Sunday, May 23, 2010

Brad Powers: Sales & Marketing with eWOMP Technologies

The Town Sports International (TSI) health club company is the largest of its kind in the Northeastern United States. It owns and operates the Sports Clubs Network of clubs. This network includes New York Sports Clubs, Boston Sports Clubs, Washington Sports Clubs and Philadelphia Sports Clubs.

The company has many qualities that keep it first rate and client oriented. It includes innovative fitness programs, well-trained staff, and high quality facilities. It focuses on member satisfaction and makes this its number one priority across all of its sports centers.

In total, the Town Sports International includes nearly half a million members, and even has three locations in Switzerland! For their sales and marketing, which is certainly a large undertaking, they have employed eWOMP Technologies, where Brad Powers was the Executive Vice President, Sales and Marketing.

Monday, May 17, 2010

Brad Powers on Getting Involved at Clark University

Clark University graduate Brad Powers would be the first to take pride in his old school’s latest worthy venture. The university has established a Community Engagement and Volunteering (CEV) Center. This center will be the perfect way for all those associated with the university – students, staff and faculty – to help the Worcester community through useful service in the community. This center will show those who get involved how to positively affect others while learning how to be a leader and at the same time, benefit from all that Worcester has to offer. Indeed, such a venture isn’t new for a community like Worcester which enjoys a long history of student involvement. Nonetheless, this center will be more of a central body where this kind of important work can take place.

Brad Powers and CEV

Anyone who studied at Clark University would be thrilled to take part in a center like the Community Engagement and Volunteering one. Brad Powers is definitely someone to talk to when it comes to gaining leadership skills, as can be seen, for example, in his founding of the Active Response Group in 2004 which sought to “provide marketers, agencies, and brand managers a way to simultaneously increase revenues, decrease costs and get closer to their consumers.” If this new Center fulfills its aim of helping students find an active role in the community, and learn what it means to be a leader via communal work, then Brad Powers is certainly someone who would support it.