Ready to Rumble?
Today's economy is in a turnaround, but we need entrepreneurs to keep the momentum going. Get your company geared up to take on the challenge.
When the U.S. economy goes into a downturn, more Americans,
forced out of their old jobs, start businesses. Ultimately, these
new businesses help power an economic recovery, providing jobs and
putting money in the pockets of consumers. It happened during the
last major economic slowdown, in the early 1990s. Given this history, many economists were prepared for
entrepreneurs to lead the country out of the economic slowdown of
the early 2000s. But for a time, entrepreneurs didn't respond.
In the summer of 2003, John Satagaj, president of the Small
Business Legislative Council, said, "I expected us to be in an
[entrepreneurial] spurt. I haven't seen it yet." In the past six months, however, all that has changed. The U.S.
economy is predicted to grow by more than 4 percent in 2004. In
comparison to previous downturns, this time, many small-business
owners waited for the economy to tick upward before making new
investments. But now that the economy has started to rebound, small
businesses have become more optimistic. A survey released in March
by the Business Roundtable, a trade group, found that the number of
executives planning to hire outnumbered those planning to slash
jobs for the first time in a year and a half. "In the past
[few] months, clients have opened their wallets," says Rob
Levinson, founder of RL Strategies, a Boston-based marketing firm that
works with entrepreneurial companies. And Levinson says, now that
an entrepreneurial surge is beginning again, savvy businesspeople
are developing strategies to take advantage of it. Slow StartContent Continues Below
Unlike previous recessions, in this downturn, signs of a
small-business-led recovery were slow to emerge. According to Heidi
Neck, an author of the 2002 "Global Entrepreneurship Monitor
(GEM)," a study funded by the Ewing Marion Kaufmann
Foundation, the number of Americans planning to start new
businesses decreased. And a report released by the outplacement
firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas Inc. showed that the
percentage of jobless managers who said they were starting new
businesses dropped to an average of 6.8 percent in 2003 (down from
9.6 percent in 2002). Compare that to the 1991-92 recession, when
roughly 15 percent of jobless managers started companies of their
own. There are several reasons why the surge was slow in coming. Mike
Smith, former head of his own PR firm, says the bursting of the
tech bubble still inhibited small-business growth in the early
2000s, as the tech crash made VCs gun shy. Fears of global
terrorism and the war in Iraq also spooked many entrepreneurs, who
worried these events would deter consumers. And, says Erik Pages,
former policy director at the National Commission on
Entrepreneurship, a group that focuses on public policy and
entrepreneurship, people were more reluctant to start businesses
because it was harder for them to obtain benefits—primarily
health insurance—than during the recession in the early
'90s.
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Brewing Big (With a Micro Soul)After 18 years of growth and with annual revenue about to break $100 million, Kim Jordan still maintains New Belgium's freewheeling spirit.
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