“…Given that many WISEs in this second category are existing nonprofit organizations, in some cases turning to commercial activity in search of additional revenue sources, the WISE business ventures frequently take the form of small scale commercial enterprises that are bootstrapping business growth with small amounts of seed monies and limited access to growth capital and run by staff with little previous entrepreneurial experience (Cooney 2010). A key challenge for these WISEs is that the businesses that are easiest to start and that feature relatively low entry barriers in terms of startup costs, infrastructure, and specialized knowledge may be located in the same low-wage labor market sectors out of which the WISE is designed to move beneficiaries (Cooney 2011). Although business enterprises in the low-skill occupations (such as custodial work, retail sales, landscaping, street cleaning, and team assemblers) allow for immediate work placement for disadvantaged workers, who not only may have low levels of human capital, but also may face multiple additional vulnerabilities including long-term homelessness, mental illness, chronic substance abuse, and so forth, they offer low profit margins for WISEs and may be setting up workers for employment in low-skill, low-wage jobs (Bloom 2009).…”