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Interview With Jerry Mills: Take a Break to Be Productive

Jerry Mills of B2B CFOYou might not expect the author of two business books, speaker, contributor, and founder of B2B CFO® to be into yoga and tai chi, but that’s exactly what helps Jerry Mills stay balanced between work and life. He practices regularly and also strives to read nonfiction books:

“I often have my most creative business ideas after I have lost myself for a few hours in a good murder mystery. It seems that the human mind needs a break in order to be most productive.”

And productive he is. His firm, B2B CFO®, provides part-time CFO services to small and midsized businesses. Currently, the company boasts 200 B2B Partners who serve more than 750 clients with combined annual sales totaling $5 billion dollars. In the next five years, Mills expects to have 400 partners and $45 million in sales. It’s no wonder he made the list of Small Business Influencer Champions this year.

Mills attributes his firm’s success to recruiting top professionals, being on the cutting edge of technology and hiring a stellar public relations firm.

Jumping in With Both Feet

Mills was reluctant to start his business back in 1987, but some valuable advice got him moving:

“A man named Roger gave me some good advice. He said, ‘Jerry, the hardest thing you need to do is to make the decision. Once you make the decision, everything else will fall into place about what you need to do to grow your business.’ He was 100 percent correct.”

And while technology is a huge part of B2B CFO’s® platform now, if Mills has any regrets, it’s that he didn’t dive into technology sooner. He says he wasn’t proactive enough upfront about technology, and wishes he had spent more time and money investing in it early on.

Back to Balance

We hear a lot about work/life balance, but few business owners truly practice it. Mills insists that it be part of every leader’s life:

“If every small business owner had an extra hour in their day, they should rotate that time doing two things: (1) exercising and (2) reading good non-business books.”

If reading good books and practicing Pilates will give us the success you’ve got, Jerry, we’re on board.

Jerry Mills was recognized as a Small Business Influencer Champion for 2011. Read more of our Small Business Influencer Champion interviews.

From Small Business Trends

Interview With Jerry Mills: Take a Break to Be Productive

View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends

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My Big Break – What Was Yours?



In most businesses there’s no such thing as an overnight success.

People suddenly become aware of a business or person and assume it or he or she came out of nowhere “overnight.” Usually, though, you don’t see the years of preparation and work behind the scenes. Nor do you see the winding path and all the dead ends and false starts and retries.

Many factors play into success.  We might think any small amount of success we have is due to hard work or brilliance.  But chances are some of it was luck.  And often, we owe it to a person who took the time to mentor us or who simply took a chance on us. Or pushed us out of our comfort zone.

I’ve had several careers:  as a corporate attorney and General Counsel; as a CEO of a technology company; and as an entrepreneur building my own business.  In each of those careers, I’ve had at least one event that made all the difference.  Those events ultimately can be traced back to a person who inspired me or mentored me, or who just gave me a push out of my comfort zone.

One such break gave me the confidence to start Small Business Trends LLC, my current business — even though it occurred years earlier.

You see, my academic training is as an attorney.  I spent most of my legal career in-house working for corporations. Yet I was always drawn to business, even while an attorney. Being an attorney felt too restrictive  because most of the time I was in the role of advisor.  Oh I had plenty of prestige and power — after all, my word was law when it came to anything legal.

But I wanted to be the one making the decisions on business deals, not just advising. I might have gone on indefinitely as a General Counsel working in corporate law, and silently chafing in a role that I perceived as being on the sidelines of business, but for that fateful day….

My big break came when my boss at the time (the CEO of the company I worked for) walked into my office one morning and announced that I was going to be the new Vice President of Human Resources in addition to General Counsel. And 2 minutes later he walked out.

It wasn’t a request.  I didn’t apply for the HR role.  I had no interviews. It  happened — just like that.

Now, you might not consider that a “big break.”  The role was not a promotion — just an additional responsibility.

But you see, that’s the point about big breaks.  You can’t always tell at the time they happen, that they are a big break.  It’s only later when you look back that you see the momentous change.

The reason I consider it my big break?  Simple. It forced me outside of my comfort zone.

Suddenly I was responsible for new areas that I had to scramble to master.  I had to learn new things. The company I worked for promptly sent me off to the University of Michigan Business School for a crash course in executive education.  It was the beginning of my transition away from the law and feet first into business roles.

From there I held a variety of senior executive positions. Eventually I became the CEO of a subsidiary of the company I worked for.  With each new role, my knowledge grew.  I was tested again and again — and it wasn’t always pretty.

