Friday, September 20, 2013

The attitudes to succeed in a small town

From simpletonian775September 19, 2013 at 7:59 PM:

The attitudes to succeed in a small town
#428 - April 23, 2013


Becky McCray is one of our favorite small town advocates! So when we saw the title of her recent post, we had to share it with our readers!

The attitudes to succeed in a small town
Beck McCray


I got a call from a freelance reporter last week. She was assigned to write a positive story about the future of rural. Someone told her she should call me, so she did. It was hard, but I want you to know I showed some restraint, so I only kept her on the line for 30 minutes or so.


No rush hour in my small town. Only rush moment.

I told her the top three reasons rural has a future (food, natural resources, and conservation). We also talked about some things that make living in a rural area great (stars in the night sky, helpful people, and rush moment instead of rush hour). It was good to hear that someone else is thinking about the positive future of rural besides you and me.

Someone else that thinks good things about rural is Clay Forsberg. Clay wrote about the attitudes we need to succeed in small towns in the next decade. (Here’s Clay’s original post.) It struck me as a forward-looking list, one that you’d be interested, too. Here’s a direct quote:

1. Embrace change and be flexible. Expect your life to be turned upside down tomorrow when you wake up. Strike the word security from your vocabulary. The only security you’ll have today, especially in a small town, is yourself and ability to navigate the inevitable changes that will “slap you in the face” when you least expect it. Don’t be pre-occupied with trying to hang on to “the way things were.” The only constant in life is change … so deal with it!

2. Embrace technology. Technology and specifically the internet is everywhere, and embedded in everything. Technology will buffer you from the ups and down of a local economy. Become adept at social media – for social media (Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, etc.) will widen your reach of contacts and ultimately the support when you need it most. The internet will also enable you to create income being a “location independent” micro-entrepreneur.

3. Embrace your community. Your community, your neighbors, are your primary safety net and support structure. Don’t be a recluse. Lend a hand whenever you can. Be the “go-to person” in your town. Be the “help” leader that people will follow. Be the one that is the first one to rally the people to make things better for all. A positive, action-oriented attitude is contagious.

4. Embrace the youth. Make your town the one that welcomes young people. For it’s the young people who will create the new opportunities, the opportunities that will keep your town’s death at bay. Don’t be part of a town that only tries to “hang to yesterday,” and tries to prevent any intrusion into this allegedly idyllic time … the time that is no longer and never will be. Business owners need to part of the solution also. Mentoring and internship programs do wonders keeping your young talent at home, rather than having them leave town for better opportunities.

5. Focus on businesses that serve out-of-town customers. If you’re an entrepreneur, stay away from ventures that serve only your fellow community members, especially if the services you offer already exist locally. Don’t depend on revenue only generated from your community. Be responsible for bringing needed money into the community rather than cannibalize the existing businesses of your neighbors.

That’s Clay’s list. I think he drew a pretty good bead on the target.

What can you do with this list? How about sharing it around your community, trying to get some discussion going? Let me know what you think of Clay’s list, or if you have a good way to get your community talking about attitudes.

As usual, Becky (and Clay) are right on target. What is the attitude of your community?
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simpletonian775September 19, 2013 at 8:00 PM
I didn't credit the post: it is from Agurban Archive, Boomtown Institute

7 comments:

  1. Thank you Huff, I am not Simpletonian if that is what you mean, but I believe in all of the above.

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  2. Thank you Pauly for reposting this and taking it out of a stream for some thoughtful discussion on moving onward and upward and embracing some change and our youth and our commUNITY and all of the above.

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  3. 2013 MCAs were posted this morning.You think with all the fuss and money put into our school system,the numbers would reflect that.Sorry,I am still voting NO.

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    Replies
    1. I saw that also deuce ..a lot of the test scores were under the state average just maybe with more money they would be able to raise the scores

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  4. http://www.boston.com/news/special/education/mcas/scores13/results/narragansett.html


    here is the link for mcas scores

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  5. Thank you Mike c
    Everyone should follow the link and see these results.
    Wow was i set back at what i saw.
    What has happened to our school system.
    Could Pete Farrell be correct?
    Does the water cause the score of kids that drink it get lower?
    Do they cross check the scores with those with wells?
    One would think it may reveal the facts in the matter!
    The test score can be tracked to where the students live and what water is used.
    Phil should be able to check this out!

    ReplyDelete