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The e200 initiative includes 13 weekly three-hour training sessions dealing with a variety of topics, including management, growth strategies, market development, strategic planning, government contracting and access to capital. Participants must attend all classes and complete all homework assignments.
An introductory program will be held at 7 a.m. March 22 in the Parrish Building, 737 Union, Room 101, at Southwest Tennessee Community College.Classes, which begin April 21 and run through Nov. 3, will be held at the Renaissance Center, 555 Beale.
For more information, contact Saundra Jackson at 901-526-9300 or send an e-mail to Saundra.Jackson@sba.gov. The deadline for applications is March 25.
This is a list of lenders directly from the SBA website.
Tennessee Lenders List D = Direct line / F = Fax Line
| Insitution Name / Address | Contact Information | PLP
|
Patriot
Exp. |
SBA
Exp. |
Comm
Exp. |
| Avenue Bank
111 10th Avenue South, Ste 400 Nashville, TN 37203 |
David Dahlroos
(615)744-2901 D (615)770-2969 F |
X | X | ||
| Banco Popular North America
9600 West Bryn Mawr Rosemont, IL 60018 |
Richard Stiles
(847)994-6811 D (847)994-6838 F |
X | X | X | X |
| Bancorp South
5217 Maryland Way, # 100 Brentwood, TN 37027 |
Bill Ellis
(615)376-0001 D (615)376-2261 F |
X | X | X | |
| Bank of America, NA
10850 White Rock Rd., # 101 Rancho Cordova, CA 35670 |
Al Smith
(916)861-9122 D (916)861-9143 F |
X | X | X | X |
| Bank of Nashville
1750 S. 14th Street Fernandina Beach, FL 32034 |
Martha Meece
(904)277-4599 D (904)491-7261 F |
X |
|
X |
|
| Bank of Tennessee
P O Box 4890 Johnson CIty TN 37602 |
Will Barrett
(423)279-2565 D (423)279-3451 F |
X | X | ||
| Borrego Springs Bank, NA
7777 Alvarado Rd., # 501 LaMesa, CA 91941 |
Bill Ruhlman
(619)668-5159 D (619)403-5182 F |
X | X | ||
| Branch Banking & Trust Co.
5901 C Peachtree Dunwoody #420 Atlanta, GA 30328 |
Tiffany Osbon
(770)522-9295 D (866)391-5430 F |
X | X | X | |
| Brighton Bank
7663 Highway 51 South Brighton, TN 38011 |
Brad Hailey
(901)476-5353 D (901)837-2599 F |
X | X | ||
| Business Loan Center, Inc.
3900 West Central, # 210 Wichita, KS 67203 |
Deryl Schuster
(316)263-3232 D (316)263-4391 F |
X | X | X | X |
| Business Loan Express
415 Beckrich Road, # 300 Panama City Beach, FL 32407 |
(850)234-5056 D (850)234-6150 F |
|
|
X
|
X
|
| Capital One, FSB
1500 Capital One Dr. Richmond, VA 23238 |
Susan Streich
(804)284-1035 D (804)284-3720 F |
X | |||
| CIT Small Business Lending Corp.
1 CIT Drive Livingston, NJ 07039 |
Brenda Eccleston
(973)422-6002 D (973)422-6127 F |
X | X | ||
| Citizens Bank of Blount Co
P.O. Box 9730 Maryville, TN 37802 |
Al Grubb
(865)977-5903 D (865)977-5943 F |
X | |||
| Citizens Bank
300 Broad Street Elizabethton, TN 37643 |
Michael Hill
(423)543-2265 D |
X | |||
| Citizens National Bank 2 Park Street Athens, TN 37303 |
Shane Jackson (423)745-0261 D (423)745-7713 F |
X | X | ||
| Citizens National Bank
200 Forks of the River Pkwy Mail to: P O Box 4610 Sevierville, TN 37864 |
Kendall Polk
(865) 286-8014 D (865) 286-2471 F |
X | X | ||
| Citizens Savings Bank
& Trust Company |
Vroi V. Taylor
(901)754-7786 D (901)754-7529 F |
X | X | ||
| Civic Bank & Trust
3325 West End Avenue Nashville, TN 37203 |
Thomas J. Kern
