© 2008
Door & Access Systems
Publish Date: Summer 2008
Author: Carla Rautenberg
Pages 72-74
Mixing Business and Bliss
The Pleasures and Pitfalls of Couples in the Door Business
By Carla Rautenberg, DAS Special Correspondent
It’s a trend. The number of companies headed by married
couples—now dubbed “copreneurs”—has
more than tripled since 1990, according to the U.S. Census
Bureau.
DAS decided to get the straight scoop on the pleasures and
pitfalls of all this togetherness by speaking directly with
the married co-owners of several garage door businesses.
The five couples we interviewed are located in five different
states; two on the East Coast, one on the West, and two in
the Midwest. Marriage counselors may be interested in this
finding: all ten individuals reported that working together
had strengthened their relationships.
Avoiding Common Pitfalls
“To be successful (as a couple in business), you have
to do more than just place an ‘Open’ sign in the
window,” says business consultant Zelda Fraden. She
offers several guidelines for copreneurs:
- Write a business plan to delineate goals and responsibilities.
- Determine together who should handle each responsibility.
- Communicate effectively—and when you disagree, do
so in private.
- Curb those egos to create a harmonious working environment.
- Hold regular business meetings.
- Create and consult an outside board of advisors.
Ready for Whatever Comes
Jay and Amy Yoder started J&A Overhead Door in Delmar,
Del., on Valentine’s Day 2003. Since Jay previously
was a long-distance trucker, the Yoders especially appreciate
the benefits of working together.
“When he was on the truck,” Amy says, “I
didn’t get to see him at all.”
Now the company runs two trucks with four full-time employees
(including Amy and Jay) and one part-timer. Although they
were the only couple we spoke with who have yet to write up
a business plan, they have been flexible and responsive to
the needs of the local market.
“At the beginning, I just wanted to do repair work,”
admits Jay, “but people kept calling me to do installations.
… Now, even though the housing market has slowed down,
we’ve kind of improvised and picked up some other good
accounts.”
“You’ve got to be ready for whatever comes,”
echoes Amy. “In ’05 we doubled what we did in
’04. The past two years we’ve maintained where
we want to be.”
Wedding Bells
Jim and Jennifer Willis were dating when they started working
in the garage door business of a mutual friend who wanted
to expand his operations. With Jim working in the field and
Jen handling the office, they opened and managed a store in
Ventura, Calif., for five years, until the owner offered to
sell the location to them.
In January 1997, they took over the ownership of what is
now Ventura County Overhead Door, and they were married in
May of that year. “That was the beginning of this exciting
adventure,” recalls Jen.
“Jen is a huge support to me. She’s great at
bringing my visions to life to make them real and tangible,”
says Jim. “I don’t have to be the only one responsible
for decisions. I can share any situation with her and get
another highly trusted perspective.”
With three children, ages 8, 6, and 4 months, the Willises
also cite an advantage mentioned by several other couples:
being able to bring their children to work. And Ventura County
Overhead Door has grown right along with their family. The
company now has 16 employees.
Who’s the Boss?
Among our five couples, the husbands all either work in the
field or run that part of the business while the wives all
take care of the financials and manage the office operations.
But when it came to the question, “Who’s the boss?”
the answers varied.
“From 9 to 5, he’s the boss,” maintains
Bettse Dodge of Dodge Overhead Door in Easton, Md. Her husband,
Gary, counters with: “If something happened to me suddenly,
they could certainly figure out a way to cover for what I
do here and be successful. If something happened to my wife,
I think I would just crawl into a cocoon.”
The Dodges, whose company employs Gary’s brother Tom,
the couple’s sons, James and Luke, and a young man “we’ve
sort of adopted,” have just added their daughter Carrie
to the payroll. She will work in the office, learning to do
what her mother does, as part of a conscious effort at “succession
planning.”
Other couples say they prefer a partnership model. “When
it comes to leadership and presence in the company, I would
say Jen and I are equal,” maintains Jim Willis. Jay
Yoder seconds that, saying, “Amy and I go at it together.”
And with reference to her “copreneur,” Craig,
Brenda Newby of Premier Door in Almond, Wis., says, “Neither
one of us is the boss. We are partners. It has made our marriage
stronger.”
Deciding Who Does What
·Armed with a business plan and a bank, the Newbys
started Premier Door seven years ago. Since it is just the
two of them, Brenda helps with installation.
“I have learned how to diagnose and fix openers, but
Craig handles the doors more because of the springs,”
she says, pointing out that they have divided business responsibilities
according to their strengths. “I am good at book work,
and he is good at installing and repairing doors, [but] we
both do what we have to do to make the business work.”
