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The Comox Valley’s first Living Wage Certified employer: Precision Tree Services LTD

January 3, 2017 by Adil Amlani

James Flawith is a LIFT VIP (he’s investing in the future of our grassroots entrepreneur economy). He’s also an innovator. James isn’t comfortable sitting still when he sees opportunities for change. That has earned him nominations as one the Island’s top young entrepreneurs. It makes him a #WeAreYQQ star: someone from the Comox Valley / YQQ region who’s not content with the status quo, who wants to make shift happen. 

But the kind of shift this entrepreneur is interested in making isn’t just about money. Launching the world’s only line of safety clothing for children – Lil Worker Safety Gear – is born of James’ concern for the safety of his kids. Getting involved as a #WeAreYQQ Champion with LIFT Comox Valley is James’ opportunity to engage with other entrepreneurs passionate about growing business and growing a supportive community. Having Precision Tree Services Ltd named the Comox Valley’s first Living Wage Certified business is about James celebrating and retaining talent to grow his business, and to add stability to his community.

An opportunity for our community to raise the bar

“I believe that people should be paid a good wage for good work,” James says. “Our guys all work extremely hard for us. Their work is so dangerous, I want them to be thinking about the work they’re doing, not stressing about whether they’ll make the rent this month.”

James says that, “Paying a living wage is a no-brainer. It means employees are focused on what we need done at Precision Tree, not thinking about a second job or stressing about making ends meet at home.”

James heard about Living Wage Canada via Twitter. “I thought it was awesome. Then I looked into it and realized that we are already paying our crews a living wage.” He followed up by submitting the two page application. A few months later he received notification that Precision Tree Services is the first Living Wage Certified business in the Comox Valley.

James looks around the Comox Valley and sees a lot of other businesses that could be Living Wage Certified. “Lots of people think the same way I do. It’s just a matter of getting the word out and getting people signed on.”  

Attracting and retaining talent

Becoming certified is a simple process, James says. At a time when talent – skilled, trained, valuable employees and staff – are getting harder to find, he believes is something a business can use to differentiate themselves. “It’s positive advertising,” he says. “Hey, we really do care about our employees.”

Receiving Living Wage Certification is also about raising the bar in our community. “I saw it as an awesome way to create positive competition in our community. Imagine, employers one-upping each other to do more for their employees than the rest. Think about the improvement in our community’s quality of life if every employer in the Comox Valley was Living Wage Certified.”

Precision Tree does well, and James thinks his employees should also do well. “It’s something I feel very strongly about. It’s not a good situation when we’re just concerned about making money off the back of our employees.”

Falling dead trees. Cleaning up hydro lines after storms. “We don’t get a lot of chances to make mistakes. If someone makes a mistake, someone pays, with blood. I’m a big fan of finding the right people, and working with them.” Providing a living wage is part of how Precision Tree retains and supports the talent they’ve trained to do very dangerous work.

“We’re proud to be Living Wage Certified. I challenge every business in the Comox Valley to do the same. We have good people. They do good work. Let’s reward them.”  

Growing a talent economy on Vancouver Island

James’ focus on retaining and rewarding his crew fits with what believe at LIFT. We launched in 2015 because we think talent is the future of community economic development on Vancouver Island. While we still have an abundance of natural resources, it’s the human resources – the men and women who are choosing this place as their home – that will determine whether our communities thrive or not. That means we’re interested in talent in all sectors. Whether your business is forestry or food, the film industry or technology, it’s the people who are turning opportunity into success that matter. Let’s make this shift – to a talent driven economy – happen!

For more information  

  • About Living Wage Canada see livingwagecanada.ca/
  • About Precision Tree Services see precisiontreeservices.ca/
  • About Lil Worker Safety Gear, a #WeAreYQQ Champion that launched the world’s first line of children’s safety clothing in November 2016, see lilworkersafety.ca/
  • About the benefits of being a #WeAreYQQ / LIFT Comox Valley Champion or Business subscriber see joinusatlift.ca

by hanspetermeyer
@hanspetermeyer on Twitter and Instagram

Filed Under: Member Profile Tagged With: #WeAreYQQ, business services, entrepreneurs, innovation, leadership, talent

The #WeAreYQQ brand: From the Comox Valley and proud of it!

August 2, 2016 by Adil Amlani

Where is here? Here is the Comox Valley. Who is here? Talent.

On July 20-22, 2016 the Comox Valley Art Gallery hosted the Where is Here? symposium. The symposium focussed on the issue of defining where we are, and who “we” are in this place. CVAG’s Sharon Karsten says this is an important part of community economic development. I agree. That’s why branding our emerging talent economy is so important: because our individual talents (in business, the arts, and more) are the building blocks for the emerging economy that will take us beyond our current economic challenges.

Branding talent economies

How do we brand talent economies? Here’s an example from Vancouver. WeAreYVR was launched several years ago to brand and map Vancouver’s emerging tech talent sector. I like the WeAreYVR example. It’s strong. It provokes curiosity. It’s inclusive. It’s geo-locatable, and distinct.

Following suit, I created #WeAreYQQ to brand our Comox Valley talent economy. #WeAreYQQ  tells the world, “From the Comox Valley and proud of it!” It’s a tool, generated to serve our talent economy. Here’s how it works.

Provocative / clickable

Love them or hate them, hashtags are provocative. They make people stop and think. Using a hashtag also means the brand is searchable (clickable) on most social networks, making it easy to see who’s doing what. #WeAreYQQ also raises questions like: Who is “we?” What is “YQQ?”

Inclusive

As a search term, #WeAreYQQ can’t belong to any one person, business, or agency. It belongs to everyone who uses it. The “we” of #WeAreYQQ is anyone who wants to use the brand to attach to their work – or to the work of people and organizations who are doing good stuff in our region. I routinely tag people doing good stuff with the phrase “#WeAreYQQ ★.” It’s my way of saying “heroes of the Comox Valley” – but in a concise, branded, and collaborative way that works well on social media.

Geo-locatable and distinct

#WeAreYQQ uses the IATA code for Comox Airport (YQQ). IATA codes are often used by businesses and organizations in other locales because they’re short, distinct markers that cannot be confused with other locales. (For example, the “CV” brand is great for locals. For the rest of the world, the people we’re branding for, it most often means “curriculum vitae” – or more close to home, Cowichan Valley.) IATA codes only point to distinct locales. Just as WeAreYVR = Vancouver and WeAreYEG = Edmonton, WeAreYQQ = Comox Valley.

Is it working?

Search via Google, Twitter, Facebook – and especially Instagram. #WeAreYQQ is being used by all manner of creatives and entrepreneurs – painters, musicians, fish charter operators, bakeries, blacksmiths, and more. They’re using #WeAreYQQ to brand what they’re doing in and beyond the Comox Valley. By using it, they’re inviting others to click through to discover a community of creatives and entrepreneurs in the Comox Valley.

Screenshot 2016-07-24 09.54.36

Collaboration and competition

Generating a talent economy is about collaboration. It’s also about competition. We compete with other regions endowed with natural and cultural amenities, relatively “affordable” housing, etc. Having a brand helps differentiate us. It also shows that we’re serious about supporting our talent economy.

How we provide support is by growing and sustaining trust and grassroots collaboration. This is already part of the culture of some organizations and businesses in the Comox Valley. Elevate the Arts Festival is one of my favourite examples. Having an inclusive brand like #WeAreYQQ makes collaboration easier. Here’s what I mean:

Whenever anyone uses the #WeAreYQQ tag they are identifying with and amplifying our talent economy. By following, retweeting, commenting on, and reposting #WeAreYQQ stories – in any media – people are extending the impact of the brand, and the reach or visibility of our Comox Valley talent economy. When we support businesses, organizations, and artists that are self-identifying with our Comox Valley talent economy, we are directly helping to grow the local talent economy.

Growing our talent economy

Macro level support from agencies and institutions is a positive when it comes to growing a talent economy, and it’s great to see movement after the pot got stirred a couple of summers back. Our small tech talent pool now is on the radar. But our talent pool is much larger than our tech sector, and the evidence of decades of community economic development, and more recent examples of “startup communities,” is that what’s most important is an abundance of diverse grassroots, micro-level activities – across all sectors. For the Comox Valley, that means we need to grow our capacity to support entrepreneurs in the arts and in food, big time.

