Across the country, Main Street leaders know that thriving downtowns don’t happen by accident. They’re built through patient, local, hands-on work, by lifting up entrepreneurs, strengthening community connections, and turning vacancy into opportunity. Main Street is different from other economic development strategies because it isn’t about chasing a big employer or importing ideas from somewhere else. It’s homegrown. It’s about recognizing the strengths already rooted in our communities and weaving economic development directly into the fabric of our downtowns.
Few people embody that spirit more powerfully than Karla Eden, Executive Director of Main Street Anniston in Alabama. Karla’s work is a case study in what local leadership, local expertise, and local passion can accomplish.
A Place-Built Pipeline for New Businesses
After trying – and struggling – to open her own bakery and coffee shop downtown, Karla experienced firsthand what many entrepreneurs encounter: there was no roadmap, no guide, no one to help her navigate permits, zoning, marketing, or the million little questions that make or break an early-stage business. She realized this wasn’t just her hurdle. It was holding Anniston back from growing into a vibrant, welcoming downtown. So she built the solution.
GETUP Anniston is an eight-week crash course guiding aspiring entrepreneurs through everything they need to launch a business, from accounting and financial planning, to digital marketing, to choosing the right brick-and-mortar location. Each session is taught by an expert from within the community, from real estate agents, to CPAs, to city staff, ensuring the curriculum is rooted in Anniston’s real market conditions, not generic templates.
Graduates finishing the program have tangible opportunities ahead of them. Retail concepts can step immediately into the Small Box Shop, a downtown pop-up storefront operated alongside the Main Street office. Participants can also enter a pitch competition for $5,000 – $10,000 in startup funding, provided they commit to launching in downtown Anniston. And hopefully soon, entrepreneurs will have access to a new retail incubator called “The Foundry,” on a former steelmaking site, another chapter in Anniston’s story of reinvention.
This is place-specific economic development at its smartest: built from lived experience, designed with community expertise, and continually refined to meet local needs.