HomeMy WebLinkAboutHandouts_Workshop_Tab 01_11/12/2009
(Innovation )
king
of
Tough economic
times .are helping
to cultivate a
new approach
to economic
development
called "economic
gardening."
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By Barbara Miracle
Traditionally, local economic develop-
ers have sought growth by trying to lure
businesses from outside aregion - so-
called "economic hunting." Hunting can
produce big economic gains, but it poses
lots of challenges: It's slow, uncertain and
usually requires big marketing budgets
and travel along with a raft of local and
state incentives. It also may end up at-
tracting highly mobile companies looking
for the cheapest place to do business at the
moment -and willing to leave for another
town as soon as they believe the grass is
greener elsewhere.
In recent years, economic developers
have begun experimenting with another
approach that has gained momentum cs
Florida's unemployment rate has risen::^+~
over 10% and local governments and ec ~-
nomic recruiters have seen their recru.t-
mentbudgets shrink.
"Economic gardening' focuses on help-
.~~ ;
~,
ing so-called second-stage companies with
10 to 50 employees and revenue of $1 mil-
lion to $25 million -local businesses that
have survived at least five years and are
growing revenue and adding employees.
The gardening approach doesn't view
all businesses equally. Startups with fewer
than 10 employees appear to produce more
growth, accounting fora 40.7% increase
in employment in Florida between 1993
and 2007, according to the Edward Lowe
Foundation, a Michigan non-profit group
that assists entrepreneurs. But the founda-
tion points out that startups have a high
.failure rate, meaning many of the jobs they
generate quickly disappear in the churn of
business formation and failure.
Proponents of economic gardening say
startups are importantbutbelieve the most
effective way to build a local economy is to
focus on helping the second-stage busi-
nesses, which accounted fora 36% em-
ploymentincrease inFlorida between 1993
and 2007. The second-stage firms, they say,
have demonstrated staying power and also -
tend to pay higher wages than startups.
Economic gardening -the term origi-
nated from the approach used to resur-
rectthe economy of Littleton, Colo., in the
late 1980s after an economic meltdown
-doesn't generate the headlines associ-
ated with big business relocations but can
produce solid results within two to three
years; its adherents claim. The approach
is also amactive to economic developers
because it doesn't require lots of capital.
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The Littleton Experience
In the late 1980s, Littleton, Colo., went
into a tailspin after the loss of its major
employer crippled its economy. Economic
developers realized the town's remaining
businesses had many strengths, however,
and focused on developing those
strengths as a strategy to rebuild the
local economy, which has emerged more
diverse -and stronger.
Information:
littletongov.org/bia/economicgardening
inf.
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Florida Gardeners
Jacksonville Regional Chamber of
Commerce. Has established a volunteer
advisory board and hosts quarterly forums
for 30 to 35 CEOs of second-stage
companies. A CEO peer counseling
program functions independently.
Information: 904/366-6600
Collier County. Has started a gardening
program. "We can spend our limited
funds on our own entrepreneurs,"
says Tim Cartwright of the Economic
Development Council of Collier County.
Information: 239/263-8989
Florida's Research Coast Economic
Development Commission (Indian
River, Martin, Okeechobee and St. Lucie
counties). Will use a $200,000 grant to
create a pilot program. Michael Corbit,
economic gardening coordinator, is
planning "boot camps" that will offer
financial, legal, HR and other expertise.
Information: 772/335-3030
The Economic Development
Corporation of Sarasota County.
Plans to encourage participation in the
state program and also develop its own
program, says Kathy Baylis, president and
CEO of the EDC.
Information:
941/309-1200 ext. 100
Broward Alliance. Is starting an
economic gardening program. "My
gut's telling me it's going to work," says
Bob Swindell, senior vice president of
business development at the Broward
Alliance. He adds, "Businesses are in
survival mode out there."
Information: 954/627-0129
Metro Orlando Economic
Developmerrt Commission. "The
companies themselves define what they
need," says Ray Gilley, president and
CEO of the Metro Orlando Economic
Development Commission, which hosted
a workshop on economic gardening in
June.
Information: 407/422-7159
Statewide. Fast-growing second-
stagecompanies that want to apply
for technical assistance from the state's
economic gardening initiative should
contact Tom O'Neal, associate vice
president for research at the University of
Central Florida, who administers the state
program. The Black Business Investment
Fund of Central Florida is handling the
loan portion of the program.
