The Telegram (St. John's)

Taking the plunge

Becoming an entreprene­ur has its rewards, but it isn’t for everyone

- BY JAMES RISDON

Two years after moving to Prince Edward Island, software programmer Abraham Roy lost his job in a corporate restructur­ing and suddenly had to scramble to find work.

He and his wife have two children and had then just bought a house. There were mortgage payments and bills. She has a good job as a software developer with an informatio­n technology firm on the Island but he still needed to get a job.

Soon, the calls from prospectiv­e employers started coming in.

But not from Prince Edward Island.

“I was getting calls from other provinces and I didn’t want to leave for Toronto,” said Roy. “I’d already bought my house here and I knew if I started something on my own, it would probably succeed.”

Between job interviews and applicatio­ns, Roy started working on a nimble and easier-to-use contact management system.

Last year – with an early version of that software ready to go – he put his job hunting aside and instead made the plunge into entreprene­urship, incorporat­ing Contacts-db with a partner with expertise in marketing, management and finance. That company makes, customizes and sells the EZEE Contacts Management System.

“It’s home based. I’ve converted a part of my basement into a lab with my laptops and computers,” he said.

The 40-something Island entreprene­ur is part of a growing trend of people turning to self-employment to either supplement or replace the income from their jobs or who are working on short-term contracts.

Last year, financial software company Intuit Canada and the Emergent Research consulting firm studied the self-employed and concluded “full- and part-time freelancer­s, independen­t contractor­s and on-demand workers are expected to account for up to 45 per cent of the workforce (in Canada) by 2020.”

Many of them are people simply struggling to pay the bills. According to the study, nearly two-thirds of the self-employed in Canada have a job on the side to supplement their self-employment earnings. Roughly one in five of them are Canadian retirees trying to top up the money they get from their pensions.

Certainly, the buzz surroundin­g entreprene­urship is palpable in Atlantic Canada these days.

“The excitement around it is probably at the highest level I’ve ever seen and I’ve been around for 17 years,” said Michael Sanderson, acting director of the newly rebranded Saint Mary’s University Entreprene­urship Centre, formerly known as the Sobey School Business Developmen­t Centre.

In all four provinces in the region, there are government programs to help people launch businesses and get financing.

But the reality is fewer and fewer Atlantic Canadians are choosing to go the self-employment route.

In a study undertaken to determine what role unemployme­nt might play in encouragin­g people to launch their own small business, three economics professors at the University of New Brunswick discovered the Atlantic Canadian provinces are bucking the growing trend towards self-employment in Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia.

Men in Atlantic Canada in particular seem more reluctant than ever in recent years to create their own jobs, the study shows.

“Since the early 2000s, slowly rising self-employment rates in the larger provinces of Ontario, Quebec and (British Columbia) have offset larger declines in most of the smaller provinces,” the study’s authors note. “Similarly, strong growth in female self-employment rates have offset stagnant or

declining male selfemploy­ment rates.”

The decline in selfemploy­ment in Atlantic Canada goes back more than 20 years, to the mid-1990s.

In their paper entitled Push or Pull into Self Employment? Evidence from Longitudin­al Canadian Tax Data, the professors were surprised to report in August last year that changes in the unemployme­nt rate don’t seem to have any bearing on the number of people who choose to launch their own businesses.

The aging of the labour force in Atlantic Canada may be a factor in the regional trend since young adults are more likely to start businesses, said Philip Leonard, research associate at the University of New Brunswick and a co-author of the study.

“It’s long-run demographi­c and identity things but the unsatisfyi­ng answer is we don’t really know (why fewer Atlantic Canadians choose self-employment),” he said.

A serial entreprene­ur himself, Sanderson says it’s the desire to take control of their lives that drives most entreprene­urs.

“It’s that passion,” he said. “When you start a business, you are the architect of your own dreams. You are responsibl­e for growing it and there’s a great deal of satisfacti­on in doing that. It doesn’t feel like work because it’s so driven from within.”

The extra money that can come from self-employment, though, also helps.

“If you work for someone else, there’s a cap on your earnings but in entreprene­urship, there is no cap,” said Sanderson.

He advises anyone thinking of starting a business to first doublechec­k to see whether there’s really a market for its products or services.

“You have the idea but you have to validate that idea,” said Sanderson. “You have to go out and talk to people and see if they would actually buy this product. It’s not about talking to one or two people. You have to talk to as many people as possible.

“The ultimate validation is for them to sign a sales agreement,” he said.

Crowdfundi­ng sites like Kickstarte­r allow start-ups to pre-sell their product even before it exists, giving these start-ups a safety margin before going into production.

At Contacts-db, the financial base for launching the company was an early deal with the PEI Bioallianc­e. That organizati­on’s executive director, Rory Francis, has since then offered up a glowing testimonia­l of EZEE Contacts Management­s – and that’s helped the fledgling company land other clients.

Although many small businesses are sole proprietor­ships, said Michael Sanderson, it’s important to build up a solid executive team. Sanderson is acting director of the newly rebranded Saint Mary’s University Entreprene­urship Centre, formerly the Sobey School Business Developmen­t Centre.

“The optimal team size for venture capital is three people,” he said. “You’re looking for the skills and abilities that will carry that business forward. You can outsource some of the skills but it’s good to have the core of them on the team.”

At EZEE Contacts Management, Roy brings the software expertise, his business partner adds know-how in management, finance and marketing, and the ecommerce side of things is being outsourced to Charlottet­ownbased Results Marketing.

That company is building a full e-commerce site for EZEE Contacts Management and will also be handling its promotion when the website is launched by August, said Roy.

He is hoping that e-commerce site will allow EZEE Contacts Management to extend its reach and land sales in every Canadian province within a couple of years. With a contract to customize his software for one client, Roy is already looking to hire another parttime programmer.

But it’s not all clinched deals and money in the bank. Many of the self-employed hang onto their jobs or get a steady gig to ride out the ups and downs of their business.

Sanderson’s advice is to be prepared and persevere.

“You can’t go in with blinders on,” he said. “You have to know there are going to be good days and bad days. When you hit a bad day and you give up, that’s the beginning of the end.”

When Roy was still developing his contact management software, naysayers were everywhere – and money was often tight.

“There were days in my first year of business when I would think twice before going to a Tim Hortons … I needed to put every dollar into the business,” he said.

A good way to stay motivated during the tough times is to get excited about the business – and ignore the critics.

“Instilling passion into the process is crucial. When you’re doing something you love, the passage of time and the effort you put in is viewed very differentl­y,” he said. “Nobody comes back from vacation and says, ‘Man, I spent way too much time on the beach!’”

On the Island, Roy worked on this software program even as many tried to dissuade him before he landed clients which now include a local Re/max brokerage, BDO Canada and the PEI Bioallianc­e.

“For the first year, it was tough until I built the base because a lot of people give you negative comments,” he said. “Slowly, things started changing and I started growing. And thank God for that!”

“Instilling passion into the process is crucial. When you’re doing something you love, the passage of time and the effort you put in is viewed very differentl­y.”

 ?? Software entreprene­ur, Abraham Roy. ??
Software entreprene­ur, Abraham Roy.

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