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Ecclesiastes 3 9-13

  • 9. What does the worker gain from his toil?
  • 10.I have seen the burden God has laid on men.
  • 11.He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity in the hearts of men; yet they cannot fathom what God has done from beginning to end.
  • 12. I know that there is nothing better for men than to be happy and do good while they live.
  • 13. That everyone may eat and drink, and find satisfaction in all his toil--this is the gift of God.

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Recession proof businesses in rough economy

http://www.charlesprimas.com/
http://www.detroitbusinesstoday.net

Recession proof businesses in rough economy


Photo by Tammy Proctor

Recession Proof Business
By Tammy Proctor
Robin Shaheen Cazantzes of Private Spa, a business that has seen good business in these tough economic times.

By Tammy Proctor
The Suburbanite

Jackson TWP, Ohio -

America’s jobless rate fell slightly less last month. Sales during Christmas weren’t aggressive, but OK. The nation’s financial experts say we’ve experienced the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression.

Yet, look no further than your backyard and see success stories.

There are businesses thriving in this economy.

Three local business owners credit their products, their service and networking with the local chamber of commerce as key factors to recession-proof businesses.

“In January, I’ll be awarded a car,” said Tijana Zelich, area manager for Arbonne International, a leader in natural skin care that’s safe for skin.

“I was never a girlie-girl,” said Zelich. “But I was concerned about my skin. I would have put lawn fertilizer on my face if I thought it would help my pores.”

A doctor told her about Arbonne. Skeptical, she tried the products and she was sold.

“In this changing economy, it’s competitive,” said Zelich. “We need to look good. We need bright faces. We can’t afford to look tired, aged. Attractive confident people attract success.”

Zelich said she networks and the Arbonne products sell themselves.

“I don’t believe in pushing the products. I let women try the products for themselves before they buy,” said Zelich. “It’s recession proof.”

“Women can’t afford $5,000 vacations to feel good, in this economy,” said Robin Shaheen Cazantzes, owner of Private Spa. “But they come in here and relax. We’re stress relievers.”

Cazantzes said at this time, women are looking for jobs. She agrees with Zelich. Women have to look good.

“Jobs are so competitive, especially during the interviewing process,” said Cazantzes. “We help ladies with make-up who are going into interviews. Some women are just entering the workforce. They must look professional.”

Cazantzes said she notices a trend. As the economy became tougher, women unite.

“Women are social,” she said. “We saw a rise in bacheorlette parties, divorce parties. Our spa is different in that we’re smaller and we offer a personal touch. We host these ladies. It rough times, we’re an oasis to relax.”

Creating an oasis of personal service has worked for Anne Marie’s Fine Jewelry.

“Everyone is important,” said Anne Marie. “The main reason we are doing well is personal service. We offer old fashioned service.”

“In business, you’ve got to have a servant’s heart,” said Zelich. “You have to know your clientele and know their needs.”

“We offer products that have meaning,” said Anne Marie. “Customers want to buy something that is worthwhile, of value.”

Anne Marie said by offering meaningful pieces and timeless elegance that give people the most for their money.

“Good people tell good people,” said Anne Marie. “We’ve networked through TIPS Clubs in the Jackson-Belden Chamber of Commerce and word of mouth.”

“My son is in college and he’s learning about network marketing,” said Zelich. “It’s something we use every day. It’s a viable way to become successful.”

Cazantzes is a member of the Jackson-Belden Chamber of Commerce and she too attends a Tips Club.

“When networking, you put a face with a business name,” said Cazantzes. “It builds clientele.”
“People do business with people they know,” said Zelich.

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Auto jobs shake-up slams black middle class

http://www.charlesprimas.com/
http://www.detroitbusinesstoday.net



December 20, 2009

RON DZWONKOWSKI

Auto jobs shake-up slams black middle class

BY RON DZWONKOWSKI
FREE PRESS COLUMNIST

http://www.freep.com/article/20091220/SPECIAL04/912200503/1318/

From 1910 into the 1930s, the black population of Detroit rose more than 600% -- double the rate of nearby Cleveland and four times faster than the increase in Chicago.

Nobody was moving here for the weather. The influx of people to Detroit -- the city tripled in size during the same period to a population of about 1.5 million -- was about jobs, mainly in the auto industry, after Henry Ford made his famous offer of $5 a day.

Among the many side effects of the assembly line was the rise of the American middle class and, in Detroit more than anywhere else, the creation of a black middle class. While segregation and racism were obstacles, Detroit became a place where good factory wages enabled African Americans to afford homes and cars; where black businesses could start up with ready customers and where succeeding generations had a measure of upward mobility. Hundreds of African-American professionals, businesspeople and academics owe their start to parents or grandparents who were able to make a decent living in Michigan's auto plants.

That avenue to the proverbial American dream has now been largely closed off by the disappearance of job opportunities at General Motors, Ford and Chrysler and the many industry supplier firms.

"What is happening now to the black middle class is absolutely devastating," said Dr. Curtis Ivery, chancellor of Wayne County Community College District. "But it is also much needed. We needed to come out of our comfort zone, that sense of entitlement to those jobs."

