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Extensive Research On How To Build Wealth From The Comfort Of Your Own Home.
Extensive Research On How To Build Wealth From The Comfort Of Your Own Home.
Feb 8th
Ok, I am a Pinterest newbie, arriving on the site because of the enthusiasm of an artist friend, Ann Kelle. As a surface designer, naturally Pinterest is one of her online stomping grounds. However, I’m a writer active in the small business arena so I was slow to respond to her excitement and reminders.

However, after attending a series of small business classes filled with artists and shop owners in the home and decor industry, it was easy to see that this social network is a mainstay for this creative group of entrepreneurs. And I wanted to know why. So I finally signed up. And quickly became addicted.
Something About Pinterest: Organic, Easy to Use
If you see something you like, then you “pin it” to one of your boards. Uou can come back to it whenever you need or want to. It’s fun. It’s mesmerizing. But is it business relevant?
Well, if a picture is worth a thousand words, then Pinterest is really on to something. It’s like an online scrapbook but better than that. It’s a little haven for the “neat freak” in some of us and perfect for the messy creative types too.
According to social media strategist, Kathryn Rose, “Pinterest is a great way to create interest in, and drive traffic to your blog posts.” Remember, traffic is the potential for conversion. Casual visitors to your website can become loyal subscribers and eventually paying customers (if you’ve prepped your site for the traffic but that’s a different post).
Kathryn uses the second half of her “in-depth look” to give you some specific things you can do to maximize the SEO benefits and in turn get more traffic. Reb Carlson, Founder of NY Creative Interns, provides four tips to help you enjoy and add to the Pinterest community.
If You Fall in Love With Pinterest
Decide to make it your next social media hang out. Consider Reb Carlson’s advice:
“Brands need to be creative in order to fit with the environment without being disruptive.”
It’s a creative space so be sure to honor that. Have fun at Pinterest and start pinning some pictures or videos, including ones from your own website, and check out the pin boards of others, too.
Push Pin Photo via Shutterstock
A Picture Is Worth A 1000 Words: Pinterest Is On To Something
View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Jun 8th
How are small business owners feeling about their financial situation these days? According to Capital One’s latest Small Business Barometer Survey, there’s good news and bad news. The good news is small business owners overall are more optimistic about the future. The bad news is, they’re still not quite ready to spend and hire.
Capital One’s quarterly survey polls small businesses nationwide about their current financial condition and their projections for the next six months. The most recent report, which surveyed entrepreneurs about the first quarter of 2011, shows many small businesses’ financial performance is improving, but their economic outlook, although optimistic, is still guarded.
“Many small businesses in the U.S. are on increasingly solid ground and, while we are still seeing businesses taking a cautious approach to spending and hiring, overall business conditions appear to be improving and their economic outlook has been growing more positive over the past two quarters,” says Pete Appello, Executive Vice President of Small Business Banking at Capital One.
Here are some specifics from the survey:
But while their finances are improving, U.S. small businesses are still keeping a tight hold on the purse strings. Fewer than one-third (29 percent) expect to add employees over the next six months, which is similar to previous results over the past year.
And slightly less than one-fourth (23 percent) say they plan to increase spending on business development or investments in the next six months. Most (67 percent) will keep spending at current levels.
When asked what challenges will affect their businesses in the next six months, competition was key. Thirty percent of respondents say competitors will place “quite a lot” or “extreme” pressure on their businesses during the next six months.
Prices were also an issue. One-fourth expect fuel prices will place “extreme” or “quite a lot” of pressure on their businesses over the next six months. And 21 percent say that price margins and profitability will place “quite a lot” or “extreme” pressure on their businesses in the near future.
Interestingly, cash flow, interest rates and customer payments were of much less concern to small businesses. All of this suggests that small businesses are nearly out of the woods when it comes to many financial issues…but could quickly find themselves back in dire straits if economic pressures don’t ease.
Small Business’s Financial Picture: Are We Out of the Woods Yet?
View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Sep 7th
August was crowded, as far as small business research goes. So, without further ado, here’s a good sampling:
Devil in The Details
Verizon released a survey late last month which found that larger-revenue small businesses are more likely to have Web sites than smaller- revenue firms — at least, within limits.
