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Dominick Wallace, Wallace Capital Funding, LLC

June 3, 2021 by John Ray

Wallace Capital Funding
North Fulton Business Radio
Dominick Wallace, Wallace Capital Funding, LLC
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Wallace Capital Funding

Dominick Wallace, Wallace Capital Funding, LLC (North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 361)

Dominick Wallace’s experience with his own business gave him an appreciation for the need many small business owners have for reliable funding to keep their businesses running without hiccups. That experience led to his founding Wallace Capital Funding to provide alternative funding options, and he joined host John Ray to share his story. North Fulton Business Radio is broadcast from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta.

Wallace Capital Funding, LLC

In business since 2002, Wallace Capital Funding, LLC provides a friendly funding alternative for small up-start and growing businesses in need of a cash infusion.Wallace Capital Funding

Whether clients need funding for new equipment, business real-estate, or to cover staff expenses before a contract payment comes through, Wallace can create a custom funding solution.

Wallace has provided alternative funding solutions for businesses with revenue up to $25 Million and growing, as well as start-up businesses with no revenue yet, but who are on the fast track to success. Their uniting factor is they all wanted a friendly financial advisor they can trust, who has a long-standing track record with numerous resources to provide a customized funding solution.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter | YouTube

Dominick Wallace, Managing Director, Wallace Capital Funding, LLC

Wallace Capital Funding
Dominique Wallace, Managing Director, Wallace Capital Funding

Dominick Wallace’s passion lies in growing resources by providing funding to see client’s business dreams come to full fruition. He is a financial savior, growing small businesses by granting them the ability to build their own island to stand on. The organization he founded shares the spotlight with institutions like Wells Fargo, American Express, Capital One, and Bank of America while giving individual attention to the business owners he serves. His partners are coming up on a billion dollars in capital funding given to these small businesses. He is also a contributing author of the number one Amazon Best Seller, The Million Dollar Story,  a book about 10 incredible entrepreneurs who hit rock bottom but managed to turn it all around and make a big profit.

LinkedIn

 

North Fulton Business Radio is hosted by John Ray, and broadcast and produced from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta. You can find the full archive of shows by following this link. The show is available on all the major podcast apps, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Amazon, iHeart Radio, Stitcher, TuneIn, and others.

Renasant Bank has humble roots, starting in 1904 as a $100,000 bank in a Lee County, Mississippi, bakery. Since then, Renasant has grown to become one of the Southeast’s strongest financial institutions with over $13 billion in assets and more than 190 banking, lending, wealth management and financial services offices in Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia and Florida. All of Renasant’s success stems from each of their banker’s commitment to investing in their communities as a way of better understanding the people they serve. At Renasant Bank, they understand you because they work and live alongside you every day.

Tagged With: Alternative Funding, Dominick Wallace, factoring, John Ray, North Fulton Business Radio, small business factoring, The Million Dollar Story, Wallace Capital Funding

Inspiring Women, Episode 12: Taking Your Business to the Next Level (An Interview with Catherine Lang-Cline)

August 12, 2019 by John Ray

Inspiring Women PodCast with Betty Collins
Inspiring Women PodCast with Betty Collins
Inspiring Women, Episode 12: Taking Your Business to the Next Level (An Interview with Catherine Lang-Cline)
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Catherine Lang-Cline and Betty Collins

Taking Your Business to the Next Level

Is your business stuck? What do you need to do to take your business to the next level? Betty Collins, host of the “Inspiring Women” podcast, addresses these issues and more. Betty also interviews Catherine Lang-Cline of Portfolio Creative on the challenges she faced in scaling her business. “Inspiring Women” is presented by Brady Ware & Company.

Catherine Lang-Cline, Portfolio Creative

Catherine Lang-Cline

Catherine Lang-Cline is the President and Co-Creator of Portfolio Creative. Prior to forming Portfolio Creative, Catherine spent more than 20 years in the creative industry as a designer for corporations and ad agencies, both as an employee and as a freelancer. Along with her co-founder Kristen Harris, Catherine felt that there needed to be a place to help artists find work and help clients find talent. They combined their experience and opened Portfolio Creative.

Portfolio Creative connects the best of the best in the creative industry. They connect the best creative clients with the best creative talent. That can come in the form of direct-hire, temp-to-hire, projects with contractors, or other needs. They handle all areas of marketing and advertising. For more information go to the Portfolio Creative website.

Catherine is a Certified Staffing Professional with the American Staffing Association. She serves as a board member for the Greater Columbus Arts Council, the Columbus Chamber of Commerce and is chair of the Chamber’s Small Business Council. She is also an active member of WPO and is currently President of NAWBO Columbus.

Catherine resides in Columbus and enjoys art, traveling, cooking, doing home renovation, and riding motorcycles.

Betty Collins, CPA, Brady Ware & Company and Host of the “Inspiring Women” Podcast

Betty Collins, Brady Ware & Company

Betty Collins is the Office Lead for Brady Ware’s Columbus office and a Shareholder in the firm. Betty joined Brady Ware & Company in 2012 through a merger with Nipps, Brown, Collins & Associates. She started her career in public accounting in 1988. Betty is co-leader of the Long Term Care service team, which helps providers of services to Individuals with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities and nursing centers establish effective operational models that also maximize available funding. She consults with other small businesses, helping them prosper with advice on general operations management, cash flow optimization, and tax minimization strategies.

In addition, Betty serves on the Board of Directors for Brady Ware and Company. She leads Brady Ware’s Women’s Initiative, a program designed to empower female employees, allowing them to tap into unique resources and unleash their full potential.  Betty helps her colleagues create a work/life balance while inspiring them to set and reach personal and professional goals. The Women’s Initiative promotes women-to-women business relationships for clients and holds an annual conference that supports women business owners, women leaders, and other women who want to succeed. Betty actively participates in women-oriented conferences through speaking engagements and board activity.

Betty is a member of the National Association of Women Business Owners (NAWBO) and she is the President-elect for the Columbus Chapter. Brady Ware also partners with the Women’s Small Business Accelerator (WSBA), an organization designed to help female business owners develop and implement a strong business strategy through education and mentorship, and Betty participates in their mentor match program. She is passionate about WSBA because she believes in their acceleration program and matching women with the right advisors to help them achieve their business ownership goals. Betty supports the WSBA and NAWBO because these organizations deliver resources that help other women-owned and managed businesses thrive.

Betty is a graduate of Mount Vernon Nazarene College, a member of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, and a member of the Ohio Society of Certified Public Accountants. Betty is also the Board Chairwoman for the Gahanna Area Chamber of Commerce, and she serves on the Board of the Community Improvement Corporation of Gahanna as Treasurer.

“Inspiring Women” Podcast Series

“Inspiring Women” is THE podcast that advances women toward economic, social and political achievement. The show is hosted by Betty Collins, CPA, and presented by Brady Ware and Company. Brady Ware is committed to empowering women to go their distance in the workplace and at home. Past episodes of “Inspiring Women” can be found here.

Show Transcript

Betty Collins: [00:00:00] Today, this podcast is about going to the next level in your business. We could go on and on about going to the next level in your professional life or in your career, in your company and in your personal life, but today I want to talk really about the business. It’s your business. It’s a woman-owned business, and we’re going to focus on that. For part of the podcast, I’m going to interview Catherine Lang-Cline. She’s with Portfolio Creative, and she has a great story. The reason I chose her is just encouragement.

