Josh Planos
Rick Alloway
Author
06/29/2023
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21
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Description
Josh Planos, APR, is the Vice President of Communications & Public Relations for the Better Business Bureau. He serves as the spokesperson of BBB’s International Investigations Initiative, and oversees and executes all internal and external communication efforts. His writing has been published by FiveThirtyEight, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal and the Washington Post, among other news outlets. He was recognized among the Midlands Business Journal’s 40 Under 40 Class in 2022. He is a 2014 graduate of the College of Journalism & Mass Communications where he majored in Advertising and Public Relations as well as in English and Communications. He spoke with Campus Voices as part of a special series on the future of the media and communications industries.
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- [00:00:02.850]Welcome to Campus Voices. I'm Rick Alloway,
- [00:00:05.280]and I thank you for your time.
- [00:00:07.530]Our guest today on Campus Voices,
- [00:00:09.630]Campus Voices is Josh Planos,
- [00:00:11.760]the Vice President of Communications
- [00:00:13.830]and Public Relations at the Better Business Bureau,
- [00:00:16.890]and he's also a freelance writer with a list of credits
- [00:00:20.670]and a list of publications that is dizzying,
- [00:00:23.340]including, but not limited to.
- [00:00:25.440]Atlantic Magazine, 538, GQ, The Guardian,
- [00:00:29.670]The New York Times, Slam Magazine,
- [00:00:32.340]Sports Illustrated, The Wall Street Journal,
- [00:00:34.457]and the Washington Post among other publications.
- [00:00:37.380]But along the line, he's also done quite a bit
- [00:00:39.360]of video work and is also a featured sports commentator
- [00:00:43.260]on CNN Philippines periodically.
- [00:00:45.540]So he has certainly done a lot of things since he graduated
- [00:00:49.110]from the University of Nebraska back in 2014 with his degree
- [00:00:53.550]from the College of Journalism and Mass Communications
- [00:00:56.100]and Advertising and Public Relations.
- [00:00:58.290]And if I am correct on this, you also had some studies
- [00:01:01.221]in English and communications, correct?
- [00:01:04.020]Correct.
- [00:01:05.370]So it's been a busy academic career for you,
- [00:01:07.770]and then you hit the ground running right after that.
- [00:01:09.810]But help us connect the dots.
- [00:01:11.970]We want to talk about the future of all the,
- [00:01:14.250]the various industries in which you take part because this
- [00:01:17.550]is part of a series now on campus voices
- [00:01:20.250]relating to futures, but help us sort of get
- [00:01:23.640]from point A to point Z where you are now
- [00:01:26.670]with the Better Business Bureau
- [00:01:27.780]from the time you graduated in 2014.
- [00:01:31.470]Sure.
- [00:01:32.550]Well, when I graduated from college,
- [00:01:34.440]I did not have a full-time position lined up,
- [00:01:37.230]and so that gave me, frankly, too much time to consider
- [00:01:41.340]what my next move would be.
- [00:01:43.110]Very thankful to my mother
- [00:01:44.910]for letting me move in for that month and a half.
- [00:01:47.760]It was a very formative experience,
- [00:01:50.040]but ultimately where I settled on was
- [00:01:54.210]a desire to write full-time,
- [00:01:57.893]whatever position that entailed,
- [00:01:59.670]I wanted writing to be just the central pillar
- [00:02:03.501]of whatever position I would obtain.
- [00:02:06.570]And ultimately, I ended up at KETV NewsWatch 7,
- [00:02:09.450]very grateful.
- [00:02:10.283]That's the ABC affiliate in Omaha,
- [00:02:12.510]to do a little bit of everything.
- [00:02:14.970]My position was digital editor,
- [00:02:17.190]but as anyone who's ever worked in a newsroom could attest,
- [00:02:20.550]you do whatever is asked of you on a given day.
- [00:02:23.340]And in that way it was an incredible learning environment
- [00:02:27.750]for a number of reasons.
- [00:02:29.640]But after then I moved on to
- [00:02:32.790]the University of Nebraska Foundation,
- [00:02:34.770]so a little bit of philanthropy, nonprofit,
- [00:02:38.130]and from there to Grand Island Public Schools
- [00:02:40.860]to work in public education.
- [00:02:43.350]And then now I am at the Better Business Bureau.
- [00:02:46.200]So that is more or less
- [00:02:48.240]my professional journey to this point.
- [00:02:51.240]I have always had a great deal of respect for folks
- [00:02:54.720]who work at the same position their entire careers.
- [00:02:57.750]I think that's incredibly admirable.
- [00:03:00.270]I knew the moment I graduated college,
- [00:03:03.570]that would not be my experience.
- [00:03:05.460]I wanted to sample the fair, I suppose,
- [00:03:09.120]and ultimately end up where kinda my heart wanted me to be.
- [00:03:12.900]And currently, I work in the nonprofit space
- [00:03:15.450]and I'm very happy there.
- [00:03:17.610]I think were this interview taking place
- [00:03:19.650]30 or 40 years ago, someone who had moved,
- [00:03:22.860]not only from different jobs but from one career to another
- [00:03:25.800]would've been considered somewhat
- [00:03:28.290]outside the norm of the experience.
- [00:03:30.210]Whereas now we're telling our students that that will likely
- [00:03:33.090]be the model of their performance throughout their career.
- [00:03:36.210]That changing not just jobs, but entire career fields
- [00:03:39.900]is likely to be what's on their agenda.
- [00:03:42.240]Would you agree?
- [00:03:43.890]I would, I think that we see, unfortunately,
- [00:03:47.310]a lot of industries hemorrhage jobs from year to year.
- [00:03:51.529]There are entirely new industries that probably
- [00:03:54.690]don't even exist yet that will present
- [00:03:57.060]a number of opportunities for,
- [00:03:58.620]you know, the next class of students.
- [00:04:00.750]So certainly I think that that would be the trend
- [00:04:04.320]that we've seen in recent years.
- [00:04:06.960]You started with the Better Business Bureau
- [00:04:08.640]in June of 2021 as director
- [00:04:12.000]of Public Relations and Communications,
- [00:04:13.890]and now are Vice President of
- [00:04:15.960]Communications and Public Relations.
- [00:04:17.730]What does your job entail and what,
- [00:04:19.724]if any such thing exist, is an average day like for you?
- [00:04:24.120]Sure.
- [00:04:25.020]Well, anyone who's ever worked in the nonprofit space
- [00:04:27.450]will tell you it is, do what is needed on a given day.
- [00:04:30.720]Some days that's turning on the lights
- [00:04:32.100]and some days that's handling,
- [00:04:34.333]you know, external media efforts.
- [00:04:36.521]But I would say the vast majority of my work involves
- [00:04:40.410]overseeing and executing all external
- [00:04:42.660]and internal communication efforts,
- [00:04:44.820]marketing efforts, public relations efforts.
