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Curing Kids Cancer Completes $1.5 Million Endowment

curing-kids-cancerCuring Kids Cancer, a Cobb nonprofit started in memory of 9-year-old Killian Owen, has completed its $1.5 million endowment at the Aflac Cancer Center of Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta. Today the young man, who lost his battle to cancer in 2003, lives on as the Killian Owen/Curing Kids Cancer Clinical Research office.

“After Killian died, we dedicated ourselves to finding new cutting-edge therapies for childhood cancer,” says his mother Grainne Owen, who is also the founder and executive director of Curing Kids Cancer. “Endowing the Clinical Research Office at the Aflac Cancer Center means that research can take place in the same hospital where he was treated.”

Since it was founded, Curing Kids Cancer has raised more than $4 million for pediatric cancer research through partnerships with sports teams at local and national levels, community involvement, corporate sponsorships and support from national sports figures. To learn more about the nonprofit, visit curingkidscancer.org.

 

Cobb High Schools Get Artsy

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Cobb County is home to more than 40 high schools, both public and independent, and serves more than 40,000 students in ninth through 12th grades. Faculty and staff in these schools place a high value on the education of their students and are extremely devoted to making sure each student is given the opportunity to excel, expanding far beyond the core curriculum classrooms.

Each school offers extensive fine arts programs to its students, allowing them exposure to a variety of learning opportunities and courses they otherwise would not have. These classes include band, orchestra, chorus and visual arts; some schools even offer dramatic arts and dance programs to its students. Several of these opportunities lead to the groups traveling for competitions and performances—often with award-winning results.

As budget cuts in schools continue to plague the nation, though, the fine arts programs are often the first to feel the pain. Because these programs are not a part of the core curriculum and not considered to be “essential” or “necessary” to a student’s development or for the requirement of completing a high school diploma, they are first to be considered in the subtraction of allocated funds. However, due to a combination of faculty member devotion and the students’ desire to continue their fine arts education, these programs manage to stay afloat—and with impressive facilities and technologies.

Fine Arts in Cobb’s Public Schools

cobb-high-schools-get-artsy-wheeler-bandMark Hoskins, band director at Wheeler High School in east Cobb, explains that in order to afford the various trips and competitions their band program attends, the students and their parents contribute much of their time and effort. “Our booster organization is very, very active,” Hoskins says. “We have a pretty comprehensive band program—just in band alone we have a marching band, three class bands and a jazz ensemble. Our boosters pretty much cover all of those.”

Hoskins also says band students at Wheeler sell Papa John’s pizza at various events at the Georgia Dome, have an annual fruit sale and participate in an electronics salvage fundraiser to help earn money for their budget. Through these fundraising events, Wheeler has been able to travel to several states, including Tennessee, California, Illinois and New York, and in March the marching band performed in a Walt Disney World Parade in Orlando.

Nathan Autry, Sprayberry High School’s fine arts department chair and choral director, says that much of his program’s funding for the fine arts comes from booster clubs and student fundraising. Autry adds that Sprayberry, also located in east Cobb, was very fortunate to have been able to fund the renovation of its main theater through an education special purpose local option sales tax, or ESPLOST. This renovation consisted of a new stage, seats, lighting and sound equipment. Autry says it was completely renovated inside.

Sprayberry is also home to a new fine arts building, which was completed three years ago. “The new wing is a state-of-the-art facility with brand new rehearsal rooms, a technology lab for music and music production, a black box theater, lighting grid and state-of-the-art sound,” Autry says. Sprayberry offers full programs in chorus, band, orchestra and visual arts. The school also offers courses in drama, guitar, music technology, music appreciation and music theory.

Fine Arts in Cobb’s Independent Schools

While public schools are able to have booster clubs and fundraise for their various programs, independent schools are required to stick to a fixed budget given to them. There are, however, exceptions to the rule when donors come into play.

Cary Brague, director of Arts at Mount Paran Christian School in Kennesaw, says the school has been very blessed with a tremendous facility in the Murray Arts Center, which was the result of a matched donation by both the Murray family and an anonymous foundation, amounting to $20 million total. “The entire building is a professional grade facility for performance,” Brague says. “It is a three-story building. The first floor has all of the educational facilities for band, orchestra and chorus, and the second floor is where the black box theater and three dance studios are located, as well as the Kristi Lynn Theater. The third floor holds the administration offices and a recording studio.”

