Introducing: Business Gift Giving Guide for the Holidays

Here in the United States, the Thanksgiving holiday and Black Friday (officially one of the biggest shopping days of the Christmas Holiday season) is almost upon us.

And just in time we’d like to share our Guide to Business Gift Giving for the Holidays.

Business gift guideWe’ve assembled a comprehensive collection of resources to help you.  These resources include:

  • Basics (who you should give to; gift giving mistakes to avoid; and packaging and shipping tips).
  • Budget (deciding between cash, gift or a greeting card;  how much to spend; low-cost gifts for tight budgets).
  • Gift Ideas (gift ideas specifically for business associates, clients/customers and employees; and last-minute gift ideas)

Best of all:  it’s designed specifically for small businesses and entrepreneurs, for business gifting.

You might wonder why we didn’t just put them in a single article.  The reason is simple:  there’s so much there, it would be too hard to read everything on a single page. That’s why we set up a special page where you can find everything in manageable chunks.  Please enjoy!

From Small Business Trends

Introducing: Business Gift Giving Guide for the Holidays

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Easy-to-read eBook introducing people to internet marketing

A useful eBook that is designed to most help those that are new to the world of internet marketing. Readers are guided through tried and tested ways of making money online.
Easy-to-read eBook introducing people to internet marketing

Introducing white space links

Whitespace The challenge of monetizing the web is a tricky one, but a new venture launched right here and right now is out to solve that problem.

YOU FOUND ONE. CALL US TO BUY THIS SPACE!

It’s called whItespAcelInks. 

VISIT OUR SNACKBAR.ORG PLEASE

There’s all this unused white space on the web. Spaces in between paragraphs or links. Wasted.

ARE YOU THIRSTY? TIME FOR A SOFT DRINK.

Consumers are tired of being overwhelmed by ads and by pages that are stuffed to the gills with ads. What if the ads were invisible? What if we could insert links into the white spaces, links you didn’t have to see but could still be clicked on? What if those ads were carefully targeted, location-based and mobile?

IT WORKS FOR LINKS, TOO: http://www.squidoo.com/seth

This is even better than permission marketing. It’s invisible marketing.

PLEASE DON’T TELL ANYONE

In one fell swoop (does anything ever happen in two fell swoops?) we can double or triple the ad inventory of any website! And there’s no need for complicated creative, because, after all, the links are invisible.

Some highlights from the funding plan:

  • We will track every user, protecting privacy by never talking about the fact that we’re doing it.
  • We will create persistent browser tools that permit us to generate whItespAcelInks revenue even when you’re not online.
  • There will be no push back from regulators because the links are invisible.
  • Will there be Android? Yes. There will.
  • An iPad app? I can’t believe you even need to ask. In fact, the iPad app will be so appy that people will pay for it by subscription.

HAVE A GOOD APRIL. DON’T TAKE ANYTHING AT FACE VALUE.

First round funding, announced today, is $11 million. We wanted to keep it modest and prove ourselves in the marketplace. The biggest challenge for us going forward is that the service only runs one day a year.

View full post on Seth’s Blog

Introducing Local Search Pro


Introducing Local Search Pro

This content from: Duct Tape Marketing

If you’re even a casual reader of this blog, I’m pretty sure you’ve noticed that I’ve been writing about local search a lot. It’s not that I think it’s this year’s hot topic, I’ve been writing about it for years, it just seems like small businesses are finally getting around to realizing the importance of showing up when people go out searching for things in their town.

local search proA combination of a renewed emphasis on local by all of the major search engines and the onslaught of mobile search has made this topic impossible to ignore and dangerous to sit out.

To help small business owners take a practical and systematic approach to learning and embracing the strategies and tactics that will help their local sites rise to the top in the local search game, I’ve developed a four session, self-guided course, complete with video lessons, tips and resources. Local Search Pro is an online course that’s delivered in precisely the right order, over a four week time frame. This sequential delivery mechanism allows you to complete each week’s action steps before moving on to the next lesson.

The slides below make up the outline of the entire course and give a glimpse into my systematic approach. You can find out more about Local Search Pro here.

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

Introducing Small Business Saturday


Introducing Small Business Saturday

This content from: Duct Tape Marketing

Small Business SaturdayFirst came Black Friday, then came Cyber Monday, and now, on November 27th comes Small Business Saturday, a day to support the local businesses that create jobs, boost the economy and preserve neighborhoods around the country. (News coverage of the announcement)

According to the SBA over the last decade small businesses have accounted for 60-80% of all new jobs.

American Express OPEN and dozens of other advocacy groups are driving the push to make a focus on local small business national shopping phenomenon this season that, hopefully, carries on throughout the year.

Research conducted by the 3/50 project suggests that for every $100 spent in locally-owned, independent stores, $68 returns to the community through taxes, payroll and other expenditures – far greater than national chains.

This holiday of sorts also presents a great excuse to get out into your community to discover those one of kind hidden business treasures where you may very likely meet the owner face to face.

As you may be aware, OPEN is a client of mine, but you also know my passion for the small, local business. This is a movement that I have no problem getting behind completely and hope you will too.

