Posts Tagged ‘Bellingham’

Uncovering a business gem in Whatcom County

Friday, August 27th, 2010

Renata Kowalczyk

Editor’s note: The following post comes from Jennifer Shelton, director of the Western Washington University’s Small Business Development Center (SBCD). The SBDC and Whatcom Community College are hosting the ThinkBiz 2010 conference Sept. 9 & 10.

I first met Renata Kowalczyk at a Whatcom Community College instructor event for ThinkBiz 2010. She was lively and intelligent. We connected because she was born in Poland as was my mother.

A few months later, we reconnected at the Temple Bar to discuss her co-working space project. I was so inspired by her story that I wanted to share it.

Living her American dream

Renata came to New York City from Europe to pursue the American dream. She obtained her bachelor’s degree in economics from Baruch College – City University of New York and her master’s degree from Columbia University.

She spent 11 years working for major corporations such as JP Morgan Chase and Merrill Lynch doing process design and re-design as a Six Sigma Black Belt, product and business development, and eCommerce project management and consulting. She was living the dream in a penthouse in Manhattan, engaged in business and volunteer activities, yet she felt empty.

Renata says her “Eat, Pray, Love” moment came at 6:32 a.m. in Penn Station on a cold New York November.

She had missed her train to an important client meeting by one minute and looked anxiously at the big Penn Station train time schedule as it changed rapidly to show status of departing trains.

A vision for her life hit her strongly like a metaphor. Day after day was disappearing at a rapid pace, just like the Penn Station timetable showing the departing trains. “Is this really the life that I want for myself?” she asked.

Then and there she started to write a list of what she really wanted in life:

“I want to live in a small college town, surrounded by mountains and the ocean. I want to live in a community that cares about sustainability and works together to build a strong local economy. I want to live where people know and care about each other.”

She realized her current life did not contain anything on the list. She didn’t know if the place she imagined even existed. Within a week, two random people told her it did, and it was called Bellingham, Washington.

She decided that her path to get there would be through academia, so she left her career and started a doctoral program in human and organizational learning at George Washington University in Washington, D.C. It was during the 2008 elections and Washington, D.C. was alive with possibility of change. The energy was riveting. Once again she was moved to reconsider her path.

She asked herself, “Am I willing to spend the next five to seven years reading and writing about life, or am I ready to step into life now and make an immediate contribution?” After her second semester she left D.C. and came to Bellingham.

Her purpose was clear. She was to take her experience and knowledge from living in a communist country and then living the American dream and put it into making a difference within the Bellingham community and the surrounding areas.

Renata, who expects to return to her doctorate in the future, now teaches classes at Whatcom Community College on how to be a consultant, building community and connection, and customized project management for organizations.

Her recent client, SPIE has this to say about their experience with her, “Thank you again for the great class – I only wish the whole building could have sat in on it!”

She’s also paying it forward, and was recently appointed to the Board of Trustees for the Kulshan Community Land Trust (KCLT). This 11-year-old organization is dedicated to creating healthy communities through permanently affordable homeownership with 94 properties currently in the trust.

Creating co-work spaces

The other gift Renata brings to our community is the creation of co-working spaces. The co-working spaces came out of her need to find people to collaborate with while she worked out of her home and coffee shops as a solo entrepreneur.  “In my corporate life, I took for granted the ability to share ideas with others in the office or ask for assistance.” She started searching for solutions and found out there is an entire industry dedicated to co-working spaces.

Her vision for Bellingham is to take co-working space to the next level. At the highest level, every neighborhood will have a co-working space within a 30-minute walk. With a potential for walkable access to a collaborative office with resources and meeting rooms, people won’t have to drive as much. They would exchange the time spent on the road for an experience of connection, community building and quality of life.

The Bellingham Co-working Community was launched on Meetup and Facebook in late June as a seed for the first co-working space. Renata anticipates the first space to be up and running by the end of this year. Her commitment is that by 2020, all people are connected creating thriving communities.

The work she is doing fits exactly with the list she wrote that fateful day in Penn Station.

Within one week of meeting Renata I have already been motivated to revisit my purpose and set intentions in my life’s work for our community.

