CCI Friends,
Meet Vadim Vasiliev in the photo below. Vadim is one of CCI’s 6,000 Russian entrepreneurs who studied how to develop small businesses in U.S. companies during the ‘90s and 2000s. He provides his large showroom when we need space for visiting Americans to meet with local entrepreneurs. Here we see him describing the climate in which he and Russia’s brightest and best were reinventing themselves as they were trying to create businesses for the first time ever. CCI’s alumni are spread over 71 of Russia’s 85 regions, from Western Russia (outside of Moscow) to the Far East. We chose not to take applicants from Moscow since that one city was getting 85% of all foreign capital and programs sent into Russia. For Russia to succeed, their vast regions also had to succeed. We’ve never regretted this decision. Now we have businessmen and women all over Russia who are eager to participate when we visit their cities. One of Mike Metz’s fabulous Foto-Journal pages follows:
Sharon Tennison
Center for Citizen Initiatives
Back in his day, Stalin responded to idealistic critics by saying his was the best of socialism, “really existing socialism,” with the gulags, police state, purges etc. Hey, you want free education, housing, healthcare, etc., ya’ gotta’ put up with a little pain. It was a rough bargain.
As I listened to the Russian entrepreneur below describing his successful business I thought about the rough road these Russians have had to walk as they learned how to do real-life capitalism. He described all sorts of pitfalls and how he negotiated them one after another. Today he’s a small manufacturer with a growing clientele that succeeds in spite of sanctions and dips in the market.
Vadim was a teacher who loved the outdoors, camping, climbing, skiing, and in the 90s he was sewing his own jackets and mittens to be able to do that. He met Sharon Tennison of CCI who arranged for him to come to Colorado, and learn from people who ran outdoors companies. Then he went home and started his own company. Today he runs a Russian division of a Swedish outdoor clothing supplier. The room is filled with Russians telling of their small business successes, folks Sharon brought to the US to learn from our small business owners and Rotary Club members. [Continue Reading]