What’s New

Tech Valley Connect Partnership Launches New Cultural Transition Program for Capital Region

TROY, NY – As a means to attract and retain businesses and key talent from around the world, Tech Valley Connect is launching a comprehensive Cultural Transition Program (CTP) to help the growing international community adapt to U.S. Culture and the Capital Region. An important part of the region’s growing infrastructure, this type of program will become a tool to help area employers with retention efforts as well as serving as a vital resource for incoming foreign nationals. The program, announced today, was created by Tech Valley Connect in partnership with Capital Region companies.

Partners in the venture include; KeyBank, CDPHP, Times Union, Tri City Rentals, and BBL Hospitality.“ This unique collaboration is the foundation of a more supportive infrastructure for the international population of this region,” said Angela McNerney, president and CEO of Tech Valley Connect. “It was important to the partnership team that we work to raise the level of sophistication in the Capital Region in attracting global businesses as well as key talent from many parts of the world.”

“Our region has been successfully redefined as a thriving technology economy and there remain many things to do to sustain this unprecedented growth.  One thing is to not only anticipate the influx of talented professionals but to embrace it, especially the foreign nationals who will bring another dimension of quality to the Capital Region.” said Michael Wacholder, Chairman of Tech Valley Connect’s Board of Directors and retired Director of the Rensselaer Technology Park.

The CTP will work with international newcomers on culture, customs, traditions, government, health care, education, and household information. It will serve as a regional hub of information in terms of connecting people with local ethnic resources (such as affinity groups, ethnic markets, restaurants) and provide learning opportunities geared toward the specific needs and interests of families who are coming from outside the U.S. Veysel Ucan, Executive Director, Turkish Cultural Center Albany (TCCA) said, “People have many difficulties and challenges when they move to a new culture. I believe the Cultural Transition Program is a great initiative to help the newcomers adapt to the American Culture and be a part of greater community. This program will be beneficial for individuals as well as organizations in many different ways.”

Tech Valley Connect is a leadership driven organization made up of area employers who are focused on retention efforts. Their services include dual-career support, family assimilation and now, cultural transition workshops. They realized during the pilot
phase of their program, at least 20 percent of their professional hires were foreign nationals and they were spending a considerable amount of time helping those families.  “We tried to locate relevant resources for these families, and quickly realized there were no  comprehensive programs in place regionally to help an international population adapt to U.S. culture,” McNerney said. “With such vast and deep cultural differences, the lack of resources can have a direct impact on the retention of these original hires or at the very least the threat of losing their families who decide the cultural isolation is just too much.”

The program launches at a time when the international population of the Capital Region is rapidly growing. The U.S Census Bureau reports that the rise in foreign nationals in the Capital Region has gone from 15,216 in 2000 to 58,307 by 2010. This includes Albany, Rensselaer, Schenectady, Saratoga, and Schoharie counties. More than 75 percent of these people are private waged and salaried workers. Those in management, business, science, and arts occupations make up more than 44 percent, and these same foreign nationals represent a household income that averages $51,599 – a significant impact to the local economy.

Dual-Career Support: A Viable Solution

The cost to an employer is astronomical when it does not retain its new hire: between two and five times the salary of the original hire, depending on the factors involved with the recruitment.

Read more of this article published in the American Society for Cell Biology Newsletter.

 

 

Tech Valley Connect aids families of new hires

Helping spouse find job in new town a big need

Schenectady Gazette – Monday, July 2, 2012
SCHENECTADY — So often, relocating for a new job is not always just about the job.  For a husband out of Texas, it’s about his wife and kids who stayed behind
until they could sell their old home. For a gay couple out of Vermont, it’s about moving to a place where they would be able to adopt a child without extra hassles. For a high-tech recruit, it’s about making sure his wife can pursue her career path of dance therapy.   The loose ends are not just superficial hurdles. They have the potential to cost a company a serious amount of money in turnover when a new hire
leaves because their spouse can’t find a job or their international background leaves them feeling isolated. That’s where Tech Valley Connect comes in.