Ivery and others said this massive economic shake-up should be a wake-up call for Detroit and indeed all Michigan to fix its schools and redirect young people toward higher education.

"The old paradigm was graduate from high school and get a good job," said Daniel Baxter, director of elections for the City of Detroit and the son of an assembly line worker. "Now, it's totally different. We have to shift the thought process, recognize the new dynamic."

Juliette Okotie-Eboh, senior vice president of public affairs for MGM Grand Detroit and the daughter of a Ford worker, recalled a time in the 1960s when the best-dressed among her classmates at Detroit Northern High School were the young men who had second-shift auto jobs.

"They had the cars, they had the clothes," she said. "The point is, I guess, they didn't need the education at that time to make the good money. But those doors have been closed for a while. Are blacks disproportionately affected? We're always disproportionately affected. ... But the lack of opportunity is more acute now."

Michael Porter, vice president for corporate communications at DTE Energy, is the son of an autoworker. His mother started out as a stenographer but worked her way up to computer systems analyst at the Army's Tank Automotive Command plant.

"I was exceedingly fortunate," Porter said. "My parents placed a high premium on education and sacrificed -- sending us to parochial schools to help prepare for college. ... But for those who couldn't or didn't want to go to college, the plants were a viable option.

"Today, those manufacturing jobs are gone. ... And even if the auto companies had the market share they enjoyed in the 1960s, the jobs our parents held would be gone. ... Today, computers and robots do many of the things that were formerly done by men and women with air wrenches and paint spray guns."

Hence the critical need, said Porter, Ivery and others, to address the ills of predominantly African-American school districts and the widespread applause for Robert Bobb, the emergency financial manager of the Detroit Public Schools, who's becoming a local folk hero as he reshapes the district with an emphasis on accountability. Bobb's trying to make changes that are at least a generation beyond overdue.

"The school systems have got to do a much better job now of meeting the needs of these students," said Bart Landry, a professor of sociology at the University of Maryland and author of a 1987 book, "The New Black Middle Class," plus a 2006 follow-up, "Black Working Wives."

"But first, students have to understand, the good dollars-for-hours jobs are gone. 'If I'm going to make it, I must go to college' ... and if they don't get into pre-college work, that road is extremely difficult."

At WCCCD, which now has upward of 80,000 people taking credit and noncredit courses, Chancellor Ivery is more blunt about the impact of all the closed factories in southeast Michigan.

"Unfortunately, we're exactly where we need to be, and it's a painful thing," he said. "But we've got to get something out of this. There's an opportunity if we take it over the next one or two years. And if we get it right here, we can get it right for the whole country.

"We have a chance," Ivery said, "to ... turn this around."

Ron Dzwonkowski is associate editor of the Free Press. Contact him at 313-222-6635 or rdzwonkwski@freepress.com.

Sunday, December 13, 2009

Young women on brink of starting career advised to build around their passions

http://www.charlesprimas.com/
http://www.detroitbusinesstoday.net

www.democratandchronicle.com

December 13, 2009

Young women on brink of starting career advised to build around their passions

Kathy Porter

http://www.democratandchronicle.com/article/20091213/BUSINESS01/912130361/1001/business

"If only I knew then what I know now." How often have you chastised yourself with that lament as you reviewed your career choices? Be honest. You'd have changed some things.

With this in mind, I asked a small group of my peers what advice they would offer to young women about to enter today's job market. What follows is a brief summary of what they said.

"Set goals to become financially independent so that you do not have to rely on anyone else," wrote Paula Rogala, a financial adviser with Waddell & Reed.

Consider jobs that incorporate residual income into your salary. The more traditional entry-level jobs in insurance, finance and real estate all have that very attractive, residual piece built into their career paths.

If none of these jobs excites you, develop a career around what you feel passionate about. Then get involved in direct sale network marketing part time for the long-term, residual income benefits. Choose a company that fits your lifestyle and stick with it.

Make deliberate choices, but don't be afraid to change direction. Network. Network. Network. Be patient. Take care of your physical health and your emotional well-being.

Never stop learning. Be a student of your profession and of self-development. Ultimately, you are your best investment.

What never changes are the practical considerations of becoming financially self-supporting. If you're not afraid to reach out to those who have been there before you, you'll get by with a little help from your friends.

Kathy Porter is the creator and owner of www.MrsBizWhiz.com and can be reached at Kathy@mrsbizwhiz.com.

Additional Facts Share a topic

This column is written by members of the Rochester Women's Network, whose focus is to help women connect, grow and succeed. For more information, go to www.rwn.org.

New career starts at home

http://www.charlesprimas.com/
http://www.detroitbusinesstoday.net

www.mydesert.com

December 13, 2009

New career starts at home

Many wooed by direct selling during slow economy

Monica Torline
The Desert Sun

http://www.mydesert.com/article/20091213/BUSINESS/912120350/-1/newsfront/New-career-starts-at-home

Dave Barton needed to find supplemental income and a reason to get out of the house — and all it took was one lousy vegetable chopper.

