vancouver catering company: corporate, weddings, events ......bus iness ancouver 17 augus –10 015...

2
17 BUSINESSVANCOUVER AUGUST 4–10, 2015 Call 604.904.2397 for your free in-home health assessment. 301 – 1221 Lonsdale Avenue, North Vancouver, B.C. V7M 2H5 www.livingwellhomecare.ca Living Well Home Care Services offers a full spectrum of home health care services including: Personal care & companion services Live-in caregivers available for 24 hour care Dementia care Palliative care Respite care Post-surgery care Hourly services Quality of life with trust, respect and dignity through Living Well. Accredited with Commendation by Accreditation Canada. Friday, November 20, 2015 Noon to 2:30pm Terminal City Club CREATING FEARLESS LEADERS Brought to you by the team behind the Dove Real Beauty Campaign RSVP at wamsbc.ca www.biv.com/subscribe 604-688-2398 [email protected] Subscribe today! In Print or Online Digital Edition Lists Now Available WOMEN IN BUSINESS How to navigate male-dominated business cultures Meticulous preparation, attention to etiquette and knowledge of current events are crucial, COO says 21 BIVLIST Biggest B.C. businesses owned by women 18 Biggest B.C. organizations managed by women 20 Careful planning, timely action are key to owning a business, execs say Q&A | Successful B.C. entrepreneurs share what put them on the path to running their own companies and what they’ve learned from the experience BY JEN ST. DENIS [email protected] Q&A DEBRA LYKKEMARK, CEO, CULINARY CAPERS Q: Did you always know you wanted to own a business? A: I wanted to have my own business since I was 30. I’d been in the restaurant business since high school – I was a hostess and then I got into waitressing and bartending and then management of restaurants. Q: How did you make that dream a reality? A: By the time I was 29 I didn’t have enough money for a restaurant, so I decided that I would take over this little coffee shop and I talked a couple of my girlfriends into coming into business with me. We each put in $5,000, and I didn’t have that kind of money, so I borrowed it from my husband. … That gave us enough money to renovate, and we got a small loan from the bank. Q: Why did you want to take on that challenge and all that responsibility? A: My dad was an entrepreneur, and I was the eldest of six kids, so I’m really good at bossing people around. I wanted to be the one that was in charge. I got into management at a very early age; I was managing a boutique leather store when I was 17. And I really enjoy having staff. A lot of entrepreneurs say, “If I Left to right: Kriston Dean, vice-president of merchandising and marketing, Purdys Chocolatier; Debra Lykkemark, CEO of Culinary Capers; and Marla Kott, CEO of Imprint Plus | SUBMITTED CONTINUED ON PAGE 19

Upload: others

Post on 05-Oct-2020

3 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Vancouver Catering Company: Corporate, Weddings, Events ......BUS INESS ANCOUVER 17 AUGUS –10 015 Call 604.904.2397 for your free in-home health assessment.301 – 1221 Lonsdale

17BUSINESSVANCOUVERAugust 4–10, 2015

Call 604.904.2397 for your free in-home health assessment.301 – 1221 Lonsdale Avenue, North Vancouver, B.C. V7M 2H5

www.livingwellhomecare.ca

Living Well Home Care Services offers a full spectrum of home health care services including:

■ Personal care & companion services ■ Live-in caregivers available for 24 hour care

■ Dementia care ■ Palliative care ■ Respite care■ Post-surgery care ■ Hourly services

Quality of life with trust, respect and dignity through Living Well. Accredited with Commendation by Accreditation Canada.

Friday, November 20, 2015Noon to 2:30pm

Terminal City Club

CREATING FEARLESS LEADERSBrought to you by the team behind the Dove Real Beauty Campaign

RSVP at wamsbc.ca

www.biv.com/subscribe604-688-2398

[email protected]

Subscribe today!

In Print or Online

Digital Edition Lists Now Available

130120141007

pageCategory

Women in Business

How to navigate male-dominated business culturesMeticulous preparation, attention to etiquette and knowledge of current events are crucial, COO says

21

BiVListBiggest B.C. businesses owned by women 18Biggest B.C. organizations managed by women

20

Careful planning, timely action are key to owning a business, execs sayQ&A | Successful B.C. entrepreneurs share what put them on the path to running their own companies and what they’ve learned from the experience

By Jen St. [email protected]

Q&ADebra Lykkemark, CeO, CuLinary Capers

Q: Did you always know you wanted to own a business?

A: I wanted to have my own business since I was 30. I’d been in the restaurant business since high school – I was a hostess and then I got into waitressing and bartending and then management of restaurants.

Q: How did you make that dream a reality? A: By the time I was 29 I didn’t have enough money for a restaurant, so I decided that I

would take over this little coffee shop and I talked a couple of my girlfriends into coming into business with me.

We each put in $5,000, and I didn’t have that kind of money, so I borrowed it from my husband. … That gave us enough money to renovate, and we got a small loan from the bank.

Q: Why did you want to take on that challenge and all that

responsibility? A: My dad was an entrepreneur, and I was the eldest of six kids, so I’m really good at bossing people around. I wanted to be the one that was in charge. I got into management at a very early age; I was managing a boutique leather store when I was 17.