Betty Collins: [00:00:30] She’s done an amazing job, and it looks easy from the outside, but she’s been through anything probably that you have been through. I have known her through being involved with the National Association of Women Business Owners, the NAWBO Columbus chapter. I had the privilege of serving with her on the board, watching her leadership. It’s no wonder she’s had success. She’s very known in Central Ohio area due to that success, but also just her involvement within the community.

Betty Collins: [00:00:56] I chose the topic today because women are starting businesses at a rapid pace. Here’s some numbers, and this is from the Women’s Business Enterprise National Council, so they’re pretty accurate, and it was done in 2018, so it probably hasn’t changed tremendously. As of 2018, there are 12.3 million owned businesses. When you look back in 1972, when they started tracking this stuff, there was 402,000 businesses, so we go, “Okay, yay! We’ve done some good things.” Here’s a statistic that’s great, women own 4 out of every 10 businesses in the US. That’s pretty significant, considering in 1988 you couldn’t even get your own financing. There was law that finally went into place for that if you were a business owner.

Betty Collins: [00:01:42] Since 2007, the number of women-owned businesses have increased 58 percent, which is better than businesses, overall. Again, we’re going kind of at this rapid pace. Last year, 1,821 businesses started a day, every day, and they were started by women. That’s pretty significant. Sounds really great. Sounds really cool. Women are slightly more likely to start a business than men. Why is that? I don’t know the reasoning behind that, but women have that interest. They have that drive. Women-owned businesses employ 9.2 million people. That is just only, though, eight percent of the private sector, but that’s a lot of people.

Betty Collins: [00:02:29] Women-owned businesses generate $1.8 trillion in revenue, which is about 4.3 percent of the revenue out there. The last one is, that’s really cool, from 2007 up to 2018, total employment by women-owned businesses rose 21 percent so, obviously, we are making some bold moves, some big moves in the marketplace that are changing the marketplace. I always say, when the marketplace works, the country works because households have provision, right? So, it’s just a huge, huge thing, and part of what I like to do in the business world is utilize accounting. Being a CPA is the venue for me to be part of that success. As much as all of these things sound really awesome, women struggle in business, and that’s just a reality.

Betty Collins: [00:03:20] Eighty-eight percent of women-owned businesses generate less than $100,000 in revenue. There could be a lot of things behind that number, so you don’t want to, you know, big doesn’t mean better. It could be what they do. It could be that they’re a sole proprietor, maybe they just got started. You know, when you’re a consultant, you can only consult so many dollars when you’re the actual, like an executive coach, there’s only so much to you get to that. But this group is growing, and it continues. Their revenues are growing. They have a little bit of struggle. And, then, 1.7 percent of women-owned businesses, though, do generate a million dollars in revenue or more.

Betty Collins: [00:03:58] Some people think a million dollars is a lot. Some people think a million dollars is nothing when you have that revenue, and those continue to increase, but women struggle getting to that hundred thousand and then a half a million, then over a million. I don’t know if it’s just all of a sudden you’re over a million, your mindset’s different and everything swoosh, and it just goes happily down the road, but they struggle, and it’s not easy being an entrepreneur whether you are a man or a woman.

Betty Collins: [00:04:25] What are the barriers that most women, you know, feel like are there … I’m going to just say business, in general, I think, but of getting to that next level? A lot of times you are this original, and you have an idea and you’re different and you’re passionate and you might want to do things. I mean, I’m considered a unique CPA because I’m fairly personable. As long as I keep that personal side of Betty Collins, I’m a different CPA. I’m still this original over here, but a lot of times we become copies, and we think we need to transform and be the norm, and a lot of times that takes away from who we are. Capital, less than three percent of venture capital goes to women-owned businesses.

Betty Collins: [00:05:08] I’m trying to ask a different question as to why that is because we know it’s true, but we just don’t really know the why so we can get to the problem of how to solve it. More women use credit cards for capital. Your banker would have a whole conversation about that, where you really should be using a bank and have a relationship with a banker that can give you the right capital, and a lot of times you’d use the wrong start-up money, and then you’re in a credit crisis. Being taking taken serious, that’s a huge thing for women. I do tell women if you want to be not looked at as like a clown, then quit going to the circus.

Betty Collins: [00:05:47] If you want to be taken serious, I mean, I think of Lady Gaga. I will admit this out loud that I went to see A Star is Born and thought, “Man, this singer is amazing,” and I didn’t realize ’til the end when they were doing the credits that it was Lady Gaga, right? She talks about, I wish I was taken more seriously. She’s a talented amazing singer. I mean, she can do all kinds of it, right? You have to sometimes, maybe, be different to be taken serious, but that’s a barrier. Owning your accomplishments, men will own them all day long, but women, they don’t do that as much. “Oh, well, you know, it was a group effort,” and all that kind of stuff. I do the same type of thing but, if you’re going to sell yourself, and you’re going to sell that idea and that stuff to venture capitalists, you own what you have created. We don’t do that well.

Betty Collins: [00:06:40] Building a supportive network. Generally, if you have a bad advisor, you just didn’t know what advisor you probably needed. So, a lot of times, you’ve got to have the right supportive network around you, beyond the banker and even the insurance, you know? It’s why I have a supportive network like NAWBO, or that I give to an organization like the WSBA. Because, when you build those networks, they definitely work for everyone that’s involved. And, then, balancing personal and professional life. That’s a barrier not just for moms. That should be a barrier for parents, that should be a barrier for everybody trying to get that stuff working out. You will never have the perfect balance. It’s a myth. You just won’t, so you have to decide which is more important and how you want it to go.

Betty Collins: [00:07:23] The last barrier that, I think, that’s out there is just fear. Nobody wants to fail, and there’s a lot of risk in being an entrepreneur, and so women really have more of an issue with fear. I think men ignore fear, maybe, I don’t know, or they just don’t let you know it’s there. Let me ask you this question before we kind of talk with Catherine. Where are you in the mix for owning a business? Maybe you have the idea, or maybe there’s a passion, or maybe that idea is now on paper and it could become real, or maybe the start-up has actually started and you’re going, “What was I thinking?” Maybe you’ve made it through two or three years and you’re going, “Wow, is there ever going to be light at the end of the tunnel?” There will be. You might be at the stage where, “I want this to be worth it.”

Betty Collins: [00:08:11] I can tell you right now, one reason I’m a business owner is because I have a piece of stock and one day I will sell that stock. It has to be worth something, right? I’m not going to do all this for nothing. Maybe you think bigger is better. There has to be more. More is always better, and then you’re finding out we grew it too fast, we’re too big, and we’ve lost our identities. Maybe legacy is becoming a familiar word, kind of a scary word but, for me, I really hope legacy is not something I run from, but maybe you’re in that stage of “I want another generation to do this,” or, hopefully, what I did had some impact or, maybe, you’re just ready to sell. It’s time to go to the beach. It’s time to get those premium dollars. You might be anywhere in this mix and you may need to go to different levels, but it all is still, I think, the same principles of getting to that next level.