(615) 620-8095 D (615) 620-8129 F |
X | X | ||
| Coffee County Bank
P O Box 1109 Manchester, TN 37349 |
Keith Turner
(931)728-1975 D (931)723-8309 F |
X | X | ||
| Comerica Bank
333 W. Santa Clara San Jose, CA 95113 |
Margaret Bradshaw
(408)556-5129 D (408)556-5397 F |
X | X | X | |
| Commerce Union Bank
701 South Main Street Springfield, TN 37172 |
Scott Bagwell
(615)433-7202 D (615)384-9873 F |
X | X | ||
| Commercial Bank
10413 Kingston Pike Knoxville, TN 37922 |
T. Dean LaRue
(865)769-2245 D (865)769-3893 F |
X | X | ||
| Commercial Bank & Trust Co. 1045 Mineral Wells Ave. Paris, TN 38242 |
Andy Collins (731)642-3341 D (731)642-0478 F |
X | X | ||
| Community Bank of the Cumberlands 744 S. Willow Avenue Cookeville, TN 38501 |
Don Calcote
(931)528-0138 D |
X | X | ||
| Community South Bank
625 S. Gay Street, # 450 Knoxville, TN 37902 |
Larry Moran
(865)329-8260 D (865)381-0740 F |
X | X | X | |
| Community Trust Banking Company 9125 Lee Highway Ooltewah, TN 37363 |
Derwin Bendle
(423)238-1111 D (423)238-4160 F |
X | |||
| Community West Bank, NA
445 Pine Avenue Goleta, CA 93116 |
Cynthia Hooper
(805)692-4350 D (805)679-6435 F |
X | X | X | |
| Compass Bank
17218 Preston Rd., Ste. 3000 Dallas, TX 75252 |
Gregory A. Clarkson
(972)735-3577 D (972)735-3598 F |
X | X | ||
| Cornerstone Community Bank
6401 Lee Highway, Suite B Chattanooga, TN 37421 *target market is Hamilton & contiguous counties |
Charles Millirons, Jr
(423)385-3006 D (423)385-3193 F |
X
|
X
|
X
|
|
| Farmers and Merchants Bank 2452 Highway 77 Atwood, TN 38220 |
Jennifer Marcus (731) 669-3900 D (731) 669-1251 F |
X | X | ||
| Farmers & Merchants Bank
P O Box 285 Dyer, TN 38330 |
Jeffrey McEwen
(731)692-3761 D (731)692-7180 F |
X | X | ||
| Fidelity Bank
1498 Klondike Rd., # 103 Coyers, GA 30094 |
J. Daniel Preston, Jr.
(678)413-2862 D (678)413-2865 F |
X | |||
| Fifth Third Bank
5001 Kingsley Dr. Cincinnati, OH 45263 |
Michael Shepherd
(513)358-8188 D (513)534-3586 F |
X | X | X | |
| First Alliance Bank
51 Germantown Court, # 100 Cordova, TN 38018 |
David Gross
(901)202-0312 D (901)386-6595 F |
|
X
|
X
|
|
| First Century Bank
1780 Highway 25 East P.O. Box 159 Tazewell, TN 37879 |
Rick Chitweld
(423)626-7261 D (423)626-1627 F |
X | |||
| First Citizens National Bank
1 First Citizens Place P.O. Box 370 Dyersburg, TN 38025 |
Andrew Harrington
(731)287-4321 D (731)287-4427 F |
X | X | ||
| First Community Bank of Bedford Co. 207 Elm Street Shelbyville, TN 37160 |
Jim Troupe
(931) 684-5800 D (931) 685-0247 F |
X | X | ||
| First Farmers & Merchants Bank
816 South Garden St. P.O. Box 1148 Columbia, TN 38402 |
Suzanne Estes
(931)388-3145 D (931)380-8377 F |
X | X | ||
| First Federal Saving Bank
1800 Ft. Campbell Blvd. Clarksville, TN 37042 |
Danni Darnell
(931)920-1773 D (931)245-2573 F |
X | X | ||
| First South Bank
1862 Highway 45 Bypass Jackson, TN 38305 |
Kirk Goehring
(731)668-2265 D (731)668-2050 F |
X | X | ||
| First State Bank
109 University Street Martin, TN 38237 |
Sam Lewallen
(731)587-9561 D (731)587-6346 F |
|
X
|
X
|
|
| First Vision Bank
P.O. Box 700 Decherd, TN 37324 |
Mike Rowland
(931)968-0065 D (931)968-9065 F |
X | X | ||
| First Volunteer Bank
728 Broad Street Chattanooga, TN 37402 |
Greg Haskew
(423)668-4609 D (423)668-4595 F |
X | X | ||
| GE Capital Small Bus. Fin. Corp.
