Posts Tagged ‘20090309’

Save the date for the inaugural Florida Boomer Lifestyle Conference, May 12

Monday, March 16th, 2009

America’s 78 million baby boomers – people born between 1946 and 1964 – constitute our largest, most affluent, and best educated consumer segment. They are in their peak earning years and spend $2.3 trillion annually on consumer goods and services, a whopping $400 billion more than any demographic group, according to the 2006 Bureau of Labor Statistics Consumer Expenditure Study. Surprisingly, they are underserved by many marketers, who covet the 18-49 year olds, and the mature marketers, whose approaches are better suited for boomers’ parents.

The inaugural Florida Boomer Lifestyle Conference, scheduled for May 12 at the Tampa Convention Center, is designed to help businesses understand the global and national trends shaping the boomer economy and the opportunities to be found within it. Trends to be explored include care giving, wellness, personal and career reinvention, social entrepreneurship, and financing longevity. Companies that are achieving success in marketing to boomers, such as Tampa’s Ott Lite , will share best practices. The conference will also explore how Florida’s business communities can gain competitive advantage by developing a boomer strategy.

Read more from St. Pete Times’ business columnist Bob Trigaux’s article on the conference here.

The Tipping Point

Sunday, March 15th, 2009

From CEO’s for Cities
As we consider the shovel ready road and bridge projects of the stimulus package, consider this important analysis by our colleague Joe Cortright of the impact modest declines in auto travel have on congestion. And how that could save us big, big money:

Last year, the United States made more progress in reducing traffic congestion than any other time in history. New data show that in 2008 the amount of traffic congestion in the nation’s cities declined by 30 percent, and that congestion was lower in every hour of every day in 2008 than it had been the year previously. How did we make these big gains? Not by adding more highway lanes or transit — the physical infrastructure barely changed — we did it with a very modest decline in car travel. On urban interstate highways, total vehicle miles traveled in the U.S. declined by about 3 percent in 2008…

Read More

Mayor Iorio: “Getting on the Right Track”

Sunday, March 15th, 2009

From TBO.com on 2-28-09
With 16 million GIs returning from World War II in 1945, the nation experienced a severe housing shortage.
One of the first to realize the potential of this market was William Levitt, whose family owned vast acreage in New York. He and his father and brother took what once had been a potato field and built inexpensive, mass-produced rental homes for veterans and their families. The development took off, spawning more building. Homeownership was offered in 1949 for $7,990, and in 1950 the ranch-style home included a carport. The suburbs were in vogue.
My own family reflected this trend.
http://www2.tbo.com/content/2009/feb/28/co-getting-on-the-right-track/news-opinion-commentary/

How The Crash May Reshape Us

Sunday, March 15th, 2009

By Robert Trigaux, Times Columnist
Published Friday, February 27, 2009

Richard Florida’s cover story in the recent Atlantic echo’s a message he delivered in Tampa Bay six years ago. He’s since honed his thoughts and applies them well to our current predicament. There’s growing consensus this economic downturn is not only longer, deeper and nastier. It’s becoming clear this recession may prove transforming, potentially changing us personally, regionally, nationally — even globally — in fundamental ways. “This Is Not the End of America” is hardly the typically numbing title of Wachovia economist Mark Vitner’s regularly published commentary on how things are going. But last week he chose that title because he felt he needed to respond to the extraordinary angst he encounters in his work and life. Read the full article>>
http://www.tampabay.com/news/business/economicdevelopment/article979877.ece

For reference, here’s Atlantic article: http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200903/meltdown-geography

Support your neighbors. Shop locally.

Sunday, March 15th, 2009

By Ester Venouziou, LocalShops1.com founder

I love to shop. I grew up in Brazil, and some of my favorite memories have to do with shopping, mostly with my grandmother and my sister, on Saturday mornings.

We’d go to the produce market, chat with the vendors as we picked up fruits and veggies. Then it was off to a meat market, or to the fish guy. Along the way we usually stopped at the newsstand, where my grandmother picked up the daily paper and maybe a magazine or two, and, if my sister and I had had a good week, we ’d be rewarded with some comic books.

Eventually we’d end up at my parents’ shop: Importadora Jenny, a fabric store named after my mom. I was about 8 or 9 then, and I remember sitting behind the counter, helping wrap up purchases, talking with the customers.

We moved to New Jersey when I was 12, and that all changed.

