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3 Essential Tools for Starting and Maintaining a Small Business
We believe that there are 3 factors that drive the success of small businesses. 1) Acquiring start-up capital 2) Finding customers 3) Accounting for, budgeting and controlling sales and expenses The following resources will help your small...

"About Us" Pages in Small Business Websites
The Internet has been heralded as "the great equalizer": on a browser window, any company, no matter how small, can look as good as a large company with a long history of quality and service. This situation presents an important challenge for small...

Firing Underperforming Employees in Your Small Business
Here are a few tips on how to hand out pink slips when it comes time to terminate an employee. As a small business owner with employees, you will likely find it necessary one day to terminate an underperforming employee – if you haven't...

The Basics On T1 Line Solutions For Small Business
T1 Lines have been the primary source of mission critical bandwidth for companies of all sizes for nearly 20 years. With so much history, a basic understanding of the T1 line should be common knowledge among business owners who are looking...

Which Small Business Credit Card is Right for Your Company?
Credit cards abound for small business owners, just as plenty as there are for your average consumer. Perhaps the difference between small business owners credit cards and those for consumers, though, is that the small business cards offer even...

 
Starting a Small Business: Balancing Risk and Reward




In a perfect world, starting a small business would be risk free, but just as with everything else; the degree of risk determines the value of the reward.


According to the National Commission on Entrepreneurship, at any given time, 6% to 9% of the United States adult population is involved in planning for a new business. Most of these aspiring entrepreneurs, they say, will start a “Lifestyle Business” – primarily providing employment to themselves and their families. The balance will find themselves in “Entrepreneurial Firms” – those growth companies that, according to the NCE, created two-thirds of net new U.S. jobs in the 1990s.


Both are fraught with risk – and potential reward. Ask a small business veteran about the risks, and three likely come to mind: employees, inventory, and accounts receivables. These are both the bad news and good news of business. In the audiobook, “Sound Advice on Small Business,” author Jim Schell says, “The bad news is that they're a headache to manage, but the good news is they exert leverage.”


What business would Schell, a seasoned entrepreneur and co-author of “Small Business for Dummies,” start if he had it to do all over again? With his tongue planted firmly in his cheek, he says in a perfect world it might be any business without employees, inventory, and minimal accounts receivables. Seriously, though, Schell says, “Without [them], you can only grow so far, so big. With them, the world is our oyster.”


Jim Schell offers advice to entrepreneurs on managing a small business each week in the free audio newsletter from What's Working in Biz, http://www.whatsworking.biz/full_story.asp?ArtID=92






Cunningham is a principal of What's Working in Biz, http://www.whatsworking.biz, a publisher of business audiobooks and online audio programs on marketing, sales, and small business strategies.




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