Friday, January 24, 2025

Along Orlando North scenic trail

Posted by Elena del Valle on October 25, 2018

First of occasional travel notes

A section of the Seminole-Wekiva Trail, a 14-mile rail trail in Seminole County, Florida (click on the photo to enlarge)

Photos: Seminole County Parks & Recreation

One of the discoveries I most enjoyed during a recent trip to Lake Mary, Florida was the Seminole-Wekiva Trail, a 14-mile rail trail, which includes Altamonte Springs, Longwood, Lake Mary and Sanford in the central part of the Sunshine State. It runs alongside the abandoned tracks  of Florida’s old Orange Beltway Railway, at one time the longest railroad in the country.  Although I don’t recall seeing the tracks I noticed a small metal sign with the name of the trail.

It couldn’t have been more convenient as it passed by the front of my hotel (Westin Lake Mary Orlando North), curving through busy suburban streets, past water features and at times weaving beneath shady tall trees dressed with Spanish moss. My favorite part, I didn’t see the entire trail, was the canopied section that traversed a nearby residential area, offering views into the grassy backyards of some of the homes.

Seminole-Wekiva Trail

The Seminole-Wekiva Trail is part of the Florida National Scenic Trail.

The Seminole-Wekiva Trail is part of the Florida National Scenic Trail, a federally designated, non-motorized, recreation trail that spans approximately 1,300 miles across some of the state landscapes. According to the trail website, the trail end points are: Markham Road near CR 46A (Wekiva River Protection Area) (Longwood) and FL 436 near Laurel St. (Altamonte Springs). I wish we had a similar trail in my neighborhood.

Along its paved path I saw many locals walking their dogs, riding their bicycles (sometimes a bit aggressively), walking and jogging. In the greenest sections, where it was cool and shady, I heard birds calling and nature sounds. Exploring the trail was one of the most pleasant activities during my brief visit to Orlando North.

Podcast with Geri Stengel, research advisor, American Express, about State of Women-Owned Businesses Report

Posted by Elena del Valle on October 8, 2018

Geri Stengel, research advisor, American Express

Geri Stengel, research advisor, American Express

 

Photo: Ventureneer

A podcast interview with Geri Stengel, research advisor, American Express is available in the Podcast Section of Hispanic Marketing and Public Relations, HispanicMPR.com. During the podcast, she discusses State of Women-Owned Businesses Report with Elena del Valle, host of the HispanicMPR.com podcast.

Geri is president of Ventureneer. She has taught entrepreneurship at The New School, facilitated Kauffman FastTrac courses for entrepreneurs, researched best practices in social media for businesses, and founded a company that provides training and online resources to entrepreneurs and small business owners who want to break through the $1 million revenue level.

Geri was a board member for the New York City Chapter of the National Association of Women Business Owners for eight years. She was recognized as one of 17 Inspiring Women to Watch in 2017 in Inc. In 2016, she became a mentor for WE NYC and in 2015, she won the Madam C.J. Walker Business Leadership Award from the National Minority Business Council.

To listen to the interview, scroll down until you see “Podcast” on the right hand side, then select “HMPR Geri Stengel” and click on the play button below or download the MP3 file to your iPod or MP3 player to listen on the go, in your car or at home from the RSS feed. Some software will not allow flash, which may be necessary for the play button and podcast player. If that is your case, you will need to download the file to play it. To download it, click on the arrow of the recording you wish to copy and save it to disk. The podcast will remain listed in the October 2018 section of the podcast archive.

Food experts discuss planet wide nutrition

Posted by Elena del Valle on October 4, 2018

Nourished Planet

Nourished Planet

Photo: Think Tank, Island Press

About 40 percent of the land in the world is used for agriculture and livestock; at the same time in the past 40 years 30 percent of the arable land has become unproductive; and soil erosion and soil degradation are widespread, according to Nourished Planet: Sustainability in the Global Food System Voices from the New Food Movement (Island Press, $25), a newly published book.

Convinced everyone has a right to food and the world needs a food and agriculture system that nourishes all sixteen people contributed their insights to the book “to show what’s working on the ground to alleviate hunger and poverty, prevent food loss and food waste, cultivate the next generation of leaders, and create more equity and social justice in the food system.” From conception to publication the book, edited by Danielle Nierenberg, required a year.

When asked who is the target audience Nierenberg replied by email, “All of us. The more than 7 billion eaters who inhabit the planet. However, we hope that academics and students will take special interest–it’s an easy to read, engaging book, full of hopeful examples of successful projects that can be replicated and scaled up and out in rich and poor countries alike.”

