Days after the pandemic forced business and school closings in March 2020, calls started pouring in to WomenVenture from business owners seeking help and advice.
In almost no time, the number of calls — and the intensity of callers' fears and worries — drew the group's top leaders onto phone duty.
"Entrepreneurship is always stressful. You don't understand that pressure until you're a CEO or a business owner," said Sarah Pike, WomenVenture's chief program officer. "All of a sudden, all those stressors were intensified."
For nearly 50 years, the nonprofit organization, backed by corporate and individual donors, has been helping Minnesota women start and expand businesses. Aiming to increase the number of businesses it served by around 10% in 2020, WomenVenture's client outreach grew 300%.
The group disbursed $9.4 million in COVID-19 emergency relief grants and loans to women-owned businesses. And it's been given another $4.4 million in state and county grant money to distribute over the next few months.
In an interview, three of the organization's leaders — LeeAnn Rasachak, its new chief executive and former board member; Sue Moses, vice president of lending; and Pike — described how they saw women business owners respond to the pandemic.
No one was complacent, they said. Business owners looked for new opportunities. And those who couldn't find them took steps to cut costs and survive.
Excerpts from the interview: