Quote:
Originally Posted by John Martin
I'm still waiting for a really good video about Utah. I haven't seen it yet. Don't bother with YouTube, everything there is just embarrassing. What is bragged about these days isn't really what we should be showing off. Salt Lake has a ton to offer, it'd take an extraordinary film to even begin accurately showcasing our home. But, nevertheless, that's a challenge someone has yet to overcome, I wouldn't know where to begin and I've lived here my whole life--I still feel like I haven't been properly introduced to Utah. That makes it really hard for anyone to create an advertisement that says something more than "our economy is good."
About the "myths," I don't really know what there is to expose. It seems silly to me to say "NOOO, guess what, you really can get intoxicated in Utah, I swear!" You can do lots of things here and the myths probably hide that, but it seems more appropriate to me to show off the benefits of having the.. culture we do, instead of just glorifying the less-common cultures which happen to be familiar in every other city. Salt Lake has a lot to offer because of it's uniqueness, that's good for a lot of companies but not exactly what all of them are looking for. Businesses pretty much thrive or fail here, we should do our best at attracting the right ones, not just anything desperate enough that we can get our hands on.
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John Martin: I'm not sure what the "right" businesses means? Are you suggesting their are businesses better suited to Utah than others? I accept that. Utah wants business that pays well. Contributes to the overall environment, both physical and sociological. Business that provides rewarding career paths for employees? Business that is a responsible corporate citizen. Business that contributes to the greater good...for all walks of life, regardless of color or creed.
With those criteria in mind, if I were the State Economic Development Agency, I would chase businesses involved in green-energy development. Or if not totally green-energy, at least non-traditional energy development, like clean coal. I wouldn't chase more multi-level marketing companies.
I would pursue companies with a global reach, especially those that increase productivity or the standard of living, such as bio-pharmaceutical firms that increase well being and add to longevity. I wouldn't chase more nutritional supplement companies, where the research is mounting that these supplements do little if anything.
I would pursue companies that were truly multi-cultural, where religious preference or any other preference doesn't matter. Global consulting firms, like KPMG or IBM Global seem like good fits. I wouldn't chase more firms specializing in personal development, who preach "Be just like me and you'll be fine." Most global consulting firms have small presences in Utah, but none have any of their individual consulting practices headquartered in Utah.
I think you get my point.