635 Maryville Centre Dr., #120 St. Louis, MO 63141 |
William Duffek
(314)205-3602 D (314)205-3691 F |
X | |||
| Goleta National Bank
445 Pine Avenue Goleta, CA 39117 |
Cynthia Hooper
(805)692-4350 D (805)683-0635 F |
X | |||
| GreenBank
100 N. Main Street Greeneville, TN 37745 |
Gary Shelton
(423) 278-3179 D (423) 787-1235 F |
X | X | ||
| Haven Trust Bank
2175 Lawrenceville Hwy. Decatur, GA 30033 |
Wendy Beuglas
(678)957-5500 D (678)500-1728 F |
X | X | ||
| Heritage Bank
108 Cumberland Street Ashland City, TN 37015 |
Paige McVity
(615)792-4337 D (615)792-6502 F |
X | X | X | |
| Home Federal Bank
307 Parkway Sevierville, TN 37862 |
Mark Williford
(865)428-6938 D (865)429-1505 F |
X | X | ||
| Innovative Bank
360 14th Street Oakland, CA 94612 |
Danny Alfonso
(510)899-6880 D (510)899-6896 F |
X | |||
| Insouth Bank
6141 Walnut Grove Memphis, TN 38120 |
Edward Bell
(901)747-5575 D (901)747-5549 F |
X | X | X | |
| Jefferson Federal
120 Evans Avenue Morristown, TN 37814 |
Susanne Deneau
(423)586-8421 D (423)581-5134 F |
X | X | ||
| Legends Bank
310 N. 1st Street Clarksville, TN 37040 |
Mike Rainey
(931)503-1234 D (931)920-0099 F |
X | X | ||
| Merchants and Planters Bank
411 W Market Street Bolivar, TN 38008 |
Kenny Adkins
(731)658-7788 D (731)658-5709 F |
X | X | ||
| Mid-South Bank
One East College Street Murfreesboro, TN 37130 |
Richard Stone
(615)278-7100 D (615)278-7333 F |
X | X | ||
| Mountain Commerce Bank
121 Boone Ridge Drive, #1002 Johnson City, TN 37615 |
Kevin W. Horne
(423) 232-5016 D (423) 232-6001 F |
X | X | ||
| Planters Bank
325 Commerce Street Clarksville, TN 37040 |
Suzanne Langford
(931)552-0654 D (931)552-1534 F |
|
X | X |
|
| Regions Bank
565 Marriot Dr., Suite #600 Nashville, TN 37214 |
(615)744-6350 D
(615)744-6530 F |
X | X | X | |
| SunTrust Bank
Credit Resource Center Mail Code CS-RIC 4323 7818 Parham Rd, 3rd Floor Richmond, VA 23294 |
Brian K. Smith
(804)270-8168 D (804)270-8552 F |
X | X | X | X |
| Superior Financial Group, LLC
165 Lennon Lane, # 101 Walnut Creek, CA 94598 |
Tim Jochner
(925)296-0500 D (925)296-0510 F |
X | X | X | |
| Temecula Valley Bank, NA
27710 Jefferson Ave, # A100 Temecula, CA 92593 |
Stephanie Bitters
(951)694-8096 D (951)506-1283 F |
X | |||
| Tennessee Bank and Trust
9000 Carothers Parkway Franklin, TN 37067 |
Tim Barnhill
(615) 771-7802 D (615) 771-7804 F |
X | X | ||
| Tennessee BIDCO
1301 East Wood Street P.O. Box 307 Paris, TN 38242 |
Jim Thigpen
(731)644-7108 D (731)644-7019 F |
X | X | ||
| Tennessee Commerce Bank
361 Mallory Station Rd, # 105 Franklin, TN 37067 |
Ellis Simmons
(615)468-2074 D (615)468-2418 F |
X | X | ||
| Tennessee Valley Credit Union
P O Box 23967 Chattanooga, TN 37422 |
Todd Byrum
(423)634-3521 D (423)634-3523 F |
X | X | ||
| The Farmers & Merchants Bank
105 South Main Street P.O. Box 285 Dyer, TN 38330 |
Jeffrey McEwan
(731)692-3761 D (731)692-3017 F |
X | X | ||
| TriStar Bank
719 E. College Street Dickson, TN 37055 |
David R. Hatcher, III
(615)326-0521 D (615)740-8381 F |
X | X | ||
| Triumph Bank
1130 West Poplar Ave. Collierville, TN 38017 |
Darla Lomax
(901)333-8872 D (901)333-8871 F |
|
X
|
X
|
|
| Trustmark National Bank
201 Country Place Parkway Pearl, MS 39208 |
Patricia McMahon
(601)208-7391 D (601)208-7394 F |
X | X | X | |
| U.S. Bank, NA
9918 Hibert Street San Diego, CA 92131 |
Tim McGoff
888-SBA-EZ4U 888-722-3948 |
X | X | X | X |
| Union Bank
P.O. Box 100 Jamestown, TN 38556 |
Roger Choate
(931)879-8111 D (931)879-4721 F |
X | |||
| United Central Bank
4555 W. Walnut Street Garland, TX 75042 |
George Martin
(972)485-7248 D (972)276-3972 F |
X | X | ||
| Unity Bank
812 West Main Street Franklin, TN 37067 |
(615)591-3110 D 866-389-4927 F |
X | X | X | |
| UPS Capital Business Credit
P.O. Box 400 Windsor, CT 06095 |
David Etter
(860)687-2651 D (860)687-2647 F |
X | X | ||
| Volunteer State Bank
101 Highway 52 West Portland, TN 37148 |
Laura Blackburn
