SBA offers "Boots to Business Reboot"
training
Veterans and spouses to learn
entrepreneurship at July 14th Springfield event - registration now
open
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[July 13, 2017]
Boots
to Business Reboot, the entrepreneurial training program offered by
the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA), will be presented on
Friday, July 14 from 8:30 a.m.-4 p.m. at Prairie Capital Convention
Center (1 Convention Center Plaza, Room B2) in Springfield. Any
veteran, service member (including members of the National Guard and
Reserves), or spouse considering business ownership is eligible to
enroll.
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Boots to Business Reboot is a two-step program.
Step one is the in-person workshop. After completion, participants
continuing to pursue business ownership are encouraged to enroll in
step two, an eight-week online course offered by the Institute for
Veterans and Military Families at Syracuse University and a
consortium of entrepreneurship professors and practitioners.
Participants are also directed to additional SBA resources, such as
their network of Veterans Business Outreach Centers (www.sba.gov/vboc).
“We know veterans make great entrepreneurs. In fact, nearly one in
ten businesses in the U.S. are veteran-owned,” SBA Illinois District
Director Robert “Bo” Steiner said. “They have leadership skills,
tenacity, and discipline required to start and grow businesses, but
most haven’t applied those skills in a business context before.”
Boots to Business Reboot helps them prepare for success and evaluate
the opportunities and challenges of entrepreneurship. In addition,
participants are introduced to SBA resources available to access
start-up capital, technical assistance and contracting
opportunities.
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To register for Springfield’s July 14 Boots to Business Reboot
class, visit https://sbavets.force.com/ or contact Stephanie Spengler at
stephanie.spengler @sba.gov
or (217) 793-5020 ext. 114. To learn more about the program, visit:
www.sba.gov/bootstobusinessreboot .
About the United States Small Business Administration
Since its founding on July 30, 1953, the U.S. Small Business
Administration has delivered millions of loans, loan guarantees, contracts,
counseling sessions and other forms of assistance to small businesses. SBA
provides assistance primarily through its four programmatic functions: Access to
Capital (Business Financing); Entrepreneurial Development (Education,
Information, and Technical Assistance & Training); Government Contracting
(Federal Procurement); and Advocacy (Voice for Small Business). The SBA’s Office
of Veteran Business Development formulates, executes and promotes policies and
programs to empower veteran small business ownership and serves as an ombudsman
for veterans to ensure all SBA programs are accessible to service members,
veterans, and their families. For more information visit www.sba.gov and
www.sba.gov/vets.
[Jessica Mayle, Public Affairs
Specialist] |