Globalization and The Small Business Owner

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For many small businesses, sales are important if not the most critical part in the success of their business. Having sales people eager to learn, and try new venues to increase their sales success, is pivotal to the small business owner.  Sales tools, and online selling venues that the sales employee wants to try should be encouraged by the small business owner.

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


This Financial Giant Will Challenge Square and OnDeck With Small Business Loans

The credit card giant will debut an online lending service this year.

American Express is expanding into the lending business for small businesses, according to a new report from Bloomberg.

The financial giant will debut a new lending arm, called Working Capital Terms, which will make online loans to small businesses who use American Express credit cards. Loans will range from $1,000 to $750,000, and interest will be tacked on at a rate of 0.5% for a 30-day loan to 1.5% for a 90-day loan, Bloomberg reported.

Online lending is a space that existing financial technology companies where have been attempting to grow, but investors have been skeptical. Square, the San Francisco payments company led by Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey, has seen growth in Square Capital, its lending arm which provides cash advances to merchants using Square’s point of sale service. Squarerecently announced that it would be expanding into traditional online loans, with fees between 10% to 16% of the amount borrowed.


Strategies: Globalization is a small-business necessity

With the U.K.’s vote to leave the European Unionand a U.S. presidential candidate vowing to build a wall between the USA and America’s third-largest trading partner, globalization is a current buzzword on cable news talk shows.  But for American small businesses, it is a double-edged sword.

For decades, some small businesses have been threatened, or shut down, by foreign competitors. At the same time, many American small businesses have been created and grown as a result of global trade.

There was a moment perfectly capturing the clash between globalization and isolation when President Obama took the stage at the Global Entrepreneurship Summit (GES) on June 24 at Stanford University.

In the hall were 700 smart, creative, capable entrepreneurs, from all corners of the globe. These were the types of people — if not the individuals themselves —  building the next Apple, Amazon or Genentech. They were prime examples of the possibilities and inevitability of globalization.


Are You Building a Startup or a Small Business?

There are approximately 29 million small businesses in the United States, about 23 million of which are sole proprietorships. This doesn’t include non-profits, nor businesses with over 500 employees. Of the total 29 million, only 418,000 or so are labeled as startups. Clearly there’s a difference between startups and small businesses, but what is it?

Startups are generally described as new, tech-based businesses focused on exponential growth. They’re generally temporary, use mostly outside investment for funding, and are led by entrepreneurs who want to create something far bigger than themselves. In other words, a startup is an explosive innovation whose goal is to transcend its people.

When we think of small businesses, we tend to think of mom-and-pop shops, restaurants, local law and accounting practices, and similar businesses. We think of the Jones’s and their three generations of financial planners in the same little building they’ve been in since ’57. We think of the mechanic and his 10 guys working on cars non-stop. We think of the local coffee shop owner who just sold his business to start some other venture. Maybe we even think of the marketing expert who climbed the corporate ladder and now does consulting. These images hold true in the data as well.


 

Taxes, Economy, and Productivity In the Workplace

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For many people considering starting their own business, the statistics are not very encouraging.  According to an article in Forbes magazine, 7 out of 10 small businesses survive at least 2 years in the United States, and although some people believe those are grim statistics and do not reflect the real reasons why many business close their doors after two years, the truth is many do close their doors and that’s what counts.  Choosing the best state and the best people to help you start your business seem to be key if you want to succeed.


The Growing Gig Economy’s Impact On Small Business

There’s a trendy term making its way through the business world: the gig economy. As a small business owner, you’ve likely heard it being thrown around at networking events or read about it in industry publications. But what does it mean, and how does it affect your business? In this article, we’ll discuss exactly what the term “gig economy” refers to and how it’s shaping today’s small businesses.

Defining the Gig Economy

There was a time when the word “gig” conjured images of a garage band booking a concert at your local bar and grill. Now, however, the word refers to any project an independent professional completes in exchange for pay.

It can be concluded, then, that the term “gig economy” references the increasing trend in today’s business world toward hiring independent contractors (think interims, consultants, freelancers) as an integral part of companies’ task forces.


State Ranks 10th Worst For Small Business Taxes

Connecticut ranked 10th worst in the country for small business taxes, according to a report issued Wednesday. It is the fourth straight year for that ranking.

