1 / 29

Sharing the Sandbox: How SBDCs & business incubators can work together

Sharing the Sandbox: How SBDCs & business incubators can work together. Association of Small Business Development Centers Annual Conference San Antonio, TX September 22, 2010 Presented by Harry Blecker and Sandra Cochrane, MI-SBTDC. Goals for today’s session.

meg
Télécharger la présentation

Sharing the Sandbox: How SBDCs & business incubators can work together

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sharing the Sandbox:How SBDCs & business incubators can work together Association of Small Business Development Centers Annual Conference San Antonio, TX September 22, 2010 Presented by Harry Blecker and Sandra Cochrane, MI-SBTDC

  2. Goals for today’s session • Understand what business incubation is, what it isn’t, and some industry best practices • Discover how to link local/state SBDCs with physical and virtual incubators/accelerators • Michigan Examples

  3. Clarification • Incubator: the physical incubator facility and the programs it offers to its clients via the incubator management • Client company: the individual company being served, either by the incubator or by the SBDC • SBDCs should work with both the incubator (its management) as well as the companies inside the incubator. They are two different clients.

  4. Business incubators are… • programs designed to accelerate the successful development of entrepreneurial companies • through an array of business support resources and services, • developed or orchestrated by incubator management, • and offered both in the incubator and through its network of contacts.

  5. Business incubators do… Does your SBDC do these things? • Help with business basics • Networking activities • Marketing assistance • Help with financial management • Access to capital • Links to university/corporate partners • Business training programs • Mentoring and coaching Source: 2006 State of the Business Incubation Industry

  6. Successful incubation programs • Integration into larger community • Part of overall community economic development plan • Community/sponsor support for mission and operations • An effective team • Professional management with adequate pay • Network of business advisors, mentors and consultants • Professionalism • Emphasizes client assistance • Models good business practices • Strives for financial sustainability • Measures effectiveness and impact regularly Source: NBIA Principles and Best Practices of Business Incubation

  7. Typical incubation programs Source: 2006 State of the Business Incubation Industry

  8. Incubation program sponsors…similar to SBDCs Source: 2006 State of the Business Incubation Industry

  9. Typical Incubator Services • Regular coaching (improving leadership and “people” skills) • Regular counseling (addressing traditional business subjects like financing, marketing, etc.) • Entrepreneurial training • Service provider network • Mentoring services

  10. Incubation Desired Outcomes • Tax base enhancement • Employment • Retain companies in communities • Access to financing • Graduation into community/state

  11. Business incubation works…similar to SBDCs • Return on investment • $1 public investment in incubator = $30 in local tax revenue • Business retention • 84% of graduates stay in community • Increased likelihood of business success • 87% of incubator graduates stay in business Source: Business Incubation Works, 1997; 2006 State of the Business Incubation Industry

  12. What is your experience with incubators?

  13. Goals for today’s session • Understand what business incubation is, what it isn’t, and some industry best practices • Discover how to link local/state SBDCs with physical and virtual incubators/accelerators • Michigan Examples

  14. Incubators and SBDCs • Small Business Development Center • By law, works with any small company that asks • Counselors typically have many clients in a revolving portfolio • Works with small businesses at any stage • Can maintain client relationship indefinitely • Business incubation program • Works with select, viable start-up and early-stage companies • Incubator manager has small number of client companies at one time • Offers targeted, specific business assistance services • Requires companies to graduate

  15. Common incubator perceptions about SBDCs • SBDCs only work with start-ups • SBDCs can only help with business basics—they can’t dive deep • SBDCs don’t have the ability to work with high-tech companies • SBDCs will “steal” my client companies • SBDCs will make my clients wait too long for services • SBDCs only care about “making their numbers” • SBDCs expect me to pay them for serving my clients

  16. SBDCs can provide incubator companies • Periodic coaching An additional coach to provide another point of view or to assist with a particular issue the entrepreneur is facing • Focused counseling An additional resource brought in on an as-needed basis (succession planning, marketing plan, investor pitch prep) • Entrepreneurial training Bringing standard SBDC training programs into the incubator (QuickBooks, business plan development, market research, marketing) • Market Research Provide information to assist company in its growth

  17. SBDCs can provide incubators • Service provider network Help incubators expand their network by providing referrals to a broader range of consultants and support firms • Specialized SBDC services Tech Team, Growth Group, Technology Roadmapping, Incubation Liaison, Manufacturing Assistance Team • Additional support services Assist in business plan competition judging, admission screening panel, participation in quarterly client meetings

  18. WIIFM…SBDCs? • Access to high potential, pre-screened client companies (greater economic impact) • Referral partner (rejected incubator applicants) • Larger community network • Stronger stakeholder support • Access to specialized expertise/resources • Possible revenue source (SMIC example to come later) • Can you think of other benefits….?

