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Tag Archives: united-states
A Supplier of Film Extras Now Trains Military Troops
Lexicon Consulting, in El Cajon, California, got its start by providing extras for big-screen military battles. Now CEO Jamie Arundell-Latshaw’s company creates mock Afghan and Iraqi villages to help train troops who are headed overseas. She spoke with Inc.’s Jason Del Rey about Lexicon (No. 4) , the top woman-run company. What are the most radical circumstances your employees replicate? At Fort Irwin, in California, as troops and medics drive up to a village, a rocket-propelled grenade goes off, a car explodes, and we have role players screaming and chanting. We hire amputees who fall out of vehicles. The wounds look realistic, and they’re set up in a way that the medics have to put pressure on the wounds and stop the bleeding. Our goal is to make the simulation as real as possible. Where do you find your role players? One of the reasons we have our office down in El Cajon is that there’s a big Iraqi population there. Our recruiters know what we’re looking for. So, what do you look for in a role player? We want people who can speak the language and understand the culture. And we also want people who have a passion for training troops the right way. Without that, you’re not going to be motivated to go above and beyond to provide a better service. What is your biggest challenge going forward? We’re growing so fast, so our challenges are hiring people who share our goals and having liquid cash. We don’t always get paid by the government within 30 to 60 days, so we have to balance trying to get new work with making sure we have money to perform the work. And the most rewarding part of the job for you? When troops return from multiple deployments overseas, the role players and managers who worked with them often get feedback like, “Learning what to do in each scenario made a difference in how I performed over there.” To learn more about Lexicon’s military training work, ” Lexicon Consulting ,” and to browse the complete Inc. 500/5000 list online, go to www.inc.com/inc5000 . Inc. Live: Ask Top Entrepreneurs Your Questions Check out our new series of live video chats featuring accomplished entrepreneurs such as Inc. columnist and 37signals co-founder Jason Fried, Zappos CEO Tony Hsieh, Mint.com founder Aaron Patzer, and Method co-founder Eric Ryan. To view the schedule of chats and watch archived chats, and to pose a question during our next chat, go to www.inc.com/live . Tony Hsieh – California – Zappos – El Cajon – United States Continue reading
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Tagged aaron-patzer, Business, consulting, culture, goals, government, language, lexicon-consulting, office, questions, role, simulation, united-states, work
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Bank’s in a Trailer: Would You Use It?
The Lakeside Bank has barely been in business a month and already it’s making headlines. It is the only new start-up bank to open in America this year. It’s not housed in some towering beacon in the sky, but a secondhand, standard double-wide trailer in Lake Charles, Louisiana. Business – United States – Financial Services – Banking Services – Banks and Institutions Continue reading
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Tagged america, charles, financial, lakeside, lakeside-bank, some-towering, start-up business, united-states
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This Trailer Is Actually a Pretty Good Bank: Would You Use It?
The Lakeside Bank has barely been in business a month and already it’s making headlines. It is the only new start-up bank to open in America this year. It’s not housed in some towering beacon in the sky, but a secondhand, standard double-wide trailer in Lake Charles, Louisiana. Business – United States – Financial Services – Banking Services – Banks and Institutions Continue reading
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Tagged america, banking, Business, financial, institutions, start-up business, united, united-states, year
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New Small Business Website Encourages the Unemployed to Seek Self-Employment
The launch of Start-Up-a-Small-Business.com has helped fuel a new movement in the United States and beyond: start your own small business so that you won’t have to depend on others for your income. So what’s stopping you? Continue reading
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Tagged Business, depend-on-others, income, new-movement, start-up, united, united-states, web
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Start up bank, rare, but true
LAKE CHARLES, La., Aug. 28 (UPI) — The first and only new bank charter granted to a U.S. bank this year started in Lake Charles, La., with $13 million in capital, The New York Times reported. United States – Lake Charles Louisiana – Lake Charles – Business – Financial Services Continue reading
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Tagged bank-charter, Business, charles, charles-louisiana, financial-services, lake, new york, only-new, times, united-states, year, year-started
