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ENTREPRENEURS
Rx for success: read the trends,
translate them into business
by Lisa Antonelli Bacon
For Virginia Business
August 2005
In the early 1980s when Henrico Doctors’
Hospital opened its first outpatient surgery unit, registered
nurse Deborah Johnston realized the treat-and-release
method had some bugs to work out. “We were wheeling
patients out who were vomiting,” she recalls.
“I could see that, when these people leave there,
they still need care. I said, ‘This is my future.’”
Little did she know then, but Johnston
was on the front end of a trend. As anyone who been
hustled out a hospital door knows, long hospital stays
are a thing of the past, increasing the need for continued
care. Seventeen years later, Johnston runs Richmond-based
Care Advantage, a $14 million-a-year home health and
nurse staffing agency with eight offices in Central
Virginia and 2,000 employees.
It took a while for Johnston to start
her company. While still tossing around the idea of
a home health enterprise, she agreed in 1985 to start
a home care and staff relief company for Chippenham
Hospital. By 1988, Johnston had learned the fundamentals
of the business and wanted to strike out on her own,
but she wasn’t financially prepared.
“In business, you need three
things,” she says matter-of-factly. “Money,
money, and money.” The solution was to take on
a partner, and Johnston says she was lucky to find the
right one, Buddy Allen, a lawyer now with the Richmond
firm LeClair Ryan. “We grew like wildfire,”
she says. “We did $225,000 in business in our
first three months.” By 1991 — just more
than two years into the venture — Johnston bought
out her partner.
On the alert for growth opportunities,
she found a new niche in 1998 by recognizing that nursing
shortages were causing staffing problems across the
board. Nursing homes, hospitals and even doctors’
offices frequently need — on short notice —
nurses for temporary or permanent assignments. So Johnston
began Nurse Advantage, a service that matches nurses
to staffing needs. “By creating two divisions,”
she says, “we could focus our full attention
on our clients and nurses.”
At one point, growth overtook time
and energy. After setting up 11 offices in Virginia,
Johnston forced herself to slow down. “I was running
myself crazy. Offices more than two hours away were
hard to manage, so I sold three.”
The slowed pace, however, didn’t
last long. In February, she began another venture, All
About Care, the company’s Medicare division, which
serves patients over 65, a growing segment of the population.
“It’s zooming. We’re projecting revenues
in our first 12 months to exceed $1.2 million,”
she says.
Through the years, Johnston’s
ability to read trends and grow her business have brought
many awards including Ernst & Young’s Entrepreneur
of the Year for Virginia in 1996 and citations from
Working Woman magazine for entrepreneurial excellence
in 2000 and 2001. Johnston also donated funds to start
a certified nursing assistant training program for low-income
women in partnership with the Richmond Redevelopment
and Housing Authority. Joan Seldon, assistant director
of resident services at RRHA, says 220 residents have
gone through the training so far. “We never envisioned
that she would start a state-certified program. She
believes in going all out with whatever she gets involved
in,” says Seldon.
Overall, Johnston’s most consistent
challenge in the nursing business is managing women.
“Men aren’t my problem,” says Johnston.
“I work with mostly women. Occasionally, they
may not get along. That is the challenge: to keep everybody
getting along.” Still, she feels she was born
to be an entrepreneur. “The bigger the mountain,
the harder I climb.”
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