Arkansas Online

Business help center expanding its reach

By Ryan McGeeney

The year 2020 was tough on many businesses throughout Arkansas, stunting some and shuttering others. As the covid-19 pandemic erupted across the country, the Cooperative Extension Service changed the way it typically interacts with Arkansans to continue outreach, often transitioning from in-person meetings and events to online webinars and Zoom sessions.

As vaccination rates continue to rise and covid-related restrictions are relaxed, the Arkansas Procurement Technical Assistance Center, part of extension’s Community, Professional and Economic Development Center, is shifting into high gear, scheduling a raft of in-person and “hybrid” events, which livestream those events to participants across the state, all while continuing regularly-scheduled visits.

The mission of the Arkansas Procurement Technical Assistance Center — which has sister organizations in states throughout the country — is to help small businesses understand the process of bidding for contracts with local, state and federal governments, from the “onboarding” and certification process to ongoing interactions with those agencies. Its mission aligns with that of its parent organization, the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture.

Melanie Berman, Procurement Technical Assistance

Center program manager, said that while there is normally a rush of introductory programs from the center each summer, 2021 is something more.

Berman said the Arkansas assistance center will be working increasingly with partner organizations throughout the state, ranging from Chambers of Commerce to local entrepreneurial innovation institutions such as The Conductor in Conway, The Generator in Pine Bluff and Startup Junkie in Northwest Arkansas.

“With many of these partners, we’ll be doing monthly or quarterly trainings, either virtually or in-person,” she said. “We’ll also have open office hours, having a staff counselor go to a given location, and advertise that, and have that person set up appointments for our clients who are interested in selling to the government.”

The Procurement Technical Assistance Center is heavy with introductory classes right now, in part because instructors are expanding their reach across the state, Berman said.

“We want to make sure businesses understand how we can be of assistance before we teach them about the specifics of marketing to the government, vendor registrations and small-business certification programs,” Berman said.

SETTING, REACHING GOALS

Like many grant-funded efforts, the Procurement Technical Assistance Center must set and achieve measurable goals each year to justify its funding. For the center, those include goals for obtaining new clients, holding events and providing “office hours” — one-on-one counseling sessions with small-business owners, helping them to navigate specific challenges.

From July 1, 2020, through June 30, 2021 — the middle of the covid-19 pandemic in the United States — the Arkansas Procurement Technical Assistance Center not only met those goals, but crushed them. The program obtained more than 560 new clients, exceeding a goal of 425; held 80 events, the goal was 65; and provided more than 2,250 hours of counseling, beating their 1,800-hour goal by 25 percent.

Berman said that during that time, Arkansas businesses were awarded more than 1,800 government contracts for goods and services, worth about $189 million.

HIGHER BAR

Berman said that while she isn’t sure where the bar will be set for the new year, it will be higher.

In June, the program opened a satellite office in Newport in Jackson County, about two hours northeast of Little Rock. The purpose of the office is to make Procurement Technical Assistance Center services and counseling more accessible to business owners in one of the state’s many financially distressed areas. More than half of all Arkansas counties are considered “distressed,” as measured by medial income level, unemployment rate or both.

“We’re expanding our reach, now that we’ve opened up the Newport center,” Berman said. “There are some partners that we work with — the Chamber in De Queen, for example — with whom we’re only now able to get ‘back into action,’ postcovid, and we’re really ramping up.”

To learn about extension programs in Arkansas, contact a local Cooperative Extension Service agent or visit www.uaex.uada. edu. Follow the agency on Twitter and Instagram at @AR_Extension.

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2021-07-23T07:00:00.0000000Z

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