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About HBN - The Homebased Businesswomen's Network
HBN is a nonprofit group with members from Boston's North Shore and beyond
who share business information, exchange ideas, and provide networking
opportunities for people interested in starting or presently running a
business from home. Members include bookkeepers, artists, marketers and
editors, interior designers, crafters, lawyers, coaches, financial and
health professionals, and web site designers. Whether they offer products or
services, HBN members all have in common the desire to share practical,
how-to experience and inspirational success stories.
In the Beginning
HBN was founded in 1981 by career counselor and Salem State College
instructor Paula Wall. "She placed an invitation in the newspaper for
homebased businesswomen to meet in her home to form a group that would meet
monthly to discuss isolation, business contacts, customer relationships, and
money-making versus a hobby," recalls Elaine Abramo, current HBN president
and owner of Abramo's Business Consulting in Salem, MA.
"At first, six to eight people met in each other's living rooms, and
occasionally served as panelists in discussion groups in Paula's classes,"
adds J.P. Goodwin, a South Hamilton, MA-based artist and HBN Board Member.
As the group grew, meetings moved to a variety of public spaces, providing a
place for entrepreneurs to seek solutions to the problems of operating a
business from home.
In HBN's early years, many members were crafters and hobbyists, and HBN held
craft shows and conferences attended by people from all over New England.
Nancy Black of Organization Plus in Beverly, MA, recalls that in the early
1980s, "there were no other support or networking groups around for
homebased businesswomen."
Early Challenges for HBN and Members
For HBN, the biggest challenge at first was finding people who felt isolated
in their homebased businesses, according to Black, who launched her business
in 1983. "Many women who started businesses at that time were not as
self-confident as women are today. Many people thought if someone had a
homebased business then they weren't really in business. My own biggest
challenge was educating people about what a professional organizer was."
"For me, getting clients was the challenge," says Abramo. "Advertising did
not work for me, but I soon found out about networking. Being on a
committee, giving a talk, chairing an event, or teaching a course were all
ways to become visible, credible and known, which in turn gave me clients."
Abramo started her business part-time in 1981 and now counts it as her
full-time source of income.
Abramo's experience is echoed by many other HBN members. Goodwin started her
business in 1978 to support three children in the absence of a father while
staying home to raise them. She remembers the challenge of "getting
prospective clients, friends, neighbors, and suppliers to believe we were
actually working to earn an income, not supporting a hobby. It was also a
challenge to get new members to remember to put on a professional face at
home."
HBN Today
Homebased business are more common now, as are business networking groups,
and although HBN has changed over the years, the group's basic goals remain
the same. For those just starting out, HBN provides valuable information
that can steer them to successful beginnings. Established business owners
find new opportunities to promote and expand, as they share ideas on
everything from basic accounting to time management.
HBN's current membership reflects a broad range of business interests.
Professionals offer such services as consulting, coaching, marketing,
editing, preventive law, landscape and interior design, bookkeeping, and web
site design. Other HBN members also offer products ranging from fine arts
and crafts to health and personal care products.
Some HBN members became entrepreneurs after leaving the corporate world
through downsizing or retirement, while others decided to start a homebased
business once they reached certain life or career turning points. What all
HBN members have in common is the desire to share practical experience and
inspirational success stories.
What HBN Can Do
"I personally feel connected to HBN, because I joined the same time I
started my business," says Abramo. "As HBN grew, so did I. I made lots of
friends along the way, and gained a few good clients too. HBN has given me a
platform to express myself, develop as a business leader, and to give of
myself in terms of time, support, action, and ideas. I've also seen other
people grow, develop international clients, and sell their businesses for a
profit."
"HBN provides encouragement, support, and education to women with homebased
businesses," adds Black. "I remember that Paula Wall encouraged me to teach
my first class in the Endicott College Continuing Education Program. I had
never taught before, but the experience taught me the value of stretching
beyond my comfort level and being open to new possibilities. It has had a
profound effect on my personal growth, enabling me to be a successful
businesswoman. Being involved in HBN leadership positions and speaking at
HBN events has enhanced my credibility in the North Shore business
community."
Goodwin describes HBN as a "close-knit, nurturing business forum providing mentoring, support, and friendship. It's an endless resource of critical information in a broad array of areas, as well as a source of sympathetic ears for discussing common dilemmas."
What Members Say About HBN
Paula Beaulieu, Artist and Art Educator
"HBN is a good group of people and a lovely way to connect with women who
are experiencing the same kinds of challenges, even though our businesses
are very diverse."
Kathleen M. Victory, Blue Pencil Consulting
"HBN is a source of energy and inspiration. It's a wonderful, welcoming
network of people who share their experience and hard-won wisdom about what
it takes to walk the entrepreneurial path from home - often while balancing
the needs of family life."
Miriam Klamkin, Night Vision Astrology
"HBN relieves isolation for homebased entrepreneurs."
Elizabeth A. Benson, Dove Haven Studio
"HBN is a wonderful support system. People are there to encourage you as a
businesswoman with a camaraderie that goes beyond networking."
Anne Six, Author
"I enjoy the camaraderie and acceptance. HBN points out what you can do and
gives you the support to do it."
Cheryl Perkins, Cheryl K. Perkins & Associates, Web Developer
"HBN has provided me with my own board of directors, offers advice and a
place to test out ideas, and helps me become aware of things I had not
thought of."
Donna Johnson, Pathworks Consulting
"HBN is a positive force in helping me know how to run a business and how to
network."
Where and When
HBN holds meetings on the second Thursday of the month at the Village Green
Restaurant in Danvers, MA, alternating late morning with evening meetings.
Guests are always welcome, and the guest fee is $10 at the door (no fee for
HBN members). See our HBN member directory and get more information.
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