Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.

IT company ICS acquires Massachusetts firm
ENDICOTT, N.Y. — Endicott–based ICS on Thursday announced it has acquired AKUITY Technologies, a provider of information technology (IT) managed services in the greater New

Lockheed Martin mourns death of executive, Owego native
OWEGO, N.Y. — Lockheed Martin Corp. (NYSE: LMT) is mourning the death of Michele Evans, the firm’s aeronautics executive VP, who was a native of the Owego area and a graduate of Clarkson University in Potsdam. Evans died on New Year’s Day, per a Jan. 2 company news release. Lockheed Martin is a defense contractor
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OWEGO, N.Y. — Lockheed Martin Corp. (NYSE: LMT) is mourning the death of Michele Evans, the firm’s aeronautics executive VP, who was a native of the Owego area and a graduate of Clarkson University in Potsdam.
Evans died on New Year’s Day, per a Jan. 2 company news release.
Lockheed Martin is a defense contractor headquartered in Bethesda, Maryland that operates locations in suburban Syracuse and in Owego.
With more than 34 years of experience in the defense and aerospace industry, Evans led a “significant number” of programs in support of the U.S. Air Force, Army, Marine Corps, and Navy; as well as for commercial and international military customers. She also was actively involved in Lockheed Martin’s diversity and inclusion initiatives, serving as the executive sponsor for the Women’s Impact Network.
“The entire Lockheed Martin team was saddened to learn that Aeronautics Executive Vice President Michele Evans passed away on New Year’s Day,” James Taiclet, president and CEO of Lockheed Martin, said in a company statement. “Throughout her career, Michele led some of the most important programs that ensure the security of our nation and its allies and help make our world a safer place. Her example was an inspiration to those of us fortunate enough to have worked with her closely, and her leadership in the aerospace and defense industry will have a lasting impact for years to come.”
Evans’ personal story
Evans, 55, passed away after a “heroic battle with cancer,” according to an obituary on the website of Estey, Munroe & Fahey Funeral Home in Owego.
She grew up in a large family in nearby Campville and graduated in 1983 from Owego Free Academy, where she was a three-sport athlete, per the obituary.
Evans went on to Clarkson University, where she graduated magna cum laude with a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering in 1987. After graduation, she returned to the Owego area, got married, and raised a family in the village.
“Evans then promptly embarked on a career that culminated in her ascension to Executive Vice President of Lockheed Martin Aeronautics. She was a stalwart in the industry — shattering the ‘glass ceiling’ and positively impacting all those around her,” the obituary reads. “Her personable nature, her attention to detail, and her unbridled work ethic were all characteristics that prompted her rise to the top.”
Evans served on the boards of the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum and Girls Inc. She was also a member of the advisory board of Clarkson’s Coulter School of Engineering.
Evans is survived by her husband, David, and two sons, Clark and Parker. She is also survived by her mother Julia Marzo.
Evans’ funeral services were held Jan. 7 and livestreamed on the funeral home’s website. She will be interred in the family’s mausoleum at Evergreen Cemetery in Owego.
VIEWPOINT: How Technology Can Steer You Through the Fast Lane of the Post-COVID World
Technology’s impact on the work environment was profound well before the pandemic — streamlining processes, increasing productivity, and making remote work seamless. Now, given the rapid changes in an uncertain economy affected by the virus, knowing how to utilize and navigate technology in the post-COVID world will be even more crucial for entrepreneurs, college graduates, other
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Technology’s impact on the work environment was profound well before the pandemic — streamlining processes, increasing productivity, and making remote work seamless.
Now, given the rapid changes in an uncertain economy affected by the virus, knowing how to utilize and navigate technology in the post-COVID world will be even more crucial for entrepreneurs, college graduates, other job seekers, and upwardly mobile professionals.
Corporate America is undergoing a major transformation. Technology is at the center of this sea change. The virus will have a tremendous long-term impact on the workplace, and the influence of technology will loom larger as a result of the lessons we have learned during this unprecedented time.
