Category Archives: finance

On The Cusp Of the Age Of Women?

If, as The New Agenda co-founder Amy Siskind suggests: “A fraternity of leadership has led our country into an economic crisis of epic proportions, ” will women be the ones to bail us out and put our financial house back in order?  As The New Agenda further points out:

The Times:  In an article titled Age of Testosterone comes to end in Iceland:

“Iceland, ravaged throughout history by volcanic eruptions and natural catastrophes, is struggling with a man-made disaster so overwhelming that the women are taking over. It is, they say here, the end of the Age of Testosterone.”

Next week a newly minted left-leaning Government led by Johanna Sigurdardottir will start to tackle the tough agenda of cleaning out the old-school-chum networks that have led Iceland to the verge of bankruptcy.
Half of her Cabinet will be women.”

New York Times op-ed: In an piece titled Mistresses of the Universe, Nicholas Kristof posits:

“At the recent World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, some of the most interesting discussions revolved around whether we would be in the same mess today if Lehman Brothers had been Lehman Sisters.

What do you think?

Have the guys displayed a little too much testosterone and too little….. what shall we say…brains? balance? reserve?  How about common sense?  I would hazard a guess most women wouldn’t take $1 and bet $30 on it, like most U.S. banks have done, and which got us into this mess to begin with.  Unless they’re addicts.

Oh, I forgot.  You can get addicted to power and greed.  But women, for the most part, aren’t.  So it makes sense to give them a shot at cleaning up this mess the power players have made.

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Hello Plinky! Hello Jane And Robot ! And Other Tales of Courage

Our hat is off to Jason Shellen! And to Vanessa Fox!  These two brave souls left Google to start their own companies in the midst of a recession.

They don’t talk about gutsy, they epitomize gutsy.

“Jason Shellen, resigned as Google’s manager of new business development in 2007 to launch Plinky.com, a startup that’s designed to inspire bloggers and users of social media sites. Shellen says he was getting complacent working at Google, despite the company’s domination of the Web.”

Vanessa Fox, aka, the Google Lady Webmaster, the most well-known woman among the SEO community, who helped build Webmaster Central, one of the company’s most successful projects took the leap as well. A star at Google, Rand Fishkin,  CEO of Seo Oz, in an anthem to her abilities and webmasters debt to her says:

” I don’t believe that anyone, outside of a few of Vanessa’s close friends, realize how much she’s done to help Google’s public image, their bottom line and their relations with webmasters, nor do most of us know how much Vanessa’s done to fight for webmasters internally at Google. … Webmaster Central was not only Vanessa’s department, it was her baby, her idea (right from inception), her show. If not for Vanessa, we might never have had the dedicated team of webmaster relations specialists (people like Jonathan, Amanda, Trevor, Susan & Maile). We might never have been able to send sitemaps to Google, see data about our sites (particularly the link data, for which Vanessa was always a fantastic advocate), verify ownership, select a preferred domain display or do any of the hundreds of other things that Webmaster Central enables.”

So, to Vanessa’s new company……. Hello Jane and Robot!

Most people in the high tech sector would kill to work at Google.  All that money.  All those stock options. Who could resist?  And why would you want to?

In, CNN.com’s reporting, They left the corporate cocoon to blossom, Shellen says he decided to leave Google despite a shaky economy because he wanted to force himself to change.

“Being an entrepreneur is all about risk and innovation, not timing the market,” Shellen says. “A good idea doesn’t wait for the perfect time to emerge. The ability to build something new outweighed the need for stability.”

Now there’s a person with the entrepreneurial gene.

“Shellen believes the large resources of a company can actually slow down the creative process. A person might want to invent a product, but small things like the name of the product end up being discussed in a committee.

“You don’t find that in a small company,” he says. “At my new company, Plinky, we sometimes dream things up in the morning and by the afternoon have it live on the Web. That never happens at a big company.”

In another example of taking the giant leap, “greater freedom is also what inspired Vanessa Fox to resign from her position at Google. Today, Fox is the founder of “Jane and Robot,” which helps Web site developers ensure their sites can be found by potential customers, and “Nine By Blue,” which helps businesses use online data to better understand their customers.

Fox says the challenge of creating something in an evolving space like the Internet was too great to pass up.

“As hokey as it sounds, there’s more to life than money,” she says. “As much as I loved working at Google, I am really enjoying the flexibility I have now, as well as the ability to really make a difference in the direction I choose to go in.”

If any of these comments sound remotely like something you might say, if you took the leap then Congratuations! You have the entreprerial gene.

So go for it!  Take the leap!  I salute you, too.  We hope to greet you out there launching your new business very soon. ( It certainly beats the cascading pink slips which will engulf many as gloomy economic times drag on and downwards, forcing many companies to cut back.)

In the meantime: Hello Plinky.  Hello Jane and Robot!

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In 2009 It’s All About Money – Again!

