The U.S Economy

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For a long time federal regulations have been known to help the big enterprise and not the small business owner.  Regulations are costly  for the small business owner, and to be compliant means to spend cash that they may not have, or borrowing cash that they may not get. The difficulties that the federal and local governments put the small business owner through means the big enterprises are able to capitalized in the small business owner closing their doors. For more news about this and other topics, follow the links below.


Small Business Loses Out On US Economic Development Incentives, As States Favor Large Companies

When Manhattan Running Co. decided to buy a building in the northeastern Kansas college town it has called home for seven years, the owners were confronted with a $120,000 renovation. It was hardly a small sum for a new business with just 10 employees, and included in the expense was about $20,000 to make the building wheelchair accessible and compliant with the federal Americans with Disabilities Actbuilding regulations. 

“In a business like ours, we don’t get a lot of people in wheelchairs,” Manhattan Running co-founder Trey Vernon, a former Oklahoma State University runner, said. “We totally support ADA, but it can be difficult for a business of our size to cover the costs. Any kind of break on investments we’re forced to make would help.”


#SmallBizHowTo: How To Get Financing For Your Small Business

Getting financing, for many entrepreneurs, is about as much fun as going to the dentist. You’ll need to figure out what you need, get your financial paperwork in order, and be prepared for rejection. But it’s also crucial. After all, every business needs cash to grow – and one of the big reasons that entrepreneurs fail is lack of funds.

Last week, Forbes asked small business owners, entrepreneurs and those who had dreams of launching a new operation to tweet us questions about getting funding. We got questions from all over the world – from as far away as Abuja, the capitol of Nigeria. The main questions focused on the key inter-related issues of what to do first, how to get financing, how to know if you’re getting a good interest rate, and what to do if you have less-than-stellar credit. Others sent questions about specific industries, such as food. I’ll address four of these questions in detail below.


Women in Small Business: Cracking the Glass Ceiling

Recent headlines have celebrated the success of women chief executives at Facebook, IBM, General Motors and other corporate giants. But this misses a much bigger story: women-owned small businesses – already numbering nearly 10 million – are starting up at twice the rate of men-owned businesses, and they are succeeding despite an all too real glass ceiling. At the same time, women in Congress are leading the legislative fight to crack that glass ceiling and level the playing field for women-owned businesses.

As the lead Democrat on the Senate’s Small Business Committee, I’ve had countless conversations with businesswomen from across the US. They are proud to be successful business owners and job creators. But they tell disturbing stories of barriers confronting women entrepreneurs that aren’t encountered by their male counterparts. They face longer odds in getting access to credit and capital, winning government contracts, and accessing the business counseling they need to succeed.


The U.S and Ohio Economies

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The Ohio unemployment rate has slowly but surely being decreasing over the last few months.  Back in March the unemployment rate was at 5.1%, and in August it was 4.7%. Compared to the U.S as a whole, Ohio is just a bit better than the national average and the small business confidence seems to have increased for a couple months now. For more about this and other topics, follow the links below.


US small business confidence edges up, sales a worry

U.S. small business confidence rose marginally in September as stock market volatility raised concerns about sales growth, suggesting the economy was expanding at a moderate pace.

The National Federation of Independent Business said on Tuesday its Small Business Optimism Index gained 0.2 point to 96.1 last month. It said that level was consistent with a 2.5 percent annualized growth rate.

“Financial markets did not provide any encouragement to owners, instead providing volatility that only a trader could like. This produces uncertainty,” the NFIB said.

Seven of the index’s 10 components eked out small gains last month, while the share of small business owners expecting stronger sales volumes in the next few months fell six points.


Why Small Businesses Are Feeling An Economic Crunch

ATTN: Baby Boomer-Aged Small Business Owners

Congratulations, you’re one of the 4 million Baby Boomers who currently own and operate American companies. You deserve credit for building strong brands and reputations, for employing countless others, for providing for your families and communities, and for effectively living out the American Dream. But as strategic as you’ve been in business, you’ve likely kicked the succession-planning can down the road and continue to do so. That’s a mistake, and hopefully this gets your attention.

Basic Facts

You and your peers represent roughly 66% of all domestic businesses with employees.

You, being a member of the generation born between 1946 and 1964, began turning 65 years old in 2011 at a rate of about 10,000 people per day and will continue passing that age milestone through 2029.


In Business, Does Size Matter?

Conventional wisdom says that startups and closely held companies should be far more nimble, less bureaucratic, and less political than large corporations. But that’s more myth than reality. In the real world, small businesses are just as likely to be poorly run and dysfunctional as big enterprises. Perhaps more so.

