
Political Science
Major
The mayor鈥檚 office, Sioux Falls, South Dakota, is not at all palatial. It鈥檚 in the southwest corner of an ordinary yellow-brick building, downtown. True, you don鈥檛 just walk in; there鈥檚 an official-looking character at the door to admit you after you state your purpose; but once inside, if you were expecting 鈥渟wanky鈥 or 鈥渟plurgy,鈥 don鈥檛.
However, the place has the makings of a tourist stop, its four walls hung with memorabilia, lots of it noteworthy鈥攂ig, colorful, signed jerseys from stars on the gridiron and court. The city could charge a fee and turn a dollar or two if they鈥檇 call the TenHaken office a museum.
To be sure, a museum is not what you might expect of Mayor Paul TenHaken (鈥00) because he鈥檚 still, in many ways, someone who just happens to be mayor of South Dakota鈥檚 only real metropolis, Sioux Falls, a 200,000 person city sprawling into the vast prairies in every direction, a city that continues 40 years of significant growth.
鈥淚f you have a passion or an issue or a cause that鈥檚 near and dear to your heart,鈥 he says, 鈥測ou鈥檙e going to find it in Sioux Falls鈥攁rts, faith, all kinds of housing options, a 30-mile bike trail, hunting options within driving distance, vibrant downtown, amazing culinary scene, and more.鈥
TenHaken is smart and savvy, an award-winning businessman, entrepreneur par excellence. He has been named one of Entrepreneur Magazine鈥檚 鈥淭op Ten Emerging Entrepreneurs鈥 as well as South Dakota鈥檚 鈥淵oung Entrepreneur of the Year鈥 for the amazing success of Click Rain, a company he created. Thin and wiry as a triathlete, which he is, he鈥檚 easily mistaken for a kid.
The museum all around him makes clear that he hasn鈥檛 stood still for a day since he graduated from Dordt with a degree in graphic design鈥攓uite an accomplishment for a guy who鈥檚 color blind.
鈥淚 would have never guessed that I鈥檇 be here,鈥 he says, from behind the mayor鈥檚 desk. Politics was an unlikely turn, but then little of what he鈥檚 done could have been foreseen. The Paul TenHaken story will take your breath away, so hold on.
After graduating in 2000, Paul and Jill (Driesen) TenHaken moved to Sioux Falls to hunt for whatever challenging work a color blind graphic designer could locate. He started in a 鈥渄ot.com,鈥 one of a million early-risers in the huge and complex world then being created by something people called 鈥渢he Internet.鈥 This particular dot.com created something brand new on the tech screens鈥攖echnical devises called apps (you may have heard of them?) for a medieval gizmo called a Palm Pilot.
Often as not, dot.coms made money hand-over-fist, if those fledgling businesses didn鈥檛 go up in smoke from poor management, sour corporate culture, too much dreaming, and not enough elbow grease. It was a wild-and-crazy life in a wild-and-crazy time. Paul TenHaken knew inside of a year that this particular dot.com wasn鈥檛 necessarily a habitat he could learn to love.
He was only a year out of Dordt, fascinated, as he鈥檇 not been before, in the potential this whole Internet thing was going to bring to the culture. When he looked for another job, he went over to Midland National Life, an insurance business the polar opposite of where he had been. At Midland National, marketing became his thing鈥攈ead of a department of four employees (all older than he was) whose job it was to create all the literature for the business.
He lasted three years. 鈥淕reat people, but I wasn鈥檛 fulfilled,鈥 he says. With what he saw happening on the Internet, he couldn鈥檛 stop thinking he had to get back there, a high energy place for a high energy guy.
But those three years in insurance taught him something he never forgot鈥攖he undeniable importance of listening. At Midland he found himself heading up an office of company veterans, and he was just 24 years old. The boss believed in him, made him the leader anyway. To get along, he says, he had to sit still. He had to learn to listen.
In 2004, he went looking for something with a little more pop and ended up at a tech firm called Electric Pulp (a cute way of saying 鈥渨eb pages鈥) and began a transition from a desk job to a marketing position, doing nothing but sales.
