Leadership Development Archives - York County Regional Chamber of Commerce - SC https://www.yorkcountychamber.com Tue, 14 Oct 2025 13:38:24 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.1 https://growthzonecmsprodeastus.azureedge.net/sites/953/2022/06/cropped-YCRC-favicon-1-32x32.png Leadership Development Archives - York County Regional Chamber of Commerce - SC https://www.yorkcountychamber.com 32 32 The Curiosity Code: Why Asking Better Questions Beats Having All the Answers https://www.yorkcountychamber.com/2025/10/14/the-curiosity-code-why-asking-better-questions-beats-having-all-the-answers/ Tue, 14 Oct 2025 13:38:24 +0000 https://www.yorkcountychamber.com/?p=62871 The Curiosity Code: Why Asking Better Questions Beats Having All the Answers October 14, 2025 Leaders often feel pressure to have answers, but the best ones know how to ask better questions. Curiosity builds stronger teams, fuels innovation, and keeps organizations adaptable. The smartest leaders reward inquiry, not just results. Create “question habits” in meetings,…

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The Curiosity Code: Why Asking Better Questions Beats Having All the Answers

October 14, 2025

Asking Better Questions
  • Leaders often feel pressure to have answers, but the best ones know how to ask better questions.
  • Curiosity builds stronger teams, fuels innovation, and keeps organizations adaptable.
  • The smartest leaders reward inquiry, not just results.
  • Create “question habits” in meetings, metrics, and mentoring to strengthen learning and trust.
  • The bottom line: In times of change, curiosity is not a soft skill. It is how leaders stay ahead.

606 words ~ 3 min. read

Leaders are often taught to act fast and have the right answer. It is what earns trust, gets promotions, and keeps things moving. But today’s challenges change too quickly for any one person to always know what is right. The leaders who thrive in this environment are the ones who stay curious. They ask better questions before rushing to conclusions.

Harvard Business Review calls curiosity “the hidden catalyst of innovation.” Teams led by curious leaders perform better, trust each other more, and come up with stronger ideas. Still, many organizations accidentally discourage curiosity in the name of efficiency. Meetings become status updates instead of conversations. Strategy sessions confirm what people already believe instead of exploring new possibilities. Over time, teams get faster at execution but weaker at learning.

Curiosity as a Leadership Practice

Curiosity is not a personality trait. It is a leadership practice that can be developed. You see it in how leaders frame discussions, respond to feedback, and shape culture.

Curious leaders do not ask, “Who messed this up?” They ask, “What can we learn from this?” They do not start with, “What’s the solution?” They start with, “What don’t we understand yet?”

At Pixar, leaders protect a process called the Braintrust. Teams share unfinished work and critique it together, not to assign blame, but to make the story stronger. Everyone checks their ego at the door. The only goal is learning. That is curiosity in action, and it is part of why Pixar has produced decades of creative success.

How to Build Curiosity Into the System

Curiosity cannot rely on a few good leaders. It has to live in the organization’s systems and routines. Here are three ways to make it real.

1. Create space for questions.
Add a few minutes in every meeting for open inquiry. Ask things like, “What assumptions might be wrong?” or “What are we not seeing yet?” When leaders model this, others feel permission to think out loud.

2. Reward exploration, not just results.
Performance reviews often focus only on outcomes. Add a new measure: who experimented, sought feedback, or reframed a problem. Recognizing these behaviors sends a clear message that curiosity counts.

3. Listen to understand.
Curiosity fades fast when people feel unheard. Teach managers to listen not to respond, but to understand. That small shift builds trust and encourages more honest conversations.

The Bottom Line

Curiosity does not mean avoiding decisions. It means making smarter ones. In a business world that is constantly shifting, curiosity is the leader’s most reliable tool. It drives learning, builds connection, and keeps teams moving forward together.

The strongest organizations are not led by people who always have the right answers. They are led by people who keep asking the right questions.

 

About the York County Regional Chamber

The York County Regional Chamber of Commerce is made up of more than 700 member firms employing more than 35,000 individuals and is the largest business organization in its four-county region of SC. Serving the Fort Mill, Rock Hill, Tega Cay, and greater York areas, the Chamber exists to connect its members to valuable resources and to serve as the voice of the regional business community.