I was just commiserating with a friend about the company where she works. “It’s hard to believe such a small firm can be so screwed up,” she said. “You’ve heard of silo mentality between departments and divisions? We have silos of like one or two people. It’s nuts.”

“Size doesn’t matter, at least not when it comes to organizational dysfunction,” I said. “There are great leaders, lousy leaders, and everything in between. Big or small, they determine how their companies function … or don’t.”


Strategic Planning For Small Business Owners

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Developing a business strategy is for many small business owners a fundamental step that they cannot afford to ignore.  Hiring a business consultant to brainstorm ideas and the steps to put this strategy in place is imperative for the success of the strategy.  Many small business owners ignore the importance of not only developing the strategy , but implementing it as well.  Consistent effort should give you the results that a good implemented strategy can bring to your business. For more about this and other news follow the links below.


STRATEGIC PLANNING: Planning for the future

When you bring up the term “strategic planning” to most company owners, you normally get some hesitant stares and mumbled words. Most owners think strategic planning is only for large companies and the time and resource commitment is too large for them to bear. If done properly, it does not have to be so at all. When most companies really think about how much time they think about and discuss all of the future needs of the business, it probably adds up to more time than an actual planning process would take.

Many companies think they have a strategic plan, but what they really have is a one-year operating plan or budget. A strategic plan looks at all phases of the business over a longer time horizon, normally five years or more. It helps companies set a long-term direction that drives short-term activities and behaviors, and helps allocate time and resources to future endeavors, challenges and opportunities that are out there. We all hear “be proactive, not reactive” all the time — a strategic planning process makes you do just that. You can plan for more than you think you can.

 


The 5 Steps of Strategic Planning for a Small Business

Strategic planning for small business is not a process that is completed overnight–or even within one week. According to the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA), planning for growth should include a “high level review of the different elements of your business,” almost as if you were “describing” your company for the first time.  Take a close look at the marketplace, delineate the precise “needs you are trying to satisfy,” and describe to yourselves (to owners and top managers) exactly how your “products and/or services” are meeting the needs of your target “consumers, organizations and/or businesses.” Honestly evaluate your “competitive advantages,” and your “competitive weaknesses,” within your industry and locale. Then, take your time within each of the following business areas.:


Is budgetting drowning strategic planning in your organisation?

“The budget is not just a collection of numbers, but an expression of our values and aspirations”…Jacob Lew

We can hardly see any organisation that does not have a well outlined budget in place. Organisations often rely on their budgets to guide them. It is not out of place to have a budget, but it is not enough to rely only on budget in driving the vision of the entire organisation.

Most organisations have missed it. How? They have allowed the budget to drive the organisation’s vision. Such organisations have worked day and night to develop a well outline budget but may not have realised the need to develop a strategic plan first. For the purpose of clarity, your organisation’s vision and the strategic plan are what drive your budget, and not vice versa.

Organisations that are reactive in their operations have low level of planning effectiveness. They allow the budget alone to drive the plan for the entire organisation. They also view planning as synonymous with financial objectives alone. Some other organisations are traditional in their planning effectiveness, and surprisingly are even better than the reactive organisations.


It’s Time to Get Serious About Strategic Planning

business (11)It’s that time of year again. The time of year when companies are — or should be — developing their strategic plans for 2016. Compared to larger companies small business owners are in an enviable position. They have more control over the development and execution of their plans. They can have a greater impact on the profitability and success of their business, with significantly less hassles and politics.
But, the downside is they have fewer resources (people, experience and knowledge) to draw from while formulating their plans. Often, in a small business, owners don’t know where to start or what’s needed to put one together and they need to figure it out for themselves. Here are 3 things they can do to fill in these gaps.
Combine data with intuition
Successful planners strike a balance between relying on just their gut or just the numbers. Usually, an owner falls into 1 of 2 camps — the “I don’t even look at the numbers, I go with my gut” guy and the “I’m a by-the-numbers, they don’t lie” guy. Neither is productive for the long term health of the company, good strategic thinkers use both to counterbalance each other.
Develop a trusted group
The most effective planners solicit information from others (i.e., peers, experts, employees, managers, vendors, customers) who’re successful. Because no one can know everything they seek out knowledge they don’t have. They cobble together their own panel of specialists. However, this isn’t group decision making — it’s about owners gathering data and opinions, and then reaching their own conclusions.
Be willing to learn
Questioning and listening aren’t the same thing. We all know people who ask questions, then don’t pay attention to the answer. The best strategic thinkers are open to what others have to say. They don’t substitute someone else’s judgment for their own, but they’re willing to learn from others.

