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Return to Virginia Business - August 2003

Editor's corner

Of automobiles and awards

by Paula C. Squires
Virginia Business
August 2003


The next time you see a shiny new Ford pickup cruising down the road, think Norfolk. That’s where Ford Motor Co. manufactures many of its top-selling F-series trucks. In fact, Norfolk Assembly is so efficient that Ford chose the plant to roll out a new manufacturing system designed to restore the automaker to profitability. During a recent visit, Ford Chairman and CEO William Clay Ford Jr. stressed how critical Norfolk is to the company’s fortunes when he told workers: “Our future is in your hands.”

We profile the Ford plant in this month’s issue as part of a package on Virginia’s growing automotive industry. Come tour the factory floor with writer Garry Kranz and photographer Mark Rhodes and see the gadgetry and robots, which are doing much of the backbreaking work on today’s assembly line.

While the Ford plant is undoubtedly the Mack truck of the state’s auto industry, Virginia is also home to Advance Auto Parts, the country’s second-largest retailer of automotive parts and we take a look at this company as well.

If the auto package doesn’t help you vroom through the dog days of August, also in the line up is a story on retirees who have chucked grass cutting. They’re buying low-maintenance homes and paying monthly fees that free them from the bonds of yard work. As baby boomers move towards retirement, they’re driving this and other trends in the building industry.

Also in this month’s issue is Virginia Business’ annual statewide Site Selection Guide, which includes profiles on businesses and localities as well as a look at Virginia’s enterprise zones.

Rounding out our package, we explore a new concept for Virginia on the Ideas page. Guest columnist Hugh Keogh, President and CEO of the Virginia Chamber of Commerce, provides an insider’s view on how the state passed a law with bipartisan support that embraces long-range planning as a strategic tool in setting both policy and budgets.

And finally, forgive us for patting ourselves on the back, but Virginia Business picked up two national awards in the 2003 Editorial Excellence competition sponsored by the Association of Area Business Publications. We placed second in the category of “Best local spin of a national business/economic story” for a comprehensive report last August on Virginia’s defense industry. Judges termed the depth of the package — which included stories, photography and graphics — as “exceptionally impressive” and said the report helps readers see how connected our state is in the ongoing war on terror. We also won second place for a November 2002 cover titled “The Party’s Over.” It relied on two familiar icons, Mr. Peanut holding a package of Marlboro cigarettes, to draw readers into a story on the demise of federal programs supporting tobacco and peanuts. The result, judges said, was “a playful cover with a hard-hitting story behind it.”

So sit back, break out the lemonade or your favorite summer cocktail and enjoy this award-winning magazine. Forget about chores like cutting the grass. Maybe one day they’ll figure out how to get the truck-building robots to do it.

Paula C. Squires
Managing Editor
psquires@va-business.com

 

 

 

 

 

Return to Virginia Business - August 2003


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