Company structures are appearing more tailored to the entrepreneurial mind. The evolving trend is working from home, smaller workplaces, and niche-focused businesses. The work is moving faster, and whether a business owner or freelancer, you must be agile and nimble to compete. All these changes can be good, but only if you are ready.
The key to success in the post-COVID world is understanding these business-related benefits of technology:
• The internet is the great equalizer for knowledge and opportunity. The internet is the driving force behind the access to today’s opportunities. With the global economy, and technology connecting so many of us to it simultaneously, success has more to do with your ability to identify the right opportunities and your desire to go after them. While the internet enables someone to gain knowledge quickly, it’s also important to be vigilant in discerning the quality of online sources.
• Leveraging technology correctly helps businesses run efficiently. You don’t need to earn a degree in information technology or become a computer whiz to leverage the benefits of technology. What’s most important is that you know how to use technology to achieve your business goals. For example, through the power of tools like QuickBooks, I was able to manage the financial aspect of several of my businesses without having to hire a full-time finance team. Leverage the strength of technology to carry more of your workload while increasing your profitability.
• Tech certifications can be more powerful than four-year degrees. Many college graduates aren’t working in fields related to their majors, and today’s employers are increasingly shifting toward skills-based hiring for technology jobs. With the demand in tech, that means certification programs are on the uptick, often providing a quicker and more cost-effective way of getting hired than does a four-year college degree. A person’s overall earning powers in tech can more than double. Our general educational system often doesn’t meet the demands of today’s business environment. Typical college graduates and most students lack the skills required for today’s tech positions.
• Freelancing and independent consulting are on the rise. Gigging — taking on multiple freelance jobs — is growing in popularity, largely due to the growth in digital platforms and social media. This has given rise to a freelancer and consulting boom that has opened the door to a more flexible and creative workforce of contractors to accommodate the heavy workflow of today’s companies. The power of social media and online platforms is making it easier for entrepreneurs to engage a more diverse and global market. You can use your individual skills to bring more value to your business simply by selling those skills and services to others.
Technology has a hugely important role in enabling us to meet the many economic and business challenges presented by the pandemic, and to be better prepared for whatever comes next.
Tim Mercer (www.timtmercer.com) is founder of IBOXG, a company that provides technology services and solutions to government agencies and Fortune 500 corporations. He is also author of “Bootstrapped Millionaire: Defying the Odds of Business.”
VIEWPOINT: How to Make Sure COVID Doesn’t Kill Entrepreneurship
It’s no secret that the COVID-19 pandemic has left many existing small businesses struggling, and the continued economic uncertainty threatens to kill the ambitions of entrepreneurs who planned to launch new businesses but now must put their dreams on hold. This crisis will end up being much worse for small businesses than the 2008-11 sub-prime mortgage
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It’s no secret that the COVID-19 pandemic has left many existing small businesses struggling, and the continued economic uncertainty threatens to kill the ambitions of entrepreneurs who planned to launch new businesses but now must put their dreams on hold.
This crisis will end up being much worse for small businesses than the 2008-11 sub-prime mortgage crisis. That 2008 crisis mostly hit banks and the mortgage, insurance, and automotive sectors — all of which were primarily big, publicly owned stock companies. The only small-business dominant category was the construction sector, which was devastated for years.
Today’s crisis hits and potentially harms nearly every type of small business.
During that 2008-2011 period, for the first time, the number of business starts fell below the number of business failures. In other words, more businesses were killed off than were launched, and many people wondered whether we had killed entrepreneurship itself. It took five years or more for the small-business community to recover from that. The COVID-19 pandemic impact is so much larger and deeper.
And when small business takes a hit, the country as a whole suffers.
Small businesses make up 50 percent of GDP and also employ half the workforce. What happens to them determines what happens to the overall economy. We as a country cannot afford to fail them. So, what steps should small-business owners take to make sure they come out on the other side of the current crisis in good shape? Here are a few questions for them to consider.
