Thursday, September 30, 2010

Davinci Suites Partners with Utah Technology Council to Bring High-Tech Jobs to Salt Lake

Davinci Suites, a leading provider of virtual offices, meeting rooms and executive office suites in the Salt Lake area, is proud to announce a partnership with the Utah Technology Council (UTC), Utah’s premier professional association. Through this partnership, Davinici Suites hopes to help UTC foster new high-tech growth throughout Utah.

UTC’s mission involves developing a high-quality high-tech work force and attracting an increasing array of funding to the state. And Davinci Suites helps their clients do just that – by lowering their capital expenditures on facility costs, while utilizing state-of-the-art virtual office facilities on-demand to run their business, host meetings and make great first impressions with important business partners with executive office suites.

Now through this partnership, Davinici Suites’ clients are eligible to join UTC at $10 per month for technology companies and $42 per month for non-technology companies. This is a 50% savings off traditional membership pricing.

Davinci Suites is proud to offer this discount to their clients, knowing that as a UTC member, they will get to learn from and share insights with industry peers, counsel with government and academic leaders, and receive help from professional service providers and funding resources.

Sam Souvall, President of Davinci Suites says, “We’re proud of this partnership with the Utah Technology Council. We love what they do and what they can offer our clients, and how together, we can help grow and bring more high-tech business to the Salt Lake area.”

Davinci Suites is also proud to be hosting upcoming UTC events at their state-of-the-art facilities, including:

9/23 – HR P2P Forum – “Building a Motivated Workforce and Leadership Culture”

9/29 – Member Orientation

10/29UTC Hall of Fame Celebration

Learn more about these upcoming meetings at www.utahtech.org.

Contact: Sam Souvall

Davinci Suites

Phone: (801) 990-3100

ssouvall@davincisuites.com

About Davinci Suites

Davinci Suites is the industry leader in virtual office space, offering businesses the professional look and all the amenities of a traditional office space – including conference rooms, a business address, meeting rooms, a reception, executive suites and more – without having to spend the money on one.

About Utah Technology Council

Utah’s premier professional association, the Utah Technology Council, has become the essential business resource for life science and high-tech companies seeking to achieve greater success. At its core, UTC exists to foster the growth of the state’s 5,000 technology companies, ensure Utah develops the highest quality workforce in the nation, and attract an ever-increasing array of funding. Members join UTC to share insights with industry peers, counsel with government and academic leaders, and receive help from professional service providers and funding resources.

Monday, September 27, 2010

Networking

Check out this article from Entrepreneur.com!

The Network is Everything

Chances are, your connections don't go far enough and you don't contact them enough. Here's how to change that.

Hollywood producer Jerry Weintraub recently published a great memoir called When I Stop Talking, You'll Know I'm Dead that illustrates the power of the network. In it, he tells story after story about how a relationship, properly maintained, brought him further along in his business than anything else.

But people rarely tell you how to build a network, or how to maintain relationships, or what will matter on the way up. And they don't give you any shortcuts that you can follow, either. Me? I'm all about the shortcuts and the help.

Understand Dunbar's number
British anthropologist Robin Dunbar said you can maintain only 150 close social connections. This isn't a software limitation--it's a number culled from research that says we humans have a hard time keeping everyone top of mind. With technology, we are able to stretch that number, but it requires consideration and tuning to maintain your 150 and to grow.

The 150 people you spend most of your time communicating with are:

  • Relatives
  • Colleagues at the same company
  • Customers or prospects served by that company
  • Schoolmates from the good old days
  • Geographic connections

It's easy to predict this, as most people network the same way. It's also a negative toward your potential future growth. Think about people who lost their jobs in the Detroit region. Relatives, colleagues, customers, schoolmates and geographic locals couldn't help one another, because they were all in the same boat. Let's fix that.

Be part of different 150s
There are many ways to consider whom you should stay in closest contact with. My take is that you should consider diversifying by location and by industry, for starters. One way to maintain a diverse and useful network is to branch out and then "feed" your network better. Let's start with expanding your network.

Pull out whatever you're using for contact management and look at the total sum of people you know how to reach. Can you find people via your networks who are in similar industries but different verticals? Maybe you sell houses. Find a real estate professional on the other side of the country, or maybe in another country. Start getting chummy.

