SCORE Seattle Helps Entrepreneurs of All Stripes Succeed

Whether it’s a brick-and-mortar shop, an export operation, or an intangible service, these workshops help students iron out particulars and make profits the priority.

Some things in the business world never change—the need for experience and advice, for instance. This is why, for the past 60 years, SCORE Seattle has offered free workshops and mentor services to help every kind of hopeful entrepreneur tackle his or her own set of problems, from age-old hurdles like bookkeeping to new ones like social media. Another constant in business, no matter the decade, is this: No two business plans are exactly alike.

“I have a client that has goats,” says Jerry Freeland, chairman of workshops at SCORE, “and she’s trying to grow her business—she’s trying to buy more goats! She takes them out, they graze on the fields, then she takes them to another place. So her business is to maintain people’s property with her goats.”

For Freeland’s goat-herding clientele and others, the day-long workshops offered by SCORE, an arm of the Small Business Association, include both a general overview (Starting a New Business) and one geared toward the business plan itself (Building Your Business Plan). Whether it’s a brick-and-mortar shop, an export operation, or an intangible service, planning is the key to selling a product. SCORE brings in a CPA, an attorney, an insurance agent, and countless other community volunteers to help students iron out particulars and make profits the priority.

Though every plan is different, Freeland sees some commonalities in her students. Of the three main parts in a business plan–operations, marketing, and finance–the latter tends to be most difficult to execute, even for veteran business owners. “Entrepreneurs tend to have a great idea, they tend to have a lot of enthusiasm, and hopefully even ways to market their idea,” Freeland explains. “But a lot of them are just kind of lost when it comes to pricing, and how they can assure themselves of making a profit.

“I had one fellow, he ran a sign business for 14 years, and he couldn’t figure out why he’d never taken a vacation. He wasn’t keeping good records—that was one of his problems—and we were able to analyze what he was doing and turn his business around.”

Once the goals are clear, owners can focus on more minute details. For those midway through the process, SCORE offers specialty workshops focused on subjects including Intellectual Property, Crowdfunding, even Storytelling.

“That was a really fun one,” Freeland says of the latter. “You have to know how to talk about your business—they talk about an elevator speech: You’ve got to be able to tell them why you do it, and why you’re better than the other people doing it. And you need to say it quickly. So it was fun, because they learned how to tell the story of their business, and hold people’s attention.”

SCORE students can build on this foundation with the help of a mentor. A SCORE mentor has the experience to guide a student on his or her unique path to success. “All have either owned their own business or managed businesses, and they’re wanting to give back to the community,” Freeland says.

Sorted by industry, mentors are available for online or in-person consultations all around Puget Sound, and as far north as Bellingham. Of course, some students fall between industries, or outside the mold entirely—like Freeland’s goat lady. Other students don’t know exactly what their business will look like. For them, building a business is less about an idea, and more about working for themselves. One student, she says, “either wanted to do a storage unit or a coffee shop.”

No matter the stage, it never hurts to get some advice, especially if that advice is free. As Freeland says, “We want to give them the tools to use their time wisely and effectively, and get the best bang for their buck.” Find SCORE Seattle workshops at Connect2Classes.com.

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