The Small Business and Entrepreneurship Council (SBEC) ranked Connecticut 41st of the 50 U.S. states in its annual Small Business Tax Index. The last time the state wasn’t ranked in the bottom 10 was 2012 when it was 40th. The report is issued just ahead of the new fiscal year, which begins July 1. Connecticut did not pass any new taxes in its budget set to take effect Friday.

SBEC uses 25 measures to create a ratings system for the index. The measures include the state’s personal income tax rate, taxes applied to LLCs and other types of companies, gas and internet taxes, among other factors.

Connecticut’s index rating was 65.467, which put it between Nebraska with a 57.933 and Maine at 65.492. South Dakota ranked first at 12.114 and California was last with a rating of 84.547. In addition to Maine, Vermont was another New England state that rated below Connecticut.


7 Small-Business Owners Share Their Best Productivity Tips (Infographic)

Efficiency is a buzzword often bandied about in the office, but what does it actually mean and why is it so important?

Merriam-Webster defines it as “the ability to do something or produce something without wasting materials, time, or energy.” In other words, efficiency — rooted in the Latin verb efficere, which means “to accomplish” — is essentially making haste without waste. In the results now-focused world of business, it’s accomplishing things quickly without frittering away company time or money, both of which many entrepreneurs cannot afford to lose.

To help you mind your business — and, by extension, your bottom line — in good time, the folks at Make It Cheaper, a service that helps small and medium-sized businesses negotiate cheaper rates on insurance, broadband and electricity, have rounded up seven key efficiency lessons from a host of entrepreneurs. From delegating tasks to avoiding distractions, check them out in the short and, yes, efficient infographic below.


 

Apps And Tips To Help Your Small Business

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There is always the dream for many people to have their own business and be their own boss.  You either will succeed on your terms or not.  A small business for many people is a scary idea that they better not contemplate.  But, if you are like the millions of entrepreneurs in the United States, you need to try, and it is never too late according to many small business owners.  The paperwork, and costs  associated with starting a small business have been declining over the years, making it more feasible for an individual to open shop.  For free advice and other related articles to starting your own business, follow the links below.


Facebook Messenger Is Actually Helping Small Businesses Boost Sales

According to the company’s director of small business.

Facebook has built its reputation on its ability to get granular. Because the social network knows so much about its 1.6 billion users, marketers can use the platform to target highly curated groups of people.

But small–business owners should think on an even more individual level, says Dan Levy, the company’s vice president of small business. He repeatedly sees companies missing out on a valuable, and inexpensive, tool: Messaging.

For better or for worse, over the last decade the phone call has gone the way of the Dodo. Millennials may have driven the trend, but by this point Gen Xers and even Baby Boomers would often rather text than talk. This extends to their interactions as consumers. “Small-business owners are telling me, ‘I’m getting more sales leads over Messenger than I get over the phone,’” Levy says.


Ken Crite: It’s never too soon to start small business

Small firms accounted for 64 percent of the net new jobs created between 1993 and 2011 (or 11.8 million of the 18.5 million net new jobs). Since the latest recession, from mid-2009 to 2011, small businesses have accounted for 67 percent of the net new jobs.

With this in mind, if the focus was on the development and/or expansion of small businesses, we should experience a more rapid rebuild of the economy.

When large corporations expand and create 50 new jobs, there are several hundred applications, leaving the majority of the applicants in the same situation that they were in prior to applying.

If half of the applicants decided to start their own small business and hired only one additional employee, the job creation and development increases dramatically.


10 Must-Have Apps for Your Small Business

Today, tablets and mobile phones are enabling every industry, every line of business and every employee to work in astounding new ways. This capacity is fueling a new generation of apps, delivering more power, more insight and more capability to businesses than ever before.

This is true for businesses of all sizes – both large and small. Leveraging the right kinds of apps can make for a cohesive business ecosystem valuable in increasing productivity, streamlining business processes, and instilling creativity overall. So where to start? This slideshow offers a look at some of the best types of apps for kicking your small business off the ground or to a higher level.

Mind Mapping

The practice of mind mapping goes beyond the brainstorming exercises you did in elementary school. When you’re beginning a business, it’s important to think through everything and being able to collect your thoughts in a flexible way, especially when you’re on the go, is valuable.


