1 / 54

Entrepreneurial Communities Activation Process

Funding Provided by. Entrepreneurial Communities Activation Process. What is ECAP ? Entrepreneurial Communities Activation Process. ECAP is a holistic approach to help communities understand unique characteristics, community assets potential opportunities for growth. Helping Nebraska.

powa
Télécharger la présentation

Entrepreneurial Communities Activation Process

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Funding Provided by Entrepreneurial Communities Activation Process

  2. What is ECAP?Entrepreneurial Communities Activation Process • ECAP is a holistic approach to help communities understand • unique characteristics, • community assets • potential opportunities for growth

  3. Helping Nebraska • Help Nebraska communities chart path to becoming more entrepreneurial • Discover current support • Scan the environment • Build consensus • Learn from other Communities • Focus and leverage strengths • Take Community action • Improve climate and effectiveness

  4. Prior to first meeting – subcommittee/executive committee review process…engagement in committee. • Who to involve? Core group of people to provide continuity and support for actions developed

  5. Community Vision • Sense of purpose and identity • Sense of commitment • Respect historical perspective • Communication open and inclusive • Support innovation and opportunities

  6. Vision Statement • Describes where the community will be in key quality of life areas 10, 20 or 30 years into the future • Reflects commonly held values • Guides strategic planning processes for all

  7. Culture of Change • Open to new ideas and opinions • Willingness to change • Value created vision and innovation • Understand - strategic plan is ever-changing • Commitment to the future

  8. Building Community Base • Multiple peaks of community change • Individuals must be ready and make changes at their own time/speed before the community as a whole can make the change

  9. 21st Century Challenges Leadership in communities to address challenges Characteristics/attributes of leaders Begin to determine your leadership style Explore personal values and strengths This Session…

  10. Community activity without partnering and common vision

  11. Working together Purpose Vision

  12. Basic Infrastructure • Public sewer and water systems • Medical and emergency services • Transportation and Distribution mechanisms; • Public services such as post office, government, schools, libraries, etc; • Housing • Telecommunications

  13. Infrastructure • What does an entrepreneurial venture need to expand in your community? • What infrastructure does your community have to recruit entrepreneurs • What might you need to add as infrastructure to help entrepreneurs become successful

  14. Who is Connected? • In Nebraska ... • 76% of households have broadband (anything faster than a dial-up connection) • 5% of households use a dial-up Internet connection • In the United States • 66% of adults have a broadband connection at home (2010 Pew study) • 5% of adults use a dial-up Internet connection

  15. What Nebraskans told us about future use? • 86% exchanging health information • 80% online banking • 79% tele-medicine applications • 78% distance learning opportunities • 78% online government services • 76% contributing to economic growth in community

  16. Networking • Networking • Economic Development Entities • Chamber of Commerce • Local Community Foundations • Banking & Finance Support • Business Incubation Services • Individual Mentoring, Coaching and Champions • Youth Entrepreneurship Education • Adult Entrepreneurship Education & networks

  17. Entrepreneurial Support Systems • Support entrepreneurs of all types • Create a comprehensive support system • Access to capital • Access to support structures • Entrepreneurial Culture • Favorable Public Policy

  18. Education/Workforce IQ • Be creative in finding capital to foster innovation and entrepreneurship • Educational Opportunities • Entrepreneurship education • Workshop education • Business transfer/transition education

  19. Scan – Schools; Workforce; & Businesses • Take an unbiased look at your existing workforce and education. • A. Schools – • What’s your school producing? How many go to college, trade school, GEDs, #s, how many drop out, quality, etc. • B. Existing Workforce- • What if any ongoing training occurs, is there a natural feeder program e.g. welders on farm and the go to be a certified welders. Does this just happen or is it coordinated and deliberate? Are new workers coming with training or raw? What’s missing, what’s working, last 20 people hired in your area.

  20. What place comes to mind?

  21. What place comes to mind?

  22. What place comes to mind?

  23. What place comes to mind?

  24. What place comes to mind?

  25. What place comes to mind?

  26. What place comes to mind?

  27. What place comes to mind?

  28. What place comes to mind?

  29. Process of adding value and meaning to the public realm through community-based revitalization projects rooted in local values, history, culture, and natural environment. What do we mean by “Sense of Place” Placemaking

  30. Through the Public Realm… Create great places Enhance community identity Increase connections between people and place and people and people If Time is Money, Then Time Results in Money (and other Resources) Assumptions “One cannot build the physical infrastructure of a neighborhood without also building the social infrastructure.”-Arthur Blum Placemaking on a Budget: Improving Small Towns, Neighborhoods, and Downtowns Without spending a Lot of Money – Al Zelinka and Susan Jackson Harden

  31. Six Thinking Hats – Parallel Thinking Process Entrepreneurial Communities Activation Process

  32. Next Steps • Here is what UNL can do • Facilitate a deeper conversation • Assist with creation of action plans • Provide educational programs/workshops • Will be involved if Community does their part

  33. Process of Parallel Thinking... “Six Hats” - An Alternative to Argument Thinking the SAME way – SAME direction - at the SAME time. All can be creative and innovative Flow of the meeting smoother Saves time Reduce tension and possible conflict Eliminate “side conversations” Adapted from Edward De Bono’s SIX THINKING HATS

  34. Get It Done Guiding the Work Dividing the Work Action Plans Committees Information & Data Facts & Figures Neutral & Objective Facts that can be Checked & Believed Missing Information & Where To Source It Questions? Cautions Careful  Dangers Problems Faults  Concerns (Logical Reasons Must Be Given) THE CENTRAL TOPIC Feelings & Intuition Emotions Or Hunches “At This Point” Likes  Dislikes  Fears Loves  Hates. The Power of “Why” Positive  Optimistic Opportunity The “Good In It” (Logical Reasons Must Be Given) Known & PotentialBenefits Does it fit community values? • Creative Thinking • Possibilities  Alternatives • New Ideas  New Concepts • Overcome Black Hat Problems & Reinforce Yellow Hat Values

  35. Information & Data • Facts & Figures that can be checked and believed • Neutral & Objective • Known and unknown • Missing Information? • Where do get the information we need

  36. InspirationBoost.com

  37. Outside In - Conventional Inside Out = Remarkable 3 1 2 2 1 3 Adapted from Start With Whyby Simon Sinekhttp://www.startwithwhy.com/About.aspx?n=1http://joelrunyon.com/two3/the-power-of-why

  38. Start With Why Does what you want to do fit community values? Positive - Optimistic - Hope - Opportunity Betterment - The “Good In It” Known & PotentialBenefits (Logical Reasons Must Be Given)

  39. What Questions Do We Have? Cautions - Careful – Dangers Problems -Faults – Concerns - Negatives Logical Reasons Must Be Given

  40. Creative Thinking Possibilities  Alternatives New Ideas  New Concepts Overcome “Black Gift” Problems – Reinforce “Yellow Gift” Values

  41. Getting It Done • Guiding the Work • Action Plans • Dividing the Work • Committees • Listen to ideas • Keep manageable size • – may not be able to include everyone

  42. Sharing The Story Updates and Continued Communication • Tell your family, friends & neighbors • Face-to-face updates to organizations • Newspaper stories • Facebook & other technology • Other

More Related