I Need Capital for My Small Business… Now What? Webinar
Wednesday, September 9th – 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm
Join Heritage Ohio and Economic and Community Development Institute (ECDI) for a discussion of small business training and funding resources. ECDI is a statewide resource for Ohio businesses, providing educational classes to improve small business success and lending programs for startup and expanding businesses.
Aaron Cornell, Director of Community and Rural Lending at ECDI, will discuss some of the challenges that small business owners face, as well as resources available to current and future small business owners to overcome these challenges. Additionally, Aaron will discuss factors that lenders, including banks and other lenders such as ECDI, look for. Participants will leave knowing who they can talk to for small business advice and take away practical tips to increase their chances of receiving funding for their business.
At ECDI, Aaron Cornell helps clients across Ohio access capital for their small businesses. ECDI is a nonprofit micro and small business lender headquartered in Columbus, Ohio, providing lending and training opportunities to business owners not able to access traditional sources of capital. Learn more about ECDI on their website.
Arts Commissions: Creating Cool Downtowns Webinar
Wednesday, August 12th – 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm
Art is one of the most important elements of creating a cool downtown. This webinar will share the success of four communities from around Ohio: Athens, Canton, Hamilton, and Toledo. What are their most successful projects? What barriers have they had to overcome? How have they funded these improvements? Each community will provide a short overview and then presenters will be available to answer your questions.
Please join: Carol Patterson Chair of the Athens Municipal Art Commission; Tricia Ostertag, VP Marketing & Special Events for Arts in Stark; Jacob Stone, Communications Specialist City of Hamilton; and Ryan Bunch Director of Community Initiatives at the The Arts Commission, Toledo
TourismOhio Marketing Opportunities Webinar
Wednesday, July 8th – 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm
Speaker
Back to Business – Wooster
Main Street Wooster
Flamingo Jack’s food truck hit the streets during quarantine. This Main Street Wooster business sold its unique comfort food in the parking lot of other brick-and-mortar Wooster businesses. The pink and blue truck has served customers outside Lincoln Way Vineyards, Miss Amy’s Cupcakes and Spoon Deli, attracting customers to these businesses and gaining more customers in turn.
This cross-promoting is one example of community in Main Street Wooster. During shutdown, Main Street supported businesses in many ways and will explore even more with its grant funding. As stores reopen, Main Street businesses are taking precautions and relying on Wooster’s small business community.
In early March, Main Street Wooster director Shannon Waller worked with the Convention Visitors Bureau and Chamber of Commerce to create a comprehensive website. It lists open businesses, new hours, and available services and products. It is one place for people to see their options, and administrators continue to update the website.
“That was the biggest success from the get-go to help people continue their revenue streams,” Waller says. “That was helpful in harnessing that community spirit that was already there.”
It also created consistency between the businesses’ online presences.
Along with restaurants and bars collaborating like Flamingo Jack’s, retailers coordinated their hours to encourage customers to visit each other.
The Main Street Wooster team encouraged this cooperative spirit in different ways as requirements and circumstances changed. With only two people in the office, Waller and project coordinator John Benko-Scruggs initially went to visit each business themselves.
“We put on some walking shoes and just pounded the pavement and visited everyone within our area.” Waller says.
When they couldn’t go outside anymore, Waller and Benko-Scruggs contacted the businesses by phone, and left encouraging messages to shuttered businesses.
“If they were on the cusp of closing, we wanted them to let us know before they made an irrevocable decision,” Waller explains. “Because we knew that there were people in the community who would try to get them through it.”
When businesses faced challenges, Waller says Main Street Wooster acted as a clearinghouse to explore any loans available; the chamber of commerce and economic development council created a webinar series about funding opportunities.
Recently, Main Street Wooster wrote encouraging notes to each of the businesses on some old Main Street Wooster postcards Waller found.
“We got some nice responses from people who were just happy for the mood lift they got when they had to stay at home,” she says.
The pair visited each business again to welcome the owners back as they reopened. Waller asked about any specials or hours they would want Main Street Wooster to share, and they discussed what the businesses were hoping for as they reopened.
The businesses worked hard to implement all safety procedures, with employees wearing masks, providing hand sanitizer and early hours for people at risk. Some business owners encourage customers to wear masks while others require it.
“They have family members who are vulnerable or employees with family members who are vulnerable,” Waller says. “They’ve gotten a little bit of push back here and there, but nothing that would intimidate anybody into changing that level of safety.”
Waller explored the possibility of expanding restaurant space with the chamber of commerce, local attorney and restaurateurs. They are hoping to get a designated outdoor refreshment area (DORA) and expand dining areas into closed streets and parking spots.
In May, Main Street Wooster received the Main Street Grills Fund. The first part of the spending plan is to create training videos with the local hospital and health department. They also want to invite business owners to approach health professionals and adapt their business practices.
They are also exploring car-related activities for people to have group experiences while social distancing. They are organizing a cruise-in through decorated downtown and residential areas that would award prizes to best business decorations, residential decorations and car decorations. The procession would end at a pop-up movie theater and local food trucks, and admission would be a $15 receipt from a downtown merchant.
In addition to the training certification, Waller says that all the businesses have at least a time frame and plan for reopening.
“You don’t get into business without being strong, creative and able to solve problems,” she says. “We’ll get through this.”

