On the QT | The Official Newsletter of GWA June - July 2017 | Page 14

MEMBER PROFILE K AT I E E L Z E R - P E T E R S Teresa Watkins: Change As a Way of Life Did you know that Theresa Watkins is the reason why there’s a Home Depot Garden Club now? And it’s not because she was hired to create something catchy or buzz-worthy or moneymaking for the home-improve- ment store chain. It’s because she saw a need and she fulfilled it. Let’s back up. In 1996, Teresa was neck- deep in corporate work. “I had been an office manager and a restaurant manager, both high stress jobs. But that year, when my mother died, I experienced a profound de- pression. When, six months later, I decided to get out of bed and face the world, I saw that The Home Depot was opening a store in my city, so I went to work in the garden center. I just didn’t want to think about anything.” THI NK O U TSIDE T H E B OX If you’ve met Teresa, you know that “not thinking” didn’t last long. “After a few months, I had taken the Florida Master Gardener course, and so I had a little more plant knowledge than other people working there. Soon, on Saturday mornings, I had a line of people waiting to ask me questions.” To manage the traffic flow and to encour- age the budding gardeners stopping by, Teresa said to her manager, “What if we do a garden club one weeknight per month?” So they did. “We’d move the lawn mowers out and we’d have 100 to 150 people coming to our meetings.” Her manager got a call from headquarters in Atlanta asking what was going on. “All of these snowbirds were going back to Indiana and Ohio and asking why their stores didn’t have a garden club.” After a visit from corporate to see what Teresa and her cohorts were doing, the Home Depot Garden Club was rolled out nationally. After two years with The Home Depot, Te- 14 resa went to work for an independent nursery. Soon after, an opportunity came up for her to take on a position with the University of Flor- ida. As she did during her time at The Home Depot, Teresa took the program and made it her own. “When I started, the program I was working with was geared toward certifying yards as Florida-Friendly landscapes. I looked at what I was to be doing. I had three counties to cover. I knew I couldn’t certify more than 30 yards per month, and that was being optimistic.” So she stepped back to evaluate the bigger picture. “I said, what if I do a three-hour workshop, for free, and then people have to take a before and after test to be certified.” By evaluating and changing the program, Teresa has helped 35,000 Florida gardeners develop more envi- ronmentally friendly landscapes. “The university liked it because the numbers grew,” she said.