t exist.

Troy von Otnott: [00:12:10] And so, I remember getting a call from the governor’s office after the bill passed, and they said, “Well, look, you’re the lead guy working on this bill. You need to come to the State Treasurer and meet with him.” And I said, “What did I do?” And he’s like, “Well, you need to tell the government how much money this tax bill is going to cost our state treasury.” And I literally said, “I have no idea.” And they’re like, “Well, you better figure it out because you did this bill.”

Troy von Otnott: [00:12:34] So, I go to the State Treasurer’s office two days later and they said, “Okay, how many individuals, or homeowners are likely to put solar panels on their house?” And I just kind of came up with a number and literally out of the air. And the guy was writing on a notepad, and he’s like, “Okay, so, that is equivalent to about $500,000. Does that sound right?” I said, “It sounds great to me.” And so, he’s like boom, stamp, “It’s good. Governor will sign it tomorrow.” I’m like, “Does this really happen?” And he’s like, “Yeah, it’s happening.”

Troy von Otnott: [00:13:06] And so, two days later, after the governor signed it, I get a phone call. It was from a 303 area code, and it was a guy named Shane. And he’s like, “Hey, are you the guy that did the renewable energy tax credit bill?” And I was like, “Yeah.” And I was like, “Did I do something wrong?” He’s like, “No, you did something extraordinary.” I was like, “What do you mean?” He goes, “Do you know you passed the most aggressive state tax credit in the United States for renewable energy?” I said, “I did?” He’s like, “Yeah. California has about a 10% tax credit. You have a 50% tax credit. How did you do that?” I was like, “I don’t know.” He said, “What business are you in?” I’m like, “I build energy-efficient houses.” He’s like, “You’re not in that business anymore.” I said, “I’m not?” He said, “No.” I’m like, “What business am I in.” He says, “You’re in the solar business now. I’m coming to see you tomorrow.” And I was like, “Okay.”

Troy von Otnott: [00:14:00] Guy gets on a plane, comes and meet me at the local hotel on Canal Street. And after about six hours, he said, “Hey, I’m with a company called SunPower. We’re one of the biggest brands of solar panels in the world. And you’re now our partner in Louisiana.” And literally, within a week, we formed a company called South Coast Solar. And within about six months, it went from me, my old friend, Tucker Crawford, and a solar expert named Scott Oman, and a part time accountant operating in my friend’s second bedroom to a downtown office with about 10 employees and about $3 to $4 million in sales.

Troy von Otnott: [00:14:36] And within two years, we became the largest clean energy company in the southeast. And it was a really interesting and wild ride. And we got indoctrinated into the national scene because people were just so excited to see someone outside of California or the Northeast actually develop a sustainable clean energy business industry. And so, we’re really proud of what we did with South Coast Solar.

Mike Blake: [00:15:00] So, that segues perfectly to the next question, and that is that especially here in the southeast, red state haven, there’s a perception and, really, I think, kind of a knee jerk reaction about when you say sustainability, you’re kind of bracing yourself for pushback, argument, lots of questions. I mean, as it turns out, I drive electric. And I still I remember one of the first times I drove outside of Atlanta, I went to a hotel. That’s where there’s a place to to plug in my car. They said no, but they said no in a way that their eyes said comrade at the end, right. Go back to Russia basically.

Troy von Otnott: [00:15:45] Right.

Mike Blake: [00:15:45] And I think we still—I still think we face a lot of that in certain sectors. And I got to imagine you face some of that in Louisiana, right? Especially a fossil fuel state. Talk about entrenched interests.

Troy von Otnott: [00:15:56] You know, it’s funny. I had a very close friend who was actually the CEO of of Entergy, which is the dominant energy company in New Orleans. And this is a friend that used to sit on my sofa and play Madden football with me. And so, now he’s running the biggest utility company in the south at that time. And he said, “Hey, I’m supportive of what you’re doing. I want you to know that.” He goes, “But you guys have got to get your cost in line because solar is way too expensive, and we can’t buy any of it.”

Troy von Otnott: [00:16:27] Well, flash forward 13 years later, and they’re still singing that same tune, right? So, it’s—and ironically, what’s happened in Georgia, regarding Georgia Power and Southern Company, is when I first moved here in 2010, they were not very supportive of the solar energy industry. In fact, it almost felt like they were running disinformation campaigns to suggest that clean energy doesn’t even work in Georgia. But at the end of the day, what all these utilities come to the realization is they have an obligation to their ratepayers to buy the cheapest form of energy that offers the most stability and that their ratepayers desire, right? Those are the three things. But number one is cost, right?

Troy von Otnott: [00:17:16] So, in 2018, solar is, by far, the cheapest energy outside of coal, natural gas, nuclear. It blows them all away. The only thing that’s cheaper than that is wind, but we don’t have a lot of onshore wind in this part of the country. So, now, even though Georgia is not a renewable portfolio state, there’s no mandate by the government to do this, Georgia Power, with the help of the Public Utility Commission, winds up buying a substantial amount of solar. We have a problem, it’s a problem, but it’s also a blessing that Atlanta is called a city in the forest because there’s so much tree cover that it’s almost impossible to find a home that’s not surrounded by 40 or 50-foot pine trees, right?

Mike Blake: [00:17:59] Right.

Troy von Otnott: [00:18:00] And so, you can’t get a direct line to the sun. So, you have massive shading issues everywhere. So, while there is very little residential solar in the market, in fact, I think in the entire state, only 40 homes last year put solar on their houses-

Mike Blake: [00:18:14] Okay.

Troy von Otnott: [00:18:14] … but utility scale solar has taken off. In fact, I helped Georgia Power put together a construction team to build 17 solar farms just last year. So, the fact is that they are now moving towards greening their own grid. And they’re doing it, not because it’s green, not because it’s sustainable, because it’s the lowest form of stable energy that they can offer the ratepayers.

Mike Blake: [00:18:43] And I’m curious, have they crossed the 1 gigawatt of capacity yet, solar?

Troy von Otnott: [00:18:48] They have.

Mike Blake: [00:18:48] Okay.

Troy von Otnott: [00:18:49] Yeah. In fact, the PUC just put out a new directive for them to buy, I think, another 1.6 gigawatts-

Mike Blake: [00:18:56] Okay.

Troy von Otnott: [00:18:56] … over the next few years. So, while that’s a decent amount of clean energy, I mean, it pales in comparison to what’s happening in California, pales what’s happening up in the Northeast. But it’s so much better than what it was five, six, seven years ago, right? So, at the end of the day, if you pull the ratepayers and ask them, “What form of energy do you want coming into your home or your business?” 80% of them will say, “Give me the clean stuff, right. I don’t want the coal because I don’t want my kid suffering from asthma.”.

Mike Blake: [00:19:31] Right.

Troy von Otnott: [00:19:32] Natural gas, that’s better. It’s a transition. It’s a bridge fuel. Let’s do that because we don’t want to have coal. The nuclear is just so expensive. It’s almost impossible to get a plant up and operating. And then, talk about annual maintenance and then decommissioning, which never gets into the economic model, which is kind of crazy to me.

Troy von Otnott: [00:19:50] But at the end of the day, cities and states are taking lead in the clean energy transformation. And there’s over 125 cities in the United States now that have mandated 100% clean energy sometime between 2035 and 2050. So, it’s coming, and it’s coming a lot faster than most people ever thought it would. ***

Mike Blake: [00:20:12] So, you bring up an interesting point. And I think, if I had asked this question five years ago, the answer would have been very different. What percentage of the sustainability program question now is being driven purely by economics, where it’s a more manifestly positive business case as opposed to, for whatever reason, we feel it’s the right thing to do case?

Troy von Otnott: [00:20:37] I would say 100% of it is, because at the end of the day, the definition of sustainability is having a business that will be around, right?

Mike Blake: [00:20:47] Yeah.

Troy von Otnott: [00:20:47] And so, what sustainability, ultimately, means is driving down cost of your operation, right? And so, when you talk about greening your supply chain, or you’re talking about more efficient lighting, or you’re talking about clean energy, all of those things have a return on investment, right?

Troy von Otnott: [00:21:05] So, at the end of the day, in order to be sustainable it means, you have to be able to turn a profit. And the only way you can turn a profit is to manage your operational cost. And everything that happens, whether you’re recycling, reusing, using smarter forms of energy, more efficient forms of energy, dealing with your waste issues in a more sustainable way, it’s all about saving money. And almost every single sustainability officer at any smaller, or midsize, or even large corporations here in Atlanta will tell you, this is not about politics. This is not about green versus red. This is about being green to make green. And so, if you think about it from that standpoint, everyone should be doing it because if you don’t manage to be profitable, you’re not going to be around to even have this discussion later on down the road.

Mike Blake: [00:22:01] So, I want to go to the flip side now. As I mentioned, we’re in a red state, there are a lot of red states around us. And you and I are roughly the same age. I was not a voting age when Jimmy Carter was president, but I do remember the whole sweater thing, turn the thermostat down, the 55-mile-an-hour speed limits and so forth. But that is because we just couldn’t buy the oil we wanted, right?

Troy von Otnott: [00:22:26] Sure.

Mike Blake: [00:22:26] It was scarcely there. And everybody mocked the solar panels on top of the White House. The first thing Ronald Reagan did was take it down-

Troy von Otnott: [00:22:32] Take it down.

Mike Blake: [00:22:33] … supposedly.

Troy von Otnott: [00:22:36] Yeah.

Mike Blake: [00:22:36] In a conservative environment, has the risk of stigmatizing yourself by being seen as too green, and hippie, and whatnot, is that no longer a concern? Is that sort of an old stereotype that’s gone by the wayside, or is that something that somebody needs to really kind of think about depending on what business they’re in and where they do it?

Troy von Otnott: [00:22:55] So, that question is interesting. And I think you get different answers from different people, right. If you talk to people in our age range, they probably are not as educated about these issues. But if you think in terms of the current generation of workers coming into the workforce, the millennials, the millennials care about this more than anything. They care about the environment more than anything because they are the ones that are going to be living in a completely different environment as they age, right.

Troy von Otnott: [00:23:29] I mean, you can have a political discussion, I guess, to some extent, about whether climate changes are anthropogenic or manmade, right? You can have that conversation if you want to. But at the end of the day, you cannot refute that the climate is changing and that it’s affecting agriculture, it’s affecting refugees, right. It’s affecting access to clean water. It’s affecting transportation systems. It’s affecting our entire global ecosystem, right. So-

Mike Blake: [00:24:01] And public health.

Troy von Otnott: [00:24:01] And public health. Public health is a really big issue that really people should be focusing on, but they don’t. I was just reading an article yesterday that I don’t know how many people died in Japan last week because of the heat wave, but it’s almost unsustainable. And so, if you think about—if you’re developing a workforce, and let’s just say you’re Coca-Cola, and you’re hiring millennials, they care about your environmental and social governance more than any other generation because they’re the ones that are going to have to deal with the ramifications of a changing climate.

Troy von Otnott: [00:24:38] So, if you don’t speak that language, and you don’t address their issues, the next company will. And so, it’s a recruiting issue more than anything. You’re not going to get the best of the best unless you are being environmentally and socially responsible, not just from a greenwashing standpoint, but this is a core tenet of who we are and what we are as a company.

Mike Blake: [00:24:59] And greenwashing is what?

Troy von Otnott: [00:25:00] I mean, greenwashing is a company saying that we’re doing all these amazing, wonderful, green things. But at the end of the day, it’s more of a PR campaign than it is an actual programmatic impact that the corporation is having to the bottom line, right. So, you can—Coca-Cola, actually, got pinged on this in the last few years, where they were making assertions in the global media that they were addressing water shortage issues or water quality issues all over the world. And when it came down to a lot of third-party independent organizations that are charged with understanding water scarcity issues, they realized that those issues haven’t been affected at all, and they haven’t changed their policies and their procedures to really ensure that there’s not an overuse of water in their respective markets where they’re operating their bottling facility.

Troy von Otnott: [00:26:00] So, they took that very seriously and said, “We cannot be looked upon in the world as a company that says what they’re doing and not do what they’re doing,” right? So, that’s what really greenwashing is. It’s just sort of a PR campaign to say we’re green just because it makes everybody feel good, but you can’t sit down and put your your corporate sustainability report out and have confirmed metrics by a reputable third-party organization.

