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SUCCESS
STORIES
jason ekstrom
'07
business
management major
What started as a "one kid" lawn-mowing
operation in a Hollis, NH neighborhood seven years ago
has grown into an award-winning business for business
management major Jarl "Jason" Ekstrom of Hollis.
Jason, whose dad is a
DWC alumnus and an air traffic controller, is a full-time business
management student who was awarded an "honorable mention" in the Mississippi
Coastal Student Entrepreneur Awards for his business, Ekstrom Lawn Care,
LLC. Jason was nominated for the award in his sophomore year by Assistant
Professor Mark Harrison.
"I learned a lot in
Professor Harrison's management class," Jason says, "such as how I can be a
stern manager without being overbearing. And how I can motivate my
employees."
Reza Hoshmand, the
business and management chair at Daniel Webster College,
noted that "Jason
is certainly one of those students who has developed entrepreneurial skills
at an early age. He is now honing those skills with the academic preparation
he receives at DWC."
Jason recalled that he
started his one-man, lawn-mowing business in junior high school. "There's
not much opportunity to earn money when you're 12 years old," he says,
laughing. He charged his neighbors $10 per hour and expanded his business
when his mother, Diane, drove him and his gas-powered mower to jobs outside
the local neighborhood.
Now as president of
Ekstrom Lawn Care, Jason has gone from employing one other person to having
two or three full-time employees on his payroll. Also, he has enhanced his
array of equipment, utilizing two (bright red) trucks, two enclosed cargo
trailers, and two commercial grade standing and sitting mowers, as well as a
number of other pieces of equipment to accomplish everything from lawn
cleanups, to landscaping, to snowplowing. “Now I price by the job," he
says.
"It takes a lot of
time," says Jason, laughing again as he recalled the challenge he faced as a
young teen to be taken seriously as a businessman. Early on, the younger
Jason discovered that the paperwork especially was one of the bigger
"hassles" in running a business. Dealing with workers compensation, business
accounts, and keeping track of billing for a total of 50 commercial and
residential accounts required an average of 10 hours per week of his time.
To handle the challenge
of running a full-time business while also being a full-time student, Jason,
who runs his business from his bedroom, relies on assistance from both his
mom and his 16 year-old sister, who he's training for bookkeeping and
administrative assistant duties.
As to where the future
will bring this young entrepreneur, Jason says he is not sure. He does know,
however, that he will be a business owner.
Daniel
Webster College. Success starts here. Right away. From day
one. |