Jennifer Scherer never imagined that an event she auctioned off for a school fundraiser would turn into a full time business. For seven years, the mom of four had been home with her kids after a long corporate career. She had just begun interviewing to return to work and surprisingly, her business started almost accidentally.
“It started out as a dinner group where I put together a kind of “Amazing Race” with people on teams followed by dinner,” the 2017 Grow Your Value contest finalist and founder of Magnified Events (magnifiedevents.com) told me recently. “Then someone asked if I could auction that (idea) off for a school fundraiser. It made a decent amount of money, and then someone asked if I could do it again. I began to introduce different themes and options. It was getting to the point where it was raising $5000 – $10,000 for these auctions. Then someone who was attending one of my events in town asked if I would ever consider doing one of these events for her company.”
Jennifer was trying to return to work at the time and almost missed the business opportunity that was right in front of her. “When I was asked to do this, I had been on a parallel path interviewing to go back to work. It was so discouraging and seemed so boring. When I got this request, I thought, ‘I don’t know if I can do this, I don’t know if I have time since I am interviewing.’ When I look back, I can’t believe [this business opportunity] was right in front of my face and I didn’t even see it right away.”
It was 2015, and the company was NBC Sports. That first paid event led to others at NBCUniversal, Citibank, NBC Sports and Healthfirst. Jennifer now has two full time employees – both of whom had been stay at home moms. She also has temporary employees who help with her events.
Starting back after a seven-year career break she says, “It was shocking that someone would pay for what I did. Maybe it’s because I had not been paid a salary in so long.” One of her biggest challenges was simply believing in herself. “I think I got physically ill before my first event.
I met Jennifer last fall at Mika Brzezinski’s Know Your Value conference, and caught up with her again recently. Jennifer says that for her, being her own boss makes sense, giving her more control over her schedule. “For me and my husband both to be in the city all day, it’s not feasible to hire someone to do everything, plus I want to be there (for my kids),” she told me. “For my life right now with four children, one going off to college and my husband working a really demanding job, this is really good. I am making money, my existing skills are getting sharpened, and I am developing new skills. Most importantly, I am able to do it on a time schedule that works for my current situation.”
Scherer is not alone. Recent data show that an increasing number of women who want to control their schedules, pursue an interest, or be their own bosses are starting their own businesses. In 2017, there were an estimated 11.6 million women-owned businesses in the United States, an increase of 114% compared to 20 years ago. Women are launching 849 new businesses a day, an increase of 3% over last year, according to the 2017 State of Women-Owned Businesses Report from American Express, and like Scherer, some of these women had off-ramped for a few years from corporate careers to take care of their families.
Diane Flynn, cofounder of the job training and placement firm for women returning to work, RebootAccel (rebootaccel.com) says being your own boss has a lot of appeal for women after a career break. “The thing that is really appealing for returners who want to be entrepreneurs, is for the most part you do have a lot more control over your schedule, and you can work where you want and when you want,” says Flynn. “We do have people who want and need full time positions in an office, but that’s not everybody. Lots of people want to work but they don’t necessarily want to report into an office 9-5.”
Flynn noticed that about a third of her return-to-work clients at RebootAccel were interested in starting their own businesses – from consultancies to non-profits to small businesses. In response, in 2017 RebootAccel offered their first workshop on entrepreneurship for women who have taken a career break. The company is now developing an entrepreneur track geared toward women who are pivoting in their careers or have taken a career break.
“A lot of people were approaching us saying: We want to do our own thing. They want to make a difference and they want more control over their schedule and flexibility.” She said the graduates of RebootAccel’s programs have gone in a variety of directions. “Some of them are hanging their shingles (as consultants), we have one who started a college counseling business, one client started a clothing line. We had one who started a mental health service in our community to try to provide services to kids who need help.”
Singari Seshadri, director of the Stanford Venture Studio (https://www.gsb.stanford.edu/stanford-community/entrepreneurship/venture-studio) is working with ReBootAccel on their entrepreneur track. She spent more than a decade in venture capital investing, incubating startups, and co-founded an accelerator program for women exploring entrepreneurship as a career path. She says it is critical for potential entrepreneurs to understand their priorities, to find a low risk way to test ideas and to know the difference between a passion project and a viable business.








