Participants in C-Change, a year-long professional development program offered by the Cincinnati Chamber of Commerce, expect to learn new things. Yet sometimes the results are surprising. Recent participants include the heads of two construction firms that won a joint bid to build the city’s streetcar project, and young professionals who used the program as a platform to network their way to their next job.
C-Change participants have become lifelong friends – and even partners. Recently, the program celebrated an unusual milestone, the first time two of its graduates got married.
Programs like C-Change are important because today’s young professionals want more than a job. They want a city they can make their own, whether it’s through renting a unique downtown loft or giving up a car to embrace a city’s public transportation system. They want dense urban amenities that allow them to leap in and have fun when they’re not working, and they want a thick labor market so they can find their next job when they’re ready. They sometimes want to switch careers; explore different options; maybe learn about real estate internships or other markets in boom; and generally just explore urban living to the fullest extent.
In the global battle for talent, where in-demand professionals have lots of choices, cities have to be ready to satisfy these customers — or risk losing them to a competitor who will.
“We want to get people connected to opportunities,” says Julie Bernzott, manager of HYPE Programs (Harnessing Young Professional Energy) for the Cincinnati Chamber, who helps run the C-Change program and other initiatives to attract and retain talent. “We don’t want to just say that your current job is here, but also your next job and your job after that.”
Building buzz: Cincinnati
Downtown Cincinnati. Photo by Scott Beseler of Soapbox. Despite the fact that Cincinnati was recently ranked one of the top 100 places to start a career by Time, one of the biggest challenges in recruiting people to move here is that they simply don’t know much about the city. Their attitudes aren’t positive or negative – instead, they’re blank, like an empty slate waiting to be inscribed with a first impression.
That offers both a challenge and an opportunity to Bernzott, who is charged with helping to ensure that Cincinnati brings up only the best thoughts in the minds of potential recruits.
“We want to provide them with something to tell the rest of the story,” she says. “When you’re talking about moving to a city, any city, the professional life is only one piece of it.”
The chamber provides HR professionals with an arsenal of marketing materials. They also fill up the Twitter-sphere and social media outlets with positive news about the metro area.
“One of biggest selling points is the affordability factor,” says Bernzott. “You can have a great urban apartment or be able to afford to buy a home and still experience the city and life here.”
HYPE’s programs, which include the annual mixer Bold Fusion, a monthly ambassador program that connects professionals, and in-depth initiatives like C-Change and Cincy Next, help to link young professionals to a larger community once they’re here. The programs are geared towards a generation that’s strapped for time and eager to jump in and engage.
Having a vibrant urban area is a key part of the mix, and beautiful, walkable neighborhoods like Over the Rhine are draws. Yet above all, people want to be connected to each other, and that’s what HYPE does.
“People say they can’t remember when there was such an explosion of friends and relationships in their lives – maybe not since college,” say Benzott.
Startup City: Pittsburgh
AlphaLab Gear in Pittsburgh. Photo by Brian Cohen of Pop City. Innovation Works, a nonprofit organization that helps to spur entrepreneurship in Pittsburgh, is charged with an ambitious task: making sure the Steel City becomes the next Silicon Valley.
And a strange thing is happening in this Rust Belt town – it’s actually working. A growing entrepreneurship scene is attracting fresh talent to Pittsburgh, which is now seen as a place where creatives can go to find a career and an affordable cost of living. The city’s population of 20 to 34 years old has grown by seven percent in the last five years.
“Accelerators are a big piece of what attracts talent,” says Terri Glueck, director of communications and community development with Innovation Works (IW), the region’s largest seed stage investor. AlphaLab offers startups $25,000 and 20 weeks of intense mentoring, and in exchange, these groups agree to stay and grow in Pittsburgh — with IW’s help.
AlphaLab is an important part of the suite of tools that Pittsburgh uses to lure talent. These companies go on to create jobs, fostering a virtuous cycle of newcomers arriving in town.
Success stories include The Resumator, which sorts and organizes resumes for businesses and was used by recent presidential campaigns; Shoefitr, which completes 3-D scans of the insides of shoe brands and puts the info on shoe websites to ensure the perfect fit; and 4Moms, which makes self-folding strollers and other products that make parents’ lives easier.
