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Home Business Planning Santa Fe NM

In the following article, you will learn some information about successful home-based business. Read on and go through the story to get some tips for your own home business planning in Santa Fe.

Santa Fe Community College SBDC
505-428-1343
6401 South Richards Avenue
Santa Fe, NM
Small Business Development Center
(505) 428-1343
6401 S Richards Ave
Santa Fe, NM
University of New Mexico/Valencia SBDC
505-925-8980
280 La Entrada
Los Lunas, NM
UNM-LA-Sandoval County SBDC
505-867-5066
282 South Camino del Pueblo, Suite 2A
Bernalillo, NM
Central NM Community College South Valley SBDC
505-248-0132
1309 4th Street, SW
Albuquerque, NM
New Mexico SBDC
505-428-1362
6401 Richards Avenue
Santa Fe, NM
Clovis Community College SBDC
575-769-4136
417 Schepps Boulevard
Clovis, NM
New Mexico Junior College SBDC
575-492-4700
1 Thunderbird Circle
Hobbs, NM
UNM-Gallup SBDC
505-722-2220
103 W. Highway 66
Gallup, NM
UNM Taos
575-737-6214
114 Civic Plaza DR
Taos, NM

One Person's Grunge is another Person's Livelihood

Doug Knippel was looking at his compost a few years back and noticed a group of redworms crawling around in the dirt. That’s when he began to unearth his business plan.

Knippel’s Northwest Redworms, a company based in Camas, Wash., near Portland, Ore., is the “Grungiest” business of the year in the 2007 StartupNation Home-Based 100 rankings. As much as Knippel might not think he deserves the title, when one counts ratio of worms to compost as the key metric of his business, he’s got a good shot at winning this award. In fact, Knipple thinks he’s even more suited for the “Greenest” award since his enterprise is, in fact, environmentally friendly. But when you’re dealing with that much slime, dirt, and rotting foodstuffs, the HB 100 judges determined that “Grungiest” was the right category for this business.

Prior to launching his worm empire in 2005, Knippel made a living building cabinets in his brother’s employ since leaving the Air Force , which he also quit in 2005 after 17 years in service. He has also gotten his hands dirty and composted throughout his life, using biodegradable organic household waste such as vegetable scraps and other materials as nutrients for plant growing. Though the process is a smelly one, it is embraced by many environmentally-friendly communities because it’s a nutrient-rich way to grow plants and farm without using chemicals. It also takes advantage of useful materials that would be thrown out otherwise.

Author: Rich Sloan

Copyright 2009 StartupNation, LLC

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