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How Teaching Your Team to Sell Drives Every Metric Up https://www.yorkcountychamber.com/2025/09/15/how-teaching-your-team-to-sell-drives-every-metric-up/ Mon, 15 Sep 2025 15:58:23 +0000 https://www.yorkcountychamber.com/?p=62846 How Teaching Your Team to Sell Drives Every Metric Up September 15, 2025 Mollie Rose Growth-minded companies train everyone, not just the sales team, to understand the basics of selling. Every employee interaction with customers, partners, or community stakeholders can be a growth opportunity. Sales skills foster confidence, empathy, and better communication, which boosts performance…

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How Teaching Your Team to Sell Drives Every Metric Up

September 15, 2025

Mollie Rose

Teaching Your Team to Sell
  • Growth-minded companies train everyone, not just the sales team, to understand the basics of selling.

  • Every employee interaction with customers, partners, or community stakeholders can be a growth opportunity.

  • Sales skills foster confidence, empathy, and better communication, which boosts performance across all roles.

  • The payoff: stronger culture, deeper client loyalty, and measurable revenue growth.

574 words ~ 3 min. read

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Most leaders view sales as the responsibility of one department. Sales teams chase leads, close deals, and push revenue forward while the rest of the organization focuses on operations, service, or support. But here’s the truth: when sales skills are seen as universal, not specialized, they become a growth multiplier for the entire company.

At its core, selling is not about closing a transaction. It is about listening, understanding needs, and connecting solutions to problems. Those same skills show up in customer service, project management, product design, and leadership. By instilling basic sales training across your team, you equip every employee to see their work as part of a larger growth story.

Think about what happens when customer-facing staff in accounting, operations, or service know how to uncover needs. Instead of just processing an invoice, an employee recognizes an opportunity to recommend a bundled service or flag an upcoming renewal. Instead of handling a complaint with defensiveness, a frontline worker sees it as a chance to retain loyalty and potentially upsell. Even in back-office roles, sales skills improve communication with colleagues, drive collaboration, and sharpen the ability to advocate for ideas.

For many companies, the barrier to growth is not a lack of opportunity. It is a lack of awareness. Employees who do not see themselves as “salespeople” miss moments that could deepen customer relationships or open new revenue doors. Training your team to sell reframes this. It creates a shared language around value, urgency, and problem-solving. Over time, that shared mindset strengthens culture because people start connecting their day-to-day actions to organizational success.

Leaders play a decisive role in this shift. When executives champion sales skills as part of professional development, they signal that growth is everyone’s job. When managers celebrate moments where non-sales staff uncover opportunities, they reinforce a culture that rewards curiosity and initiative. Without this top-down encouragement, even the best training risks being treated as optional.

The payoff extends beyond revenue. Customers feel the difference when every interaction is rooted in listening and value. Instead of being shuffled between departments, they encounter a unified team that understands their needs and responds with solutions. This builds trust, loyalty, and long-term partnerships that are far more valuable than one-time transactions.

The key is not to make everyone a quota-carrying salesperson. Rather, it is about giving your team the ability to recognize and act on moments of influence. Basic training in questioning techniques, active listening, and value articulation is often enough to shift mindsets. From there, role-specific application ensures that sales skills do not feel bolted on but embedded into daily work.

The companies that thrive in competitive markets are those that understand growth is not a department. It is a culture. Leaders who teach every employee how to sell are not just building revenue pipelines. They are cultivating ambassadors who can champion the organization’s value at every turn.

The Bottom Line

Sales training is not an isolated investment in one department. It is a cultural strategy that multiplies impact across your organization. By equipping every employee with basic sales skills, you create a workforce that listens better, communicates more clearly, and strengthens relationships. Customers win through better service and personalized solutions. Employees win through confidence and ownership. And organizations win through loyalty and growth that compound over time. If you want growth to be more than a number, make sales everyone’s responsibility.

About the York County Regional Chamber

The York County Regional Chamber of Commerce is made up of more than 700 member firms employing more than 35,000 individuals and is the largest business organization in its four-county region of SC. Serving the Fort Mill, Rock Hill, Tega Cay, and greater York areas, the Chamber exists to connect its members to valuable resources and to serve as the voice of the regional business community.

