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Public Spaces & Other “Hidden” Assets
for Economic and Community
Development
January 9, 2014 – Tipton, IN
Scott Hutcheson, Ph.D.
Purdue Extension
Purdue Center for Regional Development
Goals for Tonight
• Learn about our community‟s “hidden” economic and
community development assets
• Explore the idea of “public spaces” as one of those
hidden assets
• Understand how other communities are developing
asset-based economic growth strategies
• Consider how you could better leverage your unique
assets in Tipton County
Our Grandparents Built the Indiana
Economy on Our Assets
• Rich soils
• Waterways: Lake
Michigan and the Ohio
River
• Crossroads of America
What were our community’s greatest economic
assets 100 years ago?
Our Grandchildren Will Inherit an
Economy Based on a New Set of Assets
• Talent & Brainpower
• Innovation & Entrepreneurship
• New Narratives
• Quality, Connected Places
• New Ways to Collaborate
Five Asset Networks
New Businesses
Small Businesses
Growing Businesses
K-12
Workforce Training
Higher Education
Capacity for Innovation
Storytellers
Social Media
Heritage
Folklore
Public Spaces
Infrastructure
Broadband
Incubators
Social Capital
Partnerships w Strategic Alliances w New Models
Focusing on Assets: A Glass Half Full
1. The Talent of Our People
2. Our Capacity for Innovation
3. Our Fastest Growing Companies
4. Our Most Vibrant Industries
5. Our Skills for Telling New Stories
6. Our Ability to Connect People &
Ideas
7. Our Capacity to Collaborate
The Talent of Our People:
Occupational Clusters
• An “Occupational Cluster” is a group of
related occupations
• The Purdue Center for Regional
Development has defined 21 basic
Occupational Clusters
• Many communities have a higher
concentration than average of one or
more clusters
• Occupational Clusters can be part of an
economic development strategy
Occupational Cluster: Ideas in Action
Bring together Information Technology
professionals to foster new ideas for high
tech start-ups
Occupational Clusters:
The Talent of Our People
LQ = Location Quotient. The US LQ for each cluster is set at 1.00.
Anything above that means there is a greater concentration than the
overall US. For example, an LQ of 1.80 means that a cluster had
80% more jobs than the US.
Cluster Tipton Indiana
Agribusiness, Food Processing & Technology 4.90 1.27
Skilled Production Workers 1.54 1.25
Engineering and Related Sciences 1.38 0.93
2012 Data
Agribusiness & Food Technology
• Farm, ranch, and other
agricultural managers
• Farmers and ranchers
• Purchasing agents and buyers,
farm products
• Food scientists and
technologists
• Agricultural and food science
technicians
• Biological technicians
• Chemical technicians
• Farm and home management
advisors
• Veterinarians
• Pesticide handlers, sprayers,
and applicators, vegetation
• Supervisors, farming, fishing,
and forestry workers
• Agricultural inspectors
• Animal breeders
• Log graders and scalers
• Water and liquid waste
treatment plant and system
operators
Occupational Clusters:
Questions to Consider
• Did a look at Occupational Clusters give us
any new insights?
• What explanation might there be for our
occupational strengths?
• Do we need to find out more about our
Occupational Cluster assets?
The Talent of Our People:
Our Capacity for Innovation
• Capacity for Innovation can provide
valuable insights
• Innovation is defined as the new
products, services, processes, and
business models that get translated into
business growth
• The Purdue Center for Regional
Development has created an
Innovation Index
• The index is a simple way to look at
lots of different factors related to
innovation.
Innovation Index: Ideas in Action
Think of a high ratio of “small firms” as an
asset and launch a business growth
program
Our Capacity for Innovation
Tipton
Our Capacity for Innovation
Innovation Index:
Questions to Consider
• Did a look at Innovation Index give us any
new insights?
• Which of the index factors that showed good
capacity did you find most interesting?
• Do we need to find out more about our
innovation assets?
Our Fastest Growing Companies:
Second-Stage Firms
• Most economic growth comes from
2nd-Stage firms
– Privately-held firms
– 10-99 employees
– $750K-10 million in annual revenue
– Dealing with growth issues instead of
survival issues
– Intend and capacity to keep growing
What Do Second-Stage
Businesses Need?
• Help in re-articulating and realigning with their
Core Business Strategy
• Market Intelligence to answer important
questions
• Leadership & management team
development to makes sure people are
slotted right
Second-Stage Firms: Ideas in Action
Littleton, Colorado
• Littleton, CO developed and began to
execute the strategy in 1989
• Focused on “wealth” creation not “job”
creation
• Eliminated all incentives and tax breaks
for business recruitment
• Since 1989, more than doubled the
number of jobs from 15,000 to 35,000
• Sales tax revenue tripled from $6.8
million to $19.6 million
Second Stage Firms in Our Community
Establishments Jobs
Size of Firm Indiana Tipton Indiana Tipton
Self-Employed 29% 29.4% 3.7% 5.1%
Stage 1 (1-9) 59.3% 59.8% 23.2% 22.9%
Stage 2 (10-99) 10.5% 9.9% 35.2% 31.2%
Stage 3 (100-499) .1% .7% 22.5% 13.2%
Stage 4 (500+) 0.1% 0.1% 15.5% 27.5%
Second-Stage Firms:
Questions to Consider
• What insights do we gain by considering the
role of second-stage companies in our local
economy?
• What do we currently offer our second-stage
firms?
