UNION, NJ, January 13, 2012 (Press-News.org) After a natural disaster, one often hears business leaders optimistically talk about rebuilding and emerging stronger than before. But deep inside one wonders how doable it will be, no matter how noble the intent, or how much a person admires the determination.
The story of one Union, New Jersey-based company, however, can make a believer out of the most skeptical among us.
Hurricane Irene caused major damage to the robust and diverse packaging distributor, O.Berk Company, Inc. In a matter of hours, this 101-year-old company was inundated by the historic and destructive storm. Irene had pushed floodwaters into its Union headquarters well above knee level.
O.Berk's president and CEO, Mark Gaelen, recalls the storm's aftermath as if it were yesterday. "When I went down to our building the entire street was flooded. It looked bad, but we really had no idea how bad, until we went in. There was over a foot of water throughout the entire building. In our 101 years in business, nothing like this had ever happened to us."
One can only imagine the thoughts that ran through Gaelen's mind that Sunday morning. But, as in dealing with any disaster, it helped to have a plan in place. Recovery methods were quickly put to the test, and every option for renewing normal operations was put on the table. As unlikely as it must have seemed at first look on that Sunday morning, by Tuesday of that very week, O.Berk trucks were delivering product. At the same time a temporary headquarters was set up in trailers next to the flooded-out building.
"What really defines the character and culture of a company," Gaelen reminds us, "is not what happens when things are good, but what happens when things go terribly wrong. Our staff rose to the challenge across the board, and I'm truly proud and grateful to have such a dedicated and perseverant team."
There's another lesson to be learned from the O.Berk story. Despite the skeptics and beyond the cynicism that has prevailed while our economy has struggled to rebound, one can still emerge from disaster stronger than before in America. One can turn the disaster levied in a single day, into positive change that will serve them well for decades to come.
While O.Berk personnel worked in temporary trailers for three months following the flood, they learned a lot. Working side-by-side in cramped quarters, internal communications actually improved. Changes were made in the new floor plan even as the build-out of their headquarters was underway. The physical space was rearranged to put key people in the right locations to match the natural workflow.
"Speed is one of the keys to success in our business," says Gaelen. "We learned valuable lessons in those trailers and went with a much more open layout in our renovated headquarters to improve the flow of ideas, the exchange of information and to facilitate inter-personnel communications. We confidently expect faster response times and greater operational efficiencies as a result."
Of course, starting from the ground up after the waters receded helped put O.Berk in an enviable position, no matter what it took to get there.
When employees began moving into their newly renovated headquarters on December 3, everything was brand new. There were new furnishings, new fixtures and new computers. There was a more welcoming conference room to encourage collaboration, a new phone system to improve internal and external communications, and new servers to store data and make documents and specifications easier to access. O.Berk even came out of its darkest hour with a new inventory system to improve warehouse operations.
"The flood provided us with an opportunity to improve our company in every area," says Gaelen, "making us better prepared to meet the expectations of our customers as we continue to ask them 'How can we help?' when it comes to fulfilling their packaging needs."
According to Gaelen, "Newness is a powerful force. We took the opportunity to upgrade every aspect of our operation. When we finally moved in, it was truly a moving experience. We all shared a tremendously positive feeling of accomplishment. At that moment, everyone actually felt good about what we had gone through together."
The key word in Gaelen's statement is 'together'. It takes more than a ready-to-implement disaster plan, and more than good leadership to accomplish what O.Berk did. In the case of O.Berk, and every story like theirs, it takes everyone involved pulling together with all they have, with one purpose, without hesitation.
The company plans an open house in the near future to celebrate its emergence from near disaster. Clients, suppliers, industry colleagues and, of course, O.Berk personnel and family members will be invited.
According to Gaelen, "Our 101st year was certainly one of change and challenge. But it reinforced our belief that you have to just keep moving forward. And when disaster strikes, you really find out what you - and your people - are made of."
