New Project: Building a Community of Support

With one of the most complex acronyms ever -- MRSDVCC -- the Metro Richmond Sexual Assault and Domestic Violence Coordinating Committee's core purpose is to create a safe networking and collaborative space for people working in the sexual assault and domestic violence arena. The all-volunteer group has been around for a number of years, but recently experienced some drift in focus. We spent an afternoon with a handful of members last fall, and are reconvening for a pro bono afternoon of facilitation with more members in January. We hope to help the members establish a more sustainable foundation for their important community building work.

New Project: VCU Office of Health Innovation

We're excited to be spending time with the team at VCU's Office of Health Innovation again this winter, facilitating a team session designed to revisit and build on the strategic plan we helped the group develop in 2012. While the group's core organizing focus was to help the university move through health reform implementation successfully, they really live at the intersection of community engagement, data analytics and collaborative partnerships.

New Project: Setting Priorities with SAGE

One offshoot of our strategic planning work with the Gay Community Center of Richmond is a bit of pro bono strategizing with another organization serving Richmond's lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community -- Richmond's chapter of Services & Advocacy for GLBT Elders (SAGE). SAGE is the nation's largest and oldest organization focused on improving the lives of older LGBT adults. The Richmond chapter of SAGE operates out of the Gay Community Center of Richmond, but has its own unique partnerships with area organizations. During an evening of facilitated discussion, we'll be helping a small team from SAGE focus on opportunities to focus the chapter's work in 2014.

New Project: Insights for Teams

We're crazy believers in the benefits of increased self-awareness on teams, especially when the team in question takes the time to process their newfound self-awareness, and explore ways to leverage to increase effectiveness. Which is why we're excited to be spending two days in January with a small, self-managed communications team from John Tyler Community College using Insights Discovery® to help guide the team through it's transition to self-management.

Building Role Clarity in My Own Backyard

In my experience within organizations, we talk about role clarity like it’s a no-brainer – as if the vaguely written job descriptions that we haven’t seen since we started working make sense. Or as if the needs of the organization, or the roles that keep its engine running, never change.

I like to imagine that role clarity – who does which pieces of the organization’s work – is particularly challenging for small businesses like Floricane. After all, it wasn’t too long ago that I was the sales manager, marketing director, accountant and bookkeeper, janitor, administrative assistant, project coordinator and lead facilitator for the business.

One of the messiest parts of building a team came from a combination of my own inability to let go of work and my team’s reluctance to take it away from me. You might see how those two complimented each other in the worst of ways.

Over the past few weeks, I’ve been meeting individually and as a group with our team. We that time clarifying our roles – both as we run the business, and as we work to meet the needs of each of our clients. Not in a vacuum, and not as an exercise on paper, but built around the way we have been working together for several months now.

I’ve been letting go. They’ve been stepping up. And our clients are getting better results.

Fewer balls are dropped. There’s less milling about, wondering who’s on first. Our engagement is higher, and my stress is lower.

We’ll regroup every several weeks in 2014 to make adjustments, and keep building clarity.

Engagement Takes Time

I’ve recently worked very hard to put some action behind my words –having in-depth meetings with each member of the Floricane team. I’ve asked them for specific feedback to help me better support their success. I’ve challenged them to engage their teammates, and stretch themselves. I’ve asked them to challenge me more.

In our planning conversations for 2014, what I’ve really done is tried – through my actions – to let each member of the Floricane team know how much they matter to our business, and that their contributions are not invisible.

It wasn’t easy carving 12 hours out of my calendar during a very busy December, but it has been important. I’ve limped away from these conversations, mindful that the feedback offered is for my benefit. I’ve danced away, inspired by the commitment of our small team. And I’ve walked away with a real sense of confidence about the coming year.

Engagement takes time. The payoff is powerful.

Floricane’s Seven Goals for 2014

After five years of sprinting, the team at Floricane is settling in for the long haul. In the coming year, our small team is focused on seven simple goals – our version of a short-term strategic plan.

In the past, I went into a cave for a few days at the end of the year – or my living room at three in the morning – and tried to write an essay on all of the loose ends and unresolved opportunities that Floricane needed to address in the year ahead. I’d emerge, wave it around at my team for a few days and life would get busy.

We warn our clients about people like me.

Floricane’s 2014 plan emerged earlier this year – in September – over lunch with Caroline, our events and marketing manager. An hour-long discussion about social media turned into a small list of ideas about what was important to the business. We came back to the office and used our trademark Sharpies® to capture the ideas on a large sheet of paper.

Our plan evolved over several team meetings until we all agreed that our four goals were the right goals for Floricane. In our year-end meetings, we’ve each mapped out our own individual game plan to help move each goal forward in 2014.

Here’s a look at our business goals for the year:

  • Our marketing has the right energy: We’re proud of our brand, and its energy, and the way people tell us it is received, and perceived, in the community. In 2014, we’re rebuilding almost everything from the ground up – our website, our social media presence, our printed materials. It needs to be true to who Floricane is becoming.
     