• How is your online game? If business owners aren’t already thinking of themselves as all-virtual, e-commerce sellers, they need to be. That’s how your customer of today and the future is going to want to buy and receive products and services. You may need to update your website. Evaluate how good you are at social-media communication and promotion. Rethink how you can get orders, track delivery, and receive payments virtually.
• That’s happened to banking and access to capital? In recessions, banks shut down their credit lines, and reduce capital access if they have any concerns about a customer’s ability to pay down debts on time. This will get worse before it gets better. That means you may wake up one morning to find your business is facing challenges with access to capital. To keep your credit lines open and approved, it’s essential that you put in the time and effort to work with your bank. Without access to the proper amount of capital, your business may not be able to function.
• How have employees been affected? Businesses must be prepared for challenges that impact work production. A study by Microsoft showed employees’ brains are measurably more stressed working remotely than in an office (see: https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/uploads/prod/2020/07/NFW-Iqbal-et-al.pdf). It’s harder for remote workers to process information and they get fatigued more easily. And that’s just one aspect of what our employees are dealing with as the world around them changes so rapidly and dramatically. Build in as many communication and interaction tools as possible.
• Is your supply chain stable? Get prepared for more disruptions as COVID continues to emerge and reemerge and some vendors fall away. Additionally, many poorly funded state and local support structures could struggle. Look at how your supplies get to you. If you’re part of the supply chain, look at how you deliver supplies to your customers. Explore alternate shipping solutions and routes — trains, planes, cars, trucks, and boats. Now is the time to investigate all of them. Build in redundancy.
Staying in business is difficult even without a major crisis, as three out of four businesses fail in every 10-year cycle.
The good news is that small-business owners are known for being nimble, flexible, and resourceful. Many of them are finding new opportunities by solving problems that didn’t exist, or weren’t priorities, at the start of 2020. If we can buy them some time, they’ll be able to retool, market their new products and services, and keep good people employed.
Andi Gray is president of Strategy Leaders (www.strategyleaders.com), a business consulting firm.
VIEWPOINT: Evaluating the Viability of AI in the Workplace
It’s becoming increasingly important for organizational leaders to consider the potential impact of artificial intelligence on company culture. Recent research estimates that one in five employees will have an artificial-intelligence system as their coworker by 2022. As workplace applications of artificial intelligence (AI) become the norm, organizational leaders will face a bevy of new challenges,
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It’s becoming increasingly important for organizational leaders to consider the potential impact of artificial intelligence on company culture. Recent research estimates that one in five employees will have an artificial-intelligence system as their coworker by 2022. As workplace applications of artificial intelligence (AI) become the norm, organizational leaders will face a bevy of new challenges, ranging from resource allocation to effective implementation.
However, achieving topline objectives remains most organizational leaders’ top priority. A recent study from Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business (https://www.fuqua.duke.edu/duke-fuqua-insights/corporate-culture) states, “Executives variously defined culture as a company’s tone, operating style, standard of behavior and even the ‘invisible hand’ that guides a firm.”
As organizational leaders steer their companies into increasingly competitive labor markets while keeping a close eye on the achievement of topline results, one of their most pressing questions will become, “How can humans and AI work together while maintaining a cohesive company culture?”
Here are three key considerations corporate leaders will need to address to craft — and progressively strengthen — flourishing company cultures in which humans and AI systems are able to work in tandem.
1. Conduct cost-benefit analyses. As they prepare to roll out their AI solutions, corporate-leadership teams must be sure to conduct careful cost-benefit analyses. This should not only evaluate the potential capital investment and ROI of implementing artificial intelligence in the workplace as precisely as possible but should also weigh the cultural costs and benefits of choosing to deploy or forgo such solutions.
An AI system’s cultural costs and benefits may include its value-add to customers, users’ perceptions of its interface, its interoperability with existing operational systems, its overall reliability, its embodiment of a company’s cultural beliefs (for example: “collaborative problem-solving is valued within this organization”), and more.
For example, one of Amazon’s top cultural beliefs — what the e-commerce giant refers to as Leadership Principles — is “Customer Obsession.” The company’s customer-service chatbots can conduct natural, colloquial, real-time text exchanges with customers seeking to make returns, find lost orders, or inquire about products. These bots serve as a prime example of artificial intelligence being harnessed in a way that not only drives positive business outcomes, but also embodies an organization’s cultural beliefs.