Find people from different industries and connect. Our real estate professional could make friends in the local art community, then help artists place paintings in each house sold. Get the picture?

Deliver useful contact often
The best advice I can give you is to be helpful. There are two ways that I do this, and maybe you have others. First, I share useful information when I find it. If I see an article about the restaurant business, I send it to Joe Sorge in Milwaukee, who runs AJ Bombers and three other restaurants. If I've got something to share with Government 2.0 types, I'll tell Alex Howard, who covers the future of government for O'Reilly Media.

The second way I help is by connecting people together for business. Every time you can tell someone in your network that you have someone they should meet--and that meeting amounts to business value and/or money--it's a beautiful day for all. Be at the elbow of every deal.

Exercising our networks and connecting to important people are meant to be a part of our daily business rituals, not an add-on. It's work, but it's work that pays off.

Friday, September 24, 2010

From Entrepreneur.com

As the Economy Gets Moving, Will Your People Do the Same?

Five ways to keep your best and brightest motivated--and working for you

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

"The person who gets the farthest is generally the one who is willing to do and dare. The sure-thing boat never gets far from shore."

-Dale Carnegie

found on MotivatingQuotes.com

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Fast 50

This is a nice little excerpt from UtahBusiness.com

by Heather Stewart and Candace Little

Here at Utah Business we have one rule of thumb: never underestimate Utah entrepreneurs. The economy may be crumbling under our feet, but many Utah companies have not only remained steady--they have soared. The companies on our Fast 50 list have refused to simply wait out a bad economy; they've introduced new concepts and products, hired workers and expanded operations. Read on to see how some businesses have defied the odds and found the momentum to grow.

Monday, September 20, 2010

Check out Entrepreneur.com's 5 Keys to Growth!

Contractor Packages 5 Keys to Growth

Accel shares the principles it used to grow from a tiny studio to a company with a worldwide reach.

Growing a business and staying successful require a full palette of skills and strengths. As many business owners know, the self-starting, risk-taking entrepreneur who launches a new business idea must also be able to perpetuate that growth as her business scales up and requires more comprehensive processes and procedures.

I believe that long-term success requires staying true to your vision and competitive strengths, understanding your clients' changing needs, and nurturing a creative yet disciplined environment for your people.

At Accel, we value the art and science of contract packaging--combining consistently compelling presentation and engineering efficiencies to assemble and deliver packaged goods that enhance our clients' sales and boost their bottom lines. To make that happen, we must constantly challenge ourselves externally to know our clients' marketplace, and internally to nurture the talented engineers, designers, quality managers and various other operational roles to ensure we exceed our clients' expectations on every project.

In honor of our 15th anniversary, I would like to share five key success strategies that have enabled Accel Inc. to grow from a tiny studio to a 580,000-square-foot company serving the Fortune 500:

  • Stay grounded to your core competencies. Don't cut yourself off from your roots. Whether a company is enjoying expansion or tightening its belt, staying true to core business strengths is essential to ongoing success.

    I have seen many entrepreneurs who have been tempted to diversify too far from their strengths--and who lost credibility with the client when they couldn't deliver. It is much more strategic to diversify in areas that complement your brand and that one thing you do better than anyone else.
    For Accel, our key strength is hand assembly. We find the most efficient, economical way to put items together in a gift set, thermoformed package, health-care kit or other package presentation is by hand. (Thermoforming is a manufacturing process where a plastic sheet is heated to a pliable forming temperature, formed to a specific shape in a mold, and trimmed to create a usable product.)

    Hand assembly is what we do best. So when we grow our business, it's by expanding our capabilities to support that function. For example, we may purchase a new piece of equipment or add value by helping clients source their containers or packaging materials. This strategy allows us to offer end-to-end services but stay true to our contract packaging and assembly heritage.
  • Build on your strengths with innovation and flexibility. As a retail-oriented contract packaging company, Accel Inc. had to be innovative in addressing clients' needs as a result of the retail buying freeze in late 2008. In an effort to diversify and grow--but stay true to core strengths--Accel developed a system to receive and inventory one client's "marked out-of-stock" apparel and accessories and hand-sort them to be sold to discount sell-off merchandisers.

    Because Accel's engineers designed the process to be automated with the use of computer inventories and conveyors to move the apparel to the different sorting stations, the first sort performed by Accel was 25 percent faster than the client's previous projects. The bulk of Accel's business is seasonal, with an emphasis on preparation for the winter holidays. This new capability leads to additional business throughout the year within the industry because the sell-off projects occur after traditional retail seasons.