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Ones to Watch Profile: Will Gilmore https://www.yorkcountychamber.com/2025/08/15/ones-to-watch-profile-will-gilmore/ Fri, 15 Aug 2025 14:51:59 +0000 https://www.yorkcountychamber.com/?p=62800 Ones to Watch Profile: Will Gilmore August 15, 2025 At YMCA Camp Cherokee, summer is more than a season—it’s a place where lifelong memories are made, leadership skills take root, and confidence grows. For Will “Happy” Gilmore, Executive Camp Director, ensuring those opportunities are accessible to every child—regardless of background—is both a professional mission and…

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Ones to Watch Profile: Will Gilmore

August 15, 2025

Ones to Watchwlogo
Will Gilmore

At YMCA Camp Cherokee, summer is more than a season—it’s a place where lifelong memories are made, leadership skills take root, and confidence grows. For Will “Happy” Gilmore, Executive Camp Director, ensuring those opportunities are accessible to every child—regardless of background—is both a professional mission and a personal calling.

With nearly a decade at Camp Cherokee, Will’s leadership has transformed the camp experience for thousands of youth while strengthening the organization’s financial foundation. Under his direction, the camp’s annual operating budget has grown from $600,000 to $1.3 million—an 85% increase that has expanded programming, improved facilities, and provided more access for underserved youth.

One of Will’s most notable recent accomplishments is the fundraising, planning, and completion of the camp’s new Recreation Hall—a 12,000 sq. ft. facility designed to enhance summer programming and support year-round activities. The project was no small feat. Through years of dedicated capital fundraising, Will and his team reached their $4 million goal, securing major support including a $750,000 grant from South Carolina’s Parks and Recreation Department, as well as multiple six-figure gifts from corporate and individual donors. The new building officially opened in November 2024, ushering in a new era of possibilities for the camp.

But Will’s impact reaches far beyond Camp Cherokee’s grounds. As an American Camp Association Standard Accreditation Visitor, he travels to evaluate other camps, sharing best practices and supporting excellence in youth programming. His volunteer work is equally impressive—serving as Vice Chair for Strides for Strength, where he helped secure 501(c)(3) status and coordinated fundraising events generating $25,000 each; and dedicating years to Camp LUCK, a camp for children with congenital heart disease, where he helped establish the programming standards still used today.

Will’s passion for youth development is matched by his belief in the power of community. Whether it’s mentoring new camp leaders, securing resources for underserved families, or designing spaces where kids can simply be kids, he brings energy, vision, and a can-do spirit to every challenge.

As one of the Chamber’s Ones to Watch, Will “Happy” Gilmore exemplifies the leadership, innovation, and community-minded drive that make York County stronger—one camper at a time.

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Ones to Watch Profile: Trey Griffy https://www.yorkcountychamber.com/2025/07/31/ones-to-watch-profile-trey-griffy/ Thu, 31 Jul 2025 18:01:13 +0000 https://www.yorkcountychamber.com/?p=62765 Ones to Watch Profile: Trey Griffy July 31, 2025 As Branch Manager of Nesbit Agencies Carolinas, Trey Griffy is leading with both purpose and performance. Since stepping into his leadership role in 2019, he has transformed the agency’s Southeast division—based in Fort Mill—into one of its strongest performers. Under Trey’s guidance, the office has seen…

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Ones to Watch Profile: Trey Griffy

July 31, 2025

Ones to Watchwlogo
Trey Griffy

As Branch Manager of Nesbit Agencies Carolinas, Trey Griffy is leading with both purpose and performance. Since stepping into his leadership role in 2019, he has transformed the agency’s Southeast division—based in Fort Mill—into one of its strongest performers. Under Trey’s guidance, the office has seen a 285% increase in revenue, with a personal portfolio nearing $9 million in written premium.

What makes this growth even more impressive is that Trey entered the York County market as a complete unknown. Through dedication, community connection, and specialized expertise in areas like multifamily association insurance, he built lasting client relationships and helped cement Nesbit Agencies' reputation as one of the top 100 independent insurance agencies in the nation.

But Trey’s impact doesn’t stop at the office door.