And I really enjoy having staff. A lot of entrepreneurs say, “If I

Left to right: Kriston Dean, vice-president of merchandising and marketing, Purdys Chocolatier; Debra Lykkemark, CEO of Culinary Capers; and Marla Kott, CEO of Imprint Plus | SuBMITTed

continued on pAge 19

Page 2: Vancouver Catering Company: Corporate, Weddings, Events ......BUS INESS ANCOUVER 17 AUGUS –10 015 Call 604.904.2397 for your free in-home health assessment.301 – 1221 Lonsdale

19BUSINESSVANCOUVERAugust 4–10, 2015Women in Business

130120141007

pageCategory

could only do this without staff,” but I love growing a team and love having my staff grow with me.

Q: What has been the most challenging time for the business?A: The toughest things I’ve been through are times when the business has shrunk. Right after 9/11 I lost half of our business – people were just not coming to Vancouver for conferences, people were not doing home parties, businesses were not entertaining. The toughest thing for me, and I think most entrepreneurs, is when you have to lay off people. Fortunately I did it early. A lot of people I know kept thinking it was going to turn around, and it didn’t and they ended up losing their companies.

Q: What’s one thing you wish you’d known when you started your career?A: I should have had some kind of marketing plan and I didn’t. I didn’t have any money for marketing, so my business grew slowly over the first five years and it could have grown a lot faster.

Marla Kott, CEo, IMprInt plus

Q: How did you get involved in the business?

A: I joined in 1990, and it was almost an angel investment. The business ended up not doing that well – the bank called me and said, “We want to call our loan.” So I called in a consultant and they looked at the business. We also called Business Development Bank of Canada and they helped us out. Then in 2000 I became the CEO

and started running the business, and we started having more successes.

Q: How did the company achieve that turnaround?A: We sat down and said, “What’s our end goal?” We started to look at who the customers were and what the opportunity looked like and had to start to develop unique products that would be significant to these customers.

We developed a name badge system, and then we hired a PR firm in New York who got us into Fortune magazine. We developed an innovative product, and then we did the marketing in the space to try to launch it.

Q: Do you think your company has benefited from being run by three women?A: I think the advantage has been in the last few years with the federal government supporting diversity and women as part of that diversity program. The federal government has introduced an American program where you certify a business as a women-owned business. Those certifications have given us a shortcut to selling internationally.

Q: What advice would you give to someone else just starting out in business?A: I would say one of the biggest advantages you can have is if you join a group that enables you to grow your business, [like]

GroYourBiz.And getting the right bank is

important. I think people are scared of banks and I understand that; they even scare me. But I think if you think about banks as the same as any other supplier … you have to go and actually go see three or four banks and meet the managers.

KrIston DEan, vICE-prEsIDEnt, MErChanDIsIng anD MarKEtIng, purDys ChoColatIEr

Q: How did you get started in your retail career?A: I’m a third-generation retailer. Both my grandmother and my mom were retail executives during their career, so I kind of grew up in that environment. Our kitchen table conversations were always about what’s happening in retail and customers and learning about gross margin and how products are costed.

My very first job was fit modelling. When clothes would come in and need to be sized and tried on, I would go in and try them on for the quality assurance team. [Then] I was on a retail sales floor selling clothes.

Q: What’s the benefit of having that kind of on-the-ground experience? A: There’s no replacement in my mind, especially in retail, to understanding the front-line customer experience and how

the two worlds come together.When you work in a store,

you have what the company is telling you – they’re sending you product, they’re sending you floor plans, telling you how to merchandise, how to sell – everything’s coming at you. Then you have the customer, who’s really telling you what they want. Sometimes those two things don’t come together the way everybody planned them.

Q: Is there a time when you had to make a decision about the course of your career? A: At one point in your retail career, you hit a point where you’ve learned all those different roles and you need to decide whether to continue on the operational side or get into the more creative merchandise side.

It was very clear where my passions were, but … my skill set was really developed on the operational side. So I was very fortunate that I had a mentor who took me under his wing and allowed me to learn and explore the merchandise and brand side.

Q: What do you know now that you wish you’d known at the beginning of your career?A: When you’re starting off you think everybody’s looking to you to have all the answers, and what you quickly realize is that it’s more about the team around you and developing the answers together.•

Helping BC women start, grow and SUCCEED in business Women’s Enterprise Centre is the leading business resource for BC women who own a business or are thinking of starting or buying a business. We provide business loans up to $150K, skills training, professional business advising, mentors, resources, referrals and a supportive community as you scale your business.

Are you in the early stages of business and looking for a Mentor? Gain advice from an experienced business owner! LEARN MORE & APPLY: wec.ca/MentorOnly 6 spots left in our Langley Peer Mentoring Group

Business owners – women and men – have your say!Take action and attend the BC Economic Forum: Women as a Catalyst for Growth. Presented by Deloitte, October 23, 2015.INFO & EARLY BIRD TICKETS: wec.ca/BCEF2015

Financial support provided by:

womensenterprise.ca1.800.643.7014

facebook.com/wecbc | @businesswomenbcHillary Samson

Samson ConsultingMentor

Complementary Women & Wealth Financial Kit

Learn how to maximize your finances now to get the most from your retirement savings later.

A DIVISION OF CANACCORD GENUITY CORP. MEMBER – CANADIAN INVESTOR PROTECTION FUND

Receive your free kit: CaLL

604.643.0141

or DownLoaD at

WomenAndWealthToday.ca

CroweBIV_Fin.indd 1 15-07-24 3:52 PM

Careful Planning Continued from page 17

When you’re starting off you think everybody’s looking to you to have all the answers, and what you quickly realize is that it’s more about the team around you and developing the answers together

[]Kriston DeanVice-president, Merchandising and Marketing, purdys chocolatier