• Primary Industry:
    Services-Other
  • Racer Type:
    Walker
  • Sponsored By
    M3 RACER Sponsor Sam's Club
Clovia Hamilton

Contact Me

What I do

Lemongrass Consulting, Inc. provides planning and training services related to management consulting, regulatory compliance, and land development. We provide a broad range of services including: 1) management consulting - strategic planning, business process improvements, organizational assessments, training, project management, program management, technology transfer (patents, trademarks, copyrights), and business development through government contracting(vendor registrations, 8a and DBE/MBE/WBE certifications, GSA schedule contract proposals); 2) regulatory compliance - compliance reports, legislation, permits, EEO investigations; and 3) land development - government relations, public involvement, construction permitting, construction administration, claims analyses, zoning, community outreach, urban planning, rural planning, transportation planning, site plan reviews, and civil engineering.

  • My Story

    I am a Chicago native. I followed my dad south in 1990 when he retired and decided to live on family land in Georgia. I am a multi-disciplined professional with a background in engineering, public management, planning and law. I am a single mom of a 8 year old daughter and 18 year old son.

    My passion:
    To transcend traditions
    Why I started my business:
    To be independent
    Why I joined the M3 RACE:
    To learn how to increase sales
    Best business advice:
    You have to go digging and gain market penetration
    My biggest challenge:
    Sales - I have technical prowess and know little about sales
    What helps my business grow:
    Connecting with others - the relationships make all the difference
    How I balance work/life:
    I carve up the day. Time for customers, marketing, family, and self.
    Within five years, my business will:
    Be financially stable and have cash flow.
    My professional affiliations:
    NCMA, Georgia Bar, USPTO Patent Bar, Collaborative Women Connect, WIPP, UIUC Alum, Strategic Planning for Nonprofits, Human Resource Planning Society, American Inst of Certified Planners (AICP), APA, GPA, WTS, ITE, TRB, ACEC, SAME, ASCE, ASHE
  • My Daily Blog

    1 of 12 Entries « Prev / Next »

