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Persistence Takes Calvin Mills from Rags to Riches
Baton
Rouge, LA (BlackNews.com) - Add a cup of determination and a cup of
persistence and a teaspoon of positioning and you have the recipe for
what Calvin Mills used to develop a meal of winning possibilities.
Six years ago, Calvin Mills Jr., now chief executive
officer of C&V Technologies of Louisiana LLC, was selling computers at
Best Buy and trying to figure out his career path when a poor family
walked into the store and inadvertently handed Mills the map. They were
looking for their first computer, but they didn't have a lot of money.
"So I got with my partner, one of my best friends, Valdez (Gant), and I
said, 'I have an idea.'" Mills said. "I want to start helping families
that can't really afford to come into these stores and buy computers."
Mills figured he could build desktop systems at prices affordable to
lower-income families. The market was largely ignored by major
manufacturers and big-box retailers, but Mills, who grew up poor in New
Orleans, had a lot of experience with the segment's customers and their
needs.
C&V Technologies of Louisiana, LLC opened in 2003
with only $1000.00. The company made $6000 its first year and lost that
much the next. Last year, the third year of the company's existence,
Hurricane Katrina happened upon his hometown of New Orleans. Calvin
Mills wanted to do something to help. Using the expertise of his
business, Mills set up a call center for the Legislative Black Caucus
and began attending the caucus's weekly updates, looking for ways to
help. Caucus members suggested Mills look into becoming a vendor for the
Federal Emergency Management Agency. So Mills went to the FEMA Website,
learned the process for doing business with the agency, and signed up as
an emergency responder, listing his firm's inventory and abilities. One
morning around 7, Mills' mom burst through his bedroom door. "She woke
me up and said, "FEMA's on the phone!" If she hadn't woke me up that
day, you know who knows what may have happened?" Mills said.
It turned out that a FEMA small-business specialist
had emailed the Black Caucus looking for minority businesses to help
with rebuilding. Mills' firm was the only information technology company
on the list of minority vendors. C&V ultimately won a $350,000 contract
from FEMA to supply technology and assistance to schools and governments
in the affected areas. "We worked around the clock, 24 hours a day. They
were constantly feeding us orders. Everything that they asked for, in
the next 24 hours we had," Mills said.
The company earned the Department of Homeland
Security's Small Business Outstanding Performance Award for its work
following Hurricane Katrina. C&V is a wholesale technology distributor.
The company provides information technology services of all kinds, from
customized systems and networks to maintenance and repair. Although the
bulk of its customers remain consumers, the company generates most of
its revenues from commercial customers, government agencies and schools.
At present, the company is building a Wi-Fi system for Dillard
University in New Orleans so students can have wireless Internet service
while on campus. C&V Technologies were able to toot $500,000 in revenues
for that third year. By 2008, if C&V Technology continue in it's growth
pattern Mills want have any problem obtaining his goal to double its
2006 results and reach well over the $1 million mark in revenue.
As remarkable of path as his business has taken, it
does not fall outside the realm of what Calvin Mills aspires for
himself. Mills has never been the sort of person who lets obstacles
stand in his way. Told by one high school coach he would never play
college football, Mills took a Greyhound bus from his home in New
Orleans to Baton Rouge and cold-called Southern University's football
coaches, basically talking his way onto the team. During his career,
Mills went from walk-on to starting fullback by his senior year. Mills
followed a similar route in establishing his company.
Mills said now that C&V has reached a certain level
of success, he is hoping to give something back. He hopes to establish a
center where underprivileged students can go for math, science and
computer tutorials. The building would also house C&V's offices and
computer maintenance and repair facilities.
"I want to help kids have the opportunity to
understand and get a feel for what computers can really do for you,"
Mills said. "It's not just understanding a computer and knowing how to
work it but understanding the technology behind it because that's pretty
much where we're going at this point."
The key will be to catch students' attention while
they're young and still interested in learning, Mills said. It wouldn't
hurt for the kids to be around young African-American men who are
succeeding in professions other than athletics and rap. "If you catch
them while they're young, while they're still interested, that's the
key," Mills said. "You can have a huge impact on them and their
futures."
Mills has been featured in the Baton Rouge Advocate
Business Section, Capital Region Annual Report (Profiles of Success),
Honored as the SBDC Client of the Year by the Nation's # 1 Small
Business Incubator, InfoWorld Get Technology Right Magazine, 2006 Hot
100 Entrepreneur Magazine, C&V Technologies of Louisiana receives
Official Statement of Recognition for their U.S. Dept. Homeland Security
Award from Governor Kathleen Blanco.
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