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Tag Archives: university
Extension hosts small business workshop
Missouri Explore the dream of starting a business and working for yourself with the University of Missouri Extension’s “Starting a Small Business: The First Steps” class from 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., Sept. 13 at the MU Extension Center, 801 E 12th, Lamar. “This workshop is designed specifically for those who are thinking about starting a business,” said Kathy Macomber, a business development … Continue reading
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Tagged Business, dream, explore, extension, first-steps, kathy-macomber, missouri, small-business, start-up, start-up business, the-dream, university, workshop
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University of Nevada hosts SCORE business start-up orientation
Counselors from SCORE, a national small business counseling and advisory service, will offer a business start-up workshop Saturday at the University of Nevada’s Ansari Business Building. Continue reading
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Tagged ansari-business, Business, business start up, business-counseling, nevada, saturday, score, university, will-offer
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FNUniv’s business school hosts Aboriginal Youth Entrepreneurship Camp
It was as if CBC’s hit television show Dragons’ Den had come to the University of Regina. The School of Business and Public Administration at the First Nations University of Canada were hosting the 2nd annual Aboriginal Youth Entrepreneurship Camp from Aug. 15-20. Continue reading
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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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Author tipped for top position
The University of Auckland’s Entrepreneur in Residence for 2011 is likely to be American investor, academic and author Rob Adams, says the chief of Auckland business incubator The Icehouse, which is involved in the programme.Adams’… Continue reading
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Tagged "rob adams" opsware, adams, Business, business-incubator, chief, entrepreneur, icehouse, programme, residence, says-the-chief, start-up business, university
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School on hold as start-up gets $
Who in their right mind drops out of college just months before graduation, especially if the college is Yale University?… Continue reading
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Tagged Business, college, mind-drops, months-before, the-college, their-right, university
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New York Entrepreneurs See Silver Lining in the Pink Slip
There are two ways to approach being laid off: it can be an obstacle or an opportunity. The latter was the subject of last night’s Seeing the Silver Lining in the Pink Slip event at New York University. More than 50 attendees filed into the Stern School of Business to find out how the event’s five panelists managed to create their own companies after they were fired. The panel was organized and hosted by Jocelyn Chia, a self-proclaimed entrepreneur in the making, who was laid off from her position as an associate at Weil, Gotshal & Manges law firm last year. Instead of searching frantically for another job, Chia said she spent some quality time on her couch with pint upon pint of soy ice cream, before buckling down and brainstorming ideas for her own company. The purpose of the event, Chia said, was to help other people transition, like she has, from being “pink slippers” to entrepreneurs. Panelist Ann Fry , who became a life coach and author after leaving the corporate world, aptly summed up the unanimous feeling in the room last night, saying, “You’re ripping off the world if you’re not being who you’re meant to be.” According to the panelists, including Suparna Bhasin, who lost her job in 2001, the first thing any person who’s been laid off must do is get over those feelings of rejection and loss of identity. Bhasin is now founder and CEO of her third post pink-slip business, a women’s empowerment organization called She Creates Change , and she attributes her success to never looking back. “I remember walking around the city and people were like, ‘I’m so sorry you were laid off.’ I was like, ‘You know what? Congratulate me, because I’m off to my next adventure,’” she said. “It really empowered me.” Panelist Gail Davis stressed the importance of surrounding yourself with supportive people when you make the change. Davis lost her job at NBC and co-founded a consulting firm called The Goldwaters Group with a business partner based in London. “You have to make sure that whatever you start to do when you get laid off, you have the right people in your life,” she said. “When you first start your business, determine the type of qualities you want in a partner.” All of the panelists admitted that failure is inevitable, but the most you can do is try your best to plan in advance. Joseph Varghese, whose Peer Success Circles business helps entrepreneurs network with one another, said he asked himself a few crucial questions after he left his job as a chemical engineer: “How much money do you have in your account? How long can you go forward and survive? Do you have a budget for yourself and do you have an idea what you want to do?” No matter how many ideas people have, however, panelist Kristina Leonardi, founder of the non-profit organization The Women’s Mosaic , said that being an entrepreneur definitely isn’t for everybody. “It sounds great, but it’s a completely different approach to life,” she said. “If you’re working nine to five, and you don’t want to work nine to five anymore, maybe you just weren’t in the right job. People think you have all this time, because you’re making your own hours, but really, you’re working 24/7.” For those who, like Chia, are ready to take the plunge, though, Leonardi advised, “Do what you love. The money will follow.” Business – Entrepreneur – Coaching – New York University – London Continue reading