 

Small Business Tips And Information

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The United States unemployment rate to date is 4.7%, and that’s a rate many considered full employment.  And although the unemployment rate is very low, many people wonder if it is because many people have stopped looking for jobs because they are frustrated with the jobs available to them.  The economy though seems to be growing, but at a smaller rate than the previous two years.  Up to date, the U.S  economy has grown only an 0.8%, when historically has grown 3% in a year.  More than 750 thousand jobs have been added this year, and people are wondering if the economy is not stalling.  For more about small business news, follow the link below.


Every Small Business Owner Should Know The 80/20 Rule

Alternately referred to as the Pareto principle or the law of the vital few, the 80/20 principle is one of the most important concepts in modern entrepreneurship. The term dates back to the 1940s, when the principle was named after pioneering Italian economist Vilfredo Pareto. In brief, the principle states that 80 percent of the effects are derived from 20 percent of the causes. Here are three different ways the 80/20 rule applies to modern-day business practices.

Training Your Staff

Regardless of industry, the success of any for-profit organization depends on the training and talent of its sales staff. To ensure that your sales staff is in the best possible position to succeed, they must receive training that allows them to overcome the objections of potential customers. As noted in this Entrepreneur interview, the best way to meet that objective is to teach your team the 20 percent of the knowledge they’ll need to answer 80 percent of consumer inquiries. Using the 80/20 rule, your training program will be compact enough to get new staffers up to speed as quickly as possible.

Pursuing Leads

The most commonly cited example of the 80/20 rule in business is that 80 percent of your company’s profits will come from 20 percent of your customer base. In order to maximize your company’s profitability, you should pour over your sales data to find what your most lucrative customers have in common. Whether its geography, age or marital status, you will find a commonality among your biggest purchasers, and once you do, you can adjust your marketing strategy to target that specific demographic.


Gene Marks: Here’s how one small business is controlling its healthcare costs.

The numbers are starting to come in and it’s not looking good. Healthcare premiums for both individuals and businesses of all sizes are going up again in 2017.

By a lot.

This is the time of year when insurance companies in each state request approval from regulators to set premiums for the following years. And big increases are being requested. How big? Humana is asking to raise rates by as much as 65 percent in Georgia and 38 percent in Pennsylvania. Providence Health wants to increase rates by almost 30 percent in Oregon. Insurers in Indiana, New Mexico and Maine have all requested rate increases north of 20 percent. Let’s not go into the reasons why all this is happening – there are many. What’s more important is facing up to the fact that healthcare is going to cost my small business a lot more next year. And, like every other business owner in the country, I’m struggling with what to do. How can I keep this huge cost under control?


Get Started: Money, Regulation Are Small Business Challenges

MONEY, REGULATIONS CHALLENGE BUSINESSES, SURVEY FINDS

Small businesses are still struggling to get the money they need and to comply with government regulations, according to a survey by Babson College.

Company owners who took part in the survey said they’ve been able to get only about 40 percent of the money they requested from all sources, including loans and investor funding. The nearly 1,900 survey participants sought a median amount of $100,000, but received only $40,500. The survey also found that banks are companies’ primary source of funding.

Finding money has long been difficult for small businesses, particularly young ones. However, getting loans has been even tougher since the recession because banks are extremely cautious about lending in general.

Businesses that seek funding are most likely to use it to supplement their cash flow or to buy real estate or equipment. Only about 8 percent of the owners said they wanted money so they could hire more staffers — a finding that’s in line with other surveys that have shown owners are conservative about expanding their payrolls.


 

The State of Small Business Today

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Many small businesses where the minimum wage has increased, are dealing with issues that they believed are detrimental to the growth of their companies.  Federal law regulation about overtime pay went into effect December 1, 2015, making this another issue to overcome.  As a small business owner, is 2016 a better or worse year for you?

To read more about this and other news, follow the links below.


