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Ken Grady and his lovely wife, Jean Sutterfield Grady are no strangers to Gospel music. They have an amazing TV show called Gospel Music Today that alerts the fans on the who's who and the what's happening in Gospel Music. They have interviewed many great artists such as Bill Gaither, Ernie Haase and Signature Sound, The Williamsons, The Goulds, Les Butler and many othe… — with Jean Sutterfield Grady. https://www.facebook.com/ken.grady1 TV host at Gospel Music Today Studied at University of Rhode Island Went to Coventry High School Lives in Greenville, South Carolina From Coventry, Rhode Island
Gospel Music today With Ken and Jean Grady Aug 13 2023 Gospel Music Today Watch Gospel Music Today anytime on your computer at www.gospelmusictoday.com. Southern Gospel news This week on Gospel Music Today! Scotty Inman, exclusive concert video with The Kingsmen and Jordan's Bridge, a music video from Quarteto Principeius from Brazil, plus news, concert updates, and Jean's feature group. If you missed the show on television, you can watch online anytime at Gospel Music Today
Ken Grady-Gospel Music Today www.gospelmusictoday.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/cool-explorations/message
Ken Grady-Gospel Music Today www.gospelmusictoday.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/cool-explorations/message
This week on Gospel Music Today! Guest Joseph Habedank, exclusive concert video with Danny Funderburk and The Dixie Melody Boys, plus news, concert updates, and Jean's feature group. If you missed the show on television, you can watch online anytime at www.gospelmusictoday.com kengrady@gospelmusictoday.com https://www.facebook.com/GospelMusicToday/photos
In this episode, we talk about the ways that we can become dependent on the various technologies to do our thinking for us. Whether it's communication through email, Slack, PowerPoint or even the telephone, it's important that we stay intentional in what we want to say and how we're impacting others. There are a lot of great tools out there which make our work easier, but they aren't a replacement for intentional communication and connection. For more information about Ken Grady and Seth Rigoletti, see https://www.itsnotpersonal.net/ or https://sethrigoletti.com/ New episodes each week. If you enjoy this podcast, please leave a comment and share it on social media.
Ken Grady, CIO at IDEXX, and Seth Rigoletti, Leadership Coach at Valico Group, join host Maryfran Johnson for this CIO Leadership Live interview, jointly produced by CIO.com and the CIO Executive Council. They discuss making work more human, bridging IT generational gaps, lightbulb leadership moments, reframing change management and more. Ken Grady Twitter: @gradyken Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ken-grady-9bba881/ IDEXX: @IDEXX Website: www.idexx.com Website: www.itsnotpersonal.net Seth Rigoletti Twitter: @ValicoGroup Instagram: sethrigoletti Facebook: @sethrigoletti Linkedin: linkedin.com/in/seth-rigoletti-he-him-0a23371 Website: sethrigoletti.com
Come enjoy a chat with Ken Grady of Gospel Music Today, find out where it began, the latest buzz and more.
DisrupTV Episode 249, Ken Grady, David Horsager, Heather Clancy by DisrupTV
kengrady@gospelmusictoday.com, GOSPEL MUSIC TODAY WITH JEAN & KEN GRADY 04-06-19 This Week on Gospel Music Today Les Butler is the guest on Gospel Music Today for the week of April 7. Ken and Jean Grady host southern gospel news and concert updates. The Feature Group is The Sound, and Jean reviews new recordings by Tonja Rose and The Johnson Edition. An article from Singing News magazine is the subject of this week's News Notes. The show features singing by The Songfellows, exclusive concert video of GloryWay Quartet, recorded by Gospel Music Today's cameras in Pigeon Forge, TN, and a visit to the Gospel Music Today Archives for an exclusive video of Mark209, recorded by Gospel Music Today's cameras in Memphis, TN. https://tunein.com/podcasts/Technology-Podcasts/Howcee-Productions-Gospel-p1181027/
Peter Aprile and Natalie Worsfold interview Ken Grady, Lean Law Evangelist at Seyfarth Shaw LLP and professor at the Michigan State University College of Law. Data has become the fundamental unit for doing business, and, according to Ken, it is starting the become the fundamental unit for doing law. As a Lean Law thinker, Ken believes that data management is integral for successful law firms. He argues that law firms need to start collecting data now to be competitive in the future. Peter, Natalie, and Ken dig deep in what data management is, why it is important, and what tools are available to start collecting data. Ken explains the opportunities available to law firms once the data has been collected and cleaned, from providing data-driven answers to client questions to drafting better submissions, faster and more accurately. CPD Lawyers that have completed the S02E03 BNL CPD can claim a 45 minute Professionalism CPD credit. To access the S02E03 verification examination click this link.
In Episode 5 we talk to Ken Grady about lean thinking and the practice of law. Ken explains that the main goal of lean thinking is to eliminate waste from business processes and that legal work is rife with waste. He also points out that eliminating waste from the practice of law might just free up time for lawyers to do other work, including the pursuit of access to justice initiatives. Ken is currently a law professor at Michigan State's Legal RnD program and held prior positions in corporate legal departments and law firms. In this episode, we also talk to Gavin McGrane the founder of PacerPro, a great app that makes it a whole lot easier for attorneys and law firms to stay on top of federal court dockets and pleadings. Episode Notes. Technically Legal is hosted by Chad Main, an attorney and the founder of Percipient, a tech-enabled alternative legal services provider.
