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10th Anniversary Edition Introduction
Ten Top 10s
By Lee Burlett
It wasn't difficult coming up with a theme for SB&D's
10th anniversary edition. Everyone loves a good ranking.
When discussing what we would do for this issue, we
realized we had 10 years of data that no other publication
had. In fact, we realized we could publish more rankings
than could possibly be tolerated by even the most astute
reader. So we settled with 10 and came up with a "Ten
Top 10s" theme for a 10th anniversary issue.
As the issue began to form, we noticed a couple of
Top 10s that had to be written and included, such as
the first and last -- Top 10 Stories the Last 10 Years
and Top 10 Quotes in SB&D the Last 10 Years (The
Top 10 Quotes ranking is my favorite. I was the one
charged with finding and choosing the 10 most significant,
interesting or humorous quotes found in thousands of
pages this magazine has put to press over the last 10
years). So Ten Top 10s became 12 Top 10s. Twelve top
10s isn't marketable, so we kept the Ten Top 10s title.
Now you know.
Our Top 10s (12) are broken into two groups. The first
group is not subjective or arbitrary. We have tracked
and published every corporate and industrial deal 200
jobs or more and/or $30 million in investment or more
announced in the South for 10 years now. Our count is
5,565 deals in the South that have equaled or surpassed
those thresholds since 1993. Based on that data are
our rankings of Top 10 Deals, Top 10 Companies, Top
10 Small Markets, Top 10 Mid-Markets, Top-10 Major Markets
and Top Mega-markets (there are only seven). Actually,
the Top 10 Deals could be considered a subjective read.
An 800-employee deal in West Virginia could be argued
as more important than a 3,000-employee deal in Atlanta.
But we stuck with employment and investment figures
regardless of where the deal landed.
Our deal data also contributed to other Top 10s that
were more subjective in nature, such as Top 10 Economic
Development Groups and Top 10 Economic Development Practitioners.
If you were an ED agency or practitioner that turned
more deals than your peers, most likely you were cited.
In this section you will read more rankings based on
our opinions. Those would be Top 10 Stories, Top 10
Accomplishments, Top 10 Challenges for the Next 10 Years
and Top 10 Influential Southerners the Last 10 Years
(one tough ranking to produce). But who else better
to give an opinion than a Southern economic development
magazine that has had its eyes and ears wide-open for
10 years.
Remember, no publication concentrates its efforts on
Southern sites and economic development issues exclusively
but Southern Business & Development. While Mike
Randle is visiting tiny Trenton, Tenn., to get its county
exec Ronnie Riley's opinion on things or talking on
the phone with developers such as Jack Hutchison (Georgetown,
S.C.), Wes Stucky (Ardmore, Okla.), or real estate gurus
such as Gary Castle (Orlando Central Park), all of whom
have been around so long they have seen it all, as well
as governors and leaders of industry in every market
size available in the South, other site books are writing
about what's happening in Singapore. If I'm convinced
I want my next expansion of my business in the South,
the world's third-largest economy, I don't know how
a deal or real estate issue in Singapore applies.
The information you are about to read should be, if
anything, a really good read if you're interested in
the economics and a site in the American South. We worked
harder than normal on this edition. But we did it in
only 45 days. If you believe we missed the boat on any
of these rankings, Randle wants to know. You can email
him at mike@sb-d.com.
He is committed to publishing your comments in the next
edition, which will be out in November.
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