Historic Richmond Foundation: Our Newest Client

More than half a century ago, Mary Wingfield Scott founded the organization which would go on to save the Church Hill neighborhood surrounding St. John's Church. Historic Richmond Foundation has worked over the past several decades not only to preserve individual buildings and specific urban neighborhoods in the City of Richmond, but to raise public awareness about the rich architectural fabric that makes Richmond unique. I think it's safe to say that Historic Richmond Foundation is one of the most important organizations in Richmond – simply based on its past successes.

This summer, Floricane will be working with the board and staff of Historic Richmond Foundation to identify possible future successes – and to focus in on a mission, vision and set of strategies that will keep the organization healthy and relevant as it continues the business of preserving the unique architectural characteristics that give Richmond its historic identity. It's going to be a fun project for everyone involved.

The Future of Richmond’s Past

It was nice to be behind-the-scenes last night, helping my friend and sometime thought partner Matthew Freeman during his facilitation of the more than 100 people who turned out for the Future of Richmond's Past event at VCU.

In addition to being a solid facilitator with a deep skillset in the areas of community dialogue and diversity issues, Matthew has a solid ace up his sleeve -- a set of "Who Wants To Be A Millionaire" electronic clickers. I don't mean to make them sound trite, because when they are used well they take a large group chit-chat quickly past the surface of almost any conversation.

The clickers allow a facilitator – literally in the moment – sort through group data, slicing and dicing it from a variety of perspectives. What's the value in that, you wonder?

Well, if you have an audience that is mixed – in gender, race, economic class or even job titles (in a large company) – you're able to quickly sort through layers of perspective and share it with the audience almost as soon as they answer a question. For example, during last night's event, Matthew was able to show the audience the precise demographic composition in the room – and compare it against regional numbers. If he had time, he could have sorted the data to a deeper level – showing, for instance, that whites with high incomes in the room were far more interested in hearing positive stories about racial relations in Richmond than lower income whites (or any black participants).

My job last night was to work with Matthew's partner, Tiffany Jana, to sort through close to 300 index cards that captured the ideas from audience members about the types of activities and conversations that they felt would more effectively bring the community together. As we sorted, we sought to identify 7-10 key themes that accurately reflected some consensus across the room – the audience then had opportunities to identify which theme(s) they felt was more important for the region to implement.

This series of conversations have been designed to engage Richmonders in meaningful discussions that bring deeper understanding of the histories that comprise the 150th anniversaries of the Civil War and the end of slavery in the United States.

Create/Refine Your Personal Vision at the Visual Arts Center

I’ll be returning to the Visual Arts Center classroom in June for another full-day workshop that emphasizes creativity from another angle – from a foundation of personal values. “Climbing the Right Mountains: Creating Your Personal Vision” will be held on Saturday, June 26, from 10:00 a.m. until 4:00 p.m.

Below is the workshop description:

“Are you climbing every mountain? Are you even climbing the right mountains? Participants will chart out their own personal mountain ranges in a discussion centered on creating a creative life built around the things that matter most to you. Come prepared to explore how your personal values and beliefs about yourself, others and the world can provide focus and energy for your creative work.”

I test-piloted the program in February, and took a lot of notes for myself that should make the June session even more engaging, challenging and fun for participants. I can’t promise that this workshop can make anyone creative, but I’m sure that it will leave participants thinking differently about specific ways that they can draw lines to more intentionally connect who they are with what they do.

You can register for the workshop at the Visual Arts Center website.

Providing Perspectives on Blogging for Business

Stop. If your organization has a blog or has an interest in starting one, you might want to swing by the InVision Chesterfield eventin mid-May. Uberblogger Kate Hall of Richmondmom.com and I will be speaking at the Greater Richmond Chamber-sponsored event about the payoffs and perils of business blogging. (The free event takes place in the cafeteria at Johnston-Willis Hos pital bright and early the morning of Tuesday, May 18. Details are here.)

Kate and I will be getting together to share and compare notes before the event, but my emphasis will be on three specific areas – strategy, voice and consistency.

If you’re going to blog for your organization – or start a Twitter campaign, or launch a Facebook page – you need to have a strategy. In the olden days, they called that a marketing strategy, or a corporate communications plan. Whatever you do online should drive the broader strategic needs of your organization, which means creating a plan and sticking to it.

Easier said than done.

As important as the strategy is the voice of your blog – the style and tone and content of your writing should reflect the culture and brand of your organization. Sometimes that is driven by the personality of a senior executive. Sometimes voice emerges as a composite of several individuals, or your team’s best sense of the organizational personality.

Your customers and business partners should recognize your organization when it reads your blog.

I mentioned sticking to it. That’s essential. Consistency rules the best blogs. That means posting on a regular schedule, and posting predictable content.