Peter Aprile and Natalie Worsfold interview Ken Grady, Lean Law Evangelist at Seyfarth Shaw LLP and professor at the Michigan State University College of Law. Data has become the fundamental unit for doing business, and, according to Ken, it is starting the become the fundamental unit for doing law. As a Lean Law thinker, Ken believes that data management is integral for successful law firms. He argues that law firms need to start collecting data now to be competitive in the future. Peter, Natalie, and Ken dig deep in what data management is, why it is important, and what tools are available to start collecting data. Ken explains the opportunities available to law firms once the data has been collected and cleaned, from providing data-driven answers to client questions to drafting better submissions, faster and more accurately. CPD Lawyers that have completed the S02E03 BNL CPD can claim a 45 minute Professionalism CPD credit. To access the S02E03 verification examination click this link.
Description: Don't let the naysayers darken your view. The future of legal is bright, and technology is lighting the pathway to improved efficiencies, lower costs, better security and more. However, technology only takes us so far; a future-focused community is required to ensure people take the right actions based on what technology reveals. Exploring this idea further, we've asked a few of your ILTA peers about the future. Here's what they had to say (read the article in Peer to Peer magazine). Featured in this episode: Ken Grady, Lean Law Evangelist at Seyfarth Shaw LLP
The hosts continue talking about Getting Lean by discussing how Lean Law relates to your client management and development. Ken Grady, Lean Law Evangelist at SeyfarthShaw, discusses different pricing models for legal services and the price sensitivity that is creeping into the legal profession. Part of the way that we can provide quality of service at a lower fee is by getting Lean in our practice so that what used to take you 2 hours now takes you 30 minutes. That allows you to: • Use the extra 90 minutes to do something else that is profitable• Pass the savings onto the client which keeps them happy • Be more flexible in how you charge clients The Good News that Ken is helping us spread is that “Getting Lean” only requires basic tools: paper, pencil, post it notes, and some tape. It’s not a resource heavy activity. The basic method is to map out the sequence of things you do to fulfill a particular process – say preparing a complaint. Then create a checklist of those things to see which can be eliminated or consolidated. It also allows you to streamline the process by not having to cycle through the preliminary steps that are common to each complaint. This methodology Ken says can be applied to every process in your law firm to make you more efficient and more profitable. Ken’s evangelism on this topic extends to law schools arguing that law students should be trained in Lean Law before they graduate so that they can bring these practices into small firms. Surprisingly, Ken does say that solo or small firms should be cautious about investing in expensive and fancy software as the rate of return on that investment is slow and prohibitive to a small firm. In our discussion Ken recommends what software and programs solos and small firms should make parts of their practice to make them more Lean. In concluding our two part discussion with Ken Grady he tells our listeners to focus on spending time on the things in your practice that make you money and bring satisfaction to your clients. We can begin to do that by cutting out those inefficiencies and redundancies that bog down the various processes we all engage in.
This week Reboot Your Law Practice hosts Ken Grady – “The Lean Law Evangelist” in the first of two part episode discussing how you make your practice “lean” so that it can withstand economic downturns and be less of a monetary roller coaster. Ken is in charge of the Lean Law Practice at Seyfarth Shaw which helps the national, multi-faceted practice assist its clients in making their businesses leaner. Ken’s prior experience helped form his Lean Law Practice in that after being a partner in a BigLaw firm, he moved in-house to be corporate counsel for various Fortune 500 and Fortune 1000 corporations. It was at these corporate positions that Ken first began to encounter “Lean Thinking” in the business world. He then joined Seyfarth Shaw where he serves as the consultant to their Lean Law Practice. “Lean Thinking” is a business process improvement brought over to the states by Toyota in the 1980s that focuses on efficiency; cost control; and quality improvement. About 10 years ago, Seyfarth Shaw developed it for the practice of law. These methodologies when applied to legal services helps the firm better serve its clients and helps the firm develop best practices for things like conflict analysis; document production; and time management. The focus is on an approach to make some things about your practice standard and organized so that you spend more time doing those things that are directly applicable to clients and which make money. The idea is to eliminate as many wasteful activities as possible to streamline the work you perform. While some software that is available in the market place can help you to do that, Ken advises that much of this can be done without buying expensive software. Ken reminds us that lawyers are not quick to change. The systems we use now are basically the same systems we used in the 1900s when most of law was practiced by solo practitioners or two lawyer firms. Relying on those antiquated systems now – without focusing on efficiency and time management will make it much harder to compete in the current marketplace. Next week Ken will finish his discussion with Oscar and Scott by talking about some specific things small firms and solo practitioners can do to get “Lean.”
Rob Ekno had his first big audience jump during this show of year #1 of IYF. He talked with Ken Grady of Gospel Music Today.com about music and God. The show started with approximately 110,000 listeners and ended with approximately 184,000. Gotta love the music! Hear what so many other loved! 60 mins