Paper Writing Services your company’s story, with record sales and seemingly smooth sailing ahead. Then the industry implodes. Your sales drop 70%, and your prospects
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put it at the top of The Wall Street Journal’s Small Business, Big Innovation competition. In July, the Journal invited entrepreneurs to share the ideas they’ve used to survive the worst downturn in decades. Over the next three months, more than 100 entries poured in, ranging from a rubber-duck manufacturer in San Rafael, Calif., to a consignment retailer |
Assignment 1: Forming an Innovative Business Due Week 4 and worth 260 points Go to the Wall Street Journal’s Website and read “And the Most Innovative Entrepreneur Is…”, . After reading the article, conceive an innovative idea for a new product or service. Imagine that you are going to start a business that offers that product or service. Write a six to eight (6-8) page paper in wch you: Your assignment must follow these formatting requirements: The specific course learning outcomes associated with ts assignment are: Grading for ts assignment will be based on answer quality, logic / organization of the paper, and language and writing skills, using the following rubric found Here s the article if your not able to open it: Imagine ts. You’re coming off the best year in your company’s story, with record sales and seemingly smooth sailing ahead. Then the industry implodes. Your sales drop 70%, and your prospects seem even If you’re Quadlogic Controls Corp., of New York City, you tnk fast, get creative and rewrite your business plan. And you do it so well that you not only stay afloat but thrive in the teeth of the recession—taking on dozens of new workers and setting a record for revenue. Quadlogic’s nimble reinvention put it at the top of The Wall Street Journal’s Small Business, Big Innovation competition. In July, the Journal invited entrepreneurs to share the ideas they’ve used to survive the worst downturn in decades. Over the next three months, more than 100 entries poured in, ranging from a rubber-duck manufacturer in San Rafael, Calif., to a consignment retailer in Tampa, Fla., and a Cnese-language school in Riverside, Conn. Their strategies for overcoming the harsh economy were just as diverse—and could be a model and an inspiration for other companies that face similar struggles. Some expanded their offerings, adding goods or services to appeal to consumers with less disposable income. Others tapped new markets to cater to a larger demograpc or an underserved niche. Some abandoned their original business model and pursued an entirely different venture. Sayre Swarztrauber, left, and Doron Shafrir, two founders of the winning firm, Quadlogic Controls The Journal’s small-business staff narrowed the field to 10 finalists, and then a panel of editors—Vanessa O’Connell, Alan Murray and Dennis Berman—chose an overall winner. Readers also voted for their favorite. So, what exactly did Quadlogic do to earn the top spot? Let’s go back to early 2009 for the answer. Times were good for the company, wch made energy-tracking products that let different tenants in the same building manage and pay for their own usage. The two remaining founders— Doron Shafrir and Sayre Swarztrauber —had just put up the best revenue figures the 27-year-old company had ever seen. All of a sudden, though, the housing market was in shambles, driving sales into the ground. So Quadlogic decided to stake its future on a daring reinvention plan. Messrs. Shafrir and Swarztrauber had learned from a business associate a few years earlier that in developing countries, energy theft was a major problem. The entrepreneurs had even begun tinkering with a new product to prevent utility-metering systems from being breached. Only it was far from complete, and they hadn’t yet identified any potential buyers. The partners decided that their best move would be to ramp up production of the experimental line and launch an intense marketing push. “You have to place your bets,” says Mr. Swarztrauber, 56. “We saw our survival threatened and that gave us the incentive to make it happen.” The gambit paid off. Witn five months, Quadlogic Controls signed a multimillion-dollar deal with a private utility company in Jamaica, and a recovery was under way. Today, Messrs. Shafrir and Swarztrauber say the company’s new line has a dozen customers, all in markets thousands of miles away such as Jamaica, Mexico, Costa Rica and Ecuador. What’s more, demand for its original energy-tracking systems is close to the level it was just prior to the recession, thanks in part to an improvement in the commercial housing market. The company has ballooned to roughly 90 employees from about 20 two years ago, and it’s on track to post $20 million in revenue ts year, $5 million more than its previous gh. Messrs. Shafrir and Swarztrauber credit the turnaround they pulled off to constantly keeping an eye out for new business opportunities. Wle they say it’s important to focus on proven models of success, it’s also critical to regularly set aside time to investigate potential alternative sources of revenue. “I always have a plan B and a plan C for just in case,” says Mr. Shafrir, 64. “You never know.” Here’s a look at the other finalists in the competition, and what they did to stay afloat. Alejandro Velez and Nikl Arora, co-founders of Back to the Roots LLC