Brague says the facility is often rented out to music artists for shows, and the recording studio has been used by big names in the entertainment industry. “We can’t stop imagining how many things we can do in this facility,” she adds.

cobb-high-schools-get-artsy-north-cobb-christainLeigh Ann Geter, marketing and communications coordinator at North Cobb Christian School, which is also located in Kennesaw, says they offer a specialized arts program to their students with the Academy of the Arts Program for ninth through 12th graders. Those who enroll in the program have the opportunity to audition for a spot in the academy, and after auditions can move on to complete academic core classes with intensive training in their chosen art field. This program allows for students to expand on their talents and experience training in a program uniquely designed for them to excel in their chosen art.

“Arts in high school engage and challenge students in a way that no other discipline can,” Geter says. “Students are encouraged and connected with their peers and professors on a level not possible in other disciplines. The oratory nature of the classroom lecture gives way to a cooperative, dynamic collaboration that empowers students to lead, perform and embrace their individuality. In short, the arts foster success and display nothing less.”

The courses of study in this program include three tracks: visual arts, vocal arts and theater arts. Each track has several options for the students to choose from to further their fine arts education and prepare them for the courses they will encounter if they choose to continue in college.

Stacy Quiros, fine arts director at south Cobb area Whitefield Academy, says the philosophy and focus of the education of students attending Whitefield is somewhat different from the typical independent school. “We are a Christ-centered school. [We believe] there is biblical intervention in everything,” Quiros says. “Every child, every human is a creative work of God, and He has blessed every one of us with a creative gift. Our goal is to return that creativity back to God.” Students at Whitefield frequently go into the community to spread their creativity and talents with others, Quiros explains. “Sometimes we hang artwork at the library or hospital, or the band or orchestra will visit a nursing home and play music for them. Our goal is to love others and serve others with our God-given creativity.”

Practice, Progress, Results

Despite the obstacles sometimes posed with budget cuts in the educational system, what creates that drive and determination for students and teachers to continue is knowing that their practice will turn to progress. This is made possible by the encouragement given to each individual student by not just their parents, but also by teachers and peers at school. “I believe [encouraging students] is extremely important,” Autry says. He also says among the entire fine arts department, there are nearly 900 of Sprayberry’s 1,800 enrolled who participate in the various programs offered. “[Being involved with fine arts] helps build friendships and leaderships,” he says. “It gives students opportunities to be leaders not just in their class, but in the whole program.”

Brague says he believes the encouragement of students at a high school level is crucial because without it, students miss the opportunity to become creative thinkers. “The arts help students learn habits of creative thinking; the skills they learn transfer to how a student thinks in an academic setting,” he says. “My role as an arts educator is not just to try to create the next superstar performer but to create educated consumers of the arts and to grow and cultivate better thinkers in our country.”

While other districts may be struggling with maintaining quality arts programs, the halls of Cobb’s public and private high schools are alive with the sound of music and seemingly will be for years to come.

Hospital Expansions To Better Serve Cobb

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For healthcare systems in Cobb County and surrounding areas, top-notch care is always on the forefront, and while doctors, nurses and hospital personnel definitely make an experience at a hospital or urgent care better, having a world-class facility is just as important. Throughout 2014 and during the next few years, area residents will see what many local hospital groups are doing to provide the best for their patients, and not just in Cobb but areas that serve this community.

hospital-expansion-wellstar-northsideThe most recent addition in hospital care is the opening of the new WellStar Paulding Hospital in Hiram. Just a short drive west of Cobb at Bill Carruth Parkway and U.S. Highway 278 is the new eight-story, 295,000-square-foot facility, which houses 56 beds with the ability to expand to 112 beds, 40 emergency exam and pediatric emergency exam rooms, four surgical suites, decentralized nursing stations, private inpatient rooms, administration offices and a café. The $92 million hospital opened its new doors the first week of April and replaced the older Paulding Hospital, which had served the community for more than half a century. “Our goal is to provide world-class care,” says Mark Haney, WellStar Paulding Hospital and Nursing Center’s president. “The existing hospital in Dallas is 55 years old and was not able to support the environment and technology of today’s healthcare needs. The new hospital also supported itself from a business plan standpoint. Therefore, to meet our vision of ‘World-Class Care,’ building the new hospital was the correct move.”