    We've become adept at building flexibility into our processes on the front end. That isn't easy to achieve because once you develop an internal process to accommodate a client's need, by nature you try to apply that process to improve efficiency across the board. Inevitably, however, Mr. New Client walks in with a completely different need, and we have to decide whether to alter the current process or create an entirely new one.

    Our staffing model is a perfect example of a flexible process we have created that helps us remain cost-competitive for our clients. By partnering with local temporary agencies, we have the ability to tailor our work force to our project load.
  • Put yourself in the shoes of your client. I started out as a merchant for Bath & Body Works. When I couldn't obtain flawless production and quality for our promotional gift sets from contract packagers, I decided to launch a business that would deliver just that, and Accel Inc. was born.

    Since then, I have worked to maintain that client perspective, and I believe it has been extremely beneficial in designing new services for our clients.

    While many companies say they serve their clients, it takes ongoing discipline to think from your clients' point of view. What do they need vs. what you are selling? For example, we are proud of the artistry we use in designing packages that display our clients' products to great advantage. Yet our real "win" with clients was figuring out how to package products so that associates in retail locations could take them from the shipping box to the shelves without wasting time unwrapping miles of bubble wrap. Accel's engineers figured out a way to maintain quality, reduce packing waste and eliminate unpacking time for salespeople by using a hot-air shrink-wrap. By doing that, we free sales associates to get back on the floor to accomplish what our clients really want: to sell their products.
  • Treat your employees as well as you treat your customers. From the beginning, Accel Inc. has developed best practices to cultivate and retain talented employees. In the mid-1990s, we were an early mover in creating a diverse workplace--with associates from every continent (except Antarctica), 11 different languages spoken in-house and policies established to respect each culture. Muslim employees have a place for prayer, and Accel celebrates the Chinese New Year annually.

    We also leverage technology to create a welcoming workplace. We developed an employee information system for a handheld device. The handheld device puts the employee's information at Accel's fingertips, so the labor manager can welcome the employee warmly and direct him or her based on the worker's previous experience. The manager will take additional time with first-time employees, ensuring that they know where to go and with whom they will be working. Sometimes we have more than 500 employees working in the production area. The device allows us to recognize people by name and work history and gives us an opportunity to make a personal connection first thing in the morning, leading to a more engaged--and productive--team.

    Another benefit of flexibility is how it can create a "win-win" employee connection. Many of our part-time or contract employees are grateful for the flexibility--they may have family or other obligations that preclude full-time work but appreciate being part of an environment where their skills are known and where they can come back time and again.
  • Connect with your community. I am a passionate participant in several philanthropic organizations, including the American Red Cross of Greater Columbus and Ohio Health's HomeReach Hospice Board. I host fundraising events at my home, and Accel Inc. employees participate in community events such as the American Heart Association's Heart Walk. Accel believes that giving back to the community is part of our responsibility as an employer and corporate community member.

    Philanthropy shows your clients and employees that you care about a greater good that enhances all of our lives. And at the end of the day, that is what truly defines long-term success.

Tara Abraham is chairman and co-CEO of Accel Inc., which prides itself on providing innovative packaging solutions for the past 15 years.

Friday, September 17, 2010

(From MotivationalQuotes.com)

"When you know what you want, and you want it badly enough, you'll find a way to get it."

-Jim Rohn


"I am still determined to be cheerful and happy, in whatever our situation may be; for I have also learned from experience that the greater part of our happiness or misery depends upon our dispositions, and not upon our circumstances."

-Martha Washington

Thursday, September 16, 2010

An Unexpected Key to Business Success

Check out this excerpt from Entrepreneur.com!

Your capacity for delayed gratification increases your likelihood to succeed.

While slowing down to eat intentionally may not seem on the surface to be directly related to how effectively you're able to run your business, it's actually an ideal laboratory for the success-minded entrepreneur. For most people, eating is something they do mindlessly, and both how and what they eat is almost purely habit. That's also how most people choose to approach their work. But entrepreneurs who find sustaining success are neither mindless nor habitual about their work.

