2012 Resilience Awards Competition Opens

The 2012 Tayloe Murphy Resilience Awards competition that launches today will offer small businesses nationwide an in-depth look at how resilient companies in the areas of Virginia that have been hardest hit by the economic downturn, which began in 2008, are leading economic recovery in their communities.

The Tayloe Murphy Resilience Awards honor and support Virginia entrepreneurial businesses that demonstrate sustained vitality and commitment in areas characterized by high unemployment, high poverty and low entrepreneurial activity. Nominate a resilient Virginia business at www.resilienceawards.org through 2 July.

“We are at a critical point in the economic recovery for Virginia and the nation as a whole,” said Darden Professor Greg Fairchild, a nationally-known expert on entrepreneurship. “By analyzing how the most resilient businesses achieved success in spite of the economic climate, we can bring that knowledge to other businesses as their communities seek to build momentum and add jobs.”

Fairchild will continue to study years of data from Virginia businesses entering the competition to determine how the applicants weathered the recession. The data will inform research that identifies strategies and lessons that can apply to other enterprises, regardless of industry or location.

2011 Resilience Award winners from the towns of Melfa, Wise, Woodbridge, Franklin and South Boston have grown profits an average of 42 percent and employment by 20 percent annually over the past five years. These businesses have survived natural disasters, big-box competition and the crippling recession. Their innovations include lighter-than-air cell technology and award-winning wines coaxed from coal-mined soil. They have bridged cultural divides, supported local charities and brought hope to places where industries have disappeared. Above all, they demonstrated resilience.

Through ongoing media coverage, opportunities to engage key business and government leaders and enrollment in a week-long course at Darden’s highly-rated Executive Education program — valued at $8,000-$12,000 — five Resilience Award winners each year receive the recognition and resources to help their company and community continue to grow and succeed.

Pamela Barefoot, owner of Blue Crab Bay Co. and winner of last year’s Chairman’s Award, completed her Executive Education courses in March and published a blog about her experience.

For nearly a quarter century, her small, Melfa-based company has produced Chesapeake-style specialty foods, such as clam-juice-infused Bloody Mary mix and spicy snacks. Blue Crab Bay Co. has come back from a fire, beat the recession and reached beyond what some may see as an isolated location to engage a larger market.

“Before going to the class, I didn’t even know what a sales pipeline was,” Barefoot says. “I now feel prepared to work with my team to tackle the challenges of developing a strategic sales plan as well as a manageable sales pipeline. I know now that Blue Crab Bay Co. sells ‘pride’… pride in the Eastern Shore and our region.”

Cities in Virginia where businesses qualify based on rates of unemployment, poverty and self-employment include: Bristol, Buena Vista, Charlottesville, Colonial Heights, Covington, Danville, Emporia, Franklin, Fredericksburg, Galax, Hampton, Harrisonburg, Hopewell, Lexington, Lynchburg, Martinsville, Newport News, Norfolk, Norton, Petersburg, Portsmouth, Radford, Richmond, Roanoke, Waynesboro, Williamsburg and Winchester.

Counties in Virginia that qualify include: Accomack, Alleghany, Appomattox, Brunswick, Buchanan, Carroll, Charles City, Charlotte, Craig, Cumberland, Dickenson, Dinwiddie, Floyd, Franklin, Giles, Greensville, Halifax, Henry, Lee, Lunenburg, Mecklenburg, Montgomery, Nottoway, Page, Patrick, Pittsylvania, Prince George, Pulaski, Richmond, Russell, Scott, Southampton, Sussex, Tazewell, Washington and Wise.

Enter your ZIP code on the competition website to determine if your area qualifies.

The deadline to apply or recommend a business for the 2012 application is 2 July. Semi-finalists will be chosen by a panel of judges in July. Finalists will be named in August and invited to attend the award ceremony on 5 September at the University of Virginia where the winners will be announced.

The Tayloe Murphy Resilience Awards are presented in part by sponsorship from Virginia Business magazine.