I have to tell you, I like Thursday Bram’s work. She writes a blog called Stepcase Lifehack.  I don’t know what that means, but hopefully one day I’ll get around to asking her.  In the meantime, I do like her subjects and the time she evidently invests in delving into them.

Sometimes bloggers, even our most popular, just run short of time and, apparently, put in the first thing that comes to mind or hand.  One distinguished and high ranking blogger recently posted in his blog a digital snapshot of a very ordinary, everday item.  The backstory, such as it was, was short and sweet…a sentence or two, and not very incisive or thought provoking, either.  I could give you the entire photo and sentence or two and I bet you would agree.  But I would get in such trouble.  ( Did I mention that this is one of the Net’s most popular bloggers?)

When I was reading a particular business book, my hobby, or one of them, there was a chapter called: “Don’t Moon the Giant”.  It warns of the hazards of provoking someone with a lot more power than you have and getting squished under his giant foot. ( I can hear that squishing sound, already.)  Anyway, I learned that lesson well.  You’ll get no more from me.  Except to say that Thursday Bram is the opposite of that.  She has something to say and says it well.

Anyway, here’s her take on finance resources online for 2009, found at 30 Money Sites to Check Out in 2009 – Stepcase Lifehack. Think you’ll enjoy and find them helpful:

Blogs

  1. Get Rich Slowly: I never fail to be impressed by the posts on GRS — this blog started as a personal financial journey, but has grown into so much more.
  2. I Will Teach You To Be Rich: While most personal finance blogs focus on cutting costs, I Will Teach You… pushes readers to increase their income, instead. It’s an approach that I think is ignored all too often but is absolutely important.
  3. WiseBread: There are plenty of money blogs that focus on one person’s journey: it’s a useful view point, but there’s just as much value in seeing what a community of people come up with. WiseBread offers an amazing community of writers.
  4. Yielding Wealth: When it comes to keep track of news in the personal finance sector, Yielding Wealth is always on the spot with the facts.
  5. The Simple Dollar: Of all the great content on TSD, I recommend the book reviews. There are plenty of great books on personal finance out there and I typically find them through TSD.
  6. Mrs. Micah: Another ’speaking from experience’ blog, Mrs. Micah is more detail-oriented: her posts offer great tips on how to handle specific situations.
  7. No Limits Ladies: If you’re interested in focusing more on the money-making side of personal finance, NLL talks about everything from real estate to building a business. While the blog is geared towards ladies, I don’t think that they’d mind if guys stop by.
  8. The Frugal Duchess: The Frugal Duchess herself released a book earlier this year, and her blog is full of the same level of advice she dispenses at the Miami Herald.
  9. Five Cent Nickel: Full of practical advice and great deals, Five Cent Nickel offers a quick clue-in on all sorts of personal finance topics.
  10. The Color of Money: While not properly a blog — The Color of Money is the Washington Post’s regular column about personal finance — you’ll find tons of great information that doesn’t always make it through the rest of the personal finance blogosphere.

Web Applications

  1. Mint.com: Probably the most popular money management application online, Mint.com is continuing to evolve. Most recently, the application became available on the iPhone.
  2. Wesabe: Another popular money management application, Wesabe is community-oriented. You can get lots of help and advice with any financial situation you encounter.
  3. Shoeboxed: My favorite financial tool of the last year is Shoeboxed: for a small fee, they’ll take care of sorting and scanning all of your receipts.
  4. QuickenOnline: You can take advantage of the full power of Quicken online — and for free. It’s a solid money management tool, based on Intuit’s years of work in the field.
  5. Thrive: If you’re in your 20s or 30s, Thrive offers all sorts of personal finance help targeted just at you.
  6. BillShrink: BillShrink helps you compare your cell phone plan and credit cards to make sure that you’re getting the best possible deal.
  7. Rudder: When visiting several sites to manage your money is too much, Rudder provides a solution — it delivers all of your personal finance information straight to your email inbox, allowing you to control your money there.
  8. SmartyPig: SmartyPig offers a head start on savings, allowing you to put money out of reach while you work towards a goal.
  9. Billster: Sharing expenses among a group — like splitting the rent with your roommates — got a lot easier with Billster. The site tracks shared bills and payments.
  10. Xpenser: For an easy way to track expenses, consider Xpenser. It works through email, an iPhone app, SMS, IM and Twitter.