  • We’re partnering and connecting for impact: As we grow and get busier, it gets harder to whimsically throw together random, cool events with random, cool organizations that we love. But we don’t want to stop. Whether it’s the small business unconference, Tilted, or an amazing leadership conference, we want to do great things with great people.
     
  • Our events are amazing: When people take time out of their busy schedules to learn with us, they should have remarkable experiences. The communications, the look and the feel, the content and the learning – it all has to resonate, and astound.
     
  • We all do business development: Floricane is now a business of five talented people. Each of us have different communities, and different gifts. Letting the world see Floricane through all 10 of our eyes only helps our business.
     
  • We work to make our best work better: We do good work. We can do better work. By strengthening our collaboration, our processes and our tool kits, we make it more likely that our clients will get great results.
     
  • We maintain and strengthen relationships: The heart of our business? We care about the people and the organizations we touch, and who touch us. Staying connected, and connecting without expectation of return, matters deeply to us.
     
  • We are experts: Sharpening our saws, and strengthening our ability to deliver quality results, can’t be left to chance. Each member of our team will be spending 10% of their time learning in 2014.

We’re excited about the year ahead. Having a plan to help us be better at what we do adds to that excitement. 

Best 13 of 2013

Looking back on a year is always fun, especially when you discover tons of forgotten moments that made up the year in question. From that perspective,2013 was filled with clients, projects and moments that have blurred quite a bit in the rearview mirror – some better forgotten, and many others worth remembering.

But 2013 also had some solid standout moments for the team at Floricane, and we’ve picked 13 that we just happen to really love. They’re not in any particular order, so enjoy!

  • Tilted: The small business unconference we organized with a dozen other business owners last February was not only fun, it had a real impact. More than 140 people attended the full-day event, and it was such a hit we’re bringing it back later this winter!
  • TEDxGraceStreet: On a whim, we decided to partner with Wren Lanier, Lauren Boynton and a few other local creative stars to host a urban-centered TED event. It was part of a global TEDxCity program, and we think the 13 speakers who tackled Richmond-specific topics for a crowd of 150 people at the Richmond Times-Dispatch building were all pure genius. It was a day thick with inspiration.
  • Summer of Self-Discovery: Our four-part, public workshop series on leadership and self-awareness was a fun romp – and we were delighted to have more than 75 people join us as we dove into concepts like emotional intelligence and situational leadership. We’re doing a winter series in January, and will be back in 2014 with another summer program.
  • Sales Effectiveness Pilot: Theran and Debra pulled together a very cool pilot program designed to leverage the Insights Discovery self-awareness tool to boost sales effectiveness. A dozen-plus employees from One South Realty and Dodson Properties Management agreed to be guinea pigs in the pilot, and provided us with great feedback.
  • Library of Virginia Feedback: Speaking of feedback, inviting a small group from the Library of Virginia to sit down and pepper us with very candid, and useful, feedback about our long-term engagement with their organization was huge for our team. You can read more about it in a future blog post, but suffice to say – we got an earful!
  • The Daily Planet: It’s hard to pick a favorite client, but it’s also hard to beat the day we spent with the entire 70+ person team from The Daily Planet. Huge energy, strong relationships and a massive sense of purpose characterized this team of providers who serve Richmond’s homeless community. We left energized and uplifted just by being in the same room as these guys.
  • First Chair with CarMax: Our collaborative leadership project with the Richmond Symphony is always a blast, and sometimes everything just clicks when Maestro Steven Smith, the musicians, 60+ employees from a local company and I take to the stage. That’s what happened with CarMax last fall. We’re hoping to do five First Chair events in 2014 with the Symphony.
  • Coaching Takes Off: When Debra’s coaching calendar goes from zero to one hundred in a matter of weeks, it’s a good thing. The amount of executive, leadership, personal and group coaching our team did in 2013 was nothing short of astounding. Clients like Bon Secours, the Library of Virginia, Richmond Association of Realtors and Draper Aden Associates took full advantage of our professional coaches. (Our coaches are staggering into 2014, ready for more!)
  • Caroline Goes Full-Time (and Theran Joins the Team): Caroline Moyer didn’t miss a beat when she transitioned from part-time to full-time – our first full-time employee, by the way – in May. And that was about the time Theran Fisher joined our team to provide project support and facilitation on a project (and then another, and another, and then many more). We’re so lucky to have them both on our team.
  • We Got a Bookkeeper: It sounds silly, right? Having Terri Andrus stop by our offices every two weeks to reconcile our books has been completely liberating.
  • Two weeks of unplugged vacation: My family may have been the biggest beneficiary in 2013, as I took two weeks of unplugged time away from the business to be with them. Next year, the goal is four weeks!
  • Gelati Celesti x2: In addition to working with the Gelati Celesti team as they worked to identify what makes the world’s greatest ice cream employees – and how to treat them like gold! – we parked their truck outside of our offices in July for an ice cream social. With Floricane ice cream. Yum!
  • 1E: Our collaborative home in the Richmond Times-Dispatch building is almost completely full, and we’re exploring growth plans with the RTD team for 2014. With more than a dozen creatives from five companies working in the space, it has become a lively, fun home. We can’t wait to see how things shake out in 1E in 2014.