Haney went on to say that he expects this facility to better serve not only Paulding but also Cobb residents because “moving world-class technology and providers closer to where the population densities have grown, and continue to grow, will assure that WellStar Health System is continuing to create and deliver healthcare that improves the health of our community and region.”

hospital-expansions-wellstar-east-cobb-health-parkA second WellStar addition is also near completion. The three-story, 162,000-square-foot WellStar East Cobb Health Park off Roswell Road is scheduled to open in September. This $80 million facility will include an urgent care, medical imaging, lab services, pharmacy, cardiac diagnostics, sleep center, physical therapy and cardiac and pulmonary rehab, in addition to primary care physicians. “The rapid and continuous growth of the outpatient healthcare market is driving the development of our health park facilities,” says Joe Brywczynski, Senior Vice President of WellStar’s health parks development. “WellStar is positioning the organization to meet these growing patient needs with an innovative model of providing world-class outpatient services directly in the communities we serve. Community-based outpatient health care is all about creating a new, innovative and much-needed patient experience that provides families with high quality, improved access, more convenience and a one-stop-shop opportunity. We are eliminating the expectation that patients need to travel great distances, to multiple destinations, in traffic and congestion to receive their care. By integrating comprehensive hospital services with primary care and physician specialists, under one roof, nearby in the local community, we will become the patient-preferred destination point for obtaining their outpatient health care.”

WellStar is also building the Vinings Health Park near Atlanta Road and Cumberland Parkway in south Cobb, which is scheduled to open in late 2015/early 2016; the Cherokee Health Park at Sixes Road and Interstate 575 in Holly Springs in Cherokee County; and an expansion of WellStar Douglas Hospital, which will add new emergency department rooms, doubling the number of beds in the intensive care unit, a nine-bed admit/recovery unit, new cafeteria and retail pharmacy. Additionally, WellStar will open a pediatric imaging center off Barrett Parkway in Kennesaw this summer and Kennestone Hospital in Marietta will see an expansion in its neuroscience capabilities with construction of a suite.

Just north of Cobb County, residents can also easily access two Northside Hospital locations. The hospital group opened its medical office building in the Towne Lake area last September. This four-story, 100,797-square-foot facility houses a variety of outpatient healthcare services and practices, which represent specialties in primary care, cardiology, surgery ENT and urology.

Northside is also replacing the Canton area hospital near I-575 and Georgia Highway 20. Northside Hospital-Cherokee is scheduled to open in March 2015. The original hospital, located three miles from where the new facility will be, dates back to 1962. New construction will include 84 beds, a women’s center, medical office buildings, cancer center and a 600-space parking deck with an additional 300 parking spaces. The total project is estimated to cost about $250 million. “Northside Hospital remains committed to providing the highest level of patient care and technologies in facilities that are easily accessible to the communities we serve,” says Russ Davis with Northside Hospital. “Growth and expansion for us in the Cherokee and Cobb communities is important because so many residents of these areas already turn to us for their family’s healthcare needs. In addition to our East Cobb Medical Campus, many Cobb County residents choose to drive north for care in an effort to avoid less convenient, more traffic-congested areas.”

Not all hospitals are undergoing massive expansions like WellStar and Northside. Other healthcare systems with Cobb locations, including Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, Kaiser Permanente and Emory Healthcare, have seen or will be seeing in the near future smaller changes or additions to their facilities. Children’s Healthcare opened a new imaging center at its Town Center location in Kennesaw last November. This 9,330-square-foot radiology office offers state-of-the-art equipment featuring low-radiation dose CT, digital X-ray, 3T MRI, ultrasound, fluoroscopy, a laboratory draw station and procedural sedation to the children of Cobb and surrounding counties.

Kaiser Permanente in 2014 partnered with Cobb County and HealthStat to open the county government’s first on-site clinic for employees. Located on Powder Springs Street in Marietta, the Cobb County Employee Wellness Center and Clinic offers adult medicine, lab testing and pharmacy services. Kaiser is also renovating the Glenlake Comprehensive Medical Center, which offers an array of services including general surgery and cardiology, on Glenlake Parkway near Perimeter Mall, and in the fall, Kaiser will open its new Sandy Springs Medical Center on Lake Heard Drive, just a short drive away for east Cobb residents.

Last, Emory Healthcare recently launched its Emory Women’s Heart Center, a new program uniquely dedicated to the screening, prevention and treatment of heart disease in women. With five locations in metro Atlanta, including one in Cobb, one of the main goals of the center is to raise awareness among women of the dangers of heart disease. “Most heart disease is preventable, so we want to reach these women before 60 years old and evaluate their individual risks and educate them on risk reduction,” says the center’s clinical director Dr. Gina Lundberg, who also serves as an assistant professor of medicine at Emory University School of Medicine and sees patients at the Cobb location. “Starting treatment early, when it’s necessary, will help save lives.”