Resources

  1. Consumer Reports: While Consumer Reports has gotten into blogging in a big way lately, the whole site is very useful even if you aren’t a member.
  2. Bankrate: No matter what kind of financial information you’re looking for, Bankrate can lead you to it: loans, credit scores and taxes are just a sample of this website’s resources.
  3. The Motley Fool: The Motley Fool’s main focus is investments, although it does provide resources for other financial topics.
  4. Investopedia: Another site focused primarily on investing, the tutorials availbale on Investopedia provide a great education in a variety of topics.
  5. CNN’s Money101: For a complete guide to your financial life, Money101 can’t be beat. It’s full of step by step lessons that walk you through all sorts of financial projects.
  6. Tip’d: Tip’d launched this year — it’s sort of a Digg for money news. It’s full of great articles if you’ve got some time to spend reading.
  7. Inner8: If you’ve been looking for a place to discuss investments with other investors, check out Inner8. This new site provides tools to a large investment community.
  8. AnnualCreditReport.com: No matter what all those TV commercials say, the only place you can get all three of your credit reports for free is through ACR. It was established as to legislative requirements and protect consumers.
  9. PayScale: For financial information about your salary, check out PayScale. The site provides information about just where your salary should be.
  10. Kiplinger: Kiplinger offers solid personal finance advice on all sorts of topics, as well as current financial news.

What did I tell you?  Is Thursday Bram a blogger who knows a thing or two about finance online or what?

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Want To Survive? Forget Profits, Focus On Cash Flow

When I was starting out in business I had a difficult time understanding cash flow.  I thought in terms of profit.  Making the big score. Incredibly I saw people making big bucks but still teetering on the edge of disaster.  I saw business people who thought they could spend their way to success, and, instead crashed and burned.  I determined then that cash flow was a mystery I had to master if I wanted to succeed.

You may find it hard to believe there are individuals with $100,000 a month income who find, at the end of each month, they’re spent more than that. There are businesses in the same position. No matter how much cash comes in, it’s always possible to spend more. The reason some people and businesses bump into this reality is not because they are wanton spendthrifts, but because cash flow itself is a more fluid and dynamic process, more subtle and challenging to master than a simple balance sheet. But master it you must, if you want to be in control of your money; master it if you want to survive in business, because without cash, no one cares if you’re worth a million dollars on paper or in widgets, the doors will shut and you will be out of the game.

If you get a handle on the dynamics of your cash flow, that act alone will both improve your business and improve you as a manager, the beginning of a very positive and powerful cycle.

“There are four key reasons why watching cash flow in a business is more important than ever.

First, you can anticipate greater uncertainty of sales over the next several months. Most businesses are seeing smaller and less frequent purchases by customers.

Where a strong cash position is particularly important is during “sales shocks,” which can occur when large, steady customers suddenly stop ordering. If this is because they have found a better price from a competitor, you have a chance to win them back. But, more and more businesses are waking up one morning to discover that one of their longtime customers has suffered a business failure.

Secondly, as I have written about in the past, bank credit is getting more difficult for small businesses to obtain and some entrepreneurs are beginning to have their loans called by their banks.

SBA loans are drying up

The news last week that the Small Business Administration loan program funding also is drying up makes finding credit even tougher. SBA loan funding is down more than 50 percent from this time last year. The SBA program offers guarantees for qualified small-business loans.

Third, just as your business may be feeling the effects of the economic slowdown, so are your suppliers. You should anticipate that your suppliers may begin to tighten their terms on trade credit to help shore up their cash flow.

Some may even begin to refuse to sell to you on credit, even if you have been paying on a timely basis in the past.

Finally, even in a bad economy you may find new opportunities. Don’t count on any external sources such as banks or investors to fund new initiatives.

If you do not have the cash to fund expanding into new products, new markets, or even to buy up struggling competitors, you may not be able to pursue these opportunities.

If you do not do so already, watch your cash flow statements very carefully. And if the business starts to have consistent negative cash flow, you need to also measure and monitor how long your current cash will last.

Develop weekly, monthly and quarterly cash budgets to help make decisions on which bills need to get paid, or can get paid, and when.”

As I mentioned in a previous post, using Mint.com to track your cash automatically might be a big help to watching over those nickles and dimes and greenbacks.  Because a Mint screen shows the cash you have on hand and the debts you owe….your credit cards, for example, it can be a bit of a bracing shock, if you have less cash on hand than the amount you owe, even though you’re paying your credit card debt off over time.  Nonetheless that shock of staring your finances square in the face and watching them shift may be the shock you need to swing into action, get vigilant, get thrifty, make changes and survive.

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List Of The Best Christmas Shopping Credit Card Deals and 0% APR Offers

DES PLAINES, IL - NOVEMBER 11:  A sign showing...

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The Best Christmas Shopping Credit Card Deals and Offers.

It’s almost that time of year again….stores are already brimming with lighted Christmas trees, holiday displays and specials… where, bleak economic times or not, we all have to prepare to go shopping for our loved ones at Christmas or whatever their holiday celebration.  Now most of us are probably keeping a tight grip on our wallets, plastic and checkbooks, in preparation for even more gloom and doom from Maria Bartiromo, and belt tightening tips from Suzie Orman.  So here’s a very valuable list from Money Blue Book to help you preserve cash and credit and make it somewhat if not entirely unscathed through your holiday purchasing bout.

