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Minority-owned firm gets its start with help to win federal contracts.


Belinda Davis knows she doesn't fit the mold. There were those days, of course, when she got her share of quizzical quiz·zi·cal  
adj.
1. Suggesting puzzlement; questioning.

2. Teasing; mocking: "His face wore a somewhat quizzical almost impertinent air" Lawrence Durrell.
 glances on U.S. Air Force bases.

"You have to remember," Davis, a self-described "small, Mexican woman," says, "I'm in a man's world. I don't play the good-old-boys syndrome."

No matter. Her DGR DGR Deductible Gift Recipient (Australian tax exemption)
DGR Dangerous Goods Regulations
DGR Delibera Giunta Regionale (Italy)
DGR Directorate General Resettlement (India) 
 Associates Inc. today is a veteran government contractor A government contractor is a private company that produces goods or services under contract for the government. Often the terms of the contract specify cost plus – i.e., the contractor gets paid for its costs, plus a specified profit margin. , with facilities management The management of a user's computer installation by an outside organization. All operations including systems, programming and the datacenter can be performed by the facilities management organization on the user's premises.  contracts at five Air Force bases. The 16-year-old suburban Kansas City Kansas City, two adjacent cities of the same name, one (1990 pop. 149,767), seat of Wyandotte co., NE Kansas (inc. 1859), the other (1990 pop. 435,146), Clay, Jackson, and Platte counties, NW Mo. (inc. 1850).  firm is responsible for the upkeep of more than 6,000 military housing units.

That isn't the only place DGR is cleaning up. Davis was named the Small Business Administration Minority Small Business Person of the Year in 2004. DGR was named Minority Small Business Firm of the Year by the Kansas City SBA SBA
abbr.
Small Business Administration

Noun 1. SBA - an independent agency of the United States government that protects the interests of small businesses and ensures that they receive a fair share of government
 office last year as well.

Grady Felder, a business development specialist at the Kansas City SBA office, says DGR has earned the accolades because it consistently beats rivals for government work.

"The bulk of the work is competitive," Felder says. "There might be a half-dozen to a dozen competitors. They keep growing."

Davis is a product of the small-business world and the beneficiary of the SBA programs that support it.

Her father owned a gas station in California before moving into the home remodeling remodeling /re·mod·el·ing/ (re-mod´el-ing) reorganization or renovation of an old structure.

bone remodeling
 business.

"It was a mom-and-pop type business," Davis says. "In a mom-and-pop type business you have to do everything. Running a business was not foreign to me."

But government contracting was. In 1990, Davis was working as a planning and zoning staffer in Mesquite, Texas Mesquite is a suburb of Dallas located in Dallas County and Kaufman County, Texas (USA). The city had a total population of 124,523 in the 2000 census which increased to 129,902 in the 2005 census estimate. , outside of Dallas.

On a vacation cruise, she met an engineer who began to tell her about the business of government contracting. He told her to subscribe to Verb 1. subscribe to - receive or obtain regularly; "We take the Times every day"
subscribe, take

buy, purchase - obtain by purchase; acquire by means of a financial transaction; "The family purchased a new car"; "The conglomerate acquired a new company";
 a newsletter where contracts up for bid were listed.

Davis took it a step further by contacting the SBA office in Dallas. There, she took classes and gained certification as a small disadvantaged business.

"They had great facilities," Davis says. "I didn't have anything. They had a place where I could make my own business cards."

That opened the door to her first contract, which was for commissary COMMISSARY. An officer whose principal duties are to supply the army with provisions.
     2. The Act of April 14, 1818, s. 6, requires that the president, by and with the consent of the senate, shall appoint a commissary general with the rank, pay, and emoluments
 work at Bergstrom Air Force Base Bergstrom Air Force Base (1942-1993) is a former United States Air Force base. It is located seven miles southeast of Austin, Texas. It was activated during World War II as a troop carrier training airfield, and was a front-line Strategic Air Command base during the Cold War.  in Austin. Davis basically willed her way into the deal by calling contract incumbent JC&N Maintenance Inc., then of Kansas City, and offering her services.

