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Today in History - October 16
by bschott
Oct 16, 2008 | 1496 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
1888: Playwright Eugene O'Neill was born in New York City. 1916: Margaret Sanger opened the first birth-control clinic, in New York City. 1978: Polish Cardinal Karol Wojtyla was elected pope by the Roman Catholic Church's College of Cardinals; he took the name John Paul II. Source: New York Times
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Business Tip: Cash Flow Rules
by bschott
Oct 16, 2008 | 450 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
1. Never Run Out of Cash. Running out of cash is the definition of failure in business. Make the commitment to do what it takes so it does not happen to you. 2. Cash Is King It's important to recognize that cash is what keeps your business alive. Manage it with the care and attention it deserves. It's very unforgiving if you don't. Remember, Cash Is King, because No Cash = No Business. 3. Know the Cash Balance Right Now. What is your cash balance right now? It's absolutely critical that you know exactly what your cash balance is. Even the most intelligent and experienced person will fail if they are making business decisions using inaccurate or incomplete cash balances. That's the reason why business failures are not limited to amateurs or people new to the business world. 4. Do Today's Work Today. The key to keeping an accurate cash balance in your accounting system is to do today's work today. When you do this, you will have the numbers you need - when you need them. 5. Either You Do the Work or Have Someone Else Do It. Here is a simple rule to follow to make sure you have an accurate cash balance on your books. You do the work or have someone else do it. Those are the only two choices you have. The work must be done. It's like mowing the lawn. You can't just ignore it. Someone has to do it. That means either you do it or have someone else do it. Source: Phillip Campbell in Inc. Magazine
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Wouldn't It be Nice?
by bschott
Oct 15, 2008 | 343 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
As I read details of the news on Yahoo tonight, considering the world events getting odder and unsettling, I noticed I was humming the Beach Boys song, “Wouldn’t It Be Nice!” “ And wouldn’t it be nice to live together, in the kind of world where we belong…” While in this ‘wish the world were nicer’ reverie, I discovered this lovely article by Rebecca Brown, editor of Divine Caroline. In the hectic motion of our days, we run around in our own little worlds, especially those of us connected to multitudes of electronic devices. Plugged in to ipods, Zunes, MP3’s, cell phones, Smart Phones, various Blackberries, (feel free to add to this list, especially if you are reading this while mobile) iphones, bluetooth/is the plural blueteeth?, heavens! I have an ipod in my purse and a T-Mobile cell phone and a Verizon Blackberry, and a Bluetooth wireless earpiece, for each cell phone. From my Blackberry I can check any and all of my 8 email addresses and although I am a social media maven and use twitter.com all day from my laptop, I do not, as of yet ‘tweat’ on my cell phone, because frankly, and I always think people who start a thought with ‘frankly’ have been lying to me previously, but I digress… Anyway, we rush around connected to things and may miss key messages from real, live people around us. Ms Brown reminds us to remember our manners. Remember them? Remember others can hear our phone conversations so we should have mercy on them. Spare them the details of this and that. Hold doors open for others, pause to let people get off elevators before running them over and have change ready for car lots, so others don’t wait too long behind us. Pay attention to those older and younger and all these pregnant women, to give them seats on the train and such. Take it easy on scents for those who are sensitive. In fact, real manners, my southern mother used to say, stretch one a bit. Real manners take an effort and show true class in said effort. With all the chaos in the news, what say we all make a classy effort to be considerate and gentle with those around us. Hum a Beach Boys tune like, “Wouldn’t it be nice if we could wake up, in the morning when the day is new…” and know we made a difference in the lives of those we touched today.
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Morning Briefing - October 15, 2008
by bschott
Oct 15, 2008 | 66 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
Yesterday's slowing on Wall Street has spread to Asia and Europe. The Dow fell 0.8% yesterday, and that had the effect of dragging down foreign exchanges. Experts say the mood in the foreign markets is hopeful the bailout will have a positive effect, but some trepidation remains. There are signs that the credit markets are easing. The rate at which banks loan money to each other has fallen to just over 2% in the past couple of days, which is a positive sign that money is beginning to flow. Even with those developments, many experts are warning that the bailout will take some time to fully restore confidence among investors. Get ready for another rocky ride on Wall Street. Ebay and Google are set to announce their quarterly earnings this week. Both companies rely on consumer spending for their bread and butter. This is expected to be a miserable holiday shopping season, which could have a big effect on both companies bottom lines. The recession that some experts said couldn't touch Utah is here - and Utah's job rate is down because of it. Unemployment was only up 0.1% in September, but job growth was a paltry 1,800 new jobs. Residential construction is the sector seeing the worst of the credit crunch, and many are wondering if and when the problems in that area will filter over to the rest of the state's economy as a whole.
