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Lessons from Entrepreneurs Who Beat the Odds

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

The statistics surrounding the survival rate for small businesses have long been subject to fervid debate. Depending on who you’re talking to, the predicted life span for a startup can elicit grim to cautiously optimistic responses. One commonly cited figure is that half of all businesses go under in the first year while 95% fail within the first five years. According to a study done by the Small Business Administration, two-thirds of all new small business survive the first two years but only 44% will still be operating by year four.

Common culprits for failure include undercapitalization,cash-flow crises, and overexpansion. Then of course there are a host of external factors that nobody can predict—let alone adequately plan for—such as volatile credit markets and unstable economic cycles.

To gain insight into specific practices that enable small companies to keep going and growing even during difficult times, BusinessWeek profiled three entrepreneurs who have reached benchmarks in their companies’ life cycles: three years, five years, and 10 years. Their stories and strategies follow.

Year Three
BYD Ranch & Kennel
Bryan, Tex.
Founded 2007

After 20 years doing business administration for a number of small businesses, Miriam Rieck decided to go out on her own and open a dog and horse boarding kennel in Bryan, Tex. In 2007 Rieck and her husband plunked down $100,000 from their savings to purchase a 45-acre ranch and built BYD Ranch & Kennel’s facilities. Rieck says she differentiates it from her competition by limiting the number of runs so that she can devote more attention to the animals. The practice resonates with customers. “My clients are like an extended family and their animals are like their babies.”

Rieck says working directly under the owners of those earlier companies helped prepare her. For one, Rieck says she recognized the importance of defining boundaries between your private life and business life, a line that can often blur when you own your own business. Moreover, she says, “during the crucial first years I learned you really always need to recycle money back into your business instead of taking money out of it. A new business needs to stay fresh, especially in an industry with animals. The property can look dirty and dingy really fast. People consider their dogs like children and they want them taken care of like they are at home.” Rieck says she reinvests profits to keep her facilities in good shape. And, she says, “It’s important not to cross the line and take money meant for the business and make it your personal income.”

According to Rieck, a new small business that is customer service-based should recognize the importance of creating and deepening ties within the local community. “I always believed you should support the local community,” she says. That includes membership in a number of dog clubs and sponsoring fundraisers for the local animal shelter. “I get out there in the community and I have a good working relationship with the area veterinarians. Most of my business comes from word of mouth. “I do almost no print advertising.”

From the beginning, Rieck says she didn’t set specific benchmarks to meet each year. Instead, she set a goal to increase her client base 10% to 15% annually. In her first year in business, Rieck had 100 clients; she now has more than 300. “My ideas were simplistic; I stuck to my simple goals—nothing really grand.” Her revenue has increased accordingly: In her first year in business the firm made $17,000; during the second it hit $32,000, and Rieck says she is on pace to reach $60,000 this year.

ear Five
Space Architectural Design Firm
St. Louis
Founded 2005

When Tom Niemeier launched his firm, he planned to expand to a 20-architect office, then stop. “I had worked in a number of firms over the past 25 years and I always liked the comfort of a smaller business,” he says. Rather than rely on one type of client for revenue, early on Niemeier decided to make sure he launched a firm with a diversified clientele working on educational, corporate, health care, and hospitality projects—with residential comprising only about 10% or less of the workload. “Part of my growth strategy was to pick people who have expertise in areas that we didn’t. When we brought them in, we also brought in their client base,” he says.

In four years Space grew to 16 people (15 architects and one office manager). “We positioned ourselves so that the people we hired were already proven and had an expertise,” he says. Part of that strategy included circumscribing the firm’s growth ambitions. “We never set a time on when we wanted to get to a certain level, but once we had about 13, 14, or 15 architects we became a firm that could handle almost any size project except a mega $100 million project.”