– Companies to Watch
– Participation in the Indiana Business Growth
Network
Vibrant Industries: Clusters
Industry Clusters can be
nurtured and supported
– Articulated
– Activated
– Accelerated
– Accessing
Industry Clusters: Ideas in Action
Appalachian Ohio’s Salsa Cluster
• 20-plus boutique salsa businesses in the region
• $700,000 annual sales among new businesses
• Trains over 200 existing and emerging entrepreneurs
annually
• 350 gallons and 445 lbs of fresh and preserved foods
delivered to the region‟s food pantries each year
Industry Clusters: Our Community’s
Most Vibrant Industries
Cluster Tipton Indiana
Glass & Ceramics 10.29 2.65
Agribusiness, Food Processing & Technology 7.08 1.19
Transportation Equipment Manufacturing 5.51 2.41
Machinery Manufacturing 2.92 1.17
Forest & Wood Products 2.38 1.47
Number of Establishments (data for 2012)
Glass & Ceramics
The glass and ceramics cluster includes industries that
transform non-metallic minerals, such as sand, gravel,
stone, and clay, into products for immediate or final
consumption. The cluster also includes industries that
pertain to metal products through heat treating, etching,
coating, and the like. Establishments within this cluster
often use materials extracted from mining operations.
Industry Clusters:
Questions to Consider
• Did a look at Industry Clusters give us any
new insights?
• What explanation might there be for our
industry strengths?
• Do we need to find out more about our
Industry Cluster assets?
New Narratives: Telling Stories:
• Every community has a “narrative”
or a story that is being created.
• We need to pay attention to the
story we are telling ourselves and
the one those outside our
community are telling about us.
• We have the power to shape these
narratives.
Lots of Ways to Create Stories…
New Narratives: Ideas in Action
L.A.’s Sunset Strip
• The Sunset Strip in LA
was in decline
• The ownership of the
famed “Roxy” nightclub
began using Twitter
• Others followed, a new
story emerged, and the
neighborhood has been
transformed
New Narratives: What’s the Buzz
“Don’t go the the KFC in Tipton, Indiana. I’ve been
waiting in line for 8 years”
Why do my parents in *&^% Tipton, Indiana. I
*&^%# hate this *&@#$ little town.
New Narratives: What’s the Buzz
Quality Connected Places:
Infrastructure
Traditional
• Roads & Interstates
• Rail
• Water
• Electricity
• Water & Sewer
Emerging
• Public Spaces
• Sidewalks
• Trails
• Bike Lanes
• Third Places
• Broadband
• WiFi
Public Spaces: Creating Economic,
Social, and Environmental Value
Public space is all around us, a vital part of everyday urban life: the
streets we pass through on the way to school or work, the places
where children play, or where we encounter nature and wildlife; the
local parks in which we enjoy sports, walk the dog and sit at
lunchtime; or simply somewhere quiet to get away for a moment
from the bustle of a busy daily life. In other words, public space is
our open-air living room, our outdoor leisure centre.
The Value of Public Spaces: How High Quality Parks & Public
Spaces Create Economic, Social, & Environmental Value, Bartlett
School of Planning, University College London.
Public Spaces: Ideas in Action
Three Oaks, MI
• Renovated dilapidated downtown
theatre to show classic films –
Opened in 1996 with a showing of
Citizen Kane.
• Opened art gallery in the lobby
• Now a „fine arts” theatre
• Averages over 1,000 customers
per week
• Community now hosts film festivals
Public Spaces: Economic Value
• Job creation through public and private investment for
construction, administration, programs, maintenance, etc.
• Jobs generated through indirect spending of visitors
• Increased property values for nearby residents and
businesses
• Decreased health care expenditures from healthier lifestyle
• Non-use values such as conservation
• Natural system values such as surface water retention, carbon
sequestration, etc.
Fausold and Lilieholm, (1999).
Public Spaces: Environmental Value
One tree, over a 50-year lifespan…
• Generates $31,250 worth of oxygen
• Provides $62,000 worth of air pollution control
• Recycles $37,500 worth of water
• Controls $31,250 worth of soil erosion
Sherer, P. (2006).
Public Spaces: Social Value
“When properly designed and cared for, they [public spaces] bring
communities together, provide meeting places and foster social ties
of a kind that have been disappearing in many urban
areas”(Carmona, Freeman, Rose, and Woolley, 2004).
Public Spaces build social capital. Shopper at a farmers market will
have ten times the number of conversations than they would likely
have at the local supermarket (Halweil, 2004).
Increasing nearby greenspace by 10% was found to decrease a
person‟s health complaints in an amount equivalent to a five-year
reduction in that person‟s age (Sherer, 2006).
Public Spaces
Public Spaces
72.4
Public Spaces
83.2
Our Capacity for Collaboration
Collaboration Continuum
Turf
Trust
TIME
Sharing
Resources
Sharing
Information
Mutual
Awareness
Co-Execution
Co-Creation
Acknowledgment Exploration Cooperation Collaboration Innovation
You have to walk before you run
Adapted from Collaboration Continuum from ACT for Youth
The Real Power Is in…
Combining Assets in New and
Innovative Ways – Linking and
Leveraging
Linking & Leveraging: Success Story
Medora, Indiana
+ + =
Linking & Leveraging: Success Story
+ + =
Small Successes Add Up
No Single Big Strategy Many Modest Strategies
Our Community’s Hidden Assets
Strong Occupational Clusters
Capacity for Innovation
Second Stage Firms
Strong Industry Clusters
Positive Buzz
Great Public Spaces
Capacity to Collaborate
Purdue University: Your Partner in
Economic and Community Development
Contact
Scott Hutcheson, Ph.D.
765-479-7704 (mobile)
hutcheson@purdue.edu
More Information
• Occupational Clusters - http://www.statsamerica.org/innovation/data.html
• Innovation Index - http://www.statsamerica.org/innovation/data.html
• Second Stage Firms - http://www.youreconomy.org/
• Economic Gardening - http://www.littletongov.org/bia/economicgardening/
• Industry Clusters - http://www.statsamerica.org/innovation/data.html
• ACEnet (Salsa Cluster) - http://www.acenetworks.org/
• Twitter Search - http://twitter.com/#!/search-advanced
• Broadband Data - http://www.broadband.gov/
• National Maple Syrup Festival – http://www.nationalmaplesyrupfestival.com
• Purdue Guitar Summer Camp - http://metalsound.tech.purdue.edu/default.aspx
• Ball State Community Assets - http://asset.cberdata.org/
References
Carmona, M., Freeman, J., Rose, S., and Woolley, H. (2004). The value of public
space: How high quality parks and public spaces create economic, social and
environmental value. Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment.
