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3/16/2015 StarTribune- Print Page <br />X"'E.StaOr1bune <br />Open to Business program helps Dakota <br />County companies grow <br />Article by: Todd Nelson <br />Special to the Star Tribune <br />March 13, 2015 - 11:38 PM <br />Randy Stenger knows how to move mountains — or at least big piles of dirt — and offers customers the chance to do that <br />and more with excavators and bulldozers at Extreme Sandbox, his "extreme adventure" company in Hastings. <br />But when a financing gap threatened to slow the company's growth, he turned to Dakota County's Open to Business <br />program and business adviser Laurie Crow for assistance. <br />"We were dead in the water there for a moment," Stenger said. "We had all the approvals but ultimately we were just a little <br />bit short. I was able to engage [Open to Business] at the end and get through their program some funding to fill up that gap. <br />I know I would have gotten there, but it would have taken longer and been more difficult." <br />Open to Business offers free business counseling to prospective and current Dakota County businesses and to county <br />residents who have businesses elsewhere. It's a partnership between Dakota County Community Development Agency, <br />Dakota County cities and the nonprofit Metropolitan Consortium of Community Developers. <br />The program, entering its third year in Dakota County, provided nearly $327,000 in loans to Dakota County businesses and <br />residents from January 2013 through September 2014, the most recent period for which data was available. Open to <br />Business helped leverage five bank loans for more than $1.4 million and served more than 300 new and existing businesses <br />in that same period. <br />Companies that Open to Business assisted have created more than 50 jobs since the program's inception in Dakota County, <br />Crow said. The most common types of business ideas she sees involve services, from day-care centers and auto repair <br />shops to retail and restaurants. <br />Stenger, who had worked as a corporate retail consultant, founded Extreme Sandbox in 2012 on a test basis, inviting <br />customers to navigate a course and complete tasks behind the wheel of a bulldozer, excavator or other piece of heavy <br />equipment. As it proved popular, especially as a team -building exercise for business executives, Stenger decided to buy the <br />10 acres of land he had been leasing and build a small office building there. <br />At the last minute, however, Stenger came up some $30,000 short. He had put up his own money and what he got from the <br />bank and Small Business Administration loans. Stenger, who had gotten some early advice from Crow, returned to her at <br />the suggestion of his bank. <br />"Open to Business was a saving grace," Stenger said. "They had additional funds, some resources to apply through their <br />program. They were able to recognize the potential for this new business and that's where they stepped in." <br />Boosting city resources <br />While Open to Business can help entrepreneurs manage gaps in their financing, as in the case of Extreme Sandbox, it also <br />helps cities offer resources for businesses. <br />"The cities want to be able to support all of their businesses, big and small," Crow said. "They just don't have the knowledge, <br />connections and infrastructure to do so. A city certainly can answer questions on licensing or zoning but any time it comes to <br />'Will this business succeed?' or'Is this a good idea?' it gets a little precarious for them. As a neutral third party, we can have <br />an objective opinion to help start those businesses or potentially expand them." <br />Crow said she wanted to remind owners of existing businesses that the program is there for them as well. <br />http:/N✓ww.startribune.com/printarticle/?id=296285911 1/2 <br />