Wooed by a device that could quarter an onion without breaking the peel, Barton bought a “piece of junk” off a television infomercial a few months back.

It was truth in advertising all right: The blades were so dull, they couldn't cut through much of anything.

After hearing about the bad chopper, a friend suggested Barton try a similar tool sold through The Pampered Chef, a direct seller of kitchen gadgets since 1980.

“The difference between that and what I bought was night and day,” Barton said.

The 62-year-old Rancho Mirage man became a Pampered Chef consultant a little more than a month ago, with 10 parties under his belt already.

With conventional means of finding a job drying up, many American workers like Barton are turning toward direct selling to make some money in this recession.

“It's turned into a good opportunity for me,” he said. “It's paying my mortgage.”

The Direct Selling Association, celebrating its 100th anniversary next year, tracks employment and growth of the direct sales industry. While average employment growth rates slowed 0.5 percent during previous recession years, direct sales employment rates grew an average of 8.4 percent.

“We definitely look at direct selling as an alternative to people when they've been laid off,” said Amy Robinson, vice president of communications and media relations.

The number of direct sellers nationally started increasing toward the end of 2008, Robinson said.

While 2009 figures won't be available for a few months, she said the group is optimistic about the number of new consultants joining the industry — and the selling they will do as they get started.

“We expect an increase in sales figures as these additional salespeople build their businesses,” she said.

Will they buy?

But aren't most Americans cutting back on discretionary spending?

“If there's a reason to buy, they'll buy,” Barton said, noting that a lot of his customers are interested in the added value of three- and five-year guarantees offered on most of his products.

“Women are still interested in sprucing up their wardrobes,” Keron Gustafson of Indio said.

She bought a starter kit from lia sophia and began selling jewelry through at-home parties in July.

Bonni Davis, vice president of sales, said lia sophia consultants are reporting fewer people attending at-home parties but that the average spending per customer is up.

“Friends still get together during these times,” she said. “And this business is all about women helping women.”

Often, a woman will host a party as a favor to a girlfriend getting started selling a product, Davis said. The business expands from there.

Gustafson's initial investment of $149 bought a jewelry case, two display trays, 24 pieces of jewelry, order forms and catalogs.

The additional $500 to $1,000 she earns every month makes “a huge difference” for the household income, she said.

“In essence, I feel like I'm part of a franchise, but with a very low franchise fee,” she said.

Most people who get involved with direct sales have a specific goal in mind — a way to pay for a family vacation or a new car, said Robinson of the Direct Selling Association. The median income for a direct seller is $2,400 annually.

It can become a full-time job

But with flexible hours and little risk to get started, there's potential to turn the opportunity into a full-time career, she said.

Patti Levenda made the transition from selling at house parties to opening a showroom in Palm Desert called Simply Divine.

While she started it with the idea of creating a space for people to host direct sales parties, she also sells handbags and accessories there like the traditional retail model.

Call it customer service or a throwback to her days in direct sales, Levenda is holding workshops for women to show them how to work with accessories they already own. If they buy a new item or two to supplement what they already have, even better.

“Spending a dollar is more of a conscious choice right now,” she said.

Her advice to those looking to start a new career in direct sales: “Start small, and be creative with the marketing. Provide extraordinary customer service.”

Additional Facts What are direct sales?

Direct selling is the sale of a consumer product or service, person-to-person, away from a fixed retail location. In 2008, sales in the United States totaled about $30 billion, with more than 74 percent of the American public buying goods or services through direct selling.
The history of direct selling started in the earliest days of commerce, as traders would go to marketplace to barter for goods and services in person.
The introduction of the home party in the 1950s added a new dimension to the direct selling industry. Hostesses would invite friends into their homes, setting the stage for product demonstrations.
Today, direct selling still takes place in living rooms and kitchens around the country. But some parties are going online, with hosts sending out e-invitations to come buy wares.
The Direct Selling Association

Interested in these businesses?


For more information on the local businesses included in this article:
Dave Barton, Pampered Chef consultant, at (760) 799-2499.
Keron Gustafson, lia sophia consultant, at (760) 289-8133.
Patti Levenda, owner of Simply Divine, at (760) 799-4425.

Friday, November 27, 2009

Evan Wynn Kosiner: Take a cue from billionaires: get residual

http://www.charlesprimas.com/
http://www.detroitbusinesstoday.net

Take a cue from billionaires: get residual

Posted on Thursday, November 26, 2009
Written by Evan Wynn Kosiner

http://www.theeyeopener.com/articles/4355-Take-a-cue-from-billionaires-get-residual

I’ve hung out with a few billionaires in my day and I always drive the conversation to “How did they make money?” The answer, summarized: residual income.

What the hell is residual income? It’s your best friend that you didn’t know you didn’t know. It’s money that takes something to setup and will payout, residually. What’s the benefit?

Most university students that I know have two things going for them. One, a perspective on money, like “money is scarce.” Second, a relationship to money that their time equals money at a one to one ratio. Like, “every hour I work, I make $12.” (Notice some of you saying right about now, “wow, $12, I wish.”)