Niemeier says another key decision was to keep his overhead lean. “Once a firm hits 25 to 30 people, then you have to bring in an accounting person, a full-time receptionist, and an office manager. You are just feeding the machine. We didn’t want to get to that point. We all like to draw and design and be part of the architecture staff; we didn’t want to just go out, play golf, and network new clients. We do that to a certain degree—but when you have 50 people that’s pretty much all you do—you are buried in managing and marketing the firm.”

When construction began to slow down in 2007 and business tapered off with the slumping economy, Niemeier tried to recalibrate and adjust to the new realities. In the past two years he says he laid off three people. He also purchased a construction company that he says “helped us lengthen our revenue on any given project. We design it and we build and manage the construction. It’s a nice source of revenue.” This year Niemeier expects revenue to reach about $1.7 million, down slightly from $1.8 million last year.

“There’s never been a moment yet that I felt I was not going to make it,” he says. “Even if we have had to cut people.”

Year 10
Resource Options
Needham, Mass.
Founded 1999

Before starting staffing provider Resource Options in 1999, Matt Carlin spent seven years as a hockey coach at Cornell and Dartmouth. After getting married, his wife, a former news anchor, and he decided that if they wanted to raise a family, they needed to change their lifestyles. For Carlin that meant trading in his travel schedule to start his own company.

Carlin says he chose the staffing business because it required a similar skill set to being a hockey coach: primarily recruiting talented people. “I would be utilizing the same methodologies and processes,” he says. He borrowed $50,000 from his father and made his first goal paying back the loan as soon as his company became profitable. He wanted to run a business that could sustain itself with two to three people.

“Each time we had success we wanted to have some more,” he says. “Initially I wanted to get to $5 million and I did that by year three. That same year Carlin says the business turned a profit and he was able to repay his father. “Then we went to $10 million, then $25 million.”

During the first year, Carlin says his biggest client that represented 10% to 15% of his receivables filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. “That was an enormous loss and a big hurdle to get over,” he says. “But what I learned from that is that I really had to do a better job of screening and qualifying our prospective clients. Not everybody is a good client and when they don’t pay their bills in a timely manner I realized we had to fire them.” Carlin says the situation also taught him “not to put all of our eggs in one basket.” Following that first-year debacle that nearly undermined the company, Carlin says he redoubled his efforts in order to bring in new business and made sure to diversify the base so that any one client wouldn’t expose the company too much.

After surviving the first year, Carlin says by the time he reached year five his biggest challenge was to keep up with growth. “We were growing so quickly, we opened branches and satellite offices. We were doubling and tripling revenue every year. We were growing faster than our projections. I did a lot of soul-searching and made some key hires in 2005, and I began to delegate more responsibility.” Carlin also invested in new technology and software to streamline processes and shore up his back office.

During the past two years the company’s lightning growth has stalled. Carlin says “we had to face the reality that we were not going to continue to double our revenue on an annual basis in a less-than-favorable economy. We are now learning to do more with less.” Resource Options has 31 full-time staffers and 850 field contractors—down from 1,200 contract positions in 2007. Carlin expects revenue to reach about $12.5 million to $13 million this year, down from $14 million last year.

Still, reaching the 10-year mark, Carlin says he realizes that owning your own business is as much a huge amount of work as it is joy. “If going into business was easy, everybody would do it.”

But he says his best lesson still comes from his days as a hockey coach. “The only way to run your business effectively is to hire people that are better than you and that’s what I think I am best at. It’s the players that win the game, not the coaches. I say hire people that are better than me and make sure those hires get in the habit of hiring people that are better than them.”

Written by Stacy Perman staff writer for BusinessWeek in New York.

Ethos 360 Selected For BBB Commercials On FOX

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

Ethos 360 is pleased and proud to announce the commercial spot it received through the Better Business Bureau’s Television Campaign, which was launched on Monday January 18th, 2010. The 30-second commercial aired on the FOX Network, highlighting BBB accredited businesses with perfect track record ratings. Since its commencement, Ethos 360 has strived to create positive change for local and nationwide businesses by offering entrepreneurs a suite of complimentary services including small business coaching, capital raising and business plan consulting services. The commercial has since been aired 18 times and is featured on our website here and here. Ethos 360 is fueling entrepreneurism!