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Business Tip: The Magic Number
by bschott
Oct 15, 2008 | 251 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
I believe every business has magic numbers. A restaurant owner I know can predict his evening's receipts by the length of time customers have to wait for a table at 8:30 p.m. My friend Jack Stack, the father of open-book management, told me about a guy with a gear-making company who can determine his sales from the weight of the gears that have been shipped. Not the dollars. Not the orders. Not the number or type of gears. The weight. Indeed, the best business people I know all have key numbers they track on a daily or weekly basis. It's an essential part of running a successful enterprise. Key numbers give you the financial information you need to take timely action. Business moves too fast to wait for the monthly, quarterly, or annual statements. By the time you get them -- weeks or months after the end of the period -- you're already dealing with the consequences of whatever problems may have arisen when you weren't looking. You've probably missed out on a number of opportunities as well. To operate successfully, you need real-time information -- and not only about sales. If you just track sales, you can get into serious trouble. Sales don't make a company successful. Profits and cash flow do. A lot of companies land in bankruptcy court because their owners focus so much on driving sales that profit and cash become an afterthought. I speak from experience here. I was one of those owners. I might have avoided that fate had I paid as much attention to my gross margins as I did to my sales. Why? Because gross margins determine how much money you have available to spend on things like rent, electricity, telephones, salaries of salespeople and administrators, health insurance, bank interest, and the like -- everything, in short, that isn't directly involved in producing whatever it is that you sell. If you're thinking only about increasing sales as fast as you can, you'll be tempted to make decisions that could imperil your gross margins. That's what I did. My sales went through the roof, but my gross margins shrank dramatically. In the end, my company couldn't generate enough cash to pay all the bills. It wasn't long before I had to file for Chapter 11. Source: Inc. Magazine
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Today in Business History - October 15
by bschott
Oct 15, 2008 | 127 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
1951: The situation comedy "I Love Lucy" premiered on CBS. 1966: President Lyndon Johnson signed a bill creating the Department of Transportation. 1999: The humanitarian group Doctors Without Borders was named winner of the Nobel Peace Prize. 2002: ImClone Systems founder Sam Waksal pleaded guilty in New York in the biotech company's insider trading scandal. Source: New York Times
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Morning Briefing - October 14, 2008
by bschott
Oct 14, 2008 | 77 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
Wow! I guess being promised nearly unlimited amounts of money will do wonders for confidence on Wall Street. The Dow skyrocketed more than 900 points yesterday, which is the single biggest one-day gain in history. But it's not all butterflies and rainbows from here. Yesterday's jump came with the bond market closed, and many investors are still very skittish. We should get more details on the federal government's plan to end the financial crisis. The Treasury Department is expected to announce a plan to guarantee all new debt issued by banks over the next three years. The FDIC is also expected to unveil unlimited guarantees on bank deposits that do not bear interest, which will bring the U.S. in line with most of Europe. We all know the big firms that are struggling in the financial crisis, but there are some companies that are doing very well. Not surprisingly they include Family Dollar stores and Anheuser-Busch.
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Today in Business History - October 14
by bschott
Oct 14, 2008 | 72 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
1968: The first live telecast from a manned U.S. spacecraft was transmitted from Apollo 7. 1977: Singer Bing Crosby died at age 74. 1990: Composer-conductor Leonard Bernstein died at age 72. Source: New York Times
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Business Tip: Protect Your Cash Flow
by bschott
Oct 14, 2008 | 69 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
To Seth Godin, president of Yoyodyne, a $5-million on-line direct-marketing company based in Irvington, N.Y., happiness for a business owner boils down to one simple thing: positive cash flow. At his three-and-a-half-year-old company, he confides, "we think about this every day. But there are a lot of people who forget, when times are as good as they've been during the past few years, that the business world is cyclical and that you need money to make money." Sound cash-flow management is essential for any growing business. But here's the flip side of that reality: the stronger the economy is--and the faster a company is growing--the easier it can be to overlook cash-flow controls, sometimes without even suffering negative consequences...at least for a while. "The best thing about volatile economic conditions is that they remind managers to refocus their attention on the basics," notes Jeffrey Levine, a certified public accountant based in Newton, Mass., who warns his clients that it could take as long as 12 to 24 months for the full ramifications of today's economic problems to hit their businesses. Granted, some companies' cash flow will take it on the chin much sooner than others', especially if they sell directly to countries or industries that are already experiencing difficulties. But there's only one way to begin, and the time to do it is now: evaluate your cash-flow controls, and tighten them promptly wherever it seems necessary. If there is one single point of vulnerability in most companies, it's accounts receivable. That's because entrepreneurial companies almost invariably make the mistake--especially in their early or fast-growth stages--of paying much more attention to making sales than to collecting receivables. Source: Inc. Magazine
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Rebound!
