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Mr. President, Is It Main Street’s Turn Yet?

by Donna Maria

Yesterday, the House approved HR 5297: The Small Business Jobs and Credit Act, a $42 billion bill to aid “small” businesses. It includes a $30 billion Small Business Lending Fund, and is expected to be signed into law by President Obama in short order.

I love the idea of a new law to help businesses thrive. But we all know that a bill’s name rarely reflects its real life practical effect. (See this bill, for example.) Giving $30billion to community banks to lend to local businesses will not help “real” small businesses. You know, the ones on the much talked about “Main Street.” It won’t help people like Emily Caswell of GCDSpa in Topsham, Maine.

Emily makes bath and body care products by hand. Her specialty is customizing lip balms for special occasions. At my request, Emily customized 100 of the pictured quarter-ounce lip balms for me in Cranberry Spice (a custom scent for me) to celebrate the fall season. I plan to gift them to clients and friends to promote the capabilities of my IBN members. As you can see, my image and the Indie logo grace the lid label, and the back label contains an ingredient listing, my website address and a notation that the balms were “Made especially for IBN by gcdspa.com.”

When passed, HR 5297 won’t help people like Emily because Emily doesn’t want a loan. Like many Indies, she is building her family business wealth slowly. She doesn’t want to go into debt at this time, and she doesn’t want to turn over ownership of her business in exchange for the ability to grow faster. She’s what I call a “consumer-business owner,” and HR 5297was not designed with them in mind.

About Emily

Emily has been a member of IBN since 2006. In this 2009 article from Indie Archives, I interviewed Emily about her business. Nearly two years later, GCD Spa is today going strong and growing, and Emily is fast becoming the company of choice for people who want customized lip balms to commemorate special occasions.

Here’s an update on Emily and how her business has grown over the past two years — with no small business loans and no employees except her, her husband and the help of family members and friends when needed.

The Launch

Emily launched Graham-Caswell Design, LLC in 2005. Before launching her business, she was employed as a graphics designer. She started her company in part because she wanted to be more available to her husband and two children, aged 10 and 12. Emily also realized that she could put her design expertise to good use designing her own cosmetics labels and also customizing designs to match the customized products she makes for wedding showers, bridal parties, anniversary celebrations and other special occasions.

What Emily Makes

Ninety percent of Emily’s products are customized to order and sold only once, and only to the customer who purchases them. Emily’s business requires her to respond to her customers on a moment’s notice. For example, one customer ordered lip balm favors for a bridal shower and requested her friend’s favorite drink flavor.

Emily’s stock lip balm line did not include that flavor, but after an inventory check, she was able to formulate a suitable flavor just for the client, and just in the nick of time for the shower party. This type of custom work is a special service Emily offers, and one that many customers request regularly.

Earlier this year, Emily took on her first “back bar” customer, a luxury hotel in Beverly Hills, Ca, which now uses her products on clients in their exclusive spa. She also landed her first wholesale account, which buys customized products for sale in a retail store in upstate New York.

In addition to making great products, Emily is a super fun person, as evidence by this guest blog post and her own blog.

Emily Would Not Take Out A Small Business Loan

When I asked Emily whether she would take out a loan, she said this:

NO, I would not take out a loan. That may help other small businesses, but I’ve never considered it. I have always bootstrapped my business, figuring that it grows at the rate I can handle it if I reinvest in myself and expand as I can afford to. Of course, I’m in a different position than other small businesses because we don’t rely solely on my income to support my family. I’m sure each business is different. But no, for me the loans are not as big an issue as over regulation.

Emily Is Not Alone

For a story reiterating how other consumer-business owners don’t want loans, even with President Obama’s new plans, read this August 2010 Wall Street Journal article about entrepreneurs Erica Duignan Minnhan and Susan Reiner, who said they “wouldn’t take out a bank loan if President Obama delivered it on a silver platter.”

Emily Is Growing!

Last year, Emily and her business were featured in Good Housekeeping Magazine. In May of this year, Emily and her husband began construction on an addition to their home, that is expected to become Emily’s manufacturing area. In the depressed economy in her town, Emily has hired electricians, plumbers and woodworkers to built out her manufacturing so she can grow her business.

