Mainebiz

June 1, 2015

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V I E W P O I N T S W W W. M A I N E B I Z . B I Z 3 J U N E 1 , 2 0 1 5 Featured @ Mainebiz.biz From the Editor F ickle customers, fi re, fi nancing issues — Maine small businesspeople are well acquainted with these challenges. is issue of Mainebiz focuses on small businesses and it's chockablock with stories of comebacks and gritty successes. We asked our Bass Harbor-based correspondent, Laurie Schreiber, to talk to businesses Downeast, a region where business growth often comes at a high price. We didn't plan it this way, but fi re turned out to be a theme in both of Laurie's stories. In Eastport, "A boon for boat builder" (on the cover), Millennium Marine has a great story: A third-generation boat builder, raised in New Brunswick, last year moved his business to Maine to expand the customer base. As Laurie reported, owner Cory Guimond's operations suf- fered a fi re within three months of the move to Eastport. We're happy to report that the company started cleanup the day after the fi re and was quickly back to building boats. Millennium is now hiring 20 employees, building its workforce to around 50. In Machias, "Change afoot on Main Street in Machias" (Page 30), Laurie spoke with the owners of Helen's Restaurant, Julie and David Barker, who rebuilt the iconic restaurant after it burned to the ground in July 2014. You hear this time and again in Maine, but Helen's was a town gathering place. Its loss hurt the civic pride and hurt surrounding businesses. For a town that's trying to evolve as a destination rather than just a drive-through town, Helen's rebuilding was a matter of signifi cant local interest. Yet, as Sharon Mack, executive director of the Machias Bay Area Chamber of Commerce, says, "I never saw a community rally so quickly and fully … Helen's always stepped up for others, and that's what people did for them." Trial and error is also a big part of building a business. In Biddeford, "Reclaimed materials for an iconic look" (Page 36), Artas Designs co-founder Art Timo ev talks about the need to train employees as the furniture- making business grows. "You can't learn it from a text- book. You have to put your hands on it and try it about a trillion times," he says. In Eliot, "Crafted in Maine, paddled everywhere" (Page 22), the founders of Tidal Roots, a maker of wooden standup paddleboards, spent some three years developing products, creat- ing templates and studying the marketplace before actually launch- ing the company. " at fi rst board look forever to build. Hundreds of hours," says co-founder Kent Scovill. Yet hard work has its rewards: "It was the best day ever stepping on those boards for the fi rst time." Elsewhere in the issue, Senior Writer James McCarthy delves into fi nancing, talking to Field Rider at Pine Tree State Certifi ed Develop Corp. about the Small Business Administration's 504 lending program. We round out the small business focus with the list of Maine's largest Small Business Administration loans. You don't have to be an entrepreneur to enjoy this issue. But if you are, this is a keeper. Peter Van Allen pvanallen@mainebiz.biz Maine entrepreneurs take setbacks in stride Get Maine's business news daily at mainebiz.biz and on Twitter (@Mainebiz). Below is some of the best from our online-only offerings: For a daily digest of Maine's top busi- ness news, sign up for the Mainebiz Daily Report at mainebiz.biz/enews A new haven for startups TechPlace at Brunswick Landing has signed up 15 tenants, just five months after the manufacturing- focused business incubator and co-working space opened its doors. Learn about the incubator's current mix of clients and its future plans at mainebiz.biz/TechPlace Looking for a job? There are more than 850 job open- ings at manufacturers around the state, the Manufacturers Association of Maine reports. Find out more about the kinds of positions that manufacturers are looking for and the average pay for positions at mainebiz.biz/MAMEsurvey hammondlumber.com An inside look Get a digest of the state's largest commercial real estate transactions, industry movers and more in our weekly Real Estate Insider newsletter. Sign up at mainebiz.biz/enews.

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