This is the way most people operate, including many executives, professors and more than likely you. There is nothing wrong with it, except if something comes between you and your labour.

The way I’ve set myself up is residually. It can be as simple as purchasing one stock and getting a $3 dividend quarterly. Or setting up a company and letting it run without you. Multi-level marketing companies usually only deal with residual income.

Having a residual income means that you could barely work or not work at all in a month and bring in sufficient income to support yourself. You can focus on working on your terms once you’re set up. Then once you have sufficient cash flow, reinvest it in additional residual opportunities that will create even more money.

It’s how my dad retired at 36 and it’s how every billionaire I met made their billions. Money no longer is a barrier, especially if you slowly but surely diversify the residual opportunities in your personal portfolio of opportunities. If one buckles, you’ve got income coming in from other sources.

So how do you do it? Seek opportunities that will make you money without you being there. Start a company and pay people on commission and have them do all the work. Create a business that makes an ongoing return perhaps through technology instead of labour.

One of my companies has invested into research and development for a new technology that has paid for itself in under four months. We receive a cheque for what we created every month.

Look for opportunities that are a utility. Like your phone, hydro or other stuff that once your clients signs on, they aren’t likely to get rid of.

Although I still have difficulty taking in all of the aspects of Multi-level Marketing (MLM) companies, some are great. Google “MLM” and see what pops up. The beauty with MLM companies is that even if you don’t sign up, the format of their company and how it operates will teach you a lot about how you could operate your own venture.

I’m a few years off from retiring. By retirement, I mean having sufficient income that I don’t need to work and my financial life runs without me. Does it mean I’ll sleep all day and everyday? No. I love working due to the loving the projects I create.

Homework: Give up the meanings you’ve created about money. Look at what’s “real” for you about money, and then ask yourself, does a billionaire see this the same way? Be a billionaire and work backwards.

If you have any questions about running your own business or have feedback for Evan, send an email to ekosiner@ryerson.ca

Comments

Friday, November 20, 2009

Network marketing on an international level

http://www.charlesprimas.com/
http://www.detroitbusinesstoday.net

http://www.kidk.com/news/local/70585147.html

Network marketing on an international level

Network marketing on an international level

By Danica Lawrence

IDAHO FALLS - It starts with building a team of consultants and hosting house parties- that's what network marketing is- creating a line of independent agents and a hierarchy of different levels of consultants- and making people extra money.

"It wasn't until I got pregnant that I was all of a sudden looking for a plan B, I didn't really know how compatible my job as a flight attendant was going to be with having an infant at home, and I was like you know if I could just earn $600 a month then I could get rid of half my shifts," says regional vice president of Arbonne International, Janna Van Witbeck.

Regional Vice President for Arbonne International, Janna Van Witbeck, admits selling her company's products directly from her home has turned from a part time job just making couple hundred dollars a month up to a full time business now making around $5,000 a month! She started almost 4 years ago and then her husband lost his job two years later.

"We were just able to not lose everything even though we were totally unprepared for his income to go from bread winner to zero."

Despite what the consultants say about the products, this particular party is about educating these women to become business partners.

Local hair stylist, Jen Jennings just started her home based business with this multi-level marketing company- and she's making a couple hundred a month, she says it works for her because it takes up little time.

"It's not a 9 to 5 job, which I think is very appealing to a lot of people, no one tells you you have to go to work but no one is going to give you a paycheck if you don't go to work... It was just another avenue, another outlet, another part time job but it's been bringing in income with little to no effort," says hair stylist, Jen Jennings.

As the recession continues and people are filing for unemployment by the hundreds of thousands, the idea of network marketing has turned into a part-time job for people across the world and brought in that cash flow these women had lost.

So if you're thinking of a few ways to earn that extra income, consider a business straight out of your living room.

There are many forms of home-based, multi-level marketing, just be sure to check with your local Better Business Bureau to see if the company you want to work for is legitimate.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Is direct sales right for you?

http://www.charlesprimas.com/
http://www.detroitbusinesstoday.net

http://abclocal.go.com/ktrk/story?section=news/consumer&id=7126299

Action13

Is direct sales right for you?

Wednesday, November 18, 2009


HOUSTON (KTRK) -- The number of women taking advantage of direct sales business opportunities has spiked in this down economy. But it's not easy.

Direct sales sounds like a great concept, whether it's Tupperware, beauty products or jewelry, you can earn up to 50 percent commission, work from home and be your own boss. But before you dabble into this industry, there are some things you should know.

University of Houston student Christina Gemellaro is a sales representative for Mark.

"Mark is a beauty and fashion brand. You can mix any two products that you like," said Gemellaro.

On this day, she has set up shop at the U of H book store. Gemellaro will make 30 percent of what she sells, and says she'll use her profits to pay for books and bills.

Across town, Georgette Duane is busy booking a party for Cookie Lee, a company that sells trendy jewelry. The mother of three says last year she had to find another career after losing her job at a car dealership.