Betty Collins: [00:09:00] You also have to ask yourself what keeps you up at night? Then you’ll know why you’re not getting to the next level. That’s, as an advisor, I probably try to apply that to my business owners the most. What keeps you up at night? It could be that you don’t have any talent to hire. It could be that your line of credit has to renew again, and you’re going “Will it renew?” And payroll needs to be met again. It’s already Friday and it’s two weeks ago. Maybe your business partner who you thought you could do and be in business with forever, their personal life is completely out of control. Guess what? You’re married when that’s your partner. So, you know, these are things that keep you up, maybe bad advisors and now you realize you have them. You’re not keeping up with competition.

Betty Collins: [00:09:43] I had an interesting conversation with someone the other day who’s just been around forever doing something, and she said to me, “I’m behind. I didn’t do what I needed to, and now I’m trying to catch up,” or maybe there’s just not capital available for what you do, and you’re kind of tied. These are things that where are you in business, and what are the things that keep you up at night? Probably you’re not alone if you start talking to other businesses around you. The business community and the importance of the marketplace is too crucial to let those things get you down. You’re too crucial to, hey, go to that next level, so it plays an important part in our marketplace and for those around you.

Betty Collins: [00:10:24] Someone who has done this with just ease is Catherine Lang-Cline, and she is the owner of Portfolio Creative. She’s really admired in our community and respected because her leadership skills, she does make it look easy, but she hasn’t always been that, so I welcome you to the podcast today. I’m glad that you are with us.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:10:44] Thank you. I’m very excited to be here.

Betty Collins: [00:10:44] Yes. You said yes immediately, so I was grateful for that. I’d like to start with talking about your company today, so give my audience an overview of here we are now.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:10:58] Okay. Well, Portfolio Creative has been around for about 14 years now. We do staffing and recruiting for anything in the advertising and marketing field. In a good year, we can have as much as $9 million in revenue. On average, were around six. Essentially, we just work in the Columbus region, and we are now starting to push out to Cleveland and Cincinnati. We do have some placements in Pittsburgh, and we have worked in New York because, essentially, if people call us, we’ll try and find them someone. Sometimes, people that we used to work with move to those places and ask if we can still do it in that area, so that kind of has helped us grown as well.

Betty Collins: [00:11:36] Oh, that’s great. How many employees do you have today, just approximately?

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:11:39] Right now, we have about 10, and that includes myself and my business owner. The people that we place, that ranges by season, so that can be anywhere from like 60 to 100 people.

Betty Collins: [00:11:48] Okay, so back when you were ready to start this, talk about your idea and that glass of wine. Tell us about that moment.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:11:58] I don’t remember necessarily wine being involved, but I can tell you how I did start.

Betty Collins: [00:12:03] Okay.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:12:04] Essentially, both Kristen Harris, my business partner and I, worked for the The Limited Brands, so we had been in marketing and advertising for years and years. She mostly works with corporate America, and I kind of jumped between corporate and freelance, so I knew exactly what it was like to kind of be on my own and how to bill properly and find work at the same time. At that time, I was freelancing for her. Our paths had crossed again, and this time I was working with her as, you know, kind of her contract employee.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:12:36] She came up to me and she said, “I spend half my time looking for great, creative talent, and if there was only a service that I could farm this out to, that would be great.” And then, maybe, like the next day she came back and said, “Now, would you use a company like this if you were looking for freelance work?” I was like, “Absolutely.” When I lived in Chicago, I worked for companies like that all the time. I would let them know when I was available, they would find me work, I’d find work on my own, and it was a really, really great way to kind of back fill your pipeline.

Betty Collins: [00:13:03] Sure.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:13:05] She was like, “Great, you know how to do this, so I would love to have a partner to try this.” Essentially, we found this book that was called “Six Weeks ‘Til Startup.” It was really more … and I cannot remember the author, but it’s on Amazon, and it’s essentially a workbook that you fill out. It took us more like six months to start up because we were both working at the same time, and we also had to decide, well, when are we going to pull the trigger on this? We picked January 1st of 2005. As an accountant, you’ll appreciate that our books are always based on a calendar versus fiscal year.

Betty Collins: [00:13:36] Yes.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:13:36] That worked out well for us because we’re designers, you know, we had not worked in a business, but the reason I mentioned where we both work from, it was that it was a great place to learn about business. When people talk about starting their own business, I’m like, “Where have you worked before?” Because you can teach yourself on someone else’s dime, for the most part, how to run a business. Anyway, so we went through this workbook, which, essentially, went through the process of setting up a business. I would really recommend it to anybody, especially, if they have a business partner, to kind of make sure that you’re on the same page because we have been incredibly lucky that 14 years later, we still get along fantastic.

Betty Collins: [00:14:15] Sure.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:14:15] Some of that formula is, everything that I wanted to do, she did not want to do, and everything that she wanted to do, I did not want to do.

Betty Collins: [00:14:23] Perfect.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:14:23] Which worked out really great, so it wasn’t everybody was doing sales, or everybody was trying to place talent. I love the sales, she loved finding the talent, and we both stayed in our lane. Actually, going through the workbook, that really helped, too, because it took you step by step as far as what would your mission be for this company? What do you value? How do you vision the company? And you can run into a partner that, and there’s nothing wrong with either scenario, that one, wants, anytime there’s money being made, they want to reinvest in the business, they want to hire more people, and another one wants to buy a boat. If you are that skewed in where you would like the business to go, then yeah, it’s time to have a conversation, and maybe it’s not a good partnership. People also start their businesses with their very best friend. I always like to joke that Kristen and I are not friends. We are business partners.

Betty Collins: [00:15:09] That’s a different thing. That’s good.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:15:10] While we would probably do very fine out socially, but we very rarely socialize, and we really did not know each other beyond our work experience and ethics that we found each other. I said, “You know what? Kristen’s always been a hard worker, and I think she would be a great business partner,” and she thought the same of me, so that’s how we kind of started.

Betty Collins: [00:15:32] Okay.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:15:32] And then everything else just came like, “Well, what do you have? Well, I have a computer and you have a printer and a fax machine,” because back then we needed a fax machine.

Betty Collins: [00:15:39] Right. Do we have those now? I don’t know if we have those now.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:15:41] We don’t anymore.

Betty Collins: [00:15:44] You don’t need them. Well, I mean, what I do like you hearing it saying is, so when we’re talking about the mix of people that are listening to the audience today, there was some thought before you opened doors.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:15:55] A lot of thought.

Betty Collins: [00:15:56] There was a lot of planning, so you knew, you know, I guess you could call it marriage counseling. You still might get a divorce.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:16:02] Exactly, or Pre-Cana or whatever (inaudible) good marriage.

Betty Collins: [00:16:02] Right, but you had really thought through some good things.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:16:10] Yes.

Betty Collins: [00:16:11] So the idea becoming reality was there was a lot of discussion. It wasn’t just, “Here’s my shingle, let’s go.”

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:16:17] Right, right.

Betty Collins: [00:16:18] Okay.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:16:19] Of course, at that time, because you talked a little bit about, you know, funding and things like that.

