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Tag Archives: development
Business classes can help with business development competition
UC Clermont College and the Ohio Small Business Development Center at the Clermont Chamber of Commerce will host a Business Plan Competition. Continue reading
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Tagged Business, business-plan, clermont, clermont-chamber, clermont-college, commerce, development, ohio, start-up business, will-host
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Business North – The Daily Briefing – Business Newspaper Online Franken, Oberstar announce $750,000 for Northeast …
U.S. Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.) and U.S. Rep. Jim Oberstar (D-Minn) announced $750,000 in funding for the Virginia-based Northeast Entrepreneur Fund, Inc. The funds are administered by the Department of the Treasurys Community Development Financial Institutions Fund. This funding will allow the Northeast Entrepreneur Fund to continue to support small businesses on the Iron Range by providing … Continue reading
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Tagged Business, development, entrepreneur, institutions, northeast, treasurys, treasurys-community, virginia
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How to Bring Your Concept to Market
You have moved past the stage in which you have a brilliant business concept; and, you are no longer in the product development phase, where you do the pre- and post-prototype. You have tested your concept by conducting online surveys, focus groups, trade show demonstrations or through some other means to determine if potential customers will buy your product or service. You have refined your concept based on reliable feedback. Now comes the business development, which means you are all geared up to start manufacturing, marketing and selling your product or offering your service. “I started out with a concept on a piece of paper, now we are in 1,000 uniform stores,” says Gary R. Bronga, president of Miami-based Clipeze Worldwide. The Clipeze is Bronga’s personal design spin on an identification badge that features a bar at the bottom of a lapel pin allowing for custom logos and artwork for companies and associations. Braga had worked in the aerospace industry at Cape Canaveral for 21 years, where wearing identification badges was a routine part of his wardrobe. After applying for five different design patents, finding a supplier for the prototype, and coming up with a low-cost price point, Braga contacted buyers in catalogs. “The advantage of going to catalogs is that they like new products,” he says. “I conducted a marketing campaign where it was geared toward the individual buyer with a personal letter. I sent samples. I followed up.” According to Braga, catalogs help in several ways: “They distribute to an entire industry, they provide a stream of income, they keep your product in the catalog as long as it sells, and they open up access to other outlets, including retailers.” Your local library will house directories listing catalogs and mail-order retailers. “Once you get into that first one, which is always the toughest, other catalogs companies in that category will contact you. If you are good for their competitor you are good enough for them,” adds the author of Bringing A Product To Market From Your Home . Clipeze is in some 20 catalogs. Braga has sold to date over three million of his badge holders. Nurses and other medical professionals are among his biggest supporters. An analysis of your business will of course dictate if mail-order is the best distribution channel for your particular product. Or if your business is a service then how will you find customers and how will they know about you. How to Bring Your Concept to Market: Have A Business Plan There are three resources that must be maximized to ensure your business success — money, strategy, and people. Having a business plan provides a detailed description of the best way to optimize these resources. But this goes beyond a 10 to 20 page document; you need a well thought of plan of action. What are the mechanics to bringing your product to market: how much will it cost to produce, what price will you sell it at, what is estimated sales volume and profitability? The answers to these questions are where your earlier market research and consumer feedback comes into play. “Moving forward without a written business plan is a common mistake among budding entrepreneurs,” says Jeff Mesquita, chairman of the Atlanta chapter of SCORE (Service Corps or Retired Executives). “A business plan forces you to clarify the strategic plan for business growth,” he adds. It’s also a living document that you should revise more than once over the course of the business. For help developing your business plan, go to local small business development centers, many of which are affiliated with local colleges or chambers of