What Drives Your Business?

Why do you get up and go to work each day? Whether it’s for purpose or for the paycheck, we spend most of our waking hours in an office, co-working space or clicking away at a coffee shop.

Working Together to Solve Tough Issues

This week we were once again reminded how we do business in Colorado—we work together and we solve problems. Tuesday marked the wrap up of the oil and gas task force convened by Gov. John Hickenlooper last September. The task force developed nine recommendations on oil and gas regulation for Colorado that they will be officially … Read Post

3 Things to Watch in Business This Week

This week, here’s what the Denver Metro Chamber of Commerce is watching in the metro area business community. 1. Oil and Gas Task Force Drawing to Close The oil and gas task force created by an executive order of Gov. John Hickenlooper will have its final meeting Tuesday and will vote on recommendations to send … Read Post

How We Get Work Done

We believe that we make better decisions about what’s best for Colorado when we bring people together who have differing views, create an environment where those views are heard and develop solutions together. This isn’t a new idea for us. This approach was adopted out of necessity before we were even a state. Settlers raised barns together.  Guides … Read Post

On the Job Podcast: 3 Trends Transforming Our Workplaces

Our workplaces are changing. In this episode of On the Job, host and Denver Metro Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Kelly Brough talks with Luis Colon of Xcelente Marketing Group, Michelle Gilley of Synergy Telecommunications and Lisa Graznak of Dale Carnegie about what those changes look like and how our workplaces will continue to evolve in the future.

Colorado Leads the Next Leap Into Space

On December 5, the world watched the unmanned spacecraft Orion, a white capsule mounted atop United Launch Alliance’s Delta IV Heavy—a bundle of three Broncos-orange rocket boosters—take off from Cape Canaveral, Florida. Ascending 3,600 miles above the earth, traveling through radiation fields, the capsule sized just over 300 cubic feet circled the earth twice before splashing down in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of … Read Post