Encore News & Views
ENCORE JOURNEY: From All Things Considered to global community radio

Bill Siemering spent 32 years in public radio, helping to develop “All Things Considered” and “Fresh Air with Terry Gross,” among other programs. Now he’s applying that experience to help bring community radio to emerging democracies around the world.
“This may be the most important work of my career,” he declares. “I couldn’t imagine not using all this experience in a new way.”
ENCORE AGENDA: States applaud encore careers

States are the laboratories for experiments to fix the mismatch between boomers eager to begin encore careers and employers who are still slow to welcome them, reports writer John Greenya in Miller-McCune magazine.
Greenya quotes Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis, who wrote 65 years ago: “It is one of the happy incidents of the federal system that a single courageous state may if its citizens choose, serve as a laboratory, and try novel social and economic experiments without risk to the rest of the country.”
FIND YOUR ENCORE: Idealist's resources for career switchers

Idealist, well-known by young people as a source of social change job listings and other resources, has introduced valuable new services targeted at career-switchers and other experienced adults.
The site’s new Mid-Career Transitions Resource Center offers resources for people beginning to consider a career change, women in transition, military personnel and “encore careerists,” with links to events, graduate school programs and forums where members comments on the ups and downs of their job searches. There are even local support groups for mid-career transitions, such as one in Portland, Ore., that has 16 members.
ENCORE LEADERSHIP INTERVIEW: George Weathersby on ordinary people achieving extraordinary results

Execution, execution, execution.
Those are the keys to making the most of the encore opportunity, says George Weathersby, chief executive of Genesys Solutions LLC, a consulting firm that helps organizations deliver on their strategic goals through a relentless focus on execution.
ENCORE JOURNEY: From women's history to Global Kids

To mark the third anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, the nonprofit Global Kids, has launched Hurricane Katrina: Tempest in Crescent City to showcase the disaster’s heroes and reinforce emergency preparedness.
Just a few years ago, the virtual reality technology used in the game and Web site would have been alien to Carole Artigiani, 67, executive director of Global Kids and a Purpose Prize fellow.
DALLAS MORNING NEWS: Baby boomers find meaning in nonprofit encore careers

“In real estate, I just helped rich guys get richer. Now, I help people get a life,” said Larry Sykes, one of several individuals featured in “Baby boomers find meaning in ‘encore careers’ at nonprofit groups” in today’s Dallas Morning News.
Writer Bob Moos reports that approximately 1.1 million boomers have left corporate jobs to work in the nonprofit world and that many more will follow. “We’re seeing the beginnings of a large workforce for social change,” Phyllis Segal, vice president of Civic Ventures, which publishes Encore.org, told Moos,
ENCORE QUESTION: How might we....?

How might we … do something we really love?
Encore.org members Howard and Marika Stone have a provocative post on their 2Young2Retire blog, describing the power of asking questions that begin, “How might I (or we)...” And they suggest it might be a useful exercise for people contemplating the next stage in their life journey.
“These three little words suggest that there is always an answer even if it is not immediately apparent,” the Stones write. “It’s a radical, mind-opening approach that costs nothing and can lead to big breakthroughs.”
ENCORE JOURNEY: From machinist to job-training innovator

Austin Polytechnical Academy in Chicago will welcome 258 students this fall in its high-tech manufacturing training program — a triumph at what was one of the city’s most violence-scarred schools.
The academy is also a triumph for Dan Swinney, a former machinist who helped create the new school within the public school system in 2007. The academy is intended to deliver a “two-fer”: help for beleaguered manufacturing firms and an economic jolt to struggling communities.
ENCORE PATHWAYS: Corporations help execs transition to nonprofit sector

Rusine Mitchell Sinclair left a 25-year career at IBM last year “to bring my experiences as an IBM executive to thousands of girls across North Carolina.”
Now, IBM is helping other executives and managers follow Sinclair to the nonprofit sector. The Financial Times calls IBM’s program a “Retirement Plan with a Difference.”
FIND YOUR ENCORE: Six tips on planning a second career

“I want an encore career, but how do I find one?” That’s a question asked by many members of Encore.org.
Kerry Hannon talked with Marc Freedman of Civic Ventures and other experts in midlife career planning for “Six Tips on Planning a Second Career” in the latest issue of U.S. News and World Report.
Freedman, author of Encore: Finding Work That Matters in the Second Half of Life, said few people start a second career purely for the money. “They’re searching for work that is fulfilling and gets them out of bed in the morning,” he told Hannon.





by Art Koff on FIND YOUR ENCORE: Six tips on planning a second career
by Art Koff on DALLAS MORNING NEWS: Baby boomers find meaning in nonprofit encore careers
by Gerry Pira on ENCORE NATION: Organizing a network of experienced educators
by Gerry Pira on Seeking Rotarians Who Want to Serve
by Gerry Pira on Seeking Rotarians Who Want to Serve
by Michael Weaver on Seeking Rotarians Who Want to Serve
by Michael Weaver on Seeking Rotarians Who Want to Serve
by Robert Selinger on Seeking Rotarians Who Want to Serve
by Roy Joslin on DALLAS MORNING NEWS: Baby boomers find meaning in nonprofit encore careers
by Klaas Lindemulder on ENCORE NATION: Organizing a network of experienced educators