The way people allow delayed gratification with food reveals other things, too. In the 1960s, Stanford University psychology researcher Michael Mischel conducted The Marshmallow Study, which demonstrated how children's self-discipline and choices related to food directly corresponds to success later in life.

During the study, Mischel offered a group of 4-year-olds a marshmallow, but said if they waited for him to run an errand, they could have two. The errand ended up taking about 20 minutes. One-third of the children opted to take the marshmallow right away while one-third ended up waiting for Mischel's return so they could have two marshmallows. Fourteen years later, the children who waited turned out to be more positive, more successful in school and better able to pursue their goals by delaying gratification. The children who did not wait for the extra marshmallow ended up scoring an average of 210 fewer points on SAT tests and were also more indecisive and less self-confident in life.

At first glance, this study might suggest that nature wins over nurture. Mischel, however, discovered if children are taught cognitive tricks, they do better. What this means for you is that it's possible to learn how to make better decisions. You may not always use the right mental tools in the right situation.

For example, some people need to know all the options before they make decisions. These people are called maximizers. They tend to need the best possible option and generally are less satisfied and happy in life. Satisfiers tend to be more satisfied with something as long as it has the qualities they want--unlike the maximizer who wants to examine every possible choice. Once you learn which you are, you can begin to train yourself to use your brain to your advantage and actually make better decisions.

Continue to hone your skills of mindfulness, intention and delayed gratification through all of your daily actions--from when you eat that single raisin to when you can reach for seconds.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Tips For Starting a Business

Besides checking out our Emerging Business Program, here are a few other tips for a brand new business--

So You Want to Be Your Own Boss...

8 tips to get you going, even if you don't know where to start

Monday, September 13, 2010

Davinci has Partnered with UTC!!

Davinci has partnered with the Utah Technology Council (UTC), Utah’s premier professional association. UTC has become the essential business resource for life science, high-tech and clean tech companies seeking to achieve greater success. At its core, UTC exists to foster the Growth of the state’s more than 5,700 technology companies. Members join UTC to share insights with industry peers, counsel with government and academic leaders, and receive help from professional service providers and funding resources.

Beginning September 1, 2010, Davinci clients are eligible to join UTC for $10.00 per month for technology companies & $42.00 per month for non-technology companies. These rates are 1/2 the normal membership pricing.

Below are just a few of the upcoming UTC events: (events are often hosted in Davinci centers):

9/8 Roundtable with Senatorial Candidates

9/14 UTC ClinicTwo Keys to Success: Protecting Company Brands and Technologies and Licensing Software”

9/16 Life Science WorkshopThe Impact of Laboratory Automation on Quality, Productivity, Compliance and Business Opportunity”

9/17 CTO P2P Forum “Big Data: This ain't your father's database”

9/23 HR P2P Forum “Building a Motivated Workforce and Leadership Culture”

9/29 Member Orientation

10/29 UTC Hall of Fame Celebration

Learn more about UTC at www.utahtech.org. To join or for questions, please contact Mark Lehnhof (mark@utahtech.org 801-568-3500), or Sam Souvall at (ssouvall@davincisuites.com 801.990.3100).

The Small-Business Bill

This relevant article is from Entrepreneur.com:

What You Need to Know About the Small-Business Bill

The Small Business Jobs Act is expected to finally pass this week, but what will it really do to help entrepreneurs?

The Small Business Jobs Act is poised for a full Senate vote this week after amendments are approved as expected. The package includes plenty of goodies, including tax breaks and a $30 billion Small Business Lending Fund, but also measures that could have some small-business owners worried.

Before it becomes law, the bill must be resolved with the small-business legislation passed by the House of Representatives in June.

"We do expect the bill to pass on Tuesday night, but it still has a long way to go to become law," says Molly Brogan, vice president of public affairs for the National Small Business Association, a small-business advocacy organization in Washington, D.C.

Still, the legislation has widespread support from a host of small-business interests and is expected to become law before midterm elections in early November. Here's a look at what the bill, if passed, could mean for your business, including the potential potholes that you could be facing down the road.

Small Business Lending Fund: You might have better luck getting a loan from a smaller lender. A Small Business Lending Fund would provide up to $30 billion in capital to financially sound small banks with less than $10 billion in assets to encourage them to lend money to small businesses. Participating banks would have an incentive to lend to small business: If they increase lending to small business 10 percent over the previous year, they would pay as little as 1 percent on the capital they acquire from the fund.