At LIFT Comox Valley (formerly the #WeAreYQQ Project) we launched the #WeAreYQQ brand as a tool for grassroots creatives and entrepreneurs to use. It’s your brand, not ours. You are the people creating the home-grown economy reflecting the values and aspirations of the people who live here. By using the brand you’re making this place – this “here” – visible as an emerging talent-driven economy. Let us know how we can help. That’s what LIFT Comox Valley is all about: Leading, Inspiring, and Fuelling Talent to grow a new economy in the Comox Valley.

Let’s make this shift happen!

hpm
for LIFT Comox Valley

@WeAreYQQ on Twitter

Filed Under: Comox Valley Tagged With: #WeAreYQQ, business services, creatives, economy, entrepreneurs, innovators, knowledge sector

Rob Kelly’s #WeAreYQQ Report on Tech & Media: Spring 2016

March 1, 2016 by Adil Amlani

This is my first report on the Comox Valley’s tech and media sector for the #WeAreYQQ Project. Three to four times a year I will be reporting on how local tech and media individuals and companies are succeeding and winning. Reports will be posted to this blog, and to local print publications whenever possible. If you’ve got news, please Tweet me @robkelly63.

Congratulations to Brent Craven at Craven Studios. Brent is a video creative who recently worked as director of photography and editor on Our Voices, Our Stories documentary, about the former St. Michael’s Residential School in Alert Bay. The film recently won best short form documentary at the American Indian Film Festival in San Francisco.

 

Brent is now editing Wine Guys, a six-part TV series coming out in 2016. You can see Brent’s video on former Comox Valley Record columnist Ralph Shaw at

 

Sarah Clark’s Future Perfect is a short form animated film company focusing on commercial clients. She recently completed a project for tech start-up Appreciado, the first project she’s done that almost exclusively uses hand drawn animation. Follow Sarah on Twitter @futureperfectTV.

Here’s what Future Perfect did for Vancouver advertising and design firm, St. Bernadine Mission: 

 

Audio Xcellence is a DJ service that’s recently added a 20-foot indoors/outdoors screen to the existing 1,600 watt sound system, giving Audio Xcellence the ability to deliver “big picture, big sound”. Owner Russell Ball says that their special Halloween screening of the Rocky Horror Picture Show at the Courtenay Legion raised funds for the Care-A-Van homeless project.

Leif Jason at Mastermynde Strategy provides a wide range of professional expertise in marketing, eCommerce, web strategy, and more. He has recently developed an online calendar of Comox Valley events that’s crowd-sourced, and community-curated. A of the key to the success of this community calendar are curators, people with a passion for specific event sectors (e.g. food, sports, music, business, etc). If you’re interested in being a calendar curator please contact Leif directly via mastermynde.com or Tweet him @mastermynde A draft is posted at weareyqqcommunitycalendar.ca (see the dropdown menu at “Categories” for all listings). One of Leif’s passions is seeing community organizations using online resources effectively. For example, he’s been working with the Rotary Club of Comox to help merge multiple websites and use social media more consistently.

As for yours truly, Rob Kelly at Modern Rocket Media in Comox, I’m a corporate video writer, producer, and director. I’ve recently produced a fundraising video for the Richmond Hospital Foundation, telling the story of a long-time doctor in the community and the changes he’s seen in health needs over the years. I’ve also produced a short-form historical documentary for the Labour Heritage Centre of BC about the tragic history of asbestos and its impact on BC workers. Here’s a short I made for WorkSafeBC:

I’m currently working on a video series about dairy farm safety for new and young workers, shooting some of the footage locally – at Viewfield Farm in Courtenay.

Got tech or media news? Let’s get it in front of people. Send me a Tweet @robkelly63. Or email me at rob <at> modern-rocket <dot> com.

by Rob Kelly
on Twitter @robkelly63

Filed Under: Comox Valley, News Tagged With: #WeAreYQQ, business services, creatives, media, news, tech

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