(615)325-9257 D (615)325-7777 F |
X | X | ||
| Wachovia
1620 E. Roseville Parkway Roseville, CA 95661 |
Donna Serres
(916)787-9301 D (916)787-9533 F |
X | X | ||
| Wayne County Bank
216 S. High Street Waynesboro, TN 38485 |
Stacey Brewer
(931) 722-5438 D (931) 722-7441 F |
X | X | ||
| Wells Fargo Bank, NA
1455 West Lake Street Minneapolis, MN 55408 |
Thomas Burke
(612)667-2753 D (612)316-2322 F |
X | X | X | X |
| Wilson Bank & Trust
623 W. Main Street P.O. Box 768 Lebanon, TN 37087 |
Ralph Mallicoat
(615)547-5638 D (615)443-6172 T |
X | X | ||
| Zions First National Bank
2399 Gateway Oaks, # 110 Sacramento, CA 95833 |
Ruth Defrates
(916)561-1160 D (916)561-1170 F |
X | X | X |
** Last Updated: 3/8/2010
You can also raise the profile of your small business and get known with these five marketing strategies.
Nothing will seed and grow goodwill for you better than to be seen working regularly to make your community a better place. Regular donations to your Food Bank or other local charity, serving on town committees, doing volunteer work – all the positive things you do transform into others’ positive thoughts about you and by extension, your business.
How to get started: Choose a cause or causes and get in touch with the organization or charity involved to see what they need and what you can do for them.
The newsletter is the workhorse of self-promotion. Sending a newsletter to your customers or clients, either through the mail or via email, lets you contact them on a regular basis, and, if done well, lets them form a connection with you and your company.
The kind of newsletter you send out should not be a product pitch but more a sharing of information that should be useful to the customer or client. You might include information on a special offer or product, but the bulk of the newsletter should be articles or tip lists. The keys to a successful newsletter are readability, usefulness and publishing on a regular schedule.
How to get started: Collect the email and/or mailing addresses of customers (and potential customers if possible). Design and write a sample newsletter and decide on a publishing/sending schedule.
If you can write well and are prolific, writing articles can be an excellent marketing strategy and turn you into a household name! Well, maybe I exaggerate a little here, but certainly writing articles can establish you as an expert in your field and draw more business your way.
The tricks to using this way of getting known successfully is to get your articles published in the right places and to be sure that your articles give the interested reader somewhere to go to learn more about/get in touch with you – such as your own Web site.
What are the right places? Web sites, magazines, ezines, newspapers that your ideal customers or clients have a good chance of using.
How to get started: Research to find “the right places” to send your articles. Examine these sites, magazines or papers and brainstorm suitable article topics that would interest their audience and relate directly to your business. Writing the article(s) is next…
Most of the people who try to use this marketing strategy to get known fail. They make the mistake of creating a Web site about the wrong thing – themselves. Sure, your potential clients want to know the basic information about you, such as your name and contact information. But frankly, they don’t care about your vital statistics or your personal life.
What they care about is your expertise, and that’s what your Web site has to showcase if this marketing strategy is going to work for you. So make sure that your Web site displays your expertise and gives your site visitors a way to sample it. You can do this by providing articles or tips about subjects related to what you do on your site, by having a visual portfolio, testimonials from satisfied clients, or even take and post questions and answers from site visitors.