"It's been a blessing ever since, I really, really enjoy it," said Duane.

Duane usually sets up nine parties a month, making an average profit of $200 for each party.

"If I worked a job making $8 or $9 an hour, I probably bring in a week's time what I bring in a day's time," said Duane.

Financial expert Marilyn Logan is known around Houston as "the money lady." She's such a believer in direct sales that she began selling Arbonne, a line of skin care products.

"Right now, the three things that are not suffering are alcohol, tobacco and skin care," said Logan.

She has been so successful with Arbonne that she's being rewarded with a white Mercedes from the company. But be warned: She says direct sales is not for everyone.

"If you don't like people this is not the business for you," said Logan.

Tori Johnson, CEO of Women For Hire, says before you consider a direct sales company, keep a few things in mind. First, the start up costs. Some can be pretty low. For Mark, it's just $20. But Cookie Lee's start up fee is $250. And Arbonne's initial investment is $1,100.

"I am a huge supporter of direct sales for a couple of different reason one is that it's a chance to make money, but even for a lot of people it's a chance to force yourself to get out there," said Johnson.

The next thing to consider with direct sales is how much time are you really willing to put in?

"You make as much money as you are willing to work for, so the more hours you put in the more money you make," said Johnson.

Next, are you willing to do what it takes? That means approaching anyone as a potential client.

"When your mouth is open, your business is open," said Johnson.

Finally, Johnson says if you really want to make your business venture successful, align yourself with a mentor within the direct sales company.

If you're still not sure if it's for you, consider that the worst thing that can happen is you lose your up-front money. So what exactly does that up-front fee pay for? With some companies like Arbonne, the $1,100 gets you a line of products for display and sampling. But with Mark, the $25 simply pays for your entrance fee.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Entrepreneurship in a down economy

http://www.charlesprimas.com/
http://www.detroitbusinesstoday.net

Entrepreneurship in a down economy

By AMBER KROSEL - akrosel@nwherald.com

http://www.nwherald.com/articles/2009/11/04/r_jli3vni4q2mg91ijgpbo_q/index.xml
Algonquin resident Barb Waller of BW Accessories sets up a table full of jewelry and accessories for sale for an open house Saturday with Rebecca Woodward, 8, at Vicki Revere's home in Huntley. (Jason Chiou – For the Northwest Herald)

Goodbye, door-to-door encyclopedia sets. Hello, Pampered Chef parties.

Locally, there is no shortage of the ever-evolving home-based business. From selling skincare products to posting handmade crafts on popular sites such as Etsy.com, starting out on one’s own might be gaining popularity as traditional full-time jobs continue to be scarce.

At the Illinois Small Business Development Center at McHenry County College’s Shah Center, local estimates show a 20 percent to 25 percent increase in interest from budding entrepreneurs.

“A lot of that is, ‘I’m unemployed, I haven’t found a way to be successful,’” ISBDC coordinator Mary Margaret Maule said. “Our classes have been full every month.”

Benefits to operating a home-based business include the flexibility of creating your own schedule, but – depending on the type of job – also come with the pressure to succeed at selling and time management.

“One of your big challenges is, you are your own boss, your timekeeper, your everything,” Maule said. “And it’s easy to get distracted by the other roles in your life.”

However, several McHenry County residents – including a trio of Huntley women running their own shows – have found ways to manage.

Stay-at-home mom LeeAnn Klopp began working as a Pampered Chef consultant in August to bring in a little extra income for the family. Although she puts in only about 10 to 15 hours a week hosting or preparing cooking demonstrations and catalog shows, she said she’s done well.

And when things come up, she can easily push it temporarily aside.

“Now with my son being home sick, if I had a full-time job and had to take time off, there’s no way that they would be as flexible,” Klopp said this week.

Friend Vicki Revere got into selling Arbonne beauty supplies as a side job in addition to her full-time gig as a figure-skating director in West Dundee. She discovered the all-natural products after she was introduced to them a year ago by her hairdresser and immediately became hooked.

She carries samples with her wherever she goes, mostly because her business survives through word of mouth.

“You have to put effort into it,” Revere said, adding that she’s served 50 clients. “It is a repeat business because it’s consumable.”

Consulting jobs such as Klopp’s and Revere’s are examples of multi-tiered marketing, Maule said. Equivalent to operating a franchise in that the person is “buying into” a larger corporate structure, someone else already has done the main promoting.

“You have a much larger marketing nut to crack if you’re a home-based business and also a private business,” she said, such as personal organizers or home-based health care workers.

However, any home business takes self-discipline, responsibility, and an upbeat personality and passion, rather than a specific skills set.

Megan Adam juggles being a stay-at-home mom of four with ventures in selling Scentsy candles and her own jewelry line. She’s been making popular bottle-cap necklaces for years, but began the consulting job after the economy faltered.

Both enable her to work around her families’ needs while earning money, she said, usually taking up at least five hours a day.

“It’s very easy to sell something that you love,” Adam said. “I’m constantly researching new ideas.”

But to those interested in starting home-based businesses, Maule warns that it’s “not the fallback position,” compared with an outside job.