Entrepreneurship Education for All
In the late 1970s, about 500 colleges and universities offered courses in entrepreneurship. By 2005, more than 2,000 did so. Yet there has been no corresponding surge in start-up activity. “The things we’ve been trying on campuses have had a marginal impact, if that,” says Dane Stangler, a researcher at the Kauffman Foundation. To be sure, there are individual programs that have a proven record of generating real companies. What they generally have in common is a belief that entrepreneurship training is for everyone — not just M.B.A.’s, but engineers and art students, too. A good case in point is MIT. The school’s students and alumni start 200 to 400 businesses a year. One of the keys to that success is the school’s Entrepreneurship Center. Launched in 1991, the center serves the university’s five schools, acting as the nexus for entrepreneurship classes, clubs, and activities; connecting business students with scientists; and providing physical space, advice, and access to a network of entrepreneurs and investors — all with the goal of creating new ventures. “We’re the DMZ where the geeks can meet the suits and make companies,” says the center’s managing director, Bill Aulet. Few schools, of course, can compete with MIT. The good news is that they don’t have to. You don’t need to be a tech hub to sell the idea of entrepreneurship as a career choice. Consider a program called The Launch Pad at the University of Miami, a private university in South Florida. Started in 2008, The Launch Pad invites students and alumni to submit a plain-English pitch about an idea for a company. Everyone who pitches an idea gets free advice. About 10 percent of applicants are selected to enter an individualized venture-coaching program, in which they work with volunteers from the local business community. Launch Pad staff helps students as needed, whether with financial projections or presentation skills. “Business is intimidating to people studying something else,” says Susan Wills Amat, the program’s co-founder. “Business people speak a different language and are very assertive. We get kids who are nervous about sharing and give them confidence and a support system.” In the less than two years since the program started, nearly 500 ideas have been submitted, and 45 businesses have been formed. Only about 20 percent of participants have been business students. Among the breakout companies: a streetwear line, Voler La Rue; Audimated, a social media platform for connecting indie music artists and fans; and Elemental Stereo, which makes stereo systems for golf carts and boats. Dan Thibodeau, co-founder of URoomSurf, a college-roommate matchmaking site, says he and his partner, Justin Gaither, couldn’t have done it without help from the center. “Neither of us had ever run an e-commerce company before,” says the 24-year-old. Today, URoomSurf has 16 staff members and more than 80,000 registered users. The Launch Pad model is easily replicable, and Amat hopes it will go national. In April, the charitable arm of investment firm the Blackstone Group announced a $2 million grant to bring the Blackstone LaunchPad, modeled on Miami’s program, to the Detroit-area campuses of Wayne State University and Walsh College. Bottom Line Arts and humanities and science students need entrepreneurship education every bit as much as b-schoolers. Entrepreneurship Education for All The Immigrant Advantage Finding the Bill Gates of Sixth Grade How Incubators Speed the Start-up Process How to Make More Manufacturers Student Loan Breaks for Entrepreneurs A Tax Cut for Angels How Business-Plan Competitions Reward Innovation Cutting Incorporation Bureaucracy An Energy Policy for Entrepreneurs Why It’s Time to Revamp the SBIR How States Can Attract Venture Capital Government Data for Entrepreneurs Why We Need More Funding for Big Science Stop Enforcing Noncompetes Why Microfinancing Works University of Miami – Business – Massachusetts Institute of Technology – Blackstone Group – Wayne State University Continue reading
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Tagged blackstone, Business, energy, entrepreneurs, government, immigrant, innovation, school, science, university
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University student wins £4000 to start up business
A HARROW student was awarded a £4,000 prize after winning the best pitch award in an annual university business competition. Continue reading
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Tagged after-winning, annual-university, Business, pitch-award, start-up business, the-best, university, winning-the-best
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