Two Northern Virginia news and social media information companies have merged to form Reston-based Synoptos Inc.
The company is a combination of Infoition and OhMyGov, which were founded in in 2003 and 2009, respectively.
The new company will offer daily executive news briefs and real time media alerts, influencer identification and campaign strategy development, media monitoring software, and customized intelligence and performance measurement reports.
“Synoptos gives customers a clear picture of the media and digital landscape, so they know what’s being said and who’s saying it — and which voices are the biggest influencers,” the company’s CEO, Jeff Trexel, said said in a statement. “Our technologies and staff allow businesses to cut through the clutter of media noise and improve decision-making, strategy development and performance measurement.
OhMyGov provided media and political intelligence software that tracks the spread of information across the Web and helps organizations better understand how people, politicians, and government agencies react to issues and events.
Infoition was a news and social media consulting firm specializing in monitoring, measurement and analysis and rapid-response research.
Trexel was Infoition’s CEO. Andrew Einhorn, OhMyGov’s CEO, will serve as president of the combined company.
Mary Gowan says perks don’t make a business a good workplace.
“It’s not going to matter how many perks you have if you don’t have a management that appreciates and values people,” says Gowan, the new dean of the James Madison University College of Business. “At the end of the day, you can have an organization that doesn’t provide the perks and is a great place to work because the employees feel like they’re cared for, that their opinions matter and that people seek out opportunities for the employees.”
Gowan, a former business school dean at Elon University near Burlington, N.C., is a human resources expert who has served as a consultant for many companies, including Lockheed Martin, Marriott, Sears and Bank of America.
Her research includes examining how people cope with losing a job. Those who survive a job loss well are “very resilient,” she says. “They’re open to new experiences. They don’t define their lives solely by the company they work for or the particular job they have. They have a strong sense of career identity and understanding how they can manage their career themselves.”
Gowan has strived to be adaptable and flexible in her own career. Before coming to JMU, she spent six years in administration, two as an associate dean at George Washington University and four as dean at Elon. At the North Carolina business school, she spearheaded a strategic plan, doubled the business school endowment and hired many new faculty members. During her time there, the school’s part-time MBA program was named No. 1 in the country by Bloomberg Businessweek.
“My philosophy is you find the right people and you let them loose to do what they need to do, and good things will happen,” Gowan says.
In 2011, she stepped down as dean to return to teaching. “I had accomplished the main things I was brought in to do at Elon,” she says. “I just felt like it was a good time for me to take some time out and decide: Did I want to continue in leadership; if so, at what level?”
The answer to that question came when a headhunter called asking whether she would be interested in being dean at JMU. “I loved being back in the classroom, but this was too good of an opportunity,” she says.
In taking the position, Gowan became one of the few female deans among the 15 top public undergraduate business schools ranked by Bloomberg Businessweek. She has high praise for the faculty and students in the College of Business. “Our students are smart, they’ve got great interpersonal skills, they’re ambitious, and they have a good work ethic,” Gowan says.
Her plans “other than not to mess up a good thing” include leading the school in developing a strategic plan that will guide it during the next five years. Gowan also is planning for the 50th anniversary of the College of Business in nine years, celebrating that milestone with a new building and sizeable endowment. Her goal is to increase the current $12 million endowment to $50 million.
A native of Western North Carolina, Gowan says JMU has been a great fit for her and is something of a homecoming for her husband, the Rev. Ed Moore.
Moore, who is from Martinsburg, W.Va., spent summers at Massaneta Springs. He currently is educational program director for the Clergy Health Initiative at Duke Divinity School in Durham, N.C.
Gowan says JMU is a “very entrepreneurial university with a very entrepreneurial College of Business. That’s what has made it so great. And I get to be part of it.”
Virginia Business: What sort of qualities does a good workplace need to have?
Gowan: Let me just give you a couple of things. One, I think the leadership has to understand that the talent in the organization is the most important resource that exists. Without that fundamental understanding, policies, practices and activities will be very different. So if I’m focused just on the bottom line, I’m going to approach my human-resource policies very differently than if I say I can’t have a bottom line without having the right employees in place.