How To Increase Your Chances For Getting An SBA Loan

Saturday, August 22nd, 2009

Many of our start up business clients at www.Ethos360.com come to us with basic questions on how to get financing from the SBA.  There are a few things to have in your back pocket (and on the tip of your tongue) before going to them in order to increase your chances of getting approved. 

1.        Know your business inside and out.

You will need a business plan that not only covers all of the details of your business idea, but is also devoid of unnecessary embellishment and hyper extended financial projections.  The SBA wants to know what you’re doing and how you’re going to do it.  Also, they want to see evidence that you are qualified and capable of executing the tasks outlined in your business plan.  The Management Summary of your business plan should detail your experience or at least the experience of the people you’ll have on hand to make up for any lack of qualifications you’ll have. 

2.       Show that you have invested in yourself and your business.

This seems like an obvious requirement, but a surprising number of people come up against a wall when faced with this.  The SBA is not a zero percent down financing solution. You will have to show that you have invested a good sum of your own money, time and effort into the business in order to get the SBA to put up the loan.  The SBA will not underwrite 100% of the venture so this means that you will have to not only have collateral for the loan, but will be providing evidence of having previously invested at least 25% to 50% of the asking amount in the business.

3.        Understand that the SBA will examine your asking amount and prepare.

The SBA is very concerned and interested to know where the money you’re requesting will be going.  Being prepared with a breakdown of future spending along with brief explanations as to what the money will be used for will help the SBA determine the level of your asking amount.  Approaching a loan officer and just saying, “I’ll be needing $100,000, please” will not work half as well as illustrating in detail what that $100,000 will do such as: “I’ll need $50,000 for a new truck, $20,000 tenant improvements on a new office space, $10,000 for working capital, and $30,000 on upfront rent on an office space.”  Keep in mind that a business that has been in existence for more than a year has a better chance of getting an SBA loan than a start-up. 

There are many more tips and tricks to help increase your chances at getting funding from the SBA.  It may seem a little daunting for a first timer to gather their ducks in a row, but there are many low cost ways to prepare you.  Small business coaches and mentors can help a great deal with putting together what you need to help your business get financing. Don’t be afraid of approaching the SBA, they’re there to help.

How to Raise Capital In Today’s Economic Climate

Saturday, August 22nd, 2009

Many people ask me if it’s possible to raise capital in the traditional sense these days.  Everyone knows and understands that lending practices have tightened and many VC firms have gently (and occasionally not so gently) refused to accept any more submissions.  But is it impossible to raise capital? Of course not, it’s just even harder now.  That’s not to say that raising capital has ever been easy, it has always been a challenging process.  If it was an easy process, there wouldn’t be companies charging money to hunt down investors and business coaches priming you for your journey ahead.  www.Ethos360.com will do both of these things.  Keep this in mind, no one can ever guarantee that you will get funding.  It’s an impossible to guarantee, and illegal to make any such claims.

What do investors want to see from you?  It’s certainly not 30 pages of a long winded business plan, especially if it’s a poorly written one.  It’s not an unsolicited phone call from you to take 45 minutes of their time while you wax poetic about your business or idea.  The same logic that says to keep your resume short is the same logic you should take to approach investors with your business.  There are a number of questions that investors need answered, and any entrepreneur answering them must now be in even more concise, with verified details supporting your business claims.  Some of these questions might surprise you, particularly if you’re not well prepared to face investors. 

1.       What is your business pitch? In one sentence.

This sounds easy enough, but too many capital seekers wind up grasping for an answer to this.  What is it that you do exactly? Why is it exceptional?