commerce. Start is with the Association of Small Business Development Centers . Also, SCORE ’s Quick Start program assists business start-ups nationwide. Dig Deeper: Business Plan Template How to Bring Your Concept to Market: Execute Your Business Concept Your job now is the implementation. Figure out how to get your product or service into the hands of customers who are your target market. Will you do it yourself or will you outsource manufacturing? Who is going to physically transport your product to customers? If you haven’t already done so, line up suppliers, manufactures, and distributors. Check with the National Association of Manufacturers , Thomas Register of American Manufacturers , or National Association of Wholesaler-Distributors . What are the methods of distribution: retail, online, and/or catalog purchases? “What’s your understanding of the final consumer, the end-users? Your market research should have revealed more than do you like my product or service but really how and where does your target market buy,” says Suzan Barnett, a consultant and area director of the Small Business Development Center at Valdosta State University in Valdosta, Georgia. Who will sell it: you, in-house sales staff, independent reps, telemarketers? What about facilities: will you operate from home, a kiosk in the mall, or local storefront? Take into consideration key factors. Foot traffic is a big deal in retailing. Don’t overlook business incubators, which are one-stop shops of space and services, including technical assistance. Contact the National Business Incubation Association . How will you get the word out about your product or service to your target market, asks Barnett. If they don’t read newspapers but look for information online, then you don’t want to spend money on print advertising (and vice versa), she explains. Many cash-stamped entrepreneurs are using Google, which provides a host of web-based products, services, servers, and client applications beyond Gmail. Google’s AdWord enables small businesses of all kinds to place ads for as little as $25 a month. Yahoo! has a Small Business Resource Center that offers a wide range of Web hosting, e-commerce storefronts, sales lead generation, and online marketing services. Dig Deeper: How to Use Sampling and Demos for Customer Feedback How to Bring Your Concept to Market: Protect Your Concept Once you have tested your concept and found it to be sound, safeguard your brand name or image by registering it as a service mark or trademark, suggests Richard Stim, attorney and author of Patent, Copyright & Trademark: An Intellectual Property Desk Reference . To protect a unique product you have invented—one that is fully developed and working—register a patent with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office . Literature, music, art, fashion designs, and software programs are copyrighted and registered with the U.S. Copyright Office . The most common response by a competitor to a successful product or service is to imitate it. “The best defense is to always strive to be No. 1 in the marketplace,” says Braga. “Most companies will let you gain market share before they copy you.” Have plans in the works for making improvements to your product or your service so that you are prepared when there are competitive threats to your business, he suggests. Not every product requires a patent. This is a costly process in terms of lawyers and fees– from $3,000 to $15,000. A lot of it depends on how difficult it is to duplicate your idea or reverse engineer your product, says Stim. Coca Cola doesn’t patent their secret formula so that their recipe doesn’t get stolen; it’s treated as a closely held trade secret. One way to protect your product or service is to position yourself as an expert or go-to person in the industry, says Susan Friedmann, a nichepreneur coach in Lake Placid, New York and author of Riches in Niches: How to Make it Big in a Small Market . Use social media, blogs, Twitter, Facebook. “Those things become important in letting people know who you are and what you do.” Arrange for speaking opportunities at conferences or attend trade shows to let people see how knowledgeable you are even when aren’t selling directly to them. Dig Deeper: How to File a Trademark How to Bring Your Concept to Market: Build Your Capital Bank credit and traditional loans are even harder to access these days in the post financial meltdown economic climate. Which means you’ll probably have to tap into personal savings, equity in your home, or relatives to finance your new enterprise. Braga started his business with $500 and a computer. “I made sure that I didn’t go out and borrow a bunch of money and get into a lot of debt.” Barnett notes that if you have not positioned your personal credit such that a bank will see you as a strong enough credit risk, they won’t lend to you. “A poor credit score will ruin any chance of qualifying for a loan.” Starting out, have enough money in savings during the first 6 to 12 months of operation so that you’re not relying on the business to cover personal living expenses. Pour profits back into the business to pay for the business’ expenses. Keep in mind selling a lot of product or service doesn’t mean your making money. Some businesses spend more than they earn. “Stay on top of your finances,” says Barnett. Dig Deeper: How to Finance a Business With Your 401K Business – Google – Marketing – Advertising – Distribution Continue reading