in Oakland, Calif., have grown a business out of other companies’ trash. They manufacture grow-at-home oyster mushroom kits filled with used coffee grounds. WSJ’s Lauren Rudser reports. Alejandro Velez and Nikl Arora seemed destined to launch a company together. Before they had even met, they went to the same teacher at the University of California, Berkeley’s Haas School of Business for advice on the same offbeat business idea: growing gourmet mushrooms in used coffee grounds, rather than pricier fertilizers and wood. After the teacher brought them together, the new partners approached neighborhood coffee shops offering to haul away their waste free. In a fraternity kitchen, they grew their first crop of mushrooms in a coffee can filled with discarded grounds—and it worked. “We got so jazzed about that first bucket,” says Mr. Velez, now 24, who turned down a Wall Street banking job to co-found Back to the Roots LLC with Mr. Arora in April 2009. The company saw strong sales at a local Whole Foods and nearby farmers’ markets. But scaling up proved tricky. Even though raw materials were cheap, other parts of the business were getting expensive, and financing was tight. It didn’t take long before the partners outgrew an 800-square-foot warehouse and payables were already much gher than receivables, Mr. Velez says. Alejandro Velez and Nikl Arora of Back to the Roots LLC “We came to a crossroads in the business where we could have tried to become regional mushroom farmers,” says Mr. Velez. “But we weren’t mushroom farmers.” Instead, they used the technique to develop grow-your-own mushroom kits, eliminating the need for a costly infrastructure. The kits can produce 1.5 pounds of mushrooms in just 10 days. Today, the company collects some 20,000 pounds of used grounds from area coffee shops and repurposes them into growing kits (as well as a separate product, $10 bags of nutrient-rich soil). Whole Foods and Home Depot are now stocking the kits, with deals in the works with SkyMall and Wegmans. Ts year, revenue t $1.1 million, up from $240,000 in 2010. “We’re profitable after just two years,” says Mr. Velez. “But even better, we’re reconnecting people with growing food again.” Many small businesses in the housing industry grew with the real-estate boom—and then went bust when the bubble burst. Not Henrybuilt Corp.—thanks to some quick tnking by founder and Cef Executive Scott Hudson. The Seattle firm specializes in designing kitchens that range from $30,000 to $100,000. Launched in 2001, the company expanded quickly. In 2006, it opened a New York City showroom, wch doubled in size in just 18 months. By 2008, the company was working on some 200 projects in the U.S., Mexico and Canada, and sales had tripled since 2004. Scott Hudson of Henrybuilt Corp. In October 2008, sales came to a standstill. “Everyone was canceling projects,” says Mr. Hudson, 50. Over the next two months, the company lost hundreds of thousands of dollars of revenue, he says. With clients shying away from the gh-cost renovations, Mr. Hudson launched a subsidiary in 2009 called Viola Park Corp., wch provides clients with a modular option based on the Henrybuilt designs. Rather than working with an arctect, clients use the company’s software to configure and customize the layout and design to their liking—a cheaper and quicker process that costs roughly half what the Henrybuilt kitchens do. “We listened to the market, rather than waiting to get back to the old days,” Mr. Hudson says of the strategy. Since Viola Park launched, both businesses have collectively grown about 10%. Viola Park now represents 20% of the company’s revenue and has doubled every year. But the biggest benefit to the company has been psychological, says Mr. Hudson. When tngs got tough, he laid off two of s 25 employees. But after Viola Park launched, the two divisions grew to a combined 30 employees, who felt excited and inspired amid the industry’s turmoil. “It drove morale,” he says. “We created opportunity in a time when everytng else was contracting.” Shane Bauer started Laugngstock Design as a grapc-design and custom greeting-card company in 2007. But the downturn left fewer businesses and families able to afford its gh-end custom cards, wch required a first-time outlay of at least $40 to create a grapc using a likeness of the recipient’s head. s Duluth, Minn., business needed a new revenue stream. Shane and Jenny Bauer of Laugngstock Design Mr. Bauer was inspired by a T-srt on display in a department store featuring the words, “Bite Me.” He thought there might be a market for srts with positive slogans to counteract that kind of negative message. “I thought, man, tngs are getting pretty bad,” says the 35-year-old. So, he created Happy Space PositiveWear, a line of casual clotng and accessories that pair s intricate grapc designs with positive messages—such as a guitar with the slogan “Live In Harmony.” Mr. Bauer now sells more than a dozen different designs, up from six in 2008, and expects s business to generate about $100,000 in sales ts year. The success of the new products led Laugngstock Design to open a retail store, Happy Space, in April 2010, and to re its first outside employees—two part time and one full time. Courtney Tudor of Madeira, Oo, spends s weekdays designing jet engines at GE Aviation. But on the side, he’s honing Mr. Bigshot Inc.