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Susan Hager, 63; Advocate for Female Business Owners

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Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, August 4, 2008; Page B04

Susan Hager, 63, the founder of a Washington public relations firm and an advocate for female business owners and small-business entrepreneurs, died July 26 at her home in Washington. She had complications of polycystic kidney disease.

In 1973, Mrs. Hager and business partner Marcia Sharp overcame financing frustrations to open Hager Sharp Inc. with about $2,000 and one client.

She wanted to control her destiny and be her own boss at a time when it was not easy for women to do so, said her daughter, Elizabeth Finley. "She wanted to make it better for herself and other women."

Over the years, the social-marketing firm grew to provide communications services to nonprofit organizations and government agencies. It focused on changing public attitudes, beliefs and behaviors in the areas of health, education and safety. Sharp retired from the business in 1993.

Under Mrs. Hager's leadership, the firm conducted the first public education and outreach efforts to encourage women to take advantage of mammography and has helped raise national awareness of the diabetes epidemic through the National Diabetes Education Program.

Mrs. Hager embodied teamwork and collaboration, said Garry Curtis, who succeeds her as president of Hager Sharp.

He said earlier this year that she celebrated the firm's 35th anniversary with her 40-person staff and converted the firm to an employee stock owner program to ensure the company's continued independence.

Mrs. Hager, who had a difficult time securing bank financing for her company, used her experience to help found the National Association of Women Business Owners in 1974. She served as the first president of the organization, which now has 8,000 members in 80 chapters.

"When we started Hager Sharp, we felt like we were the only women out there," she said in a recent U.S. Chamber of Commerce publication. "Through NAWBO, women business owners were able to meet and turn to one another for support and information."

Mrs. Hager, who was described as "a mover and shaker and a doer," advocated on Capitol Hill and with federal agencies and local government for women and small-business owners.

She testified before U.S. Senate and House committees, the D.C. Council and the U.S. Civil Rights Commission. She met with presidents Richard Nixon, Jimmy Carter, Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton and urged them to change the business operating environment for female business owners and small-business entrepreneurs.

She was one of 25 people "whose actions over the last quarter century have given women in the workplace a better shot," Working Woman Magazine said in 2001.


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