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Tagged Business, concept, copyright, customer, development, finance, gary bronga, klebcil pediatric, medical, new york, nichepreneur, office, reference, sbdc, small-business, university, web
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NWI workshop takes look at potential for business start-up
The Northwest Indiana Small Business Development Center isoffering its Business Feasibility Workshop twice — from 6 to 8p.m. Tuesday at the Regional Development Co., 1757 ThornappleCircle, Valparaiso, and Sept. 14 at the Hammond INnovation Center,5209 Hohman Ave., Hammond. Continue reading
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Tagged Business, development, hohman, isoffering-its, northwest, northwest-indiana, regional-development, start-up, start-up business, workshop
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Rural agencies help small business grow
Businesses throughout rural Nevada will receive additional access to development capital in the coming months as a result of a continuing partnership between the United States Department of Agriculture’s Rural Development agency and the Rural Nevada Development Corporation. Continue reading
How to Open a Business in Brooklyn
For Alexis Miesen , Atlantic Avenue had all the makings of the quintessential Brooklyn thoroughfare that combines the charm of a small town with the pace of city life. With its colorful boutique storefronts, diverse dining options, smattering of coffee shops, and antique stores, she expected to see happy families strolling along the street sharing ice cream cones. There was one problem: There was no ice cream anywhere around. “It’s filled with all these fantastic bars and restaurants and shops and it just has this really great kind of energy. They have all these great amenities to the community but no great ice cream shop,” she said. “This is a gap in what other people are offering.” Less than three years later, Miesen and her partner Jennie Dundas had opened not only an ice cream shop on Atlantic Avenue, but also had rapidly expanded the franchise to two other Brooklyn locations, feeding summertime crowds that often form lines winding out the door. Blue Marble’s organic, grass-fed dairy-based ice cream has been praised on The Martha Stewart Show, CNN, and in a bevy of New York City publications. Brooklyn has become as much a brand these days as a location. Slap the word “Brooklyn” on a piece of clothing and it’s instantly edgy, and quite likely to sell. New York City’s most populous borough remains a popular place to start a business, and Miesen and Dundas are emblematic of the grassroots, DIY entrepreneurs across the borough who’ve found a niche, and a loyal fan base that helps spread their brand along the way. (Check out Inc.com’s slideshow on Brooklyn’s Best Entrepreneurs .) The surge of creative energy, young artists and recent graduates is putting Brooklyn on the map not just for its booming music scene but also as competition with San Francisco to see who will lead the next Internet revolution. Business owners say starting a venture in Brooklyn requires creativity, a careful study of neighborhoods, and a good deal of Web 2.0 savvy. We talked with several successful companies about why the county of Kings is a bubbling cauldron of entrepreneurship, and how to get in on the action. Opening a Business in Brooklyn: Why Brooklyn? While Brooklyn was once considered a sparse hinterland outside the bustling hub of Manhattan, now it’s seen as the roomier, cheaper, less chaotic alternative, with a more stable population, and a reputation for creativity that draws artists, developers, and investors from across the world. “It’s a community actually that appreciates a lot of handmade goods, ethnic foods,” said Catalina Castano, director of the Brooklyn Small Business Development Center. “It’s not only ethnically diverse but it’s also culturally diverse. People have really open minds.” For those looking to tap into the excitement of New York City without getting tapped dry on cash, Brooklyn can be the savior. The average rent for prime commercial corridors in Brooklyn such as Court Street, Fifth Avenue in Park Slope, and Bedford Avenue in Williamsburg is between $35 and $100 per square foot, according to a 2010 retail report produced by CPEX Real Estate. Compare that to $125 to $2,000 per square foot in most of Manhattan’s commercial areas. “It is a bit closer to the real