Betty Collins: [00:16:23] Yeah.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:16:25] A lot of it was all, it was all bootstrapped. I mean, Kristin had some money, some cash to start. I was still working part of the time. You know, you’re finding talent to place and, in some instances, I would say, “Well, if I can’t find you the perfect person, it’ll be me. I will come by and do it.”

Betty Collins: [00:16:40] Right.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:16:40] There was at least twice that I had to go and do that where, you know, our database was not that deep, and I wanted everyone to have the perfect person to do it and, in some cases, these were my past clients, so I felt I had to kind of handhold it through until I find someone as good as me or better to take the job on.

Betty Collins: [00:16:57] Well, when did you realize that, “Wow, so we talked it through,” because some people think, “I’ve created my LLC with the State of Ohio, everything’s ready to go,” which is not how it works. At what point did you decide, I mean, “We have the idea. We’ve started up, and this is great. We’re off and going?” But when did you decide let’s make this worth our time? When did you see, maybe, give us a time period, how events fell out? When did it become like, “We’re going to make this worth our time”?

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:17:32] Well, I don’t know how realistic this is for everyone, but for us, we decided that after six months, if we cannot pay ourselves, we were just gonna get a job.

Betty Collins: [00:17:42] Okay.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:17:42] We had a lot of networking experience at that point, so we figure we could get a job anywhere, I suppose, at that point. But that was the first finish line we had to cross before we knew this was a real business, and six months came along and we could, so we’re like, “Okay, I guess we’re doing this.” After that point, that’s when we realized, you know, we’re gonna have to start being a little more brave and getting larger clients and get really connected to the people that we know that we used to work with that were now in those companies and find our champions and just kind of went after it and said, “Based on how you know me and how I work and what I can produce, could you take a chance on this?” And we had a number of people that just, essentially, just walked us right into HR or right to the diversity person and got us signed up.

Betty Collins: [00:18:28] So, your mindset changed pretty quickly into this?

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:18:32] Yeah. Once we realized … because we thought if we paid ourselves, people were buying it, you know?

Betty Collins: [00:18:37] Right. You got Kool-Aid, and they’re drinking it.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:18:39] Yeah, exactly. We felt a lot more confident and (inaudible) said hey, “Let’s just keep this momentum going,” and it was just a while, just the two of us, until we started, you know, having a little more success, a little more work, and then we started, you know, hiring interns and part-time people to kind of help with things.

Betty Collins: [00:18:56] When you started expanding and you started getting to, “Hey, now I’ve got a payroll to meet, or I’ve got some volunteer interns. This is awesome,” but what was the hardest transition about, “Man, it was just Kristen and I, we could do these things, now I’ve got an office full of people.” What were those challenges for you?

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:19:18] One of the larger challenges was delegation, I will say that, because who else is going to do it better than me?

Betty Collins: [00:19:25] Right, right. Right. I am.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:19:28] I loved, for example, this is always one of my favorite stories. I love keeping the books. There’s nothing more fun than, you know, when the checks come in and you get to add them up and run them to the bank and things like that. It got to the point where it’s like, “Well, I could probably delegate that.” You know, someone had said to me early on, “Catherine, you need to focus on the things that only you can do, and then you have to hire people that can do these things better or at least get them off your plate,” so that’s kind of where we started with our hiring of people. People that could do the paperwork, people that could do the books, people that could, you know, handle the paychecks and things like that. I would stick with the selling and the relationships and the client, you know, partnerships and things like that.

Betty Collins: [00:20:08] The things that really generated the checks that were going into the bank, right?

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:20:11] Absolutely.

Betty Collins: [00:20:11] That’s where the business owner is. But I do want it be known that she liked accounting.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:20:17] I did. I really did.

Betty Collins: [00:20:18] We have to say that.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:20:20] QuickBooks is an amazing thing still to this day.

Betty Collins: [00:20:21] It is.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:20:23] That was definitely one. And, then, as we started growing, too, because it is a business where you have to pay people before you get paid, based on the size of the company. I think it’s the larger the company, it’s the longer you have to wait for the check. We had to figure out how we were going to start financing this, because once we started getting into big companies, corporations, it was, you know, like thousands and thousands of dollars, and we couldn’t … Again, we went to the banks, and I can tell you that, you know, unless you can really prove that you’re credible … and you think about that with anything, if a relative comes to you and asks for money and you’re like, “Oh, I don’t know if I like this idea,” they’re not going to loan you the money.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:21:01] So, we found a factoring company that would help us, and that is a great way to kind of help you through some of the more challenging times just because they will buy out your invoice, essentially, and they’ll handle … you get the money right away and, essentially, when they get paid, then you get the rest of the money, and they keep a little smidge of it for their time. That works out for about a year, I want to say, until we started being cash rich enough where we could handle it. At that point, once we got to about a million dollars, we then went back to the bank and then suddenly we were friends.

Betty Collins: [00:21:31] Yeah, you were their best client. Right.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:21:33] Then, with the help of the SBA, we were able to get a line of credit, and that’s always been kind of the slush fund, if you will. If we are waiting for some money to come in, we’ll just take out the line of credit and then pay it back once the check comes in.

Betty Collins: [00:21:48] Well, I mean, so you go from the idea to you have a passion, you see a need because you’re living in the need, right, and then you get it started. It sounds like things, really, went off fairly quickly for you.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:21:59] Mm-hmm.

Betty Collins: [00:22:01] But then you realized, “I got to have bigger clients.” I mean, you can have, you know, 100 $10-clients, or you can have 10 $100-dollar clients.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:22:07] Yes.

Betty Collins: [00:22:07] You know, that’s the better way to go. I’m sure you were seeing this growth, but what probably, at this point, were some game changers that just maybe took you off the charts or went, “Wow!” You can look back and go, “That was a game changer”?

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:22:24] The game changers come when you have a client that everybody’s heard of. Like, for us, we were from The Limited, and we knew a lot of people there, so we found a champion in there to get us in, and we had them within our first year of business.

Betty Collins: [00:22:37] That’s big.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:22:38] I know people, you know, really like, “Oh, if I could only work with The Limited.” The difference that made it work, too, was that not only do we have a champion, but we knew exactly what they wanted. We came from their marketing department. We knew exactly what they needed. We knew the right person to go in there, so it was somewhat of an easy sell. It wasn’t like we were coming in and now trying to sell them, you know, office supplies or something because we would have absolutely no experience with that, and we had to work, you know, a couple partnerships and they let us dip our toe in at first. But, for us, if we had five people placed there, it was like Christmas. It had grown exponentially since then because we were able to prove it and keep delivering and you can’t fail once you’re at that level too. A lot of it, I think, also came from just a belief in what we did too. You had talked about how sometimes women will get scared in business and things like that. I can, honestly, say I never have been. I just figured it was worth a try.

Betty Collins: [00:23:33] Yeah.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:23:33] It was also a little bit of almost like a math problem, too, “Okay, that didn’t work this time, so what else can we try to get in there. Now, how can we try…” you know, you’re just poking at all these different angles. “Who do we know? Who can we find? What networking event will they be at? Who’s a friend of a friend that could get me in there?” Because it was never a “No,” it was a “No, not yet,” or, “No, not now,” and I just felt like, well, why wouldn’t they want to work with us, you know? For me, it was just no question, we were just gonna get in there and we were just gonna do it, and I just hoped that Kristen was able to handle everything I threw back at her and she did, so.