ABOUT O.BERK COMPANY
O.Berk Company, with four locations on the East Coast, provides complete packaging services to the pharmaceutical, health care, cosmetic, personal care, food and beverage, and household and commercial industries. O.Berk offers end-to-end packaging solutions with stock and custom plastic and glass containers, caps, pumps and sprayers; along with labeling and decorating services.
CONTACT:
Jonathan Wong
Senior Media Planner
O.Berk Company
3 Milltown Court
Union, NJ 07083
Phone: 908-851-9500
E-mail: info@oberk.com
Web: http://www.oberk.com/
NJ Company Celebrates Its Emergence From the Floods of Irene
After a natural disaster, one often hears business leaders optimistically talk about rebuilding and emerging stronger than before.
2012-01-13
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Medical Doctor Associates Celebrates 25 Years of Service and Launches Rebranding Initiative
2012-01-13
Medical Doctor Associates (MDA) announced today, that in honor of its 25th year as one of the nation's oldest and well-respected locum tenens providers of medical staffing solutions to hospitals, medical practices and governmental agencies, the company is introducing a new brand identity.
In addition to a refreshed color palette and a new logo featuring intertwined circles symbolizing MDA's dedication to partnership, the company also is launching an updated website. The website address remains the same at www.mdainc.com. The new brand identity and accompanying website ...
EARTH: Source code: The methane race
2012-01-13
Alexandria, VA –What is the lifespan of a natural gas deposit? How quickly is our planet's permafrost melting? And does life exist on other planets? Although seemingly unrelated issues, the answers to these questions are linked. And in this month's issue of EARTH Magazine, scientists show that we may be closer to answering them than we think.
Ten years ago, John Eiler, a geochemist at Caltech, couldn't convince anyone to build him his dream machine. He wanted a mass spectrometer that could measure the mass of common gases with extreme precision and sensitivity. Using ...
Boston University School of Medicine researchers clarify link between salt and hypertension
2012-01-13
(Boston) – A review article by researchers at Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) debunks the widely-believed concept that hypertension, or high blood pressure, is the result of excess salt causing an increased blood volume, exerting extra pressure on the arteries. Published online in the Journal of Hypertension, the study demonstrates that excess salt stimulates the sympathetic nervous system to produce adrenalin, causing artery constriction and hypertension.
The research was led by Irene Gavras, MD, and Haralambos Gavras, MD, both professors of medicine at BUSM. ...
Updated American Cancer Society nutrition guidelines stress need for supportive environment
2012-01-13
ATLANTA –January 11, 2012– Updated guidelines on nutrition and physical activity for cancer prevention from the American Cancer Society stress the importance of creating social and physical environments that support healthy behaviors. The report includes updated recommendations for individual choices regarding diet and physical activity patterns, but emphasizes that those choices occur within a community context that can either help or hinder healthy behaviors.
The updated guidelines include recommendations for community action to accompany the four major recommendations ...
Scientists discover the first physical evidence of tobacco in a Mayan container
2012-01-13
Troy, N.Y. – A scientist at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and an anthropologist from the University at Albany teamed up to use ultra-modern chemical analysis technology at Rensselaer to analyze ancient Mayan pottery for proof of tobacco use in the ancient culture. Dmitri Zagorevski, director of the Proteomics Core in the Center for Biotechnology and Interdisciplinary Studies (CBIS) at Rensselaer, and Jennifer Loughmiller-Newman, a doctoral candidate at the University at Albany, have discovered the first physical evidence of tobacco in a Mayan container. Their discovery ...
Why coffee drinking reduces the risk of Type 2 diabetes
2012-01-13
Why do heavy coffee drinkers have a lower risk of developing Type 2 diabetes, a disease on the increase around the world that can lead to serious health problems? Scientists are offering a new solution to that long-standing mystery in a report in ACS' Journal of Agricultural & Food Chemistry.
Ling Zheng, Kun Huang and colleagues explain that previous studies show that coffee drinkers are at a lower risk for developing Type 2 diabetes, which accounts for 90-95 percent of diabetes cases in the world. Those studies show that people who drink four or more cups of coffee daily ...
Why do dew drops do what they do on leaves?
