Archive for November, 2009
Supporting Underserved Entrepreneurs
Posted by admin in Build Business credit, Small Business Credit, Surviving Today's Economy on November 24th, 2009
Supporting Underserved Entrepreneurs
Goldman Sachs’ initiative to help small business has drawn headlines. Here are some programs targeting microenterprises and inner-city entrepreneurs
Goldman Sachs (GS) announced last week that it is teaming up with Berkshire Hathaway (BRKA) CEO Warren Buffett to launch 10,000 Small Businesses, a $500 million initiative aimed at assisting low-income entrepreneurs.
Goldman is hardly alone in investing in small business. There are thousands of organizations—private, public, nonprofit, and hybrid—whose primary mission is to mentor, train, educate, and fund entrepreneurs.
One group reaching out to struggling entrepreneurs in distressed communities is Rising Tide Capital. The Jersey City (N.J.)-based nonprofit, founded by Alfa Demmellash and Alex Forrester when they were classmates at Harvard University, offers one-on-one business coaching and a 10-week entrepreneurship course called the Community Business Academy.
Since it was founded in 2004, Rising Tide has worked with more than 250 individuals, mostly single mothers, in Jersey City. “We noticed that there was a gap in the services provided, particularly to low-income entrepreneurs living in distressed inner cities. A lot of the established groups, such as SCORE and the U.S.Small Business Development Centers, focus on entrepreneurs further along in their journey,” Demmellash says.
far from aid: inner-city entrepreneurs
She and Forrester recognized that many micro-entrepreneurs, such as mothers offering home day-care services, did not consider themselves small business owners and did not tap into existing educational and coaching services. Even if they were aware of such resources, she says, they tend to be delivered in far-off suburbs and office parks remote from an inner-city population that often lacks transportation.
“These groups were struggling to find people to lend to, but they were not accessible to the population they were targeting,” Demmellash says. “Our idea was to be on the ground in the community.”
Another disconnect that Rising Tide discovered is that traditional entrepreneurial training programs frequently focus on formal business plan writing, a daunting prospect for entrepreneurs with limited educational backgrounds. “A lot of people we work with are coming out of an educational system that hasn’t been invested in for decades. They can’t fathom spending six to eight weeks trying to write a business plan,” Demmellash says.
Her group focuses on helping entrepreneurs organize their businesses so that a working business plan often results, she says. Rising Tide markets its programs by partnering with such existing organizations as National Urban League and Dress for Success. Flyers about the academy are even mailed out with monthly welfare checks, Demmellash says.
Entrepreneurs and would-be entrepreneurs interested in Rising Tide are invited to an orientation session where they evaluate their status to determine if they are ready for the program. Everyone who is selected to participate in the academy gets a full scholarship.
Can Rising Tide replicate elsewhere?
Initially, Rising Tide offered its educational seminars for free but found it didn’t get the response or commitment it had hoped for. “Free generally implies ‘without value,’ so we changed the dynamic and made the program selective. It’s amazing to offer someone an educational opportunity who has never before been offered an investment in their future,” Demmellash says.
As it achieves successes in Jersey City, Rising Tide hopes replicate its model in other disadvantaged cities throughout the U.S. and around the world, she says.
Another organization focusing on underserved, inner-city businesses is Next Street Financial, a merchant bank founded near Boston in 2005. While it operates on a for-profit basis, the bank has a “double bottom line,” says Tim Ferguson, who, like Next Street co-founder Ron Walker, is a long-time banker.
“We’re here to make money for ourselves, our shareholders, and our clients, but everything we do also has to have an economic development component to it. We want to know that we are having an impact on job creation in the inner-city marketplace,” Ferguson says.
In contrast to Rising Tide, Next Street targets established companies that have revenues between $1 million and $100 million, with most clients operating in the $4-million-to-$60-million range, Ferguson says. The bank, based on a European model, operates holistically, providing access to capital as well as advice on strategy, management, and marketing.
“There’s an enormous gap between what traditional financial service providers offer and what smaller businesses actually need. And it’s been going on for a decade or longer,” Ferguson says. “Banks have consolidated and adopted a ‘check the box’ approach to credit. Denial rates for African-American and Hispanic business owners are five to six times what they are for a white-owned business.”
No ownership—just brutal honesty
Walker and Ferguson, who met on a nonprofit board and dreamed up Next Street over what they call “a magical cup of coffee,” aim to provide Fortune 500-level consulting and mentoring to small business owners who could not afford that quality on their own.
Their typical client is an established company—most have been around 15 or 16 years—with an experienced CEO who is willing to embrace partnership with Next Street. The bank does not take an ownership stake in its clients, but “we will be brutally honest about their status and our opinions; they have to embrace us and not ignore our advice,” Ferguson says.
