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Watsonville Business Owner Ricardo Rocha Honored with Statewide Entrepreneurship award

As a child growing up in Mexico, Ricardo Rocha always dreamed of owning his own business and speaking a second language.<br>

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Watsonville Business Owner Ricardo Rocha Honored with Statewide Entrepreneurship award

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  1. Watsonville Business Owner Ricardo Rocha Honored with Statewide Entrepreneurship award, Gives Thanks to El Pájaro CDC for Helping him Overcome Barriers As a child growing up in Mexico, Ricardo Rocha always dreamed of owning his own business and speaking a secondlanguage. Watsonville, CA, January 21, 2020 - As a child growing up in Mexico, Ricardo Rocha always dreamed of owning his own business and speaking a secondlanguage. Years later he immigrated to California, finding work picking berries and landscaping. Not willing to sacrifice his dream and settle for less, Rocha enrolled in night classes at Cabrillo College while continuing to work in thefields. There he found hiscalling. “I fell in love with computers and what they could do,” hesaid. Rocha eventually opened a small computer sales and service office in downtown Watsonville. But his business knowledge was limited, and he ran into multiplebarriers.

  2. Then he found El Pájaro Community Development Corporation’s Business Incubator Program at Plaza Vigil in Watsonville. El Pájaro provided him with business coaching, technical assistance and paths to funding. Today, Rocha operates RVS Technology Group, employing 12 full-time staff with a bimonthly payroll of more than$30,000. In recognition of his success story, CAMEO (a statewide micro enterprise association) bestowed on Rocha one of only two Faces of Entrepreneurship awards given eachyear. Rocha did more than succeed in business, he created an entire industry that was previously nonexistent in Watsonville. Through it all RVS became the city’s first-ever company to start from ground zero through the efforts of animmigrant. Rocha is immensely proud of that, and does his best to give back. RVS employs young people who are just starting their careers in tech, providing them with good-paying jobs, highly sought-after skills, and growthopportunities. “It’s an industry that is local, provides jobs for local kids, and gives them growth opportunities,” he said. “It’s great to see these kids come forward and succeed in life, and I’m happy to be a littlebridge.” Rocha pays it forward because he knows he found a helping hand in El PájaroCDC. “I was very, very naive about all the aspects needed to run a business,” he said. “I was very blessed to find El Pájaro. They have the foundation to help anyone start a business. They give you a basic understanding of finances, teach you how to read a profit-and-loss statement, and what it allmeans.” Another challenge Rocha faced surrounded funding. Whether it was his language limitations or lack of a credit history, banks refused to give him a second look. But with the help of El Pájaro, Rocha was able to secure a loan through the Santa Cruz Community CreditUnion. “I had no credibility, I had no history,” Rochasaid. Ricardo’s determination and unwillingness to give up in the face of adversity put him where he is today. But he also knows he couldn’t have done it without help fromothers. El Pájaro CDC celebrates 40 years of transforming people’s lives through entrepreneurship by taking the confusion, guesswork and complexity out of starting small businesses. By offering technical, legal, financial and managerial assistance, El Pájaro has helped launch and nurture countless small businesses while bolstering economic development within thecommunity.

  3. “If you give someone an opportunity it can change lives, and lead to generations of success,” said Carmel Hererra, executive director of El Pajaro CDC. “To see a journey from farmworker toentrepreneur — many started that way when they came to us — is sorewarding.” Contact: Marci BraccoCain Chatterbox PR Salinas, CA93901 (831)747-7455 http://www.Chatterboxpr.com

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