But along the way the most important thing happened.  My confidence grew.

Had it not been for my boss forcing me to go outside my comfort zone, who knows?  I might still be a General Counsel.  I don’t think I would have gained the confidence to become an entrepreneur and start my own business.

And I would have missed out on the most rewarding part of my career: being a business owner.

How about you?  What was your big break?  Was it something that pushed you out of your comfort zone, like me?  Or was it landing a big customer?   Or something different?  Tell us in the comments below.

* * * * *

Thanks to American Express OPEN for sponsoring this post as part of the Big Break for Small Business program. Visit FaceBook.com to learn more about the Big Break contest. Enter your small business for a chance to win a trip to Facebook headquarters for a one-on-one business makeover and $20,000 to grow your business with social media. See Official Rules for complete details.

From Small Business Trends

My Big Break – What Was Yours?

View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends

My Big Break – Sponsored Post


My Big Break – Sponsored Post

This content from: Duct Tape Marketing

Thanks to American Express OPEN for sponsoring this post as part of the Big Break for Small Business program. Visit FaceBook.com to learn more about the Big Break contest. Enter your small business for a chance to win a trip to Facebook headquarters for a one-on-one business makeover and $20,000 to grow your business with social media. See Official Rules for complete details.

It’s pretty easy to look around at people in your world that seem to have accomplished a measure of success and neglect to consider the ups and downs, flat out failures and lessons learned, and heart and soul that gets poured into creating the next 25 year over night success.

American Express asked me to share my story, my big break, as a way to perhaps inspire, or at least inform, someone else out there waiting for something to break.

Image mendhak via Flickr

When most people think of someone getting that big break they think in terms of a helping hand from a stranger or a mentor. (Chris Brogan tells just such a story as his big break) In my case, my big break came in the form of a grand jury summons and big fat slap in the face.

Now, I know this isn’t sounding like much of a break and, believe me, at the time I didn’t view it this way, but here’s the story.

I started my own marketing agency over 25 years ago and scrambled to find and deliver work with little more long term vision than making the next month’s overhead. Today I school lots of business owners on the virtues of vision and strategy and I can do it from a place of experiential knowledge.

About ten years in my business had grown beyond what I could have imagined and I was doing work for some very high profile institutions and causes. One sunny afternoon a couple of FBI agents showed up at my door to hand deliver an invitation to appear before a grand jury that was looking into the activities of several of my clients.

Now, no one was investigating me, I wasn’t guilty of anything illegal, but I was scared to death. If you let it, the hustle to grow your business can pull you outside of your ethical framework and blur what should be obvious decisions. I wasn’t doing anything wrong, but did I suspect a couple of my clients may have been – perhaps.

So, this moment of intense fear and thoughts of letting myself and my family down actually turned into my big break because it gave me the kind of wake up I needed to remake my business in the form that truly served what I came to understand was my purpose in life.

My big break forced me to discover what I needed to do in my business in order for it serve what I needed to do in my life. At that moment, I vowed never again to work with clients that I didn’t respect and admire. Along the way I discovered that few things gave me more of a charge than helping small business owners realize what a freeing and enjoyable ride owning a small business can be – and that’s the higher purpose that makes what I do so fun today.

Below are three lessons that I’ve come to employ as I continue to learn and grow from my big break everyday.

1) Do work that feels like play

There’s a lot said about doing something you love and, while I won’t argue with the virtue in that, I’ll take it a step farther. I love what I do, but I get paid for what I finish. It’s that last 10% often that dictates whether or not a project is a success.

It’s very easy to get passionate about a venture in the beginning, but the true measure of staying power is in the pride to see something through to the end.

Work that feels like play to you will inspire you to finish.

2) Keep working on purpose

A lot of folks wring their hands about finding work that serves a purpose. What I’ve discovered is that purpose finds you, not the other way around. In the beginning it’s very hard to know why you’re doing what you’re doing, but ultimately purpose will evolve or you won’t stick with it.

Keep an eye out what for what really drives you to do what you do. A higher purpose is what makes this thing worth all the crap that comes with it, but don’t sweat it, live it.

3) Serve customers you respect

I’ve said that marketing is getting someone who has a need to know, like and trust you, but the opposite, I believe, is true as well. In the long run, if you can’t attract clients that you come to know, like and trust – and ultimately respect – then it’s hard to perform in a way that feels very authentic.

Customer service is mostly about mutual respect.