  19. Common partnering activities • Co-location (anchor tenant, office hours, space available upon request) • Filling service gaps (import/export, government contracting, banking relationships) • Client sharing (cross-referrals, client quarterly meetings, regular conversations) • Co-marketing (co-sponsoring, co-promotion, co-branded materials)

  20. Goals for today’s session • Understand what business incubation is, what it isn’t, and some industry best practices • Discover how to link local/state SBDCs with physical and virtual incubators/accelerators • Michigan Examples

  21. Michigan examples • Incubator Liaison…Sandra • One Tech Consultant with extensive incubation experience • Treat incubators just like client companies (sign 641s) and counsel them (about 25% of time) • Serves on the Board of Directors of the National Business Incubation Association and the Michigan Business Incubator Association

  22. Michigan examples • Southwest Michigan Innovation Center, Kalamazoo • Incubator just getting launched (limited staff) • Pfizer layoffs (2,000 R&D scientists) • 12 companies formed • Initial business plans for Pfizer start-ups • SBDC office in SMIC • Participation in all quarterly client meetings

  23. Michigan examples • TechTown, Detroit • Devastation of the auto industry • Kauffman Foundation and New Economy Initiative for SE MI grants ($9.25M) • Goal: 1,200 new businesses in 3 years • FastTrac to the Future events (curbside consulting and session presentations) • FastTrac training programs (facilitators and guest speakers) • SBTDC office in TechTown staffed on scheduled days

  24. Michigan examples • Automation Alley • Technology assessments of portfolio companies on a regular basis (snapshot in time) • SBTDC office in Automation Alley staffed on scheduled days • Kettering University-Tech Works/Oak Business Center • SBTDC Regional office assists campus-based tenants with traditional services. • Provides circuit rider to city-owned facility on PT basis

  25. Michigan examples • Accelerating Michigan Entrepreneurs-AME…Harry • Virtual Incubator • State of Michigan, Michigan Economic Development Corporation funded • MI-SBTDC managed with one SBTDC consultant • Reach existing companies who by choice or necessity have accessibility issues/challenges • Provides traditional business consulting, new coaching services, and client data mgmt. with web portal

  26. Michigan examples • Macomb County Incubator, Sterling Heights • SBTDC Assisted Incubator with • Feasibility assessment • Floorplan design • Financial model • EDA grant assistance

  27. Examples from other states • Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana Business & Technology Center became a regional SBTDC office • Grand Junction, CO: Business Incubator Center became a local SBDC office • Lynn Haven, FL: The director of the incubator is also the director of the Small Business Development Center • Carbondale, IL: SBDC co-locates within the Small Business Incubator • Green Bay, WI: SBDC co-locates within the Advance Business Center • Guyman, OK: Guymon Business Enterprise Center provides meeting rooms and hosts SBDC events • Birmingham, AL: Bessemer Business Incubation System partners with SBDC for training workshops

  28. Getting involved with an incubator • Get to know the incubation program and determine if SBDC has a skill set to offer that the incubator could use (do market research) • Make sure SBDC really has the people and skills (walk the talk!) • Build a mutually beneficial relationship with the incubator (everybody wins) • Ask how you can help (offer to provide support to the incubator and/or training events for incubator clients—perhaps even tailored to them) • Be prepared to be in it for the long haul (if at first you don’t succeed….)

  29. Thank you!Questions? Harry Blecker Director of AME MI-SBTDC bleckerh@gvsu.edu 810.347.2046 Sandra Cochrane Technology Business Consultant MI-SBTDC sandra_cochrane@gvsu.edu 269.267.5489

More Related