Showing posts with label Democracy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Democracy. Show all posts

Tuesday, 2 February 2021

Team Building Scott Julian develops democracy as President of Lewis Builders

  Growing up, Scott Julian was motivated by the reach of his father’s real estate and property management businesses into the community, but he was inspired by his dad’s work ethic. 

Carmel by the Sea, CA, February 02, 2021 - Growing up, Scott Julian was motivated by the reach of his father’s real estate and property management businesses into the community, but he was inspired by his dad’s work ethic. It was he who introduced Julian to the tenets of motivational speaker, the late Zig Ziglar, who said, “You can have everything in life you want, if you will just help enough other people get what they want.” 

It is this principle that has guided Julian’s actions in life and in business, whether he was running his own landscaping company during high school, for which he was bestowed the local chamber’s “Young Business Person Entrepreneur Award”, or today, as he takes the helm as President of Lewis Builders residential design/build firm in Carmel. 

“I've been fortunate to have several influential leaders invest in or inspire me,” said Julian, “which fuels my passion to create opportunities for others. In the past few years, we’ve hired college graduates and have grown them into managers. We’ve hired aspiring designers and helped develop them into award-winning designers. We’ve hired master builders who previously worked for themselves, and are now providing them with a team, proven processes, and a fulfilling career.” 

Julian’s own career development, from serving as COO for the past four years, to adding President to his role in the firm, is an example of the mentoring mentality on which Lewis Builders CEO John Lewis built the company, and has served as the foundation on which they’ve developed their team. 

Building a Business 

Within a year after graduating from high school, Scott Julian had his contractor’s license and had established the first of many businesses he would develop during the next 25 years. In 2016, he was working as an “Aging-in-Place” consultant, offering home-modification recommendations to enable residents to live safely in their homes for as long as possible. Seeking a qualified builder who understood and practiced the concept, he discovered John Lewis, an Aging-in-Place specialist, certified through the National Association of Home Builders. 

Lewis believes in “Change Your Space, Change Your Life.” He believes in possibility, in productivity, and in developing a democracy both within his business and in working with clients, enabling everyone to have a voice and a role in the process and the outcome. 

“I’ve always believed in attracting and retaining team players by focusing first on their goals and what they need,” said Lewis. “A mistake business owners often make is spending time attracting ‘A players’ and then not leaning into their intelligence and expertise. I’ve worked hard to create what I think is a true democracy, a safe place where intelligent people with different views come to table to express their ideas through healthy conflict, and then extract the most viable solutions, ideas, creativity, and inspiration.” 

In 2017, Lewis brought Julian and Kenny Boyd into partnership, starting with an invitation to join him in Florida, at a weeklong master course in business, with entrepreneur, business strategist and motivational speaker Tony Robbins. The trio went with two goals in mind: to get to know each other better, and to immerse themselves in the psychology and practices of “better business.” 

“We came back, business partners,” said Julian, “with a three-year plan and the goals and the strategies to successfully implement it. That John and Kenny saw the potential in me and thought enough of me to invite me on this journey with them has been life changing.” 

“John Lewis,” says Julian, “is a visionary and a leader. Kenny Boyd has the financial experience and acumen to put the guard rails around the entrepreneurial visions.” 

“I’m honored to have earned their trust to be promoted to President,” said Julian. “I am the process and people person, creating systems for what is a really complicated industry. Particularly now.” 

After four years of working with Lewis and Boyd to develop the Lewis Builders team, Julian is directing the daily business, enabling Lewis to focus on the future, watching for trends, and developing the highest level of building design. 

“I have every confidence that Scott Julian is in the best possible position to lead us,” Lewis said. “From an operational standpoint, no one is more well-suited, more capable, more deserving to lead our democracy than Scott.” 

Leading a Company During COVID

For Lewis Builders, the new decade dawned with a full docket of design and building projects, and the promise of a productive year, which didn’t plan for a pandemic. However, the company quickly put processes in place that, in many cases, enabled them to implement pandemic protocols and continue to provide services. When COVID shut down construction, they shifted to strategizing, so they were ready to roll once the order was lifted. 

