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Valley program turns hobbies into businesses
PHARR — Emma Llanas makes quick work of a tear in the seat of a pair of plaid shorts.
Carefully guiding the fabric through the sewing machine in her living room, her fingers dodge the bobbing needle until what was once a flaw that rendered the garment unwearable comes barely noticeable.
It’s a skill she picked up fixing clothing for family as a girl in Reynosa, but now — at 49 — she hopes she can use it to launch a successful small business.
The odds may be against her, but a group of community organizers think they can turn her into an entrepreneur.
In May, Llanas and 15 other low-income women living in Hidalgo County colonias received startup grants to help them launch their own home-based businesses.
Part of a program dubbed "Latina Hope," the awards aim to prove that with a little outside investment, extremely small business ventures can prove successful even in a down economy.
"Most of these things start off in some way as a hobby," said Eduardo Millet, vice president for business development at the McAllen Chamber of Commerce. "But in a few years, who knows? It could expand from there."
The chamber, along with the Univeristy of Texas-Pan American’s Small Business Development Center, the United Way and Wells-Fargo Bank, designed the program this year and put the women through a business boot camp offering training on marketing, obtaining financing and competitive pricing.
All came with business ideas ranging from organic gardening to printmaking. But for many, like Llanas, this was their first brush with concepts like financial projections and business accounting.
"A lot of these ladies did some of these things already — seamstress work, home décor, sold items at local flea markets," said Janie Caballero, an advisor with the UTPA Small Business Development Center. "They just weren’t used to thinking about them in a business sense."
The trick, she said, was teaching them to stop thinking of their work as a hobby and start approaching them with the zeal of an entrepreneur — a transition that didn’t come easy.
At a recent meeting, Millet spent the better part of an hour convincing the women that they needed to value their own work if their businesses were going to succeed.
One woman — who grows organic vegetables in a garden in her backyard — said she had settled on the price of her product by going to a chain store, finding a similar offering and cutting a few cents off.
"It’s not about just selling your product," he reminded her. "It’s about making a profit. You have to understand the value of the time you put into it."
Sara Mendoza, however, has already discovered that coming from a small venture sets the jewelry she makes apart. Her customers have praised the necklaces, bracelets and earrings she makes from a workroom attached to her Mission home for their unique style, she said.
Her secret: She has had no formal training and lets imagination rather than traditional designs guide her work.
"I tell everyone now — teachers, secretaries, neighbors," she said. "It all comes through word of mouth."
Despite their successes so far, the reality is that most of these businesses won’t ever expand beyond their current state, if they survive at all, Millet said.
Micro-entrepreneurs with limited resources face even greater challenges than traditional small-business owners, half of whom fail.
The women of Latina Hope face other demands, too, like the need to care for children or cook for their families — all during traditional business hours.
But if even a few of them can make a little bit of extra income and pick up business skills they can apply in other jobs, the program will have been a success, said Ramona Casas, a community activist with A Resource in Serving Equality, an immigrant advocacy group better known as ARISE.
"These are people from the colonias — people who are really struggling to survive with low, low incomes," she said. "This is another way they can be with their children and be able to get some money to support the family."
And for Llanas — who has seen her business grow in the two months since receiving her grant — a shot at success is all it takes to stay motivated.
She spent her money buying a hemming machine she installed into her Las Milpas home. It now sits nestled next to an industrial steam iron and other tailoring equipment.
Advertising in local business publications has also drawn in more clients, and she now routinely accepts bulk alteration orders from local dry cleaning shops.
"It’s opened my eyes to all the opportunities around me," she said. "It’s the kind of support not many people are willing to give you."
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Jeremy Roebuck covers courts and general assignments for The Monitor. You can reach him at (956) 587-9377.