Outside of work, Trey invests deeply in his community—coaching youth baseball, soccer, and basketball since 2021 and volunteering his musical talents on his church’s worship team. “Coaching gives me the chance to invest in the next generation—teaching not just the game, but values like teamwork and resilience,” he shares. He also serves 1–2 times a month in worship services, using his musical skills to contribute to something larger than himself. “These roles aren’t part of my job—they’re extensions of what I care about: showing up for others, using my gifts to serve, and staying connected to the community that has supported me.”

In 2024, Trey graduated from Leadership York County, calling it a transformative experience that expanded both his professional insights and local network. “The relationships I built through LYCO were some of the most meaningful of my career,” he says.

Trey Griffy exemplifies what it means to lead with heart and hustle. We're proud to honor him as one of the Chamber’s 2025 Ones to Watch.

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Chamber SVP, Colleen Dick, Earns Certified Community Leadership Practitioner (CCLP) Designation https://www.yorkcountychamber.com/2025/07/23/chamber-svp-colleen-dick-earns-certified-community-leadership-practitioner-cclp-designation/ Wed, 23 Jul 2025 16:35:27 +0000 https://www.yorkcountychamber.com/?p=62743 Chamber SVP, Colleen Dick, Earns Certified Community Leadership Practitioner (CCLP) Designation July 23, 2025 Mollie Rose The Association of Leadership Programs (ALP) proudly recognizes Colleen Dick, Senior Vice President at the York County Regional Chamber of Commerce (SC), Jessica Stanford, Vice President of Leadership and Advocacy at the Midland Chamber of Commerce (TX), Linda Valdez Thompson, CEO of Valdez Thompson…

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Chamber SVP, Colleen Dick, Earns Certified Community Leadership Practitioner (CCLP) Designation

July 23, 2025

Mollie Rose

ALP

The Association of Leadership Programs (ALP) proudly recognizes Colleen Dick, Senior Vice President at the York County Regional Chamber of Commerce (SC), Jessica Stanford, Vice President of Leadership and Advocacy at the Midland Chamber of Commerce (TX), Linda Valdez Thompson, CEO of Valdez Thompson Consulting LLC (TX), Cathy Yen, Co-Founder and Facilitator at Community Connections Fund (IL),  and Mike Zwiefelhofer, Executive Director of Leadership San Francisco (CA), as the newest recipients of the Certified Community Leadership Practitioner (CCLP) designation.

The Certified Community Leadership Practitioner (CCLP) program was developed in response to membership feedback to provide extensive ongoing training opportunities for Community Leadership Program professionals. The CCLP designation provides Community Leadership Program professionals with an incentive to achieve excellence in professional performance with mastery of essential skills. The development of the Certified Community Leadership Practitioner program began in 2016, with the first CORE training course offered in 2019 in conjunction with the ALP National Conference held that year in Tulsa, Oklahoma. 23 Community Leadership professionals participated in the first cohort. Since 2019, nearly one hundred CLP professionals have completed the required 16 hours of CORE training.

“I'm proud to have earned the Certified Community Leadership Practitioner designation and appreciate the chance to grow alongside such a passionate group of professionals from across the country," said Colleen Dick, CCLP. "Providing opportunities for our next generation of community leaders is so vital to the future success of our region and I'm looking forward to using CCLP insights and strategies to strengthen the Chamber’s leadership development efforts.”

Thirty-five individuals, including Colleen Dick, Jessica Stanford, Linda Valdez Thompson, Cathy Yen, and Mike Zwiefelhofer, have completed the process, passed the certification exam, and earned the CCLP designation. 

 

About Colleen Dick, CCLP

Colleen Dick is the Senior Vice President at the York County Regional Chamber of Commerce, where she supports the organization’s Leadership Institute for Talent (LIFT). With over two decades of experience, she has been instrumental in advancing workforce training and fostering leadership within the regional business community.

Throughout her career Colleen has managed leadership development programs for area professionals and for students at both high school and college-levels, facilitating community awareness and skill-building for over 1100 individuals across the region. She recently launched the Regional Chamber’s LeadershipCORE course, providing hands-on and targeted solutions for new and emerging corporate managers; and regularly engages volunteers and program participants through team-building and goal-setting workshops.