They found that 56 percent of firms with revenues between $250,000 and $750,000 have company Web sites, while a much more substantial 73 percent of firms earning between $750 and $2 million have company Web sites.
There were also a number of drop-dead-obvious findings, like the fact that having a Web site makes you better at estimating how much time it takes to maintain one, and some stuff that could make your eyes cross, like the fact that you’re less likely to know how to attract customers to your Web site if you don’t have one.
It would have been interesting to see how even lower-revenue firms (under $250,000) would have fared with this survey. I suspect that Verizon might have replicated other market research I’ve seen lately, which found that online microbusinesses are even more likely to have company Web sites.
Other small business market research released last month from pay-per-click search network operator LookSmart found that SMB advertisers rank ROI as their top priority in PPC campaigns (63 percent), followed somewhat closely by traffic quality (53 percent).
The LookSmart bright boys seemed a little surprised at another finding: the low priority given to customer service by SMBs — although it’s not too shocking, given that most of their customers use their self-service platform.
Development, Without the Bright Lights and Big Cities
Growing rural economies was a somewhat hot topic in research-land in August, thanks to a couple of papers that tackle the unique challenges of rural economic development in the 21st century global economy.
The International City/County Management Association (ICMA) released a paper highlighting “smart growth strategies that can help guide rural growth while preserving the unique rural character of existing communities.” Those strategies basically boil down to supporting the viability of traditional land uses (i.e., farming); helping communities to preserve existing, historically vested places; and building vibrant new places that will draw and hold population (especially young population).
The other paper gets into the nitty-gritty of rural development in the Midwest, where manufacturing had been the heart and soul of local economies. Those industrial concerns have faded fast, and Midwestern rural economies have faded too. Development authorities continue to compete in what they call “industrial recruitment” — smokestack chasing.
In this paper (Past Silos and Smokestacks: Transforming the Rural Economy in the Midwest), Mark Drabenstott, Director of the Center for Regional Competitiveness at the Rural Policy Research Institute, argues that 21st century economic strategies demand regional partnerships that leverage rural resources to compete globally.
“Only by combining their forces to create new businesses and good jobs at home will the towns and counties of the rural Midwest compete and thrive in a global economy where this kind of collaboration is fast becoming the norm,” writes Dr. Drabenstott.
While these two papers are very different in their orientation, they both say essentially the same thing: The way policymakers and development experts are thinking about rural development isn’t working. That means they need to do something else, ne?
I wouldn’t have thought you’d need a Ph.D. to figure that out, but what do I know?
Jobs Growth — or Not — in August
So, what about those jobs-jobs-jobs?
The consensus right now seems to be that the recovery has a case of the hiccups … or something. We’re expecting the August employment situation release from the Labor Department on Friday but, in the meantime, the August 2010 National Employment Report from ADP was just released.
The picture is not what I’d call encouraging.
For starters, the previous estimate of 42,000 new jobs from June to July was revised downward to 37,000 jobs. Even worse, August was a tough month, especially for small businesses.
After registering job growth for six straight months, ADP’s estimate for private sector non-farm employment change declined by 10,000 jobs. Large firms saw a net job increase of 1,000, but both categories of small firms experienced net decreases.
Medium-sized firms (50-499 employees) had a net decline of 6,000 jobs and small firms (1-49 employees) had a net decline of 5,000.
In light of some other discouraging economic news, you have to wonder: wither away, recovery?
Late Summer Releases From the SBA Office of Advocacy
Are the self-employed changing? Are there real differences between generations of entrepreneurs?
The SBA Office of Advocacy released a report last month that took a look. What they found was a measurable difference between the generation born in 1960-62 and that born 20 years later, in 1980-82. The younger group had a higher probability of being self-employed by age 23.
The researchers attributed the difference to higher percentages of African-Americans, Hispanics and, to a lesser extent, women in the younger cohort of subjects. That may be true, but I think a big part of the difference may have had more to do with growing up in different times.
