Greetings,
When the ND SBDC revised our mission, vision, and values, each team member felt strongly about a specific value: Culture. While most might read that and think, well, “culture” isn’t a value. As our conversations began to shape the idea behind it, we felt that was the most all-encompassing word to describe our intent:
We embrace a learning culture that recognizes the importance of others’ expertise, talents, experiences, and needs, encouraging personal and professional growth while appreciating diversity in all matters, extending courtesy, dignity, and respect.
Not only did we want it to focus on ourselves and our internal culture, but we also wanted it to reflect our acknowledgment and efforts to better understand the many cultures within our state, of those that we serve each and every day, and how that enhances our view of where we live and what is important.
SBDC programs across the country have a top-level priority to ensure that historically underserved populations have access to our resources and services. Historically underserved is, in fact, quite broad in what it covers, and some markets included in this term might surprise you – like “rural.” Rural populations are included as a historically underserved market because accessibility to services and resources is often more challenging to those that live in rural areas. Other populations and markets that are considered historically underserved include women, veterans and other military affiliation, socially-disadvantaged, persons with a disability, LGBTQ+, those that identify as a minority (racial, ethnic, or religious), and New Americans.
A few years ago, our network responded to this priority by identifying a staff person to concentrate services and outreach to any and all underserved populations. Tyler Demars, our Bismarck Center Director, has been serving in this capacity for a few years and partnering with other individuals from communities across the state to connect and ensure that everyone has the opportunity to advance their entrepreneurial dreams and benefit from its rewards. Targeted trainings events are brought to specific populations as they look to start their own
Throughout our network, each one of our centers have regular touchpoints
with underserved communities and populations. The above
Year after year, we see more diversity in our clients, and we realize that
we are not only sharing our knowledge but learning from them as well.
Thank you,
Tiffany Ford, State Director
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