- [00:04:47.769]But it absolutely varies by the day.
- [00:04:51.930]There are some seasonal work,
- [00:04:53.130]there are some annual projects that we work through,
- [00:04:57.150]but you know, each day is a little bit different
- [00:04:59.580]and that keeps me on my toes.
- [00:05:02.250]You also are frequently a public affairs specialist
- [00:05:06.090]for them in terms of being used
- [00:05:07.560]by other news media to spread the word.
- [00:05:10.170]I noticed doing a little research for this afternoon
- [00:05:12.540]that you are frequently asked to talk about things
- [00:05:15.330]like consumer scams and things along that line.
- [00:05:18.256]I trust you're comfortable with that role as well?
- [00:05:22.050]Yes, scam Prevention and outreach is a,
- [00:05:24.193]a pretty significant tenet of the Better Business Bureau's
- [00:05:27.420]mission to advance marketplace trust.
- [00:05:29.700]And I'm lucky enough to be the spokesperson
- [00:05:32.640]of our international investigations initiative.
- [00:05:35.310]We produce semi-regular scam studies
- [00:05:37.530]tackling a wide range of topics,
- [00:05:40.110]but many of them pertain locally unfortunately.
- [00:05:44.700]And that, you know,
- [00:05:46.030]results in a great deal of media attention.
- [00:05:49.440]When you were first looking at a career
- [00:05:52.080]and were thinking about where
- [00:05:53.100]you might want to attend college,
- [00:05:54.900]what was on the radar at that time
- [00:05:56.820]and what was it that brought you to school
- [00:05:58.740]at the University of Nebraska Lincoln?
- [00:06:01.620]That's a great question.
- [00:06:03.270]I grew up kind of all around the country,
- [00:06:05.850]but my family put roots down in Omaha
- [00:06:09.120]when I started middle school.
- [00:06:11.130]And so University of Nebraska Lincoln
- [00:06:13.140]was just down the road in a sense,
- [00:06:14.940]and I knew that they had a speech and debate team.
- [00:06:17.880]And in high school that was a big part of my life.
- [00:06:20.370]It's a big part of my identity
- [00:06:21.960]and it helped pay for school as well.
- [00:06:24.660]So the minute I was given a scholarship
- [00:06:27.720]to the UNL speech team, I was sold,
- [00:06:30.720]but I obviously was raised around
- [00:06:33.659]Husker football fanatics.
- [00:06:35.910]And that I'm sure played, played a role in,
- [00:06:38.030]in my interest in the culture
- [00:06:40.170]and environment that that UNL creates, I suppose.
- [00:06:44.280]And those speech skills are now coming back
- [00:06:46.350]to be helpful in a variety of senses as well,
- [00:06:48.900]given your work with scams,
- [00:06:50.340]but also tell us a little bit about
- [00:06:52.590]your involvement with, with being
- [00:06:54.630]a regular sports contributor to CNN's Philippines channel.
- [00:06:59.670]Yeah, if anyone is interested in,
- [00:07:02.280]or on the fence about engaging
- [00:07:04.590]with any sort of public speaking activity,
- [00:07:08.070]whether it be speech or debate or theater,
- [00:07:10.650]I would encourage them to pursue it.
- [00:07:12.630]I do feel like it is a goldmine opportunity.
- [00:07:15.480]Those skills extend to every position
- [00:07:17.640]I've ever held and every position I ever will.
- [00:07:20.040]And it's a fantastic opportunity to learn
- [00:07:22.620]a lot about yourself and your comfort level.
- [00:07:25.180]But in terms of what brought me to this kind
- [00:07:29.220]of odd situation I have with CNN Philippines,
- [00:07:33.180]I covered a basketball player
- [00:07:36.120]on the Creighton basketball team, Kobe Paras,
- [00:07:39.000]who ultimately transferred,
- [00:07:40.710]but he was a very big deal in the Philippines,
- [00:07:44.100]he has a incredible fan base,
- [00:07:46.470]incredible support team
- [00:07:48.120]and basketball is the number one sport of the Philippines,
- [00:07:52.438]incredibly passionate fans.
- [00:07:55.470]And because of that, that ultimately brought me to,
- [00:07:59.220]to a guest segment role.
- [00:08:00.390]And then I guess I just never left,
- [00:08:02.220]so they invite me on occasionally to speak about,
- [00:08:05.555]you know, kind of a little bit of a
- [00:08:07.756]talk of the town kind of situation,
- [00:08:09.720]what whatever sport is is topical and timely.
- [00:08:12.570]Some weeks that's boxing,
- [00:08:13.830]some weeks that's professional basketball,
- [00:08:15.737]some weeks that's tennis.
- [00:08:17.550]And I'm more than happy to help them out.
- [00:08:20.430]I've gained a great deal of respect for their team
- [00:08:23.700]and would hope to actually get out to Manila sometime
- [00:08:27.360]in the near future to meet these folks
- [00:08:29.730]who I've worked with and in a sense
- [00:08:31.769]for many years in person.
- [00:08:34.590]Well, that speaks to the fact that
- [00:08:36.120]you are sort of the model, I would say
- [00:08:38.707]for the multi-platform media content creator
- [00:08:42.630]that we're encouraging many
- [00:08:44.370]of our students here to consider.
- [00:08:46.540]You've done, you're doing PR for the Better Business Bureau,
- [00:08:49.590]you've been a freelance writer
- [00:08:50.970]ever since you graduated from the university.
- [00:08:52.517]You're a sports contributor to the CNN Network.
- [00:08:56.380]You have contributed at least one talk
- [00:08:59.400]I'm aware of to the TEDx UNO series.
- [00:09:02.430]You've done a variety of guest lecture appearances
- [00:09:06.030]in different places around the country.
- [00:09:07.817]So there, you seem to be comfortable touching
- [00:09:11.103]pretty much any field of content creation that there is.
- [00:09:14.820]Is there one that's your favorite at this point
- [00:09:17.850]or that that when push comes to shove,
- [00:09:19.950]you sort of hone in on
- [00:09:21.000]as the one you you feel most comfortable doing?
- [00:09:24.900]So that's a difficult question because timeliness
- [00:09:27.772]of this interview would push me in the direction
- [00:09:31.980]of business and marketing.
- [00:09:34.260]That's taking up a great deal of my time both in my,
- [00:09:38.490]my full-time role and my current position
- [00:09:41.130]in graduate school,
- [00:09:42.330]I'm pursuing an MBA through Creighton University.
- [00:09:45.510]And, but it really does depend on the day
- [00:09:48.540]and what is asked of me.
- [00:09:49.440]I think writing will always be my number one love.
- [00:09:52.171]But certainly, you know, some days social media is required,
- [00:09:56.550]some days videography is required
- [00:09:58.380]and I do find a lot of interest and excitement
- [00:10:02.580]from working in those, those various aspects.
