Veterans: Tired of Taking Orders? Start a
Business
By Lisa
Johnson Mandell
Business attorney
and Navy veteran Jim Wilson knows just how hard it can be trying to
find a job after completing military service. In fact, it can be so
grueling that he came up with another solution: Rather than going to
work for someone else, he suggests veterans start their own businesses.
"Veterans generally have some great characteristics that will help
them be successful as business owners," Wilson says. "I think there are
quite a few veterans who should consider being business owners and
carrying on the success they realized in uniform to the business world."
Wilson
writes and speaks about the unique opportunities and assets veterans
have in starting their own businesses, and he has a lot of personal
experience with the subject. He graduated from the Naval Academy in
1980, served on active duty through 1989 flying EA-6Bs and doing a tour
with Naval Intelligence, then went to law school and graduated in 1992,
while remaining active and starting his own law firm. He says that this
is actually the perfect time for veterans to go into business for
themselves; but they need to be cautious of their unique challenges.
[See Should
You Strike Out on Your Own? Or Will You Strike Out?.]
Here he discusses the pros and cons of veterans becoming their own
bosses:
Is this really a good economic time for veterans to start
their own businesses?
Yes. There are a couple of good reasons for that but probably the
biggest is the Patriot Express SBA loan, a
program started last year for veterans and veteran family members
starting businesses or who are already in business. While most banks are
not funding commercial loans like they have in the past, a Patriot
Express loan is easier to qualify for, and the SBA moves it through
faster.
Another reason that this is a great time to start a business is that
in a depressed economy, everyone wants to deal. Landlords are giving
generous build-out allowances and periods of no rent to attract tenants;
used equipment and furniture from failed businesses are readily
available; and, frankly, service providers like bookkeepers, marketers
and IT people need clients and might take reduced or extended payments
or even barter for their services.
Also, without going overboard, a veteran can endear himself or
herself to the public for having served -- customers and clients
appreciate knowing what was done on active duty.
What are those great characteristics you mention that will
help veterans be successful business owners?
Military people
have dealt with setting goals and achieving them on a more critical and
personal level than business people ever will. They understand the value
of taking a disciplined approach to accomplishing things, and they know
that a distraction could get them killed. They are not likely to take
their eye off the ball.
They also understand motivation and personal achievement on a
fundamental level much more than civilians do. They have had to convince
people to complete some very dangerous tasks. It is not always the "I
am senior to you and you will do as I say" approach that gets things
done in the military. It often takes serious motivation and
encouragement to get the best out of people in difficult times.
What are some of the basic business skills that
veterans may lack?
Veterans have generally never dealt with pure financial
management, marketing
and sales.
In the military, our budgets refilled each year whether our "sales"
were up or down. Veterans have never had to directly sell their
services.
How can veterans compensate for these deficiencies?
I think that hiring people is the quickest way to compensate for
these things; but as I advise clients all the time, just because you
hire someone to do your books does not mean you don't need to know how
books are kept. Similar to the military, a commanding officer is not
going to fix the airplane or the tank, but needs to know enough about
maintenance to direct, and be knowledgeable about whether equipment will
be available. As a business owner, the veteran does not necessarily
need to get an MBA, but taking an adult education class in business
financial management or human
resources could be very helpful.
What are some common misunderstandings veterans have
about business?
Veterans come from a world where everyone is on the same team. They
need to realize that civilians are motivated by what they will get as an
individual. The other thing that veterans are not as comfortable with
is money being the over-riding value on the outside. Certainly there are
companies that stand for things beyond just making a buck, but the
fundamental measure of success and failure is money in the civilian
world -- and in the military it is not much of a factor at all. I think
this creates a kind of psychological gap that a veteran needs to
acknowledge before he or she can be successful in business. I always
encourage veterans and anyone who seems unsure of principles of business
to contact resources like the Small Business
Development Center (SBDC) and SCORE,
which provides counselors to America's small businesses.
Applying this information to his own business, Wilson took on a
civilian partner who was both a lawyer
and an accountant
when he started the Wilson Stoyanoff law firm.
"We recently had a meeting where we were discussing ultimate goals of
our firm. My partner's first response was making money and mine was
establishing a firm that stood out for its practice of working with
business people and helping them accomplish their goals. I just assume
the money will come; he wants to set financial goals and launch plans
for accomplishing them." Together they're the perfect team.
Starting a business or franchise may sound daunting to veterans, but
they're no strangers to challenges. Using Wilson's advice, perhaps
they'll be able to create more veteran-friendly businesses.