Giving Back
As someone who strove to re-enter society after going to jail, Williams knew how hard it was to get your life on track as a “returning citizen.” “It was easier for me to start a business than it was to find a job,” he says. And so, when he and Tiffany created Urban Roots, helping people in similar situations was a major priority. “We’ve been working with returning citizens basically since we started out,” he says. “Right now, we have two returning citizens working with us.”
Over the years, they’ve also become involved at schools in their area, hosting Earth Day events at which students can beautify their campuses—and learn valuable skills. In 2019, at Ida B. Wells Preparatory elementary school, they worked with over 20 students, showing them basic landscaping skills, like mulching, planting flowers, identifying plants, and using gardening tools.
For Jimmie, it was also an opportunity to give the students the valuable lessons that he never received. “I didn’t have a lot of positive role models and guidance when I was a kid,” he says. “I talked to the kids about my background, and helped them realize that it’s possible to start your own business.”
Building a Business
In 2008, three months after they incorporated, Jimmie and Tiffany landed their first corporate client, which gave them a little breathing room—and the beginnings of a business plan. “It gave us motivation to press forward,” Tiffany says. “We started marketing toward commercial clients.”
It’s a strategy that works—they’ve increased revenue every year since they’ve started, Jimmie says. That’s not to say that things are easy—they’ve had to struggle in years where there wasn’t much snowfall, which made it difficult to build working capital and buy the equipment they needed to take on larger projects. They needed a clear plan if they hoped to expand.
As part of building their business, they took business classes. That’s where they connected with Accion Chicago and the Community Reinvestment Fund, two community development financial institutions supported by JPMorgan Chase, which provide small loans to entrepreneurs. “The first year, [Accion] loaned us a few thousand dollars,” Jimmie Williams says. The Williams paid back the loan, then took out another one. As their business grew every year, so did their dreams—and so did their funding needs.