State Small Business Credit Initiative: This provision could help you out if you live in a state that has a successful small-business lending program and can show how your loan could help create jobs. States with such programs facing cutbacks due to tight state budgets may be eligible for funding to continue them. The grant pool would total $2 billion, but states would need to show that there has been at least $10 in new lending for every $1 in federal grant money they receive. In addition, they would be required to use their funding to work with private lenders to extend more credit to creditworthy small businesses and manufacturers who need the money to create jobs. The administration estimates that the $2 billion pool could generate $20 billion in new lending.

Support of Small Business Administration Lending Programs: If you've been seeking an SBA loan, you could stand to benefit from this measure. The bill would extend provisions that amped up SBA lending guarantee programs and fee reductions that recently expired. In addition, the bill would increase the maximum loan size for the SBA's 7(a), 504, and microloan programs. The 7(a) and 504 loan program maximums would bump from $2 million to $5 million and the microloans would increase from $35,000 to $50,000. Loans made under the SBA Express program would temporarily increase from $300,000 to $1 million. It also includes a temporary allowance for small-business owners to use 504 loans to finance certain mortgages to avoid foreclosure.

Tax Incentives: Startups, this one's for you. The bill would raise new-business expense deduction thresholds from $5,000 to $20,000 in 2010 and 2011. In addition, qualifying small-business investments -- primarily those in corporations with less than $50 million in gross assets and held for more than five years -- would be exempt from capital gains tax. The general business credit, which now can be carried back to relieve the previous year's tax liability, would be extended to a five-year carry-back.

Increased Deductions: Business owners would be able to write off the whole cost of acquiring property immediately instead of over time. For 2010 and 2011, this change to "Section 179 expensing," so-named for a section of the Internal Revenue Service code, would allow taxpayers to write off up to $500,000 in capital expenditures. Expenditures over that amount would phase out, up to a ceiling of $2 million. The bill would allow taxpayers to expense up to $250,000 of the cost of qualified improvements on leased property, restaurant property, and improvements to retail-business property. Business owners could also deduct the cost of health insurance for themselves and their families when calculating self-employment taxes.

Increased Export Support: Doing business overseas? The bill contains provisions that might help government agencies help you more. It would increase support to the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, which plays a key role in promoting U.S. exports, creating staff positions there and at the Department of Commerce, while increasing funds to promote U.S. exporters and fund export grants available to industry associations and nonprofit organizations. The bill also would create the State Export Promotion Grant Program to support small, export-minded businesses and enhances efforts at the SBA to encourage export businesses.

But the bill isn't all roses for small-business owners. Some provisions to pay for the bill, particularly higher Internal Revenue Service penalties, could end up stinging small-business owners who are generally known as a group for tending to run afoul federal tax rules.

  • The bill would increase penalties for failure to file timely information with the IRS.
  • The first-tier penalty for failing to file tax returns would increase from $15 to $30, and the calendar-year maximum penalties would increase from $75,000 to $250,000.
  • The second-tier penalty would increase from $30 to $60, and the calendar-year maximum would rise from $150,000 to $500,000.
  • The third-tier penalty would rise from $50 to $100, and the calendar-year maximum would be raised from $250,000 to $1.5 million.
  • The minimum penalty for each failure due to intentional disregard would increase from $100 to $250.
  • Penalties for failure to file information returns to payees, such as 1099s and W2 forms, would also increase.

This last provision, particularly in regard to 1099 forms, is a source of concern to some of the bill's critics. New 1099 reporting requirements passed as part of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act may dramatically increase the number of 1099s businesses need to process beginning in 2013. This key sticking point is tied to health care reform, which included a major change in how businesses report spending, requiring every business which spends in excess of $600 with a merchant, vendor, contractor, or supplier to issue a 1099.

Despite the reservations of the provision's critics, the bill has the support of 187 business and trade groups, including the National Federation of Independent Business, and is expected to pass, after a Republican vote was secured last week.

"There are a ton of provisions in this bill that the small-business advocacy groups across the spectrum have been advocating for years. It's really amazing that they're all together," says John Arensmeyer, chief executive of Small Business Majority, a small-business advocacy organization in Sausalito, Calif. "It's truly a bipartisan bill that is tremendously beneficial to small business."