In an Op-Ed piece I wrote before I left Elon, I talked about there being a sweet spot somewhere between what unions try to do for employees and what should be done for employees. It was basically responding to the Twinkies fiasco … All these employees had lost their jobs because a labor union wouldn’t negotiate with management. And so I cited a lot of companies … [known for] taking care of their employees and recognizing that employees come first. These have been very successful companies. There’s a lot of research out there, academic research and others from consulting firms that shows if you pay attention to what’s most important, the rest will follow. And people are the most important part.
VB: I’ve also noticed that you’ve done a number of studies about the effects of job loss. What have you found in your research?
Gowan: It’s something I’m very passionate about, about the evolution of job-loss research. The early job-loss research focused on understanding what happened to people when they lost a job. Then it evolved to thinking about how people react. What do they do in those circumstances? It looked at problem-focused coping and emotion-focused coping, and social support and things like that.
Where it has evolved now is at a place where we understand more about the people who survive a job loss well, and those are people who are very resilient. They’re open to new experiences. They don’t define their lives solely by the company they work for or the particular job they have. They have a strong sense of career identity and understanding how they can manage their career themselves. They also have good social capital and good human capital.
So it’s not just that you survive a job loss if you have the right technical skills or you’re in the right profession. You could be the best accountant in the world … and not get employed if you don’t approach it from the right perspective and the right understanding about yourself.
A lot of it is about self-management and recognizing that you’re the one who is in control of the situation. But it’s also understanding that you have to be flexible. You can’t expect things to stay the way they were. That’s just not life.
VB: One of the things we’re hearing about … is not necessarily training people to have the skills for a particular job but training people to be able to learn …
Gowan: Yes, lifelong learning. Very important.
VB: Does that fit into this whole thing?
Gowan: It absolutely does. The people who are constantly reinventing themselves are … showing they are more resilient and are managing their career identities … One of the best pieces of advice I ever got was as a young professor in my first teaching job. My dean said, “Keep yourself marketable.” I’ve just been able to do so many different things as a result of staying focused on that …
I did an alumni event in Dallas this week, and we were talking about lifelong learning and just always wanting to do new things and have new experiences. What we’re trying to do with students is really help them start as freshmen thinking about what their future is going to be so that when you’re a senior you’re not scrambling around to find a job. But it’s also not about putting people in a box and saying, “OK, you’re going to be an accountant,” or, “You’re going to be a finance major and go into finance,” because that may evolve.
If you learn to be curious, and if you learn to think critically, and if you learn good interpersonal skills, you’re going to be able to position yourself well throughout life … I came out of a student personnel background, and my master’s is in counseling. That, I think, has been the part I was most interested in, people’s career progression, which is part of my job-loss research as well. It’s something I think I bring to a business school, and why JMU is a good fit for me because I think the faculty here has that same focus.
VB: Employers offer various types of perks. Are these things really important to being a good workplace, or is this kind of a war game between companies?
Gowan: It’s not going to matter how many perks you have if you don’t have a management that appreciates and values people. At the end of the day, you can have an organization that doesn’t provide the perks and is a great place to work because the employees feel like they’re cared for, and that their opinions matter, that people seek out opportunities for the employees … The culture is huge, and it has to start at the top. It has to come from leadership that highly reveres employees.
VB: [Tell me about your research on corporate reputation and corporate social responsibility].
Gowan: The most recent research looked at how individuals respond in terms of applying for jobs, depending upon the organizations’ perceptions of corporate social responsibility … And we found that people who tend to be more focused on legalistic perception of corporate social responsibility aren’t as interested as are people who are more into the environment and people management. It’s pretty much what you would expect.
Some of the earlier research looked at corporate image and reputation and found that different audiences have different perceptions of organizations. So what executives might perceive as being a good organization, employees might not perceive as being a good organization.
VB: One of the things we keep hearing is that environmental responsibility has become a big issue in hiring young employees. Is that what you’re finding?
Gowan: Yes. I think it’s because this generation has been so enmeshed in school and other places with issues about the environment. They’ve been taught to recycle, and they’ve been taught to think about turning out the lights. As a result, they’re much more expecting of that in organizations they go to work for. I don’t know to what extent they’re really thinking about the long-term implications on their future if they don’t take care of the environment, but for whatever reason, it is an important issue for them when they look at organizations.
VB: What do employers tell you they’re looking for from business school graduates?