- [00:10:05.490]Well, I noticed in looking over
- [00:10:06.420]your Clifton Strengths finders themes
- [00:10:08.700]that one of them that popped out at me was adaptability.
- [00:10:11.757]And I would certainly think that is most appropriate
- [00:10:14.610]given you just said it's sort of whatever
- [00:10:17.130]is required from day to day is what you're willing to do.
- [00:10:20.400]And adaptability, I would suggest you would think
- [00:10:23.100]would be one of the things you would recommend most
- [00:10:25.230]to young folks entering into the workplace.
- [00:10:28.740]Absolutely.
- [00:10:29.850]Back in the day, a five tool player in Major League baseball
- [00:10:33.210]was really difficult to find.
- [00:10:35.220]And nowadays, I would assume it is something
- [00:10:37.914]of a prerequisite for folks entering into the space.
- [00:10:41.640]I know that there were folks around me at UNL back in,
- [00:10:46.297]you know, 2010, 2011 who were just,
- [00:10:49.787]at least publicly going to school to be a print journalist
- [00:10:53.970]and they just wanted to write.
- [00:10:55.470]And I just don't know if that position exist anymore.
- [00:11:00.360]I think that frankly you need to have someone
- [00:11:03.240]who can work a camera, can produce social media content,
- [00:11:07.080]can voice a story, someone who has great typing speed.
- [00:11:09.990]I think all of those skills are incredibly desired,
- [00:11:13.350]desirable and most employers, I would say are looking
- [00:11:16.590]for a combination of skills and not necessarily one
- [00:11:20.700]which is either fortunate or unfortunate,
- [00:11:22.530]depending on how flexible or adaptable
- [00:11:24.726]you see yourself being.
- [00:11:27.330]Well, the thrust of the series is going to be talking
- [00:11:29.880]about the future and where the guests
- [00:11:33.120]in our series feel their individual fields
- [00:11:35.970]or careers are headed.
- [00:11:37.978]I'll talk to you primarily about your work
- [00:11:41.520]with nonprofits since that's where you are right now,
- [00:11:43.350]but I know you've got a wealth of other background as well.
- [00:11:45.390]So feel free to modify your answers to any of what
- [00:11:47.730]I'm about to pose to you to fit any of those backgrounds.
- [00:11:51.180]But from what you've seen since you graduated from here
- [00:11:54.480]and moved into to your career field,
- [00:11:57.960]how have you seen your field change since when you started?
- [00:12:03.630]Well, difficult to say because
- [00:12:05.730]I've bounced around so much I suppose,
- [00:12:07.770]but at least within the nonprofit space,
- [00:12:10.500]I think a desire to marry the freedom and flexibility
- [00:12:15.840]that a lot of nonprofit work provides
- [00:12:18.030]to its employers with the hard deadlines
- [00:12:21.030]necessary by today's market,
- [00:12:23.760]I think that there's a lot of folks who are being tasked
- [00:12:27.570]with deadlines that they probably never have previously
- [00:12:30.780]in the nonprofit space.
- [00:12:33.060]Frankly, every deadline I've ever had
- [00:12:35.190]since working in a newsroom has felt
- [00:12:37.710]a lot slower than anything I dealt with in a newsroom.
- [00:12:43.143]And, and that way I find that to be
- [00:12:46.200]an incredibly helpful baseline because everything
- [00:12:49.260]is slow as molasses by comparison.
- [00:12:52.470]But I do think that, you know,
- [00:12:54.030]the dev folks and nonprofits are asked to hit
- [00:12:57.104]have certainly been ratcheted up a tick or two,
- [00:13:00.900]but mostly I would say the multi-skill,
- [00:13:03.240]cross-departmental responsibilities
- [00:13:05.856]are not going away as far as I can tell.
- [00:13:08.640]So even though I was hired to essentially run
- [00:13:12.150]a communications department
- [00:13:14.520]within the Better Business Bureau system,
- [00:13:16.500]that also involves a great number of things
- [00:13:19.620]outside of communications as well.
- [00:13:22.350]So that's, I guess essentially what you sign up for
- [00:13:25.700]in the nonprofit space to begin with.
- [00:13:27.570]But increasingly so I would say has been my experience.
- [00:13:31.514]The asking to get involved with things like accounting,
- [00:13:34.800]with HR, you know, seemingly no department
- [00:13:38.250]is off limits for anyone in the nonprofit space.
- [00:13:42.120]In what ways have you seen technological changes
- [00:13:45.540]impact your career field?
- [00:13:48.870]A great deal.
- [00:13:50.070]I work, Better Business Bureau
- [00:13:51.990]is a very generational workforce.
- [00:13:55.020]There are a number of folks who frankly
- [00:13:57.990]probably will not be employed by
- [00:14:00.240]the Better Business Bureau in five to 10 years.
- [00:14:02.820]Just like there are folks like me who hopefully will be,
- [00:14:07.380]that's because there there's any number of new features
- [00:14:12.499]with regard to things like communication apps, right?
- [00:14:16.290]Getting folks up to speed on Microsoft Teams or Slack
- [00:14:19.290]or whatever your preference may be to,
- [00:14:22.620]you know, that even just the social media concept, right?
- [00:14:25.945]This would not really be a conversation 15 years ago
- [00:14:30.496]and now there's a new platform
- [00:14:33.330]that is seemingly being constructed each and every day.
- [00:14:37.560]And because of that, I think the ability to juggle
- [00:14:41.310]multiple projects, multiple innovations
- [00:14:43.840]in a timely manner is not going away anytime soon.
- [00:14:48.150]It's something that is top of mind
- [00:14:49.980]for me and my team as well.
- [00:14:51.882]But the tech, the technological advancements
- [00:14:55.290]that have been made in the past nine years
- [00:14:58.350]since I've been out of school
- [00:14:59.550]have been vast and have really caused me
- [00:15:03.570]to reflect on a lot of the skills
- [00:15:05.100]that I learned and be grateful for them,
- [00:15:06.774]those that were cultivated within
- [00:15:08.940]the halls of the UNLJ School.
- [00:15:12.210]What do you think are the biggest forces that are
- [00:15:15.360]driving change in your area, in your field?
- [00:15:21.150]Some of it is societal.
- [00:15:22.440]I think you see nonprofit organizations maybe stepping out
- [00:15:25.830]on the ledge a little bit more to advance,
- [00:15:28.530]you know, human rights issues,
- [00:15:30.567]to advance societal conversations.
- [00:15:36.300]That's tricky working for the Better Business Bureau,
- [00:15:38.610]I would say who, you know, as an organization,
- [00:15:41.970]it's a century old brand
- [00:15:43.410]that is really meant to be impartial.
- [00:15:45.930]And so that is a tricky dynamic I would say
- [00:15:49.366]on a personal level and to the folks
- [00:15:52.020]working within the BBB system.
