How Pinellas County industrial & office markets are performing

►RLJ Lodging Trust sold the 362-room Vinoy Renaissance St. Petersburg Resort & Golf Club for a total consideration of $188.5 million, consisting of the contractual sales price of $185 million and the release of $3.5 million in member deposits.

INDUSTRIAL Economy The Tampa Bay economy accelerated over the past year, adding more than 26,200 jobs for an annual growth rate of 1.9 percent. As of February 2019, the unemployment rate in Pinellas County fell by 20 basis points over the past 12 months, to 3.3 percent. Nearly all industrial-related industries saw employment growth. Transportation, … Read more

How Hillsborough County industrial & office markets are performing

INDUSTRIAL Economy As of February 2019, the unemployment rate in Hillsborough County fell by 30 basis points over the past 12 months to 3.3 percent. Nearly all industrial-related industries saw employment growth. Transportation, warehouses and utilities had the bulk of job gains, adding 1,600 jobs and a job growth rate of 5.3 percent. The region’s … Read more

Polo: Invigorating a Florida Staple

It’s Sunday at a Florida polo field and hooves click through perfectly manicured grass. Riders swing mallets with seemingly effortless athleticism, spectators raise mimosas in toast and the “sport of kings” takes on another moniker: Sunshine State favorite, for some. With this year’s debut of  “The Gauntlet of Polo” and other engagements, polo is both … Read more

Bonnie Strickland Shares Her Secret Real Estate Sauce

After years of buying, selling and investing in homes and properties in the St. Petersburg area, Bonnie Strickland formed Strickland Property Group in St. Petersburg. Raised in a family of brokers, investors, contractors, and architects, she developed an appreciation and an understanding of the real estate industry early in her life. Since 2010, her career … Read more

Doublemint Sitting grows through reputation of quality care

Doublemint Sitting, a Tampa-based babysitting and referral service, was established in 2016 by Gabriela Rosello and Synthia Fairman, both 26 years old. Since then, the company has expanded into nine Florida cities and added services, including pet-sitting and male nannies, to its offerings, growing through word of mouth and marketing through social media. The company … Read more

ServisFirst Bank to expand into Southwest Florida

ServisFirst Bank, a subsidiary of ServisFirst Bancshares (NASDAQ:SFBS), plans to expand into Southwest Florida with the hiring of five local bankers who will be located in Sarasota. Mario Bringas was named president for this newly formed Southwest Florida market in addition to Brent Dykstra, senior vice president and senior commercial banker, Ryan Riley, vice president … Read more

Valspar Championship tops $2 million for charity in 2019

Tracy West

The 2019 Valspar Championship generated $2,274,686 for charity in 2019, marking the fourth straight year the tournament has topped the $2 million mark, according to a statement. Copperhead Charities has now generated nearly $44 million for charity through the sponsorship of professional golf tournaments in the Tampa Bay area since 1977. “This is our biggest … Read more

How To Recruit And Retain The Best In Your Industry

A recent survey of Tampa Bay CEOs revealed that their main business concern revolved around human capital.  Business owners in multiple industries were surveyed and this is always their number one problem.  It’s still prevalent now.  It was even my parents’ main complaint when I was growing up as they ran our family-owned restaurant.  This really is a decades-old problem that has yet to be solved.

Many hours are spent by senior executives putting together what they believe will be great bonus and benefit packages.  Often, a significant amount of resources are spent on recruitment agencies or developing the “right” interview practices. Sound familiar?

Let me share something with you that I’ve always done, and the results that I’ve found, in my own companies.

The first thing I focus on is: What is the basic purpose of this organization?  Who does it help?  What problem does it solve for people?

To that end, I have developed a formula that I always apply in order to help focus my efforts on the right things:

  • The Basic Purpose of this company is to help, who?
  • Who live in?
  • To achieve, what?
  • By providing, what?

Those answers should be what gets the CEO, and executives, out of bed in the morning and excited about going to work.

Once this is established recruiting is a piece of cake. I just sit down with the prospect and go through an interview process that I choose; but that interview process is just a formality.  The entire point of the interview is to lay out my basic purpose and watch the potential hire’s reaction.

Here’s the key:

I need to see a positive emotional reaction to my basic purpose.  They need to agree with it, and get excited about it, before we can even begin to talk money.

Believe it or not, I’m either sold or pass on them in a matter of minutes. That’s really all it takes to give the prospect a chance.

In my experience, people who are dedicated to my cause will work harder and longer to help.  They complain less, come up with creative ideas that are much better than mine and are dedicated self-starters.  That is priceless.  It can’t be bought.

If the focus of the interview turns towards benefits and bonuses over the basic purpose of the company, I lose interest.  Of course, those things need to be discussed and are important; but I’ve hired many leaders who actually forgot what their pay and benefits were.

They took the job because they were excited about working for a purpose and not just the pay.

I want everyone in the company to know exactly how their job helps us achieve our basic purpose.  The higher they want to move up the executive ladder, the more dedicated they must be to helping our end users solve their problems.

That being said, I never try to compete by having the lowest price for the service that I’m offering.  I want to be at the upper range, if not the most expensive, in my industry.  This way there is more revenue to provide unmatched customer service and unmatched benefits and bonus packages for my employees. Simply put I don’t sell my services cheap, and I’m not cheap with my team. That way my clients get the best I can provide in exchange for their money.

To sum it up, I’ve found that the employee that holds “benefits and bonuses” higher than my company’s basic purpose can easily be stolen by a competitor.

Dedication to my basic purpose is priceless and eternal.

These people are out there and can be found.  Simply clarify your basic purpose and go find them.

 

Greg Winteregg is an internationally recognized entrepreneur, lecturer and mentor that specializes in helping small business owners reach the maximum potential for their business. He’s lectured to, and worked with, business owners in ten countries – across three continents – and built several successful, small businesses himself.

Tampa’s Four Biggest Projects

The Tampa Bay area’s office market has hit a sweet spot. From extraordinary year-over-year job growth to record-high rental rates, as well as strong demand from a wide variety of tenants, the signs all point to one thing—the time is finally right for new office development in the market. Asking rental rates for top-of-market office … Read more