Betty Collins: [00:24:10] Yeah, but I like the fact one of the barriers we talked about was owning, kind of owning your success, owning your idea, believing in that, and it sounds like you had no issue with that.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:24:18] Right. A lot of people might think, “Oh, I’m not like that,” but everybody kind of is. I think you have to kind of get over your own personal hump with that too. I had that as well. My life could be its own podcast, you know, as far as some of the struggles that I’ve gone through and, you know, a past marriage and, you know, things like that.

Betty Collins: [00:24:37] Sure.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:24:37] Some of the things that changed my life, that really kind of helped, is that I had that great support team. It started initially with, at that time, my boyfriend, who then became my husband. I had said, you know, “I have this crazy idea, I’m going to start a business,” and the first words out of his mouth were, “Oh, I think you’d be great at that.”

Betty Collins: [00:24:55] Awesome.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:24:56] And people who were surrounding me said, “Yeah, I think you could do that,” and then when I started, I don’t know, kind of getting more and more into it, you do start connecting with, you know, like the people at NAWBO and other people who run a business, and you find out that a lot of your worries are the same worries that they had, especially at start-up or they run into a certain crisis, which, you know, scares you because you’re not sure how you can handle it.

Betty Collins: [00:25:20] Right.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:25:20] But, then, you have people beside you that you can talk to and say, “What do you do in this situation?” And they’re like, “You know? Nothing. It’s going to be fine.”

Betty Collins: [00:25:25] Right.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:25:26] We lost a client, and I was able reach out to one of my NAWBO sisters, and she’s like, “Oh, yeah, that happened to us too,” and I’m like, “Well, what did you do?” You know, as I’m still sweating, and she said, “You get more clients,” it was just that simple.

Betty Collins: [00:25:43] Oh, okay. Thank you.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:25:45] Oh, okay. The fact that it happened to her and she’s super successful, it took all the sting out of it.

Betty Collins: [00:25:50] Yeah.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:25:51] So, then I just knew, you know, all right, then I just have to get more clients and it kind of made the ship a little more right at that point.

Betty Collins: [00:25:58] Well, there’s all kinds of people listening today who are, you know, business owners. You’ve been through all kinds of things, but what is the best advice you give to a business owner who is struggling or they’re just stuck? Like, “Man, you know, Kristen and I came together over six months and then we, all of a sudden, we were the bank’s best friend, and then, you know, hey, we got some big names in,” but then you kind of came to this plateau, you get stuck. What would be the advice you would say about that?

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:26:26] Just start thinking about things differently. You know, you have to change something to get change. If you keep everything status quo, it will stay status quo, and status quo is a very safe place to be because it works. We could stay at a certain level and be perfectly fine with it. You know, you had mentioned that some of the revenue that women have reached and that’s the average. When I have a bad day, sometimes I think, you know, I have a multi-million-dollar business, and that’s kind of unheard of for a woman-owned business. There’s a lot that just don’t reach that and so, at that point, I’m just like, “Well, I’ve just got to figure this out then,” because clearly, it’s working. Something just has gone off track a little bit, and we have to just try different marketing. We have to try different networking events. We have to try different people. We have to try different cities. So, it’s always problem solving and trying to keep ahead of whatever the latest trend is.

Betty Collins: [00:27:22] I was just talking to someone today and we were trying to solve a problem, and I said, “Maybe we’re just asking the wrong question.”

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:27:27] Right. Right.

Betty Collins: [00:27:28] Let’s think about what other questions are out there that surround this? I know when I merged my business from a small company to Brady, where in 2012, it was very nerve racking, but I was in that plateau. I was in that stock. This was it. I knew what my next 10 years was going to look like, right? Brady, where I’ve never known what my next 10 years was going to look like, but I did have to ask, step back, what am I going to do differently because I don’t want to stay here?

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:27:57] Mm-hmm. Yes.

Betty Collins: [00:27:58] Because I believe, you know, my coach will tell you you’re either going forward or you’re going backward, you’re not going to stay right there.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:28:04] Yeah. Actually, what you did was definitely a viable option. I mean, merging with other companies, or (inaudible) is a different way of rethinking it. You know, if I have this backing me, I know I can take this farther.

Betty Collins: [00:28:16] Yes.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:28:16] So, yeah, it could be advisors, it could be partners, it could be anything but, yeah, it’s really just sitting around and kind of figuring out what is (inaudible) because you might be in an area, too, where you are just tapped out of people, which we have thought of too. Have we talked to everybody? Is this as big as we get? Are we going to be happy with this? Are we going to push it further?

Betty Collins: [00:28:33] Right.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:28:33] That changes day to day.

Betty Collins: [00:28:35] Sure.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:28:35] Because, sometimes, you know, it’s good to stay in the easy part.

Betty Collins: [00:28:37] Yes.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:28:38] But, every once in a while, we’re like, “Let’s just see what happens if,” and that’s just how we grow.

Betty Collins: [00:28:45] Well, share with the audience just the memories or events, something that really impacted your success today, you know, something that you can go, you always, when you’re having a bad day or you’re plateauing, you can go back to that moment.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:29:01] Probably the first time we were on the Fast 50 list. I never thought of, at all, about having an award-winning company. At that point, it’s like, you know what? It’s not me that thinks it’s great, me and Kristen, other people are thinking we’re doing a great job too. That is reflected in, you know, a few other awards that we have received too, where it’s like, you know what? People are seeing that we’re making a difference, and so that also helps you kind of raise your game, too, because once you get that first award, you’re like, “Okay, well, can we stay on that list for next year? Can we keep the growth going? What else should we be, you know, trying to get or obtain,” or things like that?

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:29:41] That’s also how we kind of got more into community involvement, too. We started getting super grateful with how the community was welcoming us, and we’re like we have to give back, and with that becomes a lot of reward, too, just by your growth potential. You know, being on boards, I think, you won’t believe how much you grow when you’re on a board. Volunteer work, you know, things like that. Writing blogs, you know, just to show your expertise in a blog or a podcast or things like that. It’s all that little stuff that kind of helps you own your space, and then people think of you first when things come up.

Betty Collins: [00:30:21] They do. Well, I’m sure there’s a next level, and this isn’t a question on the list, but I’ll ask it anyways. Do you see a next level? Something you are like, “Man, if I could just do that”?

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:30:30] Oh, gosh. There’s so much I want to do, especially because I have been gifted, I will say, access, to a lot of different opportunities. I would still, on a personal level, would like to break through the corporate board ceiling. That’s one thing that’s on my list of to-do’s. As far as the company itself, I think, I would like to just have it to have a continued, steady growth. I’d like to see it, you know, reach $10 million. That’s been a goal of ours for a while.

Betty Collins: [00:30:58] Sure.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:30:58] We talked about, you know, topping off again. It’s like I’d like to reach $10 million but, in the long run, that’s just a number. You know, we have a great team. You know, I’m in good health. You know, there’s nothing that I really need, need. My family’s great. So, sometimes, I’m like, you know, “Don’t rock the boat. Be happy with what you got,” but then, every once in a while, like I said, you’re like, “You know, $10 million would be kind of good bragging rights.”

