VAULT

Long before Isabella Casillas Guzman took over at the Small Business Administration in 2021, while the agency was still pumping roughly $1 trillion of emergency aid into the heart of the American economy, she helped out her father as he grew his veterinary hospital in East Los Angeles into a small area chain. After school and during breaks, she checked in customers and their pets at the front desk while her siblings all of whom became doctors-tended to tasks in the back of the house.
Working among the menagerie of cats, dogs, birds, and the occasional iguana, she marveled at how her father juggled the dueling responsibilities of business owner and practitioner. "That was the experience of a lifetime," Guzman told Inc. in a recent interview. Watching him "being the veterinarian all day long and then having to manage staff and growth and multiple offices that framed my interest in making sure that everybody has that opportunity to pursue their American dream."
Now Guzman, 53, wields the authority as the administrator of the SBA to push that mission into overdrive. The pandemic thrust the Eisenhower-era agency center stage in the role of savior of the world's largest economy, and Guzman is leveraging that momentum to shepherd a series of reforms designed to recast the lender of last resort into something, well, more entrepreneurial. She's especially interested in ensuring that the agency better serve Black and Brown business owners as well as those from low-income neighborhoods-people who tend to be left behind by banks. The underserved.
Denne historien er fra April 2023-utgaven av Inc..
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent ? Logg på
Denne historien er fra April 2023-utgaven av Inc..
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på

2025 FEMALE FOUNDERS 500
THE PANDEMIC DROVE WOMEN OUT OF THE WORKFORCE THEN SPURRED AN ENTREPRENEURIAL EXPLOSION.

HOW TO SELL YOUR BUSINESS IN 2025
If you've been waiting to sell your business, this could be the year to get the deal done. Analysts expect mergers and acquisitions to pick up, especially given the Trump administration's promise of deregulation. So if you're considering selling now, here's what you need to know.

Marina Khidekel You can tap creative funding sources for your startup, but as these founders learned, it's hard work.
Raising capital can feel like a rite of passage for startup founders—a signal that your company is on the map.

UP IN THE AIR
HOW JSX FOUNDER ALEX WILCOX BROUGHT THE PRIVATE JET EXPERIENCE TO THE MASSES WHILE NAVIGATING STRAIGHT INTO A CLOUD OF FEDERAL REGULATIONS. AND WHY HIS RADICAL NEW WAY TO FLY COULD BE IN FOR A BUMPY RIDE.

She's Done With Al. Now Lucy Guo Is Making a Big Bet on People
Inside the Scale AI co-founder's plans to help influencers get paid, like, never-have-to-get-a-real-job kind of money.

Tory Burch Is Better Than Ever.but Don't Call It a Comeback
The fashion veteran's business is hitting its stride— and she says, at 58, she finally feels like a real designer.

ZONE OF CONCERN
Forever chemicals, or PFAS, are as pervasive as they are insidious, afflicting businesses ranging from hotels to breweries to coffee roasters. In taking on this huge problem, entrepreneur Dean Wiltse has found his calling—and an opportunity.

WE NEED TO TALK ABOUT KEVIN
HE DESIGNED THE INTERNET AS WE KNOW IT TODAY. SO WHY ISN'T HE IN THE PANTHEON OF SILICON VALLEY FOUNDERS?

SET AND ACHIEVE BIG GOALS
In her latest book, Big Goals: The Science of Setting Them, Achieving Them, and Creating Your Best Life, Caroline Adams Miller shares a methodology for psychology-backed goal setting.

10 WAYS TO GET BETTER AT SALES
Today's customers are overloaded and overwhelmed by too much information, so making any decision is a challenge.