List Of The Best Credit Card Reward Offers and 0% APR Deals For Christmas Holiday Shopping

Here is my list of the best Christmas shopping reward credit cards (I’ve bolded the percentage rate you will most likely earn for purchases made at online stores and at most brick and mortar department stores and malls):

  1. Blue Cash® From American Express – Get up to 5% cash back for everyday purchases like groceries and gas, and up to 1.5% for everything else when you exceed $6,500 worth of usage. Prior to that you’ll earn 1% cashback.
  2. Starwood Preferred® Guest American Express Card – Get 1 point for every $1 spent, redeemable for versatile hotel and airline travel rewards. Potential to earn up to a potential 1.25% back with bonuses.
  3. Discover More Card – Get 5% cash back bonuses in purchase categories like department stores, travel, home improvement, gas, groceries, and restaurants, 5% to 20% cash back at retailers through Discover’s online shopping site, and 1% unlimited rewards for everything else. Earn a $50 bonus when you make $500 in purchases within 3 months, and with Discover’s special Christmas promotion, you can get $20 back for every $200 that you spend at participating mall locations.
  4. Chase Freedom(SM) – Get 3% bonus cash back on gas, groceries, and fast food purchases for the first 6 months. Earn 1% cash back on everything else with unlimited rewards, no spending cap, no restrictions, and no expiration date.
  5. Citi Premier Pass Master Card – Get 10,000 bonus points after $300 in purchases made within 3 months of account opening, and earn 1 point for every dollar spent (1% back), redeemable for airline travel rewards.
  6. Citi Cash Returns Card – Get a full 1% cash back on every purchase plus an average 5% cash back at 400 retailers within the Citi Bonus Cash Center, along with an extra 20% bonus for the first 12 months.
  7. HSBC Weekend Card – Earn 2% cash back rewards on everything you buy on Saturday and Sunday. During the rest of the week, you get 1% cash back for everything, with unlimited reward earning potential.
  8. HSBC Platinum Mastercard Cash Back Rewards - Earn up to a potential of 2% cash back with a limit of $400 worth of rewards, or 1% unlimited cashback on all purchases depending on qualification level.
  9. Capital One® No Hassle Cash(SM) Rewards Card – Get 2% cash back on purchases at gas stations and major grocery and drug stores, and 1% cash back on all other purchases, with no earning limit or expiration.
  10. Fidelity Investment Rewards Visa Signature CardEnjoy a full 1.5% back on all purchases with no merchant restrictions. Points can be redeemed for cash and deposited into your Fidelity brokerage account.

Credit Cards That Offer 0% APR Rates For Interest Free Purchases (Ideal For Christmas Shopping)

  1. Advanta Platinum 90-Day Interest Free Business Card – Permanent 90 day interest free grace period on all purchases. This special Advanta credit card grace period offer is recurring and continuous year after year.
  2. American Express Blue – 0% APR for purchases (up to 12 months)
  3. American Express Blue Cash® – 0% APR for purchases (up to 12 months)
  4. American Express Blue Sky® – 0% APR for purchases (up to 12 months)
  5. American Express Platinum Business Credit Card - 0% APR for purchases (12 months)
  6. American Express Clear Card – 0% APR for purchases (12 months)
  7. Capital One Platinum Card – 0% for purchases and balance transfers (Up until October 2009)
  8. Capital One No Hassle Cash Rewards Card – 0% for purchases (until October 2009)
  9. Chase Flexible Rewards Platinum Visa – 0% for purchases and balance transfers (both 12 months)
  10. Chase Perfect Card – 0% APR for purchases and balance transfers (both 6 months)
  11. Chase Platinum Visa Card – 0% APR for purchases and balance transfers (both 12 months)
  12. Citi Diamond Preferred Card – 0% APR for purchases and balance transfers (both 12 months)
  13. Citi Platinum Select Card – 0% APR for purchases and balance transfers (both 12 months)
  14. Citi Business Card - 0% APR for purchases (12 months)
  15. Citi Business Card With ThankYou Network – 0% APR rate for all purchases (12 months).  Extra bonus offer of 10,000 ThankYou® Points after $250 in purchases, redeemable for a $100 gift card.
  16. Discover More Card – 0% APR for purchases (6 months) and balance transfers (12 months)
  17. Discover More Card – Clear – 0% APR for purchases (6 months) and balance transfers (12 months)
  18. Discover Open Road Card – 0% APR for purchases (6 months) and balance transfers (12 months)
  19. First National Business Edition Visa Card – 0% APR offer for purchases (12 months)
  20. HSBC Weekend Card -  0% promo rate for purchases and balance transfers (both 12 months)
  21. HSBC Platinum Mastercard Cash Back Rewards - 0% interest rate for purchases and balance transfers (both 12 months)
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17 Mistakes Start-ups Made by John Osher

One of Coke's ads to promote the flavor change

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Jon Gillespie-Brown in 17 Mistakes Start-ups Make by John Osher points us to this hard won advice by successful entrepreneur Job Osher who decided the best advice for the rest of us would not be tales of his successes but indelible memories of his biggest mistakes so other entrepreneurs can long to avoid them.