Mike Blake: [00:26:28] Now, you touched on something that harkens back to a conversation we had before we hit the record button that I want to come back to, which is it’s not just about millennials anymore either. The capital markets are now paying a lot of attention to this. I read an article recently where I think something like 78% of Wall Street analysts now are factoring in the impact of climate change-

Troy von Otnott: [00:26:49] Absolutely.

Mike Blake: [00:26:51] … in their valuation models.

Troy von Otnott: [00:26:52] But you know why?

Mike Blake: [00:26:55] I may or may not. Tell me.

Troy von Otnott: [00:26:56] Because of the global insurance market, right? I mean, insurance drives everything, right? And if you can’t insure a business, there is no business. And so, the insurance markets are basically saying, “Hey, this climate change thing is real. It’s now. It’s not something that’s coming 10, 20, 30 years from now. We’re experiencing impacts of it right now. And if we don’t start addressing this issue, we’re not going to be able to insure businesses. And if we can’t insure a business, they cannot operate.”

Troy von Otnott: [00:27:26] But you mentioned financial aspects of this whole industry. And we talked briefly about this part of this—part at the start of the podcast. But, you take an organization like BlackRock, right? I think they’re the largest financial management company in the world. They have several trillion dollars under management. Their CEO last year, Larry Fink, put out a directive to all of their associates globally and said, “You guys better start taking environmental social governance seriously. And if you don’t, and you don’t have verifiable third-party validation of what you’re doing regarding ESG, you’re highly likely not going to get capital from us again.”

Troy von Otnott: [00:28:05] And it’s weird because BlackRock still funds coal plants, and they still fund natural gas, and they still fund oil and gas. And so, you can’t just turn on a dime, right? This is a battleship. It takes a very slow curve to change direction. But when it comes top down from the CEO saying, “You guys better take this seriously, or you’re not going to get capital,” I don’t care how big of a company you are. Apple has probably more cash than anybody in the world and are constantly borrowing money because debt is cheap. They don’t want to use their own capital when they can get 2% money from the bond market.

Mike Blake: [00:28:38] Sure.

Troy von Otnott: [00:28:38] Well, you’re not going to get that bond market money if you don’t have a serious commitment, a verifiable commitment to environmental and social governance all throughout your organization.

Mike Blake: [00:28:49] And part of that goes back to the insurability. You’re not going to get 2% money-

Troy von Otnott: [00:28:55] No way.

Mike Blake: [00:28:55] … if you’re not insured.

Troy von Otnott: [00:28:56] No way.

Mike Blake: [00:28:56] Right? You suddenly go from a-

Troy von Otnott: [00:28:59] Well, you can’t even operate.

Mike Blake: [00:28:59] Right.

Troy von Otnott: [00:28:59] You cannot operate. I mean, I was working on a new business model just last year trying to help Native American tribes do some interesting things that their laws, their sovereignty allows them to do. And unfortunately, we could not get the tribe insured. And we dealt with the top 17 global insurance. I mean, all the big names in the world. And every single one of them, over the course of a year, said, “No, we cannot give you a policy.” And therefore, there was no business. So, I have firsthand experience knowing that if you cannot get insurance, you cannot operate a business.

Mike Blake: [00:29:39] So, let’s say we want to think about setting up a sustainability program for our company for the first time. We often hear that some companies—that companies have a chief sustainability officer or one individual that, at least, ostensibly answers for all these sustainability initiatives. Is that a requisite? Is it such a distinct skill set that even if I’m a small company I, kind of, just going to bite the bullet and hire that? Or are there companies that have successfully rolled that portfolio into other responsibilities that already exist?

Troy von Otnott: [00:30:08] I mean, I think it depends on the size of the company, right. So, if you’re planning on putting out a corporate sustainability report, you’re going to need a CSO. But if you’re just a small to mid-sized business, there are really simple things that every business can do. I mean, really simple things like, reduce your energy load, right. I mean, the cheapest and easiest thing to do is to address your lighting in your building, right. And the technologies are so far advanced now and the short payback period is ridiculously low. I mean, any kind of a major LED lighting conversion in a small office like this or a manufacturing facility, two-year ROI max. A lot of them are coming in at one year. And so, if you can’t fund something on a one-year ROI basis, you’re in the wrong business.

Mike Blake: [00:30:56] Right, right.

Troy von Otnott: [00:30:57] So, there are things you can do to address your supply chain. There’s things you can do to address your waste material resources. There are things you can do to to address more sustainable transportation. I mean, there are many simple things that can be done. You don’t have to have a very complex program. But what I’ve learned in talking to companies and students all over the south over the last couple of years about this issue is, they want to be involved, and they want to be engaged, right.

Troy von Otnott: [00:31:26] So, it’s kind of a—I relate this, not on a really appropriate couple basis, but if you think about XPRIZE, right. XPRIZE does these really interesting challenges, whether they’re medical, whether they’re lunar landings, whether they’re clean energy or clean water, but they create competitions, right? And people like to compete. It’s the very nature of who we are. We always compete with each other.

Troy von Otnott: [00:31:52] And so, smart companies create these little, sort of, sustainability competitions, and they create real incentives and real rewards. So, whoever wins, I’m the most sustainable employee in my group for the first quarter, guess what? I get a trip, and I get to go to Cancun, and lay on the beach for three days with pay time off. So, I mean, I think the more you can engage a, sort of, employee plan that allows them to feel like they’re taking some responsibility and doing something that has impact, and it’s not just truly a top-down directive, it’s literally a bottom up, it becomes fun. You can even gamify it and really create teams. And people care about the stuff, and they want to feel like they’re having impact. That’s the biggest struggle.

Troy von Otnott: [00:32:39] Climate change, the biggest problem with climate change is the enormity of the scope. Every time I talk to someone who’s ill-informed about climate change, I might as well be watching a slow motion train wreck, right, because at the end of the day, their brain just melts down. They just like, “What can I do about carbon emissions in the atmosphere? I can’t go up there and grab those molecules.” And it’s just like if the problem’s too big, people don’t know how to deal with it.

Mike Blake: [00:33:08] Right. So, The good news, I think, is that sustainability is a trend that is accelerating now for various reasons, and some of it we’ve spoken about today. Is there a company or organization out there you think is in a particularly good job that has some lessons to teach other companies to follow?

Troy von Otnott: [00:33:26] Yeah. So, I didn’t even know about this until a few years ago when I heard a chief sustainability officer for Cox Enterprises give a presentation at Georgia Tech. I was speaking on clean energy, and they came in and talked about corporate sustainability. And I was literally blown away at how much impact one of Cox Communications divisions has on sustainability. So, they’ve got a good internal group called Cox Conserves. And this is a really dynamic division of that communications company. Well, they’re more than a communications company now. They’re pretty diversified.

Troy von Otnott: [00:34:03] But this organization does some extraordinary things, not the least of which they actually have their own budgets. So, they’ve created their own entrepreneurial co-working ecosystem within that organization. And they, basically, instead of just saying, “Hey, guys, we’re going to have a competition to see who drives the fewest amount of miles or who recycles the most cans,” I mean, they literally say, “Hey, Bob, do you have a really cool idea about how to save the planet? If so, why don’t you write a little executive summary and submit it to us? And if we like it, we will fund you. We will use our own internal capital resources to turn our employee into a sustainability entrepreneur.”

Troy von Otnott: [00:34:49] Like, that kind of forward thinking is really what’s going to be needed in order to make this transition. Because this problem is so big, it needs a lot of people working on it. And people don’t understand that little things actually add up to big things, right. I mean, to change one bulb, recycle one can, drive one mile less than you did yesterday. I mean, a lot of little things can add up to a big thing. And so, when people say, “I can’t do anything, this problem is too big,” that’s not accurate.

Mike Blake: [00:35:20] You mentioned about gamification, and I think you’re really onto something. So, I drive a Volt, and which is a serial hybrid. First, it’s rated for the first 38 miles on electric. After that, it’a nine gallon gas tank. And there’s a very active Volt community on Facebook, Volt owners basically. And there’s a competition to see how much mileage you actually can get out of that car on battery, right. And so, people are doing all kinds of things. Probably, it may or may not be the safest things in the world, but they’re over inflating their tires, right, like, 48 PSIs. So, you go over a bean bag, and you are jolted, right?

Mike Blake: [00:36:04] Right, right, right.

Troy von Otnott: [00:36:04] Or, how much can you coast, and maybe you don’t turn the air conditioner on. And the most I’ve ever gotten out of was 46 miles an hour, and I was miserable. I’ll never try that again. But it does work, right?

Troy von Otnott: [00:36:17] Absolutely.

Mike Blake: [00:36:18] And I think the Volt’s dashboard is set up for that feedback because it shows in real time how much distance you have left, right? And I’ll tell from my own perspective, because I grew up in a fossil fuel internal combustion engine world-

Troy von Otnott: [00:36:33] Sure, we all do.

Mike Blake: [00:36:33] … because I could put gas into my car but don’t really want to, every day that I—especially, every day that was, sort of, at the outside of my range, I don’t put gas on my car. I don’t feel like I’ve saved a polar bear. I just feel like I stole something for free.

Troy von Otnott: [00:36:49] Sure.

Mike Blake: [00:36:49] Right. And the gamification really works.

Troy von Otnott: [00:36:52] It really does. In fact, the old adage, everything old is new again. You’re probably old enough to have driven the original Model T, right?

Mike Blake: [00:37:01] Almost.

Troy von Otnott: [00:37:01] Exactly. So, the original Model T was electric.

Mike Blake: [00:37:05] I did not know that.

Troy von Otnott: [00:37:06] There you go, boom. Dropping knowledge, baby.

Mike Blake: [00:37:08] No, I did know that. I mean, there-

Troy von Otnott: [00:37:09] There were two versions of the Model T, by the way. One was electric. One was-

Mike Blake: [00:37:13] I do know that, at the time, that internal combustion started to catch on. There was a competing industry than battery. And we know the history—the rest of the history.

Troy von Otnott: [00:37:24] Right.

Mike Blake: [00:37:26] And we flirted for battery for such a long time. Now, it looks like we’re rapidly approaching battery ICE parody.

Troy von Otnott: [00:37:33] We are. I mean, two or three years ago, I think people were saying that internal combustion engine parody level was going to be sometime around 2030.

Mike Blake: [00:37:46] Right.

Troy von Otnott: [00:37:48] Now, it’s 2025. And then, I read a report the other day where it’s like 2023. Like it keeps getting shorter. And it’s because R&D in battery technology is one of the bright shining spots of clean tech. A lot of money is flowing into battery storage. And the amazing work that Tesla is doing, and Panasonic is doing, and others is really the north star. It’s where all the major successes are going to happen.

Troy von Otnott: [00:38:17] And so, the utility companies actually didn’t see this coming, right. And so, now, they’ve got to kind of change their whole mindset and say, “Hey, you know how we were going to build this natural gas combustion system, and we’re going to generate 500 megawatts power?” well, they’re not really economical now that we’ve got battery storage. So, instead of building picker plants, these coal firing plants are now in demand, right? And so, at the end of the day, battery storage gets dramatically cheaper every year. And in a couple of years, none of these plants outside of solar, wind, and storage are going to be able to compete.

Mike Blake: [00:39:00] And oddly enough, I think the⁠—this is off topic, but I’ll throw it out there anyway. The VW diesel scandal, I think actually moved that.

Troy von Otnott: [00:39:10] Dieselgate.

Mike Blake: [00:39:11] Yeah, exactly. I think that moved the needle significantly.

Troy von Otnott: [00:39:16] Absolutely.

Mike Blake: [00:39:17] They went from ICE to electric, really, in a period of two and a half years.

Troy von Otnott: [00:39:23] And by 2025, every model that they make will have an electric version.

Mike Blake: [00:39:27] Yeah, right. And Volvo is following through.

Troy von Otnott: [00:39:29] But that fine they got was painful. It wasn’t a light fine. I mean, they got punched in the mouth.

Mike Blake: [00:39:37] And I think⁠—I mean, I don’t think it hurt him as much in America, but I think in terms of-

Troy von Otnott: [00:39:40] Publishing.

Mike Blake: [00:39:41] … public relation and branding-

Troy von Otnott: [00:39:42] Yeah.

Mike Blake: [00:39:42] … killed them in Europe, right?

Troy von Otnott: [00:39:42] Right. It hurt them bad in Europe.

Mike Blake: [00:39:45] I think they thought⁠—and it costs the CEO’s job.

Troy von Otnott: [00:39:47] People⁠—but not only that, but people felt betrayed.

Mike Blake: [00:39:50] Right.