Companies that participate pay monthly retainers of $15,000 to $25,000 or work with Next Street on a project basis, in which case fees can range from $5,000 to $100,000. In the past three years, about 50 companies have become Next Street clients, Walker says, and two have gotten loans of $1.5 million. Next Street has helped an additional six companies raise capital from other sources.
Next Street is looking for clients in New York and Boston. Like Rising Tide, its founders hope to expand to other cities, including Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Miami. Companies that are minority- or female-owned and fit their revenue range, but operate outside of the Northeast, can apply for Next Street’s help at its Web site.
Because there is no definitive clearinghouse listing every organization that aids entrepreneurs, there are some gulfs between small companies that need help and the groups that provide it. Here are some possibilities for entrepreneurs looking to find help with education or funding:
The official Web site of Global Entrepreneurship Week lists events sponsored by the more than 1,100 organizations that participated in GEW activities from Nov. 16-20. The events—searchable by city, state, and country—have concluded, but the groups sponsoring them may serve as local starting places for entrepreneurial resources.
The Association for Enterprise Opportunity represents microenterprise development organizations. It also has a searchable resource library.
The Boston-based Initiative for a Competitive Inner City focuses on small business development in underserved areas.(Read an interview with the founder and learn more about the group in this special report.)
Los Angeles-based Operation Hope undertakes entrepreneurial and anti-poverty initiatives around the world.
The Accion Network is a microlender and microenterprise development organization that operates around the world and in the U.S.
Boston-based InnerCity Entrepreneurs sponsors a nine-month “StreetWise MBA” program and partners with the U.S. Small Business Administration in its educational initiatives.
Goldman’s 10,000 Small Businesses is planned as a five-year program modeled on the firm’s 10,000 Women initiative, which helps women entrepreneurs in 18 countries around the globe.
Karen E. Klein is a Los Angeles-based writer who covers entrepreneurship and small-business issues.
Myths Of Owning A Small Business
Posted by admin in Small Business Credit, Starting A Business, Surviving Today's Economy on November 24th, 2009
Entrepreneurs
Myths Of Owning A Small Business
Miriam Marcus, Maureen Farrell and Melanie Lindner 11.12.09, 11:00 AM ET
In 2007, Anand Sanwal was managing a $50 million innovation fund for American Express. His job: to identify and incubate new business ideas–and that meant doing gobs of market research, much of it on small, closely held companies. One problem: Public information on private companies was scarce, and the data that did exist wasn’t in much of a structured, useful format.
Sanwal knew he wasn’t the only one looking for that kind of information. So he and some partners launched Manhattan-based CB Information Systems to do just that. The company’s Web-based software, marketed under the name ChubbyBrain (www.chubbybrain.com), trolls the Web for data on private companies–what they do, who is buying and selling them and for how much. “We are all engineers who went to business school, so we thought we had what was an elegant, logical and robust plan,” says Sanwal, 35. “We were pretty happy with ourselves.”
But no matter what the textbooks say, having a great idea and a solid business plan often aren’t enough. To fund the software development, Sanwal was banking on income from a few consulting gigs inspired by a book he had written on corporate-resource allocation. Sanwal had gotten roughly $2 million in verbal agreements from CEOs or CFOs at three large financial-service companies. Then the stock market tanked and the deals were put on hold.
With no backup plan, Sanwal dipped into his savings and cobbled a bunch of smaller consulting engagements to keep his dream alive. Larger deals (the paying kind) followed. Now ChubbyBrain competes with Dow Jones and Thomson in tracking venture activity, and plans to roll out a line of new private-company data products in 2010. While stronger for the experience, Sanwal says the hard lesson still lingers: “A deal is not closed until the ink dries, no matter how many assurances you have from the other party.”
Eye Openers: 11 Myths Of Owning A Small Business
If only you knew then what you know now. … There are plenty of reasons that statement rings true for battle-tested small-business owners. We asked a bunch of them to share the most commonly misplaced assumptions about entrepreneurship. They just might spare you that familiar lament. For the full list, check out our slideshow.
Myth: Entrepreneurs are risk-taking visionaries.
Truth. Despite what some in the media would have you believe, you don’t have to be a swashbuckling risk taker to run your own show. “These glamorous stories serve to make entrepreneurship appear to be an exclusive art that’s relegated to a few people who exhibit a variety of specific traits,” says Len Schlesinger, president of Babson College in Babson Park, Mass. “Entrepreneurs are actually very good at avoiding risk rather than taking it on.”