I am thrilled to see that Emily’s business is growing. She’s recently been featured in a number of other women’s and wedding magazines. Her slow but steady growth has been good for her, good for her family, good for her community, good for the local economy, and good for America. Emily serves customers all over the nation and I am proud and honored to be one of them.

HR 5297 Won’t Help People Like Emily

HR 5297 is well intended. But “Small Business Jobs” in the name of the bill is aimed at jobs that don’t include people like Emily — the actual owner of the business — and those are the jobs that need to be addressed now.

The bulk of businesses that will benefit from this bill are not really “small.” They are larger businesses that can afford to hire several employees and/or that have the collateral or personal credit that’s necessary to secure a small business loan these days.

Those businesses are important, but they are not “small.” The definition of small has changed, and our government policies must now change with it.

The real Main Street economy is composed of consumer-business owners, artisans, crafters, Indies and family business leaders. These business owners make up the real Main Street. They are often not in a position to hire anyone, but they have hired themselves and that counts too! They don’t want mortgage their homes, their children’s college fund or their own 401Ks to build a business faster — and they should not have to.

As alluded to by Emily above, the challenge for the real Main Street is that the government is not in tune with how new laws, rules, regulations, paperwork, registration requirements, testing requirements, and other unnecessary and burdensome requirements are slowly strangling them to death. These are the issues Main Street is dealing with, and it’s time to address them. Seriously.

People like Emily helped to bail out banks, the automotive industry, and the nation’s “not so small” small businesses, and they’ve done so without complaining. Now, it’s time to empower them, financially and otherwise, to achieve their full potential as the leaders of their families and their businesses.

It’s time to look at newly introduced bills as more than just affecting businesses. It’s time to look at them as affecting consumer-business owners on Main Street — men and women who are losing their jobs, but working hard in jobs of their own creation. They are holding it together in a tough economy, and they should be recognized and rewarded for that.

So, Mr. President, with all due respect, is it Main Street’s turn yet?

I posed a similar question to the administrator of the US Small Business Administration yesterday in a post via the American Express OPEN Forum.

Question: What do you think?

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posted on September 24, 2010 ·

Facebook comments:

  • Tammy B

    It is so nice to see that I’m not the only one choosing to grow my business like Emily. I really want to keep control of my business, I don’t want to involve banks and investors.
    I would love help from the Government. I would love to hire one other person to act as another me. However, still being small, I push through.
    I accept help from my friends and family, but it would be nice to be able to hire an assistant on a Part Time Basis.

    Please help the Small Businesses that, at this time, are truly Small Business.

    • http://www.indiebusinessblog.com Donna Maria Coles Johnson

      Tammy: Thanks for sharing. I’m sure there are procedures and processes SBA and banks could come up with to make everything work together for win/win situations for everyone.

      What if a loan was conditioned on saving a certain amount of money each month? That way, the interest rate could be lowered?

      Or what is part of a loan could be paid back by working with the bank on a local community service project? The bank gets its money back in another way in that scenario.

      There are lots of collaborative things that can be done if everyone is willing to be creative. Let’s keep engaging and working toward some solutions.

  • http://twitter.com/PureLauren PureLauren

    The hardest thing about bills like these is the banks still won’t loan the money to true small businesses. When the president signed the small business recovery act in Feb. 09 We called up our bank and the SBA to see how the Act could help us. Despite our years of double digit growth, the SBA and the bank laughed. YES, they LAUGHED and said the Act was pure politics and they would still only give loans to people who were already qualified before the Act was signed. Basically if you need the money you can’t get it, if you have the money and don’t need it, you can get more. It’s all politics and not really about helping the true struggling small business owners. They did tell us we had a great business and they would be happy to talk to us again if we continue to grow. Uh… Thanks, we will do that even if they refuse to help us.

