Wednesday, May 1, 2019

The NC CEO Summit Brings Business Leaders Together


An experienced business administrator, Norwood Teague serves as the event director for Business North Carolina Magazine. In this role, Norwood Teague plans and directs several major events including the NC CEO Summit.

On April 1st and 2nd, some of North Carolina’s top business leaders gathered for the NC CEO Summit in Pinehurst. Scheduled activities included opportunities for collaboration, learning, and networking.

Speakers at the NC CEO Summit focused discussion on challenges they have faced while leading their respective businesses and how those challenges have shaped them to became better leaders. Topics included issues such as creativity, the state of health care, transition, culture, and growth. Anthony Copeland, Heather Denny, Jim Holmes, and Billie Redmond participated in a panel discussion that specifically addressed essential lessons learned as a CEO.

Norwood Teague interviewed speaker Jim Holmes before the summit. Jim Holmes is the managing partner for Sentinel Risk Advisors, a property, casualty, and risk management provider. He also serves on the executive board for the Business North Carolina CEO Summit. 

Throughout the interview, Mr. Holmes provided insights into his view on leadership, concluding that he tends to provide support and help to the smart and gifted people he hires. Mr. Holmes also emphasized the importance of building client relationships.

Saturday, April 13, 2019

How Vistage Helps its Members Become Competitive Leaders


A political science graduate from the University of North Carolina, Norwood Teague works with the Business North Carolina Magazine in featuring the state’s key business personalities. As event director, Norwood Teague had an opportunity to interview General Microcircuits CEO David Dalton who shared how Vistage helped him in improving his company leadership.

Existing for more than 60 years, Vistage is a business coaching company that gathers the leaders from non-competing industries and trains them individually to be experts in the competitive market. Vistage continuously improves and refines its platform to mentor its members in making the right decisions, accomplish success, and overcome new challenges in their respective industries.

Vistage provides its members with unbiased tips and fresh ideas from experienced executives, who have undergone similar challenges, through its programs. These programs are designed for chief executives, small business owners, professional service providers, and executive teams.

Each program involves a process tailored for each group of leaders. For instance, the executive coaching program deals with working on the most pressing issues faced by executives through productive sessions conducted by an accomplished executive coach. The group sessions are then followed by one-on-one coaching. The executive team development program features active learning and collaboration through recurring meetings and workshops facilitated by reputable speakers. Participants of the program recognize the challenges in the business, identify departmental barriers, and apply the recommended approaches.

Tuesday, April 2, 2019

Norwood Teague trying to use Pinterest for Business

I am exploring using Pinterest for business.

It has a lot of users and according to the stats I looked at, high usage, more so than many other social sites.

Therefore

Here is my Pinterest account - https://www.pinterest.com/NorwoodTeague1

Here is one of my new Boards - https://www.pinterest.com/NorwoodTeague1/nc-ceo-summit/

BTW, if you have not found me on other sites, check out

Twitter - https://twitter.com/teaguenorwood

Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/norwoodteague/

LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/norwoodteague/

Thanks to Teddy Burriss - http://www.linkedin.com/in/tlburriss for the encouragement as I explore using social media for purposefully.


Wednesday, March 27, 2019

2019 NC CEO Summit Speakers


A political science graduate from the University of South Carolina, Norwood Teague takes charge in directing major events at Business North Carolina Magazine. As event director, his tasks consist of driving attendance, selling corporate sponsorships, and heading event logistics. One of the events that Norwood Teague handles is the NC CEO Summit.

The NC CEO Summit aims to bring together some of the state’s most brilliant decision-makers to deliver impactful presentations through leadership and engagement tips and other related topics that executive leaders need to build their companies. Attendees of the summit collaborate, learn, and network with like-minded executives through panel discussions. The event features industry leaders who share the challenges, successes, and experiences they have gone through. Two of the speakers for this year’s NC CEO Summit include:

Edward Auslander holds the positions of president, CEO, and board member of the LORD Corporation. The company’s international business growth dates back to its establishment in 1924. Serving a wide range of markets, including automotive and electronic industries, the LORD Corporation exists as a leading provider in 26 countries. Currently in charge of the company, Auslander has handled a number of management and leadership responsibilities across different industries within the company.

Aprille Bell of DHG, LLP, started serving the company as managing partner in 1991. Her responsibilities range from collaborating with business owners regarding strategic and operational concerns to resolving clients’ finance-related problems. Bell also actively participates in the company’s mentoring and recruiting efforts.