Troy von Otnott: [00:39:50] I mean, I’ve got a good friend of mine who lives here in Atlanta who is a lifelong Volvo and VW enthusiast. And he literally felt btrayed. He felt like he was completely lied to. And he, not only sold his car, he never bought another car.

Mike Blake: [00:40:08] Wow!

Troy von Otnott: [00:40:09] Like he literally got an electric bike, and does public transportation, he does Uber, and was just so incensed by being lied to by that corporation that it changed his whole relationship with the brand. It ended it.

Mike Blake: [00:40:22] That’s basically breaking up with your boyfriend and keying his car on the way out.

Troy von Otnott: [00:40:24] Absolutely, absolutely. See you.

Mike Blake: [00:40:31] So, I’ve read a literature. You probably have too. There are studies now coming out that companies that have a strong sustainability posture tend to outperform others, kind of, in areas that aren’t directly involved with sustainability also. Have you seen that? Is there credibility or are we getting ahead of ourselves?

Troy von Otnott: [00:40:50] No. So, there’s a study done last year, well, in 2018 that said companies that have embedded ESG programs have a valuation basis somewhere between 175 and 250 basis points better than those that don’t. And I mean, I know that’s financial speak.

Mike Blake: [00:41:11] Right.

Troy von Otnott: [00:41:11] But that’s real money when you talk about-

Mike Blake: [00:41:13] Loss 2% profit margin,.

Troy von Otnott: [00:41:14] … 2% profit margin. It’s really⁠—it’s a big number when you talk about a lot of companies are in single digit profit margin.

Mike Blake: [00:41:23] Yeah. If you improve Coca-Cola’s profit margin by-

Troy von Otnott: [00:41:25] 1%.

Mike Blake: [00:41:25] … 2.5%.

Troy von Otnott: [00:41:26] It’s a Big deal.

Mike Blake: [00:41:27] That’s a lot more electric-powered private jets are getting.

Troy von Otnott: [00:41:31] When I first came to Atlanta in 2010, Coca-Cola was the first company that I met with. And we were working with them on some different recycling technology. And they literally said, “If you move our profit margin by 0.5%, we will do it. That’s all you had to do.” I mean, that’s how big of a scale global operation they had that that’s a tremendous amount of revenue to their bottom line. And so, now, Coca-Cola is, obviously, one of the global leaders in sustainability. I mean, they are almost single-handedly focused on water efficiency because, look, we’ve got problems with the changing climate. It’s not just that it’s getting hotter, it’s not just that seas are rising, but it’s affecting global agriculture. It’s affecting our ability to get potable water. It’s affecting health services. It’s affecting disease. We’re destroying species at a rate that’s never happened in the history of mankind.

Troy von Otnott: [00:42:35] And so, you got to kind of steer the conversation away. “Oh, well, I could just turn my air conditioner up a little bit more. Who cares if it gets a little warmer?” Look, we’ve got a problem with our oceans, right? We’ve got a major problem with plastic in our oceans. But if you think about the biggest global carbon sink that we have is our oceans. And the more acidified those oceans become, the more it destroys aquatic ecosystems. And I promise you, if you haven’t thought about this, a dead ocean equals a dead planet.

Mike Blake: [00:43:05] Yeah.

Troy von Otnott: [00:43:06] Right? And so, at the end of the day, it doesn’t matter how much money you think you’re going to make, or how much money you need to make, you will make no money on a dead planet. And so, we’re all not going to Mars. I mean, God bless Elon, but that atmosphere is not very inviting. I’m not going to Mars.

Mike Blake: [00:43:21] No.

Troy von Otnott: [00:43:21] So, we’ve got to fix this planet. And we owe it to the future generations. I mean, look, at the end of the day, we’re all going to be here. God bless if we were healthy call it 80 to 100 years, right? But that’s just a⁠—it’s a blink of an eye on a geologic timescale scale, right? And it means nothing, but we’ve done more damage in the last hundred years to our global ecosystem that’s ever been done in the history of the world. And so, there’s this old Indian proverb. It’s like, “We don’t inherit the earth from our ancestors. We borrow it from our children.” That’s the⁠—like people, like the minds of men altogether.

Mike Blake: [00:43:58] Yeah, right.

Troy von Otnott: [00:43:58] Think about that for a second. So, even though I don’t have children – you do – I care about your children just as much as I care about a child in Ethiopia, or a child in India, or a child in Europe. It’s like we owe it to them to leave this planet better off than when we found it, or if not, just the same as, not worse. We have a responsibility for people that come after us. If we don’t, when it’s our time to leave this planet, we’re not going to do it in great graces. I promise you that.

Mike Blake: [00:44:31] So, a couple more questions before we wrap up here. Let’s say that I’m a listener, and, now, I’m convinced, we really got to put in some kind of sustainability program. What are the first steps to think about?

Troy von Otnott: [00:44:44] Well, there’s this amazing new invention called the interwebs, and you can-

Mike Blake: [00:44:49] I’ve heard of it.

Troy von Otnott: [00:44:49] Yeah. You can get on the internet. I mean, there’s so much public available information. The good news is that if you Google or search corporate sustainability reports, a lot of the reports are in the public domain. And so, you can get a report from Apple, which has a phenomenal program. You can get a report from Cox. You can get a report from Coca-Cola, from Alliance, from, major insurance companies, anyone. I mean, there’s tons of public available data out there. You don’t have to reinvent the wheel. There’s a lot of great case studies about things that work, being proven, easy to verify, not hard to implement.

Troy von Otnott: [00:45:30] And, the one thing at the end of the day, beyond, sort of, “trying to save the planet” is the the morale impact that you will have on your employees is palpable. I mean, when they feel like they are actually contributing to something good, and social impact is really kind of a broad umbrella, but when they feel like they’re actually adding value, and they can go back and look at their parents, and go back and look at their kids and say, “I did something. Even though it’s small, I did something,” right.

Mike Blake: [00:46:03] Everybody, especially millennials, we  Gen-Xers are okay with slogging for the paycheck, millennials aren’t quite so much into that, right?

Troy von Otnott: [00:46:12] Not at all.

Mike Blake: [00:46:14] And maybe they’re smarter than are we, but-

Troy von Otnott: [00:46:16] They’re not smarter, they’re just more woke, right? I mean, at the end of the day, they know they’re going to be the ones living in a different environment. It’s not us. I mean, yeah, to an extent, if you’re 50 years old, in the next 30 years, by 2050, you’re going to see some pretty bad stuff. But 2060, 2070, 2080, I mean, you’re going to see a real huge problem.

Troy von Otnott: [00:46:41] And, to your point earlier, when we’re talking, it doesn’t matter how many solar panels, or how many wind turbines we put up, or how many efficient lights, we put it on, or how many electric cars we drive, there’s so much legacy carbon in our atmosphere that, a few years ago, geoengineering was a hot topic in the scientific community about should we? It’s no longer about should we? It’s we’re going to have to. We have to remove legacy CO2, or else. And so, when you’re given an “or else,” you better do something because it’s not going anywhere. I mean, like you said, it’s in the atmosphere for a hundred years.

Mike Blake: [00:47:20] Whenever⁠—even as a kid, whenever my parents said, “or else,” I never thought, “You know what, or else is probably the way I want to go.”

Troy von Otnott: [00:47:27] Exactly.

Mike Blake: [00:47:27] Never works out that way.

Troy von Otnott: [00:47:29] Give us some of that or else.

Mike Blake: [00:47:30] Give me a thing. I’ll have a second helping with the or else.

Troy von Otnott: [00:47:33] Exactly.

Mike Blake: [00:47:34] Troy, this has been great. Thank you so much for doing this. If somebody wants to contact you to learn more about this, maybe get some advice about maybe launching a program or tweaking the one they already have, can they do that?

Troy von Otnott: [00:47:44] Sure, yeah. You can contact me in my email. It’s troy@massive-tech.com.

Mike Blake: [00:47:51] All right. Well, that’s going to wrap it up for today’s program. And I would like to thank Troy von Otnott so much for joining us and sharing his expertise with us today. We explore a new topic each week. So, please turn in, so that when you are faced with your next business decision, you have clear vision when making it. If you enjoy this podcast, please consider leaving a review with your favorite podcast aggregator. It helps people find us, so that we can help them. Once again, this is Mike Blake. Our sponsor is Brady Ware & Company. And this has been the Decision Vision Podcast.

Tagged With: Cox Conserves, Cox Enterprises, CPa, CPA firm, Dayton accounting, Dayton business advisory, Dayton CPA, Dayton CPA firm, Decision Vision, Entergy, fossil fuels, Georgia Power, going green, green energy, greenwashing, insurability, Massive Technologies, Michael Blake, Mike Blake, millennials, public health, recruiting millennials, solar energy, solar power, sustainability, sustainability program, transportation systems, Troy von Otnott

GWBC Radio: Monique Honaman with ISHR Group and Deborah Mackins with Georgia Power and GWBC CEO Roz Lewis

July 19, 2019 by angishields

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Atlanta Business Radio
GWBC Radio: Monique Honaman with ISHR Group and Deborah Mackins with Georgia Power and GWBC CEO Roz Lewis
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What sets Monique Honaman apart is her ability to see the big picture and think creatively, while also being able to put together a plan for execution. She has a passion for creating positive energy, driving momentum, and building community. She is the founding partner of three companies.

Founded in 1999, ISHR Group provides leadership assessment, development and coaching services to Fortune 1000 corporations and private equity firms globally. The firm has been featured in HR Executive, the New York Times, and the Atlanta Business Chronicle. It was recognized as a “Top Small Business” in the Southeast” by Business Leader, and as “One to Watch” in the B2B Top 25 Entrepreneurs Awards. Monique is the co-author of, “GUIDE Coaching: A Leader’s Strategy for Building Alignment and Engagement.” ISHR Group is a certified Women’s Business Enterprise (WBE) through WBENC (Women’s Business Enterprise National Council) and the Greater Women’s Business Council (GWBC).

Founded in 2010, High Road Less Traffic is Monique’s platform for writing and speaking as it relates to marriage, divorce, parenting, and co-parenting. She published, “The High Road Has Less Traffic” (2010), and “The High Road Has Less Traffic … and a better view” (2013). Monique is a frequent speaker (including NBC’s The Today Show and Fox News’ The Willis Report) and a regular contributor to The Huffington Post and eHarmony. She most recently co-authored a children’s book about the positive role of a step-parent, “BONUS Dad! BONUS Mom!™”

Founded in 2016, Contender Brands is a concept-to-consumer product development company whose mission is to develop and cultivate ideas that bring simplicity, joy and laughter to others. There are two distinct product lines. Ringo™ / RingoRefills is a portable (TSA friendly) ring cleaning system designed for the busy working and traveling woman. It was named an Amazon’s Choice in 2018 and was named by Forbes as an “ingenious gift for travelers” in December 2018 . GTKY (get-to-know-you) Games are a series of six conversation-starter card games designed to “teach the art of conversational curiosity.” The six games, Whine Barrel, Brew-aHa, Cocktail Farty, KegO’Cards, Kiss’N’Cards, and KIC-Start (kids in conversation) have received numerous awards (including the National Parenting Product Award). The games are launching in a major US-based big box retail store and in a casino system in 3Q19. Contender Brands was named to the Atlanta Business Chronicle’s inaugural Inno 50 on Fire to celebrate “Atlanta start-ups that are crushing it.”

Monique started her career with General Motors, and later joined General Electric’s Human Resource Management Program where she earned her certification as a Six Sigma Black Belt. Monique received her BA from the University of Michigan, a Master of Labor Relations from Michigan State University, and a Juris Doctorate from Albany Law School.

Monique is passionate about her philanthropic work, and presently serves on the Board of Directors Executive Committee for the Girl Scouts of Greater Atlanta. She is a member (and former Chapter Chair) of the Women President’s Organization (WPO), and a current member of the Atlanta Women’s Foundation Inspire class. She is a graduate of Leadership Georgia and Leadership Atlanta where she continues to play an active role as a volunteer (Co-chair, Leadership Day 2017; Co-chair, Closing Retreat 2019). She serves weekly in Guest Services at Buckhead Church. Monique was recognized as one of “40 Under 40” by the Atlanta Business Chronicle, received the POW! Award by Womenetics, and received the Star Award by the Women’s Business Enterprise National Council (WBENC).

Monique lives in Atlanta with her husband, Justin, their two teens, and their three rescue dogs. In her spare time, Monique enjoys photography, hiking, SCBUA diving, and traveling.

Connect with Monique on LinkedIn and Twitter, and follow Contender Brands on Twitter.