- [00:15:53.580]But I would say that, you know,
- [00:15:55.620]any organization is adapting to meet the needs
- [00:15:58.050]of the consumer and those are always a little bit in flux,
- [00:16:02.610]even if it might seem like, you know,
- [00:16:04.980]just a one degree temperature difference,
- [00:16:07.710]you know, it does add up over over time.
- [00:16:10.350]So I would say that a lot of folks just are kind of
- [00:16:13.350]on the lookout for whatever's happening next societally
- [00:16:16.620]and certainly to the business owners that we serve,
- [00:16:20.330]COVID was a pretty significant wrench
- [00:16:23.370]that I think a lot of folks are still working
- [00:16:24.840]their way through the dynamic of whatever
- [00:16:30.032]full-time employment looks like these days
- [00:16:33.720]to a lot of folks, right?
- [00:16:35.190]I work essentially fully remote and that was not really
- [00:16:40.230]an opportunity that I knew existed before COVID struck,
- [00:16:44.880]but like many organizations, the Better Business Bureau
- [00:16:47.790]is working its way through that as well.
- [00:16:49.620]So I would say just adapting
- [00:16:50.880]to meet the needs of the consumer and the business owners
- [00:16:53.671]and the folks that these nonprofit organizations
- [00:16:56.910]are duty bound to serve.
- [00:16:59.010]We'll get back to the remote
- [00:17:01.102]from home working conditions in a bit.
- [00:17:04.320]Do you feel that that because of
- [00:17:06.360]the field that you're in,
- [00:17:08.100]that the kinds of changes that are made
- [00:17:10.320]are primarily reactive to what's happening?
- [00:17:12.870]Or is there an opportunity to also occasionally be proactive
- [00:17:16.560]and suggest where maybe you think the industry
- [00:17:19.050]or the company thinks the industry should go?
- [00:17:23.070]Well, certainly I would hesitate
- [00:17:24.090]to speak for all nonprofits,
- [00:17:25.680]but I would say that the majority of it is reactive.
- [00:17:30.030]I would, and try to instill a sense of
- [00:17:34.680]being proactive for our team,
- [00:17:37.530]but it's easier said than done when, you know,
- [00:17:40.380]the responsibilities add up
- [00:17:41.970]and the time that is required
- [00:17:44.370]to tackle those responsibilities adds up.
- [00:17:46.410]So I would say the majority of it is reactive.
- [00:17:49.232]I have been pleased with some of the more proactive measures
- [00:17:53.190]that the BBB has taken, but you know,
- [00:17:56.315]with the modern day news cycle being what it is,
- [00:17:58.920]it's very difficult to feel like
- [00:18:00.450]you are anything close to being ahead of it.
- [00:18:04.770]Back to your adaption, of the adaptability part
- [00:18:08.400]of your Clifton Strengths there.
- [00:18:12.720]Because I teach an ethics course,
- [00:18:14.250]I'm always curious to ask this one,
- [00:18:16.830]what do you think are some of the ethical challenges
- [00:18:19.950]that you see in the nonprofit sector moving forward?
- [00:18:25.260]Yeah, that's a great question.
- [00:18:27.049]Something that we certainly deal with
- [00:18:29.310]pretty regularly as a 501 C6,
- [00:18:33.840]we are duty bound to serve the member organizations
- [00:18:37.350]that keep the lights on for the Better Business Bureau.
- [00:18:40.530]So balancing both what we feel like are initiatives
- [00:18:45.750]or projects that protect consumers with
- [00:18:48.960]providing value to the member organizations
- [00:18:52.290]that keep organizations like
- [00:18:54.090]the Better Business Bureau in business,
- [00:18:57.690]I think is kind of always a conversation worth having,
- [00:19:01.985]always a ledger that needs to be adjusted over time.
- [00:19:07.680]Ethically, I find it very easy for myself in my role
- [00:19:15.390]to go to work.
- [00:19:16.710]I feel very confident in what it is
- [00:19:19.320]that the Better Business Bureau has done,
- [00:19:22.140]continues to do by, you know, calling out bad actors,
- [00:19:26.790]dealing with with fraud and then scam,
- [00:19:29.520]you know, prevention conversations that frankly
- [00:19:33.360]are never more pressing than they are right now.
- [00:19:35.940]We've never monitored more scam related activity
- [00:19:38.550]than we have in the past three years.
- [00:19:40.440]That's simply not going to go away.
- [00:19:42.720]As much as I would like to think that
- [00:19:44.218]the earned media appearances that I do
- [00:19:46.350]and the releases that we get out to the public
- [00:19:50.430]prove valuable, it's playing whack-a-mole in a minefield.
- [00:19:54.930]And so it's very, very, very difficult in that sense.
- [00:19:57.930]But I would say it's a very easy calculus
- [00:20:00.698]on a personal level to deal,
- [00:20:03.330]even ethically with the businesses that keep us around.
- [00:20:07.710]I would love it if every single member organization
- [00:20:11.370]that is BBB accredited upheld the standards
- [00:20:15.510]and values that create our organization.
- [00:20:18.120]The reality is sometimes those standards
- [00:20:20.880]are broken and those people need to be removed
- [00:20:24.180]from the organization and that's, you know,
- [00:20:27.210]obviously a difficult conversation to have,
- [00:20:29.550]but I feel very confident in our ability
- [00:20:31.929]to self-police and to ensure that we are creating
- [00:20:36.120]a trustworthy market in the ways that we are able to.
- [00:20:40.830]You were, since you mentioned the pandemic,
- [00:20:42.360]you were only about several months into your job
- [00:20:46.410]with the BBB, when the world
- [00:20:48.420]sort of shut down here for a while.
- [00:20:51.600]What do you think that, what kind of change
- [00:20:54.450]did the pandemic create in the nonprofit sector
- [00:20:57.300]in the way that you do business?
- [00:20:59.520]So I actually can't speak to the precursor
- [00:21:03.732]of the pandemic since I joined mid pandemic,
- [00:21:07.470]but from what I understand,
- [00:21:10.560]it forced us to be a lot more intentional
- [00:21:13.980]about the programs and opportunities
- [00:21:15.690]that we provide to the business owners who we serve.
- [00:21:19.260]You know, an easy answer would be that we created
- [00:21:23.370]more remote or hybrid opportunities for folks
- [00:21:25.830]to take part in things like
- [00:21:28.029]Grow with Google webinar series.
- [00:21:31.403]But the reality is, I think a lot of the ways
- [00:21:33.720]in which we dispense tools and resources
- [00:21:36.120]to our accredited businesses
- [00:21:39.637]change dramatically in ways that will,
- [00:21:42.390]will never, you know, go back to, right?
- [00:21:47.138]We have a new database, right,
- [00:21:49.650]that allows us to, you know,
- [00:21:51.870]distribute like the dynamic seal
- [00:21:54.090]that indicates if you're an accredited business or not.
