Helping veteran entrepreneurs develop business skills - 5 minutes read
Helping veterans develop business skills as entrepreneurs
NEW YORK - Every year, about 250,000 U.S. military members leave the service and enter the workforce, and one in five tries to start their own business.
While the military focuses on leadership development, entrepreneurship is not a top priority, says General John W. Nicholson Jr., a retired four-star general who last commanded U.S. Forces in Afghanistan and NATO’s Resolute Support Mission.
Nicholson, who now serves as the president of the PenFed Foundation, a Washington, DC-based non-profit, talks about the value of providing seed capital to veterans who want to become entrepreneurs.
Q. Why do military veterans need help launching businesses?
A. Age is one thing. If someone enters the military straight out of high school and serves for a 20-year career, they could be as young as 38 or 39 when they retire. Many service members leave in their 30s.
You are typically getting a young man or woman with leadership experience. They are physically fit. They are problem solvers. They have worked with adversity. These are people who have dealt with complex and dangerous tasks in tough conditions.
They bring a lot of good qualities to the table: leadership, drive, energy, and, quite often, great ideas. What they don’t have is financial acumen and capital. They are not used to translating a good idea into a business plan.
A. We provide the seed capital to help veterans build and grow their businesses. We work with them every step of the way, from the idea stage to the point where it can be translated it into a feasible plan as well as an investment for us.
Our goal is to select about 20 companies per year for a one-year period to help incubate them and get started. At the end, we select a handful and give loans of up to $300,000 for their businesses. Then they repay loan, and we reinvest the money in another veteran entrepreneur’s business.
Q. Are certain industries better for veterans?
A. When we think of the military, we think of someone pulling a trigger, flying a jet or firing a missile. The truth is that 85% of military jobs are in support function roles, such as cybersecurity, human resources or logistics. The trigger pullers are in the minority.
We have helped veterans launch businesses in many different kinds of industries, including technology and even food. One example is Abe Kamarck, a former Navy pilot, who started True Made Foods. His kids liked barbecue sauce and ketchup, but the products were loaded with sugar. He read the labels and endeavored to make a product with natural ingredients his own children would eat. We invested early, and now he is distributing nationwide.
Q. Veterans are 30% more likely to employ other veterans, according to your web site. Why is that?
A. There is a shared culture and shared values within the veteran community. We all serve. Hard work and a focus on others is at the center of it. Veterans also know that when it comes to problems, they have the stamina and will to push through.
Q. How much financial experience do most veterans have?
A. Not enough. The No. 1 stressor for the majority of military members after combat is money. Military families generally live close to their means. They endure separations from loved ones, and they often move around a lot. More than half are married, and they are raising young families.
Q. Female veterans have an even harder time launching a business. Why?
A. Women, in general, have a lower level of investment in their businesses. And yet women are the fastest-growing cohort within the veteran community - they represent almost 10 percent of all retired military. We are trying to get more businesses going. It’s one area where we need to do more work.
One success story is Suzie Mills, a retired Air Force veteran. She founded Honest Soul Yoga and she employs military spouses in the Washington, DC-area. Now she is expanding to San Antonio, Texas.
Source: Reuters
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Keywords:
Business • United States Armed Forces • Workforce • Entrepreneurship • John W. Nicholson, Jr. • General (United States) • United States Armed Forces • War in Afghanistan (2001–2014) • NATO • Resolute Support Mission • Jim Nicholson (Secretary of Veterans Affairs) • President of the United States • Pentagon Federal Credit Union • Private foundation • Washington, D.C. • Nonprofit organization • Seed money • Entrepreneurship • Leadership • Stress (biology) • Risk • Leadership • Motivation • Energy • Idea • Finance • Idea • Business plan • Loan • Military • Military • Computer security • Human resources • Logistics • Business • Industry • Technology • Barbecue sauce • Ketchup • Sugar • Culture • Experience • Stress (biology) • Family • Family • Woman • Business • Woman • Working class • Woman • Demography • Veteran • Employment • Soul • Yoga • Washington, D.C. • San Antonio •
NEW YORK - Every year, about 250,000 U.S. military members leave the service and enter the workforce, and one in five tries to start their own business.