Colleen is a graduate of St. Andrews Presbyterian College and began her professional career as an Admission’s Counselor with that institution, starting her Chamber career in the Laurinburg/Scotland County, NC, area. She is a former Smart Choices© facilitator, introducing 8th grade students to skills in time management, decision making, goal setting and self-discipline; and is currently developing a program for young professionals focused on the how-to of community leadership.

Beyond CCLP she has earned a Leadership Development Professional (LDCP) certification from the Institute of Organization Development. She is graduate of the U.S Chamber’s Institute for Organization Management (IOM) and is a Certified Chamber Executive of the Carolinas (CCEC).

 

About the Association of Leadership Programs

The Association of Leadership Programs serves over 280 community leadership programs across the United States and beyond. The association strives to enhance the well-being of all communities through the work of community leadership programs. Founded in 2010, the mission of ALP is to strengthen the effectiveness of leadership programs and professionals. Authentic and organic community leadership development requires taking a critical look at situations, opportunities, and challenges our communities face through the lens of the entire community and pursuing a course that enhances the well-being of all.

Contact:
Jessie Baginski, Ph.D., CCLP
Director of Programs
programs@alpleaders.org

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Ones to Watch Profile: Travis Shealey https://www.yorkcountychamber.com/2025/07/16/ones-to-watch-profile-travis-shealey/ Wed, 16 Jul 2025 16:03:38 +0000 https://www.yorkcountychamber.com/?p=62710 Ones to Watch Profile: Travis Shealey July 16, 2025 When it comes to dedication, service, and leadership in York County, few embody those values as fully as Travis Shealey, K9 Sergeant with the York County Sheriff’s Office. With over a decade of service in law enforcement and nearly two decades as a volunteer firefighter, Travis…

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Ones to Watch Profile: Travis Shealey

July 16, 2025

Ones to Watchwlogo
Trey Griffy

When it comes to dedication, service, and leadership in York County, few embody those values as fully as Travis Shealey, K9 Sergeant with the York County Sheriff’s Office. With over a decade of service in law enforcement and nearly two decades as a volunteer firefighter, Travis has built a career—and a life—centered on protecting others.

As K9 Unit Supervisor, Travis leads a team of highly trained K9 handlers and coordinates a 14-member K9 response team. Whether tracking missing persons, locating fleeing suspects, or advising young cadets through the Explorer Post program, he brings both tactical expertise and deep compassion to every mission.

Throughout his career, Travis has earned numerous accolades, including the York County Sheriff’s Office Medal of Valor, the Life Saving Medal, and Deputy of the Year honors from the Rock Hill Optimist Club. He’s also been recognized multiple times as Employee of the Month and holds advanced certifications in tracking, criminal enforcement, and law enforcement instruction.

Outside of his uniformed service, Travis continues to make an impact in his hometown of McConnells through the McConnells Volunteer Fire Department, where he’s served since 2005. Though his call volume has shifted since entering law enforcement, his commitment to community engagement remains strong, often assisting with fire department events and mentoring young firefighters.

A steadfast presence in times of crisis and calm, Travis’s career reflects a rare blend of courage, skill, and humility. His leadership and unwavering commitment to public safety make him a truly deserving recipient of the Chamber’s Ones to Watch recognition.

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Ones to Watch Profile: Stacey Adams https://www.yorkcountychamber.com/2025/07/11/ones-to-watch-profile-stacey-adams/ Fri, 11 Jul 2025 13:26:39 +0000 https://www.yorkcountychamber.com/?p=62699 Ones to Watch Profile: Stacey Adams July 11, 2025 We’re proud to celebrate Stacey Adams, Financial Education Manager at Founders Federal Credit Union, as one of York County’s 2025 Ones to Watch honorees. With more than a decade at Founders, Stacey has dedicated her career to making financial education more than just a resource—it’s a…

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Ones to Watch Profile: Stacey Adams

July 11, 2025

Ones to Watchwlogo
Stacey Adams

We’re proud to celebrate Stacey Adams, Financial Education Manager at Founders Federal Credit Union, as one of York County’s 2025 Ones to Watch honorees.

With more than a decade at Founders, Stacey has dedicated her career to making financial education more than just a resource—it’s a movement. Through her leadership, programs like Mad City Money have expanded into public, private, charter, and homeschool classrooms, giving students from all educational backgrounds the tools to make smart financial choices early in life.

But Stacey’s impact doesn’t stop in the classroom.

