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Solar energy seminar and tour the Cobb County Safety Village

Free event: learn all about solar energy and tour the Cobb County Safety Village

Cobb EMC members are invited to attend a free solar energy seminar.

Reserve your seat at the solar energy seminar Thursday, Aug. 11, 2016 from 6-8 pm, at the Cobb County Safety Village. Experts will answer commonly asked solar questions, provide details on how solar energy systems work and the latest trends, and weather permitting, they’ll take a tour of the Safety Village at 4:30 pm.
Register at www.cobbemc.com/solarseminar

Date:
Thursday, August 11, 2016 form 4:30 pm to 8 pm

Admission:
Free. Please RSVP at www.cobbemc.com/solarseminar

Address:
Cobb County Safety Village
1220 Al Bishop Dr.
Marietta, GA 30008

For more information, please call 770.429.2100 or visit www.cobbemc.com/solarseminar

Dinner and a Show – Steel Magnolias

Dinner and a Show – Steel Magnolias, a play by Robert Harling. Dinner at 7 pm and the play is at 8-8:30 ish

The buffet style dinner will consist of a garden salad, a choice of two entrees, two veggies, rolls, beverage and dessert. The menu will vary for each show in the season. Wine and Beer will be sold separately.

Seating is very limited so tickets will need to be purchased in advance and can be up to 24 hours in advance of the show date.

Date:
Friday August 19th, 2016 from 7 pm to 10 pm
Saturday, August 20th, 2016 from 7 pm to 10 pm

Admission:
$40

Address:
21 West Park Square
Marietta GA 30060

For more information, please call 678-581-3771 or visit www.thevineyardcafe.com

Christmas Memories – Symphony On The Square

Join the Symphony on the Square back at the Jennie T. Anderson Theatre for another great Holiday Concert. Due to popularity and a history of early sell out, they will have two shows this year. Get your tickets early as this will be a sell out event.

Date:
Thursday, December 8, 2016 at 8 pm
Friday, December 9, 2016 at 8 pm

Admission:
$15

Address:
Jennie T. Anderson Theatre
548 South Marietta Pkwy SE
Marietta, GA 30060

Parking:
Free

For more information, please call (770) 874-8525 or visit SOTSHoliday2016.eventbrite.com

Good Eatin’ Great Cause

The annual Good Eatin’ Great Cause is a culinary tour and competition on Thursday, September 15, 2016 from 6 pm to 10 pm.  The event takes place at the Cobb Galleria Exhibit Hall and features food from some of the best chefs and restaurants in the metro area. Attendees can also enjoy music and participate in a silent auction.

The annual event also features a cooking competition in which local celebrity chefs serve as mentors in a judged team cook-off competition between Cobb County Police Chiefs, Cobb County District Attorney’s Office, Cobb County Sheriff’s Office, and the Marietta Fire Department.

The host for this year’s cooking competition is Ryan McKay, of NBC’S Food Fighters.  In addition, celebrity Southern chefs Asha Gomez, Holly Chute, and Ian Winslade will be there as judges for this prestigious culinary competition.

Participating restaurants include Canoe, Chicken and the Egg, The Cook’s Warehouse, Crooked Tree Cafe, Douceur De France, Drift, Fuji Hana, Fusco’s Via Roma, Gabriels Restaurant and Bakery, Henry’s Louisiana Grill, High Road Ice Cream & Sorbet, Low Country Catering, Piastra, Patak, Seed, Soho Bistro, Springer Mountain Farms, STK, Stockyard Burgers and Bones, Sugar Cakes, Taqueria Tsunami, Talenti Gelato & sorbetto, and Two Birds Taphouse.

good-eatin-great-cause-food-tasting

Date:
Thursday, September 15, 2016

Time:
6 pm to 10 pm

Tickets:
$75 per person
Tickets are tax deductible

Dress:
Casual

Address:
Cobb Galleria Exhibit Hall
2 Galleria Parkway Southeast
Atlanta, GA 30339

For more information, please call (770) 801-3465 or visit SafePath.org/Good-Eatin-Great-Cause

About SafePath Children’s Advocacy Center
SafePath Children’s Advocacy Center, Inc. is a private 501(c)3 non-profit organization dedicated to improving the lives of children who have been abused.