The dealmaker deal·mak·er  
n.
One that makes deals, as in business, finance, or politics.



dealmak
: JC&N didn't have small disadvantaged contractor status, which Bergstrom was now requiring.

"I grew up with them," Davis says. "They were my mentors. Nobody does it by themselves."

By 1992, the ambitious entrepreneur had bought out JC&hrs founders. She moved the headquarters into an old farm house in Belton, Mo., 30 minutes south of downtown Kansas City Downtown Kansas City, Missouri, the central part of the Kansas City Metropolitan Area, is defined by the Kansas City, Missouri Downtown Council and City Hall officials as the area located between the Missouri River in the North, to 31st Street in the South; and from the . The company had a subsidiary, DGR, that she adopted as the new name.

"They were a great bunch of people," Davis says. "But I'm a little different. I like to see how good it can get."

"While I'm a mom-and-pop in my heart, I'm probably not so much. I like to be very innovative."

That meant replacing the manual, paper-based processes with company-built software that tracked every piece of equipment DGR used on a military housing site.

That appealed to clients, allowing DGR to win deals at Tyndall and Wright-Patterson Air Force bases. Davis also says she refused to skimp skimp  
v. skimped, skimp·ing, skimps

v.tr.
1. To deal with hastily, carelessly, or with poor material: concentrated on reelection, skimping other matters.

2.
 on equipment, buying the best materials for her maintenance people.

"I am never the lowest price," she says. "I am always the best service."

Davis has never taken an SBA loan. Instead, she used the same bank for 15 years, Stanley Bank of Stanley, Kan., to help finance the business.

In 1997, DGR was also accepted into the SBA's 8(a) Business Development Program, which helps small disadvantaged businesses grow.

That was also the year DGR hit $10 million in revenue. But the company didn't stay at its peak very long.

DGR lost Wright-Patterson Air Force Base as a client the following year, which Davis chalks up to competitive challenges and the way the military began to judge job requirements. In 1999, revenue had sunk to $6 million.

Then the situation reversed itself. The military began emphasizing past performance in its bidding requirements, which played into DGR's favor. The firm began winning business again, resulting in a $15 million year in fiscal 2005.

The past few years, Davis has been helped by the Missouri Procurement Technical Assistance Center, an affiliate of Missouri Small Business Development Centers. She calls it "another set of eyes and ears" to spot contracts she should bid on.

But Davis isn't celebratory. Having watched corporate giants win multibillion dollar military deals lately, it is becoming clear that she won't be a prime contractor for very long.

That shift has already resulted in the loss of two Air Force contracts, and she's expecting more churn.

To stem the tide Stem The Tide

An attempt to stop a prevailing trend. Sometimes referred to as "stop the bleeding."

Notes:
If a stock is continually falling, stemming the tide would be an attempt to halt the free fall and change its direction.
See also: Reversal, Trend
, Davis must partner with the larger corporations as a subcontractor in her area of expertise, facilities management for military housing. She's also trying to diversify into the private sector, targeting big-box retailers and their facilities management contracts.

So far, no new contracts have been signed. It's a significant challenge for someone who has spent her career as a military contractor.

Davis has been working with SBA counselors for help with her diversification strategy.

The SBA's Felder thinks Davis will be able to adapt to the changes because of her track record in the face of past challenges.

"The companies we deal with can vary in the amount of help they need," he says. "They happen to be one of the firms that are very sophisticated."

DGR ASSOCIATES INC.

1002 N. Scott Ave., Belton, MO 64012

(816) 322-4452 * www.dgrassociates.com

Founded: 1990 * Employees: 180

Fiscal 2005 revenue: $15 million
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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Article Details
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Title Annotation:government contracting
Author:Anderson, Charlie
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:May 15, 2006
Words:949
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