Retrieved from http://www.worldparksday.com/files/FileUpload/files/resources/the-
value-of-public-space.pdf
Fausold, C. and Lilieholm, R. (1999).“The economic value of open space: A review
and synthesis.” Environmental Management. 23(3): 307-320.
Halweil, B. (2004.) Eat here: Hometown pleasures in a global supermarket. W. W.
Norton & Co.: New York, NY.
Sherer, P. (2006). The Benefits of Parks: Why America needs more city parks and
open space. Trust for Public Land. Retrieved from
http://lda.ucdavis.edu/LDA180.181L/parks_for_people_Jul2005.pdf

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Uncovering Tipton County's Hidden Assets for Economic and Community Development

  • 1. Public Spaces & Other “Hidden” Assets for Economic and Community Development January 9, 2014 – Tipton, IN Scott Hutcheson, Ph.D. Purdue Extension Purdue Center for Regional Development
  • 2. Goals for Tonight • Learn about our community‟s “hidden” economic and community development assets • Explore the idea of “public spaces” as one of those hidden assets • Understand how other communities are developing asset-based economic growth strategies • Consider how you could better leverage your unique assets in Tipton County
  • 3. Our Grandparents Built the Indiana Economy on Our Assets • Rich soils • Waterways: Lake Michigan and the Ohio River • Crossroads of America What were our community’s greatest economic assets 100 years ago?
  • 4. Our Grandchildren Will Inherit an Economy Based on a New Set of Assets • Talent & Brainpower • Innovation & Entrepreneurship • New Narratives • Quality, Connected Places • New Ways to Collaborate
  • 5. Five Asset Networks New Businesses Small Businesses Growing Businesses K-12 Workforce Training Higher Education Capacity for Innovation Storytellers Social Media Heritage Folklore Public Spaces Infrastructure Broadband Incubators Social Capital Partnerships w Strategic Alliances w New Models
  • 6. Focusing on Assets: A Glass Half Full 1. The Talent of Our People 2. Our Capacity for Innovation 3. Our Fastest Growing Companies 4. Our Most Vibrant Industries 5. Our Skills for Telling New Stories 6. Our Ability to Connect People & Ideas 7. Our Capacity to Collaborate
  • 7. The Talent of Our People: Occupational Clusters • An “Occupational Cluster” is a group of related occupations • The Purdue Center for Regional Development has defined 21 basic Occupational Clusters • Many communities have a higher concentration than average of one or more clusters • Occupational Clusters can be part of an economic development strategy
  • 8. Occupational Cluster: Ideas in Action Bring together Information Technology professionals to foster new ideas for high tech start-ups
  • 9. Occupational Clusters: The Talent of Our People LQ = Location Quotient. The US LQ for each cluster is set at 1.00. Anything above that means there is a greater concentration than the overall US. For example, an LQ of 1.80 means that a cluster had 80% more jobs than the US. Cluster Tipton Indiana Agribusiness, Food Processing & Technology 4.90 1.27 Skilled Production Workers 1.54 1.25 Engineering and Related Sciences 1.38 0.93 2012 Data
  • 10. Agribusiness & Food Technology • Farm, ranch, and other agricultural managers • Farmers and ranchers • Purchasing agents and buyers, farm products • Food scientists and technologists • Agricultural and food science technicians • Biological technicians • Chemical technicians • Farm and home management advisors • Veterinarians • Pesticide handlers, sprayers, and applicators, vegetation • Supervisors, farming, fishing, and forestry workers • Agricultural inspectors • Animal breeders • Log graders and scalers • Water and liquid waste treatment plant and system operators
  • 11. Occupational Clusters: Questions to Consider • Did a look at Occupational Clusters give us any new insights? • What explanation might there be for our occupational strengths? • Do we need to find out more about our Occupational Cluster assets?
  • 12. The Talent of Our People: Our Capacity for Innovation • Capacity for Innovation can provide valuable insights • Innovation is defined as the new products, services, processes, and business models that get translated into business growth • The Purdue Center for Regional Development has created an Innovation Index • The index is a simple way to look at lots of different factors related to innovation.
  • 13. Innovation Index: Ideas in Action Think of a high ratio of “small firms” as an asset and launch a business growth program
  • 14. Our Capacity for Innovation Tipton
  • 15. Our Capacity for Innovation
  • 16. Innovation Index: Questions to Consider • Did a look at Innovation Index give us any new insights? • Which of the index factors that showed good capacity did you find most interesting? • Do we need to find out more about our innovation assets?