world,” said Taylor Mork, owner of Crop To Cup, a family-farm centric coffee importer based near downtown Brooklyn. ”It’s not as fast-paced. I think people are willing to wait a little longer on their investment in you.” With 2.7 million residents, the demand for goods and services is multitudinous and diverse. The first step, experts say, is figuring out where you need to put your business to best serve your clientele. Dig Deeper: The View From Brooklyn Opening a Business in Brooklyn: Location, Location, Location Brooklyn’s neighborhoods all have unique flavors and demographics, so Castano and others said the initial question any new business should ask is: Who are my customers? If you’re a family retailer like the boutique Area Kids, the answer is Park Slope, and the busy pedestrian and commercial thoroughfares of 7th and 5th Avenues. “What I look for with kids stores is people pushing strollers,” said owner Loretta Gendville, who runs seven stores and spas in Brooklyn and two in Manhattan. “I want a high density with parents, moms. I like people that are at home, people that are with their kids during the day.” That means opening a space alongside kids hair salons, yoga studios and tea shops on those Park Slope streets. Trying for a bar? The influx of artists, a vibrant music scene and a surge in condo construction make Williamsburg a hot spot for bar hopping. If large-scale production is your game, the old manufacturing warehouse buildings on the north Brooklyn waterfront are considered prime real estate. When Rob Ferraroni was looking for a new location for his Ferra Designs metal fabrication shop 12 years ago, relocating to the Brooklyn Navy Yard seemed like a bold move. Now, people are clamoring to get into the property, and the ground-level, 10,000-sqare foot space in a former World War II building trades shop is coveted. A lot of his work is for clients in Manhattan, which is a quick hop across the bridge. “You need to be able to execute these ambitious projects, so you need room,” Ferraroni said. People also doubted Doug Steiner when he started building Steiner Studios on in the Navy Yard in 1999. But Steiner saw the potential for major growth, and the opportunity to fill a hole in the movie and television production market in New York City. Now Steiner Studios is the largest studio complex outside of Hollywood with aims of growing to a 50-acre campus, and New York City has helped roll out the welcome mat for the film industry in Brooklyn. “Everyone under 30 in the business now lives in Brooklyn. Manhattan’s gotten homogenized and nullified,” he said. “The light and the air and the view and the waterfront make this a really special place to come to.” In the tech community, the neighborhood of DUMBO (whose acronym stands for Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass) is the hot trending ‘hood. For instance, drop.io, a private file-sharing service, moved to the area in 2008 to grow its business alongside a rising district of art galleries, performance spaces and a newly expanded Brooklyn Bridge Park. Another perk: an incredible view of the Manhattan skyline. “If you did it in Manhattan or Midtown or something, you’d basically have to get an office the size of a conference room,” said Steve Greenwood, drop.io’s head of applications. Instead, the company got a cheaper, spacious headquarters with exposed brick ceilings and enough space to use for both work and after-hours social and networking events. “The culture of DUMBO is very complimentary to starting up business,” he said. “This is a very creative, imaginative place.” Dig Deeper: How to Pick a Site for Your Business Opening a Business in Brooklyn: Finding and Understanding Your Customers If there’s one thing people say is almost unanimous across Brooklyn it’s that borough residents tend to be fiercely loyal and supportive of their local businesses. But how can you earn that loyalty? Business owners said Brooklyn is ripe with ways to discover and cultivate a customer base, even before you decide on a permanent location. Mork spent months pitching his Crop to Cup coffee all over Manhattan only to be met with blank stares. In 2008, he decided to set up a $100-a-day booth at the first outing of the Brooklyn Flea, now a wildly popular market-style showcase of local artisans and antique dealers held in the Fort Greene neighborhood. There, his company’s credo of farmer-centric coffee found an eager audience. Within a few years, his coffee was on the shelves at several nearby businesses, and he recently opened a Crop To Cup caf Continue reading
Making Giant Leaps in Aerospace
By analyzing and directing future space technologies, SpaceWorks helps decide which aerospace projects should take flight and which should stay grounded. As we process applications for the 2011 Inc. 500 | 5000, we thought it would be worthwhile to shine … Continue reading
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What work do you take on vacation?
