from Inquiry, Volume 5, Number 2, Fall 2000
© Copyright 2000 Virginia Community College System
Abstract
A review of the literature reveals vital information for Virginia's Community Colleges in determining needs for noncredit programs in the area of entrepreneurship and small-business management. This article discusses the priorities and problems facing Virginia small businesses and what Virginia's community colleges can do to assist these small businesses. Perhaps the most disturbing input from small businesses found in this study is the lack of knowledge about what Virginia community colleges have to offer. This should be a clear signal to Virginia's community colleges, a challenge to better communicate to the small business community the types of assistance and training they offer.
The purpose of this study is to
review the literature, both nationally and in Virginia, that has attempted to
determine demand from small businesses for entrepreneurship and small-business
management training. Sources include William Dennis' significant research of
national small business problems and priorities, new research findings from the
National Council for Urban Economic Development (CUED), the Virginia Community
College System, Virginia's Small Business Development Center, regional chambers
of commerce, and research by the Northern Virginia Regional Partnership. It is from these data sources that small
business needs are articulated and the conclusion drawn that strong interest
and need for this training and education does exist.
National Data
Perhaps one of the most useful
research studies on needs assessments of small businesses across America is
from the Education Foundation of the National Federation of Independent
Businesses (NFIB). The fourth edition of
Small Business Problems and Priorities (Dennis, 1997), like its
predecessors, is a powerful research study detailing problems of small
businesses and the perceived priority of these problems as rated by small
business owners.
The survey for Dennis' research was
based on a random sample of 15,000 (out of 600,000) members of the National
Federation of Independent Businesses (NFIB). Membership in the NFIB represents
10 percent of the employers (of both small and large businesses) in the United
States. The findings were based on the responses from 3,471 small-business
owners throughout the United States, representing a 23 percent response
rate. Seventy-five potential business
problems were assessed by these owners and each was given a rank from
"Critical Problem" to "Not a Problem." The responses provide a mean score, which
was used to rank each problem to establish priorities. The ten top small-business problems
identified in priority ranking were:
1.
Cost
of health insurance
2.
Federal
taxes
3.
Cost
of workers' compensation
4.
Unreasonable
government regulations
5.
FICA
issues and cost
6.
Cost
of premises or facilities
7.
Federal
paperwork
8.
State
taxes
9.
Frequent
changes to Federal tax laws
10. Cash flow
Timing of this latest survey is
interesting to note. Dennis' previous
survey (1991), conducted at the height of the recession, noted more problems
such as cash flow, poor sales, poor earnings and the like. Because the 1996 survey was conducted during
an expansion period in the economic cycle, perceived problems and priorities
noted were significantly different.
Although the study did stratify the
population by several factors, such as size of business, location, industry,
legal form, years in business, and the like, the major problems identified were
mostly related to type of industry and population density of location. For example, retailers were concerned about
minimum-wage levels while contractors were more concerned about applications
for permits. However, the study
concludes that owners are more likely than not to share problems across industries.
Whether the location of the business
is rural or urban appears to impact directly the concerns indicated. Finding qualified employees ranks high for
urban small businesses while energy concerns and environmental regulations have
higher priorities with rural small businesses.
An important aspect of this study,
as it relates to needs assessments of small businesses, is in the grouping of
the 75 problem areas into clusters.
These arbitrary assignments are designed to lump problems into categories
such as finance, information, management, regulation, and the like. Some
problems appear in multiple clusters, while others lie outside the scope of
these categories. The problems identified in each cluster mirrored the national concerns
of small businesses. These data provide
valuable information for noncredit curriculum development by focusing on
problems that remain the same regardless of industry or location. (Dennis,
p21).
The survey data indicate that small
businesses in the South Atlantic region are less dependent upon a few customers
than are other regions and that seasonality is also less of a problem. However, locating qualified employees ranked
7th and was deemed a "critical problem" by 28% of the
respondents. Employee retention, training employees, and other
employee-related problems were ranked significantly high.