In addition, not only do they seek knowledge, they look for insight from others. Businesses fail everyday because the person(s) in charge made mistakes based on uniformed, misguided assumptions, ideas and biases. Effective planners learn from mistakes and don’t do them again; ineffective planners make the same ones over and over expecting different results.
Successful, well thought out strategic planning relies on good critical thinking skills, which leads to good decisions. As one of our greatest generals Dwight D. Eisenhower said, “In preparing for battle I have always found that plans are useless, but planning is indispensable”.


Ohio Business Registrations Now Easier Than Ever

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Paperwork is always considered when rating the best states to start a business.  With the new filing fees in Ohio-$99-it is easier now  to file and pay your fees on line and have your business registration done the same day. If you were dreading the filing and the time it took the government to complete the paperwork, dread no more.  Ohio is making the start of your small business easier than ever before.

For more about this and other news follow the links below.


More Ohio business owners to hire, boost paychecks

By Staff Staff

Staff report

More small- and medium-sized business owners in Ohio and nationwide expect to increase hiring and wages for their employees over the next six months, and they also are increasingly optimistic about the prospects for their own businesses, according to the most recent PNC Economic Outlook Survey findings released today, Oct. 1.

The fall findings of PNC’s bi-annual telephone survey, which began in 2003, show that about 36 percent of Ohio business owners said they expect to boost employees’ pay in the next six months, up from 26 percent last spring. And 59 percent of those business owners that do plan raises say the amount will be 3 percent or more. Nationally, the prospect of salary increases is even more promising: 42 percent intend to give raises, which is the highest percentage since 2007.


Ohio’s small, mid-sized firms report worker shortageOhio’s small and midsized businesses say they are having a harder time finding workers.

PNC Bank’s fall survey of business owners and executives released on Thursday found that 4 in 10 businesses say it is more difficult to find qualified employees than it was six months ago. Eleven percent of businesses that aren’t hiring say it is because they can’t find the right skilled workers.

Ohio’s jobless rate dropped to a 14-year low of 4.7 percent in August, and the number of unemployed workers has tumbled in recent months. In central Ohio, the rate is even lower: 3.6 percent.

Some industries are being hurt by a lack of skilled workers. For example, construction workers might have moved on to other industries during the recession, said PNC Bank economist Mekael Teshome.

Teshome said he also has heard of manufacturers struggling to find workers with the technical skills and experience needed for some openings.

In other instances, it is a case where employers aren’t quite ready to raise pay, he said.


Ohio cuts price of new business paperwork to $99

Last week, Ohio became the least costly state in the region to start and maintain a new business. On Thursday, joined by leaders from around our state, I was pleased to announce we’ve cut the cost of registering a new business in Ohio to just $99. We also launched a partnership with Google to help connect new entrepreneurs with resources to get their businesses online, registered with Google Maps and Search tools and other important marketing resources.

Elected officials and candidates talk every day about creating jobs and making it easier to do business, but what exactly does that mean? I suspect even some of the people who say these things don’t really know.

The Secretary of State’s office is the first stop for anyone wanting to do business in Ohio.

We’re working every day to try to make this first interaction positive by implementing more services to help you get your business idea off the ground. Now, we’re taking it to the next level: We’re cutting the cost of starting a business in Ohio.


Habits of Successful People You Should Emulate

59948705Emulating successful entrepreneurs’ habits to achieve success  does not necessarily mean we will achieve it, it just means that we may in the process acquire certain habits that will be beneficial for our business. Every entrepreneur is different, and their businesses and processes are widely diverse as well. By acquiring and fostering better habits and applying them in our business will help us achieve the success we are looking for.


12 Habits That Set Ultra Successful People Apart

Ultra successful people delight themselves by blowing their personal goals out of the water. They succeed along many different dimensions of life—their friendships, their physical and mental health, their families, and their jobs (which they are not only good at but also enjoy).

TalentSmart has conducted research with more than a million people, and we’ve found that ultra successful people have a lot in common. In particular, 90% of them are skilled at managing their emotions in order to stay focused, calm, and productive.

These super successful folks have high emotional intelligence (EQ), a quality that’s critical to achieving your dreams.


5 Skills That Are the Foundation of Entrepreneurial Success

Entrepreneurship requires many skills, from financial planning to human resource management, and it’s at times both intimidating and frustrating. Fortunately, if you’ve got a good idea and the commitment to making it work, most of these skills can be picked up along the way. Throughout the course of your business ownership, you’ll make mistakes, learn valuable lessons, and gain experience that teaches you these skills over time.

Unfortunately, this style of learning can sometimes come too late. Some skills need to be learned early on, or else their absence could spell a tragic fate for your business.

