Jamaica Gleaner

Yateman perseveres with outsourcin­g f irm in unknown arena

- Avia Collinder Business Reporter avia.collinder@gleanerjm.com

AFTER 20 years of executive support to government officials and diplomats, Marcia Yateman parlayed her talent for administra­tion and project management into an outsourcin­g company that provides ‘virtual administra­tive support’.

Four years ago, she launched Yateman Internatio­nal – Administra­tive Outsourcin­g, a venture headquarte­red in Portmore, but with associate offices overseas. Its referral partners are stationed in Miami, New York, and Atlanta. This year, she is aiming to triple the business.

Yateman Internatio­nal manages administra­tive, data entry, and customer care services for businesses of all sizes on a pay-per-project basis. Yateman’s track record, prior t o launching her own business, included the role of senior executive secretary to the governor general in 2011, where she managed communicat­ion as well as appointmen­ts for official and private engagement­s, among other duties, and before that she worked at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs & Foreign Trade for a decade before taking up the job of executive assistant to the consul general of Jamaica in Miami for three years, ending in August 2007.

EARNING LEVERAGED INCOME

Yateman told the Financial Gleaner that after two decades of executive support: “I realised I was great at it. I also learnt about the cash flow quadrant, and I wanted to move over to the right side of it where successful people were, so I had to start a business or start investing,” she said.

The cash flow quadrant shows how business owners can earn leveraged income.

“Well, I didn’t have money, but I had skills – exceptiona­l executive support skills that could add value to entreprene­urs who wanted to build successful businesses and lessen their overheads,” she said. However, it was not easy to meet her goals, and even now, she faces challenges in her efforts to expand her outsourcin­g firm.

“It was very difficult getting people to understand the concept of the virtual assistant business, building trust in mindsets that didn’t truly believe persons could be efficient working from home, and also to ensure the confidenti­ality and security to protect the integrity of their informatio­n,” she recalled.

However, Yateman persevered, and while she began formalisin­g her operation in 2013, she officially began trading in the last quarter of 2015.

The company now has have 17 full-time and three part-time employees providing services that include research and data entry, telephone/email handling and calendar management, business documents, reports and minutes, PowerPoint presentati­ons, business meetings and events coordinati­on, secretaria­t and customer service support, and marketing assistants, among other functions.

The services are targeted at corporate boards, profession­al associatio­ns, personal/executive assistant to executives, and ‘solopreneu­rs’ who are operating from home but still want to appear like a large corporatio­n.

INTERESTED IN PARTNERS

Yateman is interested in taking on new partners, but is yet to find any takers.

“I approached a few persons initially to partner with me who did not come on board, but I learned that the only person who can fulfil my dream is me because it is my purpose and passion,” she asserted.

Yateman said she has invested $6 million in the company since start-up and achieved break-even in 2017. Now, she needs capital to grow the business.

“I have to keep turning down projects because I do not have the funds to expand. The space I currently have is full, and there is space on the building, but the scarcity of funds is an issue,” the entreprene­ur said.

“Funding was my major challenge, and still is, because I had to use up all my savings on equipment and supplies and paying staff. The bank said they did not understand the nature of my business – virtual administra­tive support. I thought that was ridiculous, but I had a dream, I had a plan, so I made sacrifices and moved on.”

Despite its challenges, she notes that Yateman Internatio­nal is growing. The company earned revenue of just over $2 million in 2016 and then doubled that to more than $4 million last year. For 2018, the goal is to triple revenues.

“We are poised to make $12 million this year and could increase the figure drasticall­y if we were to find more space and equipment to handle the tasks coming to us as a top-rated agency online with an 83 per cent job satisfacti­on rate,” said Yateman.

“Simply put, the more people we are able to put on a job, the more profitable we are,” she said.

 ??  ?? Marcia Yateman, CEO of Yateman Internatio­nal.
Marcia Yateman, CEO of Yateman Internatio­nal.

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