“It’s tough work,” Maule said. “You’re wearing multiple hats. You will work harder than you’ve ever worked at anything else.”

Starting a home-based business? Read these tips, first:

• Make a plan for how much time you are willing to commit to your business and how many clients you want to see. Create a unit of measurement to show your progress.

• Become educated on your obligations as a business owner, such as taxes, insurance and potential liabilities.

• Understand what you don’t do well, and find someone who can do it for you in a way you support. For example, if you excel at sales, you might not be so good at billing or collecting.

• Make sure you collect. Get comfortable with being strict on billing, including notifications of late payments and service charges. Take delinquents to collections, if needed.

• Study and understand sales cycles. They often make or break a business.

• Network. Work with local chambers of commerce and create your own small group of trusted business allies. They can be an idea sounding board and help you view things from a different perspective.

• Take a class through a local Illinois Small Business Development Center for a low fee. Session topics range from taking advantage of tax changes to understanding how to use Quick Books. Information and more McHenry County resources can be found at www.shahcenter.mchenry.edu.

Source: Mary Margaret Maule, coordinator for the Crystal Lake-based Illinois Small Business Development Center

Friday, November 06, 2009

Moms Fuel Home-Based Business Boom

http://www.charlesprimas.com/
http://www.detroitbusinesstoday.net

Moms Fuel Home-Based Business Boom

Bay Area Moms Show How to Roll in the Dough

SAN FRANCISCO (CBS 5) ―

http://cbs5.com/consumer/home.business.moms.2.1282193.html
In this economy, women are starting businesses at double the rate of men. Many Moms are starting businesses in the home to supplement the family income. Some are cooking up a lot of dough.

Sasha Nichols couldn't find interesting looking bows that stayed put in her daughter's hair. So the homemaker took out the glue gun and made her own.

"Everywhere we went people would say 'Where did you get those adorable bows I love 'em.' I thought 'maybe I'll give samples to friends,' which I did... they came back and said, 'You've gotta sell these.'"

From a little workstation in her garage, her business Bow Bijou bloomed.
She started selling bows in local boutiques.

"The first few minutes I brought the product in, they started selling in first 5 minutes," Nichols said.

According to hybridmom.com, a resource for entrepreneurial homemakers, women are fueling a boom in home-based businesses. Whether it's to start a college fund, in Nichols' case. or to supplement family incomes in a down economy.

Moms are finding inspiration and business ideas through their children. Ali Krebs came up with the idea for necklaces for mothers.

"I wanted to wear something hip and stylish that had my kids names on it," Krebs said.

But it's not just a hobby for Krebs. When her real estate staging work suffered during the recession, she needed Swank Mommy Necklaces to make money. The kitchen turned into the office. A team of neighborhood moms became her employees.

"Marketing at first was word of mouth. We wore it and people thought they were cute. Ladies at preschool would want one," said Krebs. But the mothers took their gift of gab and took it all to a higher level with technology. "Twitter and Facebook has been phenomenal. Social networking - I can't say enough about it. The number of people on the web are unbelievable and the percent of those who are mothers is crazy."

And once celebrity Mom's started wearing the handmade bling, the kitchen- based business started to cook up sales - $30-50,000 a month. Krebs is now working full time, and the business is expanding with a corporate distribution partner.

Nichols chose a different growth plan. She prefers to work a couple hours a day, so she can focus on the primary tasks of being a mother and homemaker. But even being a part time entrepreneur can pay. When Nichols first started Bow Bijou a year ago, she put in $500 of her own money for supplies. These days she makes that much per week.

Friday, October 30, 2009

Recession, layoffs fuel many to start small businesses

http://www.charlesprimas.com/
http://www.detroitbusinesstoday.net

Recession, layoffs fuel many to start small businesses

By Laura Petrecca, USA TODAY

http://www.usatoday.com/money/smallbusiness/startup/week1-exploring-small-business-options.htm

SAN DIEGO — Inside a freshly renovated building, 27 restaurant trainees scurry around sweeping, shaping dough and cutting 12-inch practice pizza crusts into eight slightly misshapen slices.

"Keep your elbow up" and "Turn your wrist ⅛-inch at the end" are among the slicing tips practicing pizza cutters hear from scrutinizing store managers.

It's 9 a.m. on a Friday in August. The recession that started in December 2007 plods along as businesses continually fold, jobless claims tick up and millions of families desperately try to make mortgage payments and curtail spending.

START-UP HOW TO: Week one: Think like an Entrepreneur
THINKING ABOUT STARTING A BUSINESS? Be a part of our Small Business Challenge; take our survey

Yet in this eastern San Diego strip mall, hopes abound.

Here, in three days, the first CiCi's Pizza buffet in California will open. The chain is known for cheap prices, peppy workers and a variety of pizza toppings.

For CiCi's Enterprises and its nearly 650 other restaurants in 32 states, this is an entree into a potentially lucrative market at a time when many of CiCi's expansion plans had to be scuttled because of the economic crisis.

For franchise owners Melissa and Andre Carter, it's a new beginning.