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Awarding Cobb’s Top Students

Each spring, Cobb County’s business and civic associations select some of the area’s top students as recipients of various scholarships.

Below is the list of students whom Cobb’s business associations and Kiwanis Clubs awarded scholarships to in May and June.

Acworth Business Association

  • Emily Bontrager, Kennesaw Mountain HS
  • Caroline Pepper, Harrison HS
  • Riley O’Neill, North Cobb HS
  • Laura Allen, Allatoona HS
  • Olivia Norris, Cornerstone Prep
  • Amanda Walters, North Paulding HS

Kennesaw Business Association

  • Ron Cochran Spirit Award, Karoline Brooke Reichert, Allatoona HS
  • Carol Thompson Journalism, Adam Kovel, North Cobb HS
  • David Grant ROTC, Alex Birchler, North Cobb HS
  • Carolyn Ballard Future Business Leader, Danielle Kelly, North Cobb HS
  • Olivia Smathers Performing Arts, Carly Nunez, North Cobb HS
  • Paul Chastain Citizen, Kayla Jaconette, North Cobb Christian
  • Ron Sumpter Trailblazer, Grant Mercer, Harrison HS
  • Rj Patel International Magnet, Fatima Elfakahany, North Cobb HS
  • Dr. Frank Boone Community, Elvis Kahoro, Kennesaw Mountain HS
  • Terry Chandler Taking Care of Business, Kara Hester, Allatoona HS
  • Kevin Jabbari Athletic, Bryson Armstrong, Kell HS
  • Debbie Underkofler Culinary Arts, Brittany Daniel, North Cobb HS
  • Marlon Longacre Heart of A Champion, Brycen Colon, Kennesaw Mountain HS
  • Mayor Leadership, Haley Biggins, Kennesaw Mountain HS
  • JRM Character, John Erskine and Megan Mcmanus, Kennesaw Mountain HS
  • Wally Zimmerman Vocational, Dylan Knight, Kennesaw Mountain HS
  • Sue Gunderman Servant Leader Scholarship, Melody Jabbari, Kell HS
  • Mike Everhart Video Production, Mackenzie Diamond, Kell HS

Kiwanis Club of Marietta

  • Founders-Beck, Brianna Osuna
  • Beck Engineering, Dewey Van Allen
  • Turner-Howard, Evan Loughton
  • Jane and Ebbie Lance, Jessica Hollis
  • Special Education, Sydney Reese
  • Raymond Steve Tumlin Sr. , Ashlyn Ellis
  • Bill “Scoop” Kinney, Keydy Guevara
  • Forever Remember, Madison Arnold

Kiwanis Club of Greater Kennesaw

  • Allyson Glenn Box, Kennesaw Mountain HS

Kiwanis Club of Lost Mountain

  • Alexis Clark and Spencer McAllister, Kennesaw Mountain HS
  • Jake Gearrin and John Delay, East Paulding HS

Kiwanis Club of Metro Marietta
Morgan Thomas Scholarship

  • Cecil Abidoye, Marietta HS
  • Gabrielle Lauderdale, Wheeler HS
  • Nicholas Moore, McEachern HS
  • Brett Pollack, Altoona HS

Kiwanis Club of Smyrna

  • Pressley Scholarship, Vanessa Chan, Campbell HS
  • Key Club Scholarship, Alejandra Cervantes, Osborne HS

Jonquil City Kiwanis

  • Tiffani Tran and Vicki Tran, Georgia State University
  • Nick Sinclair, Georgia Tech
  • Tristan Christie, University of Arkansas-Pine Bluff

Marietta Business Association
REACH Scholarships

  • Jorge Calles and Viviana Salazar, Marietta MS

Smyrna Business Association

  • Evan Marlbrough, Campbell HS
  • Alejandra Cervantes, Osborne HS

South Cobb Business Association

  • Kajol Shah, South Cobb HS
  • Faith Thomas, Pebblebrook HS

West Cobb Business Association
When Character Beats Adversity Scholarships

  • Dylon Ramsey, Allatoona HS
  • Katie Roberto, Harrison HS
  • Ivy Nutter, Hillgrove HS
  • Kyne Betaudier, McEachern HS

At Bat: SunTrust Park Updates

Eight New Concepts for The Battery Atlanta

In the Atlanta Braves’ continued efforts to grow its development adjacent to SunTrust Park, the organization recently announced that it is welcoming eight new culinary, retail and entertainment concepts to the lineup at The Battery Atlanta.