Deborah Mackins has over 20 experience in various roles in Supply Chain Management. She joined Georgia Power’s Supplier Diversity team in 2011. In this role she manages Southern Company’s Transmission Business Unit’s Supplier Diversity initiatives.

Deborah is on the Board of Directors for the Greater Women’s Business Council. She has been a mentor in GWBC’s mentor protegee program, participated on several committees and was the recipient of their “2015 Corporate Advocate of the Year” award.

Deborah is a native of Michigan. She has a Bachelor of Science degree in Criminal Justice from Ferris State University. Deborah received her Master of Business Administration in International Business from Baker College and is a Six Sigma Green Belt.

Connect with Deborah on LinkedIn.

GWBC-7-18-Group

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:03] Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX Studios in Atlanta, Georgia, it’s time for Atlanta Business Radio, spotlighting the city’s best businesses and the people who lead them.

Stone Payton: [00:00:17] Welcome to this very special edition of Atlanta Business Radio. Stone Payton and Lee Kantor here with you this morning. Lee, this is our first, our inaugural episode of GWBC Radio. The Greater Women’s Business Council has gratefully decided to partner up with us to support and celebrate some of these fine entrepreneurs and business people out in the community. I have so been looking forward to this. First up on the episode, let’s get started and introduce, please join me in welcoming to the broadcast with Greater Women’s Business Council, Ms. Roz Lewis. How are you?

Roz Lewis: [00:00:54] Good morning. Good morning, Lee and Stone. I’m so excited to be here this morning with you all on this inaugural show. So, thank you so much. This is going to be great, having a conversation about how to grow your business. So, I’m very excited to be here. Hopefully, I can just talk a little bit about-

Lee Kantor: [00:01:18] Sure, yeah.

Roz Lewis: [00:01:18] … who the Greater Women Business Council is.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:20] Right. Before we get too far into things, let’s talk a little bit about the mission and the purpose for Greater Women’s Business Council. Tell us what you guys are doing every day.

Roz Lewis: [00:01:29] Well, the Greater Women’s Business Council is a regional partner organization of the Women’s Business Enterprise National Council. Now, that’s a mouthful. So, we’re going to say GWBC and WBENC, W-B-E-N-C. And what we do is we certify women businesses from major corporations, such as one of our guests that’s here today and, also, for the government. And the purpose of that is to provide procurement opportunities for those corporations spend goals. So, they have diversity spend goes to do business with small minority and women-owned businesses. And our organization, what we do is vet them to make sure they are who they say they are.

Lee Kantor: [00:02:15] And also, you’re the bridge to help connect them with these organizations, to help them do business with these larger enterprises that maybe they would have a difficult time kind of working with if they were out there just knocking on the door themselves.

Roz Lewis: [00:02:27] Exactly. We, actually, provide networking opportunities for them and some education development as well for our women businesses that are certified with us. As a matter of fact, I’ll talk about a little bit later in the show of an event, a major event that we have coming up in August that, hopefully, the listening audience will attend. And that focus is on connecting our women businesses with major corporations.

Lee Kantor: [00:02:54] Now, how did you get involved with the organization?

Roz Lewis: [00:02:56] Well, I’ve been involved with the Greater Women’s Business Council since its inception. Delta Airlines and UPS were the founders of this organization. And this started back in 2000. So, we’re actually coming up on 20 years-

Lee Kantor: [00:03:12] Wow.

Roz Lewis: [00:03:12] Right, of certifying women businesses. And today, we have over a thousand women businesses in our region. We cover the States of Georgia, North and South Carolina. And we are supported by a host of committees as well as a dynamic board of directors.

Lee Kantor: [00:03:31] Now, this was an example where the enterprise level organization said, “You know what, we want to be doing more business with women, and minorities, and these underserved groups.” And they said, “Let’s figure out a way that we can do that.” So, they invested resources, time, and people into this in order to create this kind of a network where you become that kind of matchmaker for this.

Roz Lewis: [00:03:52] Exactly. And you’re absolutely right. And one thing I always tell women business is, if you want to grow up, you need to show up. So, it’s so important.

Lee Kantor: [00:04:02] That’s it.

Roz Lewis: [00:04:02] Yes, that they show up to these events because those corporations who have representatives are taking the time out because they do want to meet you. They want to build a relationship with you because they do have procurement opportunities that you may be the perfect fit for them as a supplier.

Lee Kantor: [00:04:22] Now, having come from the large company kind of background to, now, working with a lot of the smaller companies, you have any good stories to tell of rewarding opportunities where you helped maybe a small organization grow, and once they got in there, and showed how good they are?

Roz Lewis: [00:04:38] There numerous success stories that have taken place with our women businesses. I think part of our mission, though, is to be the connector. We bring you to the dance, but you got to-

Lee Kantor: [00:04:52] You got to show up and do the work.

Roz Lewis: [00:04:53] You’ve got to show up and do the work, right. And so, you come with your skill sets, you come with your competitive edge as to why that company should select you. But there are times too where I would say success stories have occurred, where corporations have reached out to us to identify women businesses to participate, and they were successful in securing that contract. And that’s what’s exciting more importantly. We hear information back. One most recently, I would tell you, believed it or not, was the Super Bowl that was just here in Atlanta. And several of our women businesses received contracts as a result of being engaged with our organization.

Lee Kantor: [00:05:40] And then, that would be kind of a platform. They would have a difficult time just calling up the Super Bowl and say, “Hey, I could do that kind of work,” right. That would be tough for them to pull off.

Roz Lewis: [00:05:48] Exactly, because literally their selection process was they literally came to the organizations in order to identify certified women businesses because, again, they wanted to make sure that they were who they say they were, and that they were a part, that we had validated and vetted these companies as women-owned businesses, as they also reached out to the other diverse organizations as well that participated. But we’re very excited about the number of women businesses that received contracts as a result of the Super Bowl. And it has extended beyond this one. Some of them, success story, has extended that’s now working on the next Super Bowl.

Lee Kantor: [00:06:31] Right, because once they’re in, then they show they did a good job, so why don’t they trust them again?

Roz Lewis: [00:06:37] Exactly.

Lee Kantor: [00:06:38] Now, part of the purpose of this show and the mission of this show is to kind of share these stories, right, to show from both sides of the table, from maybe the entrepreneurial women that have the smaller businesses with the corporate large enterprise businesses and show how they work together.

Roz Lewis: [00:06:53] Exactly, and give visibility. The one thing that I commend you and Lee — Lee, you and Stone on is the fact that you’ve built this platform to show positive news about what’s happening in the entrepreneurial world, what’s happening with small businesses, what’s happening with medium-sized businesses where the media really doesn’t give that type of notoriety of visibility. And I think our communities need to hear what our businesses are doing and what positive impact they are making in their communities.

Lee Kantor: [00:07:31] Right. And this is the stuff that’s happening every day. These small businesses are grinding, and trying, and working as hard as they can every day. And it’s disheartening to hear kind of an overarching theme in traditional media of all this negativity and that big companies are greedy and exploiting; when in reality, they’re very generous, and they are helping, and people are trying to just make it work. I mean, that’s what most people are doing every day is just trying to make things good and work.

Roz Lewis: [00:07:55] Exactly. And think about the fact, the impact they’re having from an economic standpoint. They’re hiring people.

Lee Kantor: [00:08:02] But both sides.

Roz Lewis: [00:08:03] When you look at the numbers — right, on both sides. You’re taking those who have the entrepreneurial spirit and ideas. And then, they’re coupling that with, also, what I call giving back, right, engaging, making sure that they are creating a sustainable environment because that’s one thing we need to give credit to our small businesses is the sustainability that they’re creating. And, also, more important, creating a consumer base, helping corporations to bring their products and services to market. All of that is so key and valuable. And, I think, more stories need to be shared on a national basis as we’re global. And on the major networks about how the good work the small businesses are doing. You’re right.

Lee Kantor: [00:08:53] And it’s a symbiotic relationship. These large companies aren’t doing a favor to the small company because the large company, this is where they learn these new things, and they get to work with the different group of people that maybe wouldn’t be on their radar. And the small people get to benefit by the generosity and the opportunity that these large organizations provide. So, it’s very symbiotic. This isn’t like a large company doing a favor or giving charity to a small company. They both win in this.

Roz Lewis: [00:09:21] Oh, absolutely. And think about through the procurement process, small businesses, please remember the fact that they still have to meet the criteria.

Lee Kantor: [00:09:30] Right, they got to be able to do it.

Roz Lewis: [00:09:32] They’ve got to be able to do it because, once again, their corporate’s reputation is online. Those corporations are obligated to their stakeholders, which, in turn, is kind of a reciprocity that takes place, right?

Lee Kantor: [00:09:46] Right.

Roz Lewis: [00:09:46] Because the small businesses are also consumers of the products that they are delivering or selling. However, they still have to meet all the checklists on that decision matrix when they are presenting with those buyers or strategic sourcing managers.

Lee Kantor: [00:10:04] And then, this is — kudos to GWBC for being this kind of matchmaker, this bridge between the two groups because you’re doing a service to the large organizations by vetting the smaller ones, and you’re coaching up and helping the small ones have an opportunity to grow from the larger one. So, you’re a linchpin in this relationship. You should be commended for that.

Roz Lewis: [00:10:25] Well, thank you. And you know what? This is something that we feel is our mission to empower our businesses. And our businesses, believe it or not, range from startup, I believe, up to one billion dollars. So, we have some very large women-owned businesses as well who have major contracts with major corporations.

Lee Kantor: [00:10:48] Well, let’s get into it. Who’d you bring in today?

Roz Lewis: [00:10:50] Wow. I’m so excited that our first guests on our show is Deb Mackins. And she is the Chair of the Board of Directors for the Greater Women’s Business Council. But her day job is that she works for the Southern Company. And she’s in the supplier diversity arena with the Southern Company. And we also have Monique Honaman of ISHR Group and Contender Brands. So, you notice, I’m naming two different companies. So, she’s a busy lady. And I didn’t include the books that she has written as well. So, very excited to have both of them as our guests this morning.

Lee Kantor: [00:11:29] All right. So, let’s kick it off with Deb. Welcome, Deb.

Deb Mackins: [00:11:33] Good morning.

Lee Kantor: [00:11:34] So, now, Roz mentioned that you’re the chair with the GWBC, but you have a day job at the Southern Company. How did you get involved with the GWBC?

Deb Mackins: [00:11:46] Actually, I’ve been involved with GWBC, I believe, since 2007. It was, actually, with a prior company. And I’ve always had a passion for small business being an advocate. I’ve always been in the procurement role. And I felt that being in that role, I could be the person to bridge my company to diverse businesses, provide information, provide resources, help them understand the cultures and the subcultures, provide opportunities for development. So, I’ve been involved with GWBC and small business for a very long time.

Lee Kantor: [00:12:37] And do you enjoy the part where you’re kind of — you have to coach them up sometimes, right, because the small business things like, “Oh, I’m just going to call them up, and they’re going to love me and my work, and I can jump right in,” but a lot of times they got to change the way they’re doing things in order to serve you properly, right?

Deb Mackins: [00:12:51] Absolutely. And that’s the really cool thing about the supplier diversity role, being a advocate, being a bridge, helping companies to understand, you have to really have a value proposition as to why we should work with you, providing materials and services, because you have a lot of competitors. And not only are your competitors in Georgia, the Southeast, United States. It’s global really. So, what’s your value proposition? As a matter of fact, when I first met Roz Lewis in 2007, that’s the first thing she said to me, “Companies, corporates, you have to understand what’s the value proposition, so that as you move forward in your career, make sure you always have a solid value proposition for whatever you do.” And I think that’s great advice.

Lee Kantor: [00:13:49] Now, when you’re working with these companies, how important is that kind of the mentor/mentee role, and these kind of sharing the information, and giving them kind of insider information to help them be more successful? Do you spend a lot of time in that?

Deb Mackins: [00:14:04] Absolutely. And with Southern Company, we actually have a very robust development program. I believe we have five different programs. We also provide scholarships to Tuck. And we partner the experts, the subject matter experts within Southern Company and the business community with entrepreneurs. And, again, I’m going to go back to understanding cultures, subcultures, value proposition. What type of innovation can you bring to Southern Company or any company? What sets you apart from your competitor? Why should we do business with you?