Friday, September 10, 2010

Overcoming Anxiety Before a Business Presentation

Our clients at Davinci are thriving business people. They often give presentations and conduct meetings in our conference rooms. We're proud to assist in our clients' professional image and progress due to our services. We hope that our services induce confidence in them during their Big Presentation or their Big Meeting.

The following excerpts from an Oxford Brookes University article provides a few internal ways for the presenter him- or herself to boost his/her confidence for the Next Big Presentation:

Overcoming Presentation Anxiety

Taking control:

The key to success is to think positively; take control of your stress and anxiety by learning effective techniques to combat it.

Relaxing bodily tension in order to reduce the physical sensations of stress is a good place to start. If your body is free of tension your mind tends to be relaxed. This helps you concentrate and perform better, take decisions and solve problems. When you are relaxed, you can view each task as a positive challenge, and use stress as a stimulus to help you to carry it out .

Breathing exercise:

Place one hand on your chest and one on your stomach. As you breathe in through your nose allow your stomach to swell. This means that you are using the diaphragm to breathe in and allowing air right down into your lungs. Try to keep the movement in your upper chest to a minimum and keep the movement gentle. Slowly and evenly breathe out through your nose. Repeat and get a rhythm going . You are aiming to take 8-12 breaths a minute: breathing in and breathing out again counts as one breath. Practise until it becomes a habit and switch to regular breathing when you next become anxious.

Practice

The more you do the more you'll feel like doing and the better you are likely to be.

Pretend! Act as if you are not feeling self conscious.

If you make a mistake, use it to help in the future. Don't let it drag you down.

On the day

  • Refer back to your breathing exercises and concentrate on using them to defuse your anxieties and reduce the chances of shaking or sweating.
  • Think positively, challenging those negative thoughts like "I'm stupid", "I can't do this". Replace them consciously with "I can do this". Remind yourself that what feels like an enormous problem to you probably isn't to those watching.
  • A useful technique that can help stop worrying thoughts crowding in is to visualise a "stop sign" or draw a red dot on your work. As soon as you become conscious of your worrying thoughts, concentrate on your "stop" message. This helps keep you focused.
  • Focus on the content of your talk. As your turn approaches take some deep breaths letting go of as much tension as is possible. When it's your turn to take centre stage use the adrenaline rush to feel alert and focused.
  • If you feel yourself blushing, ignore it and reassure yourself that it will die down once you've got going ! Say to yourself that you are not likely to be marked down for turning pink.
  • Slow your speech down, it helps you feel in control.
  • Using drugs of any sort (alcohol, stimulants, even too much caffeine) to "get through" can adversely affect performance leaving you even less able to perform well. Facing your fear now will provide you with a skill for life.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Good news about our Budget Deficit, says UtahBusiness.com:

Utah’s Fiscal Year 2010 Budget Deficit Much Less Than Anticipated

by PR or News Wire 09 September 2010—

Preliminary figures indicate Utah's budget deficit for Fiscal Year 2010 will be just under $28 million--well below previous forecasts.

These latest numbers are yet one more sign that Utah's economy is turning the corner," Governor Gary R. Herbert said. "This is good news, and shows that Utah continues to lead the nation in prudent fiscal management, careful budgeting and positive response from the private sector."

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Financial IQ

Does this sound like you? Check out the rest of the article in the title's hyperlink for more information!


How to Improve Your Financial IQ

Entrepreneur.com author Peri Pakroo sees "two main types of financial blow-off:"

1. Fully neglecting to track income and expenses by letting receipts pile up (or get lost) and failing to enter data into a bookkeeping system.

2. Doing a decent job of keeping income and expense records up to date, but failing to use the numbers to answer questions about the business's financial situation.

Are these true statements?

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Obama to Back More Business Tax Breaks

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama will call on Congress to pass new tax breaks that would allow businesses to write off 100 percent of their new capital investments through 2011, the latest in a series of proposals the White House is rolling out in hopes of showing action on the economy ahead of the November elections.

An administration official said the tax breaks would save businesses $200 billion over two years, allowing companies to have more cash on hand. The president will outline the proposal during a speech on the economy in Cleveland Wednesday.

Amid an uptick in unemployment to 9.6 percent, and polls showing that the November election could be dismal for Democrats, Obama has promised to propose new steps to stimulate the economy. In addition to the business investment tax breaks, he will also call for a $50 billion infrastructure investment and a permanent expansion of research and development tax credits for companies.