For the next 15 years or so, shopping meant going to the mall or to the big-box stores. I remember, when I lived in Jacksonville in the mid-1990s every Tuesday was my shopping day. Winn-Dixie and Target and Stein Mart were the regular stops. And then there was the mall. There were two pretty close to where I lived, and I’d go to one one week, the other the next. I don’t know why I even bothered to alternate, because they both had pretty much the same stores. Every week, I’d come home with bags full of things I didn’t need, things I couldn’t afford. What was in those bags I can’t remember. All I know is that shopping had stopped being fun.

• • •

There are many reasons to shop at locally owned, independent places. Studies show that money spent locally, at an indie, is more likely to stay local. On a typical November shopping day, the Tampa Independence Business Alliance reports, if all taxable purchases in Hillsborough County were made at locally owned independent businesses instead of national chains, it wo uld make a $28 million dollar difference to the local economy.

Economics aside, supporting the independents also helps preserve the businesses that link us to the past, the businesses that ensure our communities will retain charm and character to the future.

And shopping at independents is just a lot more fun.

• • •

We launched LocalShops1.com in August 2008. We are a small, grassroots group, dedicate to helping promote independent businesses. It’s always free to browse, free to join and free to get listed.

We’re not saying, never shop at the chains or franchises. We’re simply saying, think before you shop. There are times when shopping at those places makes sense, and yes, you might run into us at Publix or Target sometimes.

We just want to make it easier for people to find their options, so they don’t automatically default to the big-box stores or the malls.

Our goal is to build a network of indie business owners and indie-minded shoppers, and we’re doing that through our Web site, of course, but also by co-hosting neighborhood parties/fundraisers and marketing/business seminars. Former radio jock-turned comedian Pat Largo has been an integral part in all this, as our official spokesman and party host.

We believe in working together with the media, as well as other business and neighborhood groups, to help our local businesses thrive. We’re all in this together.

12 Eco-Trends from Trendwatching

Sunday, March 15th, 2009

March 2009 | While financial woes may hold back some green initiatives, the future has never looked greener. Mainly because creating a more sustainable economy is not an option, but a necessity. And we all know that necessity is the mother of invention. Which is why this month, amidst crumbling banks, G20 meetings and stimulus plans, we highlight 12 eco sub-trends that any marketer or entrepreneur can act on today. You can see the briefing and download the PDF here>>
http://trendwatching.com/briefing/?utm_content=155956463

Events for 03.09.09 Buzz

Sunday, March 15th, 2009

Two Weeks Left for Some Girl(s) at the Silver Meteor Gallery

Your career as a writer is blossoming, your beautiful, young fiancée is waiting to get married and rush off to Cancún by your side—so what is your natural reaction? Well, if you’re a man, it’s probably to get nervous and start calling up old girlfriends. And so begins a single man’s odyssey through four hotel rooms, as he flies across the country in search of the perfect woman (whom he’s already broken up with).
Some Girl(s) by Niel LaBute, Directed by Joe Winskye, Feb. 27- Mar. 15, Fri-Sat @ 8pm, Sun @ 3pm
Silver Meteor Gallery, 2213 E. 6th Ave, Tampa. Tickets $14 adults/ $9 students and seniors
call 813-833-6368 for reservations or visit http://www.hatTrickTheatre.org.

The Pier Aquarium’s Spa Beach Splash and Kite Festival

Spa Beach and the Roy G. Harrell, Jr. Education Station, Downtown St. Petersburg Waterfront. Spa Beach Splash is a free family marine discovery day with environmental partners such as the Southwest Florida Water Management District, Nature’s Academy, Suncoast Seabird Sanctuary and Florida Yards and Neighborhoods guiding exploratory activities with Pier Aquarium staff. This year’s will feature a kite festival where kids (and adults) will learn the science behind flying a kite. Free kites will be given to the first 300 kids under 12 who register. Stunt kite flying demos will be performed by Team Quad FX of Pinellas County and lessons will be offered starting at 10:30am. WindWorks and other Pier Aquarium friends will provide door prizes. For information, www.pieraquarium.org or (727) 895-7437, ext. 207.

History Center Lecture Series presents “Vanishing Water”

The Tampa Bay History Center 2009 Florida Conversations Lecture Series continues in March with a
lecture by acclaimed journalist and author Cynthia Barnett, Florida and the Vanishing Water of the Eastern U.S., Sunday, March 15, 2008, 3:00 to 4:30 PM. FLORIDA CONVERSATIONS is free and open to the public. It is underwritten by the Tampa Bay History Center Endowment Fund at USF with media sponsorship from The Tampa Tribune. The series is co-sponsored by the USF Libraries Florida Studies Center and the Tampa Bay History Center. All events take place at the new Tampa Bay History Center facility, just south of the St. Pete Times Forum, between the Forum and Channelside. Learn more about Barnett’s book on this topic at: http://www.amazon.com/Mirage-Florida-Vanishing-Water-Eastern/dp/0472033034/ref=pd_bbs_3?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1235755788&sr=8-3