With partner Fuqua Development, the Braves have received commitments from the following companies, which are scheduled to open next spring:

  • Wahlburgers, a fast-growing, chef-driven burger concept from the Wahlberg brothers of TV and movie fame
  • Kings Bowl, an upscale, retro bowling and entertainment destination
  • Live!, an iconic dining/entertainment destination developed by The Cordish Companies and designed by Jeffrey Beers International
  • Goldbergs Bagel Company & Deli, an Atlanta favorite for bagels and sandwiches\
  • Mountain High Outfitters, an outdoor specialty store
  • Sugarboo Designs, an artsy boutique with household items and gifts
  • DressUp, a women’s fashion boutique
  • Harley-Davidson, with a retail-only store

“This blend of retailers and restaurants will help us create the 24-7, 365-day-a-year environment we’re aiming for at The Battery Atlanta,” said Derek Schiller, Braves president of business in a press release. “We’re very excited to have a bunch of firsts for this market, including Wahlburgers and Kings Bowl. Additionally, The Cordish Companies have been an industry leader in creating vibrant spaces that have set a new standard for entertainment in partnership with professional sports venues.”

Fuqua Development Principal Jeff Fuqua added that the “impressive” list of businesses shows that The Battery Atlanta is already a magnet for top-notch local and national retailers, entertainment uses and restaurants. “And there is more to come,” he said. “We expect to make great announcements soon as we work with the Braves to enrich the mix of businesses featured at The Battery Atlanta.”

Restaurants that were announced last year include Antico Pizza, CRÚ Food and Wine Bar, Tomahawk Taproom featuring Fox Bros. Bar-B-Q, El Felix from Chef Ford Fry and a steak house concept by Chef Linton Hopkins. The Coca-Cola Roxy Theatre, a music venue, and the Omni Hotel, also will open at the Braves’ mixed-use development at SunTrust Park, as well as being home to One Ballpark Center, Comcast’s regional office headquarters housing the cutting-edge Innovation Lab.

Visitors can get a sneak peek of The Battery Atlanta development by viewing a fly-through video online at batteryatl.com. Learn more about the 41,500-seat stadium and tickets prices, which went on sale in May, by visiting braves.com/suntrustpark.

New East Marietta Library and Cultural Center

Pictured (l-r): Cobb County Public Library Board of Trustees Chair Les Still, Cobb County Manager David Hankerson, Cobb Public Services Agency Director Dr. Jackie McMorris, Cobb County Recreation Board Chair Bill Carver, Chairman, State Rep. Sharon Cooper, Cobb County Commissioner Bob Ott, Cobb Library Director Helen Poyer, Cobb PARKS Director Eddie Canon, library patron Emily Neal and Cobb County Commission Chair Tim Lee.

More than 100 people attended the spring groundbreaking ceremony for the new East Marietta Library and Cultural Center that will be located off Lower Roswell Road in east Cobb. The 28,000 square-foot building costs $10.6 million and is being funded through the 2016 SPLOST and the Georgia Board of Regents. A total of $8.6 million will come from the SPLOST program. The new facility will include classrooms, an art gallery, black box theatre, outdoor amphitheater and music practice rooms. It is scheduled to be completed in summer 2017.The existing East Marietta Library is the seventh-busiest in the county with about 55,000 annual visitors, but it requires a replacement since it was built in 1967. The building will remain open while the new library is constructed.

More Than Just Books

Along with the print collections of books and magazines, Cobb County Library System regularly presents thousands of free programs each year — led by librarians and community guest presenters — and there are several other reasons to visit your local library, whether you’re a child, tween, teen or adult. Check out the unique program and resource offerings below:

GEMS: Girls in Engineering, Math and Science is an annual workshop series offering a welcoming and encouraging environment for middle and high school girls to meet influential women in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) careers, get hands-on experience with STEM technologies and explore STEM opportunities.

