As more women carve their own niche in the business world by following their entrepreneurial dreams, founding their own entities and opening their own stores, membership in the sorority of female business owners seems to be bursting at the seams. American Express estimates that women opened 1,821 businesses a day in the last year alone, and data going back to 2016 show that women are opening businesses at twice the rate of men. So, whatโs it like to strike out on your own and become a founder, owner or CEO? From women navigating the early years of business ownership to a dynamo with more than 35 years under her belt, these San Antonio businesswomen share whatโs making it work for them, how they navigate the challenges of being the woman in charge and share advice to help others follow their path.
Deborah RoosBuilder โ Simply People
Debbie Roos, SHRM-SCP, may not be in the construction business but feels the title โbuilderโ is a fit for her relatively new role as an entrepreneur. โItโs not a static point,โ she said. โItโs pushing my business to the next stage every single day. Building my business is a process, so I have to envision myself as someone different than just the owner, founder, CEO.โRoos offers consulting, coaching and organizational development through Simply People, which she founded after more than 25 years of growing and developing people in organizations such as Accenture, USAA and HEB. Simply People offers consulting, coaching and organizational development to help teams work better together, as well as working one-on-one with executives, managers and front-line contributors to set and achieve objectives. โWe know that people are designed to do phenomenal things. Itโs about making it possible so that the environment can allow people to do great things.โWhile her business may be relatively young, itโs a concept sheโs had in mind since she was in college. Now that sheโs jumped into business ownership, her advice to others is to jump in as well. โGo try it. If you have something you want to do, do it,โ she said. โBeing slightly uncomfortable, nervous, on edge is often that entrepreneurial spark at play. It means you care, youโre learning, thereโs an option worth exploring. When you feel comfortable, safe like youโre cruising, itโs time to shake it up: disrupt yourself, your business, your thinking. Thatโs where the creative genius comes from.
Ashley Mauricio-FloresOwner/Creative Director โ The Vintage Bouquet Bar
Coaxing a business to bloom isnโt quite the same as the magic that Ashley Mauricio-Flores has mastered to grow many of the beautiful flowers you see at The Vintage Bouquet Bar, but that challenge hasnโt changed her resolve to offer customers a unique floral experience through whimsically refined and seasonal floral bouquets and arrangements. โThe whole process of this business and what we do come from a place of creation and passion. Thereโs definitely been a learning curve,โ she explained. โAnalyzing numbers, analyzing customers โ Iโve had to do more of that than I thought.โ Mauricio-Flores has tackled it by listening to others. โIโve reached out, looking for new ways of approaching something. When youโre in the midst of things, you tend to look at something and overanalyze it, but if you step away for a moment, you look at it from another perspective. Itโs like the light bulb clicks on.โSomething has definitely clicked as The Vintage Bouquet Bar is celebrating its first anniversary, much of which Mauricio-Flores credits to her family support. She and her husband Roger founded Vintage Heart Farm eight years ago, and the flower shop bloomed from that. Their daughter has worked with them at farmerโs markets since she was three, while her sister and mother both work at The Vintage Bouquet Bar. Itโs a family business. Without that support, understanding and help, it wouldnโt work. You have to surround yourself with people who understand where you come from, and understand where youโre going
Cheri Stith & Jaime WeyandOwners โ Feather, Fluff & Flings
Cheri Stith and Jamie Weyandโs friendship began more than 25 years ago when their children were in the same class at school. Their friendship bloomed into their business, Feather, Fluff & Flings, 12 years ago when they combined Stithโs interior design and holiday decorating expertise with Weyandโs advertising and marketing background. Together, they offer home staging, ready-to-sell consulting, interior design, seasonal decorating, and private party and social event planning. But it all started with wreaths.โIt really just bloomed. Making wreaths became doing doorways, then interior staircases, mantles, tables, even gates,โ explained Stith. Both she and Weyand credit word of mouth and lasting relationships for their success. โWe have incredible clients who continue to call us over and over again. Itโs not one and done โ itโs a lasting friendship.โViewing their clients as friends is fitting for the business partners and close friends who seamlessly finish each otherโs sentences as they talk. โWe both bring different talents to the table. Cheri is very creative and thinks outside the box, and then thereโs some of us that think budget,โ explained Weyand. โItโs left brain, right brain. Sheโs [Weyand] the voice of reality,โ laughed Stith. Together with their hard-working team, theyโll tackle decorating 80 houses for Christmas this year, working all but two days from Nov. 1 to Dec. 20. On those two off days, theyโll celebrate Thanksgiving and decorate their own homes. โWhat makes it work is the blessing of energy, creativity, organization and very supportive families,โ noted Weyand.
Patricia StoutPresident โ Alamo Travel Group
When Patricia Stout opened the doors to her first travel agency, she started from scratch, with no computer skills. However, closing three sales on her first day proved her sales ability, and, thanks to her dedication, her tech skills quickly caught up. โEvery day is a new day and every day you learn something,โ she explained. She began participating in programs offered by the City of San Antonio and local chambers of commerce. At a business development session, a speaker said that everyone could become government contractors. It spurred her to jump in and figure out government contracting. Fast forward 35 years and Alamo Travel Group is a full-service travel agency serving clients with worldwide travel services to include family vacations, group travel, cruises, getaways, destination weddings and honeymoons โ and one that specializes in military and government contracts.โSurround yourself with people who know more than you,โ she advised. Stout believes that being humble about your experience and knowledge is key. โWomen tend to be like that. I think itโs why weโre successful. We listen. We know we donโt know everything and we ask questions.โWhen she started back in 1983, she never expected the road ahead. โIt was rough at times, but why should it be easy?โ she asked. Stout does believe, however, being in San Antonio helped her succeed. Itโs a great place to become an entrepreneur. If you have the stamina, you can pursue your dreams.
By Dawn Robinette
Photography by David Teran
The post Making Business Ownership Dreams Come True appeared first on San Antonio Woman Magazine.
Source: SA Woman – Women In Business