The initiative is multi-faceted. Here are a few of the highlights:

  • Consumers are encouraged to celebrate the businesses they care about through social media sharing tools built into smallbusinesssaturday.com and facebook.com/smallbusinesssaturday;
  • The first 10,000 business owners who sign up will receive $100 in free Facebook advertising;
  • Business owners can download promotional materials and social tools to promote their businesses;
  • For American Express card members, the first 250,000 to pre-register their card and then spend at least $25 on Small Business Saturday at a small, independently-owned small business will receive a $25 statement credit.

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

Introducing Jimmy “The Rent is Too Damn High” McMillan

New York gubernatorial candidate Jimmy McMillan presented his platform for the “The Rent is Too Damn High” party at yesterday’s debates. I think he won, because he’s right…the rent is too damn high. (Video above is from The Daily Beast).


View full post on Business Pundit

Introducing the Small Business Technology Tour: Free Tickets

Small Business Trends is excited to invite you to attend the Small Business Technology Tour 2010. And we have some special offers for you.

This one-day event is coming to one of 5 cities near you:

Mountain View, CA  (Sep 28)
Salt Lake City (Oct 14)
Atlanta (Oct 25)
Washington DC (Nov 5)
Boston (Nov 8)

You’ll network with your peers. Learn from experts. Speak with technology vendors. Participate in discussions. Eat. Win Prizes. And more – all with the goal of seeing how you can leverage technology and empower your business for growth.The tour, which takes place in five cities is all about helping you use technology as a tool to grow your business.

You’ll learn from experts in business and technology and leave with more information on how to strategically leverage technology for the growth of your business. At the tour you’ll learn how to save time, save money, be more productive, increase revenue and enhance relationships all by using technology.

10 FREE Tickets – Twitter Contest

And we have a special treat just for friends and readers of Small Business Trends.  We’re giving away 10 free tickets to the event.  If you’d like to qualify for the random drawing to win one of the tickets to the city of your choice, then just tweet the following message on Twitter no later than September 15, 2010:

I want to attend the Small Business Technology Tour 2010:  http://bit.ly/96udBU  RT  @Smallbiztrends  #smallbiztechtour

We’ll take all the entries and draw the 10 winners by September 17, 2010.

Or Register for 50% Discount

Don’t want to wait for the random drawing?  Then just go straight here to register today at http://www.smallbiztechtour.com.  If you use the following discount code you can get 50% off the entrance price:  SMBTRENDSDISC.  Twenty discount tickets are available.  Hurry — first come, first served.

From Small Business Trends

Introducing the Small Business Technology Tour: Free Tickets

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

Social Media Might Be Introducing 140 Characters To 140 Other Planets?

Five years ago when 140 characters shook this planet with the introduction a new social interaction platform that allowed man to communicate with folks…
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Introducing The Tales Of Micro-Multinationals

Introducing The Tales Of Micro-MultinationalsThis is the era of tiny companies that operate globally. These micro versions of multinationals outsource almost everything to specialists all over the world and sell to people all over the world through the Internet.

In olden days, “multinational” meant big. And it took a long time to get there. You started locally, then you expanded within a local region, then you went national and finally you went multinational. Now we see companies going global from day one, enabled by the Internet.

We will chronicle the real stories behind this transformation in business. We are interviewing the founders and managers of these micro-multinationals to find out what it is really like to manage a business at the leading edge of this trend.

First, we want to separate this from two trends that look similar at first sight:

1. Virtual companies: This tends to mean that there is no physical office that everybody commutes to. The problem is that the term “virtual company” sounds unreal, or insubstantial. These companies are very real, with real products/services that their customers rely upon, real revenues and profits and the people who work there rely on getting paid by these companies to pay their bills.

2. Telecommuting: Traditional companies have worked with “telecommuting” employees for a long time. The arrival of Net based collaboration tools make that a lot easier. This saves on office rent and enables companies to retain employees who need a more flexible schedule. 

Telecommuting is great and the trend will increase. But it is very different from the genuinely networked companies in one critical aspect. In a traditional company, the physical office is still the core and the “remote workers” have to work hard to “stay in the loop”. In a genuinely networked company, nobody is out of the loop, there is no core to be remote from and everybody has to make the online tools work.

This is about talent

When your product is digital (designs, code, SEO, writing, advice, finance, whatever), location of people who create your product is simply irrelevant. You would be crazy to restrict your search for employees, contractors, partners, vendors (all being “talent”) by zip code.

The Product Can Still Be Physical

You can design something and send it to get made in China, assemble a site that attracts traffic, bung in some simple e-commerce and then outsource the pick and pack fulfillment.

This is what has been called Punk Manufacturing and Chris Anderson at Wired hailed as the next Industrial Revolution.

Kicking Off The Series Is Generation Alliance

This is the first in a series of five articles on micro-multinationals. Next is Generation Alliance, a company “headquartered” in Australia and – you guessed it – doing business globally. If you run a micro-multinational and want to tell your tale to the world, send an email to bernard dot lunn at gmail dot com.

From Small Business Trends

Introducing The Tales Of Micro-Multinationals

View full post on Small Business Trends

Introducing: Internet and social media etiquette

http://homewealthproject.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/1/files/HLIC/7bbf5324b560a0a80dee68acf8e90d98.jpg – Adam Hanft, marketing consultant and journalist, and coauthor of the “Dictionary of the Future,” in a Monitor op-ed about social media…
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