IBJNews

LEADING QUESTIONS: Debriefing with Super Bowl chief

Back to TopCommentsE-mailPrint
Leading Questions

Welcome to the latest installment of “Leading Questions: Wisdom from the Corner Office,” in which IBJ sits down with central Indiana’s top bosses to talk shop about the habits that lead to success.

At roughly 6:30 p.m. on Sunday, as a booted pigskin first flew over the field of Lucas Oil Stadium to kickstart Super Bowl XLVI, Allison Melangton finally felt years of pressure-packed expectations and 16-hour work days lift from her shoulders.



As CEO of the 2012 Indianapolis Super Bowl Host Committee, Melangton had been immersed in both the minutiae and ambitious scope of the city’s big-game programs and festivities since Oct. 1, 2008.

“Over the last four years, I’ve lived with an anticipation and a little bit of anxiety about how the end is going to be,” she said, sitting in the temporary, canary-yellow office she has occupied as chief of the host committee.

“It’s like you’re in this movie for all these years, and you want to know what the end is, and you really don’t know what it is until you get there. So, I’m here, and I am relieved.”

The details of Indy’s successful stint as host promise to become near-mythic lore in the city: perfect weather, smooth operations, humongous crowds, and a great game. One wonders if Melangton ever dared to imagine an outcome—with so many things that could go wrong—where the most pressing questions from the media would include whether she was interested in running for office.

For her part, Melangton, 50, promises to stay in central Indiana and likely continue her career in sports management. A native of Maine, she moved to Indianapolis in 1983 as the city was beginning to implement its sports tourism strategy. For 12 years, she worked with USA Gymnastics, directing some 100 national and international events.

She later worked for the Indiana Sports Corp. as senior vice president of events. Her responsibilities included bidding on, planning and directing events including Olympic trials, various world championships, NCAA basketball championships and Big 10 tournaments. She also worked on the city’s bids for both the 2011 and 2012 Super Bowls, before being tapped to run the 2012 host committee.

With the game over and mostly administrative and reporting tasks left to complete, Melangton sat down with IBJ for an extensive interview this week about her experience as host committee CEO and how she approached what was likely the most demanding and high-stakes job in the city’s sports-tourism history.

In the three videos here, Melangton first discusses the personal lessons she learned while working on the Super Bowl bid and then bringing the plan to life (see video at top). They include sticking to your guns and doubling down on commitment, even when others pushed back against new ideas. And as a former Sports Corp. executive told her, “Don’t ever let logistics stand in the way of a great idea.”

Overseeing a staff of 30-plus and 60 volunteer committees, Melangton in great part relied on a management style of affection and encouragement (see first video below). When staffers threatened to succumb to pressure and an intense workload, she encouraged honest communication about shifting responsibilities, drawing the line on new ideas and respecting deadlines. And when the situation merited getting tough (including discussions about marketing strategy with the NFL), she put her foot down.

In Part III of the interview (see second video below), Melangton discusses how she managed her own time and workload, including finding time to pray while driving to work in early mornings. Now a convert to digital planners, she reveals that she is working with her third BlackBerry since taking the job. She burned through the first two with excessive use.



ADVERTISEMENT

  • Really!!
    16 hour days! REALLY??!! I agree she's incredible and did a fabulous job. I too work a lot of hours but 16? Who wouldn't want to hire her! I hope they paid her well. She deserved every penny!!!
  • Awesome Allison!
    She is totally organized... she is awesome! I'd love to work for Allison! What a great boss she'd be! As a volunteer during SB games many people I met commented on how our Super Bowl was put together so well and the woman who planned everything out thought of everything for the Indianapolis SB event! What they say about women being organized is SO true! It takes a great woman like Allison to get the job right the first time! Kudos Allison! Now you deserve a nice long relaxing vacation somewhere warm!
  • great interview
    She is wonderful! What a great interview with a remarkable lady. How could anyone not love her!

Post a comment to this story

COMMENTS POLICY
We reserve the right to remove any post that we feel is obscene, profane, vulgar, racist, sexually explicit, abusive, or hateful.
 
You are legally responsible for what you post and your anonymity is not guaranteed.
 
Posts that insult, defame, threaten, harass or abuse other readers or people mentioned in IBJ editorial content are also subject to removal. Please respect the privacy of individuals and refrain from posting personal information.
 
No solicitations, spamming or advertisements are allowed. Readers may post links to other informational websites that are relevant to the topic at hand, but please do not link to objectionable material.
 
We may remove messages that are unrelated to the topic, encourage illegal activity, use all capital letters or are unreadable.
 

Messages that are flagged by readers as objectionable will be reviewed and may or may not be removed. Please do not flag a post simply because you disagree with it.

Sponsored by
ADVERTISEMENT

facebook - twitter on Facebook & Twitter

Follow on TwitterFollow IBJ on Facebook:
Follow on TwitterFollow IBJ's Tweets on these topics:
 
Subscribe to IBJ
  1. So the Mayor adds another non value added layer to having a vehicle towed? Whereby the City Government RECIEVES AN ILLEGAL KICKBACK FROM A LGOISTICS COMPANY THAT SUBS THE WORK TO LOCAL TOW COMPANIES? What is the service the City performs for receiving the "tribute"? This is RICO!!!!! What a corrupt and unnecessary layer. What a dirtbag Mayor and his cronies.

  2. Owner occupied housing. Clear enough?

  3. So people think I am paranoid. It's from experience in dealing with puds requested by developers who make major donations themselves to representatives, have nice fund raisers for those running for office and hide through pac's. then there are the public relation firms. You will note some pr comments below. You there Clyde Lee? My opinion. Commercial along 421, great. Multifamily housing, terrible idea that will change the town. Senior condos or zero lot line homes west, great. I suggest keeping all entries to commercial areas at 421. All entries to owner occupied on sycamore. Will keep the traffic on sycamore down some. Two other things. You can't trust what will be there in 10 years. Steve builds quality stuff, but areas change over time. Look at the changes at the wall mart center at 86th and 421 over the last 10 years. Look at the apartments and neighborhoods behind St Vincent's. Raintree properties WILL decrease in value if commercial and multifamily goes in near. It has already been happening around the bridges area. The houses that have been sold recently are way below market. Several deals not closed due to the Illinois construction and the whole unsurety of the bridges. It's pretty simple, Zionsville will approve the whole thing because the city council has been groomed over a LONG period of time for this. I might even suggest some are in their position as a result of this.

  4. Esta, do you have a dog in this fight? You seem to really want to knock anyone against this project. No, I didn't move to Indiana for the architecture. I moved here for that red barn in the field. The horses and fields of corn. A place that is NOT overdeveloped. There are plenty of nearby places in Indianapolis that could be REDEVELOPED instead.

  5. RKW - OK, we get it, you're paranoid. The question is, are you paranoid enough? Greg - Yes, Pittman(s) is (are) at it again. They are developers, they build things. It's what they do. So when you go to work tomorrow, Greg, you're at it again too. Cliff - Really? You moved to Indiana for its progressive architecture? That's like moving to England for the cuisine. Zionsvillain - The house you moved to was once a field or woods. I'm willing to bet folks were upset when that ground was plowed under and a house was built. But I guess now that you are in, everything should stop? "My house was OK, but the next one is sprawl." SE Guy - Please don't paint us with such a wide brush. Most reasonable Zionsville residents welcome planned, measured development.

ADVERTISEMENT