What You Need to Know About the New Federal Overtime Rules 

Scheduled to go into effect Dec. 1, 2016, the new rule changes overtime regulations under the Fair Labor Standards Act’s minimum wage and overtime protections. Previously, employees were excluded if they were salaried, earned at least $455 per week ($23,660 per year) or were in positions considered executive, administrative or professional. Now, those exemptions will be lifted and the pay threshold for overtime protections will be raised to $913 per week, or an annual salary of $47,476. That pay threshold will be updated once every three years, indexed to wage growth over time.A rule change announced May 18 by the U.S. Department of Labor (U.S. DOL) would expand overtime protections to an estimated 4.2 million workers, extending the rule to cover those making less than $47,476 per year and removing long-standing exemptions in the law. Business News Daily dug into the specifics of the new regulation and spoke with labor policy experts and human resources professionals about the anticipated effects of the change, for both employers and workers.


Paychex Sees Small Business Job Growth Dip in May

The pace of small business job growth dropped slightly in May after a strong start earlier in the year, according to a new report from the payroll giant Paychex.

The Paychex | IHS Small Business Jobs Index, which the company compiles with the research firm IHS, declined 0.18 percent in May, from 100.77 to 100.59. Nevertheless, the pace of small business employment growth has increased 0.22 percent since the beginning of 2016.

“It’s roughly flat compared to a year ago, but the pace of small business job growth slowed a bit in May after a pretty hot start in ’16,” said Paychex president and CEO Martin Mucci. “We had a good start, but it’s dropped off a little bit. We’ll see if it’s a trend or not, but at this point we still feel like we’ve got pretty good job growth in small business, despite a little slowdown in May.”


Instagram targets small business ad revenue

SAN FRANCISCO — In a major bid to ramp up advertising revenue, Instagram is rolling out new features for small- and medium-sized businesses including the ability to buy an ad within the mobile app.

“This is really the first time you can advertise like this within the app,” James Quarles, Instagram’s global head of business and brand development, told USA TODAY.

“We have millions of businesses, great community members, and today we want to help them to have the capability to be a business on Instagram, not just be an account,” he said.


 

The Decline of Workplace Productivity

business (1)Productivity is the quality, state, or fact of being able to generate, create, enhance, or bring forth goods and services- (dictionary.com).  And unfortunately, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics productivity in the workplace is declining and has been for many years, with no clear solution.   You can finger point and blame a group, a department, or even specific individuals, but the truth is productivity in the workplace is declining and management has very few solutions to the problem.

For more about this and other topics, follow the links below.


Workplace productivity declines: Blame millennials (employers agree)

A report by the Dallas Fed was released this morning, showing a significant decline in factory activity during the month of May. With this decline came serious concerns about an increase in labor costs coupled with a lack of productivity from workers.

Akin Oyedele of the Business Insider reported that “most other regional manufacturing indexes, including those from New York, Richmond and Chicago showed that the sector’s rebound is taking longer than anticipated.”

It is alarming to find that Dallas is not the only city to be facing manufacturing decline. “Like Dallas, there was also renewed slowdown in Chicago after a few months of recovery,” said Oyedele.People expressed concerns towards the Department of Labor’s recent changes in salary, with an overtime increase of $47,476 from $23,660 spiking business costs. The overtime salary complaint was heightened by frustrations that workers were not using their time productively, with specific complaints directed towards the younger employees.


Chika Uwazie: How to Increase Workplace Productivity

Wow, it’s another week and instead of seeing happy motivated employees eager to get back to work after the weekend; you see a zombie like crowd just shuffling their way through the doors and into their cubicles. They come to work emotionless, far from motivated and definitely not eager to get back to work. Some even go as far as wearing a T-Shirt that says “I Hate Mondays” (We get it!)

Now, many Nigerian employers do not see that these are the signs of an unmotivated workforce. In case you didn’t know, an unmotivated workforce is an unproductive workforce and an unproductive workforce is the number one killer of business success (we do not want that do we?).


Is Coffee Really Toxic to Workplace Productivity?

Coffee is the staple requirement for any good programmer, and it’s a great way to build your network. But the real cost of those coffees is higher than the price at the till.

In the Observer, writer Isaac Morehouse made a provocative proposition: the habit of grabbing coffee with colleagues or partners “just to chat” is killing our productivity.

“Let’s grab coffee and chat.”

According to Isaac Morehouse, those five words can be damning. Morehouse’s opinion is that when you become known for doing interesting things, like starting a business or writing intriguing articles, lots of people want to have coffee with you. Most of the time, he says, it’s a bad idea.

