Issue link: https://nebusinessmedia.uberflip.com/i/1507596
wbjournal.com | September 18, 2023 | Worcester Business Journal 7 E X P E R T I S E M A K E S A L L T H E D I F F E R E N C E When you arrive at a certain size, your banking needs become more complex. With Country Bank's commercial banking team, you get customized problem-solving, higher lending limits, industry expertise, and highly responsive service. W Adapting to change and taking a strategic approach is a skill Sassi will continue to use constantly as she assumes the top role of the international operation. Long-term succession plan It wasn't a foregone conclusion that someone from within NECC would be the next CEO, but more and more, Strully and the board realized in order to handle the scope of the organization, someone from the inside would be the best fit to take on all that NECC encompasses, Strully said. NECC's operations include a day school, a residential program, a classroom model for use within public schools, a consulting practice, a research center, onsite graduate degree programs, and a technology division. e center is one of the 50 largest employers in Central Massachusetts and has trained nearly 2,000 in research training and applied behavioral analysis degrees. Its workforce hovers at 1,200, and its annual budget is regularly more than $100 million. NECC operates or consults in 13 countries, serving 12,000+ students worldwide, according to NECC, with a full school in Abu Dhabi, the capital of the United Arab Emirates. "It's a lot to take on," Strully put simply. Strully likens NECC to a teaching hospital on par with Mayo Clinic in Minnesota and has always put a premium on professional development for all levels of staff members. Sassi is the second-ever CEO at the organization, but both she and Strully feel confident she is prepared to take on the role. While she had a lot of time to prepare, it was not an easy few years to learn the ropes, Strully said. NECC, unlike typical or even boarding schools, cannot send many of its students home ever, Sassi said. roughout the COVID-19 pandemic, the school did not close once as it dealt with a slew of challenges. "It turned into an opportunity to learn to respond to a serious crisis," Sassi said. e pandemic coincided or caused co-occurring challenges, with a resignation boom in special education and challenging retention figures across the industry that did not spare NECC. As Sassi steps into the CEO role, the retention challenges have mostly abated, with staff retention at the same roughly 90% level as before the pandemic, she said. The future Next on the agenda is reexamining the entire strategic plan, Sassi said, which was developed shortly before the Vincent Strully, Jr., NECC founder and longtime former CEO COVID-19 pandemic. "Questions have to be answered differently now," Sassi said. Aer 48 years at the helm of the organization, Strully officially retired as CEO in August. As part of the succession plan, he will remain on as a consultant for the beginning of Sassi's tenure. She is the last in a series of generational changes at the C-suite level, said Strully, as multiple chiefs and directors who ran the center with him for decades have retired. Even with those changes, Sassi said she feels supported as she takes over. "I don't see myself as alone," she said, but rather as part of the next generation of capable leaders. Strully sees Sassi as a role model for staff, especially to female staff who make up the vast majority of the organization, he said. With the reins of NECC in her hands, Sassi has the potential to empower the next generation of clinicians and leaders within the organization and beyond. "She will be a superstar woman leader in our field," said Strully. Autism numbers National identified prevalence of autism spectrum disorder '10 '12 '14 '16 '18 '20 Prevalence per 1,000 children 27.6 14.7 Source: U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention PHOTO | CHRISTINE PETERSON