The 250-page softcover book with many graphics and images is divided into four chapters: Food for All, Food for Sustainable Growth, Food for Health and Food for Culture. Each chapter is accompanied by perspectives from several New Food Movement contributors.

The most critical food issues the United States faces today? Nierenberg responded by addressing the topic on a global scale and indicating that climate change and other environmental problems that impact the food system should create a sense of urgency; food production contributes 30 percent or more of all greenhouse gas emissions and there are some 815 million people who are hungry, while another 2 billion are overweight and obese; and that massive amounts of food are lost or wasted before they can reach peoples’ stomachs, at least one third worldwide.

She believes action from the grassroots and the top is necessary, she said by email. She also supports the participation of organizations and communities, researchers and scientists, corporate leaders, and decision-makers to make the food system better.

Danielle Nierenberg, editor, Nourished Planet

Danielle Nierenberg, editor, Nourished Planet

When asked what defines the new food movement the book editor replied, “The interest in food has been growing for decades–wealthy consumers have wanted local, fresh, healthy, sustainably grown food–but today we need a food system that goes beyond our personal lives and impacts the women and men all over the globe who depend on the food system for their livelihoods. We need a food system that focuses on equality among women and men, that considers future generations, that helps create opportunities for young people to become not only food producers, but also scientists and researchers, story tellers and advocates, business leaders, and policy makers who can change the way we grow, process, and consume food.”

The definition of farming and food system for purposes of this discussion is she said, “A food system is all of the activities involving the production, processing, transport, sale, and consumption of food. Sustainable food systems are those that are economically, environmentally and socially sustainable–they are regenerative and resilient by helping build soils, protect water and biodiversity, and they recognize the importance of women, workers, and youth for the future of agriculture.”

When asked about groups in particular need she said, “Poor and underserved communities often are labeled food deserts because of a lack of grocery stores or markets providing healthy food. Racism and lack of economic communities lead to chronic health problems including diabetes, heart disease, and obesity in communities that lack the resources to address these problems.”

The book contributors are Hilal Elver, special rapporteur on the Right to Food, United Nations; Hans R. Herren, president, Millenium Institute, and president, Biodivision Foundation; Sieglinde Snapp, agronomist, professor of Soils and Cropping Systems Ecology, Michigan State University, and associate director, Center for Global Change and Earth Observations; author Vandana Shiva; Dario Piselli, founder, Sustainable Development Solutions Network; Steve Brescia, chief executive officer Groundswell International; Shaneica Lester and Anne-Teresa Birthwright, 2016 winners of Young Earth Solutions; Alexander Müller, study leader, United Nations Environment Programme–hosted project The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity for Agriculture & Food; Bruce Friedrich, executive director, The Good Food Institute; Tristram Stuart, founder, Feedback; Natasha Bowens, author, The Color of Food: Stories of Race, Resilience and Farming; Lindsey Shute, executive director National Young Farmers Coalition; Stephen Ritz founder, Green Bronx Machine; Ruth Oniang’o, founder, Rural Outreach Programme.


Nourished Planet

Click to buy Nourished Planet


Communicating Effectively Between Diverse Cultures Within a Company

Posted by Elena del Valle on September 26, 2018

By Ray Zinn
Author
Tough Things First

Ray Zinn, author, Tough Things First

Ray Zinn, author, Tough Things First

Photo: Ray Zinn

We truly live in a global business environment.

People are mobile. Silicon Valley, where I lead my semiconductor company for 37 years, attracts talented people from across the globe. Any cosmopolitan city does as well. In the age of the Internet, even mom-and-pop companies routinely interact with people in vastly different cultures.

The 21st century reality is that you need to create diversity to thrive. Long gone are the days when all your employees and partners come from one country or one culture. To make it, you have to communicate with a lot of very different people.

Click to read the entire article Communicating Effectively Between Diverse Cultures Within a Company

Podcast with Ismael El-Qudsi, CEO, Internet Republic, about turning employees into brand ambassadors

Posted by Elena del Valle on September 17, 2018

Ismael El-Qudsi, C.E.O., Internet Republic

Ismael El-Qudsi, C.E.O., Internet Republic

Photo: Internet Republic

A podcast interview with Ismael El-Qudsi, chief executive officer, Internet Republic is available in the Podcast Section of Hispanic Marketing & Public Relations, HispanicMPR.com. During the podcast, he discusses turning employees into brand ambassadors with Elena del Valle, host of the HispanicMPR.com podcast.