While the military focuses on leadership development, entrepreneurship is not a top priority, says General John W. Nicholson Jr., a retired four-star general who last commanded U.S. Forces in Afghanistan and NATO’s Resolute Support Mission.
Nicholson, who now serves as the president of the PenFed Foundation, a Washington, DC-based non-profit, talks about the value of providing seed capital to veterans who want to become entrepreneurs.
Q. Why do military veterans need help launching businesses?
A. Age is one thing. If someone enters the military straight out of high school and serves for a 20-year career, they could be as young as 38 or 39 when they retire. Many service members leave in their 30s.
You are typically getting a young man or woman with leadership experience. They are physically fit. They are problem solvers. They have worked with adversity. These are people who have dealt with complex and dangerous tasks in tough conditions.
They bring a lot of good qualities to the table: leadership, drive, energy, and, quite often, great ideas. What they don’t have is financial acumen and capital. They are not used to translating a good idea into a business plan.
A. We provide the seed capital to help veterans build and grow their businesses. We work with them every step of the way, from the idea stage to the point where it can be translated it into a feasible plan as well as an investment for us.
Our goal is to select about 20 companies per year for a one-year period to help incubate them and get started. At the end, we select a handful and give loans of up to $300,000 for their businesses. Then they repay loan, and we reinvest the money in another veteran entrepreneur’s business.
Q. Are certain industries better for veterans?
A. When we think of the military, we think of someone pulling a trigger, flying a jet or firing a missile. The truth is that 85% of military jobs are in support function roles, such as cybersecurity, human resources or logistics. The trigger pullers are in the minority.
We have helped veterans launch businesses in many different kinds of industries, including technology and even food. One example is Abe Kamarck, a former Navy pilot, who started True Made Foods. His kids liked barbecue sauce and ketchup, but the products were loaded with sugar. He read the labels and endeavored to make a product with natural ingredients his own children would eat. We invested early, and now he is distributing nationwide.
Q. Veterans are 30% more likely to employ other veterans, according to your web site. Why is that?
A. There is a shared culture and shared values within the veteran community. We all serve. Hard work and a focus on others is at the center of it. Veterans also know that when it comes to problems, they have the stamina and will to push through.
Q. How much financial experience do most veterans have?
A. Not enough. The No. 1 stressor for the majority of military members after combat is money. Military families generally live close to their means. They endure separations from loved ones, and they often move around a lot. More than half are married, and they are raising young families.
Q. Female veterans have an even harder time launching a business. Why?
A. Women, in general, have a lower level of investment in their businesses. And yet women are the fastest-growing cohort within the veteran community - they represent almost 10 percent of all retired military. We are trying to get more businesses going. It’s one area where we need to do more work.
One success story is Suzie Mills, a retired Air Force veteran. She founded Honest Soul Yoga and she employs military spouses in the Washington, DC-area. Now she is expanding to San Antonio, Texas.
Source: Reuters
Powered by NewsAPI.org
Keywords:
Business • United States Armed Forces • Workforce • Entrepreneurship • John W. Nicholson, Jr. • General (United States) • United States Armed Forces • War in Afghanistan (2001–2014) • NATO • Resolute Support Mission • Jim Nicholson (Secretary of Veterans Affairs) • President of the United States • Pentagon Federal Credit Union • Private foundation • Washington, D.C. • Nonprofit organization • Seed money • Entrepreneurship • Leadership • Stress (biology) • Risk • Leadership • Motivation • Energy • Idea • Finance • Idea • Business plan • Loan • Military • Military • Computer security • Human resources • Logistics • Business • Industry • Technology • Barbecue sauce • Ketchup • Sugar • Culture • Experience • Stress (biology) • Family • Family • Woman • Business • Woman • Working class • Woman • Demography • Veteran • Employment • Soul • Yoga • Washington, D.C. • San Antonio •
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