
| | Bizbuzz: Business Briefs
Snapshots of events and trends shaping your future. read
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| | TRENDSETTER
For Belinda Guadarrama, founder of GC Micro, business is quite literally
soaring: on the space shuttle, that is.
By Conrad Dahlson read
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A look at some accessories
to help you refine your workspace. read
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| | BIZTECH: Big Brother is Watching ...
and Paying
As technology reconfigures the workplace, software solutions can help monitor
employee productivity and the use of company resources.
By Jeffery D. Zbar. read
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trendsetter
space-age entrepreneur Belinda Guadarrama’s
IT company GC Micro lands another big contract with NASA
By Conrad Dahlson
One
of the most incredible moments of Belinda Guadarrama life’s
was watching the space shuttle take off from Cape Canaveral—with
her IT equipment on board.
The liftoff was the culmination of a long and rocky journey for
Guadarrama, founder and CEO of GC Micro, one of the nation’s
leading suppliers of computing equipment and services.
Recognized nationally for her advocacy of small and minority business
issues, Guadarrama founded GC Micro in 1986 after the company she
was working for in Northern California folded. She had to decide
quickly whether to return to her native Texas, look for another
job or strike out on her own. Like the space shuttles that so awe
her, Guadarrama decided to shoot for the stratosphere.
GC Micro now boasts some $30 million a year in sales, and the company
has just landed a hefty share of a $5.6 billion NASA contract it
will split with 37 other firms.
To those who know her, Guadarrama’s success is no big surprise.
She showed an enterprising side from a young age. Her Texan parents
of Mexican descent taught her from the beginning that people have
to look out for themselves and that work is the only way to get
ahead, so practically as soon as she was old enough not to need
a babysitter, she became one. Many other odd jobs ensued.
Working her way through college made a lot more sense to Guadarrama
than just working. But she did not start out aiming for a career
in technology. When she began college, she actually intended to
become a teacher. She got her degree in economics from Trinity University
and went on to work for the Texas comptroller’s office, setting
up data processing systems for human resources. Soon after, she
automated the database at the state attorney general’s office,
as well.
All that IT experience drew her to the high-tech mecca of Northern
California, but two years later, DirectWare, the company she was
working for, closed. Guadarrama took a leap of faith and started
her own company.
GC Micro started out by selling software but then added hardware
as a “value-added reseller”—which means her team
takes top brand IT wares and customizes them to specific client
needs. GC Micro today has access to over $2 billion in inventory,
offers daily shipments from 14 warehouses coast to coast and is
an authorized dealer of every major product line.
On the NASA contract she’ll be working with Cray, Inc., a
global leader in supercomputers used for cybertasks such as designing
experiments to carry on in space. That means she’ll one day
watch her equipment help another mission zoom into space—a
moment she loves. “When the shuttle blasts off there’s
a rumble, it’s like an earthquake, with smoke coming out underneath,”
she says. “Lift off is so slow, but it gains speed very quickly
... and then it’s gone.”
So much partnering with the federal government has made opening
an office in Washington Guadarrama’s next big goal. The move
would seem to make sense, since 60 percent of her contracts are
with the government. D.C. might also be a launching pad to tackle
an issue bothering Guadarrama.
GC Micro is a small, minority- and woman-owned business with 30
employees, what official jargon pegs as a “small disadvantaged
business” because of the obstacles it would normally encounter
accessing capital and contracts. The Small Business Administration
is perhaps its only entrée to government contracts. In the
early days, in fact, an SBA program helped GC Micro get its very
first loan from a local bank.
But in recent years the SBA has come under attack for awarding many
government “small business” contracts to immense Fortune
1000 corporations. “They say it was because of errors, nobody
was doing it intentionally. But how can you see AT&T, IBM and
Rolls Royce on a list and not realize they’re not small businesses?”
CNN recently aired her views on the Lou Dobbs show. While the government
goal is to assign 23 percent of its contracts to small businesses,
Guadarrama says small businesses are being “cheated”
out of a lot of that. Some $12 billion worth of small business contracts
ended up in the hands of Fortune 1000 companies in 2005.
Giant corporations may have the lobbying power but, she says, “The
SBA should lobby for us. The abuse is not being addressed—nothing
is happening.”
Her expertise on this subject and others has not gone unnoticed.
Guadarrama has been chosen as small-business policy advisor to the
White House by the last three presidential administrations. NASA
awarded her its public service award. The likes of Northrop Grumman,
Boeing Aerospace, Sandia National Laboratories and others have honored
GC Micro for outstanding performance.
While active in advocacy on behalf of small businesses, Belinda
Guadarrama still finds time for another of her great passions—helping
young Hispanics. One of her favorite non-profits is the Hispanic
Education and Media Group’s program in New Mexico. “It
has an amazing dropout-prevention program that gets kids in high
school and junior high school and convinces them to stay in school.”
As the daughter of Mexican-American parents who had only a seventh
grade education, Guadarrama would like to convince kids that they
can succeed if they get an education. They can even start their
own businesses, like she did. But you have to fight for what you
want—and be willing to reach for the stars.
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DOSSIER
Name: Belinda Guadarrama
Position: Founder/CEO
Company: GC Micro
Location: Petaluma, California
Sector: Information Technology
Specialty: Value-added reseller
Annual revenues: $30 million
Employees: 30
Years in business: 21
Hometown: San Antonio, Texas
Education: Trinity University,
San Antonio, Texas:
B.B.A. in Economics;
University of Texas, Austin:
graduate studies
Tip: “Information technology is very competitive. You
win with good relationships, good pricing, and constantly
training your staff—and the more experience you
have, the more business you do.” |
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