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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, February 15, 2009

Software helps small businesses land contracts

By Ronald D. White
Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — Terrence Payne's 48-year-old family grocery store was lost in a blaze of urban rage. A bid to rebuild it was strangled by red tape. A subsequent consulting operation struggled against closed doors.

Some people might have taken the hint and decided that they weren't meant to be their own boss.

Instead, Payne tried again.

The simple idea he hatched in 2003 grew out of Payne's frustration with the expensive and confusing contracting process: He recalled spending $1,500 to bid on a contract that was awarded to someone else but no one bothered to tell him. His new business would give people the tools to get inside the decision-making loop when corporations and government agencies pass out work — and make sure they stayed there.

He expected the execution to be difficult. Software had to be created to sort through contract requirements and businesses' capabilities. Layers of bureaucracy had to be pieced. Clients had to be found.

Payne took on the marketing, hired a programmer to write the software and found a partner to manage the business, called Taylor's Marketing & Management in honor of one of Payne's grandfathers.

"We were the three legs of this project," Payne said of lead programmer Ashfaq Chougle and partner Teresa Wallette. "We taught it to stand. We taught it to walk. Then we taught it how to run."

After countless refusals, Payne landed the nation's busiest trade gateway, the Port of Los Angeles, as the most prominent customer for the software, which helps public agencies and large companies identify qualified small companies with which they can do business. It also simplifies and standardizes proposal writing for small companies.

Among other things, the port uses the software, called E-DiversityXchange, for tracking hundreds of millions of dollars in contract and subcontract awards to ensure that small and minority businesses are receiving their share of the work.

Payne's company has provided the port with an important tool for ensuring that smaller businesses aren't forgotten when major contracts are awarded and projects finally get under way, said Margaret Hernandez, who directs the port's contract and purchasing.

"We wanted to make it clear to the contractor community that we are very interested in creating small-business opportunities," Hernandez said. "We want to provide chances for as many of those businesses as possible, especially those in our local area, and his software is a big help."

Almost 17 years have passed since Payne's store burned in the 1992 Los Angeles riots. It was called Taylor's Corner Grocery, bought in 1944 by Payne's grandparents, Theodore Roosevelt Taylor and Otrie Lee Taylor.

Payne, a Los Angeles native with a high school diploma, worked in sales and marketing before buying the South Los Angeles store from his grandparents.

Trying to gather the $1.1 million in loans and grants he needed to rebuild the grocery was almost as maddening as the night it burned down, Payne said. Groups designed to help, such as Rebuild L.A., were confusing and ultimately unhelpful. When he heard about pools of money, it usually was too late. Banks had seemingly endless requirements.

"I was never contacted in a timely manner," Payne said. "When I submitted proposals, I was never notified when or if the contract was awarded. ... It was always, 'We'll get back to you,' but the letters never arrived. The calls never came."

Five years later and $200,000 short, Payne gave up and became a consultant, helping find new businesses worthy of development using federal money that passed through the local Urban League. In 1999, Payne launched Taylor's Marketing & Management to do similar work on a wider scale, but by then the federal money was running out.

As Payne cast about for something new, he pondered lessons from his family as well as business lessons. One of the earliest lessons came from an uncomfortable afternoon as a child in mid-'60s Los Angeles, in a white neighborhood that Payne remembers as being hostile to blacks.

Payne's grandfather Taylor, who also owned a gardening business, stopped his truck and walked up to a white homeowner who was watering his lawn.

Payne recalled his shock as he heard his grandfather ask the owner how much he wanted for the house. The man politely declined to name a price but accepted the offer of Taylor's phone number if he ever changed his mind.

Payne remembers his grandfather driving off, seemingly oblivious to the kids hurling rocks at the truck. Payne thought his grandfather was losing his mind, until Payne answered the phone at his granddad's house and heard that homeowner asking what the old man had in mind for a price.

The message wasn't lost on Payne: "If you know how to present yourself, and you went to the right people, they would take you seriously. Everything was for sale."

Product finally in hand in 2003, Payne approached some of the West Coast's biggest contractors and some of its largest public agencies. He was expecting them to marvel at what his small business had produced.

Mostly, potential clients just weren't interested.

"We were told that the systems they used already provide too much information and too much detail," Payne said.

Technology development expert William Lyte says the process of choosing contractors and subcontractors is filled with time constraints, first to get a proposal to the decision-makers and then to get the project completed on time and within budget.

That, Lyte says, is where small companies that don't have an inside connection can get run over and forgotten.

The contract decision-makers "are going 90 miles an hour," said Lyte, a co-founder of Technoplex Group, a business consulting company in Los Angeles.

"If you can't get your proposal to them exactly the way they want it, if they have to rewrite it and refine it, they won't bother. They will pick someone else."