    1. From Forbes How to Take Business to Next Level

      November 6, 2009

      Clovia Hamilton

      Getting From Zero to $500,000In Annual Revenue Befriend Bankers (you're going to need them). Even if your capital needs are modest, now's the time to start courting future financiers. Those relationships come in handy in a credit crunch. David Guernsey, chief executive of Guernsey Office Products in Chantilly, Va., and vice chairman of Virginia Commerce Bank, says bankers look for the three C's: collateral, competence and character. In this environment, spreadsheets alone don't cut it. "Bankers can't [measure] competence or character if they don't know you," he says. Poach old phone numbers. Businesses fail all the time. But why let all those good customers go to waste? Open up a phone book, page to the section on your industry, and start dialing. Disconnected numbers likely mean the outfit went belly up. When you find one, call the phone company and pay to have that number redirected to you. Just tell callers that the old business has shut its doors but, of course, you would be very happy to help them. "Those numbers are likely still drawing a lot of calls," says Mike Michalowicz, author of the Toilet Paper Entrepreneur. "Get them and you get a cheap surge of qualified prospects."Getting From $500,000 to $1 millionKeep proving the market. Loading up the payroll at the first nibble of demand can be a mistake, says Gregg Weiss, founder of IPhoneAppQuotes.com. Weiss' company connects mobile software application programmers with companies looking for apps. At first he collected the leads himself and passed them off to developers via e-mail. Within eight weeks, he was drawing 300 leads per month. That became too much to handle, so he hired a programmer to automate distribution. His business leaped forward again, and again he waited as long as possible before bringing on employee No. 3 to handle demand for Android and BlackBerry application quotes. "Scaling up every aspect of your business is paramount," says Weiss. "You have to recognize the need, yet be careful not to waste money when you don't have to." Pay yourself as little as possible. At this stage, capital is better put back into the business than into your pocket, says Gary Vaynerchuk, author of Crush It! Why Now is the Time to Cash in on your Passion. Vaynerchuk took that lesson to heart. Between 1998 and 2000, his retail wine business, WineLibrary.com, grew eightfold to $25 million. His annual salary during that period: $27,000. "We made a massive commitment to growth," he says. "We wanted that money to hire new employees--most of whom we were paying more than ourselves."Getting From $1 million to $5 millionRethink all assumptions. YuChiang Cheng, founder of World Golf Tour, assumed his online golf game and Web site would be mobbed by the gamer crowd when it opened in 2008, and planned his marketing and advertising accordingly. What he quickly found through surveys, however, was that his typical visitor wasn't a traditional gamer at all--instead, he was drawing pure golf enthusiasts, many of whom had never played video games. Cheng responded by making his game as realistic as possible to appeal to real golfers (rather than adding gratuitously hyperbolic features, like power-boosted swings and such, that would appeal to hardcore gamers). He now boasts more than 1 million players in 180 countries. Maintain a personal touch. Jeff Morin started selling coins at age 19. While his Coins For Anything has blossomed into a $2.8 million (sales) business, Morin has hewed to one premise: Deliver something a little extra and you'll have a customer--and advocate--for life. Short and simple handwritten thank-yous work well. "It doesn't sound like much," says Morin, "but when's the last time you got a thank you for buying something--a handwritten thank you? It shows how much you value the business."Getting From $5 million to $10 millionMaster the soft sell. Intoxicating as rapid growth is, don't let the urge to sell to everyone, everywhere, every time get the best of you. Stan Steinreich, founder of Steinreich Communications, says 90% of his company's $10 million in revenue comes through networking and word of mouth--but that doesn't mean barging into a room and shaking as many hands as possible. "The over-aggressive guys are quickly labeled as creepy," says Steinreich. The best strategy: Let prospects do the most of the talking, and sprinkle in bits of relevant advice every so often. If they liked what you had to say, you'll hear back. "Very few people listen to anybody," adds Steinreich. "They just talk." (For more, check out "Learning The Art Of Listening" and "How To Get In Good With Customers.") Build an advisory board. Advisers are critical to growth, not only for their business acumen but for their contacts with other companies, vendors, clients and industry professionals. Advisers also add a whiff of legitimacy. "Most investors will say they will invest in a B-class idea with an A-class team over an A-idea with a B-team," says Partrick Ennis, managing director at early-stage investing firm ARCH Venture Partners. For more, check out "How To Set Up An Advisory Board." Do not confuse advisory boards with boards of directors, which may be more trouble than they're worth--see "The Case For Not Having A Board." $10 million and Beyond Craft smart incentives. Rah-rah speeches will only get you so far with employees. At some point, they want to be compensated for their hard work--even if that means not taking home fatter salaries. I Love Rewards! (sales: $12 million), which manages incentive programs, eats its own cooking. Founder and CEO Razor Suleman awards cost-conscious employees by paying them 10% of any savings they generate, be it through renegotiating a vendor contract or some new operational efficiency. The program saved $263,000 last year--which works out to a 10% return on investment, crows Suleman. Trust the process, not your gut. Les McCown, chief executive of Predictable Success, a business consultancy, likes to say that getting to the $10 million mark is "fun." Beyond it is "whitewater," when decisions rush at a furious pace and an owner's intuition no longer enough. At this point, companies need established processes, for managing, hiring, customer service, the works. Without them, owners don't have time to plan for the future--and that's when growth grinds to a halt.

    2. Share Marketing

      October 14, 2009

      Clovia Hamilton

      A colleague suggested that I share marketing with firms that offer complimentary services.  He gave the Heery Mitchell example.  They marketed jointly.  Folks thought they were one firm.  I suppose the two logos were on marketing materials. Just think, the cost of advertising and postage would be cut in half or into however many slices.  Ummm... trust me, I'm looking for firms to team with.

    3. Strategic Planning Retreats for Small Business

      October 9, 2009

      Clovia Hamilton

      My firm Lemongrass Consulting conducts Strategic Planning Retreats.  We did one this year for Fulton County, Georgia.If you do not get Forbes.com News Alerts, be sure to sign up.  Check out Forbes' article:How small-business owners can make their strategic-planning retreat pay off.Click the link below to read the full story: http://www.forbes.com/2009/10/08/small-business-offsite-leadership-strategic-planning.html?partner=alerts

    4. Four for Friday Entrepreneur Magazine

      October 7, 2009

      Clovia Hamilton

      style="color: #0a54a8;"Check out Entrepreneur Magazine's Daily Dose.  You can subscribe and they will email you info.  Each Friday they send 4 questions - 'Four For Friday For Entrepreneurs.' Their blogger Mikal Belicove wrote" Each Friday for the last six-and-a-half years, I have posed four questions on my blog (Belicove.com) geared toward engaging my readers on a variety of issues and topics. Today, I'm pleased to launch the same for Entrepreneurs here on Entrepreneur magazine's Daily Dose blog."When you reply, you gain online visibility. 

    5. Stay Uplifted

      October 5, 2009

      Clovia Hamilton

      We are looking for work.  Help us to help you.  We can help you with strategic planning, government contracting and your intellectual property technology transfer needs.  If you have a strategic plan, we can help you get it out of the report and into your calendar with action items that will help you meet your goals.  Reach out to me through www.lemongrassplanning.comClovia

    5 of 12 Entries « Prev / Next »

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