If you’re planning on becoming an entrepreneur, or if you’ve just entered the world of business ownership, learn these five skills as early as possible:


7 Successful Entrepreneurs to Follow on Twitter (Plus Their Best Tweets)

Total madness.

Five-hundred million daily jolts of information, reshuffled every second, weighed up for what value they hold. Each with an average lifetime of 18 minutes.

But let me tell you a secret: virtually all of Twitter just equals noise. Smoke. Stuff you don’t want and can’t use. So why bother?

Because every now and then, it works. You discover an invaluable piece of advice, a powerful insight or a link to an incredible resource.

How? Simple: when you select people to follow and pay attention to, do extra diligence. Take discernment to an extreme.

Yes — you can (and should) follow the Richard Bransons and the Bill Gateses. No doubt they have plenty to offer.


Ohio Small Business News

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The small business sector has long been considered a big job creator for the United States economy. Small businesses have a long history of creating jobs and employing over half the workforce in the United States. It is no wonder then that the federal government has disburse millions of dollars to support the small business sector in Ohio. For more about this and other topics, follow the links below.


U.S. small businesses feel mixed impact from China’s economy

NEW YORK: China’s economic problems have been a windfall for some U.S. small businesses — and pose a threat to others.

A nearly 40 percent plunge in the Shanghai stock market since mid-June, a response to the country’s weakening economy, has sent Chinese investors looking for safer investments. Some are focusing on U.S. real estate, including the condos Peggy Fucci’s real estate brokerage sells in Miami. She’s sold six condos to Chinese buyers in the past month, twice what she’s typically sold in that amount of time.

“It’s the insecurity of continuing to lose your [stock market] investment,” said Fucci, CEO of OneWorld Properties.

Chinese buyers, who pay an average $1.2 million for the condos in a downtown Miami development where she’s sold some homes, want them as an investment rather than a place to live, she said. Fucci is heading to China this weekend on a sales trip, optimistic that she’ll find more buyers.


Feds give Ohio over $18 million for small businesses

Ohio has received more than $18.7 million in State Small Business Credit Initiative funds to help small businesses access capital to grow and create jobs, the U.S. Treasury Department announced recently.

To date, more than $55 million in initiative funds have been disbursed to the Ohio Development Services Agency to support small businesses and the local economy.

“Small businesses are the nation’s leading job creators, and the State Small Business Credit Initiative connects sources of capital to the small businesses that need it,” said Jeffrey Stout, director of the initiative, in a statement.

“The funds announced … will continue to support loans and investments in Ohio’s small businesses,” Stout said.


TAX TIPS: Ohio budget bill provides considerable tax savings for local business activity

Ohio’s operating budget for 2016 and 2017 calls for reductions in tax rates that could prove important to small business owners in the Buckeye State.

This summer, Gov. John Kasich signed into law the two-year Ohio budget bill that expands deductions for small businesses and reduces tax rates on business income and individuals. Kasich originally called it his “Blueprint for Ohio.”

Perhaps most significant is an exemption on a certain portion of business income for Ohio small business owners that do business as an S corporation, limited liability company or sole proprietorship.

The provision does not apply to C corporations, but any business that is structured as a pass-through entity so that its income flows directly from the business to individual shareholders for tax purposes.


Stay Competitive by Revising Your On-the-job Training

64735957On-the-job training — we’ve all experienced it and have the horror stories to prove it, particularly those of us who’ve worked in small businesses.  Small businesses are notorious for believing they provide training, but we know differently.  The in-depth, educational program most provide is somewhere along the lines of “go over there and watch what Steve is doing”.

In the past companies had the luxury of time — employees, competitors, processes, customers and especially technology moved slower.  People had time on the job to increase their skill level by learning from Steve and others like him.  But, more is expected out of systems, businesses and people now. 

Employees and managers are required to know more, do better and keep up at a faster rate.  They have skills and knowledge that’s likely to become outdated in years rather than decades.  Small businesses are struggling to keep up — let alone stay competitive — and many are falling dangerously behind. 

This is partly because of outdated or non-existent training programs.  The old way of doing, or not even doing, on-the-job training doesn’t work anymore.  The needed skills and knowledge increasingly has to come from outside the company.  The “old-timers” need to be “schooled” by new hires or consultants, who have the expertise no-one in the company has.

There’s a shortage of skilled workers in many industries and it’s not going to get better any time soon.  One of the ways a small business owner can combat this scarcity is to take control of the problem by developing, and following through with, a compressive training program.  A program focused on building an up-to-date, efficient workforce.

