Skip Navigation
The Missouri Honor Medal Missouri School of Journalism
University of Missouri
 
MU Home
  Real-World Experience
Journalism A to Z Index
KOMU Columbia Missourian Vox Magazine Adelante! KBIA Public Radio Global Journalist The MOJO Agency Missouri Digital News

Missouri Journalism Centennial and Dedication of the Reynolds Journalism Institute Register Online

About the J-School A Brief History
Connections
The Journalist's Creed
Media Outlets
Mission
Missouri Honor Medal
Calendar
Career Center
Contact Us
Faculty and Staff Convergence
Radio-Television
Journalism Studies
Magazine Journalism
Newspaper Journalism
Photojournalism
Strategic Communication
Doctoral Faculty
Graduate Faculty
Adjunct Faculty
Endowed Chairs
Reynolds Institute
Professors Emeriti
Show All Faculty
Show All Staff
Show Everyone
Giving to the J-School
J-School Home
News Releases
Reynolds Journalism Institute
 

Missouri Journalism Alumni
Profiles in Success  Submit a Profile
In-depth looks at life after J-School.
Class Notes  Submit a Class Note
Shorter updates and recent alumni photos.
Sort by Decade Sort by Name/Emphasis
Show All
2000-Present
1990-1999
1980-1989
1970-1979
1960-1969
1950-1959
1940-1949
1930-1939
1920-1929
Show All:
List by Last Name

Graduate Degree
Magazine
Newspaper
Photojournalism
Radio-Television
Strategic
Communication
Sort by Decade More Alumni Resources
2000-Present
1990-1999
1980-1989
1970-1979
1960-1969
1950-1959
1940-1949
1930-1939
1920-1929
@mizzou
For All We Call Mizzou
Mizzou Alumni
Association

MizzouNet

Name: Georgia O'Brien Patrick
Degree and Year: BJ '67 (News-Editorial)
Company: The Communicators, Inc.
Company Web Site: http://www.communicators.com/
Title: President
City and State: Myersville, Md.

What is your company like?
The Communicators is the coolest place to work. We won the first national competition for the best small business in America a few years ago. In a competition of hundreds of organizations we were selected among the top 10 finalists and then got the call that we were number one. Criteria included operations, technology, nature of the business, environment and culture of the workspaces, plus innovation.

What do you do?
I'm the president, and that means I get to make all of the big decisions and big mistakes.

How did you get your job?
That's worth a book! It was the biggest challenge of my career. In order to become president, I had to take that job away from the current president. He was the founder of the company, a great business partner, and another journalism professional for the Des Moines Register, and eventually became my husband. Get it? So, I helped him create another company - his next career, so I could take over this one.

What is your best professional lesson learned at the J-School?
Teaching makes you a better professional. When selected to be a News 105 Student Instructor, I learned more by teaching others to be journalists that spending time by myself.

What is your favorite J-School memory?
The hours spent in the newsroom, putting out the paper.

What would be your best advice to current students?
Work your little tail off, and don't come up for air until you graduate. The big party you think you want to go to is waiting for you after you graduate. School is serious. Life is fun.

What are you working on currently?
We are currently working on some really major developments that will create history and make national news. Today, we are locked down with nondisclosure agreements so you'll just have to be patient a few months longer.

What do you consider to be your greatest professional achievement?
We have not achieved greatest, yet. We seem to have a lot of "firsts" and history - making professional achievements every week. Maybe everyone is right who nags me to "write that book" about our amazing journey with so many nationally known leaders and organizations.

What makes you good at your job?
Our customers tell us it is in the way we make connections. We are raging visionaries with the ability to execute flawlessly. What makes me good are the super duper talented people who are attracted to this company and want to work with me. They are all better than me and just haven't figured that out yet.

Who would you like to work with and why, or where would you most like to work?
I've already worked with some major personalities and people who changed the world. And I'm pretty happy right here, on the mountain, knowing that the next mountain over is where Camp David and the President hang out on the weekends.

What are your next career steps?
Currently, I'm reinventing this company and starting a national organization for the entire certification industry - corporate, associations, and government. That's all going to take place in the next three years. Call me in 2007, and ask me this question again.

What did you want to be as a kid?
I was a writer. Others passed notes in class, and I issued small booklets with stories. Because my grandfather and great uncle were well-known journalists and newspaper publishers, it seemed like a neat thing to do.


Submit a Class Note







  
Use the form above for shorter updates. If you would like to submit more detailed information, use the Submit a Profile form instead.

Please Note: All text submitted to the J-School may be edited and posted on the J-School's public Web site. The School does not publish contact information to its public Web pages, particularly e-mail addresses. Materials must be in accordance with the University's Acceptable Use Policy.
The J-School Arch Stone Lions  
Revised: 20 April 2007. Copyright © 2008 The Curators of the University of Missouri  |  Contact the J-School