Change and Tradition: Downtown Main Streets in Ohio Web Discussion
Thursday, June 11th – 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm
Wellington has a rich tradition of late 19th Century commercial buildings that have been preserved in the downtown area. This look at the buildings of downtown will focus on the styles of the original buildings, both in current photos and historic photos, and the changes that have been made to the streetscapes over the years. To put the town in context, we will look at the development of downtowns in various places throughout Ohio, including Hudson, Medina, Norwalk, and Warren.
Speaker
Christie Borkan is an architectural historian who grew up in Wellington, living on North Mill Street and later on South Main Street. She earned a BA in Art History from Hiram College, and an MA from the Winterthur Program in Early American Culture, University of Delaware. She has worked in the Spirit of ’76 Museum, the Cleveland Museum of Art, Hale Farm & Village, and the Western Reserve Historical Society. She has also taught courses in American Decorative Arts and American Architecture for over 30 years at Hiram College and Cleveland State University.

Why Signage is Important & Why Business Owners Aren’t Excited About Signs, But Should Be! Web Discussion
Thursday, June 11th – 11:00 am – 12:00 pm
Meggan and Jason with Innovative Marketing Products will discuss sign materials and cost as well as designs, colors, fonts and what to put on a sign.
We would love to leave time to answer questions. Jason will handle all questions related to specs and fabrication as he can answer any question ( we mean any) that you may have.
Innovative is a small sign shop located in Wellington, OH. We are entering our fourth year as business partners, but Jason has over 20 years experience with signage and industrial arts. We specialize in designing and fabricating custom signage. We take a lot into consideration before we have a solid foundation for a sign idea. We do one to two site surveys of a business to help us develop a plan for a sign. We will then design and create digital images to share with a business owner before we begin production.
In many cases, we handle all the sign licenses with the city and finalize details with the building departments. We also do sign refurbishment; providing some TLC to older signs or a logo change. We also offer banners and car graphics. When we first got started we thought we would go into personalized products as well as signs, but we are sticking to signs, banners and car graphics, so you may see a name change! The best place to find us is on Facebook at Innovative Marketing Products, llc.

Medina: 60 Years of Targeted Historic Preservation Web Discussion
Wednesday, June 10th – 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm
Founded in 1818, and suffering a major fire in the 1840s, and again in the early 1870s, Medina, Ohio has risen like a phoenix several times over its storied history. Largely rebuilt between 1871-1881, our community features a cohesive and comprehensive collection of mid-to-late 19th Century brick commercial buildings.
In the mid-1940s, Medina, was chosen as a quintessential, Midwestern small town in America, and was the focus of an RKO/Pathe Pictures 20-minute short film called Hometown USA. However, by the 1960s, the historic buildings surrounding the town square has been modernized, bastardized, and generally ignored.
Join Matt Wiederhold from Main Street Medina as he shares how 60 years of targeted historic preservation and private investment became the stepping stones to economic vitality in Medina, Ohio, and how important preservation and authentic placemaking is to creating a vibrant community.

Banker Panel Online: Covid-19 Assistance Questions Answered
Wednesday, June 3rd – 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm
Answers to your hard questions from our panelists at Richwood Bank:
- PPP forgiveness
- SBA – what they can do for small business
- How to ask for help
- Banking on the other side of Covid
- Small Business, custom solutions
- Communication – More is better
- How to use marketing tactics – different ways people are shopping
Speakers
Chad Hoffman
President/CEO
choffman@richwoodbank.com
Emily Davis-McElroy
Union County Regional Vice President
edavis@richwoodbank.com
Heather Wirtz
Chief Experience Office
hwirtz@richwoodbank.com
Richwood Bank since 1867
www.RichwoodBank.com

Ohio’s Historic Architectural Styles Webinar
Thursday, May 28th – 2:00 pm – 3:00 pm
Celebrate National Historic Preservation Month by discovering the richness and diversity of Ohio’s architecture. The story of Ohio, from early settlement, through industrial expansion, to modern times, is reflected in its landmark buildings, urban centers, small towns, and the work of specific architects and builders. This free webinar will introduce broad architectural trends and characteristics of specific styles examined within the context of 19th and 20th century Ohio.
This webinar is provided by The Ohio Arts Council.

Reopening Your Business: Practical Considerations Webinar
Wednesday, May 13th – 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm
Join the legal team from Vorys Law Firm as they share practical consideration for re-opening your business following Covid-19 closures.
We will have four experts providing a variety of information, which meet a variety of needs in our communities:
- Karen Cincione: Government relations and state stay home orders
- Jolie Havens: Health care
- Bob Harris: Labor and employment
- Webb Vorys: Contracts, commercial and state stay home orders
This webinar is sponsored by a grant from The Nord Family Foundation.
An Introduction to the Secretary of the Interior’s Standards for Rehabilitation Webinar
Wednesday, May 20th – 11:00 am – 12:30 pm
The Secretary of the Interior’s Standards for Rehabilitation consist of a set of 10 common-sense guidelines that we use to guide proper rehabilitation techniques and processes. But how do you judge when a building element can be repaired, versus having to be replaced? How do you handle later alterations to a building? What if your building is missing historic features? Nathan Bevil from the State Historic Preservation Office will be joining us to shed light on how the Standards help preservation professionals guide their decision-making process, insuring a historic building can function in a modern environment while maintaining its historic integrity.