He can鈥檛 say enough about sales, because sales taught him a great deal. He claims he鈥檇 recommend it to everyone鈥攅ven cold sales, making uncomfortable phone calls. Why? Because sales taught him how to deal with rejection. He couldn鈥檛 help but grow thick skin from sales, and everyone, the mayor says, needs thick skin to get along.
He lasted two years at Electric Pulp, while the business itself became the best web developer in the region, creating websites and content for all kinds of customers, even professional athletes like Randy Moss, Dante Culpepper, and South Dakota鈥檚 own NBA superstar, Mike Miller.
One of the biggest clients was local鈥擲ioux Valley Hospital, where TenHaken ended up doing the hospital鈥檚 website work, plus the work of their entire fleet of regional affiliates.
He left Electric Pulp for reasons that had to do with faith. There was more to work, he told himself, than 鈥渂igger houses, nicer cars, better vacations, slicker watches, better shoes.鈥 He left a perfectly good position with lots of pizazz because Sioux Valley Hospital, like other hospitals, was making people鈥檚 lives better. In his book, that mission counted for something.
The Sioux Valley Hospital job was a plum; he was fast-tracked as the Associate Vice President of Marketing. But more importantly, he鈥檇 been hired by a man named Mark Elliot, who, the mayor says, shaped directions when Elliot told him, openly and sincerely, that he believed life鈥檚 priorities lined up this way: 鈥渇aith, family, work.鈥
鈥溾橧鈥檇 never had an employer who was open like that to faith,鈥 he says.
TenHaken says Elliot allowed his team to talk about faith in the everyday hours of the job, and when Elliot did so, Paul signed on the bottom line. He wanted to work for this guy, and he did.
Three years later, he started into a brand-new venture when four people he didn鈥檛 know pulled him aside and made him an offer he refused for a year before being lured into buying in. It was a company the four of them were operating, a start-up that secured government grants to do web content that would, for instance, get kids to eat healthy foods. Suddenly, he was back in sales.
Soon enough it became clear that for what he was doing鈥攕igning up more clients on his own鈥攈e didn鈥檛 need the others. 鈥淚 started hustling,鈥 he says, 鈥渟tarted making phone calls, beating the streets, going back to my roots at Electric Pulp, trying to make money.鈥
He knew the ins and outs of web construction, and he was still fascinated by the potential of the web. But he was getting his own business. Just a year later, he started a brand new company he and Jill named Click Rain, 鈥渁 marketing technology firm.鈥
That move couldn鈥檛 have come at a better time. The political world was thunderstruck at the ascendency of a man named Barack Obama who鈥檇 won the presidency of the United States in a way no one else had ever worked鈥攄igitally. Paul didn鈥檛 need to hustle because politicians called him. 鈥淲hat鈥檚 Twitter?鈥 they鈥檇 say.
Click Rain took on local politicians running for office, but the strength of their work secured contracts from near and far. What Click Rain promised was to create digital content for very specific needs, not only for politicians (鈥渉ow can I get more young people to like me?鈥), but also businesses (鈥渉ow can we sell more tomato soup in Florida?鈥). And it was, as you can imagine, successful.
It was his work with politicians that lured the color blind graphic designer, who鈥檇 become a dot.com guy, a salesman, a digital marketer, and then a CEO, along with wooing from others and his own fascination, that nudged him down a road he eventually couldn鈥檛 help but feel called to follow, politics.
鈥淲hy would anyone want to get into politics鈥攊t鈥檚 gross, it鈥檚 divisive, it鈥檚 terrible鈥擭o!鈥 he told himself. 鈥淏ut God kept putting it in front of me, through conversations, through Scripture, through quiet time.鈥 He read stories about Jonah and Moses and Gideon鈥攏one of them wanted to do what God was telling them to do. They鈥檇 all have rather not, would have turned it all down. But didn鈥檛.
What he also knew, he says, was that God was with them鈥攁nd him. What he鈥檚 come to learn, he says, is that 鈥淕od鈥檚 calling is not always comfortable鈥攊t鈥檚 not always our desire.鈥
The mayor鈥檚 job came open. He threw his hat in the ring, prepared to lose. He鈥檇 determined that a first run would give him some name recognition should he ever want to try again. 鈥淲ho鈥檇 vote for me, after all?鈥 he asked Jill.
But he could not escape the sense that God was calling him to run. Period. End of sentence. No, the beginning of sentence.