  • 17. Our Fastest Growing Companies: Second-Stage Firms • Most economic growth comes from 2nd-Stage firms – Privately-held firms – 10-99 employees – $750K-10 million in annual revenue – Dealing with growth issues instead of survival issues – Intend and capacity to keep growing
  • 18. What Do Second-Stage Businesses Need? • Help in re-articulating and realigning with their Core Business Strategy • Market Intelligence to answer important questions • Leadership & management team development to makes sure people are slotted right
  • 19. Second-Stage Firms: Ideas in Action Littleton, Colorado • Littleton, CO developed and began to execute the strategy in 1989 • Focused on “wealth” creation not “job” creation • Eliminated all incentives and tax breaks for business recruitment • Since 1989, more than doubled the number of jobs from 15,000 to 35,000 • Sales tax revenue tripled from $6.8 million to $19.6 million
  • 20. Second Stage Firms in Our Community Establishments Jobs Size of Firm Indiana Tipton Indiana Tipton Self-Employed 29% 29.4% 3.7% 5.1% Stage 1 (1-9) 59.3% 59.8% 23.2% 22.9% Stage 2 (10-99) 10.5% 9.9% 35.2% 31.2% Stage 3 (100-499) .1% .7% 22.5% 13.2% Stage 4 (500+) 0.1% 0.1% 15.5% 27.5%
  • 21. Second-Stage Firms: Questions to Consider • What insights do we gain by considering the role of second-stage companies in our local economy? • What do we currently offer our second-stage firms? – Companies to Watch – Participation in the Indiana Business Growth Network
  • 22. Vibrant Industries: Clusters Industry Clusters can be nurtured and supported – Articulated – Activated – Accelerated – Accessing
  • 23. Industry Clusters: Ideas in Action Appalachian Ohio’s Salsa Cluster • 20-plus boutique salsa businesses in the region • $700,000 annual sales among new businesses • Trains over 200 existing and emerging entrepreneurs annually • 350 gallons and 445 lbs of fresh and preserved foods delivered to the region‟s food pantries each year
  • 24. Industry Clusters: Our Community’s Most Vibrant Industries Cluster Tipton Indiana Glass & Ceramics 10.29 2.65 Agribusiness, Food Processing & Technology 7.08 1.19 Transportation Equipment Manufacturing 5.51 2.41 Machinery Manufacturing 2.92 1.17 Forest & Wood Products 2.38 1.47 Number of Establishments (data for 2012)
  • 25. Glass & Ceramics The glass and ceramics cluster includes industries that transform non-metallic minerals, such as sand, gravel, stone, and clay, into products for immediate or final consumption. The cluster also includes industries that pertain to metal products through heat treating, etching, coating, and the like. Establishments within this cluster often use materials extracted from mining operations.
  • 26. Industry Clusters: Questions to Consider • Did a look at Industry Clusters give us any new insights? • What explanation might there be for our industry strengths? • Do we need to find out more about our Industry Cluster assets?
  • 27. New Narratives: Telling Stories: • Every community has a “narrative” or a story that is being created. • We need to pay attention to the story we are telling ourselves and the one those outside our community are telling about us. • We have the power to shape these narratives.
  • 28. Lots of Ways to Create Stories…
  • 29. New Narratives: Ideas in Action L.A.’s Sunset Strip • The Sunset Strip in LA was in decline • The ownership of the famed “Roxy” nightclub began using Twitter • Others followed, a new story emerged, and the neighborhood has been transformed
  • 30. New Narratives: What’s the Buzz “Don’t go the the KFC in Tipton, Indiana. I’ve been waiting in line for 8 years” Why do my parents in *&^% Tipton, Indiana. I *&^%# hate this *&@#$ little town.
  • 32.
  • 33.
  • 34.
  • 35.
  • 36. Quality Connected Places: Infrastructure Traditional • Roads & Interstates • Rail • Water • Electricity • Water & Sewer Emerging • Public Spaces • Sidewalks • Trails • Bike Lanes • Third Places • Broadband • WiFi
  • 37. Public Spaces: Creating Economic, Social, and Environmental Value Public space is all around us, a vital part of everyday urban life: the streets we pass through on the way to school or work, the places where children play, or where we encounter nature and wildlife; the local parks in which we enjoy sports, walk the dog and sit at lunchtime; or simply somewhere quiet to get away for a moment from the bustle of a busy daily life. In other words, public space is our open-air living room, our outdoor leisure centre. The Value of Public Spaces: How High Quality Parks & Public Spaces Create Economic, Social, & Environmental Value, Bartlett School of Planning, University College London.
  • 38. Public Spaces: Ideas in Action Three Oaks, MI • Renovated dilapidated downtown theatre to show classic films – Opened in 1996 with a showing of Citizen Kane. • Opened art gallery in the lobby • Now a „fine arts” theatre • Averages over 1,000 customers per week • Community now hosts film festivals
  • 39. Public Spaces: Economic Value • Job creation through public and private investment for construction, administration, programs, maintenance, etc. • Jobs generated through indirect spending of visitors • Increased property values for nearby residents and businesses • Decreased health care expenditures from healthier lifestyle • Non-use values such as conservation • Natural system values such as surface water retention, carbon sequestration, etc. Fausold and Lilieholm, (1999).
  • 40. Public Spaces: Environmental Value One tree, over a 50-year lifespan… • Generates $31,250 worth of oxygen • Provides $62,000 worth of air pollution control • Recycles $37,500 worth of water • Controls $31,250 worth of soil erosion Sherer, P. (2006).
  • 41. Public Spaces: Social Value “When properly designed and cared for, they [public spaces] bring communities together, provide meeting places and foster social ties of a kind that have been disappearing in many urban areas”(Carmona, Freeman, Rose, and Woolley, 2004). Public Spaces build social capital. Shopper at a farmers market will have ten times the number of conversations than they would likely have at the local supermarket (Halweil, 2004). Increasing nearby greenspace by 10% was found to decrease a person‟s health complaints in an amount equivalent to a five-year reduction in that person‟s age (Sherer, 2006).