Technical assistance information:
407/882-1120 or onealCe3mail.ucf.edu
Loan information: 407/649-4780 or
bbif.com
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~ Last session, the Legislature passed ; f
' ~''~," a $10-million pilot program that
provides $8.5 million for short-term,
low-interest loans and $1.5 million
I for technical assistance.
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More than money, second-stage busi-
nesses need the kind of sophisticated
marketing information, information I.
technology and management advice that
much larger firms take forgranted -and
are often the key to expanding further, ';
says CEO Nexus President Steve Quello, a
Winter Park consultant who has worked
with many of the economic gardening
projects around Florida.
Case in point: Entrepreneur Jim Cos-
setta, co-founder ofNaples-based 4What
Interactive, a 14-year-old marketing,
training and communications consulting '',
company with $2.5 million in revenue
and 19 employees, says his biggest chal-
lenge at this point is inhuman resources
- identifying the right people to hire for ',
middle management positions. That's a
topic he'll likely focus on as he partici-
pates in the Collier County EDC's new
economic gardening program. The ap-
proach, he says, "makes total sense."
The Jacksonville Regional Chamber of
Commerce is among several local busi-
ness groups in Florida that are incorpo-
rating economic gardening tactics into !.
their development arsenals. More than
a year ago, the Jacksonville group set up
a second-stage volunteer advisory board
and now hosts quarterly forums for 30
to 35 CEOs of second-stage companies.
The forums are led by CEOs who have
Training Gardeners
The Edward Lowe Foundation offers
conferences and training on economic
gardening for local economic
developers. A white paper with
tips on implementing an economic
gardening project is available at
growinglocaleconomies.com.
Information: 800/232-5693 or
edwardlowe.org
been through the trials and
tribulations of building a
sustainable, fast-growing
enterprise -and are tar-
geted specifically for sec-
ond-stage firms.
"A second-stage busi-
ness does not want to be in
a startup class," says Sandy
Bartow, vice president for
small business at the Jack-
sonville Regional Chamber.
Separately, 10 Jackson-
ville CEOs participate in an
ongoing peer-to-peer men-
toring group called Peer-
spectives. "Probably the
best thing is that everybody
in the group kind of acts as
my board of directors," says
Joe Lemire, co-founder of
Elyk Innovation, a Jacksonville Internet
strategy firm.
The state also has bought into the eco-
nomic gardening approach in a fashic..i.
Last session, the Legislature passec a
$10-million pilot program that provides
$8.5 million for short-term, low-interest
loans and $1.5 million for techiucal as-
sistance. The idea was to use the $1.5
million to pay a group of economic gar-
dening experts to vet applications for
the loan money and to offer marketing
help and other kinds of assistance to
fast-growingbusinesses from around the
state that are seeking to expand.
The Black Business Investment Fund
of Central Florida is handling the loan
part of the program statewide, and the
University of Central Florida's Office
of Research was tapped to administer
the technical assistance portion. Tom
O'Neal, associate vice president for re-
search and commercialization at UCF,
says the group will use the $1.5 million to
launch the pilot program and to form an
economic gardening institute at UCF. It
will also acquire sophisticated databases
and other tools as well as train and pay
the people who will lead "Jumpstart"
teams. Among the team leaders is Chris
Gibbons, the business and industry af-
fairs director for Littleton who pio-
neered the original economic gardening
program.
The group plans to offer intensive and
personalized assistance to about 300
companies statewide and assist about
700 more companies in a more limited
way. The Jumpstart program began in
October with 10 to 15 CEO participants in
each of six regions around the state. Eco-
nomic developers will meet with each
CEO to identify his or her specific needs
and then connect them with nationally
known professionals in fields such as
database management, search engine
optimization and global information
systems. Part of the program includes a
rapid response solution within 24 to 48
hours to a CEO's immediate problem.
"The Florida model," says Quello, "is
very encouraging."
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"I think that most business owners who are not
short-sighted see the value of networking
opportunities, especially for something designed
specifically for businesses at that level," says
Sandy Bartow, vice president for small business at
the Jacksonville Regional Chamber.
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