Introducing Arts Into the STEM Curriculum

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STEM, referring to careers in science, technology, engineering and mathematics, is typically used to improve competitiveness in technology development in schools serving kindergarten through college-aged students. In 2006, after the United States National Academies expressed concern over the decline in STEM education, there was a push to advance it and eventually schools at the national and state levels were able to earn STEM certifications. This means that schools offer an integrated curriculum where science, technology, engineering and math are taught together to drive problem solving, discovery and student-centered development of ideas.

introducing-arts-quoteIn time, there’s been a push to add arts, or an “A,” to the curriculum, transitioning it into “STEAM.” Marietta Center for Advanced Academics (MCAA) Principal Jennifer Hernandez, whose school is Georgia’s first STEM certified school, says Virginia educator and developer of the International STEAM Framework, Georgette Yakman, first coined the term. “Science and technology are understood as the basis of what the world has to go forward with, to be analyzed and developed through engineering and the arts, with the knowledge that everything is based in elements of mathematics,” Hernandez says. “It is a contextual curriculum where the subjects are coordinated to co-support each other under a formal educational structure of how science, technology, engineering, mathematics and the broad spectrum of the arts all relate to one another in reality. This framework not only includes the art of aesthetics and design, but also the art divisions of the liberal, language, musical, physical and manual.”

Hernandez also says that the STEAM structure explains how all divisions of education and life work together, therefore offering a formal place in the STEM structure for language arts, social students and the purposeful integration of the exploratory subjects including; the arts, music and physical education. “Shifting to a STEAM perspective means understanding learning contextually; not only in terms of having a framework that illustrates where the subjects overlap, but also in providing a living and adaptable learning structure for ever-changing personal and unpredictable global development.”

The conversation about integrating arts into MCAA’s STEM curriculum began in 2012, says Hernandez. “We wanted to make sure we were successful with arts integration, so we started by infusing engineering in our arts classes.” For the 2013 – 2014 school year, she hired a part-time arts teacher with the help of a charter school grant through her district, Marietta City Schools, and a second full-time arts teacher, who was previously a graphic artist that earned her masters in art education from Cobb’s very own Kennesaw State University. “The arts will be used as a vehicle to infuse the 21st century skills of collaboration, communication, critical and creative thinking into engineering design,” Hernandez says. An example of how students are already practicing this is in projects like the Build Your Own Instrument Challenge, The House That Rhythm Built and What Does Weather Look Like? The school has also invested in a 3D printer to implement real-world engineering designs and the development of student-driven products. “Research shows that representing concepts in tangible form greatly increases understanding of that concept,” Hernandez says.

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The Walker School, a Marietta private school that has emphasized the importance of arts in the curriculum, especially in the last 10 years, very deliberately doesn’t allow students to focus on just one subject area, and in all grades. “Many of our students who take advanced sciences courses are also acting in the musical, playing in our concert band or showcasing their artwork in our galleries on campus,” says Katie Arjona, chair of Walker’s Fine Arts Department. Like Hernandez, Arjona says the drive behind including arts in the curriculum is to keep a student’s learning balanced. “They are better prepared for future careers when they have a diverse skill set,” she says. “We have alumni who say that to us all the time. Students need the arts to help them be better communicators, increase their confidence, understand and learn to cope with rejection and failure, learn to work in groups, see beyond what is right in front of them and approach projects or problems with a keen and creative eye.”

introducing-arts-marietta-center-for-advanced-academicsA local corporation, Lockheed Martin Aeronautics, prides itself on working closely with educators, policy makers and families to develop programs that educate and inspire tomorrow’s scientists, engineers and mathematicians. The company employs 60,000 engineers, scientists and IT professionals nationally, and approximately 50 percent of Lockheed’s philanthropy is focused on STEM. In Cobb County alone, nearly 375 volunteers have worked with more than 20,000 students on activities including the Atlanta Science Festival, robotics team support, corporate site tours, Society of Women Engineers and the Explore program, just to name a few. “America is facing a shortage of engineers today and our education system is not turning out nearly the numbers of engineers companies like mine will need to hire for years to come,” says Shan Cooper, Lockheed Martin vice president and general manager, Marietta operations. “While our industry is focused on technology and innovation that largely come from the STEM side, we fully understand that a well-rounded education also includes an arts component. We just need to ensure the system provides the right mix of all disciplines to secure our students’ and our country’s futures.”