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What Kind of Entrepreneur Are You? Part 3
Most growth-oriented entrepreneurs are wired for starting, not running, a business. I call these folks “on-base hitters” because, unlike baseball’s “sluggers,” they focus on earning lots of little wins in the form of starting many small businesses instead of seeking out rare but fantastic successes. (Read more about “on-base hitters” and “sluggers” in Part 1 of this series.) Yesterday, in Part 2 , I described the Kolbe personality test, which allows you to measure yourself on four personality attributes that are predictive of your success and happiness in running a business. People with a high Quick Start score on the Kolbe test thrive in the chaos of a start-up. One of the reasons Quick Starts rarely grow large businesses is because all of that creativity makes them bad managers. If you’ve ever watched a 230-pound slugger try to lumber his way to first base, you know it’s not a pretty sight. Neither is watching a Quick Start entrepreneur try to manage a large team of employees. When the boss is a Quick Start, employees get frustrated trying to keep up with all of the new ideas. Employees have trouble determining which brainchild was just a passing thought and which needs their most urgent attention. People with high Fact Finder scores often see their Quick Start boss as an impetuous, superficial risk taker. That’s why most growth-oriented entrepreneurs are happiest—and most successful—in the start-up phase. In a start-up, new ideas are valued at a premium, and there are only a few employees to manage. To follow our baseball analogy, these types are happiest with the quick, regular success of getting on base a lot rather than hitting a rare home run. Here’s an informal quiz to identify whether you’re best suited to be an on-base hitter or a home run slugger. Answer each question with a simple “agree” or “disagree.” I get bored easily.I feel overwhelmed by complexity.I have higher employee turnover than is normal for my industry.I like proposing new ideas that some people think are “off the wall.”I started lots of little businesses before getting into the one I’m running today.I’m a big-picture person.I started a little business when I was in high school or university.I burn out when my business gets too complex. If you answered “agree” to more than four of the questions above, you’re probably a person who thrives on the variety of the start-up and would flounder running a larger business. Focus on just getting on base by launching the business and creating revenue and a positive cash flow; then either sell it or install a manager. Clearly, you won’t earn as much from the sale of one small business than you would if you hung on and built it up further, but by getting out quickly, you’ll retain the energy and creativity to devote to a new business. Collectively, a portfolio of successful start-up businesses in a career could easily surpass the financial success of one home run, and you’ll be infinitely happier along the way. John Warrillow is the author of Built to Sell: Turn Your Business into One You Can Sell. He has started and exited four companies. Most recently John transformed Warrillow & Co. from a boutique consultancy into a recurring revenue model subscription business, which was acquired by The Corporate Executive Board. In 2008 he was recognized by BtoB Magazine’s “Who’s Who” list as one of America’s most influential business-to-business marketers. Business – Small business – Quick Start – United States – High school Continue reading
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Tagged america, Business, companies, employee, energy, financial, financial planner quick start kolbe, finder, getting-on-base, industry, kolbe, kolbe quick start, kolbe quickstart, kolbe quickstart career, personality, quick-start, start, united-states, what is quick start personality kolbe, working with quick start boss kolbe
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This Start-Up is "Auntie" Establishment
When the entire market focuses on one niche, and you choose another, you’re either a bold innovator, or a failure. Henry Ford’s quote about building cars for people wanting “faster horses” comes to mind. Last week I stopped by the BlogHer conference in New York, a highly popular national event which was full of energy, women bloggers and large consumer brands trying to reach those women. Many of the attendees are often characterized (rightly or wrongly) as “Mom bloggers.” But in the crowd I ran into a woman I’ve met in NYC several times, and who zigs where others have zagged. Instead of tapping into the power of the mom market, she’s discovered her own niche – “PANKS” or “Professional Aunt No KidS.” Former print beauty editor and marketing communications executive Melanie Notkin is an aunt herself, and was frustrated by the lack of information sources for women who cared about kids, but weren’t their primary caregivers. She started Savvy Auntie in 2008 and has created her own establishment – with a pretty large demographic to back her up. Howard Greenstein: How did you identify the need for your company? Melanie Notkin: Savvy Auntie is a multi-platform lifestyle company for the nearly 50% of American women who are not moms but love a child in their life. At first, the desire to create this company came from my own experience realizing that my nephew and nieces were the most important and happiest aspects of my life and yet I had no resources designed for me. And anything out there was cheesy or old and “auntique-y.” Even as a pretty savvy New York City beauty executive, I felt pretty unsavvy about the important things I need to know about the lives of these children, from changing diapers to who the heck Dora the Explorer was. As a marketer, I saw the potential of the market when I simply looked at US fertility data. 45.1 percent of American women through age 44 do not have children (there’s no data on women 45 plus). 