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Return to Virginia Business - March 2005

News & Features


Women- and minority-owned businesses gaining attention

by Robert Powell
Virginia Business

March 2005

READER RESOURCES
Related stories: The changing face of Virginia business
Larry Crewe
Cynthia Gardner
DAO Huynh
Enrique Tessada
Web Pointers: For more information
Virginia Department of Minority Business Enterprise
Virginia Department of Business Assistance
U.S. Small Business Administration
Virginia Hispanic Chamber of Commerce

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Rarely do Virginia officials speak so harshly about the performance of the state government. “Pitiful.” “Embarrassing.” “Abysmal.” Those are words several have used to describe the state’s record in doing business with small, women- and minority-owned companies in Virginia.

A study released early last year revealed that, over a five-year period ending in June 2002, companies owned by women and minorities received less than 1 percent of the state’s procurement dollars. Before the “disparity study,” some thought these companies were getting up to 7 percent of the state’s business. Instead, they found that companies such as the former accounting giant Arthur Andersen had mistakenly been counted as minority-owned businesses.

“Whereas the commonwealth thought it was doing pretty well, we found out we weren’t doing so well,” says Sandra Bowen, Virginia’s secretary of administration. She says the system used to track women- and minority-owned vendors was so imperfect the state didn’t know “who was who and what was what.”

In reaction to the study, Gov. Mark R. Warner’s administration:
• Revamped the state’s certification process for small, women- and minority-owned businesses. (After starting over in October, the state had certified about 4,400 companies by late January.)

• Set an “aspirational goal” of doing 40 percent of the state’s procurement business with companies with 250 or fewer employees, regardless of the gender or race of the firms’ owners.

• Held agency heads accountable for broadening the base of state vendors.

Bowen and Michael J. Schewel, Virginia’s secretary of commerce and trade, stress that the initiative does not abandon business judgment for the sake of diversity. “To the contrary,” says a memo from Warner’s office to agency heads, “these SWAM [small, women- and minority-owned] rules specifically state that quality, price and terms should not be sacrificed in any meaningful way in order to achieve our procurement goals.”

Schewel says that the overall goal of the plan is “to reflect the changing face of Virginia’s business and population. We have a business community that is predominately small business in terms of the number of businesses. But we also have a business community that has a lot of strong minority businesses and women-owned businesses. And if our state procurement isn’t reflecting that diversity, then we think it’s not good for the state, because we’re not really giving opportunities to the range of Virginia businesses.”

The current makeup of this changing business community is hard to pin down, but authorities believe the number of minority- and women-owned businesses is growing rapidly. The Census Bureau conducts an economic survey every five years. However, the results of the latest survey, conducted in 2002, won’t be released until late this year or early next year.

In 1997, the last year numbers are available, Virginia had 71,705 minority-owned companies, the ninth largest total among the 50 states. Compared to the 1992 survey, Virginia’s total was up 54 percent. When broken down, the data shows that the number of black-owned businesses rose 28 percent to 33,539, Hispanic-owned companies jumped 79 percent to 13,703 and the number of Asian-American firms rose 63 percent to 22,441. By comparison, the U.S. Commerce Department says that nationally the number of minority-owned businesses rose 30 percent during that time.

While minorities represented about 28 percent of the state’s population, they owned 14.9 percent of Virginia’s companies in 1997. But minority-owned firms represented only 10.9 percent of the state’s firms with paid employees (other than the owner).

A study by the Center for Women’s Business Research provides a clearer picture of the current state of women-owned companies in Virginia. The center projects that the 132,219 women-owned firms in 1997 had grown 20 percent to 159,002 companies by last year. That total represented 31.2 percent of all privately held companies in the state.

Anecdotal evidence shows that much has changed since 1997. Women- and minority-companies have grown and are gaining a voice in business affairs:

• Booming Fairfax County is home to seven of the nation’s 100 largest black businesses and 12 of the top 500 Hispanic companies.

• The Virginia Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, formed in 2000, now has 350 members.

• The Richmond-based Asian American Business Assistance Center, started just last summer, has 150 participating companies.

• The Virginia Minority Supplier Development Council, an organization that pairs minority-owned suppliers with major corporations, is considering creating similar partnerships between large and small minority firms.

• The National Association of Women Business Owners now has three chapters of more than 100 members in the state, two of which started in the past three years. The Central Virginia chapter in Richmond has grown 5 percent since June.

Erin Fuller, executive director of McLean-based NAWBO, says the diversity of Virginia’s economy, access to federal contracts in Washington and the presence of Northern Virginia’s high-tech community have contributed greatly to the growth of the state’s women- and minority-owned companies.

But, she says, limited access to markets and capital still pose big problems to these companies. Virginia isn’t alone in overlooking “historically underutilized groups,” she adds. The federal government has fallen short in procurement goals for women-owned businesses set more than 10 years ago.

In Virginia, the state’s total discretionary procurement budget is about $4.5 billion, making 1 percentage point worth $4.5 million. The money is spent on construction, architecture and engineering, goods and supplies (ranging from pencils to computers), professional services and other types of services. The Virginia Department of Transportation spends 40 percent of the total, while the state’s universities control another 35 to 37 percent.

While the level of state business going to women and minorities remains low, Tinh duc Phan, chairman of the Asian American Business Assistance Center, believes the state is making a good faith effort to do things differently. “The good old boy network still exists, but we’ve seen some improvement already,” he says.

Return to Virginia Business - March 2005


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