bigpicture
Peter Bradley
Editorial Director
peter@dcvelocity.com
Karen Bachrach
Executive Editor
karen@dcvelocity.com
Toby Gooley
Senior Editor
tgooley@dcvelocity.com
David Maloney
Senior Editor, Special Projects & eContent
dmaloney@dcvelocity.com
Mark Solomon
Senior Editor
mark@dcvelocity.com
Susan Lacefield
Associate Managing Editor
slacefield@dcvelocity.com
James Cooke
Editor at Large
jcooke@dcvelocity.com
Steve Geary
Editor at Large
sgeary@dcvelocity.com
George Weimer
Editor at Large
gweimer@dcvelocity.com
Erica E. Mac Donald
Assistant Editor
Keisha Capitola
Director of Creative Services
keisha@dcvelocity.com
Jeff Thacker
Director of eMedia
jeff@dcvelocity.com
Columnists:
Clifford F. Lynch
Don Jacobson
Shelly Safian
Kenneth B. Ackerman
Art van Bodegraven
Barry Brandman
The right thing—and good business, too
Gary Master
Publisher
gmaster@dcvelocity.com
Mitch Mac Donald
Group Editorial Director
mitch@dcvelocity.com
Jim Indelicato
Group Publisher
jindelicato@dcvelocity.com
EDITORIAL OFFICE
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SOMETIMES IT’S HARD TO PREDICT WHAT ARTICLES WILL RESonate with readers. It’s even harder to anticipate which stories in DC
VELOCITY, which is targeted to a specialized audience after all, will take on
a life of their own on the Web.
We’ve just experienced both with a story that ran in our March issue
about efforts to help U.S. military veterans who are departing the service
find work in the logistics sector. For several weeks after we posted the story,
“Hire our heroes … the right way,” it consistently ranked among the most
read articles on our website. We’ve heard plaudits from some folks who are
helping vets make the transition from military life to the private sector and
from others anxious to share the article with their own networks.
It speaks well, I think, of the professionals we reach with this magazine
that many have shown a real interest in helping veterans. It demonstrates an understanding that, whatever
you may think of the policies that sent so many into
harm’s way, we all owe those who undertook that duty
something more than applause and expressions of
gratitude.
But it is also eminently pragmatic. In her superb
report, Senior Editor Toby Gooley described the skills
veterans bring to the private sector workplace: experience managing assets and people, an understanding of
logistics even among those who did not specialize in
the field, leadership, and a strong work ethic.
It’s not that veterans are ready to step in and run the
DC or the transportation department. As we reported,
there are significant differences between military and
industry practices that certainly require training. Many veterans, especially those who saw combat, may find the transition to civilian life difficult. More than a quarter of veterans who served on active duty since
September 2001 have service-connected disabilities, according to the
Bureau of Labor Statistics.
It’s that it’s the right thing to do for both the veterans and for business.
The bureau reports that unemployment among all veterans who served
in that period was 9. 9 percent in 2012—significantly higher than for the
public as a whole. While that’s a couple of points better than in 2011, it is
still a troubling number.
Yet the lament I hear over and over again when I discuss staffing with
logistics professionals at shows and conferences is the difficulty finding
young employees who will work hard and don’t have an unwarranted
sense of entitlement. As Toby wrote in that March piece, “Clearly, this is
a first-class opportunity to match talent supply with employer demand.”
If you have not read the story, I encourage you to do so now. Then get
your human resources personnel to work.
A PUBLICATION OF
Editorial Director