2.        What is your competitive advantage?

So you built a mouse-trap.  How is it better than other mouse-traps? How do you intend to overtake the current mouse-trap on the market right now?

3.        Define your market.

Who are you selling to? This basically asks you who your customers are, who they will be in the future, how big this pool of customers is, and whether or not this pool will grow in the future.  You will need to be able to elaborate on your answer.

This is list not exhaustive, there are many more questions regarding your marketing and sales strategy that need to be answered, preferably in less than a few sentences. 

In order to better position yourself to get funding, you need to take your feet and put them in the shoes of your audience.  Many entrepreneurs wind up deeply entrenched in the details of their business, they forget that the audience isn’t psychic, or willing to fill in the blanks themselves. Don’t make it hard for them to get these answers.  Investors generally are not willing to pull answers out of you; the onus is on you to give them what they want and need to hear, preferably quickly and in a straight forward manner. 

These questions are just a small tip of the basic questions that investors need answers to.  Consider taking the time to answer these types of questions as the better you know your own business, the easier it becomes to explain it to someone that you’d like as a funding source.  We can open the door for you, but you need to take the initiative to step through prepared and ready to take on the tough questions.

How To Start A Business For Under $5000

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

In today’s economic environment, individuals with entrepreneurial mindsets are exploring new ideas for businesses that will not only survive in a recession, but will also thrive. The key to starting a new business is maximizing its resources while remaining lean in operations. Let’s face it: most people do not have $100,000 sitting in their pockets. So, how is it possible, then, to start a business with a minimal amount of capital? The good news is that there are literally hundreds of business concepts that can be created with less than $5,000 in start-up costs.

Businesses under $1,000

Yes, believe it or not, it is possible to start a business under $1,000. According to BusinessTown.com, there are 82 business categories that do not require more than $1,000 in start-up fees. For example, to become a Merchandise Demonstrator, start-up costs are estimated between $500 and $1,000.  However, earnings can rest between $20,000 and $35,000 per year. This business requires a person who has garnered a network of business contacts to demonstrate products for one or more specific companies at trade shows and seminars. This business can be learned first by handing out samples at grocery stores, which typically pays up to $50 per day. By beginning here, the person has a launching point from which to establish relationships with larger corporations, with the ultimate goal of merchandising their products. Other examples of inexpensive businesses under $1,000 entail Lawn Care Services, Toy Cleaning and Repairing Services, Reminder Services, Professional Organizers, Motor Vehicle Transportation, and Roommate Referral Services.

Businesses between $1,000 and $5,000

The good news is that there are literally hundreds of business concepts that can be created with $5,000 or less. As reported by the aforementioned online source, 136 businesses cost between $1,000 and $5,000 in start-up fees. Most of these concepts only require a phone, desk, and a few other tools such as a list of established contacts and a passionate drive to build a steady pipeline. Some of the more interesting businesses that stood out include a Resume Service Provider, a Mobile Hair Salon, a Meeting Planner, a Mover, a Window Washing Service, a Vending Machine Owner, Flower and Tree Cutting and Trimming Services, and Speechwriting Services. Now, these are only eight of the 136 businesses listed, but are businesses that may appeal to a larger number of entrepreneurs, than the more concentrated, niche-targeted businesses such as an Adoption Search Service firm. 

The antiquated notion that a business cannot be started without a large lump sum of money is no longer the reality. Many businesses today have flourished based off of lean operations and low start-up costs. Today’s world does not require every type of business to begin its first day in operations out of a 10-story office building with leather couches and a glitzy waiting room. Companies can start out of one’s home and see immediate results. Entrepreneurial expert Bonny Alpo, who has owned her own copywriting service since 2005, reports that the least expensive business concepts revolve around pet care, home care, and delivery and moving services.

There’s no excuse for not being able to start your own small business either as a full time effort or start off part-time until it grows. Contact Ethos 360 (http://www.ethos360.com/contact) for additional assistance and business coaching.