The Small Business Professor
It Doesn’t Matter When, Where, or How You Start a Business
Carolyn Gable was the
fourth of six children and always felt like she had to fight
to be heard. A self-starter, Gable put on the "golden
handcuffs" as waiting tables is sometimes called because the
work is punishing but the money is good, got married, raised
two children, and finally realized after 15 years that she
was meant for something more in her professional life.
One morning, she decided to
put on a suit and find her way to an employment agency. She
always wanted to be in sales, but the agency wasn’t
encouraging about her chances. Yet at the end of the day,
she had a job as a customer service representative for a
trucking company
One day, she happened to be
dressed-up and some visiting executives, who had passed her
by many times when she was more casually dressed, asked why
she wasn’t in sales. This incident galvanized Gable into
action and soon was a sales representative for the
well-known Carolina Freight company. She loved sales and
became a top income-producer. She was recruited by another
firm, and now with experience, she was able to negotiate a
better salary and more freedom. Soon she was making $100,000
in sales per month.
Other job offers followed,
but as Gable grew more experienced, she realized that
customers were following her wherever she went. By opening
her own firm, she could book her customers’ freight with
whatever trucking company gave the best service and price.
New Age Transportation was born in Gable’s basement and
Gable laughs when she remembers being a startup company and
in labor with her fourth child. She was leaving for the
hospital, when the phone rang. As an entrepreneur, she just
couldn’t let it ring so she picked it up and quickly
explained, but the only thing the customer wanted to hear,
baby or no baby, was if she could get the freight picked up!
(She did.)
Business was good, but it
was a constant struggle to keep from being undersold. In
1992, Gable’s largest account called and told her they were
shifting all their business elsewhere. She lost the account
and believes it was the worst time of her life, but took the
time to reflect on the company’s direction. She realized
that she wanted to get control of billing, and that by
taking on the liability of account collection; she would
also realize a much larger percentage of the profit for each
job. She concentrated on building infrastructure and got the
account she lost back within six months.
By1999, concerns about Y2K and the Internet shifted her
priority toward warehousing, so she started a new division
with 20,000 square feet of warehouse space. Within six
months, the warehouse was packed and she moved into 86,000
square feet to keep pace with the growing business. Next,
Time Warner, to whom she was regularly delivering freight
from another client, sent for her and asked if she would
handle their cable company’s freight. Instantly she went
from $4 million to $8 million in sales and from seven
employees to twenty. Shrewdly, she requested, and was
granted permission, to carry freight for other cable
companies and her business skyrocketed. Today, New Age
Transportation has 50 employees, billed $18 million in 2004,
and has built their own 90,000 square foot building.
The Small Business Professors' Words of Wisdom
Carolyn Gable’s story has a
lot to teach us. First, don’t let a lack of education hold
you back, no matter what your age or what you’ve done (or
haven’t done) before. Don’t believe anyone who tells you
that what you want is impossible – use their negative energy
to help you prove what you know to be true – you can do it.
Dress for the job you wish to have, not for the job you have
now. The more professionally dressed you are, the more
seriously people take you and your company.
Work hard and don’t give up, even when everything looks
bleak – use the time to re-evaluate, and then, keep trying;
something good will almost always come along. When you’re
running a business, the customer is your number one
priority, no matter what is going on in your personal life.
Finally, always remember where you came from. Gable
remembers what it was like to wait tables; so she
periodically gives surprise rewards (including cash) to
employees who work above and beyond.
Case History: New Age
Transportation
www.newagetransportation.com
Entrepreneur’s Strategy: Start somewhere, anywhere,
and learn a business from the inside out. If it works for
you, go for it.
Could This Work For Me? Finding something that you
love is the most important part starting a successful
business. It doesn’t matter how long it takes or what the
business is, your commitment, passion, and energy are what
drive success.
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Today, New Age Transportation
has 50 employees, billed $18 million in 2004, and has built
their own 90,000 square foot building.
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