Chattahoochee Technical College, also located in Marietta, is a higher ed partner that has been very proactive in integrating arts into the STEM curriculum. “Students in STEM fields will be pushed academically, and they will engage in hands-on learning, critical thinking and other important skills,” says Dr. Jason Tanner, dean for Arts and Sciences at Chattahoochee Tech. “I think courses in art and design areas allow students to see application of those STEM fields. I also believe that classes in art and design areas will demand that students be creative and use that creativity and imagination in practical settings.” Tanner says that like most accredited colleges, his school requires students to take courses in Humanities areas where arts-centered classes are offered. “By requiring a course in this area, just as we require a college-level math course, [Chattahoochee Tech] is demonstrating the importance of a student’s well-rounded education, but the college is also demonstrating how these must work in tandem.” Other area state colleges and universities partnering with schools and organizations that promote STEM and STEAM include Southern Polytechnic State University,  Kennesaw State and Georgia Tech.

Protect Your Home or Business From Pests

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Ants, spiders, roaches, mosquitoes —just reading the names of these pesky critters makes the skin itch and crawl, and with the warmer months upon us, it’s definitely that time of year when we see more pests around our homes and businesses. “Most insect populations decrease during the cold, winter months,” says Chuck Tindol, owner of Allgood Pest Solutions in Marietta. “As the weather warms, the insect population increases dramatically and begins to forage for food.”

protect-home-from-pests-allgood

Tindol, who runs Allgood with his brother Mike, started the pest control company 23 years ago. They provide termite and pest solutions to homes and businesses throughout Cobb County and metro Atlanta. Commercial clients include The Weather Channel, The Varsity and the Georgia Dome and World Congress Center. He says termites are typically active year round, but colony swarms mainly become a nuisance during the spring when hundreds of winged termites exit their colonies to mate and look for a new home. “Inside your home, they die quickly because they can’t get to the moisture in the soil, but the sheer number of termites crawling around can be quite scary for a homeowner.” Eric Gabe, a senior service center manager with the Arrow Exterminators location off Johnson Ferry Road in east Cobb, adds that termites cause more than $5 billion in property damage each year, most of which is not covered by homeowner’s insurance.

protect-home-from-pests-infoThere are ways to deter these pests from invading your home or business, both inside and out. Tiffani Jenkins, who owns and operates ABC Home & Commercial Services in Marietta with her husband Benjamin, says most insects need food and moisture to survive, so by eliminating or reducing these elements, infestations can be prevented. “Gutters should be free of debris. Trees and shrubs should be trimmed and kept from touching the dwelling as this is another way insects are invited inside,” she says. “For termite prevention, it is recommended to choose pine straw as opposed to wood mulch that might invite termites to inhabit areas around the foundation of your home.” The Jenkins opened their Church Street location in 2012.

protect-home-from-pests-northwestAnd if or when pests do become a nuisance around your home or business, there are ways to exterminate the problems. Adam Vannest, director of Training and Technical Services with Northwest Exterminating, recommends calling in a professional to help. “Proper identification of an infestation is essential to your treatment plan and can prevent overspending and mistreatment of an area,” he says. “After your home or business has been treated, it is important to maintain a regularly scheduled, year-round pest control service. Following your customized treatment plan and recommendations will help aid in keeping a pest-free home or business.” Northwest, which has been in business for 63  years, has four Cobb locations.

Factor In Health Problems

“Pests are much more than a nuisance,” Gabe says. “They can have harmful effects on your health and quality of life. Their ability to transmit disease and spread bacteria present a real challenge for homeowners and businesses.” Vannest adds, “Pests in general can be vectors of many diseases. Allergens, asthma, food poisoning, Lyme Disease and the West Nile Virus are just a short list of health-related concerns that can be directly related to the pests in our environments every day.”

Specifically, Tindol says research has shown that roaches are the leading cause of asthma among children, and Gabe explains that these pests are known to spread more than 33 types of bacteria that trigger the attacks. Gabe also says that stinging insects like bees send more than 500,000 people to emergency rooms each year due to severe allergic reactions, and Tindol adds that rodent droppings and urine can contaminate your food and mosquito bites could result in diseases like the West Nile Virus. “It is important to fully understand the dangers stemming from these types of infestation and how best to protect your property,” Gabe concludes.