Gowan: They’re looking for critical thinking skills. They’re looking for really strong interpersonal skills. They’re looking for good writing skills. It’s pretty much the same list they’ve been looking for a long time. And then they’re looking for students who will come in and understand you start at the bottom and work your way up. You don’t start as the CEO of the company. So the work ethic is important.
Many businesspeople fear that the disastrous rollout of the federal health insurance website is just a preview of an upcoming train wreck that will leave health care in a mess while its costs continue to mount unchecked.
But help may be on the way from unexpected sources — state health-care initiatives, including one in the works in Virginia.
The shadow cast by the federal health-care law, the Affordable Care Act, was evident when the Virginia Society of Certified Public Accountants polled its membership in December. “Health-care costs” were cited repeatedly as the biggest hurdle facing Virginia businesses.
One CPA commented anonymously that the Affordable Care Act “is going to cost us all a lot and may not lower the overall health-care costs. It will cost Virginia a lot more in the future.”
Concern about the law’s implementation appeared to shape many responses about the direction of the economy. Fifty-one percent of the CPAs said the U.S. now is in a sustained recovery. That note of optimism, however, was countered by response to the next question. More than a third of the CPAs, a plurality of 37 percent, said a full recovery is still more than four years away.
“It is not the health-care costs per-se that are creating stagnation, but the lack of clarity and changes in the tax code that are scaring businesses,” a CPA said on the survey.
Worries about the ACA have not been diminished by statistics showing that growth in health-care spending nationwide has slowed in recent years.
Spending rose only 3.7 percent in 2012, according to a study by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). Its measurement of health-care expenses — including money spent on hospital services, prescription drugs, insurance premiums, doctor visits and federal programs such as Medicare and Medicaid — fell below 5 percent in 2008 and now has remained below 4 percent for four years.
The report’s authors said the ACA, passed in 2010, has had minimal effect so far in slowing the growth of the health-care costs. The biggest factors in the spending decline were the lingering effects of the Great Recession of 2007-09. Some health policy experts, in fact, believe that the pace in spending will rise as the economy picks up steam, increasing to as much as 6 percent this year as more people get insurance coverage.
Maybe the answer to holding down health-care costs lies with the states rather than the federal government. A report issued in early January by the University of Virginia’s Miller Center, “Cracking the Code on Health Care Costs,” suggests that states are in good position to rein in costs while improving the quality of health care because they can tailor solutions to fit their needs.
The study, conducted by a 12-member panel including business executives, health-care officials and two former governors, says states should use their clout to replace “fragmented, fee-for-service care” with coordinated plans that hold providers accountable for cost control and improvements in quality.
“Health-care markets and cultures vary from state to state,” Bill Ritter, a former Colorado governor who co-chaired the panel, told The Daily Progress in Charlottesville in explaining its state-focused approach.
Almost all of the panel’s recommendations— such as creating an alliance of health-care stakeholders, collecting data to establish baselines and goals, and pushing payment reform and more coordinated care — already are part of a state health innovation plan being prepared by the Virginia Center for Health Innovation, a nonprofit organization formed in 2012.
Beth Bortz, the center’s president and CEO, says the panel’s stance on state-based reforms is reassuring. “That’s exactly the direction we’re trying to go,” she said.
Facets of the Virginia plan include: giving patients more information about the costs and quality of health-care options, promoting “population health” programs that address chronic diseases in various regions, and integrating primary care and mental health care.
The center expects to apply for federal grants to fund much of the plan. If approved, the money likely would arrive around March 2015. Bortz, however, hopes to fund some parts of the plan through grants from private foundations, a process that is expected to move along more quickly.
Financed by a state grant and private donations and staffed by only two full-time employees, some of the center’s initiatives already are underway. Last year, it set up the Virginia Health Innovation Network, a social media-style website that lets various health-care stakeholders swap ideas. The center also has worked with several major health systems in Virginia on grant applications targeting population groups struggling with expensive medical conditions. In addition, the center has set up a “strategic scorecard” that shows how Virginia fares in comparison with other states on health-care access, utilization, quality and cost.
Former Gov. Gerald Baliles, the director and CEO of U.Va.’s Miller Center, noted in a letter releasing its report that states have been called “laboratories of democracy.”
“Much like states have led in clear air, welfare reform and education reform, they are the likely level of government to lead the transformation of the health-care system because they have most of the policy levers,” he said.
Washington Gas saw record demand from its 1.1 million customers in the Washington, D.C., area in early January.
