Peering down from my perch on the bustling core of the Emerald City, known for its global icons like Amazon, Microsoft and Starbucks, I mused at the this venue of change, as well as the game-changers who have transformed their businesses and organizations by tracking emerging trends.
Titled #PRSAGameChangers: the conference featured, among others, the likes of Frank X. Shaw, the Corporate VP for Communications at Microsoft, Scott McClellan, Vice-President of Communications at Seattle University and former press secretary for President George W. Bush and Nicholas Thompson, Editor-In-Chief of Wired.
Thompson led with an anecdote, casually referencing a recent interview with the president (cue puzzled glances).” “No, really, for about 45 minutes,” he continued. They discussed the pitfalls of digital technology and how our lives will change. “He was very engaged, very knowledgeable.” More incredulous looks.
How will privacy, security and cyber-espionage evolve with universal interconnectivity? How will tech giants connect with their publics to write policy for the benefit of governments and citizens? Most importantly, how will the media continue upholding truth throughout in the face of an administration that’s declared war on journalists?
As a former chair of PRSA North Pacific district, my singular assignment of the conference was to introduce another game-changer, Zack Hutson, Vice-President of Corporate Affairs for Privateer Holdings Inc., the world’s first private equity firm to invest exclusively in legal cannabis.
“On the topic of cannabis,” I began, “a line from a Grateful Dead tune comes to mind: ‘what a long, strange trip it’s been.’ Marijuana has gone from a practical crop used by early colonists for textiles and rope to an evil substance known as the ‘devil weed,’ leading to criminalization of cannabis nationwide in 1937.”
“On the topic of cannabis,” I began, “a line from a Grateful Dead tune comes to mind: ‘what a long, strange trip it’s been.’ Marijuana has gone from a practical crop used by early colonists for textiles and rope to an evil substance known as the ‘devil weed,’ leading to criminalization of cannabis nationwide in 1937.”
“But as Bob Dylan crooned: ‘the times, they are a changin’.’ Today, most states allow for medical use of marijuana, and eight states and the District of Columbia have legalized the substance for recreational use. Hutson directs communications in building brands that lead, legitimize and define the future of the cannabis industry.”
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