(The title is a hyperlink to the rest of the article.)

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Growing Your Small Business With Social Media

Here is an exerpt from an article by Hilarye Fuller from UtahBusiness.com--check it out! It has some interesting points. The entire article is in the title's hyperlink.

Secrets to Online Success

Grow Your Presence Using Social Media

by Hilarye Fuller

02 September 2010—


Social media is more than just a buzzword used by marketing professionals. It’s a vehicle that has taken off and changed the way millions are using the Internet, not only in their personal lives but in their professional lives as well. While blogging, chat rooms and forums have been around since the late 1990s, social networking sites have really only taken off in the last few years with the most significant growth occurring in 2008 and 2009. According to Facebook Advertising, there are currently more than 87 million users on Facebook with almost 800,000 just in Utah. According to Mashable, Twitter is also estimated to have more than 18 million users by the end of the year. For today’s entrepreneurs, social media can be a goldmine.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Work Hard, But Work Less?

Check out this article that promotes business balance at Entrepreneur.com !

Work Less (It's Good for Business)

Doctors told Brett Schklar to slow down--or else. That's when he started his own company and learned that paying more attention to life off the job made him much better on it.

Brett Schklar was a fast-rising, burn-the-candle-at-both-ends kind of executive. So naturally, he was on a business trip the day of his 31st birthday.

His career as a vice president at a promising tech company was flourishing, and if that came at the expense of time with his family, time spent taking care of himself, time to even pause to celebrate his 31st, well, he was willing to make the sacrifice.

But something happened that day to make him question all that: He had a heart attack.

"Doctors told me I have a condition that needs monitoring, and that stress is a particularly important factor," he recalls. "I needed to work less and reprioritize. I had to change my lifestyle--diet, exercise, everything."

Suddenly, he had no choice: He eased off the accelerator both personally and professionally, focused more on his family and young son and cut back on the 80-hour workweeks, the constant travel and the late-night, bedside text messaging.

And he started his own business.

It was a move that almost sounded like a death wish. Entrepreneurs are notorious for working obsessively, and getting any startup off the ground requires a round-the-clock commitment. Or so the prevailing wisdom goes. But Schklar decided he was going to do things differently. In February 2006, just four months after he was rushed from his Seattle hotel room to a nearby hospital, he launched the Market Creation Group, a Denver-based business-to-business technology marketing firm, and he did it while working less. Today the business is thriving and growing, and Schklar is living proof that what the work/life experts tell us and what we never quite believe--that paying more attention to our lives outside of work makes us better workers--is actually true.

Some of the latest evidence comes from a study involving the Boston Consulting Group and the Harvard Business Review. During a four-year span, BCG consultants who took designated periods of time away from work--what the researchers call "predictable time off"--reported greater satisfaction with their jobs and their work/life balance than did colleagues who didn't take predictable time off. And in the end, according to the study's authors, the participating consulting teams delivered a better product to clients. Their conclusion: "New ways of working can be found that benefit not just individuals but the organization."

The approach is bearing fruit for Schklar: Revenue at Market Creation Group has increased 961 percent since 2006 and is projected to exceed $1.5 million in 2009. While most companies have retrenched or are struggling to maintain the status quo, Schklar's firm is expanding, with plans to open an office in Dallas before year's end.

Changed For Good
People who know Schklar are surprised by just how much the heart attack changed him.

"Here's a guy who was 'on' 24/7. Even after his heart attack, I was sure he would jump right back into that mind-set," says Nina Piccinini, a close friend and colleague of Schklar's and manager of communications for Verio, a Denver web hosting firm and MCG client. "But he made a decision to kick it down a notch, he stuck to it, and he's been very successful doing it his way. I have a great deal of respect for what he's been able to accomplish. It's inspiring."

Now 35, Schklar is hardly the distracted bundle of nervous energy one might expect to find running a marketing outfit that was recently named Denver's fastest-growing private company. He is the relaxed, focused and grounded eye at the center of a whirlwind success, a sharp, engaged conversationalist who seems comfortable in his own skin.

"There's a sense of calm about him now -- that nothing is going to rattle his cage," Piccinini observes. "I think he realizes his success is completely in his control."

In fact, things began to change for Schklar when he decided to take control of his life, starting with taking a hard look at himself.