by bschott
Oct 13, 2008 | 64 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
Not to toot my own horn, but I do seem a bit prescient today after pointing out this article in the "Morning Briefing." The Dow finishes up more than 900 points today. That's the single biggest daily gain in history. After record setting drops, it's nice to see a change in the direction of the Dow. Now, we wait and see what happens tomorrow. More roller coaster or a move toward the positive? More coverage of this story: New York Times Fox Business Channel Marketwatch.com ABC News MSNBC
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Morning Briefing - October 13, 2008
by bschott
Oct 13, 2008 | 63 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
The meeting of G-7 nations over the weekend promised "no more Lehman's." The Western nations vowed that no more failures like Lehman Brothers' would be allowed as all bank deposits will be guaranteed and banks will be flooded with "almost unlimited liquidity." The plan to end the crisis was short on details, but the group did promise to take any action, no matter how unorthodox, will be used if needed. Those announcements could pay off this morning, as signs point to a rally on Wall Street today. Author and New York Times columnist Paul Krugman was announced as this year's winner of the Nobel Prize for economics. Krugman is the author of a number of books, including The Great Unraveling: Losing Our Way in the New Century and The Conscience of a Liberal. GM and Chrysler are considering an historic merger to shore up both companies and find a way out of the economic mess. Experts are scratching their heads at the proposal, saying that there is little to be gained from the merger as GM lost $18 billion last year, and Chrysler's sales have fallen farther than any other car maker.
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Today in Business History - October 13
by bschott
Oct 13, 2008 | 73 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
1775: The Continental Congress ordered the construction of a naval fleet. 1792: The cornerstone of the White House was laid during a ceremony in the District of Columbia. 1962: "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" by Edward Albee opened on Broadway. 1974: TV host Ed Sullivan died at age 73. Source: New York Times
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Business Tip: Cash Flow: When a Cash Crisis Strikes
by bschott
Oct 13, 2008 | 63 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
Cash crises happen. the way they're managed can have a tremendous effect on a company's all-important relationships with creditors. "Credibility and confidence are built slowly but destroyed rapidly," says David Preiser, head of restructuring and managing director at the New York City office of Houlihan Lokey Howard & Zukin, an investment-banking house based in Los Angeles. His recommendations for breaking bad news to loan officers, vendors, and other creditors: · Develop a credible plan. It may require getting advice from a lawyer or an accountant, but it should resemble an action-oriented business plan. "It won't convince creditors if it's just a short-term dance, but it also can't be too gloomy, or they'll panic." Aim for a realistic assessment, and then focus on how you'll fix problems. Above all: "Never promise anything you already know you can't achieve." · Telephone your creditors to suggest meeting with them and their lawyers. Schedule meetings before payments are due; mention but don't fully describe your difficulties; divide in order to conquer. (Don't bring creditors together so they can "gang up on you.") Another tip: "Don't schedule the meeting after you've run out of funds. Always leave yourself enough to make a tiny payment and demonstrate good faith." · Behave appropriately during that meeting. To Preiser, that means being respectful, confident, and strong. "If you seem prepared to tackle problems, you'll inspire creditors' respect. If you seem overwhelmed, they'll panic." · Beware of vendor panic. You don't want to scare vendors "into refusing to make shipments." Preiser's advice: "Don't treat vendors dishonestly," but don't bare your soul. "Achieve a balance between present problems and future hopes." Source: http://www.inc.com/magazine/19960201/1570.html
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Media and Public Relations in an Online world
Oct 10, 2008 | 71 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
Sarah Buhr knows her stuff. In a Utah Pulse article which I received via subscribed email, she wrote of the PR impact of on-line methods over traditional print, television and radio. With a hefty background in those aforementioned traditional media, I have noticed a decline in effectiveness over the past few years. Think about where you get your news and information in business! Is it newspaper, television, radio, print or on-line? Take your own survey! Ask around? You will find, no doubt, that the majority of us are grabbing news here and there through our computers, Blackberry's and electronic devises. Use Sarah's advice! Go on-line for you PR, and add my advice! Go on-line for your marketing too. There are many reasons to do so. Adding up the factors is a very long list, which Sarah covered well, but the bottom line is, in this overly competitive marketplace, companies will go a long way to garnering market share by having a user-friendly website and using effective on-line marketing tools. I am watching this site, as it is the most professional, comprehensive and sharp business site in Utah.