Ismael, technical engineer in Computer Management, is also chief executive officer of SocialPubli.com and SocialReacher, founded in 2015 and 2016 respectively. Internet Republic is the parent company of both. Prior to establishing Internet Republic, Ismael was head of search engine optimization and social media at Havas. Previously, he was in charge of Microsoft’s search engine Bing in Spain.

To listen to the interview, scroll down until you see “Podcast” on the right hand side, then select “HMPR Ismael El-Qudsi2018” and click on the play button below or download the MP3 file to your iPod or MP3 player to listen on the go, in your car or at home from the RSS feed. Some software will not allow flash, which may be necessary for the play button and podcast player. If that is your case, you will need to download the file to play it. To download it, click on the arrow of the recording you wish to copy and save it to disk. The podcast will remain listed in the September 2018 section of the podcast archive.

Podcast with Alex Vorobieff, author, Transform Your Company, about how to get your company’s momentum going again

Posted by Elena del Valle on September 11, 2018

Alex Vorobieff, author, Transform Your Company

Alex Vorobieff, author, Transform Your Company

Photo: Alex Vorbieff Company

A podcast interview with Alex Vorobieff, author, Transform Your Company is available in the Podcast Section of Hispanic Marketing & Public Relations, HispanicMPR.com. During the podcast, he discusses how to get your company’s momentum going again with Elena del Valle, host of the HispanicMPR.com podcast.

Alex is chief executive officer of Alex Vorbieff Company, a financial clean-up firm since 2003. He has counseled, coached and served as a clean-up chief financial officer and president of telecommunications, aviation and aerospace, hospitality, healthcare, and outsource staffing companies. He has lead successful turnarounds in a little as three months.

Transform Your Company: Escape Frustration, Align Your Business, and Get Your Life Back was published in 2017. He is publisher of the semi-annual Confident ROi magazine (Spring 2018) and weekly Confident ROi radio show.

To listen to the interview, scroll down until you see “Podcast” on the right hand side, then select “HMPR Alex Vorobieff” and click on the play button below or download the MP3 file to your iPod or MP3 player to listen on the go, in your car or at home from the RSS feed. Some software will not allow flash, which may be necessary for the play button and podcast player. If that is your case, you will need to download the file to play it. To download it, click on the arrow of the recording you wish to copy and save it to disk. The podcast will remain listed in the September 2018 section of the podcast archive.


Click to buy Transform Your Company


Podcast with John Oechsle, CEO, Swiftpage, about what to look for in CRM for your small business

Posted by Elena del Valle on August 27, 2018

H. John Oechsle, CEO, Swiftpage

H. John Oechsle, CEO, Swiftpage

Photo: Swiftpage

A podcast interview with H. John Oechsle, chief executive officer, Swiftpage, is available in the Podcast Section of Hispanic Marketing & Public Relations, HispanicMPR.com. During the podcast, he discusses what to look for in a CRM for your small business with Elena del Valle, host of the HispanicMPR.com podcast.

John joined Swiftpage in July 2012, arriving with 30 year track record. Prior to joining Swiftpage, he served as the executive vice president of Strategy and Product for DigitalGlobe. Prior to DigitalGlobe, John was the senior vice president of Technology and Content as well as chief information officer for IHS Inc. Before that he was the chief information officer and vice president of Information Management Worldwide for Ortho-Clinical Diagnostics, a Johnson & Johnson company, where he was responsible for all technology and e-business.



John is an advocate for technology and education in Colorado. He served as 2007 Chairman of the Colorado Technology Association (CTA). John supports Open World Learning, an organization which uses the power of technology and peer teaching to develop leadership and ignite a love of learning among children. John also supports Kidstek, an organization dedicated to making technology accessible to youth.

To listen to the interview, scroll down until you see “Podcast” on the right hand side, then select “HMPR H. John Oechsle” and click on the play button below or download the MP3 file to your iPod or MP3 player to listen on the go, in your car or at home from the RSS feed. Some software will not allow flash, which may be necessary for the play button and podcast player. If that is your case, you will need to download the file to play it. To download it, click on the arrow of the recording you wish to copy and save it to disk. The podcast will remain listed in the August 2018 section of the podcast archive.

Executive shares personal short stories in new book

Posted by Elena del Valle on August 23, 2018

Gulag 401K

Gulag 401K

 

Photos: Richard A. Marin

For 20 years Richard A. Marin (see Podcast with Richard Marin, CEO, Low Emissions Resources Corporation, on how retirement is not for wimps) gathered personal stories. In the last six months of 2017 he wrote more. Over a three month period he dedicated his efforts into making the stories into Tales of a Modern Prisoner Gulag 401K (Lulu Publishing Services, $20), a 220-page softcover book. His intended audience was general although he felt the stories would appeal most to Baby Boomers.

