Southern Indiana Business July-August 2020 | Page 12

And for many employees, a future back at work depends on their kids going back to school. If homeschooling remains in the fall but employees are asked to return, “What will that look like?” Dant Chesser mused. She said that in this early stage of reopening, many business owners are planning for the post-pandemic future by creating bestcase plans, worst-case plans and ones that are somewhere in the middle. Some business owners are willing to look one quarter into the future, while others are taking it week by week, she said. “It’s overwhelming if you think about what this means, because every one of these decisions affects not only their families and their wealth, but every single employee’s families and their wealth,” Dant Chesser said. “It will never go back to the way it was.” TOP / Liz Martino, general manager and culinary director at MESA Kids Cooking School, leads an online video cooking class. After the pandemic shuttered the school’s in-person cooking classes, MESA Kids switched to an all-online business model. BOTTOM / Liz Martino, general manager and culinary director at MESA Kids Cooking School, prepares take-home Easter cookie kits for curbside pickup. Submitted photos Getting the customers to come back Kari Johnson, regional director of the Southeast Indiana Small Business Development Center, said she’s seen a growing confidence in business and their employees — especially since both federal and local funds have come through to help financially — but the next big hurdle is likely to be reassuring customers that it's OK to come back. “A lot of people are still holding back because they aren’t sure what’s going to happen,” she said. “How quickly business goes back will depend on what happens medically.” Johnson said her role as adviser to Southern Indiana’s small business community has flipped on its heels more than once since the pandemic started, moving from damagecontrol issues like staying open and applying for loans to now getting PPE, implementing health protocols and ensuring that loan money is spent in a way that guarantees forgiveness. She also found herself on the loan review committee reviewing applications for more than $1.1 million in either forgivable or 0% interest loans that were offered up by Southern Indiana city and county governments, business alliances or private donors. Going through that process, she said, helped her answer business owners’ questions more thoroughly. Like others, Johnson said she can’t see too far into the future. “That’s so hard to call,” she said. “I hope it’s back to looking somewhat like it used to, but it's still too early to tell — even though it feels like we’ve been in this for five years.” 12 July / August 2020