Deb Mackins: [00:14:51] So, it’s just helping them to really avoid some landmines, I would say, because within Southern Company, supplier diversity, we work so closely with our business units. What’s important to my business unit may not necessarily be important to someone else. And because Southern Company has a footprint now across the United States, and we serve 9 million customers throughout the United States, it’s very important to build those relationships within the company. And who better than your mentor to help you to navigate to be successful?

Deb Mackins: [00:15:30] One of the things that we always say at Southern Company, it may take a while for us to court because we want to get to know you, and you want to get to know us, but once we court, and it’s successful, we’ll probably have a very long marriage and a very successful marriage. So, that’s the role of supplier diversity to help you to get there. It’s not always about a contract. Sometimes, it’s just about the development. We can provide resources and tools to help you to be a successful business owner. So, you may do business with us or you may never be working in the capacity of having a master service agreement or contract with Southern Company. But through our development programs, you’ll be a better business owner.

Roz Lewis: [00:16:26] So, Deb, talk a little bit about the fact that as chair of the board of a certifying organization, how important is certification for these suppliers?

Deb Mackins: [00:16:38] Certification is so important. Really, whether you’re a minority business or woman owned business, it helps corporates to understand that you are who you say you are. So, it gives more credibility. You’re the person that you’re the owner, but you’re also in control. That’s one thing.

Deb Mackins: [00:16:59] The other thing is Southern Company, many other companies were prime contractors to the federal government. And we have internal supplier diversity goals. So, we want to make sure that you are who you say that you are, so that when we report to the federal government, you are properly classified. So, certification is very important.

Deb Mackins: [00:17:26] The other aspect of certification, certification doesn’t guarantee a contract, but it could prevent you from getting a contract, if that makes sense. So, I actually I talked to WBE. She had a different reason for actually getting her certification. Through her industry, she was a member of an organization that required certification. So, for her to even be a member of an organization in her industry, she had to go through it. So, there are so many pluses.

Deb Mackins: [00:18:09] And when you think about what the value is, the ROI, it’s a very small financial investment in yourself and in your company, but it can do some really great things for you. And finally, I’d also say with certification, get involved. I think you talked about, say, engagement. So-

Roz Lewis: [00:18:32] Yes yes.

Deb Mackins: [00:18:33] Get involved. Come out to GWBC events. We have four signature events. We have some events coming up in end of August, I believe. It’s the pop marketplace and the WAVE Golf Tournament. So, come out and get engaged with corporates, other WBE’s. That’s what certification can do. It can really change your company in big ways.

Lee Kantor: [00:19:01] Now, how does it work? Like walk me through. I’m a woman business, and I’m out in the marketplace. So, the first thing I do is I join, and get certified, and blessed by GWBC? Like, what’s the order of things? How does it work?

Roz Lewis: [00:19:14] Well, the certification process is actually arduous. There’s a lot of paperwork. We’re asking-

Lee Kantor: [00:19:20] This isn’t like a five-minute survey?

Roz Lewis: [00:19:22] No. It’s actually a 60 to 90-day process.

Lee Kantor: [00:19:27] Okay.

Stone Payton: [00:19:27] Wow.

Roz Lewis: [00:19:27] And this is under WBENC. WBENC has a world class-certification process. And what it includes is asking for information like your tax returns. We’re asking for the history of your business, how your business is structured. Are your LLC, which you should have an operating agreement? If not, if you’re a major corporation, then what does your bylaws look like? We’re evaluating all of this information because that information is going to legally say that that woman, in fact, owns that business. She’s in charge.

Roz Lewis: [00:20:04] And yes, you can have males within your business, even as partners within your business, but they can’t have the majority. You need to be, at least, 51% owned, operated and controlled. And we do 100% site visits. Regardless of whether or not we’re going to certify you, we still have to go out and visit you, which is another two to three hour-process of asking you questions about the business and your ownership. Once you receive that certificate, you recertify every year. Now, it’s not as hard or requiring as much-

Lee Kantor: [00:20:40] Because now, you’re just updating.

Roz Lewis: [00:20:43] Right.

Lee Kantor: [00:20:43] You’re not creating.

Roz Lewis: [00:20:43] All you’re doing, right, is just updating information. But I’ll tell you, people say, “Why do you do it every year?” Because business change. Things change. As you grow, as you’re scaling your business, you may need to bring on additional investors. First and foremost, we want you to be successful as a business. First and foremost, as a women-owned business, we want to make sure you still control and operate that business. So, that’s the reason for the recertification every year.

Roz Lewis: [00:21:13] Now, we don’t do a site visit every year, but it’s amazing, this group of women businesses, they also self-monitor each other because you can challenge a business. I will tell you, in my previous experience, none of my challenges have been overturned. They have been submitted to me because people just didn’t know the details of what was going on a business because, unfortunately, the perception, especially in construction, for example, why isn’t a woman business out there? If she owns it, well, no, she doesn’t need to be out there with a jackhammer. She doesn’t need to be out there slinging concrete or anything. No, she’s busily working on a strategy of their business and hiring the best people to be able to do that for her.

Lee Kantor: [00:22:02] So, now, they’re certified, and then how does Deb — like, now, Deb, once they’re certified, then they get on your radar, like if you need a certain service. Like, how do they even become aware of you? And like how do you become aware of them once they’re certified?

Deb Mackins: [00:22:18] Several ways. Actually, WBENC has a database that some corporate member, like Southern Company, can go into looking for specific services or materials. And you can complete a search. So, you can find WBEs from that. It could be through engagement, such as the pop marketplace.

Lee Kantor: [00:22:43] Or those networking events that you described, right?

Deb Mackins: [00:22:45] That’s correct. It could be a committee. I’ve worked on several committees with GWBC and met numerous companies that you started that relationship, you work side by side, you like each other, you trust each other. “Hey, perhaps we can do business together.”

Lee Kantor: [00:23:04] And that accelerates, right? That’s not just hoping you pick them out of the database. This is building a personal relationship.

Deb Mackins: [00:23:12] Absolutely. And the thing is we know you’re certified, but the other thing, at Southern Company, we still have to vet you. We have certain criteria that we look for. So, it’s great when you’re certified, we vet you, you have the products and services we need, you have a solid business. Those are just a few ways that we meet companies. And it could be by referral, but whether it’s GWNC, WBENC, those are wonderful avenues for meeting new companies.

Lee Kantor: [00:23:51] Now, what are some of the challenges you’ve seen that women businesses have had to overcome over the years?

Deb Mackins: [00:23:58] One of the challenges, and it may not be specific to women, it could be women, minority, small business, any company, many procurement organizations, they’re consolidating their supply base. So, when you take a a number of contractors or suppliers, and you have to look at the best of the best, again, what’s your value proposition? How do you stay competitive? How do you stay competitive with corporate initiatives that are consolidating supply bases?

Deb Mackins: [00:24:37] Sometimes, there are other opportunities that, I think, small business, women businesses, should be mindful of. There could be tier two opportunities. I tell companies, many times, green is green. So, whether you’re a prime contractor to Southern Company or a subcontractor, that’s a great thing. So, that, how can you remain a prime contractor to Southern Company or any other corporate? Is that value proposition?

Deb Mackins: [00:25:13] I met a company several years ago that had materials that they could provide to Southern Company, but we had some master service agreements that, why should we do business with you? That the thing that I kept saying I kept saying to that company. As we talked, I found out they had some innovation that we had not thought of. They actually answered some — they had some innovation that answered some problems that we didn’t know that we had. So, that’s how you stay competitive. Innovation, being a source to answer problems that corporates don’t even realize they have. Those are the types of things that companies should think of.

Lee Kantor: [00:26:05] And then, like you said, you don’t always have to aim to be the prime. You can work with the prime, and be a vendor for them. And like you said, green is green. You still win.

Deb Mackins: [00:26:15] Absolutely, absolutely. I would like to share, though, with our industry, it’s, historically, been male-dominated. However, we have a lot of very large WBEs that have grown with us over the years. They’ve built, they’ve scaled up, they’ve started it with one operating company. And now, they’re were several. So, I don’t think that women should be intimidated when going after contracts or subcontracts in areas that are, usually, historically, male-dominated.

Deb Mackins: [00:26:55] If you have great materials, products, services, you bring innovation, perhaps there’s some cost savings, there’s just just so many different things, don’t be intimidated to go for a contract or subcontract in a male-dominated area. Know your truth. Know who you are, bring the quality, the service, the competitive pricing, and you will win those contracts and be successful.

Lee Kantor: [00:27:26] And is that a lesson, also, for some of these business owners is you don’t always have to be the lowest price, right? That’s kind of a trap that people think that they’ve got to immediately lower the price. And you’re just looking for someone that’s reliable, good, great at what they do, good service. Those are important as well.

Deb Mackins: [00:27:43] Yes. And in the procurement world, we call that best value. So, absolutely.

Roz Lewis: [00:27:48] And I think that as is one of the things that is also key in communicating the fact that you really need to pay attention to what’s important in that request for proposal. What are the high percentage that they’re focused on? And you’re right, it’s not always costs because low cost does not necessarily mean best quality. And so, you want to make sure that you’re providing that.

Roz Lewis: [00:28:16] And the other thing I would say is to answer any of the request for proposals that you get, even if the answers no, that you cannot participate right now. By all means, do that because one of things you want to remain is top of mind with these corporations. You want to stay on their radar, You want to be the one, not that they necessarily have to go to a database all the time, but they know you because the experience that they’ve had of engaging with you.

Lee Kantor: [00:28:43] Now, are you seeing that more and more women kind of rise up in this? Like more? Are you seeing more women business owners since you began GWBC? Are you seeing more women kind of go to higher levels of an enterprise?

Roz Lewis: [00:28:57] Well, good question because if you think about just the number of women businesses in this country, we’re almost at 12 million women businesses in this country who are generating revenues of $1.7 trillion.

Lee Kantor: [00:29:14] That starts becoming real money, right?

Roz Lewis: [00:29:16] Yeah, that’s real money. You think about that, that’s the the GDP of some countries. So, they’re generating a lot of money. And so, one of the fastest growing segments, they grew 58% since 2007 compared to overall businesses that only grew 12%. So, when you look at the impact that women businesses have, it’s phenomenal, and it’s great. What has to happen is more of a voice. There has to be more information and communication about the success that women businesses are generating.

Roz Lewis: [00:29:55] The example I love to use is the fact that just in our region alone, our women businesses are generating over 51,000 jobs, just in the State of Georgia, North and South Carolina. And that’s just with the thousand certified women businesses that we have, because, really, it’s over about 600,000 women businesses just in this region because this region has been one of the fastest growing regions for women businesses.

Roz Lewis: [00:30:24] So, that in itself should, you would think, elevate, have more visibility. But for some reason, it has not. And so, that’s another reason why we’re so excited to partner with you all on this show is because to give that visibility to the number of successful women businesses that are in our region, but also in the country to think about it, and the corporate partners who get it and understand the value of doing business.

Lee Kantor: [00:30:54] Right. And it seemed like a no-brainer, and that here’s somebody or an organization that’s trying to help me grow. Once I get involved, like Deb was saying, and not just put my name and then pay my dues but, actually, get involved, and show up, and participate, all of the sudden, these doors are opening that I would never have had access to if I was on my own. I’d be scratching and clawing my way up when I can just go to these meetings, and meet these people, build the relationship. And over time, if I continue to do good work, some of that’s going to come my way.

Roz Lewis: [00:31:27] Right. So, there are Cinderella stories, what we call Cinderella contracts. You meet someone, and within a few weeks or whatever, the timing is just right, that you may be awarded the contract. Or, to your point, it’s build in that relationship. And it could take two years. It could take three years.

Lee Kantor: [00:31:43] Right, but that’s business. I mean, that’s what people do every day is you’re out there grinding every day waiting for your opportunity, but you have to do good work, you have to show up. And it’s great that there’s an organization like this that helps kind of accelerate my growth.

Roz Lewis: [00:31:57] And the thing of it is I want you to know, we also partner. The Greater Women’s Business Council, we partner with the Small Business Administration as well in our region. And they have tools and resources. I can’t say enough to say and their F-R-E-E, free resources to help you grow and scale your business and build, at least, that foundation that you need to make sure you structure as you should be structured. And small business development centers, they’re usually headquartered at universities. So, there’s no reason that anyone who’s looking at starting a business or who is currently in business not reaching out and tapping into those resources because they’re very valuable for you in helping you grow your business.

Lee Kantor: [00:32:48] And that’s, I think, a flaw, I think, in a lot of small businesses, especially as they’re afraid to ask for help, right. They think that, “Look, I’m the CEO, I have to know everything. People are looking at me to know everything.” And there’s so many generous organizations and people out there that are want to help and want you to succeed if you’ve just ask. They don’t even know.