Further, it’s crucial for organizational leaders to conduct additional cost-benefit analyses of specific AI applications within their organizations. AI should be viewed not as a one-time fix for all operational problems, but as a tool to be leveraged only when it will be cost-effective, efficient, and culturally valuable to do so.
For instance, an AI system may be able to streamline the talent-acquisition process by vetting applicants’ résumés and filtering out unqualified candidates. Alternatively, an AI system may be able to reduce labor costs on the production line at a manufacturing plant or drive conversions for a retailer by providing consumers with the information they need.
However, in a context like the middle of the sales pipeline — where a salesperson’s role is as much about establishing a human connection as it is about closing the deal — an AI system may not provide an organization with much tangible value. In many cases, the inherent dispassion and mechanical nature of an AI system may hinder an organization’s achievement of its desired results. These types of systems will improve over time and eventually become the “sales whisperers” that all sales representatives will need to compete soon.
It’s up to leaders to take stock of various job functions and potential AI applications and conduct thorough cost-benefit analyses to make decisions that will promote their organizations’ cultural beliefs and, in turn, drive results.
2. Maintain control over AI-driven results. A 2018 study by Oracle and research firm Future Workplace (https://www.oracle.com/corporate/pressrelease/robots-at-work-062818.html) found that 93 percent of people would trust orders handed down by a robot. This indicates not only a fundamental shift in social dynamics, but also a potential crisis of leadership for organizations looking to implement artificial intelligence in the workplace. While AI systems programmed to reflect an organization’s cultural beliefs may function as highly trustworthy and accountable colleagues, most organizations are ill-prepared to be led by such systems. At what level of the organization does the AI directive break down?
Taking a step back, it’s critical to consider the intended role of a leadership team within an organization. Great leaders do not command teams blindly, rejecting employee feedback in favor of rigid protocol and critically not creating dialogue. Nor are they micromanagers who do not trust employees to remain responsible for delivering desired results. Rather, great leaders encourage collaboration, candid feedback, and creativity, remaining open to possibilities and empathetic to unique perspectives.
Most importantly, strong leaders steer teams toward a set of shared objectives, the achievement of which would offer collective benefits. These objectives, also known as OKRs (objectives and key results), are the three to five meaningful, measurable, and memorable “must-deliver” business outcomes that define organizational success. Throughout the journey toward OKR fulfillment, leaders must maintain their adaptability and openness to innovative ideas and viewpoints.
And while AI systems may succeed in fulfilling several valuable functions within an organization — and may even advance OKRs — they may struggle to adapt their approaches to achieving results in the face of changing circumstances. It may also be challenging to ensure these systems maintain an organization’s cultural integrity, though AI innovators are increasingly exploring the development of traditionally “human traits” (such as empathy) in AI, which may equip emerging systems to serve as more effective leaders.
On the flipside, if members of an organization have not gained a sufficient understanding of how an AI system works, they will be unable to guarantee that the system is promoting both the achievement of OKRs and intraorganizational cultural cohesion. Eventually, employees may even find themselves torn between following conflicting orders from (human) organizational leaders and AI systems.
3. Foster a collaborative culture. Collaboration is the cornerstone of a thriving company culture. As Mary Barra, CEO of GM states, “You’ve got to create a climate where people feel that they can speak up, that there’s not fear in the organization. So, we work really hard to not be hierarchical; clever ideas can come from anywhere.”
In a collaborative culture this now extends to people, AI, bots, and more. All “members” of an organization need to continually reaffirm their commitment to executing on OKRs and take proactive measures — whether inside or outside the strict boundaries of their individual roles — to ensure they honor this commitment. This won’t be an easy transition for some, learning to trust AI, to objectively review data and patterns will still be in the human court for a long time to come.
