In a recent Beyond the Build podcast conversation, Jennifer Conoley revealed how Florida's Great Northwest leverages military talent pipelines and strategic collaboration to attract aerospace and maritime investments. As President and CEO since March 2020, Conoley coordinates economic development across 13 counties from Pensacola to Tallahassee. Her 'professional matchmaker' approach has generated over 1,500 announced jobs through direct leads since 2020, with significant aerospace, advanced manufacturing, and maritime projects in the pipeline.
Rather than letting counties compete against each other, Florida's Great Northwest packages regional opportunities and filters them to appropriate local economic development professionals. 'I like to call us the professional matchmakers,' Conoley explains. 'We're able to identify these opportunities and then filter them down to our 13-county economic development professionals.' This approach prevented internal competition while attracting Field International's global headquarters from the United Kingdom to Pensacola and Point Blank Enterprises' 300-job body armor manufacturing facility to Wakulla County. Most notably, Birdon announced plans for a potential 2,000-job maritime manufacturing expansion at the Port of Pensacola.
One of Northwest Florida's most compelling competitive advantages is quantifiable: six military bases within a two-and-a-half to three-hour radius generate approximately 5,200 military separations and retirements annually, with an average age of 38. A University of West Florida study commissioned by Florida's Great Northwest found that 47% want to stay in the region after military service, with another 19% undecided, making job opportunities a key retention factor. 'This is such a high concentration when you look across the United States,' Conoley notes. 'Companies feel more confident in selecting our region' based on quantifiable data rather than estimates.
Conoley stressed that in site selection, evaluators look for ways to eliminate properties, not add them. 'If you can present a site that is truly ready to go, then you're going to be more competitive,' she explains. The $1.5 billion Triumph Gulf Coast fund, created from Deepwater Horizon settlements and continuing to receive $80 million annually through 2033, provides unique leverage. While funds cannot go directly to companies, public-private partnerships using Triumph dollars have successfully attracted major industrial investments without requiring aggressive cash incentives.
Despite recent momentum, Conoley warns against complacency. 'You cannot take your foot off the gas pedal in this moment,' she cautions. Florida's Great Northwest recently received a $4.7 million Triumph grant to enhance its regional strategy for the next 5, 10, and 15 years. 'Where I see Northwest Florida in the next 5 to 10 years is really being even more well known in that Gulf Coast corridor for both aerospace and maritime work,' Conoley states. 'Keep your eye on Northwest Florida. The pipeline is full.'
For developers and investors evaluating markets, Northwest Florida's combination of regional coordination, quantifiable military talent pipeline, available industrial land, and patient capital sources offers a compelling value proposition, particularly for aerospace, maritime, and advanced manufacturing projects.