She works hand-in-hand with nonprofits, shelters, and resource centers across York County, helping individuals and families navigate the journey from instability to independence. One of her most rewarding moments came from helping a woman named Maria transition from homelessness to homeownership—a story that perfectly illustrates Stacey’s compassion, persistence, and belief that everyone deserves a path to financial freedom.

In 2024 alone, Stacey helped Founders reach more than 10,900 individuals across the Carolinas through financial literacy programming—including 3,000 in York County.

In addition to her day job, Stacey is an active leader in several professional and civic groups. She helped launch the Certified Credit Union League Financial Wellness Network for the state, giving others in her field a platform to collaborate and grow. Locally, she serves with United Way Women United, the Progressive Association of Chester County Communities (as Treasurer), and Harmony Baptist Church.

Whether she’s leading a budgeting class, mentoring a new homeowner, or writing her church’s first employee handbook, Stacey brings her whole heart to the mission of financial empowerment. Her work proves that financial education isn’t just about numbers—it’s about changing lives.

Stacey Adams is an inspiring leader, community champion, and truly One to Watch.

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Ones to Watch Profile: Reid Hovis https://www.yorkcountychamber.com/2025/07/08/ones-to-watch-profile-reid-hovis/ Tue, 08 Jul 2025 13:09:12 +0000 https://www.yorkcountychamber.com/?p=62690 Ones to Watch Profile: Reid Hovis July 8, 2025 From the soccer fields of Northwestern High School to the heart of downtown Rock Hill, Reid Hovis has always been driven by a deep commitment to his hometown. As the co-founder and operator of Smooth Move, a full-service moving and storage company serving both North and…

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Ones to Watch Profile: Reid Hovis

July 8, 2025

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Reid Hovis

From the soccer fields of Northwestern High School to the heart of downtown Rock Hill, Reid Hovis has always been driven by a deep commitment to his hometown. As the co-founder and operator of Smooth Move, a full-service moving and storage company serving both North and South Carolina, Reid has not only built a thriving business—but also a powerful platform for community impact.

Over the past decade, Reid has led Smooth Move through impressive growth. In 2024, the company celebrated its best financial year to date, completing over 800 moves and doubling its full-time staff—all of whom live locally in Rock Hill. Reid credits this success to the people behind the business, ensuring each team member received at least two raises in 2024, and emphasizing personal and professional development as the foundation of their success. With over 500 Google reviews and an impressive 4.9-star rating, Smooth Move has earned a stellar reputation for quality service and genuine care.

But what truly makes Reid One to Watch is his unwavering dedication to service beyond the business. Since 2015, Smooth Move has been a hands-on partner and proud sponsor of Rock Hill’s iconic Come See Me and ChristmasVille festivals—donating over $100,000 in logistics support, staffing, and sponsorships. Reid is also a passionate advocate for Back the Pack, a program providing meals to local students each week during the school year. His contributions to the program over the past decade total more than $150,000, helping meet essential needs for students across the Rock Hill School District.

Whether it's supporting local festivals, aiding disaster relief efforts across the Carolinas, or mentoring students through partnerships with the Applied Technology Center, Reid leads with compassion, responsibility, and vision. His favorite quote—“Society grows great when old men plant trees in whose shade they know they shall never sit”—perfectly captures his quiet but powerful leadership.

As Rock Hill continues to grow, leaders like Reid Hovis ensure the heart of the community remains strong. We are proud to name him as one of our 2025 Ones to Watch.

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Ones to Watch Profile: Nathan Mallard https://www.yorkcountychamber.com/2025/07/01/ones-to-watch-profile-nathan-mallard/ Tue, 01 Jul 2025 13:33:43 +0000 https://www.yorkcountychamber.com/?p=62684 Ones to Watch Profile: Nathan Mallard July 1, 2025 Nathan Mallard is no stranger to growth, vision, and community impact. As Co-Founder of The Home Team at Allen Tate Realtors, Nathan has helped turn a small group of agents into a dominant force in the Rock Hill real estate market. Under his leadership, the team…

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Ones to Watch Profile: Nathan Mallard

July 1, 2025

Ones to Watchwlogo
Nathan Mallard

Nathan Mallard is no stranger to growth, vision, and community impact. As Co-Founder of The Home Team at Allen Tate Realtors, Nathan has helped turn a small group of agents into a dominant force in the Rock Hill real estate market. Under his leadership, the team reached an impressive $70 million in closed volume in 2024 — nearly doubling their average production since launching in 2018.