When the restaurant opened to a long line of CiCi's lovers on Aug. 10, the Carters' venture became one of nearly 30 million U.S. small businesses.

In this recession, starting a business from scratch or buying a franchise has been the way out for many. Of job seekers who gained employment in the second quarter of 2009, nearly one in 10 — 8.7% — did so by launching their own businesses, according to outplacement firm Challenger Gray & Christmas' quarterly Job Market Index. That start-up pace is up from 6.4% in the first quarter and is twice the rate reported in Challenger's 2008 second-quarter update.

The business owners nearly all believe they have enough energy and ambition to succeed — but statistics for success aren't on their side. Even in non-recessionary periods, about half will fail in their first five years, according to the Small Business Administration's Office of Advocacy.

From laid off to start-up

Many have become entrepreneurs by force. With 6.9 million jobs lost since December 2007, and work difficult to find, laid-off employees have created consulting firms, launched eBay businesses and signed on with direct-sales firms such as Avon to earn money.

"These are people that two years ago did not aspire to own a business, but circumstances have dictated that they look at freelance opportunities" and other business ventures, says Ken Yancey, CEO of non-profit entrepreneur mentoring group Score.

Not everyone, of course.

Austin-based Tom Nall, 66, had a retirement party from his job as a chili marketer on a Friday, took Saturday and Sunday off and was back working Monday on a new liquor business.

Nall was asked to be a consultant on the early stages of the launch of a tequila company. But instead of just advising, he thought the concept of an all-organic liquor was so enticing that he became a partner and the point person for raising capital. Now CEO, he says he has invested more than $100,000 in the Republic Tequila venture and has raised money from about 25 other investors.

"I think entrepreneurs are going to play a big part into bringing the United States back to economic stability," Nall says.

Small businesses employ a little more than half of all private-sector workers, pay 44% of total U.S. private payroll and have generated 64% of net new jobs over the past 15 years, according to the SBA's Office of Advocacy.

It's difficult to pinpoint any definitive long-term trends about small businesses leading the country out of recessions, but statistics show that for firms with no paid employees — "non-employer" firms — their creation rate goes up in a downturn, says Brian Headd, an Office of Advocacy economist. Using IRS data as a guide, the number of non-employer firms jumped 8.1% from 2007 to 2008, says Headd. When the economy was doing well in the late 1990s, non-employers had annual increases of about 2% to 3%.

About 75% of small businesses are non-employer firms. The rest are employer businesses — those with paid employees.

Employer firms typically decline or remain flat during tough times. Yet a study from entrepreneur-focused group Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation shows that business creation in general ticked upward last year.

In 2008, an average of 320 out of 100,000 adults created a business each month — representing about 530,000 new businesses a month. That's a slight increase from 2007.

High start-up costs

The Carters — she's 36, and he's 42 — spent years kicking around the CiCi's Pizza idea. They had taken their kids to the chain when they lived in Texas and liked the pairing of affordable prices and friendly atmosphere.

They looked into opening a CiCi's in Texas but couldn't get a desirable location. After the Carters moved to San Diego a couple of years ago, they attended a CiCi's franchise expo in February 2008 and got the rights to open the first buffet in California. (CiCi's has a carry-out-only restaurant in Gardena, Calif.)

Being first in came with a big price tag. To open a buffet franchise, an initial investment typically ranges from $448,510 to $712,860, according to Coppell, Texas-based CiCi's Enterprises. CiCi's to-go franchises cost less.

The Carters put down $30,000 for a franchise fee, then shelled out tens of thousands more on expenses such as equipment, ingredients and hiring and training workers. They will owe the corporation a 4% royalty on sales and at least $2,300 a month for an advertising fund.

The couple's initial financing — through now-troubled lender CIT — fell through. But after some legwork, they secured a loan with a private lender.

They were lucky. Others have had a much more difficult time getting funding during the recession.

Dennis and Lisa Morton also were approved by CiCi's to open a franchise, theirs in the Chicago area. They also lost CIT funding but can't secure another loan.

"At this point, we are out $60,000" because of franchising costs, training expenses and legal fees, Lisa says. They've gone to 56 banks but are still without a lender.

They signed on with CiCi's in April and had a year to open a restaurant. CiCi's extended that timeline, but Lisa is still worried.

"We pretty much took everything that we had for the down payment," she says. "At that time, the bottom hadn't dropped out (of the stock market) yet."

As the Morton family struggles to cut spending — as well as find financing — the whole family, which includes two teens, is feeling the pinch.

"There were just so many high hopes in this house," Lisa says. Now, "There's been a lot of crying."

It's not just new franchise owners reeling over tight credit markets and tight-fisted consumers.

Across the country, about 200,000 franchise-related jobs have been lost, and more than 15,000 retail units have closed, according to International Franchise Association CEO Matthew Shay.

CiCi's has had its troubles as well. In addition to significantly scaling back on its expansion plans because of the credit crunch, it also had 39 store closures in 2008. The company says the percentage of systemwide stores that closed remains near its historical annual average of 6%, but because it had more stores in the system in 2008, the actual number of closures was up from the previous year. It blames the recession, as well as factors such as poor store location and management, for those closings.