- [00:21:56.520]There was once a time where folks had a physical seal
- [00:21:59.670]that, you know, essentially the BBB would would go
- [00:22:02.400]and pull it out of the business
- [00:22:04.170]if they violated the tenets of the organization.
- [00:22:07.920]But I do think that some of the opportunities
- [00:22:10.230]that we created, everything from budgeting
- [00:22:13.080]to how to spot fake invoice scams,
- [00:22:16.200]which really spiked around, you know, the pandemic
- [00:22:20.700]were brought up to speed and frankly,
- [00:22:22.710]it was probably much needed
- [00:22:24.210]from an organizational perspective,
- [00:22:26.160]if you could say that there was any sort of positive benefit
- [00:22:29.520]for any organization out of the pandemic.
- [00:22:31.367]It was that we reevaluated, I think a lot of the programs
- [00:22:35.580]and opportunities that we provided
- [00:22:36.960]and thought long and hard about whether
- [00:22:39.435]the value was what we thought it was.
- [00:22:42.720]I think that's, that seems to be an answer
- [00:22:44.610]that I get from a lot of folks that I talked to,
- [00:22:46.552]in varying industries that I talked to about the pandemic
- [00:22:49.680]that they say, you know,
- [00:22:51.030]there was a lot that was really terrible about it,
- [00:22:53.070]but we were able to grab some, some silver linings
- [00:22:57.330]outta some things and some of it had to deal with
- [00:22:59.280]looking at redundancies
- [00:23:00.600]and streamlining the processes for things
- [00:23:04.226]and coming to grips with the new reality
- [00:23:06.780]and finding out that, well there were things you could do
- [00:23:09.690]remotely that perhaps you hadn't considered before.
- [00:23:12.900]I know that the nonprofits may not always be seen
- [00:23:15.750]by the general public in terms of growth,
- [00:23:18.900]the way that a for-profit industry might be,
- [00:23:21.000]but certainly there's growth in nonprofits as well.
- [00:23:23.730]What do you see as some of the growth area
- [00:23:26.790]in the nonprofit sector?
- [00:23:29.370]Well, from our organization specifically,
- [00:23:31.620]looking ahead to the next generation of business owners,
- [00:23:35.490]I can tell you that a lot of folks my age probably
- [00:23:39.210]don't know who the Better Business Bureau is,
- [00:23:41.790]and some of that is intentional strategically, historically,
- [00:23:45.990]we have never taken part in a national
- [00:23:48.600]TV advertising campaign before the past six months.
- [00:23:53.672]So some intentionality around programs and resources
- [00:23:58.650]with regard to entrepreneurs, emerging business owners,
- [00:24:03.330]that has been something that we have prioritized
- [00:24:06.510]on a local level just because each,
- [00:24:09.360]each bureau is its own island in a way.
- [00:24:11.310]There are 97 better business bureaus.
- [00:24:13.320]I work for the third largest one
- [00:24:15.330]and we serve four different states.
- [00:24:16.800]So in a way we're kind of the odd duckling of the system,
- [00:24:19.470]but what I do love about the BBB is that you have
- [00:24:23.220]the opportunity to share resources
- [00:24:25.200]in the ways that you feel are most beneficial
- [00:24:27.000]to the communities that you serve.
- [00:24:28.890]And so, at least within the past few years since I got here,
- [00:24:32.520]we've really been more intentional about shepherding
- [00:24:35.490]the next generation of business owners
- [00:24:37.110]through the program and what accreditation means
- [00:24:40.338]for those folks and for their communities.
- [00:24:45.360]Looking ahead, you've touched a little bit on the fact
- [00:24:48.000]that you're likely to have some of your folks
- [00:24:50.430]cycling through and the natural give and take
- [00:24:53.370]of people coming and leaving in an organization.
- [00:24:56.040]So thinking down the road, what kinds of skills
- [00:24:59.490]do you think employees in the nonprofit sector
- [00:25:02.160]most need to be successful in that field?
- [00:25:06.630]In a lot of ways, I would think that these have been
- [00:25:10.380]requirements for a good long while.
- [00:25:12.570]Balance, judgment, willingness
- [00:25:16.271]to pivot where necessary, willingness to adapt.
- [00:25:21.780]I would say the balance is probably
- [00:25:23.370]a little bit different now than it was two decades ago,
- [00:25:27.660]what folks are being asked to juggle,
- [00:25:30.420]crossing the departments a little bit more
- [00:25:33.780]with regard to what daily,
- [00:25:35.520]you know, responsibilities look like.
- [00:25:38.310]But it would probably depend on what organization you asked.
- [00:25:41.220]I'm just, you know, speaking personally for
- [00:25:45.000]the folks in my organization that at least,
- [00:25:48.750]the next generation that we're looking for is,
- [00:25:50.790]are folks who are willing to pivot where necessary,
- [00:25:53.700]because the reality is the pivot is going to be necessary
- [00:25:56.520]and it's not going to be a slow process.
- [00:26:00.300]It's going to be very, very fast.
- [00:26:04.080]In that same sense then, are there skills or traits
- [00:26:06.780]that you feel would be beneficial to anyone just looking at,
- [00:26:11.610]coming out of school and getting started in the industries,
- [00:26:14.070]regardless of whether it was nonprofit or for-profit?
- [00:26:16.440]Are there things that just make somebody more in tune
- [00:26:20.880]with what the working world is
- [00:26:22.860]likely to look at as being a successful employee?
- [00:26:27.450]Yeah, you know, strong work ethic is never going to be,
- [00:26:32.040]you know, a sour note that's always going to be,
- [00:26:34.830]you know, looked to in any candidate, in any role,
- [00:26:37.890]someone who is ethically minded, integrity driven.
- [00:26:44.040]I do think that those, I mean for every Chat GPT
- [00:26:47.310]that can automate certain things
- [00:26:49.230]that you're going to need someone
- [00:26:51.180]who you can trust behind the wheel.
- [00:26:53.100]And I do feel like that's never gonna go outta style,
- [00:26:57.510]especially in the nonprofit space,
- [00:27:00.750]adaptability, flexibility.
- [00:27:04.357]But I would say, you know, on a human level,
- [00:27:06.450]finding someone who you truly can trust, you know,
- [00:27:09.870]with assignments or to lead a department
- [00:27:13.260]if that is what you're pursuing a candidate for.
- [00:27:17.220]Since you mentioned AI and so many of the phone calls
- [00:27:22.020]that I am getting recently are spam calls
- [00:27:25.710]and automated and spoofing and all those sorts of things,
- [00:27:28.617]are you seeing artificial intelligence playing more and more
- [00:27:31.470]of a role in the kind of scams
- [00:27:33.090]and other kinds of operations that
- [00:27:35.010]you have to warn your business partners about?
- [00:27:38.760]Without question, it would be so much easier
- [00:27:41.820]if everything that was created by Chat GPT
- [00:27:45.450]or some other language model, you know,
- [00:27:49.039]had a big red sign on the top of it, right?
