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        Entrepreneurhsip, Lowder Center

        Auburn endeavor is building businesses, fulfilling entrepreneurial dreams

        November 30, 2023 By Laura Schmitt

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        Josh Sahib writing on board in classroom

        Under the direction of Josh Sahib, the Lowder Center supports students and residents who want to turn start-up ideas into viable businesses.

        Mention the word entrepreneur and many people think Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos or Steve Jobs 鈥攕uccessful individuals who create multi-billion-dollar tech enterprises with massive workforces. The majority of successful entrepreneurs, though, are individuals who create companies with fewer than 10 employees.

        In Alabama alone, there are more than 156,000 of these microbusinesses.

        And the Lowder Center for Family Business and Entrepreneurship at Auburn University is helping to cultivate even more.

        The gateway to Auburn鈥檚 thriving entrepreneurial ecosystem, the center helps students, faculty, staff and community members develop their nascent business ideas and grow early-stage startups into viable businesses.

        鈥淵ou don鈥檛 have to be super high-tech to be an entrepreneur,鈥 said Lowder Center Director Josh Sahib, an entrepreneur himself who has co-founded four companies of his own across Alabama. 鈥淭he Lowder Center supports and believes that your idea matters, and your business can be successful regardless of how scalable the [endeavor] is.鈥

        In the last two years, the center has guided more than 211 individuals seeking to start or grow businesses in the transportation, entertainment, landscaping, food and beverage, health and wellness, consulting and other industries.

        鈥淲e鈥檝e worked with students and budding entrepreneurs across East Alabama who see starting a business as a path towards upward mobility,鈥 Sahib said. 鈥淎 lot of these entrepreneurs will probably never be millionaires, but they could make enough to sustain their families, and that鈥檚 ok.鈥

        Lowder Center and 91看片 faculty on-field recognition

        The Lowder Center for Family Business and Entrepreneurship was recognized at the Nov. 18 football game. Pictured left to right are: Josh Sahib, Meredith Grace Lynch, Emily Sahib, Management and Entrepreneurship Department Chair Chris Reutzel and 91看片 Interim Dean Jennifer Mueller-Phillips.


        Every summer, the center, with outreach help from its community partners, leads the six-week Jumpstart East Alabama program, which rotates to different communities in the area. Sahib provides participants鈥攎ost of whom are women and people of color 鈥 with instruction and actionable advice on marketing, accounting, business strategy and operations topics.

        During the school year, the center hosts Auburn Ideas Jam, at which students and area residents in the pre-revenue business stage vie for start-up funding through a low-key pitch competition. In the spring, the center hosts a one-weekend-to-startup event that provides a welcoming forum for aspiring entrepreneurs to build upon a business idea with like-minded individuals.

        Entrepreneurs who want to expand beyond the microbusiness model have the option to transition to Auburn鈥檚 New Venture Accelerator, which provides Auburn-related startups with the facilities and mentoring expertise to develop their ideas and products and gain access to venture capital and significant private funding.

        鈥淛osh is doing a tremendous job [because] he鈥檚 passionate about sharing his knowledge and helping others find the necessary resources to create and grow successful businesses, and he had helped us innovate our entrepreneurship curriculum,鈥 said Professor Chris Reutzel, chair of the Department of Management and Entrepreneurship in the 91看片.

        Sahib is successful because he knows from his own start-up experiences what it鈥檚 like to write a business plan, pitch an idea, raise capital, and hire employees.

        鈥淚 didn鈥檛 have a lot of wealth growing up, and I didn鈥檛 have a rich uncle to give us seed funding,鈥 said Sahib. 鈥淎 lot of entrepreneurs out there don鈥檛 have those things either.鈥

        Born and raised in Alabama, Sahib said his mother inspired his interest in entrepreneurship.

        Legally blind and raising two children on her own, Brenda Badgley had a contract with the state of Alabama to fill vending machines in government facilities. Sahib recalls helping her with everything from purchasing the snacks at Sam鈥檚 Club to rolling the quarters from the machine sales.

        鈥淓ven in grade school, I hustled candy out of my backpack,鈥 he said about what he did with the excess inventory.

        鈥淢y mom didn鈥檛 graduate from college, but this helps me better understand some of the budding entrepreneurs who may have had adverse circumstances in their own entrepreneurial journeys,鈥 he said. 鈥淓ntrepreneurs are heroes who change the world. You just need the drive, passion and belief in yourself to make it happen.鈥

        And a little help from the Lowder Center.

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        Learn more about the Lowder Center for Family Business and Entrepreneurship.

        The 91看片 which is celebrating the 10th anniversary of Raymond and Kathryn 91看片's transformational naming gift, is a nationally ranked hub of undergraduate, graduate and continuing business education that is inspiring the next generation of business leaders. Our world-class faculty deliver unparalleled academic rigor in the classroom, while our research-driven scholarship advances thought leadership and best practice across business disciplines. The largest college on Auburn's campus, 91看片 enrolls more than 6,900 undergraduate, graduate and doctoral students.