View full post on Small Business Marketing Blog from Duct Tape Marketing

How to Break Into the Beauty Business

Before I launched the Indie Beauty Network (IBN) in 2000, I owned a small cosmetics company in my hometown of Washington, DC. While I enjoyed making and selling products, I quickly noticed that my soaps and lotions were not nearly as appealing as those offered by many of my colleagues. My gift is not in making products, but in helping other people successfully market the products they make, and IBN was born from this passion.

Over the years, I have seen thousands of beauty companies come and go. All day, every day, I am assessing, consuming, filtering and slogging through a boatload of industry information. This process allows me to observe the habits of successful and unsuccessful companies, many of which are highlighted in Indie Beauty University, which I host and lead. Not surprisingly, I’ve learned what works and doesn’t work. If you think 2011 is the year you’ll break into the beauty business, or make an existing beauty business more successful, these tips will help steer you in the right direction.

Break Into The Beauty Business

1. Establish a niche.

Many beauty startups invest way too much time researching and perfecting recipes and product lines before (or without ever) identifying a precise niche market. Since everyone uses soap and lotion, it stands to reason that everyone also buys it. But that doesn’t mean they’ll buy it from you, and that’s what matters to your business. Of course you must develop good-quality products before launching, but you have to do it quickly, and you must simultaneously identify your niche.

As good as your products are, someone else’s are better, or even if they’re not, they do a better job of selling them. But if you have a niche, you can “own” a specific part of the market and fill it with people who love not only your products, but also you and your brand. These buyer personas (as David Meerman Scott describes them) have specific problems that can be solved only by specific products offered by you. The process of identifying the problem your products address leads directly to a unique niche that only you can fill.

La Dolce Diva, an Atlanta-based bath and body line by Jennifer Kirkwood, offers a good example of serving a specific niche. Jennifer’s fashion design career took her around the globe. She’s a fun, hip diva girl who loves to travel but, as she says, her heart is always in Italy. From the Italian landscape to the delicious gelato and biscotti, Jennifer knows Italy and she shares her passion through her upscale, high-end products. Products like Almond Biscotti Sugar Scrub, Limoncello Hand Wash, and Gelato Shea Body Butter are aimed squarely at a specific buyer persona — people who see themselves as well-traveled divas.

2. Keep it simple.

There are countless ingredients, fragrances, bottles and packaging options available to you as a cosmetics manufacturer. So many, in fact, that you could spend a lifetime creating fancy products with the latest and greatest ingredients — and still never turn a profit. At some point, you have to decide on something simple and effective, and then market the heck out of it.

Think about it. The market is saturated with companies making ridiculous claims that their products can get rid of wrinkles, keep your hair from falling out, or make your nail polish last forever. You may feel like you have to compete with these claims to be successful, but you don’t.

New Jersey-based Pookie is a good example of this. Started by college chums, the company launched in 2001 with a line of seven scented, colored lip balms sold in silver quarter-ounce tins. (You can see how simple things were by checking out the archived version of their 2001 website.)

Once Pookie established a reputation for delivering quality lip balm, they added the option of buying it in an opaque tube with a top to match the scent and color. Then they added customized lip balm for showers and weddings. Later, they added body wash and lotion. The effectiveness of their simple, measured launch strategy is made clear on the page announcing the new products. It says:

“You’ve fallen in love with our Lip Balms and ColorBalms®. Pookie® is now pleased to bring you Pookamint™, a refreshing and invigorating combination of Spearmint, Vanilla and Peppermint oils that will refresh and nourish your skin!!”

Trying to be all things to all people will send you straight to bankruptcy court, an asylum or both! Keep it simple, establish your platform, and enjoy the process of measured growth that establishes your crediblity and sets up your business for long-term success.

3. Build your network (then participate in it).

One of the most important things you can do when trying to break into the beauty business is to build your network of industry contacts. Seek out events and opportunities to meet as many industry participants, particularly successful ones, as you can. Attend networking events, subscribe to and comment on blogs, tweet and retweet industry information of interest, and contribute original information to the discussion.

The first place that industry professionals look when they want to expand, take on a new project, share a new opportunity or collaborate on a new line is within their own network. For example, last week, Emily Caswell of Maine-based GCDSpa learned of an opportunity to create private-label products for a gourmet chocolate store and shared the opportunity at our large, beauty-industry-focused social networking site. In so doing, Emily made an opportunity easily and efficiently available to thousands of people at once.

You may wish to join the Indie Beauty Network as well, to collaborate with other industry participants and enjoy focused training, networking and resources.