The top-ten problems identified in
this region by rank order include:
1.
Cost
of health insurance
2.
Federal
taxes on business income
3.
Unreasonable
government regulations
4.
FICA
costs and issues
5.
Workers'
compensation costs
6.
Property
taxes and rent costs
7.
Locating
qualified employees
8.
Federal
paperwork
9.
Cash
flow
10. Frequent changes to federal tax laws
and rules
Since there are few significant
differences between the responses of states located in this region, it is safe
to assume that small business problems and priorities in Virginia are
represented by the mean averages from the region.
Virginia Data
There were three primary sources for
these data. The National Council for Urban Economic Development (CUED, 1997) provided a research
report to the Virginia Chamber of Commerce entitled Promoting Growth in
Emerging Companies in Virginia.
CUED conducted over 40 in-depth interviews with Virginia economic
development and business professionals to determine strengths and weaknesses of
these programs in assisting Virginia's emerging
businesses. Secondly, a 250-piece
postal mail survey was sent to Virginia's small businesses to learn of their
experiences with small-business services and support. The third component of
this research involved examining efforts in both neighboring and competing
states in their successful efforts in promoting small-business growth.
CUED's findings suggest that there
is a new economy emerging in Virginia, which stems from knowledge-based
firms. The prosperity of Virginia will
depend upon how the Commonwealth assists in creating climates for growth and
success for these emerging small firms.
These companies will thrive on innovation, creativity, and quality. In
short, these emerging companies are the new breed of entrepreneurial ventures.
Among the critical factors
identified in this report in supporting small and emerging business growth are:
·
Availability
of capital, especially seed funding
·
A
trained workforce, both university trained and skilled technical assistance
·
Technical
assistance to technology based firms
·
Technology
transfer mechanisms
·
Proactive
business environments
This research found that Virginia is
not proactively and aggressively courting small and emerging businesses in its
economic development programs as much as it is more mature businesses. Researchers discovered that Virginia's
training assistance programs target relocating and expanding businesses and
leave little to the small business segment. Furthermore, the report notes that one under-recognized resource in
economic development is the Virginia Community College System and its 23
community colleges scattered throughout the Commonwealth.
Additionally, the study recognizes
the need for small-business training
in the essentials of planning, launching and managing a small enterprise. Solid business-plan development skills are a
requisite for all emerging ventures, especially those in information technology. Entrepreneurs
interviewed in this research indicated a strong desire and need for available,
affordable entrepreneurial training programs in areas such as business plan
writing, financial planning, finding capital, marketing, and communicating
business ideas.
Responses in this research also
indicate the lack of knowledge of available technical assistance and training for
entrepreneurs. When asked which services they were familiar with as listed in the
questionnaire, many replied that they were unaware of any such services. Providers and users are not communicating,
and the resulting information gap is a significant marketing problem for
community colleges. The study also
found that even given the placement of Small Business Development Centers (SBDCs) within the community colleges, the link between technical assistance
providers and users is generally weak.
The Northern Virginia Regional
Partnership Workforce Development Survey for the 2nd Quarter 1998
determined that, among other factors discovered, regional high technology
companies are experiencing serious employment shortages; 22,987 vacancies existed
among Northern Virginia's technology firms during the reporting period. The most sought-after skills are in
programming and data base administration.
More than 70 percent of the respondents indicated interest in partnering
with local educational institutions in filling job vacancies, training, and
retraining. Needs identified through
this survey include supervisor/management training, computer literacy training,
job-specific technical contract training, and human relations skills (Stough,
R., 1998).
Needs assessments are not new to
Virginia. In 1993, the Virginia Chamber of Commerce identified five areas (that
included coordinating workforce training and education programs to meet
specific needs of Virginia employers) in offering programs to assist small
businesses with competitive financing alternatives. Additionally, in 1994, the
Business Sector Advisory Councils of Opportunity
Virginia, a strategic-planning initiative in Virginia, recognized six important
economic development factors that included training programs designed for each
locale, attracting more minorities and women into Virginia businesses, and an
emphasis on technology transfer to the workplace (Jackson, 1996).
