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"THE CREDENTIAL" 
November
2020


Where Are All The Entrepreneurs?

2020 is quickly coming to an end and many A/E/LA professionals are challenged by work/home life.  You may be thinking...now that I am working remotely, maybe it's time to venture forward, take a risk, start my own practice/business. Possibly this is a dream you have had for a very long time.  Before you take that leap, consider the difference between being an entrepreneur
or a small business owner as shared by Mark Zweig, Chairman and Founder of "The Zweig Group."  You might be surprised about the options you have.
 
Entrepreneurs and small business owners have fundamentally different views on the opportunity each has in front of them. 
When I look out over the pool of roughly 100,000 A/E or environmental consulting firms, I see lots of small company owners -- but few entrepreneurs.
I guess this shouldn't be a surprise.  Few people choose to become architects, engineers, planners, land surveyors, or scientists because they are interested in business.  If they were that interested in business, they'd have started out with a business degree, right?  But you would think some -- more than those who actually do -- would get seduced by the business opportunity they have with their A/E or environmental firms. 
Let me step back a moment.  You might wonder what I am talking about here.  If these people own a business they are by definition, "entrepreneurs," aren't they?  No -- they aren't necessarily, and that is one of the things that drives me mad about the popular media.  They act as if anyone who has a lemonade stand is an entrepreneur. 
The primary distinction between someone who is an entrepreneur and someone who is just a small business owner is the entrepreneur believes in and works toward creating value in their business which they can harvest upon exit.  The small business owner only seeks to maximize the living they can earn from their business as they operate it.  These are two fundamentally different ways to view the opportunity each has in front of them. 
 
So, besides the fact these people didn't set out to be businesspeople, why aren't more owners of A/E firms entrepreneurs?  Here are my thoughts:
1.  They don't understand that to be an entrepreneur your business HAS to grow. This is the single most important thing for many reasons.  First and foremost, growth is the best indication the market served by the firm like what they do.  But another good reason is growth rate directly impacts the value of the firm.  Why do you think start-ups in other industries that are growing quickly are worth so much money? 
2.  They don't understand what the real economic opportunity is being an owner of an entrepreneurial A/E firm is.  If I told you that I know a guy who paid about $60,000 for the stock he bought in the firm he worked for and when it was acquired by a publicly-traded firm 20 years later it was worth $16 million, would you believe me?  It happened.  Or would you believe it if I told you a second-generation partner (one of many) in a planning and landscape architecture firm 30 years after buying in was making millions of dollars a year?  That, too, happened.  My point is ownership of a rapidly-growing entrepreneurial A/E firm in whole or in part is a valuable asset -- far beyond whatever the balance sheet says about assets minus liabilities being "owner's equity."
3.  They have been conditioned by their experience.  They may have started out in the firm they are in or another where the ownership is passed down from generation to generation with the assumption it has little value beyond the income you can extract from it annually.  This "income club" approach to the ownership of the firm doesn't often lend itself to making the kinds of investments that are required to keep the firm growing.  And yet it is far more common than an "investment approach" applied to the ownership of an A/E firm.  We are all limited by our unique set of experiences. 
4.  They are naturally risk-averse.  It's OK and completely understandable.  These people have been schooled in how to reduce risk.  To expect them to take chances with their business (i.e., attempt to transform it into something it currently isn't) is pretty unrealistic.  On top of that, if you honestly consider the fact that what most firms do in the majority of their projects is based on applied technology versus new technology, this is a very conservative lot indeed. 
5.  They have gotten a lot of bad advice.  The small accountants and attorneys, along with the single-person management and marketing consultants, that most firms in this business rely on for advice every day are limited by their own perspectives and orientations.  They are geared to minimize tax obligations, reduce risk, and provide typical solutions to problems that they feel are proven.  None of these preconceived notions about how to do things may be good for the entrepreneurial A/E firm owner who needs to do whatever it takes to make their business grow at a faster rate than the rest of the industry. 
In spite of these things, some entrepreneurial firm owners can and do emerge, and build valuable companies.  Zweig Group's annual HOT FIRM LIST of the 100 fastest-growing companies in this business is proof of that.  The success of some of these businesses really is phenomenal!
"This article first appeared in Issue 1367 of The Zweig Letter, Zweig Group’s Weekly Management Publication for the AEC industry.”
 
Practicing as a professional architect, engineer, landscape architect, land surveyor, planner or scientist, your credentials matter whether you are a sole practitioner, small business owner, a serial entrepreneur or a leader in a large international multi-discipline firm.   We appreciate the importance of properly maintaining your highly valued credentials.  LS Credentialing Services provides comprehensive credentials management services exclusively to architects, engineers and landscape architects - licensed professionals of the built environment. Let us help you protect your most valuable assets - your credentials. Visit AECredentialing.com for more information, or call 913-608-7880 for a free consultation session.

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 Contact Details:

LS Credentialing Services, WBE Certified, P.O. Box 91, Olathe, KS 66051

Lexi@AECredentialing.com

913-608-7880


Join us in our efforts to go "green". Think before you print.

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Take Note
A Timely Update


Your jurisdiction license renewal date may be waived due to the COVID 19 pandemic. Your continuing education requirements may also be modified.  Please visit your jurisdiction licensing website for current information. 



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License Renewal Dates

Architects:

Jurisdiction License Renewal Due Date
 
11/2020
 
Illinois
 
12/2020
 
Alabama, Arizona, Louisiana, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Wyoming


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Engineers:
Jurisdiction License Renewal Due Date

   
 
11/2020
 
Illinois -
(Structural Engineers)
 
12/2020
 
Arizona, Georgia, Iowa, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina,
North Dakota, Oregon, Texas,
West Virginia


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Landscape Architects:
Jurisdiction License Renewal Due Date
 
 
11/2020
 
None
 
12/2020
 
Alabama, Arizona, Colorado, Georgia, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska,
Puerto Rico, Wyoming,
British Columbia


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If your license renews on your date of birth this month, or by state requirement when your license origination occurred, or any other jurisdiction imposed requirement, it's time to renew.

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Learn more about our innovative and easy-to-use service at: AECredentialing.com.

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* Existing corporate credentials registration compliance review


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