Since collaboration is a crucial component of long-term organizational success, artificial intelligence should be deployed in the workplace if it contributes to the improvement of customer experience, gleans new insights faster, and enhances employee productivity. Leaders must thoroughly vet potential AI solutions to ensure they are able to assist employees in seeing critical performance or information gaps early. AI should benefit the employee’s role, make results more achievable with the goal of streamlining productivity to meet company and customer needs.
Bottom line
For corporate leaders wrestling with if, when, how, and why to implement artificial intelligence, cultural considerations should be reviewed for the readiness of an organization and its employees. Only a thriving culture rooted in collaboration and led by flexible, receptive, collaborative leadership teams will remain viable in rapidly evolving, highly competitive markets.
Leaders should deploy AI solutions for business when they feel confident that the systems reflect their organizations’ cultural beliefs, add value to the customer, employee experiences, and productivity. Enabling AI allows organizations to remain agile in their approach to execution and empower all members of their organizations to reach new heights in achieving results that matter most for the organization and its customers.
Christa Martin is a chief marketing officer with Chief Outsiders (www.chiefoutsiders.com), helping B2B, B2C, technology, health care, consumer goods, and other companies identify new market opportunities, develop new products, and generate demand.
OPINION: N.Y. Wage Board was right to not lower farm OT threshold for now
The [New York State] proposal to reduce the 60-hour overtime-threshold [on farms to 40 hours] threatened to over-regulate New York’s family farms out of existence. Fortunately, the [state Department of Labor’s] Wage Board acted prudently in its decision to preserve the current threshold for the time being. This is welcome news for farmers across New
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The [New York State] proposal to reduce the 60-hour overtime-threshold [on farms to 40 hours] threatened to over-regulate New York’s family farms out of existence. Fortunately, the [state Department of Labor’s] Wage Board acted prudently in its decision to preserve the current threshold for the time being. This is welcome news for farmers across New York — at least in the short term.
Moving forward, we must keep in mind that the past year has been one of the most difficult for the agricultural industry, which was especially ravaged by the COVID-19 pandemic. This is a time when we should be working to facilitate economic recovery and avoid putting unnecessary financial pressures onto the backs of New York’s farmers.
During hearings held in the summer, farmers testified that if the Wage Board had recommended another reduction, New York farms would likely face a level of financial distress they may never be able to overcome.
In order to stay solvent, some of these farms would be forced to lay off employees. This would further inhibit their recovery and put laborers out of work altogether. About 96 percent of farms in New York are family-owned and these farms are already reeling from the pandemic. A State Farm Bureau survey indicated that 43 percent of the state’s farms lost sales during the COVID-19 health crisis — and putting any more pressure on them would be ill-advised.
I applaud [this] decision by the Wage Board. Simply stated, the farms that provide goods and services here, and across the country, are on the brink of collapse.
The Assembly Minority Conference understands the reality thousands of farmers are facing. We remain committed to developing measures that make New York’s agricultural industry more competitive and provide critical relief to the state’s farms and local economies.
William (Will) A. Barclay, Republican, is the New York Assembly Minority Leader and represents the 120th New York Assembly District, which encompasses most of Oswego County, including the cities of Oswego and Fulton, as well as the town of Lysander in Onondaga County and town of Ellisburg in Jefferson County. Contact Barclay at barclaw@assembly.state.ny.us.
Editor’s note: This column is drawn from a statement his office issued on Dec. 31, after the New York State Department of Labor Wage Board recommended delaying the move to lower the 60-hour farm labor overtime threshold until at least November. The column also includes excerpts from an opinion article by Barclay on this topic, which was published in the Sept. 14, 2020 issue of CNYBJ.
OPINION: What a President-Elect Must Deal With
Joe Biden won’t become President of the United States [until Jan. 20], but it’s fair to say he’s already feeling the pressures of the office. I think being president-elect may be the second-hardest job in the world. For one thing, as president-elect he’s encircled by people who want something from him: appointments, jobs, and internal
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Joe Biden won’t become President of the United States [until Jan. 20], but it’s fair to say he’s already feeling the pressures of the office. I think being president-elect may be the second-hardest job in the world.