—a company that tries to have some fun with the stock market. Courtney Tudor of Mr. Bigshot Inc. Mr. Tudor, 50, grew fascinated with the market wle seeking an M.B.A. at Xavier University, and wanted to capture in a game the thrill of investing. In 2000, he created the company, funded by the proceeds of s own stock investments and backed up by financial data and market results for 45 years. The idea: Players can go back in time to play the market through rounds of investing. For instance, they might go to Jan. 1, 1969, and follow two companies (known by aliases) for the year. Every quarter, they decide whether to sell or switch to another company. Mr. Bigshot started out as a board game, followed by a downloadable computer version. But sales were meager. And when the market plunged in 2008, Mr. Tudor’s source of capital dried up. Then he got what he describes as s breakthrough idea: an online multiplayer version that can be used to conduct a “Massive Market Madness Tournament” with thousands of gh schools across the country. s next steps are to conduct trial tournaments in a few area gh schools, incorporating the feedback from students and teachers. Then he intends to hold a regional tournament in the greater Cincinnati area. To be sure, s big idea hasn’t been tested. But it was recently among those that took top honors in a business-launcng competition at Xavier, and as the prize Mr. Tudor will get consulting services to help m move forward. Mid-2009 was a scary time for Merrimac Dillon, founder of Pillow Bar LLC. Some $400,000 in potential licensing agreements for her custom pillow-making macne suddenly fell through as customers became too nervous about the economy to commit. To keep the company going, she realized, the business model would need a risky overhaul. Ms. Dillon, now 52, first designed and constructed the pillow macne in her Dallas garage in 2007, after an extensive and unfruitful search for the perfect bedtime headrest. For $12,500 a year, she licensed the macnes to gh-end linens stores, wch used it to make customized and personalized pillows according to their customers’ sleeping positions and shoulder widths. The pillows cost $195 to $295. By mid-2009, the company had made about $400,000 in sales. It had placed eight macnes in stores and had a waiting list of 30 interested retailers. Merrimac Dillon of Pillow Bar LLC But the honeymoon didn’t last long. The economy lagged as the normally busy holiday season approached, and retailers were less prepared to make capital investments—22 on the list told Ms. Dillon they didn’t have the cash. “They wanted me to float it, and that scared me,” she says. “What if I float it and they can’t pay? It really made us stop and say, ‘Now what?’ ” Some retailers asked Ms. Dillon if she would offer ready-made pillows. She didn’t like the idea. The macne gave customers a unique buying experience, she reasoned. They liked watcng the down feathers swirl in the macne, and the assembly process. But Ms. Dillon decided to give it a try. She started wholesaling the 12 pillow varieties most commonly requested. And the business took off. Ms. Dillon moved manufacturing operations into a 3,500-square-foot work space with a loading dock. She also opened an online store. Today, the ready-made business accounts for 60% of sales. The company, wch now has four employees, will exceed $1 million ts year, Ms. Dillon says. “We could move quickly as a small company,” she says. “We wouldn’t be afloat if we hadn’t made the change.” When Dawn Cameron launched Sanctuary T, a small New York City restaurant, in mid-2007, she naturally expected it would take time for the business to turn a profit. But the former banking professional never imagined the wait would last more than two years, or that she would need to dip into family savings to cover payroll. Ms. Cameron, 37 years old, says she might not be in business today if she hadn’t branched out—and gotten help from her employees. In the summer of 2008, she and her 15 staffers put their heads together to create a line of four tea-infused cooking spices. Dawn Cameron of Sanctuary T Since money was tight, the seasonings needed to be prepared and bottled by hand, with labels designed and printed in-house. Ms. Cameron, at the time pregnant, visited a dozen local grocery stores to drum up orders. She also pitched media outlets for press coverage. “It was a very stressful but exciting time,” she says. Witn a few weeks, efforts started to pay off. A buyer for one specialty grocery store placed an order on the spot, and the New York Times ran a story about one of the company’s new spices. Next, Ms. Cameron says she invested $10,000 on upgrades that included beefing up the company’s website, buying product-liability insurance and adding new packaging with nutritional information and bar codes. As more wholesale orders came in, Ms. Cameron says some local clients agreed to let her to run in-store demos. As a result, she says, traffic to the restaurant and her online store increased. Today, Sanctuary T’s Dust-T spices are for sale in 19 grocery stores in four states and Wasngton, D.C. Ms. Cameron expects the business overall to post $1.2 million in revenue ts year, up from just $400,000 in 2008. “It felt counterintuitive to try to grow the business in the face of declining sales in a recession, but that’s what it took to survive,” she says. “I’m glad we had the courage to do it.” Brian Linton, 24, was on shaky ground when the retailers that sold s