Resilience Award winner attends Darden Executive Education

BCBC Pam Barefoot photo by Kindra Clineff This past week Pamela Barefoot, Founder and President of Blue Crab Bay Company, a 2011 Resilience Award winner, attended Darden Executive Education’s course on “Strategic Sales Management.”   Barefoot worked with Executive Education to select the course that would be most useful for her business to put her Resilience Award scholarship to use.  She shares her thoughts on the week on the Blue Crab Bay blog, and you can read about her experiences there.

Entrepreneur’s Workshop takes place around Virginia

Almost 100 people across Virginia recently attended Entrepreneur’s Workshops hosted by the Tayloe Murphy Center and UVA School of Continuing and Professional Studies in partnership with community leaders in Danville, Franklin, Henry County, Isle of Wight County, Lynchburg, Martinsville, Pittsylvania County and Southampton County.

These public events, held in Franklin, Lynchburg and Martinsville the week of February 20th, brought the Darden case study method to local entrepreneurs and business leaders.  The group in each region engaged in lively discussions of the best ways to grow a business through a case on Charlottesville business Sammy Snacks. 

Teaching entrepreneurship through case study is the cornerstone of the Entrepreneurship program developed by the Tayloe Murphy Center and School of Continuing and Professional Studies and piloted in Danville in spring 2011.  SCPS is working with community leaders in each of the workshop areas to bring the program to their region in the future.

Resilience Awards finalist honored

QuailCovePhoto (1)Quail Cove Farms, a finalist in the 2010 Tayloe Murphy Resilience Awards competition, was honored this week by the Northampton County Chamber of Commerce with the Chamber’s annual “Beyond our Shores” award.  The award is given to an Eastern Shore business “who has conducted an outstanding business reaching beyond Virginia’s Eastern Shore.”  The award was presented by Pam Barefoot, president of Blue Crab Bay Co. and winner of the Chairman’s Award in the 2011 Resilience Awards competition.  Read the full story from the Eastern Shore News.

Resilience Awards winner featured

2011_Resilience_Awards211 The most recent issue of Virginia Business magazine highlights the work of Lindstrand-USA, one of the 2011 winners of the Tayloe Murphy Resilience Awards.

To be young, gifted and leaving

In a recent commentary in the Charlottesville Daily Progress, Executive Director Greg Fairchild shares some insights from his travels around the Commonwealth, particularly from his engagement with high school students in many different communities.

Fairchild speaks on the Eastern Shore

Executive Director Greg Fairchild recently spoke about “Entrepreneurs as Change Agents” at an event in Melfa, Virginia jointly hosted by the UVaClub of the Eastern Shore, UVa Office of Engagement, Eastern Shore Community College and Tayloe Murphy Center.  Professor Fairchild addressed the challenges and opportunities facing the Eastern Shore and similar communities in pursuing economic growth through support for entrepreneurship.

Highlighting local 2011 Tayloe Murphy Resilience Awards winner Blue Crab Bay Company and 2010 finalist Quail Cove Farms as exemplars of entrepreneurial success, Professor Fairchild noted the importance and potential impact of entrepreneurs in communities facing economic challenges.  The event was covered by the Eastern Shore News, and you can read more about it on their website.

Learning from resilient entrepreneurs

As part of the Washington Post “Case in Point” series, Executive Director Greg Fairchild recently shared lessons from one of the Tayloe Murphy Resilience Awards winners, Todos Supermarket.  Professor Fairchild discusses what this and other resilient businesses can teach us about successful entrepreneurship and business in a difficult economy.  Read the article here.

Resilience Award winner featured

BCBC_logo_350dpi The November issue of Virginia Business features a profile of Pamela Barefoot and Blue Crab Bay Co., winner of the Chairman’s Award in the 2011 Resilience Awards competition.  Read the full profile or learn more about the awards.

Rai quoted on Latino finance research

The Delaware First Media recently covered the expansion of banking services to low-income communities in Delaware, including an interview with Research Director Kulwant Rai.  Rai is quoted in the article discussing the findings of the research report on Latinos and access to financial services.  Read and download the report here.