- [00:27:52.770]To indicate where it's origin was.
- [00:27:56.100]But the reality is, it doesn't.
- [00:27:58.830]And so when folks report their scam experience,
- [00:28:02.863]frankly, they don't know if it originated with Chat GPT.
- [00:28:09.600]I would say given the language used
- [00:28:11.850]and some of the decoders that I know are available online,
- [00:28:15.360]we know that at least some of it did.
- [00:28:17.790]If you think about all of the traditional talking points
- [00:28:20.430]for scam prevention and awareness,
- [00:28:21.900]many of them involve looking for grammatical mistakes,
- [00:28:26.940]language of origin.
- [00:28:28.740]Many of these scams originate overseas.
- [00:28:31.020]Well, if you give somebody a toolbox
- [00:28:34.560]to create content for a romance account
- [00:28:39.600]or then they can write in the language
- [00:28:43.110]of William Shakespeare then it becomes
- [00:28:45.630]a lot more difficult to suss out who is,
- [00:28:48.420]you know, an actual person from a bad actor.
- [00:28:51.420]And now we have ways to create entire
- [00:28:54.294]profiles based out of nothing.
- [00:28:56.934]So yeah, it has been a lot more difficult.
- [00:29:00.510]It's very easy to trick people
- [00:29:03.960]and sadly the shame of being scammed leads,
- [00:29:10.920]I would say north of 80% of the folks
- [00:29:13.290]to not report their experience in this country,
- [00:29:15.540]which I think is horrifying on a human level.
- [00:29:19.200]But yeah, I do think that artificial intelligence
- [00:29:22.361]has a lot of positive applications,
- [00:29:25.350]Unfortunately, there are significant drawbacks
- [00:29:29.932]that I think are leading many people to lose
- [00:29:33.390]a great deal of money right now.
- [00:29:35.190]We certainly are wrestling with it
- [00:29:36.660]at the university level as well,
- [00:29:38.250]trying to figure out how to positively incorporate
- [00:29:41.430]into our journalism and mass comm courses
- [00:29:43.710]while not just making it the quick way
- [00:29:46.950]that somebody completes an essay exam and turns it in.
- [00:29:49.500]But to your point about the specificity
- [00:29:52.260]and how intuitive the programs are now,
- [00:29:55.440]we had an example at a convention here recently where
- [00:29:58.710]someone asked Chat GPT to write a news release
- [00:30:02.430]and then told it when the first draft came out,
- [00:30:04.837]"Well, that's good, but it's a little too passive.
- [00:30:06.960]Can you make it more active?"
- [00:30:08.700]And it instantly rewrote it all in active tense.
- [00:30:13.260]So it is pretty intuitive in a somewhat frightening ways.
- [00:30:17.160]So we'll see where it goes down the road.
- [00:30:19.890]Did your time at UNL or I guess I should ask,
- [00:30:22.890]how do you think your time at UNL has prepared you
- [00:30:25.350]for all the myriad of writing and reporting
- [00:30:28.260]and media content opportunities that you have?
- [00:30:33.150]I'm forever grateful to UNL for providing me
- [00:30:36.060]with the opportunities that it did.
- [00:30:38.580]I'm very grateful that the course curriculum
- [00:30:41.550]required me to be probably more well-rounded
- [00:30:45.330]than other departments might have.
- [00:30:49.140]I think I would've chosen, you know,
- [00:30:52.320]some different courses if I could go back
- [00:30:54.300]and had the benefit of hindsight.
- [00:30:55.890]But I'm very grateful for the experiences
- [00:30:58.920]that I had within those halls to,
- [00:31:01.649]frankly, to fail as much as I feel like I have,
- [00:31:06.360]whether it be a course project or professionally,
- [00:31:09.010]I did feel like I was nurtured and taken care of
- [00:31:13.950]at UNL in ways that I'm very, very grateful for
- [00:31:17.400]and probably in ways that folks might not anticipate
- [00:31:20.190]when they think of a Big 10 university
- [00:31:22.260]or any college that serves tens of thousands of students.
- [00:31:27.900]Well, expanding on that then,
- [00:31:29.570]if we're looking at the employees of the future,
- [00:31:32.340]and you had a chance to,
- [00:31:33.570]'cause I know you do talk to college classes
- [00:31:35.490]and frequently our guests on campus.
- [00:31:38.520]What are you encouraging today's students to take
- [00:31:41.820]and to study and what skills should they pursue
- [00:31:44.424]to maximize their opportunity to be a good employee?
- [00:31:50.850]Any way you can find a balanced plate, pursue it.
- [00:31:54.952]I think that there are some obvious skills
- [00:31:58.680]that are more desirable right now.
- [00:32:00.330]Things like coding, I believe that there is,
- [00:32:02.850]you know, like a sports statistics course
- [00:32:06.030]or variety of courses in that realm
- [00:32:08.190]that were not available when I was a student,
- [00:32:10.080]I absolutely would've taken those courses.
- [00:32:13.230]Finding some balance between what your passions are
- [00:32:17.460]and thinking of more creative ways to get there, right?
- [00:32:20.460]If you really wanna tell a great story,
- [00:32:22.290]if you treat yourself like a storyteller,
- [00:32:24.390]there's so many ways to tell a story.
- [00:32:26.880]Find the tools that will get you
- [00:32:28.800]to whatever story is that you wanna pursue.
- [00:32:33.360]Ideally it would involve a dabble of video,
- [00:32:37.020]a dabble of writing, a dabble of reporting.
- [00:32:41.520]You know, pursue your passions.
- [00:32:42.870]That's always going to be probably my number one goal
- [00:32:46.110]because that's really marked my entire life.
- [00:32:49.800]But I do think that there are some courses
- [00:32:53.280]that are available now that I frankly wish
- [00:32:56.700]were available when I was around,
- [00:32:58.560]that I hope they take advantage of
- [00:33:00.390]and I know the curriculum is asking them
- [00:33:02.310]to take advantage of them.
- [00:33:05.040]The, you touched briefly a little bit ago on the,
- [00:33:08.040]the opportunity you have to work remotely
- [00:33:09.930]and work from home.
- [00:33:11.250]Do you see that, and that again
- [00:33:13.170]was certainly amplified by the pandemic.
- [00:33:15.930]Do you see that as a change that's likely to stick
- [00:33:18.630]and that people are not as geographically bound
- [00:33:22.350]as they once might have been in the non-profit specifically.
- [00:33:27.300]Tricky conversation to navigate,
- [00:33:30.270]especially when asking someone to come into the office
- [00:33:34.680]is treated punitively or viewed
- [00:33:37.642]as a punitive measure by colleagues.
- [00:33:42.060]I can tell you I was very adamant when I applied
- [00:33:44.850]for my current role that it be remote,
- [00:33:49.376]that it at least offer hybrid flexibility.