  • 45. Our Capacity for Collaboration
  • 46. Collaboration Continuum Turf Trust TIME Sharing Resources Sharing Information Mutual Awareness Co-Execution Co-Creation Acknowledgment Exploration Cooperation Collaboration Innovation You have to walk before you run Adapted from Collaboration Continuum from ACT for Youth
  • 47. The Real Power Is in… Combining Assets in New and Innovative Ways – Linking and Leveraging
  • 48. Linking & Leveraging: Success Story Medora, Indiana + + =
  • 49. Linking & Leveraging: Success Story + + =
  • 50. Small Successes Add Up No Single Big Strategy Many Modest Strategies
  • 51. Our Community’s Hidden Assets Strong Occupational Clusters Capacity for Innovation Second Stage Firms Strong Industry Clusters Positive Buzz Great Public Spaces Capacity to Collaborate
  • 52. Purdue University: Your Partner in Economic and Community Development
  • 53. Contact Scott Hutcheson, Ph.D. 765-479-7704 (mobile) hutcheson@purdue.edu
  • 54. More Information • Occupational Clusters - http://www.statsamerica.org/innovation/data.html • Innovation Index - http://www.statsamerica.org/innovation/data.html • Second Stage Firms - http://www.youreconomy.org/ • Economic Gardening - http://www.littletongov.org/bia/economicgardening/ • Industry Clusters - http://www.statsamerica.org/innovation/data.html • ACEnet (Salsa Cluster) - http://www.acenetworks.org/ • Twitter Search - http://twitter.com/#!/search-advanced • Broadband Data - http://www.broadband.gov/ • National Maple Syrup Festival – http://www.nationalmaplesyrupfestival.com • Purdue Guitar Summer Camp - http://metalsound.tech.purdue.edu/default.aspx • Ball State Community Assets - http://asset.cberdata.org/
  • 55. References Carmona, M., Freeman, J., Rose, S., and Woolley, H. (2004). The value of public space: How high quality parks and public spaces create economic, social and environmental value. Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment. Retrieved from http://www.worldparksday.com/files/FileUpload/files/resources/the- value-of-public-space.pdf Fausold, C. and Lilieholm, R. (1999).“The economic value of open space: A review and synthesis.” Environmental Management. 23(3): 307-320. Halweil, B. (2004.) Eat here: Hometown pleasures in a global supermarket. W. W. Norton & Co.: New York, NY. Sherer, P. (2006). The Benefits of Parks: Why America needs more city parks and open space. Trust for Public Land. Retrieved from http://lda.ucdavis.edu/LDA180.181L/parks_for_people_Jul2005.pdf

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. In most communities, if you ask leaders to identify their significant and unique economic and community development “assets” they will might come up with things like the available square footage of industrial space or maybe their cheap labor, land, and utilizes, or even low taxes. These may certainly be significant but are they unique? Do they set one community apart from another? There is another set of assets that are not usually so apparent and some of these “hidden” assets are what I would like to talk about today.
  2. In our time together today I hope we will all learn more about our community’s assets for economic and community development, learn from examples of other communities, and consider how we might be able to leverage the unique assets in this community to help grow our economy and enhance the quality of life for all the people who live here.
  3. Indiana’s economic history is really a story of how our previous generations took advantage of our great state’s assets. Like much of the Ohio Valley we are blessed to have some of the best soils in the world and agriculture helped make Indiana what it is today. We were able to easily export our grains because of waterway assets like Lake Michigan and the Ohio River. Soon our shipping infrastructure created the opportunity for the production and movement of the steel that would help build much of America during the industrial boom. A few decades later Indiana found itself at the crossroads of the federal highway system opening up even more opportunities.If you think back to the history of our own community, what were some of the economic assets that have helped us grow over the last two centuries?
  4. As we look toward the future we envision a very different set of opportunities for the next generation. Most of the members of this next generation will not be working on the farm, in steel mills, or even in auto parts plants. Although these are still vibrant industries in Indiana, gains in productivity mean that we just don’t need the same number of people in these jobs that we once did. The formula for economic growth has not changed. We still have to build on our assets but a new set of assets has come into play. The successful communities of tomorrow will be the ones that focus on (1) building world-class brainpower, (2) translating that brainpower into innovation and entrepreneurship, (3) creating and telling new stories about our communities, (4) making our communities quality connected places where new ideas can flourish, and (5) finding new ways to collaborate with one another.
  5. Think of these five asset areas as networks – groups of people, organizations, and institutions working together to grow their economy and ensure a great quality of life for their all their residents. A network approach is needed because other organizational structures don’t really work very well in communities. We don’t have a true community hierarchy. Nobody’s in charge and nobody can really tell anybody else what to do. Who’s “in charge” of brainpower, for instance, the school superintendent? The school board? No, it takes a network of people all working toward a common goal to build world-class talent.
  6. Focusing on assets is a glass-half-full approach. It does not really do us much good to spend too much time thinking about what we DO NOT have. Investing our energies in understanding our unique assets and how we can leverage them, on the other hand, is time well spent. There are lots of assets we need to consider as we think about economic and community development but let’s start the conversation by looking at a seven assets that you may not have even considered in the past. We will begin with an asset that helps identify some of the talent that resides in our workforce and our capacity for innovation. Next we’ll take a look at our fastest growing businesses and our most vibrant industries. We’ll see if we can identify the stories that are emerging about our community and examine the new infrastructure necessary to move information and ideas. Last we’ll consider our capacity to invest in our civic economy, the networks and collaborations that support and sustain our private-sector economy.
  7. One of the ways we can measure the Talent of Our People is to look at something called “Occupation Clusters.” These can be a “hidden” asset because not all of these workers may work for the businesses you might expect. For instance, a community might find that they have an Information Technology-related occupational cluster without having any businesses that would be considered IT firms. This could occur because these IT works are embedded in other industries like the hospital, the schools, the IT staff at a manufacturing firm.The Purdue Center for Regional Development, along with Indiana University and other partners, has developed a set of tools that helps us look at 21 different basic Occupational Clusters to see within which ones, if any, we have a high concentration. Having this information can be useful in developing strategies to leverage these occupational assets to grow our economy.
  8. Here is an example of how one community used occupational clusters to develop a strategy to to encourage new business formation. This small community had no IT firms but after looking at occupational cluster data they learned that they did have some IT workers working in non-IT businesses. Upon learning this information, the Chamber of Commerce decided to start hosting “Tech Tuesday” lunch programs to which the community’s IT professionals were invited. The Chamber provide lunch, brought in speakers, and created the opportunity for these people to get to know one another. As relationships fostered, some new ideas were born. Two people realized they share a love for fantasy baseball and decided to create a new venture to develop a fantasy baseball smartphone app. They worked nights and weekends for several months and launched their product on the iTunes App Store. Sales grew steadily and they decide to create an LLC to develop additional apps. The are keeping their day jobs for now but hired three people to do the programming work. They also leased and renovated an office space downtown. Now the community really DOES have an IT company.
