Meet our Team – Clay Hickson

March 24, 2010

Susan

“Bridging Global Markets” is not only the tagline for Towson University’s international incubator, TowsonGlobal but also Director Clay Hickson’s personal motto as he has crossed many bridges in his global travels.

This former rancher from Texas has visited many countries along the Pacific Rim, including Mainland China, Hong Kong, South Korea, Singapore, Thailand, and Japan.  He also lived and worked in Taiwan for a total of six years.  In addition to these Asian countries, Clay has visited many countries in Europe, which include Germany, Austria, Luxemburg, Belgium, Netherlands, and France.  And that’s not all—he has worked on a variety of projects all across the world.  It was my pleasure to interview this well-traveled Director about the international incubator, TowsonGlobal.


University Incubators: A Resource for Students and Entrepreneurs

March 22, 2010

Clay

University-based business incubators such as TowsonGlobal not only support start-up businesses from the surrounding region, but also offer students a plethora of hands-on experience and practical knowledge before joining the workforce (see story from The Baltimore Sun special education section).

While the model may vary from one incubator to another, area entrepreneurs, students and others can tap into the incubator’s resources by paying affordable membership fees as either resident or associate members.  The incubator offers a wide variety of resources, including office space, mentoring, and networking assistance.  For instance, TowsonGlobal’s advisory board, brimming with advice from seasoned executives, is a great asset for member companies.

Affiliation with a university provides incubator companies ready access to faculty and staff for collaboration on research and development, for commercialization of university generated technologies, or other types of academic-business partnerships.  This also can provide an ideal avenue for finding enthusiastic and hardworking student interns.

At TowsonGlobal, for instance, over the last several years as many as 30 students have benefited from internships with participating companies as part of their academic programs. They have been assigned to companies where they have conducted market research, produced feasibility studies, and developed real business contacts for the incubator clients (see the TowsonGlobal YouTube video).

Encouraging entrepreneurship through incubators allows universities to provide great collaborative, educational experiences that benefit all… students, faculty/staff, entrepreneurs, and student entrepreneurs, too.


Do I Need a Business Plan?

March 8, 2010

Clay

As in just about every area of life, the importance of planning really can’t be overemphasized for the entrepreneur.  This old saying is very true:  Failure to plan is a plan for failure.  Even though some entrepreneurs may “luck” into success without going through the process, a lack of planning really is a formula for failure.

The business plan does not need to be complex or long, but it is necessary.  In simple terms, a business plan is a written description of your business, a document that describes what you plan to do and how you plan to do it.

What is included?

  • A business plan conveys the business goals and the strategies you’ll use to meet them.
  • It discusses the potential problems and risks that may confront your business and ways to solve them.
  • The plan highlights the organizational structure of your business and who the team members are.
  • It demonstrates that there is a market for your product or service and that you know how to tap that market.
  • The plan highlights how the product or service will be produced.
  • It also discusses the amount of capital required to finance your venture and where you expect that money will come from.

Clay Hickson advises a TowsonGlobal business

Business plans have several purposes. They’re used to seek support from potential lenders or investors.  They also may be used to attract key team members, win new business, work with suppliers, and understand how to manage the business better.  However, just because you have a plan doesn’t mean that everything is covered and that there won’t be surprises.  It does mean you will be much better prepared and more likely to achieve success.  Even so, once you have the plan in place, it doesn’t mean that all your work is done.  A business plan is a living document that should be regularly revised as conditions and goals change.

There are numerous resources available for guidance on developing a business plan.  Small Business Development Centers have workshops that teach all the basics.  Their counselors and those of a Small Business Resource Center or of the Service Corps of Retired Executives also can help.  Of course, there also are templates and other resources available on line, such as from the Small Business Administration.  In addition, participation in a business incubator program like TowsonGlobal can provide an entrepreneur significant help in fine tuning his or her business plan.

This nautical analogy sums it up pretty well:  “It’s better to be 5 or even 10 degrees off your charted destination than to have no port in mind at all.  After all, the point of sailing is to get somewhere, and without a plan, you’ll wander the seas aimlessly, sometimes finding dry land but more often than not floundering in a vast ocean.  Sea captains without a chart are rarely remembered for discovering anything but the ocean floor!

Do you need a business plan?  Yes!


The Bilingual Entrepreneur

December 2, 2009

Clay

The world we live and work in today is a much smaller place than it was even just a few years ago.  Advances in telecommunications and transportation technologies have increased international and cross-cultural interactions among people and businesses.  Each of us is impacted personally by these effects of globalization because we increasingly find that our colleagues, customers and friends come from different cultures or may even be in different countries.  This fact makes the ability to speak a second, or even a third language a great advantage in both our professional and private lives.

Recently, on Foreign Languages Day (November 18, 2009) during International Education Week, I had the opportunity to address two beginning Chinese language classes at Towson University to share some of my experiences as a bilingual businessperson.  A unique opportunity I had during my college years allowed me to learn Mandarin Chinese in a two-year, sink-or-swim total immersion environment that only whetted my appetite for learning the Chinese language and culture.  This pursuit ultimately focused my career in a way in which working in a multicultural and multilingual environment became a daily reality.

While not everyone will have the same opportunity I had to immerse themselves in another language and culture, each of us can (and should) create our own unique opportunities in this “smaller world.”  The benefits of being fluent (or even just conversant) in more than one language are numerous, including many personal, social and professional opportunities.  Opening our minds to new ways of thinking not only enriches us personally but also can help the organizations we work for (or want to work for) manage in this global environment.  The ability to manage a diverse workforce and client base makes us even more employable.

from stock.xchng by dogmadic

Businesses of all sizes need bilingual capabilities in this globally interconnected economy.  They can create a competitive advantage with bilingual owners and employees.  However, knowing another language alone will not guarantee success.  Learning the culture—customs, traditions and social norms—can be just as important in understanding a “foreign” people and business environment. With such language and cultural capabilities, organizations will be able to communicate more clearly to a broader global market.  Companies and individuals in touch with a wider variety of cultures may very well have the upper hand over the competition.