The company’s “sendout” of natural gas from 1 a.m. Jan. 7 to 12:59 p.m. Jan. 8 reached 1.652 million dekatherms.
That level is 8,000 dekatherms higher than the previous 24-hour record date of Jan. 16, 2009.
This January has been so cold, company officials said, that seven days this month have made the company’s 25 highest-ever usage days.
The company urged customers to take steps to help keep their homes warm, by regularly replacing the homes air filter, setting the water heater level to low or warm, and to caulk, weather strip, and insulate doors and windows.
Mach37, a cybersecurity accelerator at the Herndon-based Center for Innovative Technology, will double the investment made in companies participating in the program.
Companies starting the program in March will receive $50,000, up from $25,000 previously.
“This additional financial investment will not only help Mach37 entrepreneurs attract complementary team members, but also will provide them with additional resources necessary to expand target market validation and further accelerate technology development,” Rick Gordon, the managing partner of Mach37, said in a statement.
Mach37 was created to accelerate the development of information security product companies.
The intensive 90-day program helps entrepreneurs validate their ideas, technologies and markets, and ultimately launch their companies.
Upon acceptance into the program, companies receive a cash investment to complement program participation in exchange for a small amount of equity.
After completion, the CIT GAP Funds will match up to $100,000 for companies based in Virginia.
Mach37 is accepting applications from information security startups and entrepreneurs for its Spring Cohort beginning March 17.
Applications may be submitted online at: https://www.mach37.com/apply.The deadline to submit is Jan. 31.
The Kroger Co., based in Cincinnati, has completed its $2.5 billion acquisition of North Carolina-based Harris Teeter Supermarkets Inc.
Kroger and Harris Teeter operate stores in Virginia, and Kroger’s Mid-Atlantic division is based in Roanoke.
Under the terms of the merger agreement, Harris Teeter shareholders will receive $49.38 per share of Harris Teeter common stock.
With the deal, Kroger acquires the Harris Teeter brand and its 227 stores in North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, Georgia, Tennessee, Maryland, Delaware, Florida and the District of Columbia.
Harris Teeter also operates distribution centers for grocery, frozen and perishable foods in Greensboro, N.C., and Indian Trail, N.C., and a dairy facility in High Point, N.C.
Harris Teeter, which will retain its headquarters in Matthews, N.C., will operate stores under the Harris Teeter name as a Kroger subsidiary. it will continue to be led by Harris Teeter's current president, Fred Morganthall. In fiscal 2013, Harris Teeter had revenues of $4.7 billion.
The combined Kroger company will operate 2,641 supermarkets, employing more than 368,000 workers in 34 states and the District of Columbia.
No store closings are planned.
Centra Health is expected to gain full ownership of Bedford Memorial Hospital and Oakwood Health and Rehabilitation Center by mid-year.
Since 2001, the Lynchburg-based health system has co-owned with Carilion Clinic the 50-bed community hospital and 111-bed, long-term care facility in Bedford.
Roanoke-based Carilion plans sell its 50 percent ownership to Centra.
The board of directors of the hospital and long-term care facility, which share a campus in Bedford, have endorsed plans to transfer ownership.
“Our patients and this community will be our primary focus as we go through this transition,” Bedford Memorial Hospital Vice President and Administrator Patti Jurkus said in a statement. “We are committed to making 2014 a year of positive change for all of us”
Officials at the two facilities described the collaboration between Centra and Carilion over the years as successful and positive.
The decision to end the partnership was attributed to a changing health-care landscape, with declining inpatient volumes declining in smaller hospitals like Bedford Memorial Hospital.
Carilion also has moved away from operating long-term care facilities while Centra operates three nursing and rehabilitation facilities
The Bedford board of directors, which include representatives from Carilion, Centra, and the local community, determined local health needs can best be served with a single owner.
All Bedford Memorial Hospital employees will have the opportunity to transfer to Centra. They will maintain their accrued years of service and receive similar benefits.
Jacksonville, Fla.-based Patriot Rail Co. LLC has acquired through the bankruptcy process the assets of Keysville-based Alderman Railcar Services Inc., a railcar repair and cleaning service.
The repair facility has been renamed Blue Ridge Railcar Repair LLC.
Patriot Rail owns and operates 13 short-line freight railroads operating on about 500 total rail miles in 13 states.
