'If You Can't Get A Job, You've Got To Make A Job'
Entrepreneur|Startups Fall 2018

How does acompany boundworker transform into a free-thinking entrepreneur? Itisnt easy but for laid-off factory workers like Marty Mann, getting it right is a matter of survival.

Jennifer Miller
'If You Can't Get A Job, You've Got To Make A Job'

I. The Entrepreneur’s Journey Begins

In fall 2015, when Marty Mann’s boss at General Electric called him into the office, he knew his days at the company were numbered. For seven years, Mann had been a welder at GE’s locomotive plant in Erie, Pa. Built just over a century ago, the 340-acre complex originally employed and housed thousands of workers, and defined the city’s economic and social life. But layoffs had become common, and 2015 saw a downsizing of 1,500 employees. Mann was one. “Yeah, I was mad,” he says. “You used me and then got rid of me. But when it’s time to go, it’s time to go.”

Mann has lived in Erie his entire life, and everyone here—his wife, kids, grandkids, and friends—knows him as a no-bullshit kind of guy. Middle-aged and meaty, he prefers oversize T-shirts and dirt-crusted work boots. His graying hair is rarely brushed, and his days are fueled by whole pots of sugar-saturated coffee, beer, and drugstore doughnuts. But he’s a talented welder. So upon being shown the door at GE, he began looking for another job. Nobody in his field was hiring locally. A buddy told him about an opportunity in South Carolina, but Mann couldn’t imagine leaving his family behind. “What are you going to do?” he says. “Work in McDonald’s? Be a greeter at Walmart? At GE, I was making between $33 and $40 an hour, plus benefits.”

This story is from the Startups Fall 2018 edition of Entrepreneur.

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This story is from the Startups Fall 2018 edition of Entrepreneur.

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