Ideas like selling globally, social media marketing, lean manufacturing and supply change management, create opportunities to increase market share and profit.  However, with these opportunities come challenges.  The small business owner who’s willing to take responsibility and create the employees he needs will meet these challenges and grow.


Starting A Small Business and Succeeding

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Many small business owners enjoy the fact that they are in control of their business and their future.  At the beginning of their endeavors, willing to take the many responsibilities that a small business entails, it is not only smart but cost effective.  As the business grows, the ability to delegate and give responsibilities and control over various aspects of the business become more of a difficulty for many small business owners, and some of them do not welcome the change. Follow the links below to read more about this topic.


9 Steps That Will Help Your Chances of Starting a Successful Business

If you are unemployed, underemployed or unhappily employed, the idea of taking control and becoming your own boss might be sounding pretty sexy right about now. Plus, the past decade has shown us that jobs aren’t quite as dependable as perhaps we previously thought.

However, the success rates for new business are quite scary too, with the majority of all new businesses failing in just a few years’ time. While there is never going to be a “sure thing,” if you are thinking of leaving your job to hang out your own shingle, there are significant benefits to preparing before you take the leap.

Here are nine ways to make sure that you are prepared before you start your own business, so that you can give yourself the best chances to succeed. These are adapted from my bestselling book, The Entrepreneur Equation.


Maybe It’s Time to Let Go of Control in Your Business

How much control do you really have in your business? Do you know what to do with it? Does having it help you or hold you back in your business? What about when you want to change something? Does control help you then? 

Growing a business is one of the most life changing experiences on which you will embark. It’s challenging, exhilarating, exhausting, scary, fun and my goodness, some days it can be downright hard.

Why is it hard?

Because it involves change, trust and letting go of control.

Surrendering to change means letting go of being in control. Yet, as much as we want our lives to be different the truth is, we don’t like it much when our illusion of being in control is challenged. The feeling that we are in charge of our lives gives us leverage in our attempts to avoid the experience of loss. Yet, these efforts to circumvent loss are the very foundation of our excessive anxiety and worry. – Katherine Woodward Thomas (Calling In The One).


Instead of Flexing Authority, Leaders Should Influence Employees

When it comes to managing employees, most employers tend to take one of two key leadership approaches. There’s the “power/authority” approach, where it’s their way or the highway, or the “influence” approach, where the goal is to get employees on the same page and empower them to make decisions that will have a positive impact on the organization.

In today’s work world, employees want to feel like they are a part of the decision-making process. Millennials, especially, want managers who give them the freedom to do their jobs and trust they will deliver.

In fact, in a 2014 survey of 16,637 millennials worldwide titled Millennials: Understanding a Misunderstood Generation, nearly half of people in this age group from North America want a manager who “empowers their employees” above all else.

Clearly, for those who manage the fastest growing part of today’s workforce, it’s time to take the focus off of the power/authority approach and on to the influence approach. Here are three areas where the influence approach is especially useful in the office:


The Dream vs. the Reality of Entrepreneurial Control

59350241For many people in our country the American Dream of owning their own business is still alive and well.  Moreover, they’re not just dreaming, they’re doing something about it.  Last year startups increased in 32 of the 50 states, the biggest increase in 2 decades (Kauffman Index: Startup Activity, 2015).  This is a reversal of the last 5 year’s downward trend.

There are many reasons why more people are becoming entrepreneurs.  Their motivations are as varied as the individuals who have the drive and desire to take the risk.  Coupled with these unique motivations is the universal reason people start a company — control.  Control over: time, money, quality, procedures, ethics, product/service development, etc.

The dream of having ultimate control is a primary one for most entrepreneurs.  A bedrock belief for the majority of them is, “Things will be better once I’m in charge, because I’ll make the decisions and have the final authority”.  And it’s true, having authority is one of the main benefits of ownership.  It gives people the opportunity to finally make their ideas a reality. 

Unfortunately, what’s also a reality is that in addition to control they also have responsibility, which is usually where the trouble starts.  Too often the dream of business ownership is really magical thinking and not based in the real world.  Many small businesses owners want to be in charge without the actual responsibility that goes with it.

Often owners want the control (viewed as positive) without the responsibilities (seen as negative) of: learning and doing tasks (i.e. marketing, sales, understanding financials, customer complaints, quality issues) outside their interests and comfort zone; showing up motivated every day to deal with challenging, as well as, boring day to day operations; actively managing people who don’t want to be managed or do their jobs.

Running a business is a difficult, never ending and time consuming process.  People who start a company quickly learn that ownership is not what they imagined it would be.  Most small businesses’ problems can be traced to the owner’s dream of control without him accepting the reality of responsibility.  This is the primary reason that most small businesses fail.