• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Texas A&M Forest Service
  • Texas A&M Veterinary Medical Diagnostics Laboratory
  • Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service
  • Texas A&M AgriLife Research
  • Texas A&M College of Agrculture and Life Sciences
Ellison Chair in International Floriculture
Ellison Chair in International FloricultureTeaching, Research, Extension and Service
  • Menu
  • #1593 (no title)
  • Benefits of Plants and Greenscapes
  • Plants, Nature, and Health Initiative
  • Marketing & Economics
  • Water Resources
  • Sustainability
  • Executive Academy for Growth & Leadership (EAGL)

Seeley Conference Delivers!

June 26, 2008 by Charlie

Wow!

It’s been 48 hours since we closed to door on this year’s Seeley Conference and I am still chewing on some of the stellar presentations that were made.

Jim Marstiller kicked off the conference in good fashion. He is Senior Vice-President of Consulting Services for TNS Retail Forward, a leading management consulting and market research firm specializing in consumer behavior and its impact on retailers, those that supply retailers, and the economy. He is also the author of The Power to Innovate. Jim’s talk focused on growth strategies, category reinvention, brand development, and innovative merchandising solutions. For a publication that provides much of his discussion, click here.

I followed Jim on the program (not an easy task I might add) with a discussion I called Industry 2015, which focused on the driving forces and historical trends of the green industry. For an overview of that talk, click here.

That evening, Bill Lipinski, Chief Executive Officer, First Pioneer Farm Credit discussed the difficulties that many businesses had had in expanding while adjusting to the ever-changing business climate. Very few firms have done this successfully for several reasons: (1) the leap from hands-on management to delegating is difficult; (2) there is often a disconnect between strategy creation and strategy execution; (3) there is a hesitancy to change business strategy to the changes going on; (4) a lack of management systems and information; and (5) a lack of an ability to lead.

I opened the Monday morning session with a discussion of the economic drivers underlying differentiation strategies, particularly addressing the nature of perceived value on the part of our customers. Click here for more on this discussion. You can also click on the “differentiation” label on the right hand side of this blog page for more posts regarding this strategy.

The rest of the day highlighted a series of case studies illustrating firms who have been successful in differentiating themselves in the marketplace including Brian Minter of Country Garden and Minter Garden Center, who has one of the premier gardens & garden centers in the Northern hemisphere.

He was followed by Gary Mangum of Bell Nursery, who has been featured in several trade journals articles (click here). Gary discussed the Bell Nursery model and the unique and innovative ways they carry out their own differentiation strategy in servicing Home Depot.

Ball Publishing’s Jennifer Duffield White finished off the day by asking whether sustainability in floriculture is a tipping point for producers, retailers and consumers. The last morning of the conference, Peter Moran, Executive Vice President/CEO of the Society of American Florists (SAF), concluded the conference with a discussion of the draft sustainable standards for agriculture currently being proposed by SCS, the firm who is behind the Veriflora certification.

Needless to say, it was a busy 2.5 days but well worth it. If you missed the conference, the only respite you have is that your brain probably hurts less than mine right now.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: alliances, green industry, recession, Seeley Conference, strategy, sustainability, trends

Seeley Conference Begins Today

June 22, 2008 by Charlie

For the next several days, I will be participating in the Seeley Conference here at Cornell University (for more info, see www.hort.cornell.edu/seeleyconference). The topic of the day? One of my favorites, of course, differentiation in the marketplace!

As you have heard me say in previous posts many times, in a time of heightened rivalry resulting from a maturing marketplace, firms need to differentiate themselves from the competition. This year’s topic — “Profit Squeeze: Is Differentiation the Solution?” — addresses changes in the industry’s marketplace, focusing on differentiation and innovation as ways to achieve success.

Stay tuned for insights gleaned from the conference!

Filed Under: News Tagged With: differentiation, Seeley Conference

Early registration extended for Southwest Growers Conference

June 19, 2008 by Charlie

Attention all growers! The early registration deadline has been extended to June 30 for the annual Southwest Growers Conference that will be held in Conroe, TX on July 8-9, 2008. Refer to the conference website (http://swgrowers.tamu.edu) for more details and to register.

On Tuesday, July 8, there will be tours to four innovative nursery/greenhouse operations.

On Wednesday, July 9, there will be a full day of timely educational sessions at the Lone Star Exposition Center. Two morning sessions will focus on the practical and economic applications of environmental sustainability. Afterwards, a session on hiring a legal work force will cap off the morning program.

In the afternoon, there will be sessions on water quality and alkalinity, controlling new insect and disease pests, the use of PGR’s, reducing weed control costs, and a laws/regs session to cap off the day. TDA Certified Pest Applicator CEU credits as well as TNLA CEU credits will be available.

Register now for the early-bird discount! It’ll be worth the gas, I promise!

Filed Under: News

Which windfall profits should we tax?

June 16, 2008 by Charlie

Let’s proceed with a game I’d like to call … Pick the Profiteer! Your choice will indicate the industry that’s clearly making more than its fair share. We’ll tax those excess profits to subsidize the unreasonable prices that consumers pay for the industry’s products. Sound good? Here are your choices:Take all the time you need.

Ready to tax that windfall? That was pretty easy, right? Clearly the oil company is C, the one making the most money off of every dollar of sales. Nope! Actually, that’s Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO). And B, the company with the second-highest margins, is 3M (NYSE: MMM).