14 percent of those who are mothers have their first child age 35 or over. So there’s a pretty long lifespan for women as aunts without kids of their own even for women who eventually become moms. And that trending is growing and growing, year after year. Plus these women have discretionary income and time relative to moms. So marketers jump at the chance to connect with them. Until Savvy Auntie there was no way to reach them directly. I dubbed this powerful segment: PANK s™. HG: Did you test the market before starting? How? MN : A couple of weeks after I decided to start this company, I gathered a number of women in my apartment to learn attitudes about aunthood. A week or two later, I discovered Twitter and began asking women all over America for their thoughts as @SavvyAuntie . Wow – talk about being able to test in Peoria for no cost! While I was able to plug some of that feedback into the development of the brand, I took my 15 plus years of marketing expertise at the time and jumped in. It’s tough to test a market before it self-identifies. I needed to showcase that PANKs were nearly 50% of American women before this segment realized how much they contribute to the American Family Village and the economy. HG: How did you get your initial funding ? MN: I am completely self-funded and was profitable in my first full year (2008). My late mother left me some inheritance when she passed away 20 years prior. Back then, even as a teenager, I had the foresight to wait for my dream to leverage it. Investing my life savings in me would have made my mother proud. HG: What’s been the biggest challenge in starting up a company? MN: Starting a company. I remember the day I woke up an ‘auntrepreneur .’ It was June 12, 2007. That morning I went to a seminar on business plans. Then I invested in business cards. While I didn’t yet have a name for my company, I felt it was important to invest in identifying my intention. Then I joined other classes and groups. I did everything I could within reason to begin the investment in this dream so I would not back out. I never looked back. HG: How did you find a lawyer, accountant, developer and others to help you create the company? MN: I networked with people I trusted for referrals. My developer, for example, was a recommendation from a former colleague. HG: What tells you your company is on the right path? MN: I learned I was on the right path rather quickly. Twenty three minutes after I launched SavvyAuntie.com I received an email from the digital media buying agency for PlaySkool. Two hours after I launched, I received and email from Sephora. The next day, Disney’s agency sent me an email. And so on. Two years later, the company and its audience to continue to grow. HG: What’s your growth plan? MN: In the two years since launching SavvyAuntie.com, I’ve also introduced Auntie’s Day™ and The Savvy Auntie Coolest Toy Awards. I’ve appeared on national television and have a book coming out on March 22, 2011 with William Morrow/HarperCollins called: The Savvy Auntie Guide to Life – The Ultimate Source for Cool Aunts, Great Aunts, Godmothers and All Women Who Love Kids . Next up is more TV, products and who knows, maybe a movie. There’s no stopping this brand or the sixty million women it potentially serves. HG: What keeps you up at night? MN: Late Night with Jimmy Fallon or a good book. Thankfully, by living my life to my potential, I go to bed every night knowing I’m doing the best I can. New York City – BlogHer – United States – Henry Ford – Marketing Continue reading
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Tagged america, beauty, betaboro otic, Business, digital, do you need license to set start up monthly flea market in your neighbor hood ?, explorer, guide, investment, nephew, new york, night, power, savvy, savvy-auntie, susan friedman minnesota, susan friedman the nichepreneur complaints reviews, united-states, vision
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Start-Up Aims to Slay Chip Goliath
A group of investors, including companies from the United States, Europe and the United Arab Emirates, has formed in a bid to disrupt one of Intel’s most lucrative franchises. Continue reading
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Tagged disrupt-one, emirates, europe, from-the-united, including-companies, intel, most-lucrative, start-up, start-up business, united, united-arab, united-states
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