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Today in Business History - October 10
by bschott
Oct 10, 2008 | 71 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
1935: George Gershwin's opera "Porgy and Bess" opened on Broadway. 1964: The 18th Summer Olympic Games opened in Tokyo. 1985: Actor-director Orson Welles died at age 70. 2006: Google Inc. announced it was snapping up YouTube Inc. for $1.65 billion in a stock deal. Source: New York Times
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Business Tip: Don't Be Site Unseen
by bschott
Oct 10, 2008 | 85 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
It's easy but time-consuming to manually submit your site. You could use a submission service, such as SelfPromotion.com, Site-See, or submitplus. Shop around. Fees range from free for submission to 20 search engines to $10 (U.S.) for submission to 700, $147 for 800, $200 for 900, and up. Check search engines often to monitor your site ranking -- just type in your keywords. Use site traffic analysis tools to measure results and determine which search sites send you the most visitors. Concentrate your efforts on these. Don't try to outsmart the search engines. These tricks, known as "spamdexing," will get your site banned: Senseless repetition of words. Insertion of meta tags unrelated to page content. Use of words that are illegible due to their color or small size. Online community involvement lets you use communities to reach customers and build credibility. Find discussion groups, chat rooms, and e-zines devoted to topics related to your business. Posting answers to others' questions and contributing articles to e-zines can position you as an expert in your field. That way, when your customers need help, they'll think of your business first. Source: Inc. Magazine
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Morning Briefing - October 9, 2008
by bschott
Oct 09, 2008 | 80 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
It looks like the government is ready and willing to take an ownership share in troubled banks. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson says the $700 billion bailout would allow the government to give money directly to banks that request it. That would give the federal government an ownership stake in those institutions. Insurance giant AIG is asking the government for more money. Last month, the government loaned AIG $85 billion in an effort to keep the company from collapsing. AIG is asking for nearly $38 billion more from the government to help shore up their books. The company plans to sell off some of it's subsidiaries to pay back the original loan, but experts say the economy could prohibit the company from selling those assets at a reasonable price. The newest request comes after revelations that executives with the company spent more than $400,000 on a retreat at a California spa. Another large insurance company could give Wall Street heartburn. MetLife says their quarterly earnings will be down from projections due to turmoil in the global market. The company says the plan to raise capital and cut jobs in response to the lower than expected earnings.
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Today in Business History - October 9
by bschott
Oct 09, 2008 | 146 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
1701: The Collegiate School of Connecticut - later Yale University - was chartered in New Haven. 1936: The first generator at Boulder (later Hoover) Dam began transmitting electricity to Los Angeles. 1940: Rock musician and songwriter John Lennon of the Beatles was born in Liverpool, England. Source: New York Times
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Ways to Market Your Site for Pennies
by bschott
Oct 09, 2008 | 71 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
You can market your Web site for little or no money. Your skills and time will determine which low-cost methods you can perform yourself and which might require professional services. The methods discussed here require little money but often a lot of time. Before you try them, determine their respective costs by adding up the prices of any tools you'll need, such as paper, printing, or purchased mailing lists. Estimate the hours required to act on each method; multiply that by your hourly work rate and add this to the total. Apply the Rule of Three Commit to trying any technique three times to determine its effectiveness. Measure the results by how many leads and customers each one generates -- for instance, conduct a survey on your site asking people how they found it. Focus your effort on the techniques that yield the greatest return on investment (ROI). Try search engine and keyword optimization. Without search engines and directories, locating information online would be nearly impossible. Getting your site indexed by search engines and directories makes it accessible to customers and drives traffic. Search engines use keywords to categorize your site and make it easier to find. Determine which keywords customers might use when seeking a product or service you offer and include 5 to 15 in the meta tags in the HTML code, the title tags, and the first few hundred characters of text in your Web pages. Source: Inc. Magazine
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Auto Industry Problems Hit Home
by bschott
Oct 08, 2008 | 126 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
The Chairwoman of the National Automobile Dealers Association says the credit crunch could cause 700 dealers to go under this year. The group says quick action by the government in implementing the $700 billion economic package will free up credit and shore up consumer confidence. If auto dealerships fail, it could have a big impact on local TV and radio broadcasters, who get a significant portion of their advertising revenue from auto dealerships.
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