  9. So let’s take a look at some Occupational Data for our own community. Here are the six Occupational Clusters in our community with the highest Location Quotient (LQ). This means that our community has a higher concentration of these occupations than does the US. For instance our LQ for Arts, Entertainment, Publishing, and Broadcasting is 39% higher than the US. We can also see the LQ for the state and the region. We have 960 people in this cluster, which represents a greater concentration than the US, the state of Indiana, and our region. Our LQ for Agribusiness is also very high with 653 workers in this cluster, a little higher than the state LQ but significantly higher than the region.
  10. For each of these clusters we can get more detailed information. Here, for instance, are the specific occupations that make up the Arts, Entertainment, Publishing, & Broadcasting Cluster.
  11. Looking at this sort of data should cause us to consider some questions: (1) Does this information give us any new insights or reveal something we didn’t know before (2) What are the possible explanations for why we have these strong concentrations? (3) Do we need to find out more information? Your mind may already be jumping to possible strategic initiatives that could help build on these assets but hold onto those ideas until we consider the other assets.
  12. Another asset related to the talent of our people is the capacity to translate talent into innovations: new products, services, processes, and business models that find their way into the marketplace in the form of new ventures and in the growth of existing businesses. The Purdue Center for Regional Development, along with Indiana University and other partners, has created an Innovation Index that is made up of 23 different factors that contribute to innovation. These factors include some items you might expect like patents but other data as well.
  13. Something called “economic churn” is one of the factors in the Innovation Index and here is a story about one urban county that ranked high on economic churn and they decided to look at that as an asset. Economic churn is the rate at which new business are born and then die. That may not sound like much of an “asset” but actually a high-rate of churn is usually a good sign, when accompanied by other factors. Even places like Silicon Valley have high rates of churn. Leaders in this community interpreted churn to mean that their entrepreneurs and small business owners don’t give up easily. When one business fails they jump right into a new one. They decided to pilot a program to add two additional Small Business Development Center Business Counselors and locate them in community centers. It was not long before entrepreneurship workshops were taking place and local business owners were getting much-needed technical assistance. Before long, more businesses began to make it beyond the start-up phase and some of the other factors of the Innovation Index began to rise.
  14. Now here’s a look at the overall Innovation Index shows that our community is not quite as innovative as the nation, the state, or our region but since we are focusing on our assets, we can take a deeper look at those 23 sub factors and see where our innovation strengths are.
  15. Looking at the sub factors, our community is doing well on many of them. Here are some of those. Look, for instance at the chart in the lower left hand corner. This is the Average Net Internal Migration from 2000-2009. In a time when population growth has been flat in the US and actually declined in the State of Indiana, it has grown pretty well in our region, but grown significantly in our community. This indicates that our community is attractive to job seekers and families, a key ingredient for innovation to occur. The chart in the lower right shows the Change in Average Proprietors’ Income from 1997-2008. This means that our community is a great place to be a business owner, with income growing nearly twice the rate as the region and over twice the rate of the State.
  16. Looking at this sort of data should cause us to consider some questions: (1) Does this information give us any new insights or reveal something we didn’t know before (2) Which of the strong factors jumped out at you? (3) Do we need to find out more information? Be thinking about what you learned regarding our community’s capacity for innovation and we will discuss it soon.
  17. Another asset related to innovation and entrepreneurship can be found in our community’s 2nd Stage Companies. We’ve just recently learned that these companies contribute significantly to our economic growth and they are typically not on our radar screen when it comes to economic development programs that can assist them. To understand what help they need to grow, we need to better understand some of the distinctive characteristics of these 2nd-Stage Companies. We say that they are in their “second” stage because they are beyond their initial, or start-up stage. For some the first stage may have been just recently but others have been in this second stage for a long time. Some of what these businesses have in common is that they are typically privately held, have fewer than 100 employees but more than ten, have annual revenues of $750,000 to $10 million. They want to grow, have the capacity to grow, and are dealing with growth-related issues.
  18. There are three key areas in which many 2nd stage companies need some assistance and a growing number of communities and economic development organizations are launching programs to provide them with these things. Most of these businesses started out with a niche business rather than a commodity business. In other words, they provide a service or product that is of high value and being the lowest-cost provider of their product or service was not as important to their success as was having a niche. They also have a need for good market intelligence, information that is hard to find, expensive to get, or both. Larger firms usually have in-house market research functions but these second stage firms are just not big enough to have that capacity.They also often are dealing with issues related to their top management team. Sometimes executives have been taken on roles for which they might not be well suited.
  19. Littleton, CO had been providing these services to their Second Stage Companies for over 20 years and use the term “Economic Gardening” to describe their work. The success in Littleton has been so significant that they no longer do any industrial recruiting, focusing all their attention on helping their existing businesses grow. As you can see they have experienced significant growth that outpaces both the state of Colorado as well as their own region.
  20. Here is some data on the businesses in our community broken down into the four stages. You will notice that in terms of percentages of all businesses, 2nd Stage firms make up just 6.6% of our total number of businesses but 34.5% of total employment and nearly 40 percent of our jobs come from Stage 1 companies. In many communities the Stage 3 and 4 firms get most of the attention yet these smaller firms are really what keeps our local economy vibrant. Some communities are turning to programs like economic gardening to help these companies grow even faster.
  21. What are we doing in our community to help our 2nd Stage companies? Do we have any programs in place? There are two statewide programs that are specifically designed for 2nd Stage Companies. One is the “Companies to Watch” program which is an annual nomination and recognition of Indiana’s 2nd Stage companies. Businesses that are designated as a “Company to Watch” get significant visibility that can lead to the possibilities of new capital and new customers. Another is the Indiana Business Growth Network which works with local economic development organizations to bring economic gardening and other business-growth resources to their community’s 2nd Stage companies.