Overall, the research shows that those who reported self-employment in their early 20s (ages 20-22) are much more likely to remain self-employed through age 41. I guess it’s once an entrepreneur, always an entrepreneur.
Also worth noting from Advocacy was a report on gender and business dynamics, appropriately entitled Gender and Establishment Dynamics, 2002-2006.
The report “found” a lot of things that seem pretty obvious (e.g., larger firms are less likely to close, and tend to both create and destroy more jobs) but it’s most interesting finding was a confirmation of earlier Kauffman research: Real job growth comes from new firms.
Is anybody listening?
Research Roundup: Big Picture, Little Picture
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View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Apr 8th

What do you think about when you watch a movie? Unless it’s a complete dud, you’re probably not thinking about anything but the movie.
OK, turn that around. What do you think about when you’re not watching a movie? If you compare real-life events to movies, think of the right movie quotes for every situation, and see most movies the week they’re released in theaters, read on. A couple of movie buffs just like you put together what could be the ultimate compilation of business lessons from movies.
Many movies–even date movies and comedies–are full of lessons for business. Authors Kevin Coupe and Michael Sansolo cover the best of those lessons in The Big Picture: Essential Business Lessons from the Movies. In their new book, they share the business wisdom in 65 famous classic and modern movies. The Big Picture’s combination of clever business analysis with the joy of cinema makes it a fun, insightful read.
Content
The Big Picture is broken down into six parts, which in turn are divided into fifty-one short (4-12 page) chapters. Here’s how they divvy up the sections:
Part 1: Action/adventure movies like Jaws and Rocky
Part 2: Biopics/documentaries like Schindler’s List and Pumping Iron
Part 3: Classics like High Noon and Citizen Kane
Part 4: Comedy, including Tootsie and Charlie Wilson’s War
Part 5: Date movies, eg. Sex and the City and Julie & Julia
Part 6: Drama, including Amadeus and The Godfather
The book has a total of 51 brief chapters. Every chapter is devoted to a different business lesson, indicated in the title section of the chapter. Lesson topics include branding, customers, strategy, leadership, ethics, and more. In each chapter, you learn what a certain movie is about, and what themes and scenes carry the relevant business lesson.
The most gratifying business lessons are the unexpected ones, like how Charlie Wilson, a single person, made a big difference in Charlie Wilson’s War–but his efforts ultimately ended up being in vain, because Congress never passed a motion to rebuild Afghanistan afterwards. The lesson: One person can make a difference, but if you don’t see the job through, it can all go down the toilet.
The authors’ movie selections are also refreshing. Who knew you could learn about the importance of delivering bad news as soon as it happens from Adam Sandler’s The Wedding Singer? The authors sometimes banter with one another, or give you different individual insights in the same chapter. That keeps the fun. Despite many clever and original movie choices, a few lessons, like build relationships in good times (shown through The Godfather), are rather obvious.
Thoughts
The Big Picture could be a great resource for presentations, speeches, training, and any other business activity that could use good movie references. The authors make it easy for you to find a cinematic example to express your business point. This may be a good book to keep around as a reference if you speak or team-build frequently.
The authors’ well-written commentary made me want to see a number of movies again—or for the first time. That said, I’m not a movie buff. I like movies, but it’s not a habit of mine to think about them outside of the movie theater. For that reason, the book felt more laborious to me than I think it would have to a true movie fan.
I also noticed that it was more fun to read about the movies I’d already seen than those I hadn’t. This also makes me think that someone who has seen–and remembered–a lot of movies would enjoy this book a little more than a casual movie watcher like me.
All in all, if you’re a movie buff, The Big Picture will gratify and instruct. It’s also useful if you want a good reference book for motivational, team-building, and training speeches. I recommend it for movie lovers, movie critics, and anyone with a heart for cinema.
Disclosure: We received a free copy of this book.
View full post on Business Pundit
Apr 1st
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In the real world, we all make an effort to look our best when meeting new people. We make sure that we have on clean clothes. That we brush our teeth… |
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Mar 31st
A Blog Measurement Guide: Learn to Track Blog Comments – Big Picture Web – Internet Marketing from St. Paul, Minnesota
Feb 28th
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