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Doing it her way: Women Entrepreneurs
September 17, 2003 @ 6:33 am and 8:20 am on 90.3
The facts
do seem gloomy these days-a weak economy, high unemployment rates
and few new jobs available. But that’s only looking at half the
picture. Over the past 30 years, a new wave of entrepreneurs is
finally surfacing with enough influence to boost an otherwise slumping
economy. As part of Making Change: Reinventing
our Economy, ideastream’s Shula Neuman reports:

For Kelly Ferrell,
it was about freedom. She had worked as a graphic designer for someone
else. But she looked around and saw how most people struggled to balance
life and work. Ferrell decided she could make more money on her own
AND maintain some freedom.
KELLY FERRELL: It was just to see if
I could do it, I guess. I wanted to freedom to live, whatever that
meant. I just saw people that were working and trying to raise a
family and it just seemed insane to me and I was only like 25. So
I thought I would try it when I was young. I didn’t have anything
to lose.
Ferrell is among 10 million women nationwide that own their own business.
In 2002 those women-owned businesses generated more than 2-TRILLION
dollars in sales nation-wide. According to the Center for Women’s
Business Research, in Northeast Ohio nearly 69-thousand people work
in women-owned businesses.
That’s a force to be reckoned with says Jeanne Coughlin, author of
The Rise of Women Entrepreneurs. She’s also chairman-elect of the
Council of Smaller Enterprises. Coughlin says it’s time that the region’s
business leaders saw the potential influence women entrepreneurs wield,
even though their businesses don’t look like traditional corporations.
JEANNE COUGHLIN: They’re less hierarchical,
they tend to ask more people their opinions before making their
decisions and again, those soft skill of human resources and communication.
Coughlin says Northeast Ohio’s power brokers need to recognize that
leadership doesn’t mean what it used to.
JEANNE COUGHLIN: I think in this region
there is a perception that the best leaders come from big companies,
from those people who have risen through the ranks. And I think
if you look at the qualities that go with entrepreneurship, we need
to tap into that and have people with that perspective and those
strengths engaged.
Civic involvement isn’t a one-way street either, says Marlene Herman,
owner of two Aamco Transmission shops in the Cleveland area. Through
her involvement with organizations like COSE and the National Association
of Women Business Owners, Herman made business connections that helped
her overcome one of the hardest hurdles she’s faces in owning a male-dominated
business.
MARLENE HERMAN: So you have to go in
and see those people and again it comes back to credibility. You
have to sell yourself and your company and men usually only have
to sell the company because it’s just easier, there’s assumed knowledge.
But with us you have to sell both and then you have to prove yourself.
Diana Bilimoria (bili-MORE-ia), an associate professor at the Case
Weatherhead School of Management, says part of what women have to
prove is that their businesses have staying power.
DIANA BILIMORIA: The distinctive factor
between women and men owned business is not are they more profitable,
but will they survive. In fact, women owned businesses are likely
to survive even more.
And they’re growing. The Center For Women’s Business Research says
over the last five years, the number of women-owned firms grew by
more than double the national average. Explaining their success, Bilimoria
says: a.)women intentionally keep their businesses small and grow
them slowly; b.)they frequently provide more perks to balance work-life
concerns, and c.) they show more concern for the environment. But
there is a downside, Bilimoria says. Investors still operate under
an outdated paradigm: that success in business means fast growth and
an aggressive business plan. Women entrepreneurs don’t necessarily
fit that mold, so they don’t attract the amount of venture capital
that helps generate a healthy economy.
DB: So venture capitalists need education,
they need incentives and they need to be able to understand that
women owned businesses are successful, that they are contributing
to the economy and they are helpful to regional development…
For Northeast Ohio, that return was 8.3 million dollars in sales in
2002. For the women who run the businesses, the best returns aren’t
necessarily the financial kind. After 16 years in business, Kelly
Ferrell’s communications firm-Design Room Creative-does give her the
freedom she sought. She pretty much picks the clients she wants to
work with. She works four days a week-and is the sole supporter of
her three children and husband--a choice she and her husband made
three years ago.
KF: he said, if you want to build the
business, I’ll leave the job and you can focus and grow. And so
we bit the bullet and he did and so far so good. He’s been home
and when he is here on Fridays I’m at home with the kids or vice-versa.
One last stat about women entrepreneurs and their impact on the economy.
The census bureau predicted that by 2025, women will own 55 percent
of all businesses in the country. Which means we could see a lot more
soccer dads behind the wheels of those mini-vans.
In Cleveland, Shula Neuman, 90.3
Resources:
- The Center for Women’s
Business Research
Provides information about women business owners and their enterprises
worldwide. The Center’s mission is to unleash the economic potential
of women entrepreneurs by conducting research, sharing information
and increasing knowledge about this fast-growing sector of the
economy.
- Women’s Business Enterprise
National Council
The Women's Business Enterprise National Council (WBENC), founded
in 1997, is the nation's leading advocate of women-owned businesses
as suppliers to America's corporations. It also is the largest
third-party certifier of businesses owned and operated by women
in the United States
- National Association
of Women Business Owners
This membership organization supports and encourages women entrepreneurs
into economic, social, and political spheres of power worldwide
- The
Small Business Association’s - Women Entrepreneurs
This section of the site is geared toward women business owners.
- National Women’s Business
Council
This is a bi-partisan Federal advisory council created to serve
as an independent source of advice and policy recommendations
to the President, Congress, and the U.S. Small Business Administration
on economic issues of importance to women business owners. The
Council's mission is to promote bold initiatives, policies and
programs designed to support women's business enterprises at all
stages of development in the public and private sector marketplaces,
from start-up to success to significance.
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