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Presentation to CSU Chancellor’s Office March 15, 2010 The California SBDC Program, An Economic Development Engine within CSU
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Impetus for this Meeting Growing number of SBDCs hosted by individual CSU campuses Increases in Federal funding Decreases in State funding SBDCs in the place to make strategic investments into statewide partnerships
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Meeting Objectives Provide an overview of CA SBDC Program, including current CSU/SBDC relationships Present the concept and benefits of a statewide SBDC/CSU partnership Identify appropriate next steps
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What is the SBDC? Small Business Development Center Free consulting and training to emerging and existing small businesses. The primary business education program funded by the Small Business Administration In California, assistance to over 57,000 business owners and entrepreneurs annually.
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CA SBDC Structure 6 Lead Centers Including Humboldt State, Chico State, Cal State Fullerton 30 Service Centers Including CSU Monterey Bay, CSU Bakersfield, Fresno State Services in over 100 CA Communities Statewide Leadership Council, Rotating Chair
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Primary Services In-depth business consulting/coaching Non-credit educational workshops Major training events Business Topics Commercialization and intellectual property Equity finance and loan packaging Writing/reviewing business plans International sourcing/sales Technology Adoption Green and energy efficient business practices Government Procurement
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Primary Clients Business owners with 1-200 employees Any stage of business: startup to succession planning Wide variety of industries Over 55% ethnic minorities Over 12% veterans / service-disabled veterans Approx 40% (guess) have not completed their 4-year undergraduate degree
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Economic Impact of the CA SBDC 2009 Statewide Results: $118 million in incremental sales 2,756 new jobs 2,398 retained jobs $125 million in equity capital infusion 639 new enterprises started Return on Investment: $1.77 in annual tax revenue for every $1.00 in program funding $4.10 in capital raised from external sources for every $1.00 in program funding
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CA SBDC Funding Total Cash Funding:$21 million Federal funding: $12 million Cash Match funding: $ 9 million In-Kind Match:$ 3 million Annual Budget:$24 million Current opportunity: As much as $5 million in unmatched Federal funding
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SBDC Benefits to an Individual Campus Many opportunities for student internships Class projects, guest lecturers Faculty research projects, curriculum development Online and extended education opportunities Connection to local business community Commercialization assistance
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Benefits to an Individual Campus Increased competitiveness for economic development grants; access to SBDCs-only grants Student business plan competitions New donors and corporate partners Broad community exposure Continual “good news” for Administration
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Benefits of a CSU/SBDC Partnership Preference for local SBDC hosting as territories come open (see benefits to a local campus) Exposure in variety of high-profile events, speaking opportunities; platform and vehicle to enhance CSU’s connections to California economic development activities Sharing in the concrete economic impact “good news” produced by the SBDC– helpful for Administration, in assorted grant writing endeavors, etc.
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Benefits of a CSU/SBDC Partnership (continued) Ability to leverage the SBDC infrastructure and outreach engine: easy transfer of information to/from 100+ communities and a database of several hundred thousand small businesses Inclusion of CSU in other SBDC partnerships California Innovation-Hubs Efficient Building Systems Regional Innovation Cluster Initiative CSU-Exclusive SBDC Grants to existing CSU business development programs
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Benefits of a CSU/SBDC Partnership (continued) Encourage collaboration across campuses between business and economic development focused programs, institutes and centers Partner with the CSU on industry-specific programs and projects: provide a non-credit element in coordination with for-credit workforce development Increase federal and state economic development focused funding flowing to the CSU
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What SBDC is asking for… A signed MOU that speaks to the statewide collaboration we would be engaging in. A point of contact for the SBDC at the Chancellor’s Office who could help make connections at local campuses. Quarterly meetings with individuals from the Chancellor’s Office to highlight accomplishments and discuss additional opportunities. An ability to state that the CA SBDC and the CSU Chancellor’s Office are engaged in a partnership.
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Questions?
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