The Virginia Community College System (VCCS) in 1994 created Virginia Works, which
is a program designed to redirect the Virginia community college effort towards
the needs of business and industry in workforce development. Virginia Works has
established selected, specialized services for business and industry through
its “Institutes of Workforce Excellence.” Unique training needs of each community college region are identified
and addressed by the local community college.
Regional partnerships with various stakeholders in each service region,
including community college leaders, were established and continue to work
together to further the development of Virginia's workforce.
A survey of Virginia community college presidents
revealed the following data (Jackson, 1996).
Between 1995 and 1996, over 3,000 employers received workforce training
through contract and open-enrollment courses at Virginia's community
colleges. Individual community colleges
provided various degrees of training to companies employing between four and
1,500 employees. Northern Virginia Community
College served over 200 employers during this period.
Jackson's survey results indicated that there is a growing
number of specialized centers and services being established in response to
changing needs of communities and businesses.
There appears to be a high level of partnership activity between community
colleges and their local industries, and this includes curriculum development
and support.
During this same period, Virginia
community colleges delivered workforce noncredit courses to nearly 68,000
individuals and, by 1997, the VCCS served over 90,000 individuals (House
Document No. 85). Twenty-two colleges
offered training in ISO 9000 certification while fifteen colleges offered
training in ISO 14000 certification.
Jackson provided each of the 23
Virginia community college presidents with an analysis of that region's
customer perceptions of the college's workforce training service programs. This survey targeted businesses employing
more than 25 employees but fewer than 500. This survey was conducted by the VCU
Survey Research Laboratory with data of employee size furnished by the Virginia
Employment Commission.
Jackson's survey excluded small
businesses employing fewer than 20 workers, which is estimated to be
approximately 60 percent of all small businesses in Virginia (Small Business
Profile, 1998). However, his conclusions
are still valuable for needs determination since the vast majority of responses
from all regions of Virginia were from those firms employing between 25 to 99
employees. His findings for training and education needs include:
·
Computer
and computer literacy
·
Supervision/management
training
·
Human
relations skills
·
Licensure
and certification courses
Importantly, the study
discovered that there are significant gaps in the types of training provided by
Virginia's community colleges: a lack of specific training and course
timeliness, lack of industry-specific training, and lack of on-site training. College degree credit and public
funding were not very important issues to small businesses.
There have also been several
attempts in various locales in Virginia to determine training and education
needs of local small businesses. The
Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond (1997)
initiated a study, Survey of Small Business Owners; Assessing Capital and
Other Resources, which was designed to determine the needs of small
businesses relative to capitalization requirements. The partial results from this study indicate:
1.
80 percent
of respondents founded their own business.
2.
Sources
for financing their business include credit cards, business earning, commercial
loans, family loans, and loans against personal assets.
3.
Insufficient
collateral or no personal loan guarantee offered were the two top reasons for
loan rejections.
Perhaps respondents’ remarks gathered
on the surveys reveal the real needs of small businesses. These responses ranged from questions on
what programs are available to assist small businesses in financing operations
to the need for guidelines in structuring multi-source business financing. One interesting comment was, "How can I
get past a bad credit history and still get a loan?" Although the survey was oriented to
financial needs of small businesses, it does provide additional curriculum
information as to what small businesses need in education and training.
The Fredericksburg Regional Chamber
of Commerce and the Rappahannock Region Small Business Development Center
conducted a regional (Spotsylvania and Stafford Counties, Virginia, and the
City of Fredericksburg) needs-assessment survey. The purposes of the assessment were to determine some general
concerns of small business owners, identify small-business training needs, and
to identify business research uses and needs. Surveys were mailed to nearly 500
small-business owners, and a random sample of 30 from the returned surveys was
analyzed. Major concerns and problems
included:
·
Cash
flow
·
Customers
·
Personnel
·
Competition
·
Marketing
·
Sales
·
Time
Management
Other general concerns included marketing strategies, human
resources, local economy and government rules and regulations.