If you are not a part of a few focused communities, you will not be able to connect efficiently with your peers, and you may miss out on opportunities like the one Emily shared so freely.  You’ll also want to connect with beauty bloggers. The best place to do that is at the Beauty Blogger’s Network. It’s great to find so many of them all in one place, making it easy for you to choose which bloggers would be the best ones to develop relationships with.

4. Remember that the media is you!

After 11+ years in business, I am absolutely persuaded that you are the best media outlet for your business. I teach these principles in The Media Is You Workshops online and nationwide. It’s great to be featured in the pages of the nation’s top women’s magazines, but nothing provides the depth, consistency and richness of experience needed to maintain a strong market position like branded magazines, books newsletter, podcasts, Twitter streams, Facebook pages, etc., that allow your customers to connect with you on their terms whenever they are ready to hear from you.

There are so many social media tools, and you must be careful not to use them just to use them. I’m not saying you should not experiment. You should; that’s how you learn. But time is money, and your experimentation should be to specific ends. Here are some examples to get your creative juices flowing.

Brambleberry a Bellingham, Washington, online retailer of soap-making ingredients, makes videos to show people how to make soaps using the ingredients she sells. Each video is posted at her YouTube page, tweeted, and added to FaceBook and her blog. Her community members often use the embed code to share her videos at their blogs.

Brambleberry has over 5,000 people at her FaceBook Page — all of them chatting it up about soap and looking to the company to provide guidance, encouragement and inspiration. Over the past few years, Brambleberry’s use of social media has allowed it to cut public relations and traditional advertising costs, making the business more profitable than ever.

Video is not the only way to skin the media production cat. Take Texas-based LA Minerals, for example. At first frustrated by Twitter, Lorraine stuck with it. Today, she says the key is “giving your followers a reason to click or retweet.” I couldn’t agree more. As Lorraine suggests, “mix personal, light-hearted stuff with information, news and links to your blog.” As Lorraine knows, it takes consistency and focus, and the ever-increasing amount of engagement she sparks at her Twitter page is proof.

Also consider Soapylove, the San Diego company that publishes an ezine of the same name. Created using the inexpensive Microsoft Publisher software program, the ezine includes soapmaking techniques and how-to articles, and features photographs taken by Debbie Chialtas, Soapylove’s founder.

You might also consider these innovative beauty companies: Joan Morais’s ebooks, and Elin Criswell’s newly released soapmaking book.

And since beauty products are more than soap and lotion, check out Virginia-based Charlene Sevier’s Flickr stream showcasing her beautiful handmade jewelry. Each of these business leaders has selected media that works best to accomplish their specific goals within their niche. You can do this too!

Just remember that there is no magic bullet. The idea is to publish information that is meaningful to people in your network, including your customers, industry colleagues and women in general. Create a system that gets results for you by repeating what works well and not repeating what doesn’t. Connect with industry friends (see the importance of a network, above) to discover what works best for others. Engage people who care about the same things you care about, and your efforts will pay off in increased visibility and more sales!

6. Leverage new opportunities.

Most beauty startups tend to manufacture products they use themselves, overlooking market opportunities in plain sight. For example, according to a recent article published by Euromonitor, a global market watchdog, the men’s grooming market is “relatively small and easy to break into.” While that article focuses on opportunities for multinational companies like Procter & Gamble, the same holds true for small and independent startups. Don’t limit your options by making only products you would use.

Another option is to add a unique spin on an existing type of product. For example, Berkeley, California-based Ganache For Lips takes the simple combination of ingredients in lip balm to a new level by adding gourmet Scharffen Berger unsweetened chocolate to the mix. All the other ingredients are commonly found in dozens of lip balms sold by thousands of companies every day. By adding one simple ingredient, the company is making a potentially mundane product more exciting — and is able to increase profit margins as a result. After all, you can charge more for a tube of lip balm containing chocolate than you can for one that does not — yet it takes the same basic amount of effort to make each product.

7. Keep up with regulations and trends.

Contrary to numerous erroneous reports by traditional media and bloggers across the Web, cosmetics manufacturers and products are regulated by federal law pursuant to the U.S. Food, Drug & Cosmetics Act, which is enforced by the U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA), and sometimes via state law as well. Use of the term “organic” on a beauty product labels is governed by the U.S. Department Of Agriculture’s National Organic Program.

(Check for any state laws as well. While there are very few of them, you should be proactive about finding out whether you live in a state that regulates cosmetics companies at the local level.) Read the regulations, understand them and make sure you follow them. Not only will this keep you out of trouble, but it will also build your credibility in the industry.