I encourage you to meet her at the upcoming ThinkBiz 2010 event where she will be leading a workshop on consulting. It is ideal content for any business service professional, account manager or solo entrepreneur. www.thinkbiznw.com

Partnering with younger generation: Your experience, their energy

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010

I had the opportunity to attend the Bellingham YWCA’s 16th annual leadership breakfast earlier this month. Every year, and despite the recent economic conditions, the organization does an admirable job of filling the ballroom at the Lakeway Inn with friends of the YWCA. This year was no exception, with 325 in attendance from all sectors of the community – business, local government, academia and the community at large.

Keynote speaker for the event was political and communications strategist Cathy Allen, founder of Seattle-based The Connections Group. Her topic: “How to be a 21st Century Suffragette.”

Allen, who has worked to get women elected throughout the world, including the Middle East, knows a thing or two about mobilizing folks to get out and vote, and many of her observations regarding energizing the younger generation to be politically active can apply to business as well.

No longer is mentoring a simple informational interview and a few job leads, notes Allen, but a true partnership. Hire, respect and give young workers a genuine opportunity to make a difference in your organization, she suggests.

Also realize the younger generation doesn’t necessarily want to be tied to a long-term commitment, such as becoming a member of Rotary, but prefers finite time commitments such as working on a specific volunteer project.

I think Allen’s comments ring true. Young people are great at multi-tasking and using technology to their advantage. They may do things differently than older generations, but given the proper expectations, they can get the job done.

I’ve found a lot of personal satisfaction in the mentoring relationships I’ve had with WWU students. Their knowledge and skills benefitted the magazine, and in turn their experiences here helped in their future job searches.

Whether running a business or nonprofit, establishing a partnership with younger generations can bring a new ideas and a burst of energy into your organization.

Bellingham/Whatcom real estate: Behind the numbers

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

Last week Dr. Julie Hansen, an economics professor at Western Washington University, spoke to a group at the Building Industry Association of Whatcom County’s Housing Outlook and Construction Economic seminar. Hansen is the editor of the Whatcom County Real Estate Research Report, which is out this week. She gave an overview of the current housing market at the state level, then zeroed in on specifics to Whatcom County and Bellingham.
“In our region we relied on internal migration for our growth,” Hansen explained, adding that the national recession has stifled the flow of migration from one state to another as people simply can’t afford to move.
Yet, “we’re clearly in a better position than other areas,” Hansen said, noting other regions around the country. But that doesn’t mean we aren’t feeling the pinch of the recession, she admits. Housing recovery is “still very fragile,” and will take a turnaround in high unemployment and foreclosures to really see the market recover.
Perennially listed as overvalued on lists such as the one from IHS Global Insight, which cited 21.4 percent of Bellingham/Whatcom homes overvalued in fourth quarter of 2009, the area is still a lower-cost alternative to Seattle or Vancouver, B.C., Hansen said.
The “why” to this phenomenon could lie in several factors, Hansen said. Possibilities include a city climate “above average in terms of its anti-growth policies” or the impact of a stronger Canadian dollar, among others. A spillover effect from housing prices in California may also be a factor, she said.
Realtor Mike Kent, who attended the seminar, added that it has a lot to do with how buyers perceive the value of the area. “People here are willing to pay more of their income for a higher quality of life,” he said.
Members of the audience brought a number of questions to Hansen on varying topics. Here’s a sampling of the discussion:
• Shifting preferences: Will younger homeowners continue to “drive to qualify” for an affordable home in the county, or will they be wooed by the idea of urban living? While living downtown may appeal to Generation Y, Hansen feels their views may change as their family situation does. “Are people going to want to raise kids in condos?” she asks. One builder in the audience remarked that he is seeing many young families migrate to the Ferndale area.
• On the waterfront: How will Bellingham’s waterfront redevelopment affect us? Hansen notes that now is the prime time for boomers to be buying a second home, not necessarily in the approximately 10 years it will take for development to be realized. “One of my concerns is that we’re not going to recover fast enough to capture that (market).”

Special visitors to the NWBM office

Saturday, May 22nd, 2010

The other afternoon we had some surprise guests come marching down our driveway – an entire family of geese. Mom took the lead, followed by her goslings, and dad brought up the rear. They waddled around the side of the building and out to the pond in back for a dip. These cute critters had the whole staff up out of our seats to watch the show!

On the way to the pond.

The goose family goes for a swim.

Baby birds have arrived!

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

Our resident finch are now the proud parents of six babies. The first hatched yesterday and now the entire brood is hatched. Mama bird is busy gathering food for her little ones. Welcome baby birds!

The little peepers have hatched!