“John Osher has developed hundreds of consumer products, including an electric toothbrush that became America’s best-selling toothbrush in just 15 months. He also started several successful companies, including Cap Toys. He built sales to $125 million per year and then sold the company to Hasbro Inc. in 1997 ( I have just heard from Joe Kling:  Osher sold Cap Toys to Russ Berrie & Co. which sold it 3 years later to Hasbro for a major profit. Kling says he was a board member of Russ at the time and acted on behalf of both parties in his sale to Russ ). But his most lasting contribution to the business world just may be a list of screw-ups he jotted on the back of a piece of paper.

He came up with an informal list of “16 Mistakes Start-Ups Make”-since expanded to 17-that has been used in a Harvard Business School case study, has been cited in many publications, and has become a part of what he teaches budding entrepreneurs in his frequent university lectures. He also used the list in 1999 when he started Dr. John’s SpinBrush to sell a $5 electric toothbrush that quickly became America’s best-selling toothbrush. In 2001, Procter & Gamble purchased the company from him for $475 million.

Here’s a quick summary if you’re time pressed, or you want to bookmark this and come back to read the whole post later:

The first 6 mistakes deal with projecting you will make more money than you do, at least in the beginning. Entrepreneurs, like marketers, are optimists. They’re imagining the future.  Accountants are realists. They’re adding up the past.

The 7th is about not having a contingency plan. Duh. Entrepreneurs need Plan B,C, D & F, maybe more. That’s like the advice about travel.  Pack 1/2 the clothes and twice the money.

Mistakes 14 – 16 all deal with maintaining focus: don’t get scattered or chase too many opportunities at once.  Do one thing well.

Mistakes 8-13 are pretty rooky mistakes: bringing in unnecessary partners, not knowing how to hire or manage your company, not getting that success is about persistence.

Mistake 17 is about not having an exit strategy, but yours may be a lot simpler than his ie. don’t forget to sell the sucker ( unless you have children you want to give it to, then be sure a.) they want it & b.) they would have clue how to run it.)

Or you can read the 100 word version:

Here are all 17 mistakes in detail

Mistake 1: Failing to spend enough time researching the business idea to see if it’s viable. “This is really the most important mistake of all. They say 9 [out] of 10 entrepreneurs fail because they’re undercapitalized or have the wrong people. I say 9 [out] of 10 people fail because their original concept is not viable. They want to be in business so much that they often don’t do the work they need to do ahead of time, so everything they do is doomed. They can be very talented, do everything else right, and fail because they have ideas that are flawed.” ( This has never been my problem: I’m a demon on research.)

Mistake 2: Miscalculating market size, timing, ease of entry and potential market share. “Most new entrepreneurs get very excited over an idea and don’t look for the truth about how many people will want to buy it. They put together financial projections as part of a presentation to pump up their investors. They say, ‘The market size is 50 million people that could use this product, and if I could only sell to 2 percent of them, I’d be selling a million pieces.’ But 2 percent of a market is a lot. Most products sell way less than 1 percent.” ( From what I see, most people wildly overestimate what their market share might be. For small entrepreneurs I’m not sure you really can estimate it up front. Personally, I’m into low cost testing.  Test it.  Then you have reality instead of estimates.  If it works, go with it and keep expanding it.  If it doesn’t, drop it. Same principle as Feed the Opportunities, Starve the Problems.)

Mistake 3: Underestimating financial requirements and timing. “They set their financial requirements based on Mistake 1, and they go ahead and make a commitment to this much office space and this many computers, and hire a vice president of sales, and so on. Before they know it, based on sales projections that were wrong to start with, they have created costs that require those projections to be met. So they run out of money.” ( #1 Rule: Never run out of cash. See Start Your Own Small Business Using More Ingenuity, Less Cash)

Mistake 4: Overprojecting sales volume and timing. “They have already miscalculated the size of the market. Now they overproject their portion of it. They often say ‘There are 200 million homes, and I need to sell [to] x number of them.’ When you break it down, though, a much smaller number of those are really sales prospects. That makes it impossible to make their sales projections.”  ( Again, I don’t project, I test. See Mistake # 2 above. It quickly becomes apparent that these projections, which I think are next to impossible for a small business to make…. and lots of big ones too ..remember the Edsel and New Coke fiascos…. can have a snowball effect and that’s a snowball going downhill, picking up speed.)

Mistake 5: Making cost projections that are too low. “Their cost projections are always too low. Part of the reason is that they project much higher sales. There are also unknown reasons that always come out that usually make costs higher than planned. So on top of everything, their margins are now lower.” Snowball effect. As is the following.

Mistake 6: Hiring too many people and spending too much on offices and facilities. “Now you have lower sales, higher costs and too much overhead. These are the things that you see every day in companies that fail. And they all grow out of that first mistake: failing to research the size and viability of the opportunity.”