Roz Lewis: [00:33:08] Well, there’s a saying that sticks with me by J. Paul Getty. You’re on a train going 60 miles an hour, are you standing on the sidelines watching a train go by at 60 miles an hour? So, which one do you want to be? Right? So you need to get on that train of assistance that’s out there for you. Even at Georgia Tech, there’s P. Tech, the Procurement Technical Assistance Center. Another opportunity of resources that are available for people to want to, if they’re serious as far as growing their business and becoming an entrepreneur.

Roz Lewis: [00:33:47] And that’s in all walks of life. Regardless of what the industry you’re in, regardless of the product or service that you’re selling, if you want to be successful and future thing how you’re going to become another Home Depot, think about how they started out. Just think about how most corporations started out as small businesses.

Lee Kantor: [00:34:10] Right, exactly.

Roz Lewis: [00:34:10] Right? And they scale.

Lee Kantor: [00:34:11] You don’t start at the top.

Roz Lewis: [00:34:11] Right.

Lee Kantor: [00:34:13] And if you just want your business to be a lifestyle business for you and your family, if that’s the work/life balance you want, go for that. I mean, it’s your choice in this. That’s the beauty of this.

Roz Lewis: [00:34:24] Lee, do you know, there are over a million mompreneurs out there?

Lee Kantor: [00:34:28] A million?

Roz Lewis: [00:34:28] A million mom producers. And these are women who, to your point, lifestyle, business, working from home because they’re taking care of their families and raising their families. So, yes, there is enough room, as we say-

Lee Kantor: [00:34:45] For everybody.

Roz Lewis: [00:34:45] … in the sandbox for everybody.

Lee Kantor: [00:34:46] So, now, Deb, I want to ask you about this kind of category of supplier diversity. Is this a new thing? Has this been always been the thing like where organizations are creating those kind of departments?

Deb Mackins: [00:35:01] Well, I’m going to speak on behalf of Southern Company and Georgia Power specifically. We just celebrated last year our fortieth anniversary for supplier diversity, which within our industry, the electrical utilities, Georgia Power was the first electrical utility to have a supplier diversity program. So, that’s pretty cool.

Deb Mackins: [00:35:25] Supplier diversity is not new. There are many companies in the South that have supplier diversity organizations, as well as across the country. And I think that for any entrepreneur, if you have any interests to find out what companies or a specific company that you’re targeting to do business with, start by going to their website to see if there’s some information about supplier diversity in some of their efforts with small business.

Deb Mackins: [00:36:01] It’s very interesting, there are several women business owners or enterprises that I engage with on a regular basis. They have supplier diversity programs as well. So, diverse suppliers are actually embracing that initiative. It’s not just the large corporations that are doing it. But not every major corporation has a supplier diversity program.

Lee Kantor: [00:36:31] And then, if you were kind of talking to these organizations that don’t have it, what would be some of the compelling reasons to invest time and resources into creating one?

Deb Mackins: [00:36:40] Well, this is my personal opinion.

Lee Kantor: [00:36:43] Your personal opinion.

Deb Mackins: [00:36:45] If you want to get the same old thing, the same products, the same services, the same perspective, keep doing what you’re doing. But if you want to bring some innovation and, I think, supplier diversity, engaging with women, minority veteran, bringing in small business, it’s a good way to do that, through supplier diversity. So, that’s one of the things.

Deb Mackins: [00:37:20] I think the value proposition is just really helping your business, as a corporate, to ensure that you have suppliers that are competitive. And one way to do that is through bringing new suppliers in. So, I’m going to just give you an example. If your supply base for a widget consist of, I don’t know, 10 suppliers, and you continue year after year issuing those contracts to those same 10 suppliers, and you’re not opening opportunities to small business, diverse business, how do you know that you’re getting the most competitive pricing? How do you know that you’re the customer, the favorite customer, that all the innovation and the favorite pricing is coming to you? So, I think, supplier diversity is a great avenue to bring in innovation, competitive pricing, that type of thing.

Lee Kantor: [00:38:26] Because innovation happens everywhere, and we’re fortunate in America that we do have a very diverse population. And to just ignore big chunks of people, it doesn’t make any sense. I mean, you’re missing out. There’s great things happening everywhere.

Roz Lewis: [00:38:43] And you want your supplier base to marry your customer base.

Lee Kantor: [00:38:47] Right.

Roz Lewis: [00:38:47] That is something that’s very key and important, and to Deb’s point about the innovation, but also your diverse suppliers are going to bring the ability to be nimble. They’re going to bring to be able — there’s not so much red tape from-

Lee Kantor: [00:39:07] Right, and they’re going to be hungry.

Roz Lewis: [00:39:08] And they’re going to be, right. They’re also going to be hungry as well. But they also are using your product or service. So, you’re getting good focused feedback as well, and having them is valuable because, now, they can help you improve that product or service and deliver it to the marketplace.

Lee Kantor: [00:39:29] And they might be looking at it in a slightly different way that you didn’t even think about.

Roz Lewis: [00:39:32] Exactly.

Deb Mackins: [00:39:33] I’d love to share a success story, if you don’t mind.

Lee Kantor: [00:39:37] Sure, go ahead.

Deb Mackins: [00:39:37] One of our diverse suppliers at Southern Company, actually, met this company in 2012, and they were not successful in the bidding process at that time. However, they had an interest in establishing those relationships, and being a better company, a better owner. And they actually participated in some of our mentoring, and grew as a company, change kind of short of some processes. In 2016, the same company that I met in 2012 called me and asked me, “Hey, Deb, I think it’s time for this particular service to be rebid.” Well, I had no idea. I checked, and they were correct.

Deb Mackins: [00:40:28] Fast forward, 2017, they received their first master service agreement contract. It took five years, but they stayed in there, they hung in there, they were interested in the development. That company in 2017 grew from 40 employees to, today, 85. All of their companies — or excuse me, all of their employees today have healthcare and benefits. That’s something they were not able to provide before. They actually opened another location. So. this company, staying in there, hanging in there, they had the wherewithal, they’re growing, and they’re doing some great things.

Deb Mackins: [00:41:09] I wanted to give that story to you because one of the things that we’re very passionate about and interested in doing in Southern Company is the community. This is one story of a company that more than doubled. And, now, they’re able to provide benefits to their employees. That’s a success story. And I think that as corporate partners, because we work on the board, I’d love for you to take a look at the website for GWBC and see all of the board members, and we have some directors that are very passionate, very committed, both WBEs as well as corporates, but we’re all doing these same things, providing opportunities in the community, helping small business become large business, helping them grow. And we’re all committed and doing some great things. So, I think that’s really what it’s all about. It’s community providing jobs.

Lee Kantor: [00:42:09] Now, if somebody wanted to learn more about your work at Southern Company and, like you said, what’s the website up GWBC, so they can check that out, and Southern Company if they want to get a hold of you?

Deb Mackins: [00:42:21] Well, the website address is www.southerncompany.com. And you click on suppliers, and that takes you to a link for registration. So, that’s one way.

Lee Kantor: [00:42:21] Right. That’s a good way. And then, the GWBC, what’s the website for that?

Deb Mackins: [00:42:38] That’s www.gwbc.biz.

Lee Kantor: [00:42:39] Well, thank you, Deb for sharing your story today.

Deb Mackins: [00:42:45] Thank you.

Roz Lewis: [00:42:46] Thank you.

Lee Kantor: [00:42:47] So, who else you got with you today, Roz?

Roz Lewis: [00:42:48] Well, we also have Monique Honaman. And she’s with Contender Brands, as well as ISHR Group. And, also, I want to mention the fact that she’s an author. She’s an author of several books, even a children’s book as well. But talking to her as a woman-owned business, obviously, you wonder when does she sleep, right, trying to run two businesses.

Lee Kantor: [00:43:13] Right. There’s a lot going on.

Roz Lewis: [00:43:15] And writing books as well, and coaching, and a whole lot of other things that she does. So, one of these will be great is to kind of hear her story.

Lee Kantor: [00:43:26] All right. Go ahead, Monique, share your story.

Monique Honaman: [00:43:28] I sleep really well.

Lee Kantor: [00:43:29] I bet.

Monique Honaman: [00:43:29] I do not move. Thank you, Roz. So, yes. So, two companies. And you were talking about the arduous process of getting certified and went through the first arduous process when I certified ISHR Group back in 2006. And, of course, have been the recipient of the ongoing every year recertification, which, yes, is not as arduous, and the site visits, and all that. And I’m currently in the midst of the arduous process to get Contender Brand certified, so-

Lee Kantor: [00:44:02] So, you liked it so much, you just decide to do it again.

Monique Honaman: [00:44:05] That’s my point, right. This is such a valuable process, per this whole conversation, that it is valuable for both companies to have. And, yes, passionate enough to come back and say, “I want to get Contender Brand certified as well.”

Lee Kantor: [00:44:17] Now, for the person that’s considering doing this, and they see like, “This is going to be an arduous process,” can you talk about kind of the thought process when you were weighing? Should I do this or should I not do this? What were you thinking, and you’re like, you”Yknow what? I’m going to do this”?

Monique Honaman: [00:44:30] Yeah, absolutely. Because I did think about it for a couple of years with Contender Brands. And the tipping point for me came when I realized that the people who want to see the WBE certification had the potential to be our clients, right. So, if we were only looking at, in the case of Contender Brands, retailers who didn’t value the certification, then it’s not important to get. But we tipped over to the other side of the equation where we do have the larger companies who value it, who have their supply diversity pages on their website, to Deb’s point. Once we tipped there, then we knew we needed to get it.

Lee Kantor: [00:45:04] Then, it became a no-brainer at that point.

Monique Honaman: [00:45:05] Absolutely.

Lee Kantor: [00:45:05] Then, it’s like, “I have to do this in order to play. I’ve got to get this certification.”

Monique Honaman: [00:45:09] Yeah. And we joke about it being an arduous process, and it is on the one hand. On the other hand, with all transparency, it took me just a full day.

Lee Kantor: [00:45:19] Right.

Monique Honaman: [00:45:19] But if you’re organized, and you go through that checklist of the documents that need, and Roz mentioned them, and there’s a lot, but if you’re organized, you know.

Lee Kantor: [00:45:26] Like you have this information.

Monique Honaman: [00:45:29] You have it, right. You’re not creating something.

Lee Kantor: [00:45:30] It’s not like you’re having to do research to find it.

Monique Honaman: [00:45:32] Exactly. Yeah, exactly.

Lee Kantor: [00:45:34] So, now, tell us about the companies now that you’re involved with.

Monique Honaman: [00:45:38] Absolutely. So, ISHR is the company I founded, actually, 20 years ago this year, which is unbelievable.

Lee Kantor: [00:45:44] 20 years, congratulations.

Monique Honaman: [00:45:44] Yeah, thanks, unbelievable.

Roz Lewis: [00:45:44] Congratulations.

Monique Honaman: [00:45:46] And so. it’s myself and two business partners. We’re women-owned and controlled. And we do executive assessment, executive development, executive coaching. So, most of our clients tend to be those large corporate clients that do value the WBE certification and look for it. And we, also, tend to work with a lot of private equity firms. So, that’s why ISHR. So, we’re I human capital services business. Total other side of the spectrum is Contender Brands, which I launched and co-founded with my husband in 2016. And that all started with a couple of product ideas. One specifically that I started with for a portable ring cleaner. And I think a lot of people have ideas, and we thought, “Oh, it would be so cool to create this. We could go on Shark Tank. We could come up with this.” But then, nobody really does anything with that. And we’ve taken Ringo, and created it, and prototyped it, and patent it, and trademark it, and manufactured it. And now, we’re distributing it. And also, a set of get-to-know-you conversation starter. So, that’s a product development company. Very different than the services company of ISHR.

Lee Kantor: [00:46:48] And then, that started as kind of just kind of a wild idea. How long was it on the backburner before you said, “You know what, let’s do this”?

Monique Honaman: [00:46:54] Great question. So, the ring idea actually started in late ’09, early 2010. And I realized I was actually out on a business trip, I think I was at a WBENC conference actually out in California, and my ring was dirty. And I’m like, “Oh, this is horrible. I don’t have anything to clean it with.” Well, you can’t travel with those jars of cleaning fluid. So, literally. came back from that trip and started researching whether there were these portable, TSA-friendly – at that point, we weren’t using the word TSA – but portable sort of ring cleaners that were on the market. I put a little business plan together, and then did nothing. So, to your question of how long did it sit on the backburner, it sat on the backburner for six, seven years.

