1. Economic Gardening is Sprouting in Michigan
Barbara Fails – MSU Land Policy Institute
Christine Hamilton-Pennell – Growing Local Economies
National Economic Gardening Gathering in Glacial Lakes Area, South Dakota
June 17-19, 2009
2. Michigan Pilot EG Program
• Core Team
Small Business Assoc. of Mich. Growing Local Economies
Shepherd Advisors Michigan Library Assoc.
MSU (Agriculture, Library, Product Center) Library of Michigan
• Tuscola County (EDC, coaches and 5 entrepreneurs)
• Keweenaw and Houghton Counties (EDC, coaches and
5 entrepreneurs)
• USDA Rural Business Enterprise Grant
3. Objectives
Test a distributed EG program delivery model
in rural communities in Michigan
•Partner local librarian (researcher) with local economic
develop agency (business coach) to provide direct services
•Support the direct service providers centrally
•Discover what data resources are publically available, what
data resources are needed
•Develop a statewide business model for rural communities
4. Community Based Model
Community Model
Central Support Team
Service Providers
Coach
Coach
Community
Librarian
Coach
5. Two Pilot Communities
Keweenaw
& Tuscola
Houghton County
Counties
58,266 people
38,317 people $42,344 MHI
$31,076 MHI
2000 census data
6. Preparation and Tactics
1. Select entrepreneurs
2. Train librarians and business coaches
3. Develop a central support system
4. Provide EG competitive intelligence services
– Interview
– Research
– Analysis
– Report
– Present findings to entrepreneurs, develop strategies
5. Assess the model and service delivery
7. Select Entrepreneurs
• Revenues < $1,000,000
• In business for at least 1 yr.
• Growth-oriented
• Willing to act on research
from the EG services
• Willing to participate in
project assessment
8. Train Librarians and Coaches
Coaching role
Research role
Data resources
available
Reviewed actual
clients
Assigned the work
Case studies
9. Develop a Central Support System
• Growing Local Economies project consultant
• MLA / Business Librarians competitive intelligence
• MSU Team
– Business Library competitive intelligence
– Product Center market analysis
– Center for Economic Analysis project assessment
– Rural Entrepreneurship project coordination
10. Provide Competitive Intelligence Services
• Interview
• Research
• Analysis
• Report
• Present findings
to entrepreneurs,
develop strategies
11. Assess the Project
• Survey to clients
served
• Key observations and
lessons from core
team and central
support team
12. What We Learned
• Prequalification process – not all are ready for EG
• Importance of the business coach
• Getting to the questions – many heads are good
• Expectations of the program
• Access to information and databases
• Primary vs. secondary data needs
13. What We Learned
• Organizing, referencing data
• Synthesizing the recommendations
• Preparing the report
• Communicating with client, coach - iterative
• Each case is unique
• Takes a lot of time
14. Toward an Integrated System
• Community assets
– Entrepreneur resource centers (meet up places)
– Entrepreneur databases (virtual access to information)
– Networks, professional services, biz coaching, peers
• Central support
– Customized EG services to select clients
– Leveraged purchase of databases
– Marketing, program support for communities through
existing infrastructure
15. Challenges and Opportunities
Business model
Time management
Business coaching
Infrastructure/systems
Client prequalifying
Library, community roles
Diversity of needs
Partnerships
Capacity development
16. Barbara Fails, Ph.D.
Entrepreneurship is Pure Michigan Associate Director
EntrepreneurshipLand Policy Institute
is Pure
Michigan 307 Manly Miles Building
Michigan State University
East Lansing, MI 48823
www.landpolicy.msu.edu
fails@msu.edu
517-432-3287