The July 4th weekend is just behind us and I spent a good part of last week thinking about summer and how my expectation for work-free vacations might or might not be about to disappear with the launch of FamiliesGo!. Back when I had a staff job at a major business magazine I had an editor who asked me to miss an evening flight that would start my annual vacation to do an eleventh-hour revise on a story. Now, he’d known about my trip for well over a month and I’d filed this story several weeks earlier. Still, he needed to make this request because he’d only gotten around to reading my piece at 4:00 p.m. the day after it was supposed to go to press. I declined to cancel my flight and instead scrambled to do some additional reporting while my boyfriend waited in the lobby with our luggage and the taxi I’d called left to find another fare. We made the plane—barely. But it was a learning moment for me. When I got back I had to acknowledge that many of the people who were successful at that publication would have skipped their flight without blinking an eye. In truth, if I had to do it over again the only thing I’d do differently would be call the editor out for disrespecting my time before leaving to catch my taxi. So shortly afterward I began to plot my transition to freelancing—the only way to guarantee that I’d always have a boss who respected my vacation time. And for the 12 years I’ve been self-employed, my R&R time has been mine. I believe it’s necessary to disconnect every so often to avoid burn out and gain a new perspective on my work—not to mention have fun with loved ones and be a well-rounded person. I’ve never toted my laptop on a personal trip and I generally leave out-of-the office messages warning I won’t have regular access to email or voicemail for several days. This summer things are different. My husband managed to wrangle three weeks of vacation—no small feat these days—and we’re taking my German-speaking three-year-old to Munich, where she has cousins her age and an uncle who owns a bakery (really, what more do you need on a vacation when you’re three). Free-agent Eileen would have shut down the office for three weeks, no question. But I’m not sure business-owner Eileen can. Truth be told I like the idea of a website that can continue to generate revenue while I’m exploring charming Alpine villages. But I also know that a young business is a lot like a small child; it needs a certain amount of ongoing attention to thrive. It seems unwise to let a website that’s just a few weeks old sit idle for 21 days. But I don’t know how much I can realistically plan to do. I have no idea if the homes and inns we’ll be staying in will have Wi-Fi, or if access to my website platform will be the same from overseas. I don’t know how much work I can expect to cram in around visiting friends and family and sightseeing with a jetlagged child. Also, I imagine Munich’s famous beer gardens are not so good for productivity. In addition, I still believe in the necessity of downtime. And I don’t want to be the parent with a phone attached to her ear while waiting in line to ride the Tea Cups at Legoland. Or the workaholic who’s too busy texting to enjoy the scenery on a stunning Alpine lake. Here’s what I’m thinking: I will bring my laptop (in my suitcase, not on the plane). I will work one to two evenings each week. No days. I’ll work ahead to have fresh content written, uploaded, and formatted so that I just have to make it “live” from wherever I am. I’ll monitor email and answer notes that really can’t wait. I will try to defer as much as I can until I’m home again. As with everything else on this new venture, I’ll have to see how it goes and improvise. I’d love feedback and advice from Inc.com readers. Have you tried to unplug from your business on vacation? How did it affect your business? If not, where do you draw the line? What work do you take with you on vacation and what do you put off? How has working on vacation affected your wellbeing? I’ll respond to your comment…unless I’m already out of town when you post. Continue reading
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Tagged Business, business start up help, development, employee, innovation, marketing, personal-finance, sales, starting up a business, web
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Inc. 5000 Update: Auction Systems Auctioneers & Appraisers
Auctioneering, not prostitution, is the oldest profession known to man. Deborah Weidenhamer seemed destined for a career in finance until a chance conversation led her to become an auctioneer. Sixteen years later, Weidenhamer’s business, Auction Systems Auctioneers & Appraisers, is thriving, with revenue of $93.3 million—and the No. 1,532 spot on the 2010 Inc. 5000, the company’s seventh appearance on the list. I was on a flight to Phoenix, and I started talking to the gentleman next to me, who happened to be an auctioneer. I learned that auctions are a huge industry—$270 billion in 2010—dominated by a few family-run firms. I was mesmerized. The first thing I did was to sign up for auction school, where I learned how to chant and talk fast. My husband thought I had lost my mind. He has since gotten over it. We sell for banks, lawyers, courts, government agencies, and individuals. We sell everything from bulldozers from the Department of Transportation to stolen and confiscated goods from law enforcement. We once sold a decree from the Salem witch trials. My firm has a TV show called Auctioneer$, where they film us at work. I think the recent craze of reality shows has made auctions more popular, but what really changed things was the economy. Ordinary folks were looking for the fastest way to sell their stuff. People are also looking to maintain their lifestyle without spending as much. What gives us our competitive advantage is that all of our auctions are simulcast online, which means we have people bidding live and on their computers. Everything is transparent. For more on the Inc. 500|5000, go to www.inc.com/inc5000. Continue reading
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Tagged advertising, auction, computers, development, finance, internet, lifestyle, marketing, online-marketing, personal-finance, phoenix, small-business
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Cork start-up secures €1m funds
A CORK-based medical start-up firm has secured a €1.1 million investment for future development. Continue reading
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Tagged cork, development, entrepreneur competition, future, medical-start-up, result, running your business
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