Young or old, there are many ways to gain fluency in a new language if you have the passion to learn.  Universities are expanding language offerings and language programs and software are available from a variety of sources.  You also should look outside your immediate circle to make bilingual friends to converse and learn.  If you have a real passion to learn, you should take advantage of travel opportunities, study abroad programs, volunteer programs, the Peace Corps, etc. to gain valuable language and cultural experiences.

Even though I learned the fairly challenging Chinese language, it is past time for me to learn another language… to learn Spanish.


Does Incubation Make a Difference?

October 21, 2009

Linda

Linda

Until I started working at TowsonGlobal, I had never even heard of a business incubator, much less understood its purpose.  I have since learned that an incubator is not just a place where start-up companies move in and pay rent like they would in any other office space, instead through a strategic partnership between the incubator the member company they are able to accelerate the successful development of the entrepreneurial venture.

According to the Centre for Strategy and Evaluation Services’ report “Benchmarking of Business Incubators,” there are approximately 1,500 business incubators in the United States and about 4,000 worldwide.  That U.S. number is up from only 12 incubators in 1980!  The numbers alone say a lot. Clearly, if incubators weren’t making a difference, that number probably would be shrinking.

Let’s look a little deeper and see what an incubator has to offer besides office space….

  • They provide support for a young company through mentoring, networking advice, suggestions on where to go for financing, and so much more that can help relieve a lot of the cost, planning and management worries that young companies often face.
  • Incubation also creates a synergistic environment where entrepreneurs can learn, network, create business partnerships, and it opens doors to markets and numerous resources.
from Flickr <i>fLeMmA</i>

from Flickr fLeMmA

Almost everyone has thought about going into business for themselves; only a few ever go beyond the point of dreaming and actually start their own business.  Of those few, 95% will ultimately see their business close and not realize their dream of success (cite: National Business Incubation Association). Incubators provide a structure for entrepreneurs to learn to avoid the problems that typically cause failure.

The impact an incubation program has on the local economy is not just in terms of clients served, but the real meat of the matter is jobs created, salaries paid, revenues earned, taxes paid and other economic gains.

Business incubation helps fast-track the growth of early stage businesses, improving their survival rate.  According to a Department of Commerce study, 87% of all small businesses who had been through a business incubator were still in business 5 years later. Does it make a difference? Yes, I would say so!

contributed by Linda Pytel

What is an Entrepreneur?

October 15, 2009
Clay

Clay

The term entrepreneur comes from the French word, entrependre, which means “to undertake,” and this is precisely the basic principle of entrepreneurship.  An entrepreneur is one who has a vision of an opportunity and takes the initiative to capitalize on it.  In simple terms, he or she organizes, manages, and assumes the risks of a business.  Surprisingly, there actually is debate over exactly what the term means, but few would argue that anyone who embarks on a new venture in order to create a new business would be considered an entrepreneur.

Entrepreneurs and other small businesses are the driving force behind the US economy, creating jobs and innovative technologies.  These businesses “represent 99.7% of all employers, employ more than half of the private sector workers, account for 39% of high-tech jobs, and create 60-80% of the net new jobs annually,” says Entrepreneur magazine.

A true entrepreneur has a vision to seize an opportunity with passion and diligence.  And these traits are crucial to success.  If you are thinking to yourself:   “This whole entrepreneurial thing is a piece of cake!  It can’t be a complicated process?  I can make millions effortlessly!”  Well, you are sadly mistaken.  Experience, knowledge, and most importantly, planning breed success.

from Flickr MartinPhotoSport

from Flickr MartinPhotoSport

Entrepreneurs often are innovators, creating new products, new production methods, new markets, new forms of organization….  However, being an innovator doesn’t ensure success.   People come up with new ideas everyday that we never even hear about.

Planning is the key to success.  Even though some entrepreneurs may “luck” into success, a lack of planning really is a recipe for failure.  There must be a market for whatever the idea is, and the product/service must actually be successfully produced and marketed.  And then there is the competition; someone may already be doing something very similar, or may learn how to do it better very quickly, stealing the market away.  The successful entrepreneur has a pretty good handle on all of these elements because he’s done his homework, he has planned.

towsonglobalMany entrepreneurs find that obtaining the support of an incubator can help them move more quickly along the path to success.  Incubators like TowsonGlobal provide a wide range of support, including affordable office facilities; business counseling & mentoring; networking assistance; and workshops and other educational forums.


TowsonGlobal is Thinking Outside–Listen to the latest TU Radio Spot!

September 29, 2009
Linda

Linda

Whether the company is local or foreign, TowsonGlobal, TU’s international business incubator, is well positioned and has the individualized resources needed to help start-up ventures and entrepreneurs, like member company Solaroad Technologies and others, grow their businesses and navigate today’s global business environment.  All of these resources and support are provided at below market rates, which allow businesses to focus on establishing themselves without many of the worries common to start-ups.

Recently, TowsonGlobal and Solaroad were featured in a radio ad as part of Towson University’s Thinking Outside Campaign.  You might have heard the ad recently during morning drive on WBAL AM1090!

contributed by Linda Pytel

3rd floor of TerraceDale—What’s going on up there?

September 14, 2009

TowsonGlobal, TU’s international incubator for early-stage companies, helps bridge the way for entrepreneurial enterprises to find success in the global economy.

Bookmark and Share


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.