Determined to succeed

Running a successful business is a piece of cake compared to living in Communist Romania, says Stella Moga.

When Moga came to America in 1979, she had no money and did
not speak English. But she worked several jobs and took business
classes at night to build the funds and the knowledge to found Le
Chaperon Rouge.

Now, her vision for a child care and development and private elementary organization has been realized, and Le Chaperon Rouge
has eight locations and more than 150 employees. Her success has
come from making a business plan and sticking to it, and her determination has never wavered.

Smart Business spoke with Moga, president and CEO of Le
Chaperon Rouge, about why it’s important to watch every penny.

Q: How do you manage business growth?

I am learning how to manage. Delegation is one very hideous
thing. If you delegate and you don’t know how to delegate, and you
don’t prepare those people that you delegate to, if they don’t know
exactly what you want them to do, then you are going to be in big
trouble.

Before you delegate, you have to know what to project to those
people. That’s the most important thing. Yes, you delegate, but you
better know how to delegate.

For example, what kind of message do you want to delegate?
You cannot come back to that person you delegate to if your message is not clear enough. You cannot hold that person responsible
because then the frustration comes up, and then you have people
unhappy and everybody works under pressure.

I delegate to my employees now, and it’s amazing. Before, I was
involved in every little detail — I am a control freak. I’ve started to
delegate a little bit and check what they do. Now, I’ve started to
leave them alone a little bit.

That’s the hardest step an entrepreneur has to take, from a small
business to a big business. But you cannot be everywhere at every
time.

Q: What pitfalls should a CEO try to avoid?

Spend money wisely. If you do it unwisely, if you don’t watch
every penny, if you try to live lavishly, then you deplete your own
company of cash flow. And you are ending up buying things you
really don’t need.

Why don’t you try to leave the company in good shape financially, and try to do some charity work that will help American children?

You have to watch pennies when you have a company because
it’s so easy to spend too much, not to pay attention to details in
standings, and then you can have problems. I have seen many
big companies go under because they didn’t pay attention.

Q: How do you attract quality employees?

I attract quality employees by giving them opportunities. They
have horizons to reach in my company. It’s up to them to succeed
in my company. They can start with being a teacher’s helper, and
they can be promoted in management, but it’s up to them. Also, I
give as many benefits as I can.

I give them respect, and they know that without them, my
schools would not exist.

Happy employees make happy children and happy clientele.

Q: How do you motivate employees to succeed?

I train them a lot. My employees don’t
work in the dark. I have very precise goals and curriculum, and I
give them all the tools to succeed. If you don’t give your employees the right tools to accomplish what you need them to accomplish to deliver your concept, to deliver the job you need to do,
then you’ll have failure.

But, if you know how to train them and how to make them work
for what you are looking to accomplish, they will do it for you.
Respect, respect, respect.

They have to see you as part of their team. If you golf too much,
if you go on vacation too much, if you’re not there to hear their sorrows and joys, then you don’t have a company.

If it’s a huge company where the CEO doesn’t have time to talk
to the thousands of employees, then delegate this concept to your
managers. The CEO of a 2,000-person company cannot go listen to
every sorrow and every joy. But you have to train your direct managers to do that.

Q: What have been the keys to your success?

I put my heart in it, I make a very detailed plan, and I stick with
it. I’m stubborn, and I don’t take no for an answer. I think I’m
always right when I want something.

I have a lot of confidence. I accomplish things thinking this is
work I have to do, and I do it. If I can do it, everybody can do it.

HOW TO REACH: Le Chaperon Rouge, (440) 934-2716 or www.lechaperonrouge.com