“We are excited about this investment, as it supports Patriot Rail's long-term strategy to expand the mechanical repair services within the rail industry,” John Fenton, the company’s president and CEO, said in a statement. “Our operational strategy for Blue Ridge is designed to provide fleet owners with a network that delivers consistent, high-quality and responsive maintenance services that will reduce overall fleet downtime.”
The Blue Ridge facility has 21 acres of land and 11,000 feet of track capacity, which allows for up to 130 “repair in progress” cars to be stored at any given time.
Blue Ridge will repair, clean, and paint a wide array of railcar types including boxcars, hoppers, gondolas, and flatcars.
Patriot Rail said a shortage of certified railcar repair facilities across North America is expected in coming years.
The Blue Ridge acquisition, finalized on Dec. 31, is scheduled to be fully operational in February.
Virginia’s population grew by less than 1 percent last year, the slowest pace since before the Great Recession.
Nonetheless, the Old Dominion ranked 14th in growth rate compared with other states and still grew faster than the national average, according to estimates from the University of Virginia’s Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service.
Virginia added 74,531 people last year to increase its total population to nearly 8.3 million.
Large population gains were concentrated in urban localities particularly in Northern Virginia, the center said.
Fredericksburg has been Virginia’s the fastest-growing locality since 2010, increasing by more than 15 percent.
Most urban localities in Virginia also experienced above-average growth, representing a change from the previous decade.
Between 2000 and 2010, urban localities grew much more slowly than suburban localities in Virginia. In the past four years, however, many urban areas are among Virginia’s fastest-growing localities, with Arlington, Fredericksburg, Harrisonburg, Radford and Richmond among the cities growing at a rate faster than the state since 2010.
Most localities losing were outside of the “urban crescent,” stretching from Northern Virginia through Richmond to Hampton Roads.
In Southwest Virginia, all seven coal-producing counties declined in population in 2013, the center said.
The Cooper Center’s population estimates are based on changes since 2010 in housing stock, school enrollment, births, deaths and drivers’ license issuances.
They are used by state and local government agencies in revenue sharing, funding allocations, planning and budgeting.
The Virginia Bar Association has installed John L. Walker III, a partner at Williams Mullen in Richmond, as its 126th president.
Walker is the third member of his family to serve as VBA president. His father, John L. Walker Jr. of Roanoke, was VBA president in 1983, and his grandfather, John L. Walker, also of Roanoke, presided over the association in 1947-48.
The new president’s one-year term runs until the association’s next annual meeting, in January 2015.
Walker succeeds Tom Bagby, president of Woods Rogers PLC in Roanoke.
Harry M. “Pete” Johnson III of Richmond is president-elect of the VBA, and James P. Guy II of Richmond is chair of the Board of Governors.
Johnson is a partner at Hunton & Williams LLP, and Guy is energy industry team leader at LeClairRyan.
We use cookies on our website to give you the most relevant experience by remembering your preferences and repeat visits. By clicking “Accept All”, you consent to the use of ALL the cookies. However, you may visit "Cookie Settings" to provide a controlled consent.
This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. These cookies ensure basic functionalities and security features of the website, anonymously.
Cookie
Duration
Description
cookielawinfo-checkbox-analytics
11 months
This cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Analytics".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-functional
11 months
The cookie is set by GDPR cookie consent to record the user consent for the cookies in the category "Functional".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-necessary
11 months
This cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookies is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Necessary".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-others
11 months
This cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Other.
cookielawinfo-checkbox-performance
11 months
This cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Performance".
viewed_cookie_policy
11 months
The cookie is set by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin and is used to store whether or not user has consented to the use of cookies. It does not store any personal data.
viewed_cookie_policy
11 months
The cookie is set by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin and is used to store whether or not user has consented to the use of cookies. It does not store any personal data.
Functional cookies help to perform certain functionalities like sharing the content of the website on social media platforms, collect feedbacks, and other third-party features.
Performance cookies are used to understand and analyze the key performance indexes of the website which helps in delivering a better user experience for the visitors.
Analytical cookies are used to understand how visitors interact with the website. These cookies help provide information on metrics the number of visitors, bounce rate, traffic source, etc.
Advertisement cookies are used to provide visitors with relevant ads and marketing campaigns. These cookies track visitors across websites and collect information to provide customized ads.