The Georgia Room, located at the Switzer Library in downtown Marietta, is the system’s genealogical and historic collection that serves a broad spectrum of patrons from throughout Cobb County and the state. Along with the Georgia Room’s archival collections, special programs are presented by library staff on historical research and preservation of documents and historic images and other resources.

A special library for special needs clients is part of the Windy Hill Therpeutic Center, a Cobb County P.A.R.K.S. facility.

ParkPass and Zoo Pass: Cobb libraries participate in the Georgia ParkPass library loan program of Georgia State Parks & Historic Sites and Georgia’s public libraries. The kit includes passes, which exempt library patrons from paying the daily $5 parking fee at state parks and exempts up to four visitors from admission fees to historic sites operated by Georgia State Parks, Recreation & Historic Sites. The number of ParkPass kits is limited. Also available are a free passes to Zoo Atlanta.

Digital Resources: Cobb library cardholders enjoy free access 24-7 to thousands of online courses and videos on a range of topics and databases with information on demographics, business and more. The use of the library’s digital resources covering business, personal finance, science, genealogy and other topics is also growing, reaching just over 240,000 people in 2015, up from nearly 232,300 in 2014.

Lynda.com and Gale online learning sites provide courses on business, web development and design, multimedia skills, software and more. Complete Lynda for Libraries courses and Gale courses are available at any location with internet access.

DemographicsNow offers a variety of demographic data reports that may be customized by geography and provides options for summary, ranking and comparison reports.

Morningstar Investment Research Center provides information on stocks, mutual funds and exchange traded funds, giving free access to information for investors and anyone seeking quick information on a single company.

America’s News gives free access to current and archived full-text articles from local, state and national newspapers, newswires and web content.

Value Line gives up-to-date analysis and news on investment research resources covering thousands of stocks and industries.

Zinio Magazine offers more than 100 titles, including Atlanta Magazine, The Economist, The New Yorker, Golf Digest, Motor Trend, Shape and The Atlantic.

Overdrive offers users eBooks, eAudiobooks and streaming video.

InstantFlix offers a collection of streaming videos of independent films from throughout the world, including award-winning shorts, PBS documentaries, classic cartoons and more.

Volunteer Opportunities: Cobb County libraries welcome volunteers serving in support roles in the libraries. The Cobb County Board of Trustees is a nine-member volunteer board of citizens appointed by the Cobb County Board of Commissioners. The trustees set library policy and advise on activities. The Cobb Library Foundation is a volunteer nonprofit supporting efforts to build private support, enhance visibility of the library’s impact and strengthen the public’s commitment to the library system.

Dobbins First Military Grocery Sales Events See Success

As a young adult learning to live on your own or an older citizen trying to save money, there’s one thing everyone shares: we are all looking out for ways to save on groceries and the everyday goods we need.

Veterans and other military personnel are no different.

One of the benefits extended to veterans and active military personnel with appropriate ID cards is access to local commissaries found in bases around the country. These commissaries provide a much-needed service to the men and women who serve — namely providing groceries and other related goods at a discount.

A new public-private partnership between the Cobb Chamber of Commerce, Defense Commissary Agency, Georgia Department of Defense and Dobbins Air Reserve Base has resulted in the extension of the commissary alike benefit to metro Atlanta through the Military Family Support Center.

Found just outside Dobbins’ front gate, the support center will host on-site commissary sales every month allowing retirees and other personnel access to the goods they need.

Lt. Col. Thomas Lesnieski’s family of five visited the Military Family Support Center’s first sale this month. “It was a great opportunity to shop locally and utilize a military benefit,” he says. “For me and my family, we were able to save a significant amount of money by going to this sales event, and we will definitely be repeat customers.”

The sales event provides goods at regular prices, plus a 5 percent surcharge. According to the DeCA’s website, personnel save an average of 30 percent by shopping at commissaries compared to other grocery chains.

Additionally, commissaries and the on-site sales being offered at the center stock everything found in an average grocery chain and provide a safe environment for servicemen. “[Shopping at the support center] was very convenient. They have everything from laundry detergent all the way to steaks to cereals and everything in between,” Lesnieski says.

