| Whittemore
School hosts Holloway competition May 7
By Lori Wright, Media Relations
Joe Faro had a great business idea: Sell gourmet pasta and sauces
to restaurants, wholesale clubs and supermarkets across the country.
Fortunately, Faro had a comprehensive business plan to back up his
vision, which is what sold First Essex Bank on the concept and convinced
them to lend the then 21-year-old student fresh out of UNH more
than $1 million to start his business.
Faro developed the business plan in his undergraduate entrepreneurship
class at UNH for the 1991 Paul J. Holloway Business Plan Competition
hosted by UNH’s Whittemore School of Business and Economics.
Thirteen years later, Faro’s company — Joseph’s
Gourmet Pasta and Sauces – is a $40 million-a-year business
employing nearly 200 people in Haverhill, Mass.
On Friday, May 7, outstanding business students at the Whittemore
School of Business and Economics will vie for the Paul J. Holloway
Business Plan prize at Holloway Commons on the Durham campus. The
event is free and open to the public.
Many will be hoping to become the next Joe Faro.
“No matter what you do in life, developing a business plan
is really a tremendous exercise. All businesses, large or small,
are based on the model of some form of business plan. You can do
things in this country that you can’t do anywhere else. If
a business plan and this competition is the spark these college
students need to build their own businesses, they should go for
it,” Faro says.
In those early years when Faro was turning out 300 to 500 pounds
of pasta a week – by hand – on the second floor of a
former church, he says he never foresaw that his business would
grow to where it is now. It serves more than 15,000 restaurants
and supermarkets from coast to coast, businesses such as the Olive
Garden, Bertucci’s, Legal Seafoods, California Pizza Kitchen,
BJs, Costco, Hannaford Brothers and Shaw’s. Now, Joseph’s
produces 300,000 to 500,000 pounds of pasta a week. And it all started
from his business plan developed at UNH.
“I went through the Holloway competition and used my business
plan in the real world. Now my livelihood is based on that plan.
That’s a fact. It proves that anything is possible,”
he says.
The annual competition awards prizes to both undergraduate and graduate
students, either as teams or individuals, who develop the most realistic
plans for starting, acquiring or expanding a business venture in
each of two tracks: high growth ventures and lifestyle ventures.
This year’s cash awards are $4,000 each for the winning undergraduate
and graduate business plan. Undergraduate and graduate runners-up
in both categories are given cash awards of $900 each.
“Students competing for the prize have the opportunity to
test their ingenuity and business acumen in the real-world situation
of developing and presenting a business plan,” says Steve
Bolander, dean of the Whittemore School. “The Holloway Competition
is one of the longest-running business plan competitions in the
country. We welcome members of the community to join us in honoring
the many successes of the program and all those who have contributed
to this achievement.”
The competition, established by Holloway’s family, honors
the Exeter business leader’s entrepreneurial spirit by stimulating
and recognizing outstanding business plans.
Holloway began his career in the automotive industry and starting
in 1967, shaped a multi-franchise dealership emphasizing customer
service and satisfaction. Holloway then extended his business skills
to the development and management of eldercare facilities.
His strong commitment to public service has led to contributions
as a member of the Board of Trustees of the University System of
New Hampshire, the board of Berwick Academy, fund-raising programs
for Temple University in Pennsylvania and the Governor Dummer Academy
in Massachusetts in addition to involvement with other nonprofit
organizations and charitable programs.
The Holloway Business Plan Competition begins at 1 p.m. in the Piscataqua
and Squamscott rooms at Holloway Commons.
A reception and award presentation follows at 4:30 p.m. in the Holloway
Commons galley. For more information, contact the dean’s office
at 862-1983.
|