One way to keep up with regulatory and industry trends is to subscribe to industry trade publications, some of which are free. A few examples are Global Cosmetics Industry, Happi Magazine and Beauty Packaging Magazine.

These are easy and inexpensive ways to continually read up on new and coming trends, including things like eco-packaging and green ingredient and manufacturing options.

While product liability insurance is not required, it is a good idea to procure at least $1 million in coverage so you can operate your business knowing you can protect your assets if someone claims to have been damaged by one of your products.

Join the fun!

Like all other industries, the beauty industry is expanding at a rapid clip. It is advancing and changing very quickly, with new competitors, products, services, ingredients and services arriving on the scene each day. If 2011 is your year to take your beauty business to the next level, use these tips to join the fun in an industry that is full of opportunities for growth and success!

From Small Business Trends

How to Break Into the Beauty Business

View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends

Inventory Management: Make or Break Your Business

Do you know what’s in your business inventory at this very moment? Can you easily find or follow where your inventory is being used and by what departments?

Using various tactics and techniques, along with trusting technology to handle your inventory, can put you on the path to making profit and sticking tightly with your financial projections.

What are some ways to manage your inventory?

1. Be Aggressive

Inventory can be a valuable or a costly asset, depending on how it’s handled and the turnover rate. Unused and unsold inventory sitting in storage does nothing but decrease in value over time, especially if it’s a perishable item such as cosmetics or food products. Inventory requires space, power, insurance and interest to carry, therefore moving it quickly is smarter financially. Inventory with no sales equals a dwindling profit margin. The inventory is paid for when it’s purchased, and the longer it takes to see a return on the investment can cause your business to lose money slowly over a period of time.

2. Negotiate Terms

Negotiating terms with suppliers is one of the very best things for a business to do to manage their inventories. Suppliers definitely want your business and may be willing to negotiate terms to get it and keep it.

You can reasonably negotiate to extend your payment terms or propose arrangements for product consignments. In a product consignment setup, you and the manufacturer split the profit costs, and can save your business money in the long run.

You can also use vendor managed systems where the supplier absorbs more of the associated costs. This is much like the drop shipment method, where your company doesn’t store any of the inventory and the manufacturer is responsible for shipping the item(s) directly to the consumer or client.

3. Use Smart Financing

Think creatively and frugally when you decide on the type of inventory financing to use in your business. Many business financing companies can provide you with lenders who can connect you with financial services that are conducive to your own business industry and methods.

Good financing in inventory management will ensure that payment terms and arrangements with the vendor are substantially longer than the terms offered to your customer base. This method allows you to rotate your cash without grossly affecting your budget. This also ensures that your inventory has time to go through the entire process without interruptions, since there is time for the products to be paid for by the consumer, and time for the cash to go through your books and garner a profit in time for you to pay your vendors.

4. Frequently Rotate Inventory

When inventory is frequent rotated, downtime is decreased on unused or unsalable inventory that is on your warehouse shelves. You can eliminate inventory regularly by offering discounts and special promotions on products.

The idea is to constantly keep your inventory moving, salable, and in demand. Offering special promotions also stokes the interest of your customers. They will gladly look forward to any product discounts that are offered by the company. Fairly set your profit margin to see gain if this becomes necessary, so as not to lose money on sales.

Many businesses that use ERP software can track this information about their inventory while ensuring that it is all being maximally used. But you also need to know what’s going on, yourself, in order to change your strategy.

You don’t want to break your business, so make sure you’re working smart and not hard to avoid mistakes. Leverage every possible asset you have.


View full post on Business Pundit

Obama to Push Tax Break for Business Investment

http://homewealthproject.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/1/files/HLIC/896a5e0e641b456a40c3165dd47ef179.jpg President Obama will propose that companies… 2011, a plan that White House economists say would cut business taxes by nearly $200 billion over two years.
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Biz Break: Forget 3-D; consumers want their Internet TV

Today: Internet-enabled TVs are more popular than expensive 3-D sets, an industry researcher says. Plus: Tech news from Apple, Adobe, PayPal and…
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Big media’s losses on social networking sites break through £1bn barrier

http://homewealthproject.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/1/files/HLIC/45a3b0b004318b7ee12b6d80e1275c4f.jpg The media industry has now lost $1.5bn (£1bn) on investments in the social networking craze after AOL sold Bebo last week for a fraction of…
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