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Business Goal Setting Tips Tacoma WA

By setting traditional goals, Andrew Baca positioned himself to start a business, then took Abba Technologies from a local company with limited reach to a nationally recognized IT player.

Tacoma Athletic Commission, Inc
253-759-1124
PO Box 11304
Tacoma, WA
John Comis Associates
253-272-6808
401 Fawcett Ave Ste 213
Tacoma, WA
Greenfield Development Group
(253) 272-3232
728 Pacific Ave Ste 300B
Tacoma, WA
KnightVision Consulting, LLC
253.376.8598
1267 Fernside Dr
Tacoma, WA
Edge Learning Institute, Inc
253-272-3103
2209 N Pearl St Ste 100
Tacoma, WA
Greg Towne, Consultant
(253) 380-0523
3906 S 74th St Ste 201
Tacoma, WA
WSU/Small Business Development
253-680-7768
1101 S Yakima Ave Rm M123
Tacoma, WA
Thompson Smitch Consulting
253-879-1250
4041 Ruston Way Ste 201
Tacoma, WA
Katharine Dexter & Associates, LLC
(253) 759-0939
2522 N Proctor St Ste 7
Tacoma, WA
North Shore Village Management
(253) 874-5398
35415 21st Ave Sw
Federal Way, WA
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Simple Goals: Employee Buyout turns into a $50 million Business - Business Goal Setting Series

When Andrew Baca was named 2006 Minority Male Entrepreneur of the Year by the U.S. Department of Commerce, he accepted it by saying, “I know the motivating power of ownership.”

As president and CEO of IT company Abba Technologies, Inc., based in Albuquerque, N.M., Baca counted some $50 million in 2006 revenues – a lofty achievement that had its beginnings in a very traditional start. Baca may have benefitted from being a third-generation entrepreneur, but setting simple, traditional goals laid the foundation for success.

Goal 1: Learn Your Business from the Inside

Baca began, as do so many young professionals, at a large company – IBM, in his case, where he worked first as a programmer and then in business development. When he joined Abba Technologies in 1997, it was his third job ever.

At the time, the company had seven employees, and all its business came from supplying tech hardware to the U.S. Department of Energy's Los Alamos and Sandia national laboratories. Today, under Baca’s leadership, Abba Technologies has nearly 50 employees serving clients throughout the Southwest.

His advice to others who want to start a business is to do what he did. “Work for a larger company in your field and gain as much experience as possible," he says, "so you have a head start and some ideas of what type of culture you need to be successful on your own."

Goal 2: Recognize an Opportunity – and Pounce

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