For one thing, as president-elect he’s encircled by people who want something from him: appointments, jobs, and internal disputes settled. Right now, political players of all sorts — people who supported him, people who opposed him, interest groups of all kinds and descriptions — are angling to get his ear.
I remember standing behind a rope line once when President-Elect Bill Clinton passed by. A gentleman standing next to me yelled, “Mr. President, be sure to sign HR 101!” or whatever the bill number was. Then he ducked out of line and left. I have often wondered what he charged his clients for that little shout-out.
We have already seen what else lies in store, as President-Elect Biden announces cabinet picks: he will be analyzed backward and forward and criticized as being too liberal, too conservative, too timid, too bold, too committed to elites or not committed enough to expertise. This welcome-by-fire happens to every incoming president.
There is also the realization that they do not get to make easy decisions. Every decision a president or president-elect makes is tough because the easy ones have been dealt with before he even sees them. How to fulfill promises, how to deal with Congress, what to do about a slew of issues that will soon land on his desk — all will require hard decision-making.
In some ways, this will come to a head quickly, at his first State of the Union address. In every administration, one of the biggest fights both internally and among interest groups is to get a sentence or two in the speech, since that’s where a president sets out policy for the world to see. People do all sorts of things to get their phrase or topic mentioned, and the sorting process is fraught.
It’s hard to know in advance exactly what the key policy issues will be, but it’s not hard to guess. The [coronavirus] pandemic will be a top priority from the get-go, as will the Russian hacking of our government’s computer systems. Climate change, economic growth, and racial issues will feature prominently. Infrastructure development is always of importance. And in foreign affairs alone, there are enough challenges to try the most resolute politician: Iran, Afghanistan, China, Russia, Great Britain and Europe, global trade [and more]. Setting priorities will come down to the president and his closest advisors — that is, after all, what presidents do. The federal bureaucracy is huge and filled with talented people and resources. Focusing it on the big things is a major part of the president’s job.
But beyond specific policies, President-Elect Biden has another set of challenges on his plate. He has said that he wants to “restore the soul of America” and to help our “better angels prevail.” The period since his election has only confirmed that we face serious concerns about the health of our democracy and its institutions, and about government agencies’ ability to perform effectively and without partisan or political interference. He has talked about bipartisanship throughout this year and will have to find a way to make it a reality in the face of determined opposition from Republicans and serious doubts among Democrats. Moreover, he has to restore the dignity of a presidency that has suffered withering attacks on its norms and prestige under his predecessor.
And while he won’t be able to avoid hot-button culture wars, he won’t be able to solve them, either. So he’ll have to do his best to address them without letting them dominate. An incoming president cannot afford to let matters that are extraneous to his core policies capture him — though he can try to lower the temperature on them.
In the end, perhaps his most important task will be to refocus the nation’s political will on the many challenges we face, and to project a sense of optimism that as a country we can address and solve them. Americans understand their complexity. What they want is a leader who can bring us together to work on them.
Lee Hamilton, 89, is a senior advisor for the Indiana University (IU) Center on Representative Government, distinguished scholar at IU Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies, and professor of practice at the IU O’Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs. Hamilton, a Democrat, was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives for 34 years (1965-1999), representing a district in south central Indiana.
Haylor, Freyer & Coon, Inc. recently announced several new employee owners joined the firm in the fourth quarter. Coming aboard in the commercial insurance division were STEPHEN ALBI, risk management advisor; JENNIFER GENSEL, account manager associate; JOHN MCDANIEL, account manager associate; HANNAH REYNOLDS, account manager associate; and JENNIFER FUFFINI, account manager associate. Joining in the
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Haylor, Freyer & Coon, Inc. recently announced several new employee owners joined the firm in the fourth quarter. Coming aboard in the commercial insurance division were STEPHEN ALBI, risk management advisor; JENNIFER GENSEL, account manager associate; JOHN MCDANIEL, account manager associate; HANNAH REYNOLDS, account manager associate; and JENNIFER FUFFINI, account manager associate. Joining in the group department was KRISTEN WOODEN, and joining the personal risk management division was JENNIFER ZYSK.