Additionally, it was noted that 63 percent
of businesses use training seminars with 40 percent very satisfied with
training and 17% satisfied. Nearly 77
percent of businesses prefer single-session, daylong training emphasizing needs
in marketing research and planning, advertising and sales promotion, and
strategic planning.
Various Small Business Development
Centers (SBDC) scattered across the state have conducted their own local needs
assessments. Business start-up counseling is a high-need priority for small
businesses. For example, the 1997
Counseling Report from the Virginia Small Business Development Center indicates
that Counseling in Business Start-ups represented 42 percent of total cases
counseled. This was followed by Sources of Capital, 21 percent, and
Marketing/Sales, 18 percent. The SBDC at Wytheville Community College reports
that nearly 70 percent of its counseling is with start-up companies (Wytheville
Community College Objectives).
In analyzing the Virginia SBDC
Training Report for 1997, which includes input from all of Virginia's SBDC
organizations, nearly 2,573 individuals received training for a total of 27,655
contact hours. Pre-business Planning
ranked number one, 38 percent of the courses offered, followed by sessions on
Marketing and Sales at 12 percent. The
balance of offerings is scattered among topics ranging from Veteran Outreach to
Minority and Women-Owned Businesses.
In 1998, the Greater Richmond
Chamber of Commerce initiated a survey of its small-business membership to
determine education and training needs. The question was posed, "What
concerns your business most?" The
highest-ranked response was Marketing with 20 percent of the responses,
followed by Cash Flow (13 percent), and Competition-Domestic with 13 percent. Government regulations were rated fourth at
10 percent. When asked which government
agencies, rules or regulations most impeded the business, Payroll Taxes
received 17 percent of the responses, Employee Benefit Regulations at 11
percent, and OSHA and Wage Reporting 10 percent each.
The survey also asked which seminar
topics are of interest to business owners.
Not surprisingly, 19 percent of the respondents indicated a strong
interest in Marketing while an additional 13 percent suggested
Advertising. Sales as a topic came in
third, followed by Networking and the Internet with all three topics ranked at
11 percent each. Business-Plan
Development was ranked sixth with a 9 percent response rate.
Needs Assessment
The starting point for any community-oriented
education program is the development of a needs assessment. Nelson and Piland
(1982) note that a properly designed needs assessment will fulfill these
functions:
1.
identify
business interests, needs, and concerns,
2.
provide
a network of key people in the community who will serve as resources, and
3.
give
guidelines to identify future small-business programs.
This
assessment is crucial in identifying training and education needs in the local
community, primarily in noncredit activities.
Survey instruments need to be designed and disseminated to
all local small businesses within the service region of each community-college
campus. Partnering with the local chamber of commerce is one means of
developing a mailing list. Service
organizations, such as Rotary or Lions Clubs, are excellent sources for mailing
lists. Another source is the local
Small Business Development Center (SBDC).
Once the survey results are received and evaluated, and the
needs in the business and campus communities established, the final program can
be designed. The needs assessment is
the critical success factor in designing the program’s content. This initial approach to identifying what
the customer wants and needs is market-driven education and training, and
represents a departure from the traditional approach of offering programs and
waiting for the "customer to buy."
This new approach is entrepreneurial for both credit and noncredit
programs and is relationship-focused (developing lasting relationships within
the community).
Summary of Findings
From Dennis' research (1997), the
problems and priorities facing Virginia small businesses are costs of
operations and overhead, government regulations, finding qualified employees,
and cash flow. The National Council for Urban Economic Development (1997)
research notes that seed funding, technical assistance and transfer of
technology, a proactive business community, business plan writing, financial
planning, finding capital, marketing, and communications are the priorities of
emerging businesses in Virginia. The Northern
Virginia Regional Partnership study
reinforces the need for continued collaboration with local educational
institutions for workforce retraining.
