NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Finding and keeping a quality workforce in
a fast-growth market was the hot topic Thursday at a panel convened Thursday by Leadership Nashville that included
MTSU President Sidney A. McPhee.
Nashville-based
Chris Karbowiak, executive vice
president of Bridgestone Americas, and Jim
Flautt, CEO for Asia Pacific and Japan at Asurion, joined McPhee and
moderator Janet Miller, CEO of
Colliers International, to discuss challenges and opportunities facing top
employers.
Leadership
Nashville brings together top area leaders for a nine-month program to
discuss issues such as government, education, business, labor, diversity and
quality of life.
Calling
Nashville a “50-year-old overnight success story,” Flautt told the group that
low unemployment and the city’s great marketability also means employers are
all “vying for the top talent.”
Karbowiak, who
also serves on MTSU’s Board of Trustees, cited Bridgestone’s mechatronic
partnership as an asset for its manufacturing workforce. She said, however, she
sees competition for administrative, technical and management roles increasing
as Nashville’s popularity rises.
“The challenge
we face is retention, retaining the talent we need,” Karbowiak said. “Five
years, 10 years from now, will the talent stream still be there?”
That’s why
education is important, Flautt said, adding, “You have to reskill the workforce
and think through how they get into the new economy.”
McPhee,
speaking on MTSU’s role as the top provider of college graduates to the
region’s economy, said the university has “embraced the challenge of being the
biggest university serving this boom town.”
“We are doing
this by offering majors that are more in sync with what employers want to see
in our workforce, both hard skills like mechatronics, management and applied
sciences, and soft skills like communications, confidence building, team
building and project work,” he said.
About 80
percent of MTSU’s graduates remain in Tennessee, McPhee said.
The president,
scanning the crowd from the stage, asked Wanda
Lyle, managing director and general manager of U.S. operations for UBS
Business Solutions, based in Nashville, to describe her experience in hiring
MTSU graduates.
Lyle said about
30 percent of the 1,400 workers in its Nashville operation were recent college
graduates – and most of them came from MTSU. She said many MTSU graduates come
to her with work or internship experience and a “down-to-earth” ethic.
“We’ve been
very happy with all the graduates we’ve hired from all of the universities, but
MTSU is our most significant pipeline,” Lyle said.
Bridgestone,
the world's largest tire and rubber company and maker of industrial rubber and
chemical products, and Asurion, a leading provider of device insurance, warranty
and support for cell phones and electronics, are global concerns.
As such, both
Karbowiak and Flautt underscored the importance of diversity and the need for
employees to understand and appreciate differing cultures and markets.
“It’s really
important to mirror your customer base and understand who your customers are,”
Karbowiak said. “Those companies with diverse boards and diverse senior
management will outperform their peers.”
Added Flautt,
“We’re competing on the global stage – we’re not just limited to North
America.”
McPhee, whose
university has almost 40 academic and research partnerships with global
universities, including several strategic ties in China, said overlapping
strategic interests and economic interdependency pay scant attention these days
to borders.
MTSU’s
“percentage of diversity more than exceeds the total percentages put forward in
the state’s population and one of the most diverse universities in the
country,” he said.
“Understanding
and embracing diversity is not only the right thing to do, it’s also the smart
thing to do,” the president said.
MTSU has more than 240
combined undergraduate and graduate programs.
No comments:
Post a Comment