Roz Lewis: [00:47:39] Wow.

Monique Honaman: [00:47:39] And then, literally, a couple of years ago, I was actually back in California on a trip and resurfaced it in my mind. And at that point, we said, “You know what-”

Lee Kantor: [00:47:49] Let’s go for it.

Monique Honaman: [00:47:49] Let’s go for it. And came back from that trip, contacted the prototype designers, and we’ve been hanging on to that train by our fingernails ever since.

Lee Kantor: [00:48:00] So, now, at some point, you decide to get involved with the GWBC. That certification was the catalyst, or were you involved with GWBC before kind of saying, “I’m going to be certified”?

Monique Honaman: [00:48:11] So, first heard about the value of certification, again, back in 2006 when I first got certified with ISHR. And for me, it was the opportunity to have this network. And they’ve talked about that’s very important. But the educational opportunities, the programming that they put on in terms of sharing how you write a capability statement, how you — I can’t even. Just so many educational opportunities were so important – the networking, the connections, the matchmakers. Deb mentioned the Tuck Program. I was able to go through the Tuck Program, which is sort of a mini MBA that WBENC sponsors. So, it’s just been such a great learning experience over the years.

Lee Kantor: [00:48:56] So, now, when you started the company, and then you’re like, “Okay, I’m going to get certified,” the GWBC, I’m going to go there, I’m going to learn, you become an active member? Like I’m sure you were involved in lots of organizations. Is this one of the ones you look forward to going to?

Monique Honaman: [00:49:13] Absolutely.

Lee Kantor: [00:49:13] Is this one of the ones where you’re like, “You know what, I’m getting a lot of value out of this”?

Monique Honaman: [00:49:16] Yeah. I think-

Lee Kantor: [00:49:17] Because there’s a lot of organizations that-

Monique Honaman: [00:49:18] There’s a ton of organizations. And you’ve got to pick and choose, right?

Lee Kantor: [00:49:20] Right.

Monique Honaman: [00:49:20] Because if all you do is go to organizations, then you’re never working and honoring your business.

Lee Kantor: [00:49:24] You’re not working.

Monique Honaman: [00:49:24] Yeah, and it’s great. Another night of networking, right?

Lee Kantor: [00:49:26] Right. Networking, not working.

Monique Honaman: [00:49:27] Right, exactly.

Lee Kantor: [00:49:27] There’s a difference.

Monique Honaman: [00:49:28] Exactly. No, I actually became very involved. And in fact, Roz became a client. And I helped facilitate several of the board of directors strategic retreats over the years. I helped to moderate several of the panels that GWBC had. So, became very involved in the events, and the awards programs that they have, and the networking programs, and spoke at a couple of events. So, presenting sort of knowledge to others as well. So, I stayed very involved. It’s not worth getting involved — to me, if you’re going to do something, do it all the way, right. And so-

Lee Kantor: [00:50:05] So, that’s good advice for the entrepreneur that just starting out or maybe earlier in their lifecycle cycle.

Monique Honaman: [00:50:10] And people who think, “Oh, I’m going to go get my WBE certification, and then my phone is going to start ringing.”

Lee Kantor: [00:50:14] “And then, I’m done,” right?

Monique Honaman: [00:50:15] “And I’m going to have all of these corporate contracts that are worth gazillions of dollars.” Like, that’s no. That’s not how it works, right. You have to get your certification, and stay involved, and meet, and network, and get involved, and prove your value, and, and, and. It’s not this magic potion.

Lee Kantor: [00:50:29] Now, how long did it take for you until you were seeing some results for, “Hey, this is going to kind of lead me to the Promised Land”?

Monique Honaman: [00:50:35] With ISHR, I would say a couple of years. To Deb’s point, right, there’s that building that relationship, meeting people, various-

Lee Kantor: [00:50:45] And showing you’re going to show up, proving that you’re not — because everybody, the first day, it all looks enthusiastic, and it looks like you can’t tell-

Monique Honaman: [00:50:52] There’s that staying power.

Lee Kantor: [00:50:53] Right.

Monique Honaman: [00:50:53] I, also, think there’s that building relationship, right. Once you sort of know someone, and you recognize a face. The second time you know their name. The third time, you ask how their kids are. The fourth time, you’re going to go vouch for them for someone else. Like there’s that relationship building. So, ISHR, I would say took a little bit. With Contender Brands, and, again, we’re sort of in the midst of the arduous process right now, but have already been reaching out and talked to some folks telling them we’re about to get certified, and I’m already starting to see some upside there. So, that might have much quicker-

Lee Kantor: [00:51:27] Because you’ve already laid a foundation for-

Monique Honaman: [00:51:28] Yeah, that may have a quicker turnaround.

Lee Kantor: [00:51:30] And, again, that’s great advice. It’s not just paying the dues and showing up occasionally. It’s getting involved in committees, and volunteering, and showing, kind of demonstrating your work, ethic, and your value, and your skills in real-life situations, not kind of these hypotheticals.

Monique Honaman: [00:51:47] That’s exactly right.

Roz Lewis: [00:51:48] And so, it’s the same as your degree, right? When you get your college degree, how often did you phone ring?

Lee Kantor: [00:51:55] Right.

Roz Lewis: [00:51:56] Right?

Lee Kantor: [00:51:56] It’s not like you were-

Roz Lewis: [00:51:56] It was sitting up there on the internet, that they called it a sheepskin sitting on the wall, but you had to activate that. You had to go out and do the lead generation in order to, hopefully, get the interviews, in order to get the job. And so, it’s the same thing with growing your business and scaling your business. You really are going to have to put sweat equity into this.

Monique Honaman: [00:52:20] And what you put in relates to what you get out, for sure.

Lee Kantor: [00:52:22] Now, in your career, you work a lot with larger institution, larger enterprises. Have you had a mentor/mentee opportunity there? Did somebody mentor you or have you had the chance to mentor other people?

Monique Honaman: [00:52:34] Both, absolutely. I firmly believe in mentoring and being mentored as well. And I can think back to several people in my corporate career before I even launched out to being an entrepreneur who have been instrumental in my development. And I’ve very definitely tried to pass that forward. And there’s several younger women that I would consider my mentees that I’ve sort of helped and tried to get them moving forward in their careers successfully as well.

Lee Kantor: [00:53:03] Now, what some advice for the younger entrepreneur?

Monique Honaman: [00:53:07] One of my favorite lines is, “What’s the worst that can happen,” right. I think so many people are scared, and they think about something, they think about all the negative things, or all the nos they’re going to hear. And it’s my favorite line, what’s the worst can happen? Someone says no. Okay. Did it hurt? No. All right, move on. Because I don’t think people step out of the nest enough and aren’t willing to take risks as much because they’re scared of the consequences. What’s the worst that can happen?

Lee Kantor: [00:53:30] Yeah, when I’m mentoring younger people, I find that they kind of imagine this gatekeeper that’s preventing them from their dreams when the gatekeeper is them.

Monique Honaman: [00:53:40] Right.

Lee Kantor: [00:53:42] They’re the first gatekeeper. They’re not even trying. They’re afraid to take that risk, and putting themselves out there, and being vulnerable.

Monique Honaman: [00:53:49] Right, right, exactly. I was telling a story before we went live on air here. My daughter just applied for a fall internship at a major corporation, and she looked at the job spec, and she’s not fully qualified. She made some of them but not fully. And so, she’s like, “Hey, Mom, what do you think?” And I immediately said, “Well, you know what I’m going to say.”

Lee Kantor: [00:54:06] Yeah, go for it.

Monique Honaman: [00:54:06] And she said, “What’s the worst that can happen?” I said, “Exactly. You spend a few minutes? What? They can say no.”

Lee Kantor: [00:54:12] Let them say that.

Monique Honaman: [00:54:12] What’s the best that can happen?

Lee Kantor: [00:54:13] Don’t say no first.

Monique Honaman: [00:54:14] Exactly, exactly.

Lee Kantor: [00:54:16] So, now, Roz, is that something you hope? Is there some opportunity to mentor the younger people, to give them kind of some of the skills? Is there kind of a learning opportunity for the kind of pre-entrepreneur, or is this for only people that have already kind of taken the risk, and then became an entrepreneur?

Roz Lewis: [00:54:31] Well, basically, yes, because of the information we are asking for. Yeah, you do need to have all of these documents in place of your business structure. So, we talk about micro enterprises. And then, also, looking at who our corporations are. In those contracts, those, you’ve got to be able to have your business scalable, to be able to manage that.

Lee Kantor: [00:54:56] To deliver that, right?

Roz Lewis: [00:54:56] Right. And, Deb alluded to some of that about strategic sourcing and how they’re ratcheting down their supplier base. But in the supply chain, that’s one thing you want to keep in mind is the fact there’s money in every level. So, it doesn’t matter. You don’t have to be the prime supplier to a major corporation. You can be a supplier of the prime supplier, which actually gives you more visibility. That’s the best kept secret because, now, you have visibility to all of their customers. And you can step out. You can be first tier and second tier at the same time.

Roz Lewis: [00:55:33] So, for the young people, too, to your point of this question, we have, believe it or not, on our organization called Next Gen. And Next Gen is where we do focus on the young woman entrepreneur of helping her and scaling her because one of the things you have to think about generationally, the current successful women-owned business, 9 times out of 10 may have come out of corporate. So, kind of has that foundation, and background, and structure; where today’s young entrepreneur, they’re saying, “I don’t want to work for a corporation. I want to track my own path of success,” yet, they still need some infrastructure. They still need some guiding principles in order for them to be successful because they’re very disruptive, right, which is great. That’s what you want.

Lee Kantor: [00:56:23] And impatient.

Roz Lewis: [00:56:25] And, yes. And impatient. But you know what? Life always teach you patience. So, that’s just how you live.

Monique Honaman: [00:56:33] Whether you want it or not.

Roz Lewis: [00:56:33] Right, whether you want it or not, it’s going to teach you that patience or experience is going to do that. And those nos make sure that educated nos, is what I always say. But we do, we do focus on the Next Gen. As a matter of fact, we’re is coming off the heels of our national conference that we held in Baltimore. And each year, we invite numerous women businesses, young women entrepreneurs out of college. And it’s amazing, some of their products and services. And we have a contest, and they literally present. And once again, it’s amazing. They are mentored, and they’re paired. They’re paired with a woman-owned business, and they’re paired with a corporate member at this conference because, once again, we want to work and give them that infrastructure.

Roz Lewis: [00:57:20] Well, we’re getting ready to do something. Believe it or not, we’re going to throw the dart a little further into the future where we, now, are developing another program, believe it or not, where we’re reaching all the way back to eighth grade.

Lee Kantor: [00:57:35] Wow.

Roz Lewis: [00:57:36] Yes, and identify young entrepreneurs at that stage. And that just doesn’t include young girls. That, also, includes young boys as well. It’s called Planet Mogul. And we launched that last year. And so, that is also — and, again, it is amazing what these young ideas are coming up with for the future, and later, that’s going to affect our lifestyles.

Deb Mackins: [00:58:06] Roz, excuse me. I just wanted to interject this. I attended the national conference. And I believe the contests they had for the elevator pitches for the entrepreneurs, the winner, if I’m not mistaken, was 16.

Lee Kantor: [00:58:22] Wow.

Roz Lewis: [00:58:23] Yes.

Stone Payton: [00:58:24] Wow.

Lee Kantor: [00:58:24] That’s encouraging.

Roz Lewis: [00:58:25] Yes.

Lee Kantor: [00:58:26] It’s one of those, it’s a mindset, I think, more than anything. And Monique, you can probably speak to this. You have to change how you think when you’re a small business person, right? Like you can’t be held back by all these constraints. You have to believe that it’s possible or else, you’re not going to even try.

Monique Honaman: [00:58:43] I think you have to have an insatiable curiosity, a willingness to step outside your comfort zone, a willingness to take massive risks. So, before I became this entrepreneur and launched these companies, I worked for very, very corporate-y America. And when I left and started, ISHR and, now, Contender, I am the CFO, I am the CMO, I am the CIO. I mean, you have to figure it out. And then, to Roz’s point, there’s all these great resources available. You don’t have to do it on your own. And ultimately, you have to figure it out. So, there’s that curiosity that has to happen. And again, there’s that stepping out of the nest and taking that risk. So many people have great product ideas. So many people watch Shark Tank every week, and they’ve got their product, and they fantasize about how they’re going to be on Shark Tank, but they never take that first step of going and designing it. So, there’s that that comfort with risk piece as well.

