Capt. Tim O'Neil was finishing up a stint at a Twin Cities Marine recruitment office when he saw an article about a new program at the University of Minnesota's Carlson School of Management. The school was intensifying its recruiting of military veterans and had even hired a retired Navy commander to scout the country for prospects.
O'Neil, a Minneapolis native who had spent seven years in infantry deployments from Korea to the Horn of Africa, decided it was time to stop selling the military and start selling himself.
At school he was able to develop a business he had conceived while in the Marines. He would take his knowledge and passion for military gear and apply it to the civilian market in a premium line of rugged commuter and weekender bags with an urban aesthetic.
Now, like a growing number of veterans, O'Neil is doing battle in a different environment: the high risk/high reward world of entrepreneurship.
"Having your own team, a sense of effort and duty, being able to right your own ship, it all fit in to what I knew," said O'Neil, who still sports a military bearing, despite having exchanged Marine battle dress fatigues for flannel shirts.
Infantry to enterprise
As the nation transitions from a country at war on two fronts, much of the focus has been on veteran unemployment, which, while falling, continues to remain higher than for civilians.
But there is a growing group of veterans who aren't looking for jobs; they are looking to create them.
Veterans are 45 percent more likely to be self-employed than people with no military experience. Aging census data show that at least 2.4 million U.S. businesses are veteran-owned, but experts say the number could be twice that. In Minnesota, there are 43,484 veteran-owned businesses with annual receipts of $25.7 million, according to the U.S. Small Business Administration.