“I thought we’d have one or two employees by
now,” admits Craig. “But I’d hate to hire
somebody and then have to lay them off.”
In terms of dividing responsibilities, our five couples tend
to follow the way Bettse Dodge sums it up:
“He handles the outside, and I handle the inside.”
The Hardest Part
It’s unanimous. Everyone we interviewed says the biggest
drawback of running a business as a married couple is the
difficulty of separating work life and home life.
“Sometimes it’s hard to punch out when you leave
at night,” says Pat Sullivan of Sullivan Door in Kewanee,
Ill. His wife, Eileen, agrees: “I think that’s
one of the hardest [challenges]. As much as possible, things
need to stay at the showroom because we need to have a family
life.”
Pat, who started out working as an installer for a door manufacturer,
began his own business in 1985, and Eileen joined the company
full-time seven years later. Now they employ 11 full time,
including themselves, and they also have four part-timers.
Amy Yoder feels the most difficult part of being in business
with her husband is “Sunday calls and having to be available
to the public all the time.” Jay Yoder adds, “When
you go out for dinner, it’s hard to get away from talking
about the business.”
Communication and R-E-S-P-E-C-T
Again and again, our couples stressed the importance of communication
and mutual respect. All agree it is essential for couples
to refrain from airing differences in front of others, particularly
employees.
“I find that after a storm blows through the business,
I check Jen’s countenance as an indicator of how well
I handled things,” says Jim Willis, and then he advises,
“Men: when partnering with your spouse, a needed apology
goes much further to gain respect than not.”
“Know that sometimes it won’t be his way or your
way, it’s just going to be,” is Brenda Newby’s
philosophy.
“My wife and are very good friends,” notes Gary
Dodge. “At times, when a part of our relationship may
be stretched to its limit, we always have that friendship.”
Bettse Dodge adds, “Whenever we need to go out of our
way for a customer, Gary and I are in agreement 95 percent
of the time. As far as our customers are concerned, we have
the same standards.”
Regular Meetings
Most of our respondents do hold regular business meetings,
although the frequency varies from company to company. For
example, the Yoders meet with their employees briefly every
morning at the start of the workday. At the other extreme,
the Willises hold meetings with their workforce of 16 every
six weeks to discuss sales goals and, as Jen says, “celebrate
our employees’ accomplishments.”
Pat and Eileen Sullivan sit down together “in a closed
office” twice a week. The Dodges try to meet every Wednesday
morning, although Gary admits, “It’s hard to do.”
Brenda and Craig Newby hold informal business meetings over
lunch or driving together to a job.
Help From the Outside
Asked if they ever consulted a formal or informal outside
group of advisors, our interviewees gave a variety of responses.
The Dodges say that their primary supplier fulfills that role
for them. In addition to turning to their supplier for advice,
Craig and Brenda Newby count on networking with friends and
members of several builders’ associations to which they
belong.
Jennifer Willis feels her husband’s involvement with
a group of CEOs that meets monthly provides valuable time
for him to “work ‘on’ the business, rather
than ‘in’ the business.”
The Sullivans and the Yoders say they really don’t
have ongoing relationships with outside advisors as such.
However, several respondents credit faith and prayer with
carrying them through the inevitable rough spots of juggling
their family, business, and marital lives.
Copreneurship—Is It for Everyone?
These successful couples believe that only a fundamentally
strong marriage can survive the stresses created by running
a business together. But by the same token, most say that
their business relationship actually has strengthened the
marriage bond. Brenda Newby offers these words of wisdom to
couples considering taking the leap:
“Be forewarned, it is hard. Respect each other. Make
sure you have a plan and some assets behind you … and
be able to admit when you’re wrong.” Her husband,
Craig, stresses that planning time off is important, and Jay
Yoder concurs.
Amy Yoder’s advice is to “Really think about
it and put everything down on paper. You’ve got to know
that that’s really what you want to do.”
Pat Sullivan emphasizes, “Boundaries are always the
biggest thing.” Eileen seconds that: “Keep the
business and the home life as separate as you can …
and enjoy what you’re doing!”
“Always remember, put the marriage relationship first.
Business comes second,” advises Jim Willis. “With
Jen by my side here in the business, I have a lot more confidence
running this company. Our mantra is, there’s nothing
that we can’t accomplish together.”
The Last Word
Bettse Dodge describes the true value added by all the dedicated
copreneurs operating small businesses across the country:
“What makes us unique is my husband’s standards
for the quality of the installation. And he’s good to
the employees. We may not be the richest door company, but
we’re the happiest!”
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