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Bits & Briefs

Business Today's 6th Annual Champagne Reception Oct. 6 for Women in Business

A power networking session and champagne reception will be held Oct. 6 at The Peninsula Club in Cornelius in honor of Business Today’s 2010 Top Women Business Leaders. The sixth annual event recognizes the contribution of women in business in the Golden Crescent. Former winners include Realtors Abigail Jennings, of Lake Norman Realty, and Diane Honeycutt, of Team Honeycutt in Concord; Pat Horton, president of Cabarrus Bank & Trust; Robin Smith of Lake Norman Chrysler Jeep Dodge; Dakeita Vanderburg Johnson, CEO of Southgate Masonry & Lumber in Concord; and Ginger Griffin of Ginger Griffin Marketing and Design in Cornelius. Business Today columnist and UNCC instructor Cheryl Kane will conduct the power networking sessions, after which the 2010 winners will receive their awards, complete with champagne toasts. The event, which starts at 6 p.m., is $12.50 to attend, Visa and MasterCard accepted at time of reservation. More info: Phone BusinessToday at 704-895-1335 or email nebiztoday@gmail.com for more information. Registration opens at 5:30 p.m.


Heart Group merges with Sanger Institute

Heart Group of the Carolinas, with offices in Concord and Albemarle, has merged with Sanger Heart and Vascular Institute. The practice will now begin operating under the Sanger name.


Denver Business Association luncheon set for Sept. 16

More than 100 Denver area business owners will meet at Verdict Ridge Golf Club Sept. 16  from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. for the annual Denver Area Business Association networking luncheon.  Non-members are invited to attend the event which will honor long-time Denver business leader Joe Turbyfill and his wife Jean. Michael Thompson, director of corporate communications for the Charlotte Bobcats, will discuss overcoming adversity in the business world. The cost is $17 for pre-registration at www.dabanc.org or $20 at the door. More info: Denis Bilodeau, dbilodeau@aquestainsurance.com


NC DOT official addressing LKN business leaders Friday

Jim Trogdon, the chief operating officer for NC DOT, will be the featured speaker at a Lake Norman Chamber of Commerce luncheon Friday at NorthStone Country Club.  Trogdon will discuss local road improvements including HOT lanes, commuter rail and the diverging diamond interchange planned at Exit 28 on I-77 in Cornelius. Tickets are $16 for members and $20 for non-members. More info: 704-892-1922.


RCCC receives $2.6 million in grants

During its 2009-2010 fiscal year, Rowan-Cabarrus Community College was awarded $2.654 million in grant funding from public and private organizations. From July 1, 2009 to June 30, 2010, the 21 grant awards produced a single-year grant-funding record for the college. Funded projects include scholarships for students with financial need, a major updating of RCCC’s IT infrastructure, the JobsNOW certificate programs, initiatives to develop new curriculum, and programs to help students quit smoking and assist local citizens adversely impacted by changes in the tobacco industry.The funding agencies include the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Margaret C. Woodson Foundation, the Blanche and Julian Robertson Family Foundation, the North Carolina Health and Wellness Trust Fund, the North Carolina Tobacco Trust Fund, the North Carolina Community College System, the Proctor Foundation, and the N.C. BioNetwork.


Small Business Toolbox

How to evaluate an event planner

LAWRENCE

What does a professional planner really do to help clients?

Let’s say you want to hold a customer appreciation event but you want it to be more than just a party. Your company’s reputation is on the line. You have to make a decision whether to leave this important function to a professional or to unskilled hands? In this case, a planner can be a valuable asset

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Savvy Business Owner —

August edition

DeMAO

In the last of this three part series, Sherre explains how reviewing your current involvements can help you achieve your goals through putting you in direct contact with your ideal target market, in direct contact with those who could refer you to your ideal target market, or to help you gain needed support or resources for growing your business.

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Boost Your Sales:

Effective questioning combats centuries-old selling problem

Since the dawn of mankind we have been buying and selling “stuff”, and over the centuries a predictable pattern has developed between buyers and sellers. The buyer-seller dynamic can spell “commission catastrophe” for the sales professional who lacks the artful skill of effective questioning.

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RCCC Board announces new member, reappointments

Quentin Woodward Jr. of Salisbury has joined the Rowan-Cabarrus Community College Board of Trustees, and four current members have been reappointed.

Woodward replaces J. Newton Cohen Sr., who retired.

Woodward worked 21 years for the Federal Bureau of Prisons as a correctional officer, unit manager, case manager and EEO recruiter. After his career with the Bureau of Prisons, he has worked in public education, security and as a small business owner.

RCCC board members who have been reappointed are Paul Brown of Salisbury, Cynthia Mynatt of Concord, Irvin Newberry of Concord, and R. Wayne Troutman of Concord.

 Brown, vice president and general manager of W.A. Brown & Son Inc., was first appointed to the RCCC board by the Rowan-Salisbury Board of Education in 2005.

 Mynatt is vice president of Ben Mynatt Pontiac-Buick-GMC Truck, Ben Mynatt Nissan, Ben Mynatt Chevrolet-Cadillac, and Ben Mynatt Pre-Owned Inc. She was first appointed to the RCCC board in 2005 by the Cabarrus County Commissioners. She has served as vice chair of the RCCC trustees since 2006. She serves on numerous other boards, including the North Carolina Automobile Dealers Association, Charlotte Automobile Dealers Association, Cabarrus College of Health Sciences and Ben Mynatt Children’s Foundation.

 

Newberry, a certified public accountant, is owner of the Irvin T. Newberry Accounting Firm. He has served on the RCCC Board of Trustees since 1998, when he was first appointed by the Cabarrus County Commissioners.

 

Troutman is president and general manager of Troutman Motors Inc., and general manager and agent for Troutman Insurance. He was first appointed to the RCCC board by Gov. Mike Easley in 2003.

Opinion

Our regional recovery

RUSSELL

By Bill Russell
Wouldn’t it be nice to pick up a paper and read only pleasant headlines for a change?  The news in Washington this week is that we have retired the national debt, unemployment in North Carolina has sunk to it’s lowest levels since 2006, and a group hug broke out in the streets of Baghdad.

Unfortunately that’s not the headlines we read.  According to the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), the annual difference between what our federal government collects in tax revenue and what it spends will be $1.3 trillion this fiscal year alone. Combat troops are leaving Iraq, however, we are still a stretch from a tension free region.   Closer to home, North Carolina’s unemployment rate dipped to 9.6 percent in July and has declined for five consecutive months but still remains higher than the national average of 9.5 percent.

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North Line: Does it make any sense, really?

GILROY

Many of us were chilled to the bone a few weeks ago at what Charlotte City Councilman David Howard said at a Lake Norman Transportation Commission meeting. Howard, a Democrat who has focused on inner city affordable housing issues through his position as vice president of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Housing Partnership since 1997, was quoted several times:

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Hot Properties

High-end home sales run the gamut

in LKN; growing supply in Cabarrus

It’s a mixed bag in the luxury market. Some homes are closing at steep discounts, while some pristine homes in superb locations are closing near their asking prices.

Prices per square foot edged upward about 1 percent in Lake Norman during the second quarter vs. 2009 levels, but realized values are still off 20 percent to 25 percent compared to 2007 levels, according to Reed Jackson of Ivester Jackson Distinctive Properties in Cornelius.

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On the Record

Homes sales —

August 2010 edition

These home sales and property transactions in the Golden Crescent were recorded by the Register of Deeds in Mecklenburg, Cabarrus and Iredell.

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New corporations —

August 2010 edition

These new businesses in the Golden Crescent have registered with the N.C. Secretary of State.

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