Ms. Poole goes to Washington

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Emily Poole. File photo.

Fayetteville’s director of economic development to work on Global Cities Initiative

Fayetteville Director of Economic Development Emily Poole has been chosen to help represent metro Atlanta in a Brookings Institution conference in Washington, D.C., aimed at developing strategies for the Global Cities Initiative (GCI).

Atlanta is one of eight city-regions that will participate in the July 10 and 11 effort to amplify the impact of metropolitan trade strategies through new research and problem-solving that will determine how city-regions can best prioritize and execute international economic partnerships with international metro counterparts, said Brookings fellow and Director of Strategic Partnerships and Global Initiatives Marek Gootman.

The new effort is part of the Global Cities Initiative, a joint project of Brookings and JPMorgan Chase.

“Like every county and city in the metro Atlanta region, Fayetteville’s goals are to increase jobs and investment,” said Poole. “By successfully implementing this ‘where geography meets our clusters’ approach, our region will become more strategic in prioritizing our international partnerships. This, in turn, will allow us to accelerate metro Atlanta’s solid foundation of global business.”

Selected by Brookings through a competitive application process, Atlanta will join Columbus, Louisville/Lexington, Philadelphia, Phoenix, San Antonio, San Diego and Wichita in producing a locally tailored market prioritization assessment and initiating or expanding at least one metro-to-metro collaboration. The regions will provide a detailed work plan for building out those relationships and establish an approach that can be replicated by other metropolitan areas.

“Even with strong trade and investment strategies, all metros face resource and capacity constraints to engaging internationally. In the global market haystack, metros need tools to focus on where they are most likely to find the needles,” said Gootman. “We selected this diverse group of metros to test new approaches to identify, prioritize and structure economic connections with specific foreign counterparts for maximum returns.”

In the first phase, GCI metros will apply a new evidence-based methodology to prioritize international markets for high-potential economic relationships. Through an assessment, each metro area will identify existing and potential market connections, sector synergies and growth trends (global market prioritization). Following this phase, the cohort will examine different models to operationalize international metro–level economic partnerships targeted through prioritization, based on testing bilateral and multi-lateral sectoral, geographic and intermediary relationships (metro-to-metro economic collaboration), according to Brookings.

Metro Atlanta will be represented by multiple organizations, including the Metro Atlanta Chamber, the Georgia Department of Economic Development, the city of Atlanta and Partnership Gwinnett working in partnership with several other regional and local economic development organizations, public and private agencies.

Since its launch, the Global Cities Initiative has raised awareness about the importance of international economic connections and competitiveness for growth and job creation and spurred dozens of metropolitan areas to reorient their economic strategies toward engaging world markets. GCI has become a hub for coalitions of metro leaders across public, private and civic sectors to connect with their counterparts for peer learning, problem-solving and economic collaboration, Brookings said.

“Atlanta is a true global city, and we’re delighted it’s getting this critical support to further develop international growth strategies,” said David Balos, head of Chase Middle Market Banking. “We must look beyond our metro area for growth opportunities. This effort will create international economic connections for local businesses and greater economic opportunity for all residents.”

To learn more about the Global Cities Initiative, visit https://www.brookings.edu/project/global-cities/ or www.jpmorganchase.com/globalcities.