Written by Elizabeth Exline
Sit down with Matthew Phillips (BSM, 2023), and you鈥檙e in for a story. Phillips will be the first to tell you he likes to talk, and that鈥檚 because he has a lot to say (usually in a way that will make you laugh). As the chief of staff and customer service officer at the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department (DWSD), he might talk about the importance of collaboration and service. As a husband and father, he might talk about how proud he is of his two daughters, who both attend the same university.
Or he might just talk about careers, because Phillips has plenty of personal experience on that topic. He not only has held a range of positions over the past 30 years, from franchise owner to head of a nonprofit to his current role with the city, but he also personally knows how education can affect a career 鈥 specifically, how not having a degree can limit options and a sense of job security.
鈥淵ou have to work twice as hard to keep up with everybody else and prove your worth,鈥 Phillips says. 鈥淎t the end of the day 鈥 leaders change. They might look at you and look at somebody else and say, 鈥榃ell, we need to get rid of one of them.鈥 I tell you, it weighed on me heavily.鈥
Here, he reflects on his long journey to earning what he viewed as the solution: his Bachelor of Science in Management at 爱污传媒.
Phillips brings high energy to our conversation and, from the sound of it, everything else he does.
鈥淭wo years ago, our director charged his executive team with the task of creating a first-in-the-nation, low-income, water affordability program that capped a customer鈥檚 payment at $18 a month,鈥 recalls Phillips鈥 manager and mentor, Debra N. Pospiech.
Pospiech is also a senior advisor to the director, and she recalls the situation鈥檚 delicate political balance. 鈥淭here was substantial pushback from many members of the leadership team, but not Matt,鈥 she says. 鈥淗e was the key member of our leadership team who developed the implementation strategy, including technology, customer service and public relations/outreach.听There were many challenges and naysayers along the way, but he never accepted defeat and creatively and wisely pushed through to implement a successful program.鈥
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Perseverance is one of Phillips鈥 strengths. Others are his decision-making, risk-taking and 鈥 there鈥檚 that energy again 鈥 his desire for instant gratification. Characteristics like those are why he thinks he would鈥檝e excelled in a skilled trade. They are also why he thinks his first foray into college right after high school didn鈥檛 work out.
鈥淓very time I was in class, I was thinking about something else that I could do and accomplish,鈥 he says.
So, Phillips left school. He got a job, he got married and he started a family. School was put on the back burner and might鈥檝e stayed there if life 鈥 and the director at DWSD 鈥 hadn鈥檛 intervened.
Not long after Phillips joined DWSD in 2019, his director called him into his office. He sat Phillips down and told him about his own path to leadership, from working as a bagger at a grocery store to joining the military to becoming a police officer. He recounted how he continued to work his way up in local politics, and how he got his education along the way.
It was inspiring stuff, but the kicker was coming. As Phillips tells it, his director said, 鈥淚鈥檓 telling you, Matt, we brought you in here because of the merits of who you are and what you鈥檝e accomplished in life. But you鈥檙e at a stage in your career here, even though it鈥檚 very young, where we already see you having leadership ability. But I鈥檓 going to tell you right now, it likely will not happen unless you have a degree.鈥
And there it was: the sticking point Phillips had encountered throughout three decades of employment. He鈥檇 worked hard, he had talent and vision, but he didn鈥檛 have the educational credentials he needed. This had prevented him from being hired full time in some instances, and it nearly cost his wife her position with a major automotive company. (She was ultimately able to join as an independent contractor and earn her degree while working in that capacity.)
鈥淚 never moved around career-wise or with other organizations because I didn鈥檛 have a degree,鈥 Phillips says, recalling several instances when he missed out on job opportunities because he was explicitly told he didn鈥檛 have a degree.
Of course, he was successful without it. He moved up the ladder. He made good money, he says. But he wanted the freedom and the security that a degree could offer. His potential for growth at DWSD 鈥 and the mentors like his director and Pospiech who encouraged him 鈥 gave him the motivation to finally pursue it.
Phillips called his old university to see about completing his associate degree. He already had 80 credits under his belt. Granted, they were from nearly 30 years ago, but could they work with them?