Eight people were in the race. To win required fifty percent of the vote, plus one. When votes were tabulated, no candidate got there. At 30 percent, he was at the top of the list. There鈥檇 be a runoff, and he鈥檇 be in it.
Then came the horror. Rumors morphed into accusations that looked all too plausible to those who didn鈥檛 know him or didn鈥檛 want to believe him. Someone had hacked into his competitor鈥檚 bank account, and TenHaken, as everyone understood, was a tech guru. Makes sense, doesn鈥檛 it? Young techie like him?
It was the darkest time of his life, he鈥檒l tell you. 鈥淚 got into the politics of politics, you know: 鈥榮weet Christian guy鈥欌攕ure. But look what he鈥檚 doing.鈥 In a way, guilt by association was a given, and today, as everyone knows, the accusation alone can put an end to a campaign and even a career. All of this went down ten days before the election.
He was questioned, deposed by the Department of Criminal Investigation and the Sherriff鈥檚 Office, interrogated at length, his lawyer present. He told people he was innocent鈥攁nd he was. Just three days before the election, the authorities announced as much鈥攏one of the story was true. Votes were cast, and he won. Paul TenHaken would be the mayor of Sioux Falls.
It鈥檚 over now, but in some ways, he says, it isn鈥檛 gone. 鈥淭here鈥檚 still some splatter on me, but at the same time the whole story thickened my armor too.鈥
And as anyone from Sioux Falls knows, he鈥檚 needed a wearying coat of protection because in the last two years, in his first term of office, Mayor TenHaken has had to handle a devastating tornado that hit the city鈥檚 busiest streets, immense flooding all over the town, the rampage of Covid-19 through a huge packing plant, and racial tensions that exploded after the death of George Floyd.
But then, no one ever told him the job would be a cake walk, and he knew as much. He just hadn鈥檛 expected the successive storms, totally unforeseen, that every Sioux Falls resident knows he鈥檚 had to handle. It hasn鈥檛 been easy.
Still, with two years in, he says he knows that 鈥淕od wants me here. I feel reaffirmed in this calling every day. I鈥檝e not doubted the decision to run three years ago. He鈥檚 been crystal clear.鈥
Paul TenHaken is still a young guy. Some of us might even call him a kid. But he鈥檚 learned some things, as we all do. Empathy, for starters. 鈥淧eople want to see empathy in their leaders. They don鈥檛 see it enough of it in government, but they want to feel empathy from their elected leaders.鈥
So how does the young, high-energy mayor of a city like Sioux Falls gain empathy? 鈥淏y sticking with the values you know to be eternal and true,鈥 he says. By holding on to clich茅s when they speak the truth. 鈥淎s much a clich茅 as it is,鈥 he says, 鈥淚 ask myself daily in this office, 鈥榃hat Would Jesus Do?鈥欌
He has to deal with what comes his way from the other side of the mayor鈥檚 desk. He has to listen鈥攖o Black Lives Matter and LGTBQ advocate groups as well as a host of others. 鈥淚鈥檝e had to come to a moment of reckoning about the homogenous life that I鈥檝e lived,鈥 he says. As mayor he knows he can鈥檛 and won鈥檛 dismiss those with whom he disagrees.
Being mayor has changed him, he says. 鈥淚 have had to listen to so many different people in this office, so many people from different walks of life that it鈥檚 given me an appreciation of other people鈥檚 viewpoints, sometimes begrudgingly because I鈥檝e had to admit that maybe they鈥檙e right.鈥
TenHaken runs every morning, sometimes as much as six or seven miles. He does Ironman competitions, too, even Obstacle Course Racing World Championships for three separate years. If you didn鈥檛 know better, you might think the mayor could pass for 19 years old. Athletic, trim, and wiry as a bed spring, he鈥檚 been tough to beat in any kind of race.
But he鈥檚 not a kid. He鈥檚 the elected mayor of Sioux Falls, South Dakota, who listens when he hears the voice of Jesus and when he hears the voices of the people he serves. He鈥檚 an entrepreneur, an innovator, a politician who鈥檚 the captain of a team of diverse men and women, boys and girls.
He鈥檚 a husband and a father and, he鈥檚 happy to tell you, a servant of the King.