|
URBANDALE, Iowa — If you’re a business owner besieged by fund-raisers, Terry Stark has a memo for you:
He
doesn’t want your cow – that’s your livelihood. And he won’t dip into
the cash flow of fresh cow milk. But if you’re crying about the stray
pail that spilled, he’ll gladly help you recover the loss – with the
bonus of making an eternal impact on the Christian mission field.
One
man’s waste really is another man’s treasure, be it locomotive engines
or bubble bath soap. Pool tables or 10,000-gallon paint tanks. No
matter the size, this businessman-turned-missionary is finding
creatively unconventional ways to help fund the global church-planting
enterprises of Avant Ministries, an inter-denominational mission based
in Kansas City, Mo.
Many companies don’t realize
how much their industrial waste burdens the bottom line, from excess
and damaged inventory to outdated equipment. And often they’re unaware
that a profit-draining problem might become an opportunity for another
business, a Third World country or a charitable tax deduction.
Enter
Stark, who is equal parts matchmaker and politician. His stumping for a
new alternative fund-raising program has earned Avant the 2005 Murray
J. Fox Recycling Innovation Award, presented recently by the Iowa
Recycling Association at its annual conference in Des Moines.
“I
introduce Harry to Sally. I find the guy who has a problem and match
him with the guy who has a need,” Stark says. “Avant becomes the
connection, the way for a company to turn a problem into an asset.”
Water into wine
Turning
industrial waste flow into revenue streams is nothing new. In a
consumer-driven Western world, entire recycling industries have been
generated from the production glut of plastics, paper and aluminum.
But
companies have bigger headaches than empty Pepsi cans. Maybe it’s a
semi-sized truckload of $10 brooms with a misspelled brand name that’s
clogging valuable warehouse space. Or a $10,000 drill press that’s no
longer keeping pace with competitors and new technology. Traditional
solutions – salvage yards, landfills, equipment brokers and recyclers –
recapture mere pennies on the dollar. And these taxable pennies are
often lost to Uncle Sam, along with storage, disposal, hauling and
dumping costs.
“My question to companies is this:
Instead of just writing me a check for a donation to Avant, how can I
help you solve a problem that you already have?” Stark says. For
example:
- A struggling
locomotive repair business shuts down and is stuck with three
partially-restored locomotives sitting on a train track in Iowa. Stark
locates a buyer, facilitates the appraisal and helps negotiate a “where
is, as is” deal that benefits both sides, and Avant nets a matchmaking
fee.
- A manufacturer has 33 warehouse work
benches left over from a marketing idea that fizzled. The benches are
donated to Avant for a charitable in-kind gift receipt, and then Stark
rustles up a couple of buyers.
- An Iowa real
estate company purchases a building with 13 massive paint tanks inside.
Aided by a professional broker, Stark finds a Kansas farm co-op that
wants the tanks to store agricultural chemicals. The company frees up
leasing space by unloading the unwanted tanks, the co-op pays to
extract and transport them, and Avant gets a finder’s fee.
Avant’s
industrial waste exchange program is only a year old, but “this is a
prime example of how it works,” said Jared Johnson of Signature Real
Estate Services in Des Moines. “It benefited us, it benefited the
missionary, and it benefited the guy getting the tanks.”
Signature
bought the warehouse 12 months ago with plans to lease it, but the
giant tanks had been in the way. The building had been constructed
around the tanks, so it was difficult to find a buyer willing to remove
a wall and use cranes to tip the tanks and lift them onto semi-trucks.
“I’m busy, I’ve got bigger fish to fry,” Johnson said. “But I knew Terry could get the job done. I’ve known him for years.”
Simply
put: A company’s perceived loss doesn’t have to stay a loss, Stark
says. It could become a non-cash contribution that Avant converts into
cash for its ministries.
Backyard mission field
Stark
says he’s on a Lewis-and-Clark expedition, charting new territory not
only for industrial waste disposal, but also for missions fund raising.
Who would figure that this literal wasteland holds new frontiers for
Christendom?
“We’re exploring the Wild West, where
nobody has been before,” Stark says. “Everyone is fishing in
over-fished evangelical ponds. You have 1,000 guys chasing the same
rich guy. There’s not enough fish to feed everybody. It’s like, stand
in line and take a number.”
So Stark is avoiding
the well-traveled roads of most Christian fund-raisers, as well as the
well-worn doorbells of donors and foundations. Which isn’t easy.
There’s not exactly a Yellow Pages for waste-laden companies and
clients, or entrepreneurial middlemen like Stark. So he’s using his
assets: a proven track record from a successful business career, a
healthy rolodex of corporate connections, and a heart for missions. “My
biggest edge is God’s leading me to the right people,” he says.
Now
58, Stark spent 35 years as a general contractor and developer in Des
Moines, where he owned and operated Pace Company Inc., a hotel,
apartments, warehouses and retail centers. But he also spent 20 years
smuggling Bibles into China and venturing overseas on short-term
mission trips. When his multi-million dollar business at home suddenly
unraveled, Stark saw it as God’s open door to a bigger Kingdom
enterprise. The radical truth of God’s economy intersected both his
personal life and newfound career: There is no waste with God; He can
redeem anything for good.
“I wanted to make the
rest of my life the best of my life,” he says. “Most of the business
owners I meet with are not Christians. This is my mission field.”
For
Stark, ministering God’s peace to executives struggling with alcohol,
business and marital problems is as vital as spreading the gospel of
Avant’s new waste-exchange strategy.
Stark spent
18 months as an Avant board member before accepting a staff position in
October 2004. He now works as a special assistant to President Paul
Nyquist, who pastored the First Federated Church in Des Moines where
Stark still serves on the elder board.
Avant runs
a financially lean mission organization, grounded in a legacy of
long-running partnerships with faithful churches and individual donors.
But Avant is also counting on Stark to blaze a fresh fund-raising trail
for expanding its church-planting work around the world. Stark’s
corporate networking will reduce the fund-raising burden on
missionaries and bolster Avant’s International Service Center in Kansas
City, which provides field training, support and ministry projects.
“In
the future, mission organizations will have to think innovatively about
financing,” Nyquist says. “Old reservoirs are slowly drying up. Terry
Stark gives us the ability to explore new possibilities and develop
their potential. I am confident God will continue to supply sufficient
resources to take the gospel around the world. We just have to be
willing to tap new markets.”
|
|
The Stark File:
Contact Terry
Read Terry's Bio
Award:
Avant was recently awarded the Iowa Recycling Association's "Recycling Innovation Award" for Terry's work.
Got Waste?
Does your company have excess, distressed or damaged inventory? Recyclables? Outdated tools, equipment or machinery? They might prove to be a hidden asset. Contact Terry at the link above.
|