Myth: The idea is more important than the details.
Truth: Whiz-bang new technologies and business models are sexy, but they aren’t a requirement. “A well-executed, decent idea is better than a poorly-executed, excellent idea,” says Gerald Shreiber, founder and chief executive of J&J Snack Foods. Shreiber’s secret to minding the details: a healthy dose of paranoia. “I have 2,600 people to worry about,” he says. “Somewhere, God or my parents and grandparents are watching over me.”
Myth: Jealously guard your idea, lest someone might steal it.
Truth: You may be onto something, but you surely don’t have all the answers (if you even knew to ask all the right questions). “While you don’t want to put your entire business plan on the Internet, entrepreneurs who do their homework look to a relatively large but select number of people to talk through their ideas,” says Reid Hoffman, founder and chief executive of LinkedIn.com.
Myth: Your business plan must be rock solid from the get-go.
Truth: Building a company is an iterative process, says Hoffman, and entrepreneurs must be willing to adapt–to changes in customer demand or the competitive landscape. “It’s not like chess where you have a pre-formulated, deterministic strategy and must get all the moves in exactly the right sequence,” he says. There should be a principal plan in place–see Ten Things All Good Business Plans Must Have–but it should be flexible and updated constantly. Says Hoffman: “No battle plan survives impact with the enemy.”
Myth: Passion will get you there.
Truth: Passion can ease the pain of 15-hour days. It can galvanize employees and win over customers. In some cases, it can even enthrall deep-pocketed investors. But it is no silver bullet. The most effective entrepreneurs learn to modulate their emotions, says Rich Gelfond, chief executive of IMAX. His mantra: “It’s never as good as it looks, or as bad as it seems.”
Myth: You can set your own schedule.
Truth: “I thought I’d be the boss and sit back and put my feet up,” says Mike Zaya, chief executive of Printrunner, an online printing and ink-cartridge company. Reality looked a bit different, including a several-night stretch of sleeping but two hours a night at the office. “You end up being the goalie of the company, and the goalie has to sacrifice their body,” adds Zaya. “You have to be the first man in and last man out on any given day.”
Myth: There’s glory in it.
Truth: For all its rewards, entrepreneurship can also feel like a thankless job. “No one tells me that I did really well, it’s always me telling everyone else that,” says Amir Korangy, owner of the Real Deal, a real-estate focused publishing company in New York City. Korangy says entrepreneurs need internal motivation and reassurance because it rarely comes from outside. “After a few years, you want someone to say you’re doing good work,” he adds. “But the only way to tell yourself you’re doing a good job is to see an increase in revenues.”
Geithner Calls on US Banks to Boost Lending
Posted by admin in Small Business Credit, Starting A Business on November 20th, 2009
Geithner Calls on US Banks to Boost Lending
U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner on Wednesday called on banks that received government aid during the financial crisis to boost lending, saying limitations on credit availability for small businesses may slow the nation’s recovery.
“We need banks to be working with us, not against recovery,” he said, kicking off a day long Obama administration summit aimed at devising ways to strengthen the flow of credit to small businesses.
Associated Press
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner at the Small Business Financing Forum, with SBA Administrator Karen Mills, left, and Kevin Watters of JP Morgan.
“The recovery in earnings across the banking system . . . is not because the surviving banks are particularly smart and clever,” Geithner said. “It’s because the taxpayers of the United States and their elected representatives decided that to save the economy, we had to save the financial system.”
Geithner, however, defended the rebound in bank earnings, suggesting the more positive figures are necessary for the economy to rebound. Meanwhile, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Chairman Sheila Bair said she expects “credit losses will continue to hold down” earnings in the banking sector.
Geithner said banks bear at least some responsibility for the financial crisis and, therefore, are obligated to help communities recover. He said the Obama administration is committed to doing more to help small businesses access the credit they need and would move as quickly as possible.
“We cannot wait until next year to see these aggressive actions,” Sen. Mark Warner (D., Va.) said.
Small businesses are typically more reliant on bank financing than their larger counterparts. “When banks pull back, small businesses take the hardest hit,” Geithner said.
Treasury’s latest monthly survey of bank lending shows the 22 largest banks receiving government capital during the crisis tightened lending for the fifth time in the past six months, with total outstanding loan balances falling 1% in September.
Small business lending also dipped 1%, as did originations of new small business loans. Small business loans outstanding have slid by $10 billion since April, down to $259 billion in September, the report showed.
“This credit crunch is not over,” Geithner said. “It may feel dramatically better for a large business, but it is not over for small businesses across the country.”
Write to Meena Thiruvengadam at meena.thiruvengadam@dowjones.com

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