If you’re a fan of Richmondmom.com, you know that Kate will bring more colorful advice to the InVision session. But we’ll also both share great stories about the trials and errors of promoting and celebrating your business through a blog, and we’ll have some solid advice for newcomers to the mix.

You can register for the InVision session at the Greater Richmond Chamber’s website.

SPOTLIGHT ON: Strategic Planning with The James House

The James House Case Study

The James House board of directors was aboutto change dramatically as a number of terms were expiring and a handful of members were about to retire. It was a critical opportunity for the organization to fill these positions in a way that would reflect their objectives for the future.

In order to develop an active, hands-on board integrated with The James House staff they needed to take a good look at the organization and really assess its position in the community. Floricane was brought on to guide that process and to help The James House align its goals in pursuit of a shared vision.

download a PDF of The James Case Study

Visual Arts Center Gets Creative in the Workplace

Thinking differently. Getting out of the box. Sparking innovation. Driving creativity.

No matter how you want to phrase it, there’s a renewed demand within organizations for individuals and teams that can bring new ideas to the table, demonstrate their value to the bottom line and deliver something new to drive business.

The Visual Arts Center of Richmond thinks it has just what Richmond area organizations are looking for – their new Creativity at Work program is designed to provide tools and strategies that drive innovation in the workplace. It happens this fall as a team of business experts and artists come together to lead participants from across Richmond through a three-month program.

The three full-day workshops happen over three months. Each is focused on a different topic:

  • Igniting the Creative Spark is built around Leonardo daVinci’s principles for creativity, and will be facilitated by Harry Vardis of Atlanta-based Creative Focus Inc.
  • Seeing with Unique Vision will encourage participants to think outside of traditional patterns, and explore the value of bringing new perspectives to the table. Chip Ransler of Husk Power Systems will facilitate.
  • The Intersection of Collaboration and Innovation will explore the unspoken rules of creativity an experimentation, and will be facilitated by Steve Van Allen of QVC Network.

The artistic team will be ceramic artist Richard McCord, painter Amie Oliver and sculptor James Chalkey.

Working with the original design team for the Creativity Work program was one of my more challenging volunteer opportunities last fall – sorting through all of the possibilities to give shape to a focused series of creative lessons was no easy task! But the evolving team of educators, artists and businesspeople – led by Jo Kennedy and Amie Joyaux of the Visual Arts Center – landed a solid program framework, and it looks like the Visual Arts Center team has provided plenty of shape, color and texture to our original ideas.

Registration for the three-month program closes on June 1, and the Visual Arts Center is encouraging organizations to consider sending cross-functional teams and high-performing leaders. Tuition is $3,000, and you’re welcome to contact Jo Kennedy, President and CEO of the Visual Arts Center, if you want to discuss the program further. Her number is 804.353.3761.

Virginia Poverty Law Center: Our Newest Client

We’ll be spending some time in May with the Virginia Poverty Law Center, a statewide nonprofit, discussing ways in which their team of attorneys and support staff can more effectively collaborate; brainstorming ways the team can best tackle new initiatives in the year ahead; and discussing their organizational vision. The Virginia Poverty Law Center is the only organization in Virginia that provides ongoing training and support to local legal aid programs, private attorneys and their clients with a focus on the legal rights of Virginia’s lower-income residents.

Richmond Community Hospital: A Chapter in the Conversation

Talking to local physicians over the past several months as part of my work with Bon Secours Richmond Health Systems has been a history lesson – and a lesson in Richmond’s racial legacy, the importance of community, and the deep passion many doctors bring to their work.

Richmond Community Hospital (RCH) opened its doors more than 100 years ago in Jackson Ward, and moved onto Overbrook Road behind Virginia Union University in the 1930s. It wasn’t more than a half-mile from the old Richmond Memorial Hospital. For decades, black patients turned down Overbrook Road while white patients motored up to the doors of Richmond Memorial. Community made a final move in 1980 to its present location on North 28th Street in Church Hill; Bon Secours acquired it in 1995.

While many people know RCH for its important history, I’ve had a meaningful opportunity to explore the hospital’s future. It is so well-positioned to be in service to an almost-forgotten corner of the city – Church Hill and the broader East End (including portions of Henrico County) – that its mission literally is its middle name.

Over the past three months, Juliet Brown and I have been meeting with area physicians – including some of the leading black doctors in Richmond who were so instrumental in Community’s success – to talk about ways in which Bon Secours can broaden and strengthen RCH’s service to the community, and explore ideas on broadening that community. And while the outcomes of our work are for the leadership at RCH to discuss and share, it is exciting that much of what the physician community already sees in RCH mirrors what the hospital’s staff has worked hard to create.

For us, this has been exactly the sort of engagement we love – one which gives the Floricane team space to facilitate meaningful, actionable conversations that position groups of people to create a strong future together.

We can’t wait to see the future Richmond Community Hospital emerge from the heart of Church Hill.