If AlphaLab gets them in the door, Pittsburgh’s growing green scene (bike commuting is on the rise here), world-class universities and blooming restaurant scene seal the deal. Yet equally important is the organic growth of a startup network that supports like-minded companies.
“If you need a flexible space to start your company with four people this month, then grow to 12 people next year and 30 people the year after, then you can find that here,” says Glueck. “If your team bikes to work and you need to be able to pull your bikes into the co-working space, that’s becoming more common. There are more amenities for a 24-hour lifestyle.”
Innovation Works also provides a human resources strategist that helps fledgling companies find C-level executive talent, a critical aspect of helping startups reach the next level.
The art of placemaking: Denver
Union Station in downtown Denver. Photo courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
Union Station in Denver was built in 1881 as a hub for the city’s rail traffic. Today, it is the site of a $1 billion placemaking effort that is elevating this Rocky Mountain city to new heights.
More than 6,500 housing units have been built around Union Station in recent years. The station will soon be the hub of Denver’s new FasTracks rail network, which provides intercity rail service and, in a few years, will add commuter rail service to and from the airport. The project shows the importance of transit-oriented development in attracting young talent.
“Creating place is what ultimately attracts the talent,” says Brittany Morris Sanders, vice president for public affairs with Downtown Denver Partnership, the group charged with guiding downtown development. “This generaton, millenials, often pick where they live before they have a job. We also know that companies look for places that attract this type of talent.”
Denver is now ranked second in attracting millenials by the Brookings Institution (Washington, D.C. is number one), and much of its success, according to Saunders, has to do with public investments in placemaking. From parks to signature open spaces to infrastructure for public transportation, Denver has transformed its downtown into a magnet for talent.
There are now more than 65,000 people living in downtown Denver (by way of comparison, Pittsburgh and Cincinnati are struggling to cross the 20,000 threshold).
The atrium at Galvanize. Photo by Kara Pearson Gwinn of Confluence. Denver also has a growing culture of entrepreneurship. Denver Startup Week is the largest in the country, with 5,000 people engaged in 125 different events. Saunders says that Denver’s highly educated workforce helps attract entrepreneurs and companies. (Many say that the “Colorado paradox” is still a challenge, with the state’s relatively low investment in education resulting in low levels of college attainment for natives.)
Of course it’s about more than development. DDP’s CityBuild program helps young professionals living downtown to engage in making the city a better place.
“We know through research that the emotional connection that people have with their city translates to their ability to invest in their city, stay in their city, become part of it,” says Saunders.
It’s nice to share: Washington, D.C.
Senator Mark Warner, Paul Singh and Mitchell Schear at Crystal Tech Fund. With the battle to attract and retain talent heating up in cities across the U.S., developers are now getting in on the game, designing spaces and places that attract the next generation.
Nowhere is that more apparent than Washington, D.C. In Crystal City, a close-in suburb serviced by the Metro, New York real estate developer Vornado has leased an office building to the national coworking company WeWork. The plan is to build 250-plus small apartments with amenities geared towards tech workers.
Vornado’s placemaking effort is the sharing economy writ large. This unique apartment development is aimed squarely at the generation that’s embraced bikesharing, carsharing, coworking and the like. The apartments are small but the amenities will be big, with fun spots to hang out and collaborate, including high-end communal kitchens featuring Viking stoves.
“By bringing together a collaborative living environment, we think what that does is attract great young talent,” says Mitchell Schear, president of Vornado/Charles E. Smith. “Instead of being bound to a specific place and a lot of material posessions, people want to be flexible with work and living. If they want to take a vacation to South by Southwest, they can do that.”
Tech Shop in Crystal City. The project is part of a larger effort in Crystal City, where Vornado owns eight million square feet of real estate. The company has partnered with Paul Singh, formerly of 500 Startups, to create the Crystal Tech Fund to invest in homegrown entrepreneurs. Vornado has also created a 22,000 square foot Tech Shop maker studio, designed and built a showroom of the latest open office trends, and attracted top restaurants and bars to the area.
“We have knowledge workers,” he says of D.C.’s changing complexion. “Instead of just being the seat of government, which is how we’ve attracted and retained people for decades, more young people are being drawn here because of our economy. They come, they stay.”
Lee Chilcote is Editorial Director with Issue Media Group. He writes about urban redevelopment, placemaking and the future of cities. Follow him @leechilcote.