“We thought we could do some things to address that in a unique way,” said President Angela McNerney.
The nonprofit helps relocating professionals and their families feel welcome and engaged when they first arrive in the Capital Region. It helps with spousal employment, family assimilation and cultural transitions. In a sense, it can solve nearly all of a company’s recruitment and retention problems.  And McNerney has the numbers to back it up. The cost of turnover — training, moving expenses, and more — can be three times as much as the salary of a new hire. Turnover rate in the fields of technology, engineering, higher education, health care and finance tops 9 percent.
But Tech Valley Connect has retained all 76 families it has assisted in its three years of operation, from clients with regional institutions like SEMATECH, Wadsworth Center, SUNY Albany, and others.
At a networking event with about a dozen Schenectady County officials Thursday, McNerney touted the program’s benefits and urged community leaders to spread the word.  Many in Schenectady County aren’t even aware of the program’s existence, said  MVP Health Care President and CEO David Oliker.  “I think the Schenectady involvement is not where we’d like it,” he said.
“And I view this as one of those arrows in the quiver that we are using.”
Tech Valley Connect consists of a consortium of employers throughout the Capital Region who have agreed to offer informational interviews to a traveling spouse. Many big name employers are members, including GE Healthcare, GE Global Research and Development, and GlobalFoundries.
“It is not a job interview,” stressed McNerney. “It’s not. Our job is to professionally and personally network these people so that they’re integrated into the community.”
When Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute was recruiting a man who wouldn’t accept an offer until his wife was sure she had career options in the region, RPI referred the couple straight to Tech Valley Connect.
The woman was a dance therapist.
“It was challenging at best,” laughed McNerney.  The program set her up with nearly 10 information interviews to discuss her prospects with the people in her field. So she went to Four Winds and
different hospitals in the region, a dance studio and yoga studios — “places that were looking to do different things,” said McNerney. “We just got really creative, brainstormed about this and we had her meeting so many different people her head was spinning.”  They  arrived on a Monday and by Thursday her spouse had accepted the job with RPI.  As the Capital Region continues to experience a growing tech sector — bolstered by GlobalFoundries in Malta and General Electric’s footprint in Schenectady County, among others — it needs to be prepared to welcome international employees to the region.
“Twenty percent of our clients were internationals and that’s growing and that’s going to keep growing,” said McNerney. “We decided we needed to raise the level of sophistication of the region. If we’re going to be attracting global markets here, we really have to have services that meet their needs.”
The cultural transition is a big part of that, and it’s so basic employers don’t often think about it. Like the spouse who drives without a license because it wasn’t a big deal where they were from. Or the woman who wouldn’t invite kids over to the house because she was too afraid Americans all sue each other.  Tech Valley Connect already helps with these basics, but is launching a Cultural Transition Program in September that includes language courses.
When a family uses the program, a coordinator also compiles a portfolio with resources they might request: doctors, dentists, mechanics, plumbers,
recreational options, and more.  “It’s about making people know that where they just landed, they’re going to be OK,” said McNerney. “It’s not the black hole of voicemail, it’s not a
basket full of brochures and saying have at it. It is real life, vetted qualified resources that we connect them to.”

TVC is awarded a grant from The Berkshire Bank Foundation

The Berkshire Bank Foundation presented Tech Valley Connect with a grant of $2,500 yesterday at their new branch opening in North Greenbush to help continue our work with assimilating new families into the Capital Region. Thank you Berkshire Bank!

Tech Valley Connect sits on panel at CRHRA Event.

Tech Valley Connect presented to the Capital Region Human Resource Association, Capital Region Recruiters Network, the Consulting Alliance and the Association for Training & Development.  The topic presented to the panel was “The Impact of Retention on Employers”.  Included on the panel
from left to right; Angela McNerney, President of Tech Valley Connect, Tom Feist, General Manager of GE Healthcare,  Sujata Chaudhry, Principle of Tangible Development and Gwen Pulvirent, newly relocated ‘trailing spouse’ of a recent Global Foundries hire.

Cost of Turnover Worksheet

Tech Valley Connect has developed a tool for institutions to use to determine their cost of turnover.

Cost of Turnover Worksheet

 

Workforce Turnover Survey – deadline is April 13, 2012

Dear Regional Employers,

Tech Valley Connect in conjunction with the State University of New York at Albany M.B.A. program cordially invite you t0 participate in a workforce turnover survey. Tech Valley Connect is a not-for-profit started through Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute seeking to provide local employers with infrastructure to increase employee retention, particularly among those who relocated into highly specialized positions. While a preliminary study has been done, further research is needed to identify the specific needs of Capital Region businesses.

The following survey should take approximately 5-10 minutes to complete. In exchange for your participation in this confidential survey, we will happily provide you with the finalized aggregate results of this study. Please click on the following link to participate: http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/6SJ3KPS.

We appreciate your time and consideration by joining with regional employers to compile update local workforce data. If you have any questions about this survey, please contact me at [email protected] or phone 518-283-1812.  The deadline to participate in this survey is April 13, 2012.

Sincerely,

Angela McNerney
President & CEO
Tech Valley Connect

Forbes list of the Best Cities for Jobs

“We’re a comeback city,” said Chuck Steiner, president of the Schenectady Chamber. And a rich one, too: With a median household income of $59,000, Schenectady ranks above the national average of $51,914.

To read the complete article.

 

 

Albany Children’s Book Festival

The Albany Academies is hosting the Fourth Annual Albany Childrens’ Book Festival on Saturday, April 28, 2012.

The Albany Children’s Book Festival — now in its fourth year — was inspired by noted Childrens Author Daniel Mahoney who participated in other festivals throughout New York State and wanted to bring a similar concept to the Capital Region. His idea was to offer a Book Festival that would be free and open to all children of the Greater Capital Region, providing them with the opportunity to meet many distinguished authors and illustrators.

The Mission of the Albany Children’s Book Festival is to nurture literacy in school-aged children.  We aim to encourage, promote, and celebrate the joy of reading, while fostering a love of books, stimulating imaginations, and opening new worlds to them.

Our Vision is to become the premier literacy event in the Albany area. We hope to continue to grow and develop into a community event that inspires the region’s children to read, write, and explore the world of books.  It is our belief that every child, in every community should have access to books to explore, learn from, and to trigger their imaginations.

The event promises to be better than ever! We are honored to welcome 70 highly talented and accomplished children’s authors and illustrators to the festival. Each one is approachable, glad to share a moment or two talking about the process of creating their books, reflecting on the experiences that shaped them, pointing out special features in them, or simply listening to your reactions to them.

Listen to Ruth Pelham of The Music Mobile; watch Mike Maybee as he juggles an amazing assortment of items. See the Tulip Queen help dramatize a story or march in the storybook parade dressed as a favorite storybook character. Visit Bette’s Cupcake truck for a snack or Dave’s Wood Fired Pizza truck for lunch.

We are all looking forward to a wonderful event. For more information, please contact Ann Wendth at 518.429.2385 or email [email protected].

 

 

Christian Brothers Academy Open House

March Open House Flyer