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'EVE'olution
Family Business Long Distance
When we moved 6000 miles away from our families 22 years ago, I
certainly never imagined I would be working in the business my
grandfather established way back when. Way back when ... there was no
internet, no low cost international telephone service, no e-mail, and
no digital photography.
My children are grown up now, and I theoretically COULD leave the
house and find outside employment,
but I have now chosen not to take that path. This time the decision
is a calculated one.
Throughout my family's childhood and teen years, I solved the "where
to be first issue" by working from home. My hard-earned M.Sc. degree
in Human Resource Administration was shelved - although I would like
to think I applied some of the key principles to running our in-house
human resources. As a fluent English speaker in a foreign country,
armed with the latest computer equipment in my own home when
computers were fairly new even in offices, I opened an
English-language word processing business out of a corner of my
living room.
My clients came from the nearby academic centers and new hi-tech
industry park. As word processing became more sophisticated, I moved
on to desktop publishing and was soon creating books, brochures, and
journals. I attended seminars, read the literature and soon expanded
my services to offer
copywriting and marketing communication. Over the years my portfolio
grew and I felt a special frisson whenever I saw a company with my
marketing material succeed.
All the while, the children were growing up, and although often
pressured from the deadlines and demands of not one boss, but many --
as is the plight of the independent business person -- I was able to
"be there" for them and participate in school and club events.
Over the years, I co-authored a book, established, published and
wrote an
online magazine with two women partners, and with them also built an
online business. All this while, my children graduated high school,
served in the army, traveled abroad, returned, left home, returned,
had a baby, worked abroad, returned, got a girlfriend (who knows? he
doesn't tell me anything...), and we built a house. Now I have a
fabulous corner office looking out on the garden and my husband has
his own
sanctuary upstairs.
And then my father surprised me during a routine touch-base telephone
call, which he later backed up with an e-mail note. "I've been
thinking... Maybe you see
a way to use the internet for our business? Is there a way you could
direct something like that?"
Well, blow me away. I just happened to be at a crossroads. My husband
was preparing to set out on a two-week long
male-bonding trek in the Himalayas, I was recuperating from a torn
miniscus operation, my son was nearing the end of his army duty, the
downturn in high tech and in tourism had negatively effected my
bottom line, I cherished drop in visits to my little granddaughter,
and I needed an opportunity I could sink my teeth into.
When Joel headed east to trek, I headed west to create a new
interface to
a 90-year-old family business, Maurice Goldman Fine Jewelry
http://www.mauricegoldman.com
Over the last eight months, the learning curve has been steep. Within
2 weeks of opening our eBay store, the fraudsters were running
rampant.
David Bloom wrote in from Cremona, Italy, with ready cash for a
$20,000 sapphire ring, and a strong recommendation that we use an
escrow service to protect him from losing his hard earned cash. It's
true that he never spoke about protecting us
from losing our hard earned merchandise... At the eleventh hour,
well, actually at 8 AM in my pajamas in front of the computer screen,
with the aid of my calm, dependable and analytical husband, I avoided
our first theft in the virtual world. We learned that not all escrow
sites are created equal, and that the one our "customer"
"recommended" was a fraud. In his last e-mail note to me, Mr. Bloom
lamented that the site was phony, and that he had just suffered a
loss of $20,000. Couldn't we have told him sooner?(!)
Other would-be sales included stolen credit cards (this is apparent
when the
buyer suggests that you take MORE money than you the posted sales
price to
cover charges), more fraudulent escrow sites, money transfer deals,
and a bank check swindle. As Joel points out, the crooks are always a
step ahead.
My work vocabulary has grown exponentially, as has my respect for th
business world in general, and my father in particular. Our business
issues are the same: to source new products, to market and sell to a
growing customer base, and to avoid theft and fraud. But whereas my
Dad deals with the real world, my business is virtual. I find the
global reach of the virtual world tremendously satisfying and very
neat.
Customers tell us that our online presence means they can acquire
goods otherwise unavailable in their small towns. So here I am in
Israel, promoting and selling jewelry that is in New York, to
customers around the world, without leaving the house. The process of
building and handling the internet extension of our family business,
and combining family, home and business brings me full circle. My cup
runneth over.
| About the Author
Judith Isaacson lives in Israel from where she
develops virtual connections for the family jewelry
business which is based in New York. Passionate about
pearls and precious gemstones, she finds the virtual
market reach exciting and challenging.
http://www.mgoldmanjewelry.com
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