2012-01-13
Nobel laureate poet Rabindranath Tagore once wrote, "Let your life lightly dance on the edges of time like dew on the tip of a leaf." Now, a new study is finally offering an explanation for why small dew drops do as Tagore advised and form on the tips, rather than the flat surfaces, of leaves. It appears in ACS' journal Langmuir.
In the study, Martin E. R. Shanahan observes that drops of water have a preference for exactly where they collect on leaves as their surfaces cool in the morning and afternoon. Those droplets, which condense from water vapor — moisture — in the ...
Advance toward an imaging agent for diagnosing Alzheimer's disease
2012-01-13
Scientists are reporting development and initial laboratory tests of an imaging agent that shows promise for detecting the tell-tale signs of Alzheimer's disease (AD) in the brain — signs that now can't confirm a diagnosis until after patients have died. Their report appears in the journal ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters.
Masahiro Ono and colleagues explain that no proven laboratory test or medical scan now exists for AD, which is claiming an increasingly heavy toll with the graying of the world's population. Patients now get a diagnosis of AD based on their medical history ...
Best way to boost adult immunizations is through office-based action, study finds
2012-01-13
Promoting immunizations as a part of routine office-based medical practice is needed to improve adult vaccination rates, a highly effective way to curb the spread of diseases across communities, prevent needless illness and deaths, and lower health care costs, according to a new RAND Corporation study.
Increasingly, vaccinations are being offered outside of physician offices at pharmacies, workplaces and retail medical clinics. Even so, office-based medical practice continues to be central to the delivery of recommended vaccinations to adults.
"Regardless of where vaccines ...
Slippery when stacked: NIST theorists quantify the friction of graphene
2012-01-13
Similar to the way pavement, softened by a hot sun, will slow down a car, graphene—a one-atom-thick sheet of carbon with wondrous properties—slows down an object sliding across its surface. But stack the sheets and graphene gets more slippery, say theorists at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), who developed new software to quantify the material's friction.
"I don't think anyone expects graphene to behave like a surface of a three-dimensional material, but our simulation for the first time explains the differences at an atomic scale," says NIST ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
This year’s dazzling aurora produced a spectacular display… of citizen science
New oral drug to calm abdominal pain
New framework champions equity in AI for health care
We finally know where black holes get their magnetic fields: Their parents
Multiple sclerosis drug may help with poor working memory
The MIT Press releases workshop report on the future of open access publishing and policy
Why substitute sugar with maple syrup?
New study investigates insecticide contamination in Minnesota’s water
The Einstein Foundation Berlin awards €500,000 prize to advance research quality
Mitochondrial encephalopathy caused by a new biallelic repeat expansion
Nanoplastics can impair the effect of antibiotics
Be humble: Pitt studies reveal how to increase perceived trustworthiness of scientists
Promising daily tablet increases growth in children with dwarfism
How 70% of the Mediterranean Sea was lost 5.5 million years ago
Keeping the lights on and the pantry stocked: Ensuring water for energy and food production
Parkinson’s Paradox: When more dopamine means more tremor
Study identifies strategy for AI cost-efficiency in health care settings
NIH-developed AI algorithm successfully matches potential volunteers to clinical trials release
Greg Liu is in his element using chemistry to tackle the plastics problem
Cocoa or green tea could protect you from the negative effects of fatty foods during mental stress - study
A new model to explore the epidermal renewal
Study reveals significant global disparities in cancer care across different countries
Proactively screening diabetics for heart disease does not improve long-term mortality rates or reduce future cardiac events, new study finds
New model can help understand coexistence in nature
National Poll: Some parents need support managing children's anger
Political shadows cast by the Antarctic curtain
Scientists lead study on ‘spray on, wash off’ bandages for painful EB condition
A new discovery about pain signalling may contribute to better treatment of chronic pain
Migrating birds have stowaway passengers: invasive ticks could spread novel diseases around the world
Diabetes drug shows promise in protecting kidneys
[Press-News.org] NJ Company Celebrates Its Emergence From the Floods of IreneAfter a natural disaster, one often hears business leaders optimistically talk about rebuilding and emerging stronger than before.