The Small Business Professor
The College Inn – School of Life
Many entrepreneurs start
out working for others and then find they are so burned-out
that even the risks of entrepreneurship pale in comparison
to the sacrifices they are making for others. Many dream of
opening a little bed and breakfast, reducing their stress
levels and becoming masters of their own destinies. Becky
Rohrer of Westerville, Ohio, a suburb of Columbus, never had
that dream, but she ended up making it come true in the
small family-oriented town where she went to college.
After graduating from
Otterbein College with a Bachelor’s in Business in 1981,
Rohrer landed a job in retail jewelry sales before becoming
a regional property manager managing over $200 million in
properties. By the time she was 32, she was married with
three step children, managing 75 people, working 65 hours a
week, stressed out, overworked, and underappreciated.
When she had a baby at 35,
even superwoman realized she had had enough. One day, Rohrer
walked in to her boss’ office and said, “I can’t do this
anymore.” Although her husband worked for the same company,
no one could convince her to come back. She crawled inside
herself, took care of her child, didn’t answer the phone for
3 weeks and tried to come to grips with her life. It took
about six months for her to de-stress, relax and realize
that she still wanted to do something outside her home.
Late in 1995, Rohrer
stumbled onto a house built in 1870. At that moment, it was
if a lock clicked and a door swung open in her mind – here
was a home, a new life. A historic home on the main street
leading to the college, it had been gutted, with no roof or
windows, and left standing in preparation for remodeling by
someone else who had run out of money. Walking through it,
ducking bats and raccoons, she saw it in her mind,
completely restored and decorated. The broken-down state of
the home seemed a mirror of the way she felt on the inside;
if she could restore the house, she could restore herself
too. Although the home was in a restricted area which
couldn’t be used for student housing, a real estate agent
told her it could be used as a B&B. Rohrer wasn’t even
familiar with the term and had to go to the library to
figure out how to do it.
Although Rohrer’s marriage
was crumbling, she asked her husband for help in getting a
loan. All of her real estate training told her the location
was the key, but the bank required a five year plan, so she
sat down and figured it out. It was going to be a lot
tougher than she had thought, but if she did absolutely
everything herself, cooking, cleaning, landscaping, and
management, she would make it, and for nine years, she did
just that.
What kept her going was the
positive feedback she received from her guests. Many of the
guests return year after year and have become life-long
friends. She credits some of them with helping to change her
life by sharing their perspectives. When her first five year
plan was complete, she made another, and fulfilled all of
its goals by the ninth year. Today, Rohrer’s The College Inn
can sustain both a housekeeper and a landscaper. She is
writing a book about the lessons she’s learned from her
guests.
The Small Business Professors' Words of Wisdom
Sometimes, we become our
own worst enemy without even realizing it. We stumble around
professionally and personally, exhausted and unhappy,
hearing a litany in our heads that there is nothing that can
be done to change things. Often it takes a traumatic event
to wake us up to the clues all around us that we are on the
wrong path. Once that happens, some find the courage to make
a different way.
Many entrepreneurs have the
same experience as Becky Rohrer. Suddenly, they realize they
have to get out, and soon after decide that they never want
to work for anyone else again. No matter what sacrifices are
required, the horror of going back to that old way of life
gives them strength to carry on. Rohrer exemplifies the best
in entrepreneurs – she has the faith and tenacity to stick
it out, doing whatever is necessary to make it, and she’s
still reaching for more. Recently, she developed a new 10
year plan, one that includes travel and writing. Judging by
what she’s accomplished so far, there seems little doubt
that she will triumph.
Case History:
www.thecollegeinnonline.com
Entrepreneur’s Strategy:
Write a
five year plan, which includes lower than expected revenue
and a complete expense list.
Could This Work For Me?
No
matter where you are in the entrepreneurial process, writing
a five year plan can help you set and meet goals.
|
All of her real estate
training told her the location was the key, but the bank
required a five year plan ...
|