“In Monterey County,” said Julian, “it is very difficult to get construction and remodeling projects properly designed and permitted, even when there isn’t a pandemic. But, having a clearly defined process that moves the project forward, executed by a team of talented engineers, designers, and contractors committed to our clients, often has resulted in finishing in record time. Even now.” 

In addition to working with a dynamic team as he deals with the day-to-day demands of business, Julian relies on the support of his biggest champions, his wife, Alicia Stirling-Julian, and their daughter, Alexa. 

An unprecedented year, 2020 proved a trying time for all, filled with unforeseen challenges. Against all hope, 2021 seems to have begun as a continuation of that. “Yet, because of this,” said Julian, “I have learned so much about resiliency and determination, and how essential it is to work as a team, always guided by our core values. If we can do that, we’ve got this.” 


Contact: 
Marci Bracco Cain 
The Buzz PR LLC 
Salinas, CA 
(831) 747-7455 
https://www.lewisbuilder.com/

Saturday, 20 February 2016

Democracy in the Fields Website launch and Panel discussion with Luis Valdez on April 3rd at the National Steinbeck Center

On April 3, from 2-5 P.M., the National Steinbeck Center will host a website launch and panel discussion, moderated by Teatro Campesino founder Luis Valdez, to formally unveil Democracy in the Fields.

Salinas, CA, February 20, 2016 - On April 3, from 2-5 P.M., the National Steinbeck Center will host a website launch and panel discussion, moderated by Teatro Campesino founder Luis Valdez, to formally unveil Democracy in the Fields. This multi-media project tells the stories of farmworkers who joined Cesar Chavez’s movement forty years ago in the Salinas Valley.


The website features a recently discovered trove of captivating images by award-winning photographer Mimi Plumb. Plumb documented events during the summer and fall of 1975, when a landmark law gave California farmworkers the right to petition for union elections. “Mimi was swept up in the excitement as she watched history unfold. She took hundreds of photos over many months. Then she put the negatives in a box and went on with her life,” notes Miriam Pawel, project coordinator. “Forty years later, she rediscovered the trove of photos, and her curiosity and passion were rekindled. She had taken almost no notes, written down only a handful of names.” The first stage of the website project, adds Pawel, was “to put names to the faces. But as soon as we began sharing the photos, it became clear they were a window into a much larger, important story. Partly because of the memories they evoked, partly because of the transformational nature of that era, and partly because we were showing people photos of loved ones they had not seen in decades.”

In words and pictures, Democracy in the Fields tells the story of Cesar Chavez’s march through the Salinas Valley to spread the word about the historic elections that began in the fields in September 1975, and the impact on farmworkers who discovered their own power. It features workers like Jose Renteria, recruited as a teenager to help in the campaigns of 1975, who grew up to run the UFW’s Salinas office and then to work as Human Relations director of Matsui Nursery; Sabino Lopez, who was an irrigator with a third grade education and became a labor organizer, then deputy director of the Center for Community Advocacy. He was the first farmworker on the board of the National Steinbeck Center. Mario Bustamante is also featured; he left his Mexico City home as a teenager to find his father, followed his father into the lettuce fields, and then into a union that became a social center, a classroom, and a path to power.

The program on April 3rd will feature an online gallery of photos as well as opportunities for participants to peruse the website, add comments, and tell their own stories. The panel discussion, led by Luis Valdez, will feature participants in the movement who are the subjects of the photographs. Timed to be close to Cesar Chavez Day, the event offers an opportunity to revisit the farmworker movement with fresh perspectives and help inform a new generation about the significance and legacy of the farmworker movement in the 1970s.

The project was made possible with support from California Humanities, a non-profit partner of the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the Center for Community Advocacy.

Contact:
Marci Bracco Cain
Chatterbox PR
Salinas, CA 93901
(831) 747-7455
http://www.steinbeck.org/