The sales events currently being offered at Dobbins occur once a month, usually for a string of two or three days, explains DeCA spokesman Rick Brink. “The Chamber of Commerce came in and leased a building and cleaned it up, and [DeCA] come in once a month and do our sales,” Brink says. “If you’re saving on your grocery purchases, then that means you have more money in your pocket to spend on other things.”

This service comes as an especially great benefit to veterans returning from conflict zones and elsewhere. The sales allow a variety of people with different economic situations to get the goods they need. “I think it makes a big difference for the mere fact of the cost saving when you purchase items there. It’s definitely a significant discount compared to some of the large outlets out there,” Lesnieski says.

The Military Family Support Center is the first of its kind being served by DeCA and allows metro Atlanta servicemen an alternative to going to a commissary that may be out of the way. Commissaries as a whole are slowly decreasing in number due to base closings around the nation.

“It’s a benefit that most of our retirees and military personnel have come to enjoy over the years when there’s a large military base nearby,” Lesnieski says. “But due to commissaries being closed, this is our one opportunity here in metro Atlanta to enjoy that benefit.”

Brink has also seen the benefit of the sales firsthand, and he agrees that the support center will go a long way to helping out local authorized shoppers. “If you’re in an area where you normally can’t reach a commissary, and you’ve got this type of grocery shopping center with really good products at good prices — people take advantage of them,” Brink says.

Chamber President David Connell spent three years working with his own team at the chamber, dubbed Team Dobbins, to turn this project into a reality. For him, offering these sales to people in need was the least they could do to give back to the community.

“It’s not about recognition for [the chamber], it’s doing something to help our fellow citizens. A lot of the people that take advantage of what we put together are people who are [injured] because they served this country or put their lives on the line to allow us the freedom that we have today, or are the spouse of somebody who actually got killed,” Connell says. “So to be able to offer something to that Greatest Generation, in particular, is very, very special to me and the people who worked on this.”

Brig. Gen. Joe Jarrard, an adjutant general with the Georgia Department of Defense, hopes the project at Dobbins will be long-lasting and make a difference where it truly counts. “The Military Family Support Center will be beneficial to the military community in the Cobb County area,” he says. “The Georgia DOD is proud to support this project as it will support all components of the military in the metro Atlanta area.”

For more information on the goods being offered and the sales schedule at the Military Family Support Center, visit commissaries.com.

When Work and Family Merge

What would you prefer: separation of work and personal life, or spending the majority of your waking hours with loved ones running a business? For a number of Cobb Countians, the joys of working side by side with spouses, parents and children far outweigh the challenges. Sibling partnerships, firms jointly owned by spouses and companies founded by parents who now include adult children have created strong alliances, financially sound entities and flourishing enterprises.

From retail stores and online commerce, to dental practices and law firms, entrepreneurs are succeeding by aligning their values, pooling their talents and looking to their families. As businesses have expanded, founders have turned to their families as a strong resource to continue the traditions.

Carrying the Family Tradition

Rob Higginbotham started in the luggage business as a sales rep fresh out of college in 1981. Six years later, he started his own company. “It was not a calculated plan for me to become an entrepreneur,” says the successful international businessman whose company Claire Chase Luggage is based in Marietta. “It was really more of an accident when I began looking for new sources overseas. Soon, manufacturers were approaching me about working with them and we’ve just grown from there.”

Higginbotham frequently traveled between the United States and his suppliers overseas, also building relationships with brick-and-mortar retailers and later, as the internet grew, through online merchandising. When his children were born in 1989 and 1990, he decided to create the Claire Chase brand, named after them. “It had a nice ring to it,” he says, “and so the name has really become our signature.” Today, Claire Chase is sold by Zulily, Brookstone, Wayfair and Amazon, as well as to exclusive fashion retailers.

Daughter Mary Claire worked with her father during the summers throughout high school and college. When she graduated from the University of Georgia in 2012 with a degree in public relations, Rob asked her to help out with trade shows. “His dream has been to pass the company on to me,” Mary Claire says. “He told me, ‘if you want to start learning the business now, come and work for the company.’ And that’s what I did. I’ve never looked back.”