Betty Collins: [00:31:25] Exactly. They’d be awesome. But there are those things that, I mean, we just learned with Elise Mitchell about the destination versus the journey-

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:31:34] Yeah. Oh, the journey is so great.

Betty Collins: [00:31:35] Right. You have to have that destination thing out there, though.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:31:35] That would, probably, be the one thing that I would add, too, to anybody who starts a business is really kind of enjoy the journey, and every part of it, like the pitfalls and the peaks. I mean, all of it is you learn so freaking much in all of that, and then you can go out and you can help others, you can mentor others. You can be that person that just says, “Oh, you just get more clients,” you know?

Betty Collins: [00:31:59] Right. And they go, “Oh, well, if she said that, I’m sure it’s true.”

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:32:02] “That happened to her, like, really, I can do it too,” which is definitely reassuring.

Betty Collins: [00:32:07] Yeah.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:32:07] The one thing, too, that I would also kind of mention about women business owners, too, is I run into a lot, because I have had the opportunity to mentor a couple, where they kind of feel like they’re a little unworthy of, or scared of, kind of getting super successful, and the reasons are really kind of interesting and, in many cases, true. They don’t want to fail. I mean, I think that women do treat failure a little differently than men do and kind of getting over that. But, then, also, I think they’re afraid of losing friends and family.

Betty Collins: [00:32:39] Sure.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:32:39] That was one thing that I had heard a couple of times where if I own a million-dollar business, “How’s my family and friends going to treat me? Am I going to always have to pick up the check? Are they going to always come to me for money? Are they going to call me, ‘Well, you know, Miss Moneybags over there,'” you know? And I have experienced some of that. You have to be prepared that some people are not going to like this new version of you, and anybody that’s kinda holding you back, you might have to think about just kind of not seeing so much, and it’s hard when it’s family or you’re your best, best friends, but there’s a lot of women out there that are more than happy to, you know, enjoy a glass of wine with you, too, so you really have to find your cheerleaders and hang around them.

Betty Collins: [00:33:22] One thing my husband and I talk about a lot is just, because I kind of run into it with my family as well, a little bit of, “Well, she owns that company.” You don’t know how much I own. You don’t know anything about me, okay, but it’s important that, as women, we share in your success and be glad for it, you know?

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:33:40] Yes.

Betty Collins: [00:33:40] And we say, “Yes, this is all good,” or help that person get to have the success that you’ve had. That’s okay to do.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:33:48] Absolutely.

Betty Collins: [00:33:48] Well, I so appreciate you coming today.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:33:51] Thank you, again, for having me.

Betty Collins: [00:33:52] You’ve been really insightful. I know that, statistically, we have about 90,000 downloads of my podcast.

Catherine Lang-Cline: [00:33:59] Oh, nice!

Betty Collins: [00:33:59] So, this will go out, and we will be out there telling your story. But, you know, going to the next level, whether it’s your professional career, because you’re not maybe a business owner or you’re a parent or, you know, you’re in certain phases of your life, get with people that you see that the level you would like to be with and get there, and so that’s why we had Catherine come today. So, going to that next level, wherever you are in the mix, don’t let those barriers get you. I’m Betty Collins, and I appreciate your time today.

Tagged With: CPa, CPA firm, Dayton accounting, Dayton business advisory, Dayton CPA, Dayton CPA firm, delegating tasks, Delegation, factoring, fear, financing the business, Inspiring Women, Inspiring Women podcast, NAWBO, NAWBO Columbus Chapter, scaling the business, small business financing, The Limited, woman owned business, women entrepreneurs, Women in Business, Women in Leadership, women-owned businesses

The Facts of Factoring: Mark Little with Diversified Funding Services

July 29, 2015 by Mike

On the Money
On the Money
The Facts of Factoring: Mark Little with Diversified Funding Services
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Joe Moss, Mark Little
Joe Moss, Mark Little

Get the facts about factoring! On this episode of “On the Money“, host Joe Moss interviews Mark Little with Diversified Funding Services on how factoring can help a small business.

Mark Little/Diversified Funding Services

Mark Little, Diversified Funding ServicesFactoring is a fast, easy and flexible way to improve your cash flow and generate working capital for your company. Through the power of factoring, you obtain immediate access to cash that is normally tied up for terms of up to 30, 60 or 90 days in your accounts receivable.

Diversified Funding Services was founded in 1998 by Mark Little with the mission to provide businesses the opportunity to obtain critically needed cash flow for their companies with Account Receivables financing, traditionally known as Factoring. To accomplish this mission, Diversified Funding Services carefully selected trustworthy, well-financed, highly qualified funding sources to meet the needs of most business that qualified for this powerful form of finance. Many business owners did not realize this powerful cash flow tool existed. Many bank clients have profitable and growing businesses, however they do not qualify for traditional bank financing, or the constraints are not flexible enough to allow them to grow to their potential.

Diversified Funding Services has now helped clients in very diverse industries receive funding from $10,000 a month to over $1,500,000 a month. Any business that provides a product or service to another business is a candidate for this cash flow tool. From start up to well-established companies, all they need are invoices to creditworthy clients to realize the benefits of partnering with Diversified Funding Services.

—————————————————————————————————————

“On the Money” focuses on topics and issues allowing small businesses to better navigate the financial services minefield, with analysis and opinions from today’s industry experts on banking and loans. “On the Money” also introduces you to some of the top small business leaders in the Atlanta market.

Hosted by Joe Moss, the president of Embassy National Bank, “On the Money” airs live every Wednesday at 3:00 PM EST from the Business RadioX studio in Gwinnett.

Joe Moss interviews Mark Little

 

Embassy black & gold27-33-76-02

Tagged With: diversified funding services, Embassy National Bank, factoring, finances, financing options, Funding, funding options, loans, mark little, money, non-traditional funding, On The Money, On The Money Radio, small business factoring, small business loans

Transition Planning

June 23, 2015 by angishields

Midtown Business Radio
Midtown Business Radio
Transition Planning
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NOWaccount
Archie Jones CFO of NOWaccount
NOWaccount
NOWaccount Chairman, John Hayes

Transition Planning

I sat down with NOWaccount CFO, Archie Jones and his colleague, NOWaccount Chairman, John Hayes.  They stopped by to share some thoughts on how business owners need to start planning for how they intend to transition their business when it comes time, whether that’s selling it to a buyer or passing it to family members.

John and Archie talked about some of the common missteps business owners make that can complicate or delay sale of a business, or even cause the sale to fail.  We talked about how important it is to choose capital sources carefully, taking a few minutes to discuss factoring, business loans, and NOWaccount’s innovative merchant services option that gives the business access to their accounts receivable cash and preventing the need to acquire debt.

We discussed how important it is for business owners to insure they are on the same page with all partners with regard to what the plan is for the “end game”—sell or transition the business to family.  Archie and John shared the pros and cons of various business structures such as LLC’s versus C Corp, for example.  Three topics of conversation that owners need to have:  How will the company be operated?  Will all members/partners have roles or equal votes in decisions?  How much revenue will be taken for salaries for partners?  What is the “horizon” for deciding if/when to sell if that’s the goal?

John and Archie shared a number of critical points that make a business very attractive for a seller (or unattractive).  Archie talked about how important it is for business owners to educate themselves on the potential market for buyers of their business when they go to sell.