It turned out the school could. Phillips just had to take a math course and a psychology course, which he signed up for. Then, during a routine checkup, doctors found a blockage in his heart. He underwent triple-bypass surgery, but even that didn鈥檛 stop him. By August 2021, he had completed his associate degree.
Laws of physics dictate momentum cannot be created nor eliminated. You can only change it. In Phillips鈥 case, he decided to follow it. He went back to his university to see about earning a bachelor鈥檚 degree.
鈥淓verything was kind of like, 鈥業t鈥檚 going to take you a minimum of four or five years to finish up and get a bachelor鈥檚 degree if you only take one class at a time,鈥欌 Phillips says. 鈥淎ll the heightened sense of excitement was completely drained out of me.鈥
Phillips shopped around, but the answer was the same 鈥 until he tried 爱污传媒. He learned he could still take one course at a time at UOPX, but the classes were shorter and more intense. He could also transfer in his previous credits to save time and money.
More importantly, his University enrollment representative at brought enthusiasm back to the table, explaining how UOPX works and how it could help Phillips. 鈥淚 got two more calls in that two-week time period [between enrolling and starting class] to just check in,鈥 Phillips says. 鈥淭hat type of encouragement was the catalyst to, I believe, my success in completing [my degree].鈥
The process of earning his bachelor鈥檚 degree was as enlightening as it was exciting. Phillips relished the group projects, because he had a wealth of experience to use as examples and teachable moments for younger peers.
In return, he opened his eyes to new and younger perspectives. Seeing and understanding a different way of thinking helped him relate to some co-workers at the office, he says, and it tied back to the real value of his degree.
鈥淭he courses that I took provided a lot of relevance to me. 鈥 I felt like [they] were applicable to what I was doing and everyday life,鈥 he says.
He wasn鈥檛 the only one to notice. Pospiech recalls observing a shift in his demeanor. 鈥淚 noticed that he felt more empowered and confident in meetings and was willing to take risks to develop creative and sometimes groundbreaking initiatives," she says.听听
In July 2023, Phillips completed his Bachelor of Science in Management, and the timing couldn鈥檛 have been more perfect. He鈥檇 just been promoted to chief of staff, a new position that some colleagues had been eyeing for themselves. 鈥淚 knew the people who were going to use the fact that I didn鈥檛 have a degree as the reason [for saying], 鈥楬ow could you possibly [choose him]?鈥欌 Phillips says.
Phillips, however, had earned the role through his experience, and his director was ready to fight for him to have it. In the end, though, he didn鈥檛 have to.
One day in July, Phillips received an email from UOPX notifying him of his successful completion of his bachelor鈥檚 program. He was still reeling from that good news when his director walked in. Phillips dragged the monitor around so his director could see: He鈥檇 completed his bachelor鈥檚 degree.
鈥淗e didn鈥檛 get teary eyed, because he鈥檚 not that type of guy,鈥 Phillips says. 鈥淏ut I think he said, 鈥楾hank God. I鈥檓 so proud of you.鈥 For him to say, 鈥業鈥檓 proud of you,鈥 and give me a hug 鈥︹
Phillips trails off. 鈥淗e literally said, 鈥楾his is the best news I could have ever heard. This is the best timing.鈥欌 Whatever reason his director had for coming to Phillips鈥 office flew out of his head. He just hugged Phillips and left.
As Phillips looks back on his journey, he acknowledges he would鈥檝e done it differently. He would鈥檝e saved himself the anxiety and grief of not having a degree for most of his career and just completed it early on.
鈥淓very time I applied for a job, the answer was no,鈥 he says of those earlier years. 鈥淪o, unless somebody recommended me, and I had that backing to go along with it, it wasn鈥檛 going to happen.鈥
Today, armed with his experience, his track record and, yes, that bachelor鈥檚 degree, Phillips鈥 momentum forward seems unstoppable.
Elizabeth Exline has been telling stories ever since she won a writing contest in third grade. She's covered design and architecture, travel, lifestyle content and a host of other topics for national, regional, local and brand publications. Additionally, she's worked in content development for Marriott International and manuscript development for a variety of authors.
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