Date: Fri 17-Apr-1998
Date: Fri 17-Apr-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: SUZANN
Quick Words:
SCORE-business-conseling
Full Text:
In Business, Success Comes To Those Who Know The SCORE
(with cut)
BY SUZANNA NYBERG
You have to know business to do business.
That is the experience and the message of the volunteers of the Service Corps
of Retired Executives (SCORE).
SCORE is a nationwide organization that provides counseling for those who want
to go into business for themselves or who already own a business and want to
see it perform better. The local chapter recently moved its office from
Danbury to Brookfield.
SCORE is staffed entirely by volunteers, either the retired or those still in
business. "One can't keep taking," said Phil Edelstein, secretary of the
organization and a Newtown resident. "One needs to give back." The officers at
SCORE are hoping that more women will want to share their business acumen with
those just starting and that more women will decide to go into business.
Both in small groups and one-on-one, 16 counselors show clients how to go
about borrowing money, what banks to approach for that money, and how to do a
cash flow analysis. While counselors assist clients in getting loans by
matching them with an SBA recommended bank, they also encourage that client to
put up as much money as they can.
One of SCORE's most important functions, explained Mr Edelstein, is to
articulate the demands of running one's own business. "Business requires
discipline and self-sacrifice," he said. "People mistakenly believe that if
they go into business for themselves, their lives will become easier and that
is simply not the case." Mr Edelstein, who owned Danbury Plumbing Supply for
almost 25 years, says that it is actually quite lonely to run a business and
that the responsibilities can be arduous. "When you work for a company, you
wait for the day when you get paid," he said. "But when you run the company,
you worry about the day everyone has to get paid."
Counselor Al Benoit, a Newtown resident, noted that all advice, including the
advice to scrap a business idea, depends upon context. While Mr Edelstein has
a definite criteria for success in the business world, Mr Benoit believes that
no one thing will make or break an entrepreneur. At the same time, he believes
that it is just as important to save someone from spending time and effort for
nothing as it is to help someone manufacture a product and sell it. For
example, many housewives who want to start a home craft business eventually
realize that the idea might be too labor intensive to be worth it. Conversely,
a businessman may be encouraged to incorporate more marketing techniques and
phase in new product development lines in his organization.
As the former president of three small companies, Mr Benoit says that he made
a point to be involved in all aspects of the business and that he encourages
his clients to do the same. "One never wants a lawyer or accountant to do
something one doesn't understand," he said. "Not knowing puts the business in
danger of going haywire." Mr Benoit was able to step in and do the books when
he his chief financial officer fell ill.
It is this kind of hands-on expertise that Mr Edelstein says SCORE can
provide; counselors readily offer advice on running a variety of businesses,
from operating a small hot dog stand to setting up a machine shop. "We go from
one extreme to the other," he said, remembering the range of people he has
counseled, including families and one woman with four brothers-in-law.
SCORE also helps those businesses experiencing difficulties, ranging from
cash-flow problems to skyrocketing overhead costs.
Writing A Plan
The first step toward owning a business is writing a business plan, one that
defines the business in great detail. "Many do not realize what they're doing
until they put their thoughts in writing," Mr Edelstein said. He remembers
greeting one client who wanted to open a shoe store simply because she thought
it would be a good thing to do. "But she knew nothing about the retail shoe
industry," he said, laughing.
"I told her to get a job in a shoe store and work there for a year and then
come back to me."
After discovering what one's business will entail, one must determine who the
competitors are. "If a market is over-saturated, we would discourage someone
from even considering it," Mr Edelstein said. Also important is finding out
the strengths and weaknesses of the competition, a research process that can
take weeks.
Within five years, Mr Edelstein claims, 50 percent of businesses fail, not due
to a lack of capital, personnel or inventory, but to an owner's lack of
experience. Only because Mr Edelstein worked for Ridgewood Plumbing Supply in
New Jersey was he confident that he could make a go of Danbury Plumbing
Supply.
Mr Edelstein's leadership of Danbury Plumbing Supply provides a model for
those who would follow his route. When he bought the company, he decided it
would offer something that no one else could. He focused on giving service,
one that undercut the competition and made him a leader in his field. "If
other stores opened at 8, we opened at 7," he said. "And when they started
opening at 7, we opened at 6. The other stores couldn't get people to do
that."
Mr Edelstein also promised to deliver faster than his competitors, getting his
shipments on the road within ten minutes of ordering. Although he admitted
gratefully that the service was rarely taken advantage of, he insisted that
the simple fact that it was offered gave him an edge on his competitors.
Danbury Plumbing Supply grew from a $660,000 operation in 1970 to a $7.6
million operation in 1988. Mr Edelstein routinely worked more than 60 hours a
week.
The key to a successful business, Edelstein believes, is discovering how to be
different and then how to market that difference. To that end, image and
advertising are important. "It's not what you do, but it's what you say you
can do," he said. Mr Edelstein tells SCORE clients that advertising can be as
simple as a flyer tucked under someone's windshield to a billboard looming
over a highway. While all depends on one's capital budget, Mr Edelstein
believes in ways that are tried and true: the yellow pages and word of mouth.
Although presently open three days a week, SCORE will counsel clients five
days a week in September due to increased demand. The organization also offers
seminars and runs roundtable discussions. The number is 203/775-1151.