Mistake 7: Lacking a contingency plan for a shortfall in expectations. “Even if you’re realistic in your estimates to start, there are things that happen when you start a new business. Your sales ideas may be no good; bank rates may go up; there may be a shipping strike. These aren’t the result of poor planning, but they happen. More often than not, entrepreneurs just feel that something will come along when they need it. They don’t have contingency plans for it not working out at the size and time they want.”

Mistake 8: Bringing in unnecessary partners. “There are certain partners you need. For instance, you often need money, so you’re going to need money partners. But too many times, the guy with the idea takes on all his friends as partners. Many people don’t provide strategic advantages and don’t warrant ownership. But they’re all going to get 25 percent of the company. It’s totally unnecessary, and it’s a mistake. Before people are made partners, they have to earn it.”  My father used to say, just like no witnesses, “No partners”.  But, learn for yourself what’s right for you.

Mistake 9: Hiring for convenience rather than skill requirements. “In my first business or two, I hired relatives. It was easy to do, but in many cases, they were the wrong people [for the job]. And it’s hard to fire people, especially if they’re relatives or friends. More time needs to be spent handpicking people based on skill requirements. You really need super-skilled people who can wear more than one hat. It just bogs you down when you hire people who can’t do the job.” You’re kidding, right?  Hiring is the time to be ruthless.

Mistake 10: Neglecting to manage the entire company as a whole. “You see this happen all the time. They’ll spend half their time doing something that represents 5 percent of their business. You have to have a view of your whole company. But too often, the person running it loses that view. They get involved in a part, and they don’t manage the whole. Whether I do this product or that product, whether I hire somebody, [I consider] how they [will] fit long term and short term in the big picture. Constantly try to see your big picture.”  If you have a small company, it’s pretty easy to see the whole picture.  Just follow your numbers.  Every day.  The big numbers are where to focus your attention.

Mistake 11: Accepting that it’s “not possible” too easily rather than finding a way. “I had an engineer who was a very good engineer, but with every toy we developed, he would say, ‘You can’t do it that way.’ I had to be careful not to accept this too easily. I had to look further. If you’re an entrepreneur, you’re going to break new ground. A lot of people are going to say it’s not possible. You can’t accept that too easily. A good entrepreneur is going to find a way.” Harold Geneen, the great manager of ITT’s then 250 some odd international companies in varied industries used to repeat: ” Management must manage. If you’ve tried 23 times and failed, you must try the 24th time. You must keep searching for a solution that is not just for the moment, but which is strategic and generic and forms a permanent solution to the problem.”

Mistake 12: Focusing too much on sales volume and company size rather than profit. “Too much of your management is often based on volume and size. So many entrepreneurs want to say ‘I have a company that’s this big, with this many people, this many square feet of space, and this much sales.’ It’s too much [emphasis] on how fast and big you can build a business rather than how much profit it can make. Bankers and investors don’t like this. Entrepreneurs are so into creating and building, but they also have to learn to become good [businesspeople].”  This is another duh. When I was starting out in my twenties and my family was in the cattle business one of the top people from the King Ranch group told me: ” If it costs you 40 cents to put a pound of beef on a cow and you sell it for 30 cents a pound, that’s not something you can make up with volume.” I get it.  And most of the profit from ranching comes from land appreciation.  But that’s another post.

Mistake 13: Seeking confirmation of your actions rather than seeking the truth. “This often happens: You want to do something, so you talk about it with people who work for you. You talk to [your] family and friends. But you’re only looking for confirmation; you’re not looking for the truth. You’re looking for somebody to tell you you’re right. But the truth always comes out. So we [test] our products, and we listen to what [the testers] say. We give much more value to the truth than to people saying what we’re doing is great.” Duh….no one likes criticism, but that’s what testing is all about.

Mistake 14: Lacking simplicity in your vision. “Many entrepreneurs go in too many directions at once and do not execute anything well. Rather than focusing on doing everything right to sell to their biggest markets, they divide the attention of their people and their time, trying to do too many things at [one time]. Then their main product isn’t done properly because they’re doing so many different things. They have an idea and say they’re going to sell it to Wal-Mart. Then they say they’re going to sell to [the] Home Shopping Network. And then the gift market looks good. And so on.”

Mistake 15: Lacking clarity of your long-term aim and business purpose. “You should have an idea of what your long-term aim is. It doesn’t mean that won’t change, but when you aim an arrow, you have to be aiming at a target. This [concept will] often come up when people ask ‘How do I pick a product?’ The answer depends on what you’re trying to do. If you’re trying to [create] a billion-dollar company with this product, it may not have a chance. But if you’re trying to make a $5 million company, it can work. Or if you’re trying to create a company [in which] family members can be employed, it can work. Clarity of your business purpose is very important [but] is often not really part of the thought process.”