Friday, January 4, 2019

Sometimes businesses are born when an entrepreneur is sitting on the other side of a negotiation. Jim Holmes’ Sentinel Risk Advisors, which provides property, casualty, and risk management services, is no exception. Early in his career, he discovered a weakness in the business insurance market: many brokers were focused more on completing transactions than achieving the best results for clients. Holmes knew this was a flawed approach.

Holmes is a Smithfield native who earned a bachelor’s degree at N.C. State University and earned the certified public accountant (CPA) designation. After graduation, he worked for a furniture company and insurance brokerage giant, Marsh & McLennan Cos., in Phoenix, Ariz. After a couple years, he moved back to North Carolina and led business development for a Raleigh-based brokerage for 12 years. 

Holmes launched Sentinel Risk Advisors in 2013, representing clients nationwide and in 150 countries. Since then, Sentinel has opened offices across the Carolinas and built a staff of about 45 employees. In addition, Holmes has served on the UNC System Board of Governors since 2015 after being on the foundation boards of WakeMed Health & Hospitals and Wake Technical Community College.

Holmes also serves on the Executive Board of Business North Carolina Magazine’s CEO Summit, held this April in Pinehurst. At this event, he will participate on a CEO panel, moderated by Heather Denny of Wells Global. Joining him will be Billie Redmond of Trademark Properties. 

The NC CEO Summit is two days of collaboration, networking, and learning for North Carolina CEOs and Presidents. For more information on the CEO Summit, see:
businessnc.com/ceosummit. 

Why did you open Sentinel?
Sentinel was born out of what I observed as a weakness within the insurance industry. 
Through consolidation, things were becoming too transactional. Instead, it needed to be driven by a strong value proposition, and buffeted by intellectual capital and a world-class customer service platform. So, we sought to hire the best and the brightest, and build a service platform to compete with large and small alike, but at every interaction with every client, drive value. 

How has Sentinel evolved since its founding? 
Certainly, we are much different than when we started. Our talent is much deeper at every space. For instance, we have developed our loss prevention platform, our claims platform, and our thought leadership platform. Also, we have attorneys working in numerous specialty areas, and we have five offices in two states. It has been a great ride and we have had a lot of fun. 

Is hiring challenging?
We are very intentional. Essentially, we run two strategies as we recruit within the industry, and out of the industry. Does it require meeting a lot of people to hire the right people? Sure, but that is part of it. We work very hard at “being out there.” 


Tell us about your leadership style?
I am a big fan of hiring really smart people and getting out of their way. My job is to support what they do, not drive what they do. We come up with goals and objectives collaboratively as a firm and then I help and support.


What is your typical day like? 
I believe strongly in the power of partnership. My rule is breakfast, lunch, or dinner with a prospect, a client, or a center of influence. My days, thankfully, have shifted to the things I enjoy the most. We have recently hired a talented CFO, which keeps me away from spreadsheets. I spend three-quarters of my time on the thing that I enjoy most, am best at, and derive the most value from—and that’s building relationships.  

What is your main approach in client relationships?
We need to know the right solution, keep up with market changes, and give clients strong advice and council, but that is the transactional part. The value proposition we bring is to dig deep into someone’s business, spending time understanding the nuances of their enterprise and helping them structure their transactions to mitigate their risk. 

Do current clients provide a lot of your prospects?
Our clients are our partners, and we are fortunate that they feel that way, too. So, yes, we do get a lot of referrals from existing clients. Our strategic partnerships—centers of influence, for instance—have also played a critical role in growing Sentinel’s brand and business. But candidly, we’ve also built the business the old-fashioned way; writing letters, getting on the phone, networking, etc.   

What else sets Sentinel apart?
Several things set Sentinel apart. While most in our industry compete on how well they can place your insurance, Sentinel is working to position your business for success. At a time when other providers are moving toward automation and an impersonal service platform, Sentinel is elevating our service commitment to uncompromising standards. It’s a seismic shift in approach; from merely delivering tactics, to setting forth strategy. 


What should we be paying attention to? 
This is an interesting question because there is a transition occurring. In Raleigh, and I think in North Carolina in general, the “old guard” is cycling to the new. I would say that the names of yesterday will likely not be the names of tomorrow.