At first, Mary Claire staffed trade shows and developed customer and industry relationships across the United States, while Rob managed manufacturing and operations. He had shifted production to South America, giving him more creative input into the designs, but it was the addition of Mary Claire that helped him see how to expand the company further.

“Until Mary Claire joined the company, most of our products were oriented toward men. For example, we only had five leather bag designs and they were all black,” he says. “She has such a good design eye and persuaded me to start offering products for women as well. Now we have more than 150 products and three to five colors in each style.” Mary Claire brought her communications, public relations and journalism experience to the table and is in charge of designing and producing the company’s catalogues and sales materials.

When-Work-and-Family-MergeThe company’s goal is to introduce at least 20 new products this year. Additionally, Claire Chase has expanded into two new industries — golf and promotional products.

Mary Claire and Rob have worked out their business relationship and obviously have mutual respect for each other. “He’s my dad, so we have a typical father-daughter relationship,” she says. “We have our own views, but we listen to each other.”

Operating a small family business has its advantages. “We support family and having a personal life here,” Rob says. “We have flexible work schedules, some people bring their dogs to the office and every day is casual Friday.”

Community Roots Run Deep

Long-time Cobb resident John H. Moore had a vision when he created his law firm in 1984 in the former Greyhound Bus Station in downtown Marietta. He’d been practicing law in Cobb for nearly 15 years, but realized that he needed to build the type of practice that could serve the needs of a growing county without relying on large Atlanta firms.

Two years later, and with the help of a family friend, he persuaded Mercer Law School graduate and fourth-generation Cobb resident Robert D. Ingram to leave his position with an Atlanta practice and share his vision. Adding partners William R. Johnson in 1986 and Stephen C. Steele in 1987, the four created a broad foundation of specialties that includes zoning and commercial real estate, insurance defense and workers’ compensation, civil litigation and criminal law that set the tone for one of the largest law firms in Georgia outside of Atlanta. Ninety attorneys and more than 175 employees staff eight Moore, Ingram, Johnson & Steele offices in five Southeastern states.

“Of the more than 45,000 lawyers in Georgia, 85 percent of them are generalists,” says Robert, who served as president of the Georgia Bar Association in 2005. “The practice of law is much like the practice of medicine, and it’s getting harder and harder to be a generalist. There are so many nuances in each area of the law that we’ve found having specialists is the best way to serve our clients.”

Most of the firm’s clients started with the Marietta practice, but as these companies have grown and diversified geographically, the partners have opened offices to serve them. “We’ve never opened a satellite office without a client asking us to,” Robert says. “When they’ve had legal needs in another market we’ve responded.”

The key to the firm’s growth and success is its specialized departments. John heads the Zoning and Commercial Real Estate section; Robert and his department focus on insurance, worker’s comp and probate litigation. William manages civil litigation, insurance defense litigation, worker’s comp defense and product liability defense; he’s also the administrative partner. Stephen is senior partner of the Family and Criminal Law Department.

The firm became multi-generational in 1996, when John’s son Kevin joined the real estate department right out of law school. “Frankly, I tried to talk him out of being an attorney, believing that he could pursue many other avenues,” says John of his son’s decision to pursue a profession in law. “The law can be a jealous mistress and put many demands on you. Having him here has been good for the firm and for me as well.”

From Kevin‘s perspective, working with his father was always in the back of his mind, but he also saw the benefits of working for a larger firm. “At the end of the day, I realized that I would have a much more satisfying career working for and with my father and being in the community where I grew up,” Kevin says. He chose the same practice area as his father — commercial real estate — and works side by side with him. “It’s given us an even deeper relationship.”

In 2010, Robert’s son, Ryan, graduated from Mercer Law. “He, too, had opportunities with firms in Atlanta, but just like John and my dad, I persuaded him to come practice with us in Cobb. In both cases, it’s been a blessing,” Robert says.

Ryan admits that he never really envisioned working in his father’s firm. “I always thought I’d be with a practice in Atlanta, but when the economy took a downturn, the practice I was with cut back its newer attorneys,” he says. “The truth is, it’s been a real blessing to be in the same type of practice as my dad, to work with all these excellent attorneys and to live and work right here in Cobb where I was born. Plus, it’s always a motivator for me to live up to his standards and make him proud.”

