|
Matchmaking
Showcase introduces urban technology
companies to rural businesses
READER
RESOURCES
|
|
Web
Pointers: For more information
|
|
Multimedia:
Matchmaker, Carl
Mitchell, President & CEO of VA Economic
Bridge, talks about Virginia’s
Linked Workforce program that brings
together employees in rural areas with
companies in urban Northern Virginia.
|
|
|
|
by Brett
Lieberman
for Virginia Business
April 2006
Robyn Snyder knows what she wants in a relationship.
That’s why she’s hanging around the ballroom
at the Holiday Inn Tysons Corner in McLean on a blustery
afternoon. She’s searching for a long-term, dependable
partner who will listen to her needs. Somewhere out
there is a perfect match. All she needs is an introduction.
As Snyder, a supply representative
for Lockheed Martin Corp., slips into her seat, she’s paired with
her first possible match. She peers over her reading
glasses at the two casually dressed younger men. Rather
than play games, she decides on a straightforward approach,
explaining how Lockheed’s Maritime Systems & Sensors
division needs partners that can build out submarines — not
aircraft. “That would be a great fit for us,” responds
Paul Parks, vice president of sales and marketing at
Omnitech Engineering of Lynchburg, who has been busily
taking notes across the table.
Parks has less than 30 minutes to
make Omnitech’s
case and to leave a positive impression. Soon, his
seat will be taken by a representative from another
small business who will make a pitch to Snyder and
two other Lockheed representatives in the hope of forging
a deal with one of the nation’s largest defense
contractors.
Across the ballroom, about 10 similar
conversations are taking place. Welcome to the business
version of
speed dating, officially known as Virginia’s
Linked Workforce Showcase. Just as speed dating enables
people to quickly rotate among tables in search of
relationships, Showcase events give small Virginia
firms a chance to sit down with large Northern Virginia
defense contractors and telecoms, with the hope of
eventually landing a lucrative contract.
The nearly three-year-old program run by Virginia Economic
Bridge Inc. (VEB), a nonprofit based in Radford, aims
to create strategic business partnerships primarily
between Northern Virginia and rural Southwest Virginia
companies. The events are funded through company-paid
fees, sponsorships, corporate contributions and donations
from local economic development agencies.
Business networking events are nothing new. Local chambers
of commerce, economic development agencies and industry
associations host thousands of them nationally each
year to give companies exposure. What sets Linked Workforce
events apart, beside the speed-dating format, is the
preparation beforehand.
Several state agencies are involved
in the matchmaking. The Virginia Economic Development
Partnership and the
state’s community colleges identify emerging
or in-demand industries, such as homeland security
and telecommunications. Then local economic development
agencies pinpoint companies with the capacity to
serve large Northern Virginia companies, frequently
government
contractors. Companies who want to participate are
prescreened by VEB and prepped for the meetings.
“We work with companies to get them to the point
that they come into this event and they are really
ready
to do business,” says Carl Mitchell, VEB’s
president and CEO. “We’re not going to
bring them up here if they’re not ready, and
the Northern Virginia companies know it’s like
the Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval.”
VEB is hoping to partner with the federal Department
of Homeland Security for a June showcase to help create
opportunities for small firms in that rapidly growing
sector.
The prescreening and prematching
of potential partners is one of the program’s strongest selling points.
The preparation, say company officials, helps them
avoid the many pitfalls that beset networking events. “This
is a little more focused, and it’s a little more
intimate and provides a more meaningful experience,” says
Anne Donahue, vice president and director of contracts
for Fairfax-based SRA International.
Within 15 minutes of arriving at a showcase, Donahue
knows exactly which presentations she wants to hear.
Since July 2003, SRA has sent representatives to four
events. VEB even organized an event specifically for
SRA, an information technology services firm, to meet
with a handful of companies at Radford University last
year.
For small businesses looking to break
into government subcontracting, it’s a priceless opportunity. “You
have supposedly the decision makers sitting across
from you. How much would that cost you in time and
phone calls?” asks Parks, whose meeting with
Snyder has led to follow-up discussions.
During the recent showcase at Tysons Corner, which
focused on computer proramming and software development,
some pairings looked more like bad blind dates than
potential marriage material. Byron Hudgins, CEO of
C.R. Hudgins Plating, Inc. of Lynchburg, was looking
for metal plating work, but the Lockheed group had
no need for his products. The result was nearly 20
minutes of small talk, with Snyder suggesting that
Hudgins contact the manufacturer of a dog-grooming
table that she uses at home to see if it might have
a need for his products. Though Hudgins walked away discouraged,
Snyder offered him tips to identify contacts and potential
markets
within Lockheed’s dozens of other business units. “If
you don’t do that you’re wasting your time
because you’re marketing to the wrong groups,” she
advised. “It’s like when somebody sends
me something on an airplane wing and I do submarines.”
VEB tries to give each participant at least four matches,
says Mitchell. Typically, participating companies from
Southwest Virginia prepare a five- to six-minute presentation.
VEB helps companies craft their pitch, which may include
dress rehearsals or brainstorming sessions. Larger
companies give brief 30-second summaries of their business.
Then the fun and networking begins as the sounds of
conversations from about a dozen tables fill the room.
Companies have about 25 minutes to sell themselves
before the process begins anew.
While some good relationships have
begun, signs of success, so far, are only anecdotal.
Like many participants,
Donahue can’t point to any contracts or signed
deals. Yet like others, she praises the program. “We’re
pleased with who we meet and we’re happy to spend
our small business outreach dollars with VEB because
it provides us better leverage than a mass attendance
event,” she says, adding that the conversations
are more substantive than they usually find at trade
shows.
After nearly three years, several
companies have scored some work, but most of the deals
have been worth less
than $100,000 each. Still, firms optimistically point
to promising leads and networking connections that
didn’t exist before they attended a showcase
event. “This is an 18- to 24-month process,” says
Mitchell. “We’re identifying partners and
solidifying relationships.”
The ultimate goal is not to help
a small business land a whopper of a contract, though
nobody would complain
about that. The purpose is to foster mutually beneficial
long-term relationships. With 80 percent of economic
growth nationally coming from existing businesses,
those relationships can prove fruitful over time. Though “no
checks have been written yet,” says Henry Bass,
president of Automation Creations, Inc. of Blacksburg, “they’ve
put us in touch with some of the prime contractors
that we would have been unable to get face time with.”
Several large contractors have added
Automation Creations, a developer of custom software,
to their small business
databases, and SRA identified the company as its
top candidate for one government project that was ultimately
cancelled. Another firm, which Bass can’t name
yet, has also named Automation Creations as its preferred
subcontractor on a government contract that could
be worth up to $15 billion for small businesses.
With the program celebrating its
third birthday in July, organizers are hoping for more
tangible successes. “This
is the year they are looking at real jobs and contracts,” says
Mitchell. One reason for the delayed success is that
many of the relationships are dependent on government
contracts, which can take several years to finalize.
As they put together teams to bid on federal contracts,
several larger participating companies are looking
for partners, especially minority- or veteran-owned
small businesses from underutilized areas such as Southwest
Virginia. They are highly sought after because of federal
contracting requirements that frequently specify that
one-quarter or more of the subcontracts go to small
businesses. Minority- and veteran-owned businesses
get preferential treatment in federal contracting and
can give a team an advantage.
The jury, though, is still out on
whether the Linked Workforce showcases provide an opportunity
for mere
flirtation or something more serious. But participants
are sold on the concept. “I think they definitely
deliver what they promise,” says Omnitech’s
Parks.
|