Friday, March 30, 2012

A Decade After 9/11: American Entrepreneurship Is Alive And Thriving

Where were you when American Airlines Flight 11 and United Airlines Flight 175 crashed into the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center in New York City?

What were you doing when American Airlines Flight 77 crashed into the Pentagon? Or when, after heroic passengers stopped the hijackers from reaching their intended target in Washington, D.C., United Airlines Flight 93 crashed into a field near Shanksville, PA?

If you're like most of us, ten years later you can instantly recall where you were and what you were doing that September morning.

To say that we were taken by surprise would be the understatement of the decade. The attacks on 9/11 shattered, finally and forever, our illusion that America was invincible.

A Decade after 9/11: Small Businesses Re-shaping America

Even as September 11, 2001, changed each of us individually, it also changed the face of small business owners and the way we operate in America.

Since the horrifying and unifying events of September 11, 2001, entrepreneurship in the U.S. has taken turns not even the most prophetic of entrepreneurs could have imagined.

Examine all that has happened: With the rubble of the Twin Towers not yet cleared, our country went to war, first in Afghanistan, then in Iraq. We experienced a "slow down" in the economy with one president and entered as great a recession as any of us have experienced with another. We gaped in shock as the financial walls of Wall Street crumbled, the big three automakers skidded toward bankruptcy, and tens of thousands of Americans lost their jobs, homes and saving..

Yet, through it all, America's businessmen and businesswomen persevered. Now, ten years post-9/11, they have demonstrated once again that small businesses are the backbone of American innovation, adaptation, and survival.

Here are three ways American small business are re-shaping America:

1. Entrepreneurship, like a pebble cast into the water, sends out ripples of hope and opportunity.

"More people than ever are breaking out of poverty and despair through entrepreneurship," writes Steven Strauss in USA Today. "Most important, I think, is that entrepreneurs are like pebbles thrown into a pond. They send out ripples of hope and opportunity, ripples of economic viability and creativity, and even bigger ripples of possibility.

2. Small businesses create stability in local communities.

Since 9/11 small businesses are discovering that getting involved at the local level creates stability within the community, and that's more important than ever.

Post-9/11 small businesses are thriving in communities where they've put down roots and made investments through donations of time. Being visible in neighborhoods and being actively involved with hiring from within the community has created much needed stability. Teaming up is no longer an option; it's a necessity. That's what has built America in the past and what is helping to rebuild her now.

3. Local businesses figure out how to co-exist.

Ten years after 9/11 small businesses are seen thriving in the shadow of big businesses. Take, for example, the home improvement industry. Before 9/11 the big box stores Home Depot and Lowe's dominated the home improvement arena. In fact, many thought the rise of the big box stores would drive out the smaller, independent stores.

Yet, after 9/11, look who's struggled to stay afloat. It isn't the little hardware store on the corner. It's Home Depot first and then, lately, Lowe's.

That's because the small independent hardware stores figured out how to make service pay even if the customer has to pay a higher price. And now, instead of wrangling with each other, they are co-existing.

What has American entrepreneurship in general and small business in specific learned ten years after 9/11? That being a small business owner doesn't mean you're small—it means you have the ways and the means to be flexible. That small businesses can more easily adapt to quickly changing environments than big box stores. And, what's more, that, in the marketplace, it is the consumer who decides where he or she will shop.

Even now, ten years after 9/11, looking for ways we can continue to innovate and adapt is the most any of us in America's entrepreneurial community can aspire to—while keeping in mind how lucky we are to have the freedom to own, operate, and run our own businesses.


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