To learn more about the services each of these companies provide, visit their websites.

The High Price of Low Morale

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It is often said that a company is only as good as its employees, and with the economy on the mend, business owners are selecting who works for them more carefully than ever. U.S. News and World Report wrote in January that our national economy appears to be poised for its best performance since the recession hit in 2008, saying it has largely mended. Fiscal and regulatory drag is diminishing, deleveraging is in the past and by the fiscal year 2015, the U.S. government is expected to have achieved a fully balanced, operating budget.

In this time of healing it’s imperative that companies keep outperforming the previous years, and happy employees will be a big part of that success. High employee morale can potentially boost revenue and reduce expenses—both serve to increase profitability. “Morale touches everything an employee or team does,” says Andy Crowe, founder and CEO of Velociteach in Kennesaw. “There is a direct correlation between morale and productivity. With the employment challenges in the economy over the past several years, many companies have neglected their employees, and now that things are heating up again, employees with low morale are changing jobs in droves. It is so much better to improve morale (and productivity along with it) than it is to lose employees and have to start over.”

The Makings of a Happy Employee

high-price-of-low-morale-sidebarHigh productivity, a direct result of higher morale, is a competitive advantage, one that companies should strive not only to maintain but increase. One of the oldest and largest background check companies in the country, InfoMart, employs 100 people and 120 in its peak seasons. Founder Tammy Cohen recalls working for employers that didn’t recognize or support their workforce emotionally. “People spend a good portion of their life at work; it is important that people are happy where they work, and that they go home happy to their families,” she says. “From the first employee, InfoMart has always placed just as much emphasis on morale as we have on profit.” Cohen says that investing in morale has a high return on investment.

Velociteach is a small business with 25 employees and a global footprint. A leader in the project management education business, Crowe’s team trains individuals and businesses alike in more than 100 countries. Achieving Cobb County’s 2012 Small Business of the Year award and ranking on the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s 2013 Top 100 Small Businesses in the U.S.A., Velociteach helps companies learn to plan, execute, monitor and manage their products more effectively. It’s no small task for this small team. With June being Effective Communications Month and National Smile Month—two areas that greatly affect the workplace—Crowe has some unique initiatives and practices in place to keep up morale in his own company, and it often starts with careful hiring. “When someone has a phone interview, one of the questions on our form is whether or not you can ‘hear their smile’ over the phone,” he explains. “We spend an inordinate amount of time trying to select people with the right personality for the organization. Positive attitudes are contagious, but negative ones can be as well.” They also make an effort to catch people doing things right instead of just correcting mistakes.

For Kim Ellet, who oversees Cobb County in the metro Atlanta branch of The Growth Coach, employee loyalty can be just as important as customer loyalty. The Growth Coach was ranked No. 1 by Entrepreneur magazine in 2013 for business and sales coaching. “We all know how great it feels to interact with an employee or business owner that clearly cares about the customer and will go the extra mile. If employees truly enjoy their job and are dedicated to serving their clients, it will show in the day-to-day interaction with both customers and fellow employees, and most certainly on the bottom-line,” Ellet says. “In addition to affecting sales, positive employee morale also affects marketing. In today’s world of instant reviews and word-of-mouth marketing, customers are swayed by the experiences of others, so it makes a big difference if happy employees are taking care of business.”

When it comes to what makes a happy employee, Crowe believes it is a constructive mix of some very important accomplishments. “We have actually done a lot of research in this area, and I believe it comes down to three basic areas: control over how they do their job, developing skill at their work and making a difference,” he says. “If these three are present, you have the ingredients for real happiness and success.”

Above and Beyond

Feeling valued, respected and able to follow productive avenues of change are some of the many elements that can take employee morale to the next level. “Ideally, business owners create the culture of open communication within their teams. Working with a coach for business and life is also a terrific resource to prevent and tackle issues that arise,” Ellet says. “It is very comforting for folks to realize they are not alone in some of the challenges they may face and that they can also provide support and insight to their peers.”

Cohen remembers her father saying, “Don’t hit my something with your nothing,” and relays this message to her employees—meaning that if someone has an idea for improvement and you don’t like or agree with it, you have to come up with something better before offering your opinion. InfoMart begins the day with a company-wide chant and the daily intranet posts announcements, tips and the productivity from the previous day. Each employee is aware of productivity issues and needs as they occur. The “IM InfoMart” program includes committees such as IM Fit, IM Giving, IM Growing and IM Celebrating that are chaired by employees to ensure that employee needs are always being addressed.