Robert admits that having second-generation attorneys in the firm can have its challenges. “Anytime a son or daughter comes into a business it can create tension,” he says. “It’s kind of like being the coach’s son, but both of them have worked hard, developed their own clients, do great work and have the respect of everyone here. They’re great lawyers in their own rights, as are all the other young lawyers who come into the firm. Our business model is to hire lawyers who are smart enough to work at the big Atlanta firms, and bring them here. That’s the key to our success.”

Nothing Like Family

Combining his background in advertising and marketing with experience in the jewelry business, Mark Jacobson and his brother, Wayne, opened Cumberland Diamond Exchange as a family business in 1982. “Our vision was to create a fine jewelry store,” says Mark, who owned a marketing and advertising firm in the county before going in-house with a jewelry store client. “We each had good experience, but as we grew, we realized the need to expand our team.” The brothers hired businesswoman Rhonda Akins in 1984 to supplement the operational side of the firm. “It was the best thing we ever did for the business,” Mark continues. “She helped our store grow more than anything that we could have done on our own, from helping us automate to becoming our first graduate gemologist.”

Mark and Rhonda started as friends but soon found they had much more in common. Within two years, they married and she became a permanent member of the team. “My parents had been in the restaurant business, so I had a pretty good idea about what it would be like to work with a spouse,” Mark adds. “And when Rhonda came on board, our business really started clicking.”

For the couple, there was never an issue about being together at work and at home. Each of them focused on their strengths as the company grew from its original 1,200 square feet to its current 4,800. Wayne retired in 2008, and Mark and Rhonda’s daughter Melissa worked with her parents during high school, then earned her degree in communications from the University of Alabama. She returned to Georgia to work in technology public relations in Atlanta.

“I wanted to prove to them and to myself that I could succeed on my own,” says 26-year-old Melissa. But it wasn’t long before her parents urged her to join the family firm, which she did in early 2015. “I realized that jewelry was a lot more fun than software,” she says with a smile. And her talents opened new marketing avenues for the company. After redesigning the website, she launched social media platforms and manages digital and marketing initiatives for the store.

Mark brings it full circle. “I was in traditional marketing when I started Cumberland Diamond Exchange, and now Melissa’s taking over where I left off,” he says. For Melissa, working with her parents has broadened her perspective. “My respect for them and what they’ve done has grown so much,” she says. “There’s really nothing like family.”

Which Dr. Waldron?

Dr. Jon Waldron, DMD, says he had a strong feeling that his son, Blair, would become a dentist, but he readily admits that sometimes working with family isn’t the best idea. “I’ve known other people who brought family members into their businesses and it doesn’t always work out,” says the founder of Waldron Dentistry in east Cobb. So when Blair graduated from dental school, it was not a foregone conclusion that Blair would join the practice.

Instead, Blair purchased another practice, working three days a week there and spending the other two at Waldron Dentistry. As the senior Waldron’s business grew, Blair and Jon merged their practices to be more productive and economically feasible. “The concept of multi-dentist practices came about 10 to 15 years ago, because of the high cost of technology,” Jon says. “It clearly makes more sense.”

The two continued as 50-50 partners in Waldron Dentistry until Jon sold the practice to Blair several years ago. The sale gave Jon the opportunity to focus on the dental staff school that he and his wife, Janet, founded in 2005 to train dental assistants. It also gave Jon the chance to focus on his day-to-day dental patients and turn the management over to Blair.

“It’s kind of like the military,” says Jon, who served as a Navy pilot. “One person must be in charge and when the captain says to turn the boat 90 degrees, that’s what you do.”

Today, the practice has four dentists, including Drs. Ed Schlissel, DDS, MS, and Christopher Lee, DMD, but it’s clear who’s in charge. “I work for Blair now, and he has great management experience. We still discuss issues, but ultimately he makes the decisions.”

Blair is making changes at Waldron Dentistry, including expanded hours to accommodate the many patients who work full time. “I recognize that my dad has a lot of wisdom and experience that’s invaluable to me,” Blair says. “I want to keep an open mind and build on that as much as possible.”