Morehouse continues:

“Face to face meetings can be valuable. There’s an energy that you don’t get any other way. But the cost is very high, and it’s rare to gain that energy with a stranger. Unless you know from interactions over email, social media, or phone that you and this person have mutual interests and will both be spurred to beneficial action by a coffee meeting, avoid it.”


 

Small Business Social Media, Cybersecurity, And Social Networking

54642287Many people around the globe are willing to give a lot of private information about themselves if it means they will get something of value in return.  Researchers found that among these, millennial are the most willing demographic to give information about themselves.  And although the information is of value to these companies, millennials do not seem too concerned whether this information will be use ethically or not.

To read more about this and other topics follow the links below.


What Small Businesses Need to Know About the Future of Cybersecurity and Hackers

Q: What should small businesses know about for the future of cybersecurity?

A: The truest way to frame the future of cybersecurity is to expect constant change. With estimates ranging from 20 to 50 billion connected devices coming online between now and 2020, the attack surface is expanding at an exponential rate. This fact along with hyper-connectivity brought on by new technologies like 5G will amplify the appetite of bad actors as they try new techniques to attack and disrupt your business. Our industry will continue to take on these new challenges through continuous innovation and recasting how security solutions are built and deployed.

To help thwart the efforts of cybercriminals who target businesses like yours, make it a point to stay informed of what’s going on in cybersecurity and how it may impact your business. Part of staying informed would include how contemporary security solutions are addressing these cybersecurity challenges. I would suggest taking an hour or two each week to understand the cybersecurity trends that are impacting your specific industry (health, finance, manufacturing, retail, etc.) and along the lines of the size of our business.


Why Social Networking Matters For Small Business Owners

Getting the word out about your company is one of the biggest challenges for small business owners today. No matter how great your product is, it can be hard to get noticed when your marketing budget is a fraction of the size of your bigger competitors.

Fortunately, there are a few things you can do to even the score. With websites like LinkedInFacebookTwitterInstagramPeriscope, and more being developed each day, it has never been easier to get more bang for your buck and to use social networking to your advantage.

People Give Money to People

It’s an old fundraising adage that people give money to people. This is not to say that a great idea doesn’t help, but at the end of the day the thing that’s going to attract customers to your brand and keep them coming back is a personal connection.

Social networking helps you make a personal connection by allowing you to give your followers access to a behind-the-scenes look at your business. The swanky Providence-based restaurant North’s Twitter feed is a great example of this kind of approach—almost every post has an image of a new menu, fresh ingredients, or a delicious-looking new dish. Including images is a key strategy for increasing intimacy and creating more effective and shareable social media content.


3 signs your small business should forego social media, and what to do instead

Wait — you thought every business needs a social media presence? Columnist Jordan Kasteler explains why being on Facebook, Twitter or YouTube may not be the right answer for a small business.

If you’re a small business owner, the title of this article may not sit well with you. After all, there’s no shortage of online articles and blog posts insisting that it’s necessary for businesses of all sizes to maintain a social media presence.

Admittedly, having a professionally crafted social media presence does benefit many large companies worldwide. Social media, when done right, can give a brand or a public figure an effective “voice” and let their personality shine. (Even Bernie Sanders can attest to social media’s branding abilities.)

Effective social media practices also can make a company more visible, as well as build trust with its consumers.

However, all this being said, a huge problem exists for small businesses that spend time and effort on social media: The return on investment is often lacking.

Countless small businesses don’t have the ability to do social media right. Is yours one of them? Here are three signs that you need to be getting out of the social media arena:


 

 

 

Small Business Lending – Are The Terms In Your Favor?

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Many small business owners try to keep cash in hand to cover payroll and any other contingencies they may have month in and month out.  If some small businesses have problems meeting payroll that month, they have to come with a solution right away.  Small business loans are a solution for them, but sometimes the terms of the loan are not worth the trouble. Small businesses are the most susceptible to scams, or poor loan rates that eventually are more harmful than not.  Before you signed on a loan that you really need, be careful what you are signing for, understand the terms, and borrow only what you need and not more.  Shop around first, and if a bank is not offering the best terms for you, there are many others that will want to work with you, and your business.