How to get started: Design a Web site focused on your expertise yourself or hire a professional to do it. Buy a domain name, get a Web host and publish your site on the Internet.
Some people make the mistake of separating businesses and consumers in their minds. They seem to think because they’re marketing to consumers, they don’t need to bother with other businesses, except for supplies. Wrong! Other business people are consumers, too – as are their families, their friends, their suppliers and their customers – all people who might be interested in what you have to sell if they got to know you.
That’s why joining organizations specific to your industry or field and other business organization, such as your local Chamber of Commerce, Business Association and/or networking group is so popular a way to get known. And by participating in these organizations, you also contribute to the well-being of your business community. In addition, some even offer financial benefits to members, such as discounts on insurance.
How to get started: Pick the organizations that interest you and find out how to join.
Yes, it’s going to take some effort and obviously getting known is not something that can be accomplished overnight, but this is one marketing strategy where you’ll be amply rewarded for your efforts. And don’t forget, you can shortcut the process by hiring a publicist if you wish.
Article Source: About.com
If you’re just starting out, here’s a cheat sheet of what you should or could be doing to get known. And if you’re already established, read through the list and see if there are any strategies you’ve missed that could do even more to spread your fame. These “get known” marketing strategies are ranked from least common to most common. The less commonly employed strategies tend to take more effort.
The beauty of TV is that viewers see you and if they see you in action, they start to think they know you.The most effective version of this marketing strategy is to have your own TV show. Think of Mike Holmes and Debbie Travis, for instance, and what having their own shows on the Home and Garden Network has done for their careers. Think they have any trouble getting all the business they can handle?
However, even if you can’t manage to get your own show, you can still be on TV. Many programs, such as news programs, are looking for guests for expert segments. You can also buy your own TV time, creating ads and/or infomercials about your products or services.
How to get started: Search for TV programs that regularly feature guests and might see you as a suitable candidate. Then find out who the right contact person would be and make your pitch for a guest appearance.
Radio is far from dead and being a guest on radio is another great way of getting known that relatively few are using.
The key to making it on radio, as Kimberly Henrie says, is to be an entertaining guest and offer the producer/show host something to offer their listeners. How to get started: Seek out radio programs where you would be a good fit as a guest and contact the producer/show host with your pitch.
Being an author tends to confer instant expertise and a certain amount of instant celebrity, too. And the great thing is that literally anyone can produce a book now, thanks to the variety of self-publishing tools available.
There is absolutely nothing to stop you from producing a book except time. All you actually have to come up with is the concept; there are always plenty of underemployed writers around who will be glad to ghostwrite your book for you for a fee.
And you don’t have to write a full-length novel, either. Shorter books and ebooks are becoming increasingly popular, opening whole new vistas for showing off your expertise. A restaurateur might put together a booklet of favourite recipes, for instance, while a realtor might create a booklet of showcasing tips for people wanting to sell their home.
How to get started: Focus on your expertise and come up with ideas for possible titles. Then choose one or more of these titles and write a chapter by chapter outline. (This will give you a sense of whether or not the project would work and how long the finished book would be.)
Publicly supporting charitable causes isn’t just fashionable anymore but de rigueur for savvy businesses. The charity event is a lovely piece of PR, of course, but it’s also an attempt to sway the influencers to prefer one company’s products or services over another.
While large corporations can afford to sponsor many different events, one of the best ways for a small business to employ this marketing strategy to get known is to select one charitable cause and connect their charitable giving to an annual event. You could be one of the main sponsors of a walk or drive, or even start such an event of your own.
How to get started: Choose a cause that you believe is important and see if any annual fundraising events for that cause already exist in your community. If they do, find out how you and your company can become a sponsor. If not, start brainstorming what kind of fundraising event for that cause might be successful and how you could get other interested parties on board.
A masseuse giving workshops on aromatherapy. A retailer who sells kitchenware giving cooking lessons. Giving lessons is an extremely powerful marketing strategy for small businesses.
Offering lessons to the public related to your product gives you the opportunity to form a relationship with potential customers and introduce them to/kindle their interest in your products. And by giving lessons, you’re setting yourself up as an expert. The next time your “student” wants to know something about your topic, you’re the one he or she will contact.
How to get started: Put your thinking cap on and brainstorm what kinds of lessons or workshops you could present that are related to your products or services. Then choose the idea you are most comfortable with and plan a lesson or short series of lessons.
Continue to the next page to learn five more marketing strategies to get known.
Article source About.com