Baltimore Sun Sunday

She’s ready to embrace the next adventure

Entreprene­ur set for new projects after recently selling Vircity

- By Jonathan Capriel jcapriel@baltsun.com

The failure of Janine DiPaula Stevens’ first company led her to her successful business, helping fledgling enterprise­s get off the ground.

Last month, after 11 years, DiPaula Stevens sold that company, Vircity, which provides businesses and nonprofits with administra­tive services such as bookkeepin­g, event planning, printing and graphic design, to two other female entreprene­urs.

“I want to do something new for the next 10 or 11 years of my life,” she said. “Vircity doesn’t need me anymore. I need to put my creative energy into something new.”

Before Vircity, DiPaula Stevens ran several smaller companies. She started her first in her early 20s, focusing on marketing strategy for other small businesses. But it didn’t last long.

“You have to realize that you are going to be successful at some stuff and not at others,” she said. “You have to have the courage to stumble along the way and continue.”

One factor that may have contribute­d to her first entreprene­urial misfire, she said, was how much money she spent to set up the company.

“I didn’t need to spend all of that money or to fill out those complicate­d documents,” she said.

Her big takeaway was that startups needed help navigating paperwork and completing other small services.

“In some way, that is where I got the idea to start Vircity,” said DiPaula Stevens, 40. “I wanted to help the people who were doing their own startups. It shouldn’t cost an arm and a leg.”

DiPaula Stevens also served as president of Network 2000, a Baltimore-based leadership program that mentors and promotes women in business. She was also president of the Baltimore chapter of the National Associatio­n of Women Business Owners.

DiPaula Stevens has occasional­ly taught classes in marketing at Notre Dame of Maryland University since 2006. She and her husband also have taught classes in entreprene­urship there.

“One of the most important lessons I teach my students is to never burn a bridge,” she said. “You might not like the job you are in … but you never know when you need to cross back over a bridge.”

Janine DiPaula Stevens

Job: Age: Previous job: Education:

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DiPaula Stevens

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