Highline College program celebrates first year of helping small businesses
Mon, 09/28/2009
Highline Community College's StartZone is marking its first-year anniversary with a celebration from 5-7 p.m. Oct. 8 in the Highline Student Union (Building 8).
Since opening in October 2008, the program has helped more than 120 women, people of color, immigrants and people with disabilities who want to start or expand their small businesses in Southwest King County.
In addition, StartZone members have started 15 new businesses, created dozens of new jobs and obtained nearly $90,000 in financing.
The celebration, which is free and open to the public, will feature speakers who have found success after receiving support from StartZone's trained business specialists.
Featured speaker Adugna Wubbie, of SeaTac, originally came to StartZone with the hope of building a successful business and helping his family back in his home country of Ethiopia.
He started Rose Super Clean Services, a commercial janitorial service, and is now earning about $3,000 a month in revenue. By the end of his first year in operation, he hopes to generate at least $10,000 a month in revenue.
"Our StartZone business adviser gave us information on what we needed for success," Wubbie said. "As part of the StartZone community, we have had an opportunity to meet other business owners, network and find support from our peers."
StartZone services are free to members and include assessments, referrals, business consulting and planning, loan packaging, workshops, mentoring and opportunities for networking and peer support.
StartZone offers orientations from 6-6:30 p.m. on the first Thursday of the month at the HCC Outreach Center (Building 99), room 132, 23835 Pacific Highway S. in Kent.
For more information about StartZone, call 206- 878-3710, ext. 3388, e-mail startzone@highline.edu or visit http://startzone.highline.edu.
StartZone is funded by a grant from the U.S. Small Business Administration.