Tampa Downtown Partnerships Downtown Debriefing Series presents on IKEA

Joseph Roth ,US Public Affairs Ikea Property, Inc.. IKEA Tampa Opens May 6th – Come be among the first to hear about it! The Tampa Club,101 East Kennedy Blvd., Suite 4200, Downtown, Tampa. The most significant retail development ever to hit Tampa will open May 6th on the boundary of downtown. The 353,000 square-foot IKEA Tampa will feature nearly 10,000 exclusively designed items home related items. This international retailer, opening just off Adamo Drive east of the Channel District, will be a major destination and significant economic catalyst. Come hear what IKEA means to Downtown Tampa and what Tampa means to IKEA. To continue reading, click here

Pure & Shameless Technology Social. 10th year anniversary!!

Blue Martini, International Plaza Mall. To Register & more details visit www.HotSpaces.Net/register.asp. Come network with the local tech community. This social is usually attended by all levels of IT – Developers, QA, managers, CIOs, etc. It is an interesting cycle, again, for the local tech community so what better time to get together. Dress is casual, bring cards, ideas, co-workers and be ready to mingle. The HotSpaces.Net site has just been updated with my current local job openings in IT, Marketing, Sales and finance. Call me if you want to talk in detail on the local job market.

Self Employment in the Arts Conference

Artists who are working hard to make a living out of their talents should attend the upcoming conference called “Self Employment in the Arts Conference.” The conference is being held on March 21st at the University of Tampa. Details about the conference are found by clicking here. http://www.ut.edu/detail.aspx?id=10862

The Wisdom Tradition of West Africa’s Drum Rhythms

A spicy and captivating day of guided drumming with Papa Malick Faye, Master Drummer from Senegal
In this full day of instruction Tampa Bay will become infused with the wisdom of a 900 year old tradition. from Senegal where drummers play a significant rolein all aspects of life. Come learn some of the most significant drum rhythms from West Africa. Explore how drumming enhances peace, healing, celebration,
love, prosperity, and happiness. Open to beginners and advanced drummers. Location- Centro Asturiano, 1913 N. Nebraska Ave., Tampa, Fee- $85. To register please visit www.thebridgetampa.Com or call (813)416-3069

Walk Before You Run: A Primer on How to Run for Political Office

Ever thought about running for office? Isn’t it time the creative community had more of its members representing constituents at the state and local level. Local elected officials, party leaders and political commentators will share their advice and experience on topics that include typical challenges first time candidates face and how to overcome them, getting candidate training, and initial campaign planning. Confirmed speakers include Kevin Beckner, Hillsborough County Commissioner; Mary Mulhern, Tampa City Councilwoman, Rep. Bill Heller of St. Petersburg, and others. Location: The Studio@620, 620 First Avenue South, St. Petersburg. The full day workshop is $65 and includes lunch. Learn more and register here: http://www.common-language.com/index.php?option=home&action=conference. Presented by Common Language, PlanningWorks, and ThinkBIG!

Sunday In The Arts

Las Damas de Arte (LDDA) will present Sunday In The Arts, an annual exhibition and fund-raiser, on April 5 from 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. in Ybor City at Teatro on Seventh, 1600 E.8th Avenue, Suite C-201. Part of Centro Ybor, the restored brick building was built in 1892. Sunday in the Arts is a juried show, featuring more than 50 acclaimed Tampa Bay Area women artists. All artwork is for sale. It includes paintings, drawings, ceramics, photography, sculpture, fiber, jewelry and mixed media. General Admission is $40 in advance, $50 at the door, $75 patron. For additional info visit www.lasdamasdearte.org.

USF Polytechnic in Lakeland Offers Nonprofit Management courses for Spring 2009

The University of South Florida Polytechnic’s Extended University is now accepting applications for its Spring 2009 Nonprofit Management Certificate Program. The Nonprofit Management Certificate Program offers the following four-hour courses: Leadership and Governance for Nonprofits, Nonprofit Financial Management, Grant Writing, Program Development and Marketing. Seating is limited, so please register early. Early registration is $89 per session before April 1. Classes will be held on April 16 and April 17, 2009. Register online at www.poly.usf.edu/nonprofit or call (863) 667-7059. All courses are held at USF Polytechnic, 3433 Winter Lake Rd., Lakeland. Students who complete the four courses will receive a Nonprofit Management Certificate. Those who enroll in individual courses will receive a certificate for that course.