Mistake 16: Lacking focus and identity. “This was written from the viewpoint of building the company as a valuable entity. The company itself is also a product. Too many companies try to go after too many targets at once and end up with a potpourri rather than a focused business entity with an identity. When you try to make a business, it’s very important to maintain a focus and an identity. Don’t let it become a potpourri, or it loses its power. For instance, you say, ‘We’re already selling to Kmart, so we might as well make a toy because Kmart buys toys.’ If you do that, the company becomes weaker. A company needs to be focused on what it is. Then its power builds from that.”

Mistake 17: Lacking an exit strategy. “Have an exit plan, and create your business to satisfy that plan. For instance, I am thinking I might run my new business for two years and then get out of it. I think it’s an opportunity to make a tremendous amount of money for two years, but I’m not sure [whether] it’s proprietary enough to stop the competition from getting in. So I’m in with an exit strategy of doing it for two years and then winding down. I won’t commit to long-term leases, and after the first year, we’ll start watching the marketplace very closely and start watching inventories.

Simultaneously, I will keep the option open to sell it in case I can’t get something more proprietary. That means I won’t sign international agreements that would kill any opportunity to sell it to a multinational. I will make sure that the patent work is done properly. And I’ll try to make sure manufacturing is up to the standards of any multinational company that I might try to sell it to. Pretty high level stuff you probably won’t need to focus on starting off.

Another exit strategy can be to hand the company to [your] kids someday. The most important thing to do is to build a company with value and profits so you have all the options: Keep the company, sell the company, go public, raise private money [and so on]. A business can be a product, too.”

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Tough Times Make For Desperate People: Don’t Fall For Scams

Telemarketers!

Image by Cayusa via Flickr

Not only do people get desperate.  Companies do, too.

Some offer to reduce your credit card debt for a fee.

Some prey on people whose homes are being foreclosed.  For a fee, this person or business, will make that crisis disappear.  But, usually, the only thing that disappears is your money.  In one case in San Antonio, Texas, a couple lost the home they’d raised their family in after paying an unscrupulous business owner more than they owed the mortgage company.  This, after the business owner had already gotten and agreed to a “Cease and Desist Order” from a court over just this kind of predatory behavior.

These are scams pure and simple.

Perhaps it’s too harsh to call all of these enticing propositions scams.  But when you analyze some of the things companies, even very large, respectable companies, are asking you to do, they certainly could be classified as much better deals for them than for you.

Last week my mortgage company asked me if I’d like to pay 2% less interest and several hundred dollars less a month in my mortgage payment, for no fee from them.  Naturally, I said “Sure!”  But when I received the paperwork yesterday, it turned out there were over $10,000 of additional fees, added into the mortgage payment.  Yes, over the life of the loan I’d be paying less interest, but it would take me 40 payments, or 3 years and 3 months to get back to where I am today.  Was that a good deal?  For the mortgage company, yes.

Seth Godin in Too good to be true (the overnight millionaire scam) writes about the scams that crop up in tough times and the imperative to avoid being suckered in by them:

“Times are tough, and many say they are going to be tougher. That makes some people more focused, it turns others desperate.

You may be tempted at some point to try to make a million dollars. To do it without a lot of effort or skill or risk. Using a system, some shortcut perhaps, or mortgaging something you already own.

There are countless infomercials and programs and systems that promise to help you do this. There are financial instruments and investments and documents you can sign that promise similar relief from financial stress.

Resist.

There are four ways to make a million dollars. Luck. Patient effort. Skill. Risk.

(Five if you count inheritance, and six if you count starting with two million dollars).

Conspicuously missing from this list are effortless 1-2-3 systems that involve buying an expensive book or series of tapes. Also missing are complicated tax shelters or other ‘proven’ systems. The harder someone tries to sell you this solution, the more certain you should be that it is a scam. If no skill or effort is required, then why doesn’t the promoter just hire a bunch of people at minimum wage and keep the profits?

There are literally a million ways to make a good living online, ten million ways to start and thrive with your own business offline. But all of these require effort, and none of them are likely to make you a million dollars.

Short version of my opinion: If someone offers to sell you the secret system, don’t buy it. If you need to invest in a system before you use it, walk away. If you are promised big returns with no risk and little effort, you know the person is lying to you. Every time.

Has anyone tried to scam you?  Write and share your experience.  It will help all of us to have a common pool of scams to avoid.


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Think Outside The Box : Get A Free Online Financial Guru

Tough times have arrived.  Time to think outside the box.

Do you ever spend more than you should?  Let your bank account get too low?  Put off budgeting?  Forget or delay paying off those high interest credit cards? Who doesn’t?

What we could all use is a a financial planner/ manager who will take care of all those myriad money details for us.  But who can afford that?  You can.  We all can.  Because Mint is free.

Mint – Manages Your Money

http://www.mint.com/

Mint is fresh, intelligent online money management. Not only is Mint free, it saves you money….

With Mint , you can achieve better online financial management in less than five minutes. After that, … Mint money management software does the rest, with virtually no more work required. It automatically pulls together your bank, credit union and credit card data, and provides up–to–date and amazingly accurate views of your financial—life from the big picture to specific details, in a friendly and intuitive way.”