- [00:33:53.430]I have attention deficit disorder,
- [00:33:55.050]so the idea of the water cooler,
- [00:33:58.740]the proverbial water cooler conversation,
- [00:34:01.830]stuff like that takes me completely off the path
- [00:34:05.190]and completely away from my work.
- [00:34:06.780]So in a completely selfish way,
- [00:34:10.020]I would say remote work has been a real treasure
- [00:34:15.870]that I do not take for granted.
- [00:34:17.490]I feel like I'm more productive at home.
- [00:34:20.310]I know that collaboration is key
- [00:34:21.930]and I intend to collaborate as long as I can with,
- [00:34:25.860]with my colleagues, of course.
- [00:34:28.080]But I do feel like in certain industries they will be asked
- [00:34:33.090]to re-enter the brick and mortar
- [00:34:37.493]or just the business office if productivity wanes.
- [00:34:41.790]So I would encourage those who don't want to go back
- [00:34:45.900]or who prioritize that flexibility, to stay productive.
- [00:34:51.720]It might not be in their hands, right?
- [00:34:53.610]I think that because of the punitive nature,
- [00:34:57.570]it becomes a situation you might not
- [00:35:01.620]be able to avoid culturally,
- [00:35:03.390]but on a personal level,
- [00:35:05.310]I think that the productivity will win out.
- [00:35:07.170]And so that is my priority.
- [00:35:09.567]And on a related topic, I know more and more
- [00:35:11.940]of the guest speakers to our college within the last decade
- [00:35:14.700]have have begun to talk about the importance
- [00:35:17.910]of the work-life balance of any particular job.
- [00:35:22.530]I take it from what you've said,
- [00:35:23.610]that's important to you for a variety of reasons,
- [00:35:25.650]but how do you see that moving forward as well,
- [00:35:27.993]that employees are a little more cognizant
- [00:35:31.080]as you were in your specific situation to say,
- [00:35:34.560]this is important to me and this will have a bearing
- [00:35:36.690]on whether or not I keep a job or take this job?
- [00:35:42.330]Yeah, I've been married for two years now,
- [00:35:44.970]and so spending more time with my wife was,
- [00:35:48.240]and will continue to be a real priority of mine.
- [00:35:53.370]I think she feels the same way,
- [00:35:54.600]though it might depend on the day, I suppose.
- [00:35:57.930]I do think that that is a real benefit
- [00:36:00.990]that came out of the pandemic,
- [00:36:03.690]at least for our organization specifically,
- [00:36:06.450]was a respect of work-life boundaries for folks.
- [00:36:12.450]I don't, I can't say definitively
- [00:36:14.010]that prior to the pandemic that those,
- [00:36:18.126]that that balance was not respected.
- [00:36:20.940]But I do know that it is top of mind
- [00:36:23.000]for our organization now and moving forward
- [00:36:25.740]if you need to provide daycare or childcare rather,
- [00:36:29.700]if you need to, you know, go to an appointment.
- [00:36:32.709]With the flexibility, I think that has been something
- [00:36:35.910]that has been treated with the utmost respect.
- [00:36:38.923]I do hope that that organizations will see it as important,
- [00:36:44.430]even if it might not impact their bottom line.
- [00:36:47.220]I have trust and faith in that being respected,
- [00:36:51.780]but I would say it purely depends on what industry
- [00:36:54.750]or, you know, employer you land.
- [00:36:58.770]Let's talk about salaries and compensation and benefits,
- [00:37:03.390]some of which is tied to that work-life balance again.
- [00:37:06.330]Without asking you what your particular package looks like,
- [00:37:10.710]what if that's another area in which the pandemic
- [00:37:13.170]had a pretty dramatic effect
- [00:37:14.820]in terms of industries saying, you know,
- [00:37:17.700]we're not gonna be able to make the same kind of money
- [00:37:19.230]we did before because things are different now.
- [00:37:21.060]And of course that was starting prior to the pandemic,
- [00:37:23.190]with the advent of the internet and the way
- [00:37:25.350]we change how we get a lot of our content.
- [00:37:27.960]But for folks just coming out of school
- [00:37:31.620]or looking to change careers in the nonprofit field
- [00:37:35.430]in particular, how have salaries been affected?
- [00:37:38.820]How is that picture looking
- [00:37:41.670]and tying in with that compensation
- [00:37:44.010]and benefits packages down the road?
- [00:37:47.220]Yeah, I certainly don't feel like the benefits
- [00:37:49.259]have been limited, at least in my experience.
- [00:37:53.400]I know that salaries change quite a bit.
- [00:37:56.640]I mentioned that the BBB is seen as its own island.
- [00:38:00.420]Each bureau with a federated model,
- [00:38:02.310]you can kind of create FTEs out of nothing
- [00:38:04.860]and shuffle them as you see fit.
- [00:38:06.450]So in that way, I do think our BBB
- [00:38:09.120]has been more intentional about driving demand
- [00:38:13.440]for positions that have cross departmental responsibilities.
- [00:38:17.310]And in that way, understanding that that will require
- [00:38:20.670]a certain salary that maybe was not approved five years ago,
- [00:38:27.270]certainly depends on where you go,
- [00:38:28.800]but you know, the hybrid model as well,
- [00:38:30.900]or the fully remote model has opened folks up
- [00:38:33.480]to really pursuing talent in maybe ways that they didn't
- [00:38:38.190]in previous years.
- [00:38:40.238]I know that we have opened up, you know,
- [00:38:42.300]some of our positions for people who do not
- [00:38:44.827]work in a place where there is a physical office.
- [00:38:48.870]And that of course would've never happened
- [00:38:50.789]prior to the pandemic.
- [00:38:53.490]So I can't say specifically
- [00:38:55.560]that the salaries are any better or any worse.
- [00:38:58.200]I just think that they're different
- [00:38:59.520]and I think organizations are thinking
- [00:39:00.960]maybe more intentionally about the ways
- [00:39:02.880]in which their FTEs are driving value to the company
- [00:39:06.930]because of that naturally,
- [00:39:08.735]you know, the salary will change
- [00:39:11.250]based off the responsibilities that,
- [00:39:13.710]you know, companies are pursuing in potential applicants.
- [00:39:17.340]Since you mentioned FTEs, do you anticipate
- [00:39:19.982]and I'm not asking you to generalize
- [00:39:22.380]for the entire nonprofit industry,
- [00:39:23.970]but do you anticipate that full-time positions
- [00:39:27.329]will continue sort of as they had before?
- [00:39:30.990]Or are you seeing more work being done
- [00:39:32.700]by freelancers and contractors?
- [00:39:36.150]Depends on where you work.
- [00:39:37.560]I know that if you can outsource,
- [00:39:40.736]there's typically over corrections, right?