When asked by email what motivated him to write the stories he replied, “I am a student of the retirement topic and hence the overall subject matter, but mostly I am a storyteller who finds the topic of retirement to be a compelling human phase that is rich in social, psychological and economic reality with which everyone can relate.”

When asked what he meant when he said in the book that it’s not possible to build high enough walls he replied, “I mean that the retirement or pension crisis is so globally and demographically pervasive that you cannot insulate yourself from it. It is a problem that we as a species must face in the next 30 years. It will affect us all, regardless of how wealthy we are or where we live. We will all need to deal with the humanity of the issue.”

Richard Marin, CEO, Low Emissions Resources Corporation

Richard Marin, author, Gulag 401K

As to in what ways he has marketed the book he said, “I hired a top-class publicist in Lavidge and I promoted it via Kirkus Review. The two have reached out to both professional and general populations that have a broad interest in the topic.”

Marin is a 42-year finance, real estate, and venture capital industry executive. He also is involved in managing private equity investments, consulting on major commercial real estate and attractions projects, and the retirement field. The book is divided into seven sections and 23 chapters.


Gulag 401K

Click to buy Gulag 401(k)


Podcast with Andrew Conte, director, Center for Media Innovation, Point Park University, about media deserts

Posted by Elena del Valle on August 13, 2018

Andrew Conte, director, Center for Media Innovation, Point Park University

Andrew Conte, director, Center for Media Innovation, Point Park University

Photo: Point Park University

A podcast interview with Andrew Conte, director, Center for Media Innovation, Point Park University is available in the Podcast Section of Hispanic Marketing & Public Relations, HispanicMPR.com. During the podcast, he discusses media deserts with Elena del Valle, host of the HispanicMPR.com podcast.

Andrew joined Point Park University in 2005 as a part-time professor and founding director of the Point Park News Service. As an investigative reporter at the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review since 2001, he has covered a wide range of topics that include rising health care costs, offshore banking and the legalization of casino gambling across Pennsylvania.

He received national and local awards for his reporting, including a Scripps Howard Foundation award for business reporting, the Carnegie Science Award, and first-place honors from the Inland Press Association, the Association of Health Care Journalists, the Pennsylvania Associated Press Managing Editors, and the Associated Press Society of Ohio. His latest book, The Color of Sundays: The Secret Strategy that Built the Steelers’ Dynasty, won a Ben Franklin Silver Award from the Independent Book Publishers Association.

To listen to the interview, scroll down until you see “Podcast” on the right hand side, then select “HMPR Andrew Conte” and click on the play button below or download the MP3 file to your iPod or MP3 player to listen on the go, in your car or at home from the RSS feed. Some software will not allow flash, which may be necessary for the play button and podcast player. If that is your case, you will need to download the file to play it. To download it, click on the arrow of the recording you wish to copy and save it to disk. The podcast will remain listed in the August 2018 section of the podcast archive.

Podcast with author Seline Shenoy about redefining beauty

Posted by Elena del Valle on August 6, 2018

Author Seline Shenoy

Author Seline Shenoy

A podcast interview with author Seline Shenoy is available in the Podcast Section of Hispanic Marketing & Public Relations, HispanicMPR.com. During the podcast, she discusses redefining beauty: Why are women still measured and defined by their looks? with Elena del Valle, host of the HispanicMPR.com podcast.

Seline is a podcast host who focuses on personal empowerment, self-esteem, productivity, and wellness. She is the founder of The Dream Catcher, a blog community that encourages people to live their ideal life, where she has been sharing her thoughts since 2014. Her book Beauty Redefined How to Feel Authentically Beautiful in Today’s World was published in June 2018.

Born and raised in Dubai, Seline has traveled to more than 35 countries across Europe, North America, Australia, Asia, the Middle East, and Africa. She holds a a Master’s in International Marketing from Emerson College, and has certifications in hypnotherapy, life coaching, and personality assessments.

To listen to the interview, scroll down until you see “Podcast” on the right hand side, then select “HMPR Seline Shenoy” and click on the play button below or download the MP3 file to your iPod or MP3 player to listen on the go, in your car or at home from the RSS feed. Some software will not allow flash, which may be necessary for the play button and podcast player. If that is your case, you will need to download the file to play it. To download it, click on the arrow of the recording you wish to copy and save it to disk. The podcast will remain listed in the August 2018 section of the podcast archive.