JAMES SHOMAR has joined MACNY, The Manufacturers Association as chief growth officer, a new position at MACNY. His role is to help propel MACNY’s growth and also work directly with MACNY members to accelerate their growth. Shomar will deliver growth training, boot camps, coaching, and fractional growth services to help members go after new markets,
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JAMES SHOMAR has joined MACNY, The Manufacturers Association as chief growth officer, a new position at MACNY. His role is to help propel MACNY’s growth and also work directly with MACNY members to accelerate their growth. Shomar will deliver growth training, boot camps, coaching, and fractional growth services to help members go after new markets, develop product lines, and advance company growth. For the past four years, he has been a partner at the venture-capital firm StartFast. Shomar was involved in fundraising efforts across two funds, and leading investments in more than 25 companies from across the globe. He worked directly with the founders of each company in the portfolio helping them bring their products to market, develop a growth strategy, execute, and raise larger rounds of funding. Shomar is also the entrepreneur in residence at the Keenan Center for Entrepreneurship at Le Moyne College where he teaches entrepreneurship classes and coaches student entrepreneurs. Prior to that, he was the entrepreneur in residence at the Whitman School of Management at Syracuse University.

SRC, Inc. has made the following promotions across the company. DANIELLE CHABOT will become assistant VP of contracts, compliance, and internal audit. In this role, she will be responsible for all corporate contracts and will lead the company’s corporate compliance program, which includes monitoring, training, and policy development in addition to working with external auditors.
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SRC, Inc. has made the following promotions across the company.
DANIELLE CHABOT will become assistant VP of contracts, compliance, and internal audit. In this role, she will be responsible for all corporate contracts and will lead the company’s corporate compliance program, which includes monitoring, training, and policy development in addition to working with external auditors. Chabot will also oversee the internal audit department. She has been with SRC for more than 15 years, most recently working as director of compliance. Cabot has a bachelor’s degree in accounting from SUNY Geneseo and is a certified public accountant (CPA). She serves on the board of directors of Vera House.
LISA MONDELLO has been appointed assistant VP, human resources and corporate communications. She will oversee human resources (including benefits and compensation, recruiting, and organizational development) and advise on effective communication and marketing strategies while focusing on employee satisfaction and retention. Mondello has been with SRC for 22 years, most recently as director of corporate communications. She has a bachelor’s degree in graphic design from Alfred University and an MBA from Columbia College.
JOANN CAMPBELL-MAHER and MICHELE NELLENBACK have both been promoted to director roles within SRC’s contracts department.
Campbell-Maher is taking on the role of director of R&D contracts, while Nellenback steps into the position of director of production contracts. Both will lead teams that support complex defense contracts, provide business-risk assessment and mitigation plans, deliver guidance on contractual issues, and develop and maintain customer relationships. Campbell-Maher has been with SRC for 24 years, serving the last 11 as a senior contracts manager. She has a bachelor’s degree from SUNY Oswego and an MBA from Le Moyne College. Nellenback brings a decade of tenure at SRC to her new role. Most recently, she served as a senior contracts manager, overseeing the team responsible for production and life-cycle management contracts. Nellenback has a bachelor’s degree from SUNY Geneseo and an MBA from Syracuse University.
ROBINSON LINGO will take on a director role in SRC’s general counsel department. In this new position, he will oversee in-house and outside legal services for SRC and its subsidiaries and guide the international trade compliance team. Lingo has been with the company eight years, most recently as senior manager, associate general counsel. He graduated with a bachelor’s degree in accounting and finance from Syracuse University and also received his MPA and juris doctorate in national security law from Syracuse University. Lingo is a captain in the New York Army National Guard.
SIMONA NAVA has been promoted to a director role in SRC’s electronic warfare & services division. In her new position, she will lead the team that helps the nation’s warfighters to succeed in their missions and return home safely. She has been with the company for 11 years, most recently serving as program manager. Nava graduated from Texas State University with a bachelor’s in physics and, later, a master’s degree in physics.
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