Lee Kantor: [00:59:34] Right. And then, do you think that that’s something that can be taught at a young age, that you can kind of let the younger people kind of skin their knees and see that they’re okay at the end of the day?

Monique Honaman: [00:59:43] Absolutely, absolutely. I mean, kids take more risks and than anyone, right? They’re the ones that are on the top of the tree. “Look, mom, I’m going to be Superman,” and jump out, right. But I think life sort of tamper some of that as we get older, and there’s really no reason it should.

Lee Kantor: [01:00:00] Right. We’ve got to kind of encourage more of that. Now, how did the authoring come into play? When did you start?

Monique Honaman: [01:00:06] That’s in the midst of all this. That’s in between ISHR and Contender. That came from life sort of happening. And I actually went through a divorce and found that people started calling me asking for advice, people I didn’t know, and one thing led to another. And a fellow WBE person recommended, she’s an author, and she said, “Why don’t you write a book about it?” And I said, “I’ve never written a book in my life.” And so, wrote that book, wrote a second book. Again, it’s taking opportunities when they come up and being curious. I’m now remarried. Justin and I, he’s bonus dad to my two kids. So, a couple of years ago, we thought, “Well, let’s write a children’s book about what it means to be a bonus mom and bonus dad,” step dad and step mom. We’ve never done that before, but we figured out how to go find an illustrator. We figured out how to find a publisher of a children’s book, which is different. So, it’s just curiosity and wondering, “Hey, can we make this happen? We have an idea.”

Lee Kantor: [01:01:05] But it’s also taking action.

Monique Honaman: [01:01:07] Yes.

Lee Kantor: [01:01:07] It’s one thing to be curious and then just say, “Oh, that’ll be nice. Future me will do this.”

Monique Honaman: [01:01:12] No, that’s the point. You’ve got to have that idea and do something with it. Not just think about it but do.

Lee Kantor: [01:01:18] Now, are there examples you’re willing to share of taking one of these shots, and then exploding, and go, “Oh well.” I’m not saying it’s a failure. I’m just saying it’s a learning opportunity to not do that anymore.

Monique Honaman: [01:01:30] Yeah, that’s funny. Years ago, someone asked me in an interview, “Tell me about your biggest failure.” And my response was, “I don’t know that anything is but failure.”

Lee Kantor: [01:01:35] Right. I don’t count things as a failure. What thing I love to say is learning opportunity.

Monique Honaman: [01:01:38] That’s exactly what I said.

Monique Honaman: [01:01:40] Oh, you should always just fail forward, right?

Lee Kantor: [01:01:41] Exactly.

Monique Honaman: [01:01:42] Exactly. There’s been — with Contender Brands, several stops and starts. There’s been — we’ll start down a path and make a big investment of time, and energy, and money, and we’ll realize, “Oh, that’s not going to work.” And so, we’ve got to take a couple of steps back. So, in some respects, is that a failure? Absolutely. We’ve wasted time. We’ve wasted money. On the other hand, we learned so much from that. And when we redirected, and then got back on the right path, the right path is so much better. I can think of the same examples within ISHR Group. Started to sort of — I would call it a side business, another service line, if you will. Started going down that path, realized it wasn’t the right path for us. Was it a failure? We’d invested time and money. Redirected back. So, again, if you look at them as failures, I think it scares you from trying new things in the future. But if you look at them as learning opportunities, and you realize how much you’ve grown from them, then they’re all things to really cultivate. Not that you want to purposefully gotten fail, but that’s where we learn.

Lee Kantor: [01:02:41] But the successes is when you are taking risks. If you’re not taking a risk where there is a chance that it may not work out, it’s going to be hard to move forward.

Monique Honaman: [01:02:50] Exactly.

Lee Kantor: [01:02:51] And it’s like Deb said earlier, like there was a company that battled for years, and years, and years to become this overnight success, right.

Deb Mackins: [01:02:59] Yes.

Lee Kantor: [01:03:01] But the public doesn’t see the struggle and the pain. They just see, “Oh, look at those people who are millionaires now. Yeah, I want to be a millionaire.” Like they don’t see kind of all the leading up to.

Monique Honaman: [01:03:10] Sarah Blakely posted on her LinkedIn page yesterday the iceberg picture. And above the iceberg was wildly successful. Wow. That was easy. And then, underneath the iceberg was the pain, the costs, the sleepless nights, the worry, the investment, all that stuff. And I just thought that was so appropriate and it’s appropriate for this whole conversation. Like people see the top of the iceberg, but they have no idea, all the the work to get certified, the work over the many, many years to build the relationships, the work to make sure that you’re ROI and your value proposition is where it needs to be. It’s all that underneath the iceberg that’s so critical.

Roz Lewis: [01:03:45] And the other thing is just risk. You take on so much risk that — I mean, I think that entrepreneurs are rock stars because you are the CFO, and the CIO, and the president. You wear so many different hats; whereas, the corporate, I know that every two weeks, I get a paycheck, and I have my benefits. So, hats off to you and all of the WBEs that you do it, you’re rock stars, you provide jobs for the country. So, thank you.

Monique Honaman: [01:04:23] Thank you. And thanks to organizations like GWBC and the corporates that value this certification. I mean, it really is — and now we’re making a little love fest, but it really takes all of those relationships to make it work. It really does.

Deb Mackins: [01:04:37] Yes, yes.

Roz Lewis: [01:04:37] But it’s building just a stronger ecosystem of engaging small businesses in to understand and having someone that understands what you’re going through. That’s the other component of this, that you’re not in it alone. You have plenty of company and plenty of stories that can tell. I saw on a marquee, there have been enough mistakes made that you don’t have to create new ones. So, learn from some of these other mistakes that have been made by talking and engaging. And that is something that I would say is an added bonus with our organization is our women businesses share with each other because they mentor each other. They are there for each other. And that’s key and important too. Now, don’t get me wrong. They compete if they’re in the same space, but, overall. but they also partner because there is an opportunity for them to partner as well in order to win contracts.

Lee Kantor: [01:05:39] And then, really successful businesses know that there’s a big pie out there, and it’s a collaboration, and everybody wins. And if you just sit there, be a good person, be helpful, be generous, that’s going to come back.

Roz Lewis: [01:05:51] So, you’re talking about paying it forward, right?

Lee Kantor: [01:05:53] Well, we try to pay it forward and tell these stories because these stories are the important stories, because small and midsize businesses, they’re the heart of most communities. That’s where the work is getting done. They’re the ones hiring the people. The large corporations are super important, but there’s a lot more small organizations out there battling, and making one employee, two employees, and 40 employees, 80 employees, multiple times. There’s only a handful of big, large enterprises. But there’s, what, how many small businesses, you said?

Roz Lewis: [01:06:25] Well-

Lee Kantor: [01:06:26] Hundreds of thousands? Millions?

Roz Lewis: [01:06:27] Right. Well, because 98% of the businesses in this country are small.

Lee Kantor: [01:06:31] Right.

Roz Lewis: [01:06:32] Right. And so, 2%, which is to say that leaves that for the major corporations. However, yes, they rule, in a sense, but they can’t do it without the small. So, we need each other. This is not, you’re able to do this alone, to your point. There is reciprocity that takes place. You’re creating your consumer base. And the way you create your consumer base is by engaging these small businesses in your supply chain.

Lee Kantor: [01:07:01] Right. Small businesses like ISHR and Contender Brands. Monique, if people want to get a hold of you, what are the coordinates?

Monique Honaman: [01:07:08] Absolutely. So, ishrgroup.com for our executive assessment of development programming, and contenderbrands.com if anyone’s looking for conversation starter card games or portable ring cleaner called Ringo.

Lee Kantor: [01:07:20] All right. Well, thank you so much for sharing your story.

Monique Honaman: [01:07:23] Thank you. Absolutely.

Lee Kantor: [01:07:24] And Roz, if somebody wants to get involved with GWBC, what’s the website or any events coming up?

Roz Lewis: [01:07:28] Oh, yes. So, we have a major event that’s coming up on August 26th and 27th. On 26th is our golf tournament. Now, you need to be certified as a woman-owned business to participate in this. And for women out there making this statement, who don’t play golf, this has been the best kept secret that men have been doing for years where they get out there on the golf course and negotiate deals. So, here’s an opportunity for you to spend time with a corporate member or even another WBE who may be looking for a supplier to build a relationship over four or five hours.

Roz Lewis: [01:08:06] But then, if golf is really not your thing, then how about come into our Power Partnering Marketplace on the 27th. That’s going to be held at the Gwinnett Energy Forum. And that is from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. We have a keynote speaker, wonderful keynote speaker. Her name is Shawne Duperon, who’s being sponsored by GM, believe it or not. And here are both of our guests who have backgrounds with them. And she is going to, believe it or not, talk about the apology that you never heard and that you deserve as a leader. And so, that is something that we’re going to be focused on, along with one of the biggest challenges for women businesses, believe it or not, is access to capital. And so, we’re going to be focused on that. And cash is queen. They say cash is king. We say cash is queen. So, we are hoping that you’ll join us on the 27th. You can visit our website at www.gwbc.biz for more information, not only about this event, but other information about our programs, how to get certified, and get engaged with our organization.

Lee Kantor: [01:09:17] Well, Roz, thank you so much for putting this episode together, and we look forward to the continuing conversations to grow your business.

Roz Lewis: [01:09:26] Well, thank you, Lee. I really appreciate it. Can I leave the audience with just one parting thought?

Lee Kantor: [01:09:31] Absolutely.

Roz Lewis: [01:09:31] And that parting thought is, your smile is your logo, your personality is your business card. How you leave others after having an experience with you is going to be your trademark. So, thank you so much and make it an amazing day.

Lee Kantor: [01:09:50] All right. This is Lee Kantor for Stone Payton. We will see you all next time on Greater Women’s Business Council Radio.

About Your Host

Roz-Lewis-GWBCRoz Lewis is President & CEO – Greater Women’s Business Council (GWBC®), a regional partner organization of the Women’s Business Enterprise National Council (WBENC) and a member of the WBENC Board of Directors.

Previous career roles at Delta Air Lines included Flight Attendant, In-Flight Supervisor and Program Manager, Corporate Supplier Diversity.

During her career she has received numerous awards and accolades. Most notable: Atlanta Business Chronicle’s 2018 Diversity & Inclusion award; 2017 inducted into the WBE Hall of Fame by the American Institute of Diversity and Commerce and 2010 – Women Out Front Award from Georgia Tech University.

She has written and been featured in articles on GWBC® and supplier diversity for Forbes Magazine SE, Minority Business Enterprise, The Atlanta Tribune, WE- USA, Minorities and Women in Business magazines. Her quotes are published in The Girls Guide to Building a Million Dollar Business book by Susan Wilson Solovic and Guide Coaching by Ellen M. Dotts, Monique A. Honaman and Stacy L. Sollenberger. Recently, she appeared on Atlanta Business Chronicle’s BIZ on 11Alive, WXIA to talk about the importance of mentoring for women.

In 2010, Lewis was invited to the White House for Council on Women and Girls Entrepreneur Conference for the announcement of the Small Business Administration (SBA) new Women Owned Small Business Rule approved by Congress. In 2014, she was invited to the White House to participate in sessions on small business priorities and the Affordable Care Act.

Roz Lewis received her BS degree from Florida International University, Miami, FL and has the following training/certifications: Certified Purchasing Managers (CPM); Certified Professional in Supplier Diversity (CPSD), Institute for Supply Management (ISM)of Supplier Diversity and Procurement: Diversity Leadership Academy of Atlanta (DLAA), Negotiations, Supply Management Strategies and Analytical Purchasing.

Connect with Roz on LinkedIn.

About GWBC

The Greater Women’s Business Council (GWBC®) is at the forefront of redefining women business enterprises (WBEs). An increasing focus on supplier diversity means major corporations are viewing our WBEs as innovative, flexible and competitive solutions. The number of women-owned businesses is rising to reflect an increasingly diverse consumer base of women making a majority of buying decision for herself, her family and her business. GWBC-Logo

GWBC® has partnered with dozens of major companies who are committed to providing a sustainable foundation through our guiding principles to bring education, training and the standardization of national certification to women businesses in Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina.

Tagged With: Contender Brands, Georgia Power, Georgia Women's Business Council, GWBC, ISHR Group, Supply Chain

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