BizProv: Business outside the box

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Zip! Zap! Zoom! And away we go!
This zipping and zooming is the first exercise Galen Emanuele introduces improv newbies to when they venture into one of his BizProv classes at Bellingham’s Upfront Theatre.
“BizProv” is an eight-week class designed to give businesspeople new techniques for communicating and thinking on their feet.
Each hour-long session includes games and exercises to get participants thinking about their interactions with others and what effective communication looks like – all while getting to act a little, well, goofy.
Emanuele is an improv instructor, performer at the UpFront and the theater’s sales and marketing director, a position he started last year.
The sales and marketing position didn’t exist at the theater, so he made a pitch to create one. The job combines his sales and marketing acumen from working at a local business publication and his passion for improv. “This is what I’m good at and what I love,” he said.
The focus on marketing the theater has worked. Bookings for private parties are at an all-time high, and new programs such as BizProv have proven successful. A focus on giving back to the community is another priority. Most recently the Upfront players put on a show to raise funds for Whatcom Middle School after it was gutted by a fire. The effort raised $7,500.
I had the chance to experience BizProv for myself in November when Emanuele hosted a free workshop for folks to check it out. Most of us there weren’t quite sure what we were getting ourselves into, but the embarrassment level was close to nil.
Emanuele says that he seen greater confidence develop within the participants of BizProv’s inaugural class as they learn that in supporting the other guy, “ultimately it makes you look good.”
It’s also about trusting one’s spontaneous side, and learning not to censor our ideas, he notes. “We still have access to the creativity we had as kids.”
Want to check out BizProv for yourself? A free workshop is schedule for Tuesday, Feb. 23, from 10-11 a.m. at the Upfront. Spaces are limited so call to reserve a spot, 360.733.8855.
The new session of BizProv classes start March 2. Classes are an hour every Tuesday for eight weeks from 7:30-8:30 a.m. The cost is $100.

Healthcare reform is a VERY urgent matter

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

Welcome to Northwest Business Monthly magazine Online (nwbmonline.com).  One of the many upgrades on our New website is our ability to share ideas more frequently than in our monthly magazine.

I’m excited about this blogging feature because I know how challenging it is to put the necessary time and focus on your family, health, relationships, business, finances and other priorities in your life.  After that, you don’t have much time to keep up on economic and political issues that impact your life.

I intend to blog regularly regarding issues that I’m passionate about and that I feel are important for all of us to be informed about.

My hope is that nwbmonline.com will become a place for you to visit, not only to gather insights and a fresh perspective, but to provide your own, whether you agree or disagree with mine.  So please log in and join the conversation.

That being said, I’m writing this note with much urgency.  Congress is in the middle of creating an enormous debacle before Christmas.  I wrote a column in the December issue of Northwest Business Monthly regarding what I see as the healthcare reform disaster.  Please pick up a copy of Northwest Business Monthly and read it if you are so inclined.  In the future, if you log in for no fee, you’ll have access to everything in the magazine and online.

I couldn’t be any more concerned about how bad I believe the proposed healthcare reform bill will be for our economy and country.   And as it turns out, most Americans feel the same way.  According to a recent Rasmussen poll, 56% of voters oppose the plan while only 40% approve.  46% strongly oppose it while only 19% strongly favor it.  And it appears that as more people pay attention to the details, the more they oppose it.  Perhaps that’s why the only people who’ve actually seen the senate bill are those who have been personally invited into Harry Reid’s meeting room.  Zero of them were Republicans.  So much for the transparency and bipartisanship we were promised.  Remember when we were told that the debates would be bipartisan and televised on C-SPAN?  Perhaps this is also why the democratic leadership is trying to pass this bill at record speed.  They want a vote before Christmas, that is, before democrats in moderate districts go home on holiday to hear from their constituents.

While the massive taxes from this new bill will start in 2010, the so-called benefits won’t kick in until 2013.  Anyone who pays attention and is not completely blinded by partisan politics understands this bill will have a devastating long-term impact on our economy and particularly on the small businesses that used to make our country the envy of the world.  This bill is particularly bad for seniors, bad for young people, bad for small businesses and absolutely a nightmare for our national economy and country.  PLEASE call or write your legislator (www.sos.wa.gov/elections/elected_officials.aspx) and let them know how you feel.  Also, please log in and post your comments.  Your opinions are very important.

Positively,

Tony Larson, Publisher
Northwest Business Monthly Magazine