    • http://www.indiebusinessblog.com Donna Maria Coles Johnson

      Thanks for sharing, Lauren. It’s unfortunate that the person literally laughed. I wonder if part of the laugh was because they were uncomfortable with their position. If they knew the program was touted as being able to help people like you, yet they are in the position of turning you down on the spot, well, that might make me some feel uncomfortable enough for a nervous laugh. I think some aspects of business (and the world) will always work like you say — to get more, you have to already have some. However, I think if people are willing to think outside the box and place a value on things other than dollar bills, we may be able to change that for enough people in this country to make a real difference. I hope so anyway.

  • http://twitter.com/GCDSpa Emily Caswell

    dM, thank you so much for sharing my story! Lauren, I think your observation is interesting: if you have money and don’t need it, the banks will give you more. This reality for small businesses, as well as legislation that doesn’t make exemptions for small and micro businesses, means we’ll live in a world where you can’t succeed unless you’re already big. But who starts out big? So many large companies started at someone’s kitchen table. If only the wealthy can start or maintain businesses, what does that say about us as a country? What does that say about the “American Dream”? Is it available only to those who can afford it??

    • http://www.indiebusinessblog.com Donna Maria Coles Johnson

      Emily: It was my pleasure to feature you of course! I am loving my lip balms. Like you, I agree with Lauren’s commentary. What it says about us as a country is that families are not a priority. I think the time is changing though, because, thanks to the Internet, we have a way to make our voices heard in ways that were not possible just a few years ago. I love how your business is growing, and how you are inspiring others. Thanks for being so incredible!

  • http://twitter.com/HandGPodcast Hustle&Grow

    I do agree with your assessment on taking out loans and fully agree that one should bootstrap their business. However, I do like the tax credits and incentives for small businesses, such as the tax deduction for trade or business start-up expenditures from $5,000 to $20,000 in 2010 and 2011.

    • http://www.indiebusinessblog.com Donna Maria Coles Johnson

      Yes! Tax deductions are always good!

  • http://www.facebook.com/marcia.elston Marcia Elston

    I started Samara Botane, not as a young entrepreneur, but as someone who had already had a long and fulfilling career – at a time when I, personally was not looking to build an “empire”, but wanted to do something different to fulfill a more personal passion before I actually called it quits and retired. Admittedly, this gave me the advantage of having some retirement savings established.
    I certainly did not want to encumber debt. I knew that borrowed money could be costly, and even more costly – taking on investors. So we also proceeded slowly, bootstrapping almost every step. We certainly can’t call ourselves a ‘consumer business owner’, but we are still a very small business. There were times when I borrowed from my own savings (always repaid with interest) to secure essential oil stock (a market seasonally driven) when current cash flow would not be sufficient. Otherwise, even after 20 years in business, we still operate on a pay-as-you-go basis, with only a small line of credit at our bank to cover short-term emergencies. If you can operate this way, I agree with others that your overall experience building your business will be less stressful and more enjoyable.
    I am looking forward to some of the tax deductions that are in the bill; this will definitely help us update needed and outdated equipment sooner than we might have.
    I like Donna Maria’s ending question; I believe that the overall economic troubles in most of the world compel us to find resources (not necessarily just money) in creative ways that are outside the mainstream of business. Cooperative ventures and affiliate programs come to mind as ways to add income to your business without having to borrow. Trading for necessary goods or services is another way to avoid borrowing at bank interest.

    • http://www.indiebusinessblog.com Donna Maria Coles Johnson

      Marcia: Your wisdom and experience always shines through! I love the last paragraph of your post about cooperative ventures and affiliate programs. They are so important and empowering. I think that the practical progress of business is always way ahead of the government’s ability to properly serve its needs. Along with you, I’m doing my part to help them catch up so we can work together toward common goals. Thanks for sharing your perspectives!

  • http://mommyrevenue.com Rhonda

    I’m all for growing your business without creating debt. It was refreshing to read this story about Emily growing her business without doing so!

    • http://www.indiebusinessblog.com Donna Maria Coles Johnson

      “Refreshing” is a good way to describe Emily and her business philosophy. I think she and others like her are inspiring a lot of people. I’m so glad you enjoyed it, thanks for letting me know!

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