Beyond closing deals, Nathan is focused on team leadership and culture, overseeing recruitment, budgeting, and team development. “A good leader,” Nathan says, “is very clear and upfront with expectations, and with making decisions.” It’s a philosophy that has guided his team’s strategic growth and success.

But Nathan’s contributions don’t stop at business. He’s a dedicated community leader whose fingerprints can be found across Rock Hill. As a longtime board member of Bethelwoods Camp and Conference Center, he helped establish the camp’s 501(c)(3) status and provided critical leadership during the COVID-19 pandemic. He’s also served on the City of Rock Hill Planning Commission, helping to shape the city's 2030 strategic plan.

One of Nathan’s most visible roles is with the beloved Come See Me Festival. He’s been part of the leadership team for over a decade — organizing major events like Beach Bash and overseeing communications — and now serves as Vice Festival Chair, on track to lead the entire festival in 2026. His goal? To improve the experience for both attendees and the volunteers who make it all possible.

Nathan is also deeply engaged in Rock Hill’s professional ecosystem, from launching the Old Town Referral Group, to serving on the Piedmont Regional Association of Realtors Board, where he advocates for both realtors and homeownership.

With a sharp business mind, a heart for service, and a deep investment in York County’s future, Nathan Mallard is truly One to Watch.

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Mark Pursley Graduates from Institute for Organization Management https://www.yorkcountychamber.com/2025/06/26/mark-pursley-graduates-from-institute-for-organization-management/ Thu, 26 Jun 2025 14:28:10 +0000 https://www.yorkcountychamber.com/?p=62675 Mark Pursley Graduates from Institute for Organization Management June 26, 2025 A Leadership Training Program Produced by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce WASHINGTON, D.C.— Institute for Organization Management, the professional development program of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, is pleased to announce that Mark Pursley, IOM, Director of Programs & External Affairs, of the York…

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Mark Pursley Graduates from Institute for Organization Management

June 26, 2025

Institute for Organization Management
Mark Pursley

A Leadership Training Program Produced by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce


WASHINGTON, D.C.— Institute for Organization Management, the professional development program of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, is pleased to announce that Mark Pursley, IOM, Director of Programs & External Affairs, of the York County Regional Chamber of Commerce, has graduated from the program and has received the recognition of IOM. Awarded to all graduates of the Institute program, the IOM Graduate Recognition signifies the individual’s completion of 96 credit hours of course instruction in non-profit management. In addition, participants can earn credit hours towards the Certified Chamber Executive (CCE) or Certified Association Executive (CAE), certifications. Nearly 1,000 individuals attend Institute annually.

“Institute graduates are recognized across the country as leaders in their industries and organizations,” said Raymond P. Towle, IOM, CAE, the U.S. Chamber’s Vice President of Institute for Organization Management. “These individuals have the knowledge, skills, and dedication necessary to achieve professional and organizational success in the dynamic association and chamber industries.”

Since its commencement in 1921, the Institute program has been educating tens of thousands of association, chamber, and other nonprofit leaders on how to build stronger organizations, better serve their members and become strong business advocates. Institute’s curriculum consists of four weeklong sessions at four different university locations throughout the country. Through a combination of required courses and electives in areas such as leadership, advocacy, marketing, finance, and membership, Institute participants are able to enhance their own organizational management skills and add new fuel to their organizations, making them run more efficiently and effectively.

“Graduating from this Southeast Institute for Organization Management isn’t the finish line - it’s a new starting point. I’ve grown in ways that will help me continue to learn, keep leading, and give back to the community that has helped shape me.” said Mark Pursley, IOM.

Institute for Organization Management is the professional development program of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. It is the premier nonprofit professional development program for association and chamber professionals, fostering individual growth through interactive learning and networking opportunities.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is the world’s largest business organization representing companies of all sizes across every sector of the economy. Our members range from the small businesses and local chambers of commerce that line the Main Streets of America to leading industry associations and large corporations.

institute.uschamber.com           @IOMeducates

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