"I realized the reason I had a lot of stress in the corporate environment is because I didn't fit in that environment," Schklar says. "I came to understand that my real passion is getting things done in ways that probably aren't always acceptable in a corporate setting, like saying what's on your mind, actually telling people when you think they're going about something the wrong way, and trying to help them find a better way to do it."

He decided that what's important in life and in business is as simple as figuring out what you love, and pursuing it: "The way to grow is to do what you love to do. Invest in it. Build it. Be willing to take risks. Keep ethics and the best interests of the people around you in mind. And don't always focus on the money."

The Humane Office
On a recent day, two receptionists greet visitors to the Market Creation Group offices. One rises from behind her desk and introduces herself as Shay, offering a handshake and bottled water. The other is Bear, a chocolate lab, who offers a sniff and the top of his head for a pat.

A pets-are-welcome policy is one way Schklar reinforces the importance of work/life balance at MCG. Having their hounds around, he says, lets people relax and bring a piece of home with them to the office. But Schklar also encourages his employees to bring a piece of the office home with them when the need arises; several members of the MCG team are telecommuters and all the firm's employees have the flexibility to work remotely.

"Other people work more, have fewer employees and take home a lot more money than I do," he acknowledges. "A few years ago, that might have been me. Not now. I still bust my ass and work long hours when I need to, but I'm not here sunup to sundown everyday. That, more than words, is what drives the culture here. I want people here to know they have freedom and flexibility, because I think it helps them work better."

Taking a cue from their boss, MCG employees are encouraged to carve out time for other pursuits, whether it's getting a lunchtime massage--membership at a local massage parlor is one of the fringe benefits of working there--or taking an afternoon off to be with family. "Everyone here works hard," he says. "But that doesn't mean work dominates our lives. The reward for doing our jobs well and delivering consistently great work to our clients is that we don't always have to be stressed about work. It's about maintaining what I call a 'quality balance.'"

Besides spending time with his son, Ari, Schklar finds that balance through being involved in the local arts district (MCG's offices are surrounded by galleries and filled with work by local artists), and serving as a fundraiser and speaker for the American Heart Association. "It's amazing," he says, "how many people who, after hearing my story, have gone and gotten a physical."

The businessman in Schklar attributes MCG's meteoric rise to starting with a clear vision of the niche the company would fill and how it would go about exploiting it. The niche revealed itself while Schklar was recuperating from his heart attack, during a brief stint as a marketing consultant.

"What I saw with B-to-B technology startups is that marketing typically is the last thing on their minds," he says. "They really need a rent-a-VP-of-marketing-type person."

So Schklar started touting himself as that person. Within a couple months, he had several new clients on retainer. MCG was born, with a reborn Schklar at the helm.

In plotting a course for the company, he wanted to build it around the concept of providing "virtual marketing executives" to help tech firms go to market. It wouldn't be a marketing consulting firm that "charges ungodly amounts of money" to startups that can't afford it, or a web design agency that thumbs its nose at "boring" B-to-B work.

Sticking to that vision helped MCG grow, even during the depths of a recession. Now the 10-employee firm has both startups and large corporations as part of its national client base.

"We understand the marketplace," Schklar says. "It's all we do and all we are passionate about. We know how to use e-marketing, social media, things like that, in a B-to-B context to help companies grow. People are dying for that kind of help."

Work Smarter, Not Longer
Brett Schklar built Market Creation Group into Denver's fastest-growing private company by working fewer hours and relying on shrewd planning and execution. Some of the keys:

Make sure somebody needs what you are offering. Identify a niche--a void your company is uniquely positioned to fill--and exploit it.

Define the types of clients you want. And avoid the ones you don't. They're not worth the trouble.

Tap your network. Known quantities offer fewer unpleasant surprises.

Hire people to bolster your weaknesses. The goal is to build a balanced, highly capable staff.

Plan, plan and plan some more. "It's about having a big, awesome long-term vision, plus a staged approach to growth," Schklar says.

Make team members privy to your company strategy. "That gives everybody a compass," he explains, "and leaves less room for error."

Deliver superior work. Satisfied clients are sticky clients. In 2008, Schklar notes, Market Creation Group doubled its revenue without adding a single new client.

David Port is a freelancer based in Denver who writes on small business, and financial and energy issues.