veteran entrepreneur presentation by cary mcentee
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Veteran Entrepreneurs
Cary McEntee
BLUF• Entrepreneurship Overview
• Characteristics of an Entrepreneur
• Military Training and Skills that Transition
• Challenges
• Process
• How to get Started
• Franchise Options
• SBA Patriot Loan
EntrepreneurshipEntrepreneurship is the process of starting and running a business. The entrepreneur identifies a need, an opportunity, chooses/develops a business model, acquires the human and other required resources, and is fully responsible for its success or failure.
Opportunity
Background• Military veteran entrepreneurs have used their learned
leadership characteristics to launch well-known entrepreneurial operations such as Fed Ex, Chick Fil A, American Online, Little Caesars Pizza, and Nike.
• Veterans are majority owners of more than two million private businesses in the United States or 9% of total businesses. Those businesses employ 5.8 million people and spend an average of $210 billion a year in payroll (SBA, 2012).
• Military experience is an even stronger predictor of self-employment than graduate level education
US Veteran & Non-Veteran Population
(300,000,000)Veteran Non-Veteran
Total Population 24,000,000 276,000,000
Total Business Owner
6,000,000 30,360,0000
Ratio of Business Owner
4:1 9:1
Percent of Population
25%% 11%Krumm (2009)
Key Indicators• Military service appears to have provided business skills to a significant
proportion of both current veteran business owners and those planning to become owners.
• The self-employment rate for veterans was higher than that of non-veterans in each year from 1979 through 2010, the last year covered by the SBA.
• About 22 percent of veterans in the U.S. household population were either purchasing or starting a business.
• About 23 percent of current veteran business owners, and 32 percent of those planning or in the process of starting a new business, indicated that their venture would be 50 percent or more internet-dependent (SBA, 2012).
Learned Skills• Military provided the foundation, skills, and training.
• Discipline
• Tenacity
• Planning
• Leadership
• Ambiguous situations
• Flexibility and Adaptability
• Entrepreneurship talent comes natural, skills are developed.
Programs
ChallengesCompetition
Outside Variables
Experience Level
Financial
Time Management
Commitment
Process• Dream
• Opportunity
• Getting started
• SWOT
• Business Plan
• Financing
• Operation
Writing a Business Plan
George Washington
“If I have six hours to cut down a tree, I’d spend the first 4 hours sharpening the ax.”
Start Up Avenues • Patriot Loan $500,000
• Private Financing
• Partnerships
• Franchises
• Government contracts
• Veteran Business Outreach Programs• Workshops
• Training
• Mentorship
Franchisees• Benefits of established and
successful business processes.• Over 600 franchise
companies participate in the program.
• Entrepreneurship Overview
• Characteristics of an Entrepreneur
• Military Training and Skills that Transition
• Challenges
• Process
• How to get Started
• Franchise Options
• SBA Patriot Loan
TAKEAWAYS
Websites• SBA Website has directions to all of these services.
• http://www.sba.gov/content/what-sba-offers-help-small-businesses-grow
• http://www.sba.gov/community/blogs/community-blogs/small-business-matters/leaving-military-life-entrepreneurship-%E2%80%93-5-essential-resources-can-help
• http://www.sba.gov/offices/headquarters/ovbd/resources/362341
• International Franchise Association. http://www.franchise.org/Veteran-Franchise.aspx
Questions
Contact Info
Cary McEntee757-469-0991
CaryMcEntee57@gmail.com
SBA.gov
VA.gov
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