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


SMALL BUSINESS ALTERNATIVE LENDING: Alternative roads to capital will add billions to the small business lending market.

Small businesses are the backbone of the US economy. Small businesses — businesses with less than 500 employees — represent 99% of US companies, 54% of total sales, and 55% of all jobs, according to the US Small Business Administration. And these businesses need capital in order to grow.

But small businesses are underfunded — only half of small businesses with $100,000 to $1 million of annual revenue received at least some of the financing they applied for from large banks in late 2015. This is partially because banks have retreated from this segment because issuing loans to small businesses using the traditional underwriting model is expensive. This leaves a massive amount of unfulfilled loans that we estimate reached $96.5 billion in Q4 2015.

Alternative lending companies have stepped in to capitalize on the opportunity available in helping meet more small business’ lending needs. Alternative small business lending platforms use machine learning and digital tools to extend credit to a wide array of small businesses quickly and efficiently, particularly to those that have been rejected by banks. Alternative small business lending companies provide digital platforms that connect small business borrowers to capital using nontraditional means.


Small Business Loan Approval Rates Surge

Big banks have long been accused of turning a blind eye to small businesses’ credit needs, but things are changing for the better now.

According to the Biz2Credit Small Business Lending Index, March 2016, the monthly analysis of more than 1,000 small business loan applications on Biz2Credit.com, loan approval rates at big banks and institutional lenders has hit new highs.

By contrast, approval rates declined slightly for small banks, credit unions, and alternative lenders.

Key Highlights

Some of the top findings of the monthly study include the following:

  • Big banks approved 23 percent funding requests in March, up two-tenths of a percent from February 2016,
  • Institutional lenders improved their approval rates to 62.8 percent, up from 62.7 percent in February,

Chase Quietly Launches Its Online Small-Business Loan Platform

Following months of behind-the-scenes work with OnDeck Capital, JPMorgan Chase has quietly started offering online loans to its existing small-business customers.

The New York megabank launched its digital lending platform on a limited basis last week, spokeswoman MaryJane Rogers confirmed Monday.

Existing Chase small-business customers are being prescreened, and some of them are being invited to apply for loans of up to $250,000, according to Brian Geary, director of platform solutions at OnDeck.

JPMorgan has roughly 4 million small-business customers. The bank declined to say how many of those clients have received invitations to apply for a loan, or when its online lending platform will be opened to a broader group of prospective applicants.


 

Apps And Tools To Make Your Small Business Run Efficiently

Customer Relationship Management business chart on a digital tab

According to the Small business administration (SBA) small businesses in the United States have increased by 49% since the 1980s. and provide more than half the jobs in this country. And although small business owners employ many workers, their personal loads at work have increased. They do more than one job at any specific time, and their long hours seem to never be enough to catch up with the many things they have to accomplish daily.  If you find yourself in a similar situation, then this article might benefit you tremendously.  Read more by following the links below.


Top 10 mobile apps for business executives

Anyone with a smartphone or tablet knows that a good app can make life easier — and business executives are no exception. These are the top 10 consumer apps that business people turn to for day-to-day productivity.

Mobile apps for business executives

Apps make your life easier. You can place an order for nearly anything with the touch of a button, you can call a cab to your door or schedule an appointment all without talking to a live person. It seems only natural that as apps make our personal lives more efficient, they’re also making our business lives more productive and functional.

“Over the last five to 10 years we have seen enterprises move away from in-house apps to off-the-shelf or SaaS models. Many of these are consumer-grade services that are retrofitted to specific enterprise needs,” says Dan Rowinski, editor in chief of the Application Resource Center (ARC), publishers of the report and the editorial and research arm of app quality and testing company Applause.


4 Tools That Make Your Small Business Look Big

Being a small company has its benefits: You’re agile, able to change directions at a moment’s notice. You’ve got autonomy, as your business is independent of a giant conglomerate. No, you’re not attracting the same number of consumers as a household name business, but that doesn’t mean  you can’t look every bit as professional to the consumers you do reach. You can make your small business look big.

