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A bounty of the successful.


One of the great under-told stories in business his the power of private companies.

Most business magazines and business news sections in newspapers focus not on private companies but on public companies. That makes sense because public companies generally are bigger, and since they attract investment from the public, they should get scrutiny.

But where many go wrong is in mentally dismissing private companies. They're often viewed as small, insignificant, family affairs Family Affairs is a British soap opera. The flagship soap on five, it was the first programme to air on the channel on March 30, 1997, the channel's launch night. The serial was broadcast in half-hour episodes, screening each weeknight. . The B-team.

In fact, the opposite is true. Private companies are the backbone that holds up the economy.

Most businesses are private. In Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850.  County, there are more than 200 public companies, but there are 235,000 companies total (not including the self-employed). Simply put: 99.9 percent of businesses here are private.

What's more, private companies represent the future. Today's obscure fast-growing young enterprises are tomorrow' s Countrywide coun·try·wide  
adv. & adj.
Throughout a whole country; nationwide: launched a fundraising campaign countrywide; a countrywide search.

Adj. 1.
 or Hot Topic or Mercury General.

The importance of private companies may be overlooked and underplayed, but this issue of the Business Journal is one attempt to shine a light on local private companies by ranking the fastest-growing among them. If you haven't done so already, I invite you to look over the special section within this issue. We rank the top 100 private companies in the county by growth in revenues from 2003 through 2005. If you scan down the list that begins on Page 40, you'll see true economic strength and vitality vi·tal·i·ty
n.
1. The capacity to live, grow, or develop.

2. Physical or intellectual vigor; energy.
.

For example, the last company on the list--No. 100--had growth of more than 40 percent over the two years. (By the way, last year the lowest on the list had growth of 30 percent.) Most any public company would brag in their slick See SLC.  annual report about a growth rate of half that.

The No. 1 company on the list, Major Properties Realtors, grew more than 990 percent. The No. 2 and 3 companies each grew more than 600 percent. For that matter, all companies in the top 12 grew at least 200 percent.

Granted, most companies on our list are small. But some are sizeable. Newegg.com (No. 17) has 1,200 employees. American Apparel American Apparel, LLC is a clothing manufacturer and retailer based in an 800,000 square foot factory in downtown Los Angeles, California. The company is most well known for making basic cotton knitwear such as t-shirts and underwear, but in recent years the product line has  (No. 18) has 4,400.

I'm lightly amused a·muse  
tr.v. a·mused, a·mus·ing, a·mus·es
1. To occupy in an agreeable, pleasing, or entertaining fashion.

2.
 by the civic hand-wringing that occurs whenever a big local public company gets bought out. When that happens, civic leaders inevitably ask what they believe is an important question: What can we do to stop losing "all our headquarters"?

I don't like losing big public companies either, but in a philosophical sense, the loss of a big public company is simply part of the life cycle. Companies are born, they grow, they get old and they go off to their end, perhaps in a merger.

A more important question is this: Do we have a bounty bounty, payment made by a government
bounty, amount paid by a government for the achievement of certain economic or other goals. It often takes the form of a premium paid for the increased production or export of certain goods.
 of thriving private companies?

If the answer is yes, that means the main pillar pillar, freestanding columnar supporting member. It is a general term, little used as an exact architectural definition except as applied to an upright support in the medieval styles, consisting of an assemblage of juxtaposed shafts and moldings; unlike the column,  of the local economy is sturdy sturdy

neurological disease in sheep caused by the pressure of a Taenia multiceps metacestode. Called also gid.
. If the answer is yes, that means many of the fastest-growing and most successful of the private companies will become our next generation of public companies. If the answer is yes, then the civic minded can get a decent night's sleep.

If you look over this special section, you can't help but see the power of our fast-growing private companies. And I'm sure you'll discover that the answer to that more important question is yes.

Charles Crumpley is editor of the Business Journal. He can be reached at ccrumpley@labusinessjournal.com.
COPYRIGHT 2006 CBJ, L.P.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:COMMENT
Author:Crumpley, Charles
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Date:Nov 20, 2006
Words:566
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