By Valerie
Krieger, guest writer
When it
comes to the robust construction industry in the Dallas metroplex, companies
led by Latinas don’t readily come to mind — but they should.
Take, for
instance, Elizabeth Ponce, who has been in construction since 2002 and chose
demolition — or abatement — as her company’s specialty because she had
experience in that area.
“I started
working right after high school as a receptionist,” she said. “As time went by,
I was running almost every administrative function in the company, but when I
asked for a small $10 raise, I was told there was no money. That’s when I knew
that if I wanted to move up, I had to move out.”
Ponce said
the demolition industry did not typically value women — especially Latina women
— and that banks were very unlikely to lend money to a novice entrepreneur with
no college degree.
But thanks
to encouragement from the Dallas-based Regional Hispanic Contractors
Association or RHCA and a small loan from her father, she was able to start her
company, Ponce Contractors. Since then, she has won demolition contracts in
airports, universities, schools and corporations.
In 2015
Ponce started her latest company, Picasso Contractors LLC. It recently exceeded
its previous year’s sales of $3 million by double digits.
To “pay it
forward,” she is currently board co-chair of the National RHCA Training and
Safety Foundation and frequently mentors young Latinx entrepreneurs.
A blessing
… and a curse
In 2012,
Valerie Jimenez founded Bold Entity, an award-winning Dallas-based
business-to-business (B2B) marketing agency. She has focused on leveling the
playing field for small businesses by enabling them to approach marketing in
the same way a Fortune 500 firm would — with strategic focus, insight-driven
tactics and quantifiable results.
She said
her unique approach to marketing includes creating a framework to identify what
makes each client’s business exceptional, then deploying that information to
craft impactful stories that drive growth. And it works: She said her
strategy has yielded a 300% return on investment for her clients.
Jimenez
said that being a recent immigrant she couldn’t lean on a network of family or
friends to help her meet people who could eventually become clients.
“And I
discovered what most young Latinos find — which is that banks are very, very
hesitant to lend money to our new ventures,” she said.
So, Jimenez
self-funded Bold Entity and made ends meet by taking every piece of business
that came her way.
“At the end of the day, I am a marketing
expert, a graphic designer and an entrepreneur,” she said. “I’m also a wife, a
mother and [a] Latina. This is the recipe that has made me successful, and I
wouldn’t trade any of those ‘ingredients’ for the world.”
No labels,
please
Armed with
a journalism degree from Southern Methodist University, Veronica Muñoz made a
name for herself covering sports and hard news for Univision Communications
Inc. After a successful journalism career — thanks to working alongside her
father for many years, the construction industry was “in my blood,” she said.
So, in
2012, she launched Mezquite Installations Inc., focusing on the construction
industry sector she knew best: flooring for commercial projects. The company
quickly expanded and now offers a variety of wall and ceiling finishes, in
addition to all types of flooring for commercial projects.
An RHCA
board member, Muñoz recently expanded Mezquite Installations to include custom
millwork, which she creates at her in-house shop.
“In my
home, we were brought up never to classify ourselves as one thing or another,”
she said. “So, I have never conformed to labels — and I certainly won’t let
people put labels on me.”
Muñoz said
at times some have doubted her because of her gender or her heritage, but “once
we get to talking about the technicalities of a project, my bona
fides ring true, and I smash any preconceived notions people might have
had.”
To learn
more about Picasso Contractors, visit picassollc.com.
To learn
more about Bold Entity, visit boldentity.com.
To learn
more about Mezquite Installations, visit mezquiteinstallations.com.
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