Wednesday, April 8, 2020 1:15 pm - 2:45 pm
When businesses and brands want to build strong leader / employee relationships that build the bottom line, Phillip Van Hooser is the guide they turn to.
From firsthand experience in manufacturing and consumer products plus board leadership in banking, Phil knows the anxiety and hard costs that follow low-performance leadership, communication and employee engagement.
Add to that experience, Phil’s work with 1000+ unique clients, and the results? Companies and individual leaders discover a commonsense plan for creating a culture of trust, teamwork, and valued employee engagement!
An accomplished business writer, and mentor to emerging leaders, Phil has laid out a clear success plan in multiple books. His latest title is We Need to Talk: Building Trust When Communicating Gets Critical.
Phil is a 30+ year member and past president of the National Speakers Association. He is a Certified Speaking Professional, a member of the CPAE Speaker Hall of Fame and is recipient of the Cavett Award, NSA’s highest honor.
He resides in the small rural town Princeton, KY with his wife Susan and their black lab, Jaz.
Door barricade systems, white boards that double as shields and lockdown systems are being positioned as critical investments in campus active shooter response programs. Critical analysis of these investments is an important part of making your security budget go further and confirming these tools, technologies and systems are actually able to address vulnerabilities and fit into your campus physical environment. As an example, door barricade systems have been proven to be highly effective, but if your walls are made of drywall, shots can still get through. These are better than nothing investments, but are they good enough when it matters?
The presenters will explore the history of a series of projects recently completed on the Bucknell campus. Starting with a review of master plans for the expansion of the campus towards the east, the team will discuss the evolution of the master plan from loose ideas of building placement towards the creation of a new formal quad and lawn.