How Does Mint Work ?

Mint connects to more than 5,000 US financial institutions. Your account information is updated daily. Mint automatically categorizes all your purchases, showing you how much you spend on gas, groceries, parking, rent, restaurants, DVD rentals and more, with amazing precision.

Secure: Mint provides bank–level data security and industry–leading identity protection. Its security and privacy have been validated by VeriSign and TRUSTe. Users sign up with nothing more than a valid e-mail address, password, and zip code, then enter login credentials for supported financial institutions. Mint doesn’t store any of these credentials, working instead with Yodlee, a third-party financial aggregation service provider that’s provides similar services for “top” US financial institutions. Mint uses 128-bit SSL encryption to communicate with Yodlee and pull your transaction data. Mint never knows your identity.Their level of security is much the same as Paypal.com, eBay.com, your bank or many of the other online companies to whom you’ve given your financial information.

Mint Is Your Financial Traffic Cop/Watchdog

An advanced alerting system highlights any unusual activity, low balances, unwanted fees and charges, and upcoming bills so you’re in constant contact with your money. Plus, Mint is proactive—alerting you when you are exceeding your personal budget, have a low balance, need to pay a bill, and more.

Mint Is Your Sharp Eyed Accountant Looking for Savings

In addition, Mint goes beyond visibility and analysis providing personalized money–saving and money–making suggestions. Mint provides users an average of $1,000 in savings opportunities during their first session. Mint is constantly working to find you savings. Mint keeps looking for new ways for you to save every day—continuously comparing your needs to product, service and bank offerings most relevant to you. ( Of course, the companies who are making the offers are also financing the program, Mint, so you don’t have to….to you it’s free.  Just bear that in mind when you evaluate the offer.)

Mint is Your Always On, Anywhere/anytime access, Free Financial Planner

These are some of the goals Mint can help you with.

Perhaps in some ways we all practice a little avoidance ( perhaps even denial) when it comes to our finances.  Do we really want to know how much we spend eating out or whatever our personal indulgences are? Maybe not.  Or, at least, maybe not by choice.  But a recession is upon us and, for most of us, there is not only the possibility but the real likelihood that the champagne will not be flowing and the airline tickets won’t be raining on our heads.  One way or another, we should all be contemplating the recession time strategy of tightening our belts, lowering our expenditures and increasing our savings to ride out this gathering storm. I, for one am going to be trying Mint to see if it can help me achieve some of those those financial goals I’ve procrastinated about.  Where else can I get a financial guru I don’t have to pay, feed, meet with or take to an expensive lunch?

If you try Mint, please do write us and share what you think and how it’s working for you.  If you have any other online, automated financial guru you’d like to recommend, please do.

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Crunch Time – Prepare For the Business Credit Tsunami

Maria Bartiromo moderating a session at the World Economic Forum.

Maria Bartiromo moderating a session at the World Economic Forum.


As we see the storm clouds gathering on the financial horizon it is a good time to brace your business for the economic fall out. I would break this down into 2 phases:
Preparation before the Tsunami
The most important advice for a business I learned long ago from a very successful entrepreneur who nearly went under several times, but each time convinced his board and investors to hang in and put in a little more money. He eventually sold his company to Pfizer. The product became Lubriderm. His advice: Never run out of cash. If you run out of cash, they take you out of the game.

So, when times get tough, as they are today, it’s a good time to get out the scalpel and make the tough choices necessary to cut costs. Here are some suggestions.

  • Keep overhead costs to a minimum. If you have a very expensive office and don’t have a long term lease consider scaling back or sharing office space, thereby splitting the costs. Many entrepreneurs and companies today don’t maintain an office at all and keep costs low with “virtual offices” and outsourced workers across the city or the globe.
  • Buy second hand. Scour estate sales, liquidations, sites like Overstock.com. Barter.
  • Forget support staff…. call don’t write… use your email…avoid paper.
    Answer your own phone and dispense with calls in a few minutes.
  • Work until seven and eat a little later. You can do all your “support” chores after regular office hours.
  • Surviving the Tsunami Once It Washes Over You.

    • Swing into action the moment you start feeling the effects of the crisis and your back is against the wall. You must immediately communicate with everyone involved– whether vendors, associates or the general public —and tell them exactly what is happening and , at the same time, tell them the concrete, positive steps you are taking to correct things and restore a smooth running operation. Above all, communicate and keep communicating, particularly with your vendors who you want to keep on your side and empathetic with you. In a widespread economic shutdown where we’re all in the same boat they may be more sympathetic than you expect.
    • You may have to make decisions about which bills to pay and when. Remember, rent and utilities first.
    • You may even have to approach vendors about stretching out your payments. Don’t be timid or gloomy about approaching them. It won’t be the first time they’ve been approached about stretching out payments or working out a different payment arrangement unless this is their first day in business.

      Remember: All business like all life is about change. This, too, will pass and good times will return.

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