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ENTREPRENEURS
Consultant builds a business
and a legacy for her daughter
by Lisa Antonelli Bacon
For Virginia Business
August 2005
Twenty years ago, as a minority,
first-generation business owner, Rita Ricks blazed a
trail into the dense landscape of the good ol’
boy network that once ruled Virginia industry. Now 58,
Ricks is turning over her successful professional development
company to daughter Kim Walton.
The image-consulting business Ricks
founded in Richmond in 1988 has grown into a multi-faceted
enterprise with revenues of between $600,000 to $1 million
a year, four full-time employees and some subcontractors.
The vision and hours spent building Mirror Enterprise
Inc. are an important part of Ricks’ personal
legacy. And, she says it’s a legacy that is as
important to future minority entrepreneurs as it is
to her daughter.
“We’re now in the second
generation [of minority business owners], so a lot of
hurdles have been crossed,” notes Ricks. “Those
of us in the first generation have begun to enter and
understand the political process, policies and procedures.
That will help this second generation go a little faster
than we did.”
Ricks has led several professional
lives. In 1985, after 15 years teaching in Hanover County
schools, Ricks took a splash into the fashion business
as co-owner of a women’s clothing boutique. It
was quite a leap; one that led to the creation of her
company, which develops customized training for schools,
corporations and individual clients.
Back then she had no idea about how
to run a business, Ricks says. “But my teaching
skills helped me in selling and managing people.”
To Ricks, peddling fashion wasn’t just a sales
job. She loved matching clothes with customers’
personalities and, in a couple of years, realized that
she wasn’t just in the clothing business; she
was in the image business. She also realized that she
“really could run a business.”
The next step seemed obvious. After
some training and fine tuning, in 1988 she started
Mirror
Enterprise, a soup-to-nuts training camp to prepare
clients for their future: how to dress appropriately;
how and when to present a business card; how to shake
hands and leave an impression; how to leave an effective
voice message; and even how to dine properly in a professional
setting. “We can present to Ethyl Corp. or to
sixth graders,” says Ricks.
In recent years, Ricks has expanded
Mirror to include a broader range of services, from
hiring and writing procedure manuals to doing personnel
file audits and creating human resources divisions for
clients, which include the Virginia Department of Corrections,
Wella Corp., and Verizon Communications Inc. “I’ve
branded us more as a personal and professional development
company,” she says.
In that capacity, Ricks stands out
as someone who helps others fulfill their potential.
“She is always looking for a way for someone to
get to the next level,” says Tracey Jeter, president
of the Virginia Minority Supplier Development Council.
“Most entrepreneurs are trying to grow their businesses.
Rita is doing that, but she is eager to do that for
others. When people walk away from her, they feel like
they can do anything.”
Who better, then, to train women
in the Welfare to Work effort? For seven years, Mirror
has teamed with Interim Personnel and the Greater Richmond
Chamber of Commerce to help women lift themselves into
paying jobs. “We helped them understand who they
are; why they are where they are; and how to go forward,”
says Ricks, who has seen 2,700 women graduate from the
program.
Although as chairman Ricks will be
less involved in day-to-day operations at Mirror, it
has prepared her for her next career. For the moment,
she is calling it Rita Ricks LLC and plans to focus
on being a life coach and professional speaker. “I
say that this is my fourth mid-life crisis,” says
the breast cancer survivor. “It probably won’t
be the last.”
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