Crowe has an open-door policy in his business, but says that alone is not enough. “Employees need to know that their managers and co-workers really care about them as human beings and not just as human resources,” he explains. “I think that our greatest asset is that we really do value our employees, and I believe they value Velociteach as an employer.”

It is always a good time to look around your workplace and reevaluate how morale is affecting not just your day-to-day, but the future of the company. “The foundation of happiness is constant recognition, respect, security and empowerment,” Cohen advises. “Add laughter and activities that fulfill personal interests and you have not only happy employees but a very committed and productive workplace.”

Marietta Players Present: “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee”

Six young people in the throes of puberty, overseen by grown-ups who barely managed to escape childhood themselves, learn that winning isn’t everything and that losing doesn’t necessarily make you a loser. The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee is a hilarious tale of overachievers’ angst chronicling the experience of six adolescent outsiders vying for the spelling championship of a lifetime.

Date:
September 18, 2014 at 8:00 pm
September 19, 2014 at 8:00 pm
September 20, 2014 at 8:00 pm
September 21, 2014 at 3:00 pm
September 24, 2014 at 8:00 pm
September 25, 2014 at 8:00 pm
September 26, 2014 at 8:00 pm
September 27, 2014 at 8:00 pm
September 28, 2014 at 3:00 pm

Admission:
$25 adults, $20 children and seniors

Address:
Theatre in the Square
11 Whitlock Avenue
Marietta, GA 30064

Parking:
On the square parking

For more information, please call 678-224-8095 or visit www.mariettaplayers.com

Marietta Players Present: “August: Osage County”

A play by Tracy Letts, AUGUST: OSAGE COUNTY looks at the lives of the strong-willed women of the Weston family, whose paths have diverged until a family crisis brings them back to the Oklahoma house they grew up in, and to the dysfunctional woman who raised them. This play contains adult language and situations.

Date:
August 22, 2014 at 8:00 pm
August 23, 2014 at 8:00 pm
August 24, 2014 at 3:00 pm
August 29, 2014 at 8:00 pm
August 30, 2014 at 8:00 pm
August 31, 2014 at 3:00 pm

Admission:
$15 adults, $12 seniors

Address:
Theatre in the Square
11 Whitlock Avenue
Marietta, GA 30064

Parking:
On the square parking

For more information, please call 678-224-8095 or visit www.mariettaplayers.com

YAP Presents: The Big Bad Wolf

Set in an imaginary village populated with a variety of fairy tale characters, “The Big Bad Wolf” delves into the dark secrets we try to hide from the world. Little Red Ridinghood finds herself stuck between accepting herself for who she is, and who she wants the world to think she is. Goldilocks finds herself resenting the attention the world pays to Little Red, and the Boy Who Cried Wolf has a sheep that is straying from the flock for a better life. Performed by children ages 8-14.

Date:
July 18, 2014 at 7:30 pm
July 19, 2014 at 7:30 pm
July 20, 2014 at 3:00 pm
July 25, 2014 at 7:30 pm
July 26, 2014 at 7:30 pm
July 27, 2014 at 3:00 pm

Admission:
General Admission
$12 adults, $9 children

Address:
Theatre in the Square
11 Whitlock Avenue
Marietta, GA 30064

Parking:
On the square parking

For more information, please call 678-224-8095 or visit www.youngactorsplayhouse.com

YAP Presents: Into the Woods

A childless baker and his wife endeavor to lift their family curse by journeying into the woods, where they encounter Rapunzel (and her witchly “mother”), Cinderella, Jack (of Beanstalk fame), Little Red Riding Hood and other classic fairy tale characters, and they all must learn the responsibility that comes with getting what you want. Performed by youth ages 14-18.

Date:
August 1, 2014 at 7:30 pm
August 2, 2014 at 7:30 pm
August 3, 2014 at 3:00 pm
August 8, 2014 at 7:30 pm
August 9, 2014 at 7:30 pm
August 10, 2014 at 3:00 pm

Admission:
General Admission
$15 adults, $12 children

Address:
Theatre in the Square
11 Whitlock Avenue
Marietta, GA 30064

Parking:
On the square parking

For more information, please call 678-224-8095 or visit www.youngactorsplayhouse.com