News

SBA partners with other agencies to expand Boots to Business

sba logo
Log in to save this page.

The U.S. Small Business Administration has reached a cooperative agreement with America's Small Business Development Centers, SCORE, and the Association of Women's Business Centers (AWBC) to provide a combined$1.12 millionof funding to sustain and expand the partners' participation in SBA's Boots to Business program.

The program provides training to transitioning service members and their spouses pursuing business ownership as a post-military service career. Funding for the agreement will reimburse SBA resource partners for the two-day "Introduction to Entrepreneurship" courses delivered on military installations worldwide as part of the Department of Defense's Transition Assistance Program TAP). The course helps prepare transitioning service members for business ownership and connects them to SBA resources in their local communities.

"Veterans make some of our country's best entrepreneurs, and we are investing in them by ensuring our partners are funded to maximize the training and support they provide to service members embarking on their post-service careers," said SBA AdministratorMaria Contreras-Sweet. "We owe so much to those who have served in our Armed Forces and sacrificed so much.  Our veterans deserve opportunities, and the SBA and our network of small business experts are ready to help them start their next chapter."

Boots to Business is the entrepreneurship training track within the TAP program designed to support service members as they transition to civilian life. Boots to Business began as a pilot in 2012, expanded nationally in 2013, and was appropriated$7 millionin the fiscal year 2014 federal budget for expansion and sustainment. SinceJanuary 2013, more thanr 16,000 transitioning service members have participated in the two-day "Introduction to Entrepreneurship" class on 165 military installations worldwide.

Each year, more than 250,000 service members transition out of the military. These veterans are natural entrepreneurs who possess the skills, experience and leadership to start businesses and create jobs.  

Veterans make up a large number of successful small business owners. Nine percent of small businesses are veteran-owned. These 2.45 million veteran-owned businesses employ more than five million people and generate more thanone trillion dollarsof receipts each year. In the private sector, veterans are more likely than those with no active-duty military experience to be self-employed. 

Each year, SBA helps more than 200,000 veterans, service-disabled veterans and reservists start and grow their small businesses. To learn more about additional opportunities for veterans available through the SBA, visitwww.sba.gov/vets.

 

About the Author
Paul Gordon is the editor of The Peorian after spending 29 years of indentured servitude at the Peoria Journal Star. He’s an award-winning writer, raconteur and song-and-dance man. He also went to a high school whose team name is the Alices (that’s Vincennes Lincoln High School in Indiana; you can look it up).