Hmm. Fine, then it must be E, right? It is, after all, the company earning the most relative to the amount invested in the business. Sounds like excessive profitability to me! Well, that would be Accenture (NYSE: ACN).

Let me stop you — it’s not A, either, which I should note also happens to sport the highest free cash flow growth among the five. That would be Apple (NYSE: AAPL). Whichever “parasitic” company you chose, I hope you’re ready to fire off a missive to your senator, demanding an excise tax on those rip-off Cherry Cokes, Post-it Notes, consulting contracts, or iPods.

While the sheer size of a company like Chevron (NYSE: CVX), company D, translates to some eye-popping profit numbers in absolute terms, I would hope this exercise gave you a little more perspective on Big Oil’s profitability relative to its large-cap brethren.

Thanks to Toby Shute for the game idea.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: profitability

Phantom recession???

June 16, 2008 by Charlie

“A funny thing happened on the way to the most predicted recession in US history: it didn’t happen.” I’m not fulling embracing this quotation just yet, but it is interesting commentary by Wesbury and Stein. Click here for their full elucidation.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: recession

New IPM blog available

June 15, 2008 by Charlie

The East Texas Nursery and Nursery Greenhouse IPM Program has recently added another method to distribute information — the “East Texas Nursery and Greenhouse IPM Program Blog” at http://etipm.blogspot.com/. This site will have regular updates regarding advances in greenhouse and nursery pest management, meeting information, efficacy study results and newsletters. If you would like to have updates emailed directly to you the day they are posted, go to http://etipm.blogspot.com/ and simply enter your email address.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: education, risk, sustainability

On the Road Again

June 15, 2008 by Charlie

After being out of the office at 5 different meetings over the last two weeks and talking to literally dozens of folks about their business performance this spring, I am convinced now, more than ever, that those who are successfully differentiating themselves from the competition are weathering this economic contraction better than those who aren’t.

Not that there isn’t some belt-tightening going on. There is plenty of that, but those who are focused on their marketing strategies [and even expanding them] are confident that they are gaining ground instead of losing it.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: differentiation, strategy

Ecomomic Rx for Business

June 15, 2008 by Charlie

“In good times, running a company is exhilarating. Money is flowing, customers are happy, employees have a spring in their step. In not-so-good times—like now—the very same job can feel like scaling Mt. Everest in a snowstorm while wearing a knapsack filled with bricks and suffering from a bad case of the flu.”

In the latest Florists’ Review magazine, Quint Studor offers “Eleven Ways to Infuse Your Company with the Leadership Skills to Thrive in Tough Times” — a good read. For more, click here.

Another good read is George Whalins article on “Strategies for a Changing Retail World” — click here.

Other good reads include:

Don’t Just Survive—Dominate
When the Going Gets Tough…
Maintaining Strong Sales During the Summer
The Upside to a Downturn
The Business of Retail is Going to be Brutal in 2008

Filed Under: News Tagged With: leadership, retail, retail sector, strategy

Largest minimum wage increase in 50 years

June 8, 2008 by Charlie

Fellow blogger Mark Perry makes a good point. In nominal dollars, the upcoming change in the minimum wage from $5.15 per hour in 2007 to $7.25 per hour in 2009 will be a 41% increase. In real, inflation-adjusted dollars (assuming a 3.8% increase in 2008-09), it will be a 25.5% increase, and will be the largest 2-year increase in the real minimum wage in at least 50 years (see chart below — click on it for larger view).

Filed Under: News Tagged With: labor, trends

Register NOW for the 2008 Southwest Growers Conference!

June 7, 2008 by Charlie

Attention all growers! The early registration deadline is approaching for the annual Southwest Growers Conference that will be held in Conroe, TX on July 8-9, 2008. Refer to the conference website (http://swgrowers.tamu.edu) for more details and to register.

On Tuesday, July 8, there will be tours to four innovative nursery/greenhouse operations.

On Wednesday, July 9, there will be a full day of timely educational sessions at the Lone Star Exposition Center. Two morning sessions will focus on the practical and economic applications of environmental sustainability. Afterwards, a session on hiring a legal work force will cap off the morning program.

In the afternoon, there will be sessions on water quality and alkalinity, controlling new insect and disease pests, the use of PGR’s, reducing weed control costs, and a laws/regs session to cap off the day. TDA Certified Pest Applicator CEU credits as well as TNLA CEU credits will be available.

Register now for the early-bird discount!

Filed Under: News

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 32
  • Page 33
  • Page 34
  • Page 35
  • Page 36
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 43
  • Go to Next Page »

About the Chair

  • About the Chairholder
  • Donors
  • Contacts

Advisory Commitee

  • Overview
  • Permanent Seats
  • Rotating Seats
  • Ex-Officio Members
  • Members Emeritus
  • Early History of the Ellison Chair

Multimedia

  • Webinars
  • Distinguished Lecture Series

Conferences/Workshops

  • Executive Academy for Growth & Leadership (EAGL)
View Charlie Hall's profile on LinkedIn
Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service
Texas A&M University System Member
  • Compact with Texans
  • Privacy and Security
  • Accessibility Policy
  • State Link Policy
  • Statewide Search
  • Veterans Benefits
  • Military Families
  • Risk, Fraud & Misconduct Hotline
  • Texas Homeland Security
  • Texas Veteran's Portal
  • Equal Opportunity
  • Open Records/Public Information