- [00:39:43.230]There's, the trend line seems to be
- [00:39:46.650]everybody says outsource everything
- [00:39:48.420]and then they swing completely the opposite direction
- [00:39:51.450]and say, no, actually we just need
- [00:39:52.710]a zillion part-time employees and nope,
- [00:39:55.890]let's go back to outsourcing everything.
- [00:39:57.390]So it does depend on where,
- [00:39:58.905]what organization you land at.
- [00:40:01.027]I do think culture matters.
- [00:40:03.090]I do think it's very difficult
- [00:40:04.530]to create culture with freelancers.
- [00:40:06.600]I say that as a freelancer myself,
- [00:40:08.720]but it purely depends on the organization.
- [00:40:12.546]I have not heard from my peers that there has been
- [00:40:17.190]a large sea change toward one direction or the other.
- [00:40:23.850]But I do think a lot of it depends
- [00:40:26.940]on where it is that you're looking.
- [00:40:29.640]So when you talk to folks about,
- [00:40:31.650]or when folks talk to you and you go to these campus visits
- [00:40:34.290]and other things, or you're just talking to colleagues
- [00:40:36.420]or family or friends at gatherings and say,
- [00:40:39.420]oh, you're in the nonprofit zone, what's that like?
- [00:40:41.790]What do you tell people?
- [00:40:43.590]What do you most want people to know about working
- [00:40:46.230]in the nonprofit industries
- [00:40:48.270]and what would you say might be any misconceptions
- [00:40:51.030]that people have about working for a nonprofit
- [00:40:54.030]as opposed to a for-profit agency?
- [00:40:57.960]Yeah, I feel like it's very easy
- [00:41:01.680]to wake up and go to my job.
- [00:41:03.870]I knew, and I do think that there is some data
- [00:41:06.780]to suggest that the next generation of college graduates
- [00:41:10.260]are pursuing positions like this,
- [00:41:12.210]but a purpose driven work was very top of mind to me.
- [00:41:16.920]I say that as the child of two professionals
- [00:41:21.000]who did not work in the nonprofit space.
- [00:41:24.480]So it is not as though, you know,
- [00:41:26.070]dad worked at nonprofit jobs
- [00:41:28.110]so I work a nonprofit job,
- [00:41:29.400]that was something that I really,
- [00:41:31.290]that meant a lot to me was,
- [00:41:33.000]was working for an organization
- [00:41:35.340]that pursued a mission I could believe in.
- [00:41:37.560]And if that required a little bit more work
- [00:41:39.540]and required me to do things that maybe
- [00:41:42.230]fell outside of the primary responsibilities
- [00:41:46.088]of my employment, then so be it.
- [00:41:49.047]I do think that my friends who work in the for-profit space
- [00:41:55.463]understand that to the best that they can.
- [00:41:58.650]I do think for a lot of folks, you know,
- [00:42:00.720]money is a significant factor and I'd be lying
- [00:42:03.240]if I said that money was not, you know,
- [00:42:06.480]an important part of every professional conversation
- [00:42:09.900]when you're looking for a new gig.
- [00:42:11.970]But to me the work was always the most important thing.
- [00:42:16.260]And luckily, I've landed, you know, where I have,
- [00:42:22.020]I do think that that's,
- [00:42:24.450]my socioeconomic background
- [00:42:26.160]is very different from a lot of others as well.
- [00:42:28.320]And that's absolutely part of the conversation
- [00:42:30.720]that I don't want to to generalize or overlook
- [00:42:35.340]for reasons why people go into
- [00:42:37.650]working at places that they do.
- [00:42:39.840]But I do think that I always knew I wanted
- [00:42:42.510]to pursue mission-driven work
- [00:42:44.112]and up until now I feel like I have.
- [00:42:48.030]Well, since this is a futures series we're doing here,
- [00:42:51.330]what do you think when you have
- [00:42:53.430]a free moment to ruminate about it, what's in your future?
- [00:42:56.670]Are you, you sort of alluded that you hope
- [00:42:58.860]you're gonna be there for a few years,
- [00:43:00.270]but long range, what do you see down the road?
- [00:43:04.650]You know, I do feel like my work
- [00:43:07.111]is not even remotely close to being done at the the BBB.
- [00:43:11.730]There's still a lot that I want to,
- [00:43:14.040]to accomplish with my colleagues.
- [00:43:16.530]So I don't anticipate that changing anytime soon.
- [00:43:21.120]I will always have an additional creative itch.
- [00:43:24.300]That is always how I have framed freelance writing,
- [00:43:28.660]if I could be a astronaut and there would be a part of me
- [00:43:33.000]that would wanna write or would wanna do something
- [00:43:35.160]completely unrelated to being an astronaut,
- [00:43:38.010]and I don't envision that changing anytime soon,
- [00:43:41.970]very difficult probably to keep up with,
- [00:43:45.030]you know, the AI models that can spit out the,
- [00:43:48.300]you know, news releases
- [00:43:49.380]and create a content mill out of nothing.
- [00:43:53.044]But, you know, I'll do my best to fight that battle
- [00:43:56.100]as long as I can to ensure that I have
- [00:43:58.920]the opportunity creatively to pursue that itch.
- [00:44:02.682]So I think moving forward I would like to have
- [00:44:05.520]a little bit more of, you know, a business acumen.
- [00:44:07.560]That's why I am, you know, enrolled in graduate school,
- [00:44:10.260]but I would also like to ensure that I can help
- [00:44:12.930]the next generation in the ways that I can.
- [00:44:14.790]So I would anticipate more effort on my behalf
- [00:44:19.770]with either speaking at campuses, speaking to students,
- [00:44:22.980]offering internships, things of that nature.
- [00:44:27.133]And that's probably,
- [00:44:28.437]and spending more time with my wife.
- [00:44:30.090]I would say that that is both a short-term
- [00:44:32.340]and a long-term goal of mine.
- [00:44:35.010]I think priorities are firmly in place.
- [00:44:36.750]I think having a creative itch is a healthy thing.
- [00:44:39.690]Keeps you thinking about new things to do,
- [00:44:41.460]keeps the boredom level down and you are more than welcome
- [00:44:44.880]to return to your home campus at any time
- [00:44:46.950]to talk to any of our classes
- [00:44:48.390]about all the things that you do.
- [00:44:50.070]Josh, I appreciate your time today.
- [00:44:51.300]It's been a pleasure catching up with you.
- [00:44:52.755]Thanks so much for having me.
- [00:44:54.720]Our guest on Campus Voices has been Josh Planos,
- [00:44:57.330]the Vice President of Communications and Public Relations
- [00:44:59.924]at the Better Business Bureau,
- [00:45:01.830]and an established and well admired freelance writer
- [00:45:06.300]on a variety of levels.
- [00:45:08.010]This has been Campus Voices on 90.3 KRNU.
- [00:45:11.597]I'm Rick Alloway, and as always,
- [00:45:14.100]I thank you for your time.
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