Special Guests:

Archie Jones,  VP of Finance/CFO of NOWaccount  facebook_logo_small3  twitter_logo_small  youtube logo  linkedin_small1

NOWaccount

  • MBA General Management, Harvard Business School
  • Previous Principal and Charter Member, Parthenon Capital
  • Member, Board of Directors, AIT Worldwide Logistics
  • Founder, Tubman Ventures

John Hayes, Chairman of NOWaccount  linkedin_small1

NOWaccount

  • JD, Law, Emory University School of Law
  • Previous CEO/Chairman, FTRANS Corp.
  • Founder and Former CEO, OneCoast Network
  • Founded Advanced Technology Development Center (ATDC) at Georgia Tech

 

Tagged With: CW Hall, DSO, factoring, merchant services, Midtown Business Radio, NOWaccount

Pay Per Click Advertising

March 7, 2015 by angishields

Midtown Business Radio
Midtown Business Radio
Pay Per Click Advertising
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Pay Per Click Advertising

This week I caught up with Eric Jones from Jellyfish, the digital strategy experts.  We talked about Pay Per Click Advertising, mistakes that can be made, things to think about when planning your campaign, and why it makes sense to work with experts such as those at Jellyfish to engage in a digital marketing campaign that employs pay per click advertising.

Having tried our hand at DIY Google AdWords campaigns that quickly cost us $$$ while getting us no conversions, our business can surely say there is value to working with experts who can guide you and help you spend wisely.  Eric talked about the value of analytics to track the effects of a given campaign, as well as why it’s important to consider the page on your website the ads direct your prospective customers to.

Eric shed some light on how the bidding process works in determining where your ads will rank, ultimately controlling where your ads will be displayed (1st page?, top of 1st page? etc).  We talked about how when there is much competition for a given set of keywords the cost per click can rise significantly, so advertisers must be prepared for that.

I also discussed some guests who have been on the show before that our listeners could benefit from getting to know.  I’m planning to incorporate some occasional shout-outs to be sure the companies who need their solutions can link up with them.  We hope you enjoy our show and subscribe to the podcast.  Let us hear from you with feedback, guest recommendations, and where you’re listening from.  If you tweet us questions or put them up on Facebook we’ll try to get them on the air and/or follow up with the guests after the fact to get you answers.  Thank you for listening to us!  Looking forward to 5000 downloads!

Special Guest

Eric Jones VP, Client Strategy with Jellyfish  Twitter 16x16  Facebook  Linkedin  youtube logo  google-plus-logo-red-265px

Jellyfish

  • CEO, Avenue J Development LLC
  • Previous Board of Directors member, Toolbank Baltimore
  • >10 years in leadership roles in digital strategy/marketing companies

Lara O’Connor-Hodgson, CEO of Nowaccount Network Corporation  Twitter  LinkedIn  Facebook

 

HEAR LARA’S FULL INTERVIEW HERE

Nowaccount Network Corporation

  • MBA Harvard Business School
  • Former Adjunct Professor of Finance, Georgia Institute of Technology
  • Board of Directors, Georgia Regional Transportation Authority
  • Owner, Insomnia Group
  • Chairman of the Board, Atlanta Heights Charter School
  • Second Language–Japanese

LeeAnn Maxwell, CEO/Co-Founder of Vixen Vodka  Facebook  Twitter  LinkedIn  Pinterest

 

HEAR LEEANN’S FULL INTERVIEW HERE

Vixen Vodka

  • 28 years experience in finance sector
  • former Director, Client Services of AccousTech Music Productions
  • Crossfit fan
  • 50% Firecracker
  • 50% Do-It-Yourself Woman

Jesus Ricardo (Rick) Tapia, Founder of La Bodega International, LLC and Creator of J.R. Revelry  Facebook  Twitter 16x16

JR Revelry

  • 17 years of experience in alcohol beverage industry
  • Successful entrepreneur
  • Actively involved in the community, supporting Hispanic and Latin American Chambers of Commerce
  • BA, Boston University
  • Speaks Fluent Spanish

Ron Herman, CEO of SionicMobile  google-plus-logo-red-265px  Facebook  Twitter 16x16  Linkedin  

HEAR RON’S FULL INTERVIEW HERE

SionicMobile

  • Founder and Former CEO, Urban Informatics Corporation
  • >19 years of Executive Leadership roles in Technology Start-up to Fortune 500 Companies
  • Former CEO, Intellione Technologies

Mario Montag, CEO, Co-founder of Predikto Analytics  Linkedin  Twitter 16x16

 

HEAR MARIO’S FULL INTERVIEW HERE

Predikto Analytics

  • > 15 years of experience developing transformational technology solutions for Fortune 500 companies
  • Former Director, North America Oracle Master Data Management practice
  • MBA, IT, and International Business, Georgia State University J. Mack Robinson College of Business
  • Fluent in Spanish
 Bill and Diedre Plunk of CimCo Commercial Collections  Linkedin 

CimCo Commercial Collection

  • BS in Education, Minor in Business, Northeastern State University
  • Former Teacher and Coach, Oklahoma Public Schools
  • Board Member, River of Praise Ministries

Tagged With: conversion, corporate collections, customer loyalty, CW Hall, digital advertising, digital marketing, digital payments, digital rewards, digital strategy, echeck, eCommerce, Eric Jones, factoring, google, Google AdWords, high-value assets, ION Loyalty, ION Rewards, landing page, Lara Hodgson, lead generation, LeeAnn Maxwell, Manufacturing, Mario Montag, merchant services, Midtown Business Radio, NOWaccount, oil & gas, pay per click advertising, predictive analytics, Predikto Analytics, railroad, Rick Tapia, Ron Herman, search engine marketing, SEM, SEO, SionicMobile, small business loan, Transportation, Vixen Vodka, vodka

Three Fantastic Female Entrepreneurs

December 16, 2014 by angishields

Midtown Business Radio
Midtown Business Radio
Three Fantastic Female Entrepreneurs
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women

Three Fantastic Female Entrepreneurs

This week I got to sit down with Three Fantastic Entrepreneurs from the Atlanta area. Diana Keough, CEO and founder of ShareWIK Media Group (Share What I Know), LeeAnn Maxwell, Co-Founder of Vixen Vodka, and Lara Hodgson, multiple-time successful entrepreneur and CEO/Founder of NOWaccount.  We talked about some of the challenges they faced as women launching their own businesses, hear what they believe helped them succeed as entrepreneurs, and advice they offer for women contemplating starting a business of their own.  For the longest time most of us would envision a man when thinking “CEO” or “Doctor”, or even “Entrepreneur”.  And, as our guests shared, many times they’re the only female CEO/Entrepreneur in a room full of men.  Times are slowly but surely changing.  And today many women are launching successful brands and businesses, some of which are now global brands.