From Jackson's studies (1996) of
business needs in Virginia, conclusions drawn are that Virginia businesses need
computer and computer literacy training, supervision, human relations,
licensure and certification. Chambers
of Commerce and SBDCs found training needs in business plan development, cash
flow management, customers, personnel, competition, marketing, and time
management. The SBDCs are spending the
majority of their training and counseling efforts in business start-up
activities.
The most significant finding,
however, is the apparent lack of communications between the community colleges
and the small business community; these institutions must inform their
constituents of the various training and education programs offered by the
colleges. Communicating program
offerings is especially important in rural regions where the primary source for
entrepreneurship and small-business management training programs will come only
from the community college.
References
Dennis, W., Jr. (1996). Small
business problems and priorities (4th ed.). National Federation of Independent
Businesses (NFIB). Washington, DC: NFIB Education Foundation.
This work is the fourth compilation of perhaps the most
extensive survey of small business owners across America. Each survey lists problem areas and
respondents are asked to rank the problem from "Critical Problem" to
"Not a Problem." Industry,
size, location of business, and sales change are just a few characteristics
that separate respondents into various categories. (NOTE: The 5th edition was expected to
be released in May 2000).
House
Document No. 85 (1998). Noncredit
education for workforce training in Virginia. Report of the Joint Subcommittee
to the Governor and General Assembly of Virginia. Richmond: Commonwealth of
Virginia.
An outstanding public
document detailing the workforce needs of Virginia, this report became the
basis for legislation passed in 1998 for workforce development programs
coordinated by the Virginia Community College System.
Jackson,
J. (1996). Workforce training and service needs of Virginia businesses: a survey for the Commonwealth of Virginia. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, George
Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia.
A survey was
undertaken to determine workforce needs in Virginia, with businesses of 25 or
more employees as the subjects of the study.
Jackson also wanted to know the quality of the workforce, availability,
organizations providing training, barriers to getting assistance, and
requirements for special technical training.
National Council for Urban Economic
Development (1997). Promoting growth
in emerging companies in Virginia; a report to the Virginia chamber of commerce. Washington, DC.
This report to the
Virginia Chamber of Commerce details the need to recognize a new economy
emerging in Virginia, which is focused on new technologies. The argument is excellently advanced that
the success of this new economy depends upon the success of new emerging
businesses that thrive on innovation, quality, and ideas.
Nelson,
R. , Piland, W. (1982). Organizing
small business programs in community colleges.
Illinois University, Urbana Department of Vocational and Technical
Education. (ERIC Document Reproduction
Service No. ED 219 517)
Developed
as a manual for use primarily by the vocational activities in Illinois
community colleges, this article delves deeply into the rationale, the need,
the contents of a suggested program, and the benefits derived. Basic design is to facilitate small-business
development and community development.
Appendices include sample questionnaires, a bibliography on small
business and entrepreneurship, a timetable for implementation, and sample
evaluation forms.
Small Business Profile (1998).
Office of Advocacy, Small Business Administration, Washington, D. C.
Annual
report on U. S. and Virginia small business activities (heavy on statistics).
The importance of the role of small businesses in economic growth is
highlighted.
Stough, R., Trice, M. (1998). Northern Virginia regional partnership
workforce development survey 2nd quarter 1998.
Report
details the training needs of Northern Virginia high technology firms. Significant shortages of computer related
skills are identified and strategies are looked at for assessing these
shortages, including partnering with local educational institutions.
Richard L. Drury, D.A., is an Associate Professor of Management and the Assistant Division Chair for Management, Marketing, Finance and Real Estate at Northern Virginia Community College, Annandale Campus. Dr. Drury is the former Director for Small Business Programs at George Mason University, a Small Business Institute Director, and is currently pursuing promoting entrepreneurship and small-business management curricula in community colleges.