In this issue

Economic development is more than just attracting new businesses. It also is creating spaces and opportunities for people to enjoy life outside of work. Having offices in places that offer lively entertainment, sports, theater and arts options makes it easier to hire and retain employees. Communities in the Region are embracing that notion and prospering because of it.

Businesses also benefit from regional events, like a youth swim meet I attended in Valparaiso. Parents stayed at hotels and ate at restaurants. In the third installment of our series on economic development, we explore these many options to enjoy life.

Several of this issue’s stories focus on technology, including our cover story. Attorneys in the Region are considering the benefits and problems that come with using AI. They are cautiously optimistic but leery of its limitations. Our information technology story offers advice on how to keep data protected and workers trained so they can spot the latest scams and phishing tactics, while Nate Uldricks says the Region needs a “tech mindset.”

We also look beyond traditional post-secondary education in a story about alternate career pathways for youth in the Region. Uthiverse founder Ken Barry says it best that students aren’t “anti-college; they’re anti-student loans.”

And then we offer some advice from financial planners in the Region, who say that uncertainty is always part of starting a new business. Politics and economic chaos are just noise when an entrepreneur has a solid business plan and sticks to it — capital helps too.

Chesterton is hoping businesses will take that advice and join them in big plans for the downtown, which is undergoing large capital improvements. Our “Future Of” series features the latest developments and plans for growth.

We also talk with Samantha Burgett who started The Community Change Center after mentoring youth in a juvenile detention center. Veronica Banks helps Region executives find the perfect job here. The RDC is starting a new fund to help small businesses. State Rep. Patricia Boy got her start at Jewel in our latest Career Path column. And our Viewpoint comes from Keith Kirkpatrick who says the seeds of entrepreneurship can start early — let’s all help them grow.

Enjoy this issue!

Read more stories from the current issue of Northwest Indiana Business Magazine.

John Wilkening

Common sense beats process

Employers who overlook older workers forfeit a median job tenure of 10.4 years, institutional knowledge, and stability that younger hires typically can't match.
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Brian Schutt

Great ownership transfer

Indiana's Office of Entrepreneurship and Innovation is piloting a business succession program in NW Indiana to help small business owners plan for retirement and find local buyers before closing.
Read More
NWI Works

Bridge for skills gap

NWI Works is opening two workforce training hubs in Gary and Michigan City, combining job readiness, childcare, and support services under one roof.
Read More
Janus Motorcycles

Passion project

Goshen's Janus Motorcycles raised $470,000 through equity crowdfunding to fund expansion, with customers among the first investors in the 25-employee, build-to-order shop.
Read More
Olivia West

Curiosity at heart

La Porte native Olivia West serves as in-game host for the Indiana Pacers and Fever while running a marketing firm and speaking to 1,000+ people weekly.
Read More
Trinity Displays

Quality trade show strategy

Northwest Indiana businesses are rethinking trade show strategy, shifting toward smaller, experience-driven booths focused on audience fit over raw attendance numbers.
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Ty Financial

Employee wealth plans

Regional employers are expanding financial wellness benefits beyond retirement plans, adding literacy programs, ESOPs, and adviser access to reduce turnover and retain workers.
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Holy Cross College

Inside mid-career learning

More working adults are returning to college mid-career to change fields, with programs including teaching and business administration designed around full-time jobs and family obligations.
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JNE Group

Betting on Northwest Indiana

Low property taxes, a 3.8% unemployment rate, and projects from Amazon, John Deere, FedEx, and Microsoft are drawing business relocations and expansions to the area.
Read More
Microsoft data center

Digital infrastructure

Hobart, La Porte, and Merrillville are navigating a wave of data center proposals, weighing billions in projected revenue against concerns over energy, water use, and transparency.
Read More
June-July 2026 Cover

In this issue

Mid-career retraining, data center growth, and a new state succession planning pilot are among the topics covered in this issue of the regional business magazine.
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Author

  • Heather Pfundstein 2024
    Publisher/Executive Editor - Linker Media Group

    Heather Pfundstein is the publisher and executive editor of Northwest Indiana Business Magazine and NWIndianaBusiness.com. She is an award-winning journalist with more than 25 years of experience in Northwest Indiana and northern Illinois newsrooms. She earned a Bachelor of Science degree in journalism from Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. She has been part of the magazine's team since 2018.

    View all posts

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