  22. Another hidden asset to consider are industry clusters, or collections of business that are similar or that have something else in common like being part of the same supply chain. Some industry clusters occur in a birds of a feather sort of way. You can see this at our highway interchanges. There is usually not just one fast-food restaurant but several. They flock together because they share similar needs – interstate access, a steady group of customers needing something fast and inexpensive to eat.Other clusters are based on a anchor asset and then nurtured along by supportive legislation, a pipeline of skilled workers from universities, and other supportive factors. The Indiana life sciences cluster is an example of that. Building on the presence of the Eli Lilly Company, BioCrossroads was formed to guide investment in and support for the life sciences cluster in Indiana.
  23. Another interesting example of an industry cluster can be found in Appalachian Ohio where a significant concentration of salsa producers has emerged. In this very distressed area, economic developers looked to the area’s tomato farmers to see how they could build on that asset. Today the region is home to more than 20 boutique salsa makers.
  24. So lets look at some Industry Cluster data for our own community. Here are the ten clusters with the highest Location Quotient (LQ). Location Quotient is the same measurement we used to look at occupation clusters. This means that our community has a higher concentration of firms in these clusters than does the US. For instance our LQ for Electronic Equipment, Appliance, and Component Manufacturing is almost four times higher than the US and over 400% larger than the Indianapolis region. We can also see the LQ for the state and the region.
  25. For each of these clusters we can get more detailed information. Here, for instance, is additional information about the types of businesses that make up the Electronic Equipment, Appliance, & Component Manufacturing cluster.
  26. Looking at this sort of data should cause us to consider some questions: (1) Does this information give us any new insights or reveal something we didn’t know before (2) What are the possible explanations for why we have these strong concentrations? (3) Do we need to find out more information? Your mind may already be jumping to possible strategic initiatives that could help build on these assets but hold onto those ideas until we consider the other assets.
  27. The next asset area to consider is New Narratives. Every community has an existing narrative, or a story or set of stories that affect how people who live there feel about their community and how outsiders think about the community. These stories emerge and evolve over time. They can be positive or they can be negative. Some community leaders are starting to pay attention to this narrative and working hard to shape it.
  28. It was not too long ago that creating stories about communities was left to the professionals: TV, newspapers, radio, public relations firms. Social media has changed all that. Progressive economic developers and other community leaders are using all of these tools, both the traditional ones and the new ones, to shape the narrative about their communities. Perhaps, even more powerful, however, is the narrative that is being created organically through Facebook status updates by the people in our community, by the Tweets of those passing through, and by the YouTube videos being posted by our young people and others. All of this “chatter” adds up to a story that is shaping who we perceive ourselves to be and how others outside our community see us as well.
  29. Nic Adler was born in 1973, the same year his dad opened The Roxy, it soon became one of THE places to be in LA nightlife. Other nightclubs and concert venues saw success on the Sunset Strip as well. A few years ago, however, the neighborhood had declined and so had the number of people showing up at The Roxy and the other places on the strip. When Nic took over for his dad he began using social media tools like Twitter to communicate directly with a small group of Roxy devotees. As the number of Twitter followers grew so did the crowd at the club. Then Nic did something very counter-intuitive. A couple of the other clubs had also begun using Twitter and Nic sent a message to his followers inviting them to also become followers of his competitors. Almost immediately, the Twitter buzz began and soon all the clubs were busy and the neighborhood began to be transformed. Nic’s strategy worked because he gained even more followers and now has over 75,000. His club is now the anchor of a growing “cluster” of vibrant nightclubs in West Hollywood.
  30. We may or may not have something as “Twitter worthy” as an historic nightclub in our community but people out there are having conversations about what’s going on locally. Here are a few Tweets from June 2011 along with a couple of photographs that a couple of people included. What story is this telling?There is also a way new way to get a check on the attitudes association with our community by searching Twitter for the name of your community PLUS the little smile and frown emoticons, those sideways faces people make using colons or semicolons for the eyes and either the right parentheses for a smile and the left or a frown. I am happy to report that there were not frowning tweets and several smiling tweets.Of course this is just a one-time snapshot of a few people who happen to be Twitter users but companies are starting to pay attention to this sort of data to monitor the buzz about their products. Maybe more communities should be paying attention as well.
  31. We may or may not have something as “Twitter worthy” as an historic nightclub in our community but people out there are having conversations about what’s going on locally. Here are a few Tweets from June 2011 along with a couple of photographs that a couple of people included. What story is this telling?There is also a way new way to get a check on the attitudes association with our community by searching Twitter for the name of your community PLUS the little smile and frown emoticons, those sideways faces people make using colons or semicolons for the eyes and either the right parentheses for a smile and the left or a frown. I am happy to report that there were not frowning tweets and several smiling tweets.Of course this is just a one-time snapshot of a few people who happen to be Twitter users but companies are starting to pay attention to this sort of data to monitor the buzz about their products. Maybe more communities should be paying attention as well.
  32. Connections have always been important in community and economic development and the public sector has done a great job of building our connections infrastructure. Rural electrifications connected farmers and other rural residents to the grid. The railroad helped tame the wild west. The interstate highway system allowed people and goods to move faster from one community to another. Today communities extend water, sewer, and other services to spur economic development. This sort of infrastructure remains important for economic and community development but another type of infrastructure is becoming just as important. Sidewalks, trails, and bike lanes are becoming less of an amenity and more of a an expectation for an increasing portion of the US population. Civic spaces and Third places are vital for people to connect socially. Civic spaces are where the community can come together to have crucial conversations and “third places” is a term coined by urban sociologist Ray Olenburg to describe the places besides home and work where we can connect socially. A local coffee shop can serve as a great third place. Another vital aspect of the quality connected community is broadband and wifi. Today’s economy is as much about moving ideas and information as it is moving goods and services and communities without accessible broadband has a sever disadvantage.
  33. Several recent studies have demonstrated that broadband has an impact on both population and economic growth and specific industry sectors are even more dependent on it. It can be concluded that competition is good. The more providers the greater the penetration and business with high-speed internet make more money.