Build/Update your Website:

The U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) estimated last year that 50 percent of all small businesses still didn’t have a website. Without a presence on the web, your small business can easily go unnoticed by potential customers. Now the good news: It’s easier than ever to create a website, especially one that your customers can access from their mobile devices. More than 75 percent of mobile phone users access the internet through them, and the number will rise to nearly 86 percent by 2018. Google now favors sites which work well on mobile in its search results: You definitely want to be one of the top results when people go looking.


KANSAS CITY — A little over a month ago, Tony Spagnoli, an aspiring coffee roaster in Philadelphia, discovered his fledgling business had received $3,500 from Mondelez International, Inc. Specifically, the money came from Triscuit Maker Fund, a project launched with crowdfunding web site Indiegogo to support artisanal food makers. On March 23, the cracker brand invested $250,000 to help fund 55 food makers’ campaigns on Indiegogo. Ranging from microbrewers to food trucks to small farms, the businesses represent a diverse scope of backgrounds, products, size of organization and geographic location across the United States and Canada.

“The timing of the Triscuit Maker Fund was just impeccable,” Mr. Spagnoli told Food Business News. “I had reached the point where I needed new capital to do some training and buy additional equipment, and I was also in the process of changing the brand name, so I had to redo a lot of collateral and the web site.”


 

Ohio Small Business News

Last Oct. 2015 the Unemployment rate for the state of Ohio was a 4.7%, and since then it has been increasing slowly, but surely to a 5.1% as of last month. A small increase to be sure, but it does make you wonder whether there are better times to come for the state, or things are going to progressively get worse.  Small businesses in Ohio are not as optimistic as they were last year, and some are still wondering wether the minimum wage increase will have other ramifications for their businesses.  For more news bout Ohio, follow the links below.


Ohio’s economy has had its ups and downs over the years, experiencing decline long before the rest of the nation felt the effects of the financial crisis. In the years preceding the recession, Ohio’s manufacturing sector was hollowed out, contributing to a drop in per capita income and a drastic slowdown in growth. And while the unemployment rate has plummeted, the labor force has shed nearly 300,000 workers since its peak in late 2007, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. And as employment rises, so does the demand for skilled or experienced labor, and business owners find it progressively harder to hire the employees they need at the cost they want.

However, in 2008 — amid the recession — Ohio’s per capita income started to gain compared to the national average, and the U.S.’ seventh-largest economy has seen some bright spots. Despite a difficult decade — between 2004 and 2014, the compound annual growth rate of Ohio’s GDP was an anemic 0.3 percent, according to the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) — entrepreneurs in Ohio are seeing promise again. For small business owners in the Buckeye State, the sentiment is tepid optimism that a fledgling startup community and the return of manufacturing in the form of tech-focused companies will propel the economy forward in the years to come.


While small business owners acknowledge that there are some downsides to increasing wages for their entry-level workers, many of these business owners also find positives in doing so, new research finds.

Nearly 60 percent of small business owners said they favor raising the minimum wage, and the same percentage said they would likely vote for a state or national candidate who supports a minimum-wage increase, according to a study from Manta, a provider of products, services and educational resources for small businesses.

The results were released as both California and New York recently approved measures to gradually increase their minimum wages to $15 per hour.

The majority of small businesses surveyed are already paying their employees above what’s required. The research revealed that 40 percent of small business owners pay entry-level employees “far above” the required minimum wages in their areas of operation, while 38 percent pay “slightly above” the minimum wage. Just 14 percent are paying the state or local minimums, and only 9 percent are paying the federal minimum wage of $7.25 per hour.


Small Business Confidence Hits New Two-Year Low

Small business confidence fell to a fresh two-year low in March amid persistent worries about sales and profits, the latest indication that economic growth braked sharply in the first quarter.

The National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) said on Tuesday its small business optimism index dipped 0.3 point to a reading of 92.6 last month, the lowest since February 2014.

It has declined from a reading of 100 in December 2014 and has pushed further off its 42-year average of 98.

“A ‘chartist’ looking at the data historically might conclude that the index has clearly hit a top and is flashing a recession signal. The April survey will decide whether or not the alarm should be rung,” the NFIB said in statement.

The soft reading fits in with recent economic data on consumer and business spending as well as wholesale inventory investment that have suggested economic growth slowed sharply from the fourth quarter’s 1.4 percent annualized rate.