ShareWIK Media Group is a licensed content-generating group, producing high quality, interesting content across all media types for use in population health management efforts, inbound marketing/branding, testimonial content, and pertinent health optimization content.  Diana talked about her transition from a journalist for the Plains Dealer newspaper to a Chief Executive Officer in a leadership role.  She says, “If you are not surrounding yourself with people who are better than you and open to the fact that you might be wrong; or they might have a better idea on how to do things, then you’re not going to grow.”  Over the weeks since I met Diana I’ve had the opportunity to meet several of the folks who make up the team at ShareWIK and seen some of their work.  I can tell you: if your organization or agency needs to move an initiative or your business forward and you rely heavily on engaging your target audience to drive awareness you MUST include ShareWIK Media Group on your shortlist of content providers.  At their core, the people at ShareWIK Media Group are journalists with expertise across all media types.  On top of journalistic skills they bring knowledge and expertise within the healthcare journalism space as well.

Vixen Vodka is an EXCELLENT vodka that was born out of a trip to St. Simons Island, GA where two friends, drinking cocktails by the pool, decided they should launch their own vodka, branded and tailored for women.  As LeeAnn says, “We came home, sobered up, and remembered it was a great idea.”  “A dream without action is merely a fantasy.”  It took them 2 years from beach to shelf.  She shared how she and her good friend (also a woman) broke into the spirits business, starting with ZERO knowledge of how to make vodka much less how to bring one to market.  After being told her idea was fantastic by a business consultant he turned around and told them, “I’ll never work.  The spirits industry is a Good Ol’ Boys network.  Those men will chew you up and spit  you out!”  That was several years ago and now the brand is adding more states to the seven states where they’re currently sold.

NOWaccount got started as a solution to a problem Lara Hodgson encountered as an entrepreneur with an earlier business, the impact of not having access to cash that is tied up holding unpaid invoices, particularly when they aged for several weeks (or more).  She firmly believes that a successful business needs to have people behind them who are providing the product/service to solve a particular problem for their customer more so than “to sell lots of ‘X’ and make lots of money because it’s a great product”.  She said, “So many people come up with a great idea and they fall in love with the ‘What’.  They fall in love with the widget or the product.  And if your ego and your passion is in the product then they are going to woefully un-deliver.  But if your ego and your passion are in the “So What?” and the impact and the problem you’re solving then the sky’s the limit.”  NOWaccount is a merchant services company that provides the B2B company with access to capital by selling slower-paying invoice accounts within 2-5 days for basically the same cost as accepting a credit card.  Their solution is invisible to their client’s customers, has no minimum time commitment, and includes only those accounts selected by the B2B they’re helping.  The NOWaccount option gives businesses the capital they need to accept larger orders, add staff, often enabling them grow larger and faster than was possible before.

Special Guests:

Lara O’Connor-Hodgson, CEO of Nowaccount Network Corporation  Twitter  LinkedIn  Facebook

Nowaccount Network Corporation
Lara O’Connor-Hodgson of Nowaccount Network Corporation
  • MBA Harvard Business School
  • Former Adjunct Professor of Finance, Georgia Institute of Technology
  • Board of Directors, Georgia Regional Transportation Authority
  • Owner, Insomnia Group
  • Chairman of the Board, Atlanta Heights Charter School
  • Second Language–Japanese

Diana Keough, CEO/Founder of ShareWIK.com  facebook_logo_small3  twitter_logo_small  linkedin_small1  Pinterest-logo  google-plus-logo-red-265px  

ShareWIK.com

  • Journalism Instructor/Guest Lecturer, Emory University
  • Member, Koles College of Business Advisory Board, Kennsaw State University
  • Former Front Page Series Writer, The Plain Dealer
  • Former Reporter/Commentator, WKSU
  • Co-author, “Building a Business, Building a Life: The Incredible Life of a Woman Business Owner”

LeeAnn Maxwell, CEO/Co-Founder of Vixen Vodka  Facebook  Twitter  LinkedIn  Pinterest

Vixen Vodka

  • 28 years experience in finance sector
  • former Director, Client Services of AccousTech Music Productions
  • Crossfit fan
  • 50% Firecracker
  • 50% Do-It-Yourself Woman

Tagged With: content generation, CW Hall, DSO, Entrepreneurs, factoring, GE Healthcare, healthcare journalism, healthcare journalist, insuror, Lara Hodgson, licensed content, liquor, merchant services, Midtown Business Radio, National Public Radio, NOWaccount, NPR, payer, Plain Dealer Newspaper, ShareWIK Media Group, ShareWIK.com, small business loans, Spirits, start up, storytelling, Vixen Vodka, vodka

NowAccount Network Corporation

September 2, 2014 by angishields

Midtown Business Radio
Midtown Business Radio
NowAccount Network Corporation
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Nowaccounts Network Corproation
Kim Humphreys and Lara Hodgson of NowAccount Network Corporation

Nowaccount Network Corporation Eliminates DSO Aging for Small to Medium-sized B2B Companies

Today on Midtown Business Radio we were joined by Lara Hodgson and Kim Humphreys of Nowaccount Network Corporation.  In the business world, companies can encounter significant risk related to prolonged aging of their Accounts Receivable.  It’s not uncommon for some businesses to have a Day Sales Outstanding of nearly 60 days.  With so much capital unavailable to cover costs such as payroll, necessary production materials, and capital equipment, many companies are forced to avoid taking on larger contracts/client orders or even close their doors due to capital short-fall.  Until now, B2B companies were forced to try to secure capital through onerous loans (if they could obtain one), factoring agreements (which require disclosure to all clients), and other less-than-optimal sources of funds.  Service companies that provide a service versus selling goods/products can have a particularly difficult time gaining access to loans or other options due to a lack of inventory/capital equipment that could be used as collateral.

Nowaccount serves the B2B space and provides access to AR pending capital within 2-5 days for a 2.5% fee.  In essence the service is akin to being able to accept a credit card for invoices.  Their clients can select which of their customers’ accounts they wish to include in their program rather than requiring them to enroll ALL AR.  Additionally, Nowaccount Network Corporation doesn’t force a long-term contract on their clients, giving them even greater flexibility.  Nowaccount does not require disclosure to their clients’ customers of their relationship so engaging in Nowaccount’s services is completely invisible to the B2B’s customers.  With access to their capital in such a timely fashion, many of the company’s clients have been able to leverage their quick access to pending AR capital into securing large contracts that would have been previously-inaccessible.  Some Nowaccount customers have been able to use their newly-acquired AR Cash in hand to gain bulk buying discounts on supplies/production materials and even improved company valuation prior to selling their company.  If your company is a B2B company that doesn’t have access to capital sources the Big Boys have there is no good reason to not be taking advantage of Nowaccount Network Corporation’s elegant solution to aging DSO!

Special guest:

Lara O’Connor-Hodgson, CEO of Nowaccount Network Corporation  Twitter  LinkedIn  Facebook

Nowaccount Network Corporation
Lara O’Connor-Hodgson of Nowaccount Network Corporation
  • MBA Harvard Business School
  • Former Adjunct Professor of Finance, Georgia Institute of Technology
  • Board of Directors, Georgia Regional Transportation Authority
  • Owner, Insomnia Group
  • Chairman of the Board, Atlanta Heights Charter School
  • Second Language–Japanese

Tagged With: CW Hall, david schwegman, day sales outstanding, dr. david schwegman, DSO, factoring, financial services, Kim Humphreys, Lara Hodgson, Lara O'Connor Hodgson, medium-sized business, NOWaccount, NOWaccount Network Corporation, small business

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