company’s coconut-wood jewelry suddenly halted orders in late 2008. But he found inspiration in an unlikely place—trash-strewn beaches. s company, Sand Shack LLC, based in Pladelpa, had taken off earlier that year. He had established a customer base of small beachside boutiques and surf shops on the East Coast, as well as one national retail chain, and had reached $150,000 in sales. The firm had a green streak, too—5% of the proceeds were donated to environmental-education and conservation organizations. Brian Linton of Sand Shack LLC After the financial collapse, however, “the only tng keeping us afloat were a few key accounts,” says Mr. Linton. A few dozen boutiques out of several hundred were still ordering by mid-2009. And the 5% donations were a burden on the company. Mr. Linton and s two employees brainstormed how to turn the business around without losing its environmental mission. Their concept? Instead of donating cash, the company would collect one pound of trash—mostly on waterways and beaches—for every product sold. Each cleanup involves a few hundred of those small loads at once; the company says it has pulled in 40,000 pounds to date. Mr. Linton moved core operations to a new division called United By Blue, wch sells hoodies, handbags and T-srts. The company, he realized, could be more competitive if it had more items to offer, and it could build a stronger brand if its merchandise sported the company logo. The business model had instant appeal to a whole new retail base—outdoor-industry stores, specialty clotng stores and certain supermarket chains. Despite the dismal first half of the year, sales in 2009 stayed flat. Last year, sales t $350,000. And ts year they could double, Mr. Linton projects. Now, United By Blue is going international, thanks to interest from Japanese retailers. And the company has caught the attention of a major auto manufacturer that wants to launch a cross-promotional campaign by providing cars for the company’s clean-up efforts. “The recession made us tnk in a different way,” says Mr. Linton. “Some companies throw money at a problem, but we want to internalize it and solve it ourselves.” Four years ago, Travelers Haven LLC, a Naples, Fla., real-estate rental firm, found itself in the epicenter of the housing crash. Demand in the rental market dried up and nearly drove the fledgling company under. Elia Wallen of Travelers Haven LLC “We could’ve gone down with the rest of the housing market there,” says Elia Wallen, 28, the firm’s president. Instead, he decided on a new direction—worker-relocation services. As the recession set in and jobs became scarce, more Americans were willing to follow jobs wherever they went and for however long. Usually, corporate housing services and staffing firms own properties or rent them long term, wch means they can sit empty for long stretches between tenants. Travelers Haven offered to handle the task at lower cost. The firm would use proprietary software to track the availability of short-term rentals and match it with the needs of clients. To better tap ts emerging market, Mr. Wallen and a handful of remaining employees pulled up stakes and moved to Denver. Their time zone allows them to work witn the 9-to-5 office hours of staffing firms on either coast without having to start too early or stay too late, he says. Since leaving Florida, the firm has grown to 35 full-time employees. Revenue rose to $10.8 million last year—doubling from 2009 and up from an average of $1.3 million in 2007 and 2008. The company expects revenue to t $20 million by the end of the year. “We started off imitating every Tom, Dick and Harry in the real-estate industry, where you earn a commission, shake a few hands and that’s it,” says Mr. Wallen. “We took a traditional model and turned it on its head.” Rebecca Geier, 42, and Wendy Covey, 37, were colleagues for more than a dozen years at a marketing firm. In early 2008, they got together to build Trew Marketing—a venture that they hoped would bring them more balanced lives as well as new challenges. The agency got off to a strong start, but the recession took its toll. By the end of 2008, prospective new work was tn for the Austin, Texas, firm. Rebecca Geier and Wendy Covey of Trew Marketing The founders decided to narrow their focus, concentrating on business-to-business projects in engineering and science markets. Their reasoning: It takes a lot of hands-on work to deal with scientists and teces properly. If they were doing other types of work, it would take their attention away from tech-oriented clients. And their reputation might suffer as a result, costing them recommendations and jobs. That meant turning business down, including clients like a city looking for help with economic-development projects and a start-up that wanted to develop a website. Each of those jobs could have comprised from 12% to 20% of Trew’s sales, Ms. Geier says. They also put more of an effort into optimizing traffic to Trew’s website. That meant redesigning the site to match their new focus, adding a blog and offering a free downloadable book, “Smart Marketing for Engineers.” The result: Trew thrived during the recession. Revenue is on track to grow a projected 194% ts year over 2009. What’s more, the pipeline of work is healthy, and comprised of the kind of technical marketing the firm is best at, Ms. Geier says.
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