  34. Regional leaders in Northeastern Pennsylvania came up with a strategy for economic growth that would not be possible without the capacity for moving large amounts of data instantaneously. In the aftermath of 9/11 this rural region positioned themselves as “Wall Street West,” a place for data backup services for New York City’s financial sector. They found that they had the unique advantage of being far enough away from NYC so that a human or natural disaster hitting New York would not likely also hit them yet close enough for people to get back and forth from the two areas. They invested in fiber optic infrastructure for not just their region but to connect them to NYC.
  35. So how does our community stack up in terms of our broadband assets? Actually pretty well. Our number of available providers is high and remember that has a positive affect on both population and economic growth. Our speed of connection is near the top third of the state but not as high as it could be.
  36. So how does our community stack up in terms of our broadband assets? Actually pretty well. Our number of available providers is high and remember that has a positive affect on both population and economic growth. Our speed of connection is near the top third of the state but not as high as it could be.
  37. So how does our community stack up in terms of our broadband assets? Actually pretty well. Our number of available providers is high and remember that has a positive affect on both population and economic growth. Our speed of connection is near the top third of the state but not as high as it could be.
  38. The last of the five asset networks has to do with the ways in which the organizations and institutions work together to get things done and to support the private-sector economy. Most of us are familiar with terms like cooperation and collaboration but may not realize that there are a number or ways in which these organizational relationships can be created and that collectively they make up the “civic economy” that supports economic and community development.
  39. One way to think about the various types of civic infrastructure is in a continuum. At the most basic level organizations can begin by becoming mutually aware of one another. For instance, in a community there could be two churches that both have programs to address hunger issues and it is not until two members meet one another and learn that they each have a program. That is mutual awareness. When representatives from each church begin to exchange details about the history and focus of their programs, this sharing of information starts the exploration process.The next step in their relationship may be in sharing some resources. Perhaps one of the programs has run out of space to store nonperishable foods and the other has excess space. Cooperation occurs when they begin sharing the space and sharing in the cost of the rent for the space.Collaboration occurs when they begin to co-execute together. For instance, both programs had been thinking about having some sort of awareness event and they decide to jointly host a “hunger summit” in the community.The highest level on this continuum is co-creation. This is when, by virtue of getting to know one another, two organizations create something brand new that neither could have conceived of and executed without the other. In our example co-creation might occur after the two organizations have had a history together. Perhaps one of the programs focuses primarily on school-age children and the other on feeding senior citizens. Together they create a brand new intergenerational program.Back when the two individuals first met it would have been impossible to come up with that new idea, agree on roles, and then pull it off successfully. It took some time to make sure turf issues didn’t sideswipe the organization and for a sense of trust to develop. A vibrant civic economy has solid civic infrastructure with high levels of trust and innovation.
  40. So far today we’ve discussed seven assets for economic and community development. Merely identifying assets, however, is just the first step. The real power comes in combining assets in new and innovative ways. We call this linking and leveraging. One of these asset, in and of itself has value been but when it gets combined with another valuable asset something entirely new can be created that has exponentially more value than either of the single assets alone. Like on the Periodic Table of Elements combining the right amounts of hydrogen and oxygen creates water.
  41. Here is an example of how assets were leveraged in the tiny town of Medora, Indiana. A small group of people got together in Medora to talk about how they could grow their economy. Among the small group was (1) someone who operated a small foundation for children with craniofacial anomalies, (2) someone who had recently visited the National Cornbread Festival in Tennessee, and (4) a maple syrup farmer. Through their conversations this eclectic group of assets began to take shape into something brand new. Today Medora, IN is home to the not just a maple syrup festival but the National Maple Syrup Festival, attracting thousands of visitors and backed financially by national sponsors like King Arthur Flour. Proceeds from the event support the foundation, and the syrup farmer now sells his syrup to high-end chefs and consumers in Chicago and beyond. None of this could have occurred without linking and leveraging their unique assets.
  42. Here is another link-and-leverage success story. A group of community leaders in North Central Indiana were discussing the need to get more high school students interested in manufacturing careers. The region’s manufacturers had good jobs available that were going unfilled. One person at the meeting made a passing comment that most of the young people she knew were only interested in playing Guitar Hero. That triggered someone else to think about a Purdue professor who runs a sort of fantasy camp for adult guitar enthusiasts, helping them make their own guitar. The group then begin to think of kids who like to play Guitar Hero as an asset and then linked these three assets together. Purdue now runs a high school summer camp where students make their own guitar and learn about advanced manufacturing.
  43. Neither a festival nor a summer guitar camp will transform a local economy but the days of one big transformative event are probably behind us. Plant relocations or expansions bringing in 2,000 or more jobs is not the reality for most communities. Economic and Community Development occurs slowly, over time, and transformation occurs because of the cumulative effect of lots of modest successes.
  44. So here is a summary of some of our community’s unique hidden assets we’ve talked about today. They are unique because no other community has this exact some portfolio. They also represent just a drop in the bucket of unique assets in this community. Data only gets the conversation started. Some of the most valuable assets for economic and community development come from the skills, knowledge, and experiences of the people in the community, especially people like you. Many communities do asset mapping to help identify a rich inventory of assets and then get creative about how to link and leverage those assets in new and creative ways.We could spend more time identifying other community assets but lets concentrate for our last few minutes together about the ones we talked about today. What creative ideas have come to mind that could leverage these assets? Is there something our community could do that we have not yet tried? Let’s hear some of your ideas.
  45. Purdue Extension’s Economic and Community Development program is a network of local educators, campus specialists, and other partners who work in these areas of (1) Brainpower and 21st Century Talent (2) Innovation and Entrepreneurship, (3) New Narratives, (4) Quality Connected Places, and (5) Civic Collaboration. We are available to talk with you about helping you look further into your unique set of assets and help you develop launch link-and-leverage strategies to move your community forward. We can also connect you with lots of resources on campus.
  46. More information about the many resources we’ve discussed today can be found online
  47. More information about the many resources we’ve discussed today can be found online
  48. More information about the many resources we’ve discussed today can be found online