The company did manage to bring in higher revenue despite the recession, at $580 million, a 1.8% rise over 2007. Yet, that increase was smaller than the 5.4% revenue rise from 2006 to 2007, even though there were more stores in the system in 2008.

'A little bit of variety'

Around 7 a.m. on Aug. 7, Melissa Carter is driving to the first full day of employee training. By 7:45 a.m., she is catching up with her recently hired store managers. A few hours later, she is showing workers the CiCi's way of doing things: how to stock the salad bar (very neatly) and how to greet customers (very loudly, with a cheer of "Hi, welcome to CiCi's!")

Her bright red shirt and quiet authority make her stand out from her hired managers and the men in staid blue button-downs that came from CiCi's corporate office to help with the launch.

She is the leader, but a mere two years ago, her restaurant knowledge was at the same level as most of these trainees: barely there.

Carter has a law degree from South Texas College of Law and worked in the legal field in Texas and California. But that career wasn't for her long term. "I'm not really cut out for working in an office, being in one place all day every day," she says. "I need a little bit of variety."

She has a diverse day now, serving customers, making shift schedules, determining inventory and working on budgets.

Like Carter, many potential franchisees come from other industries, says CiCi's Enterprises President Craig Moore, who is retiring this year. Often those folks don't realize that while they're pursing their entrepreneurship dream, customers simply see them as a pizza provider. "In the restaurant industry, you're a servant," Moore says. "You're no better than a servant."

As for Carter, she is a servant to thousands of people each week. Opening week alone, she had about 6,000 patrons.

She works up to 70 hours a week. Leading up to the grand opening, her workday was longer, often 15 hours. At one point during the opening, she joked that she needed three days straight of sleep to make up for all the slumber she has missed.

Those long hours will likely continue, as they do for most small-business owners.

Slightly more than 60% of them say they toil six or seven days a week, while only 22% of the general population say they work that much, according to Discover Financial Services' Discover Small Business Watch May survey of entrepreneurs who have fewer than five employees.

Carter has reaped some early rewards for her work. Opening week, she pulled in about $30,000 in revenue, Moore says. While the CiCi's system average is nearly $1 million a year, early signs show that the San Diego CiCi's could take in more. Moore says it could take in $1.5 million in annual revenue.

But the actual take-home profits can vary greatly. Robert Rinaldi, who owns a CiCi's franchise in Niles, Ill., says he has brought in "decent numbers" after his Aug. 31 grand opening. Yet sky-high expenses — such as $10,000 monthly rent — gnaw at the bottom line.

Rinaldi, who also had difficulty obtaining financing, says he's relieved to finally get the restaurant open. But he adds that his stress level is high.

"Now it's going to be constantly monitoring the labor and sales (levels) to keep it going," he says. "If I stick it out, I think it can be a successful store. I just don't know if I have the working capital to keep it afloat."

Millions of other small businesses are buckling under economic pressures.

More than 60% of small businesses polled by the National Small Business Association in late June and early July reported revenue declines over the past 12 months. That's the first time a majority of small-business respondents cited decreases since NSBA began asking the question in 1993.

Two in three also cited profit decreases. Only 18% of firms said profits were increasing.

In 2008, there were 43,546 business bankruptcies, according to the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts. That was up from 28,322 in 2007. For the first half of 2009, 30,333 businesses have already filed for bankruptcy.

Those figures don't count personal bankruptcy filings that some small-business owners claim instead of a business bankruptcy.

1,000 served

On opening day, the CiCi's workers certainly delivered a friendly and festive atmosphere. Some of the female workers tied balloons to their ponytails, and throughout the day, workers cheerily greeted lines of customers with enthusiasm.

At 8:24 p.m., the restaurant remained filled. "It's been crazy," says Carter, who at various points in the day couldn't remember the combination to the store safe or the location of her car keys.

By the 10 p.m. closing, about 1,000 people had been served.

After the last customer walked out, Carter's husband, Andre, sits with two buddies in a back booth. He works in ground operations for Southwest Airlines but has committed much time to the CiCi's launch as well.

"I hope I'm not working for a non-profit," he quipped earlier that day, as he surveyed the restaurant.

He seems satisfied but exhausted.

It's been "positively overwhelming," he says. "I've literally had about four hours sleep for the third day now. … It takes every little ounce of energy to muster up and go forward, but that's what we call perseverance."

In front of the restaurant, Melissa Carter is sweeping the floor.

Later that night, the duo joke that they might as well sleep on the air hockey table in the restaurant's game room because they have to be back again early the next day to do it all over again.

"It's been a long day, we're tired and achy," Melissa says.

Nearly three weeks later, she sounds energized again. She's taken a rare afternoon off to get some errands done.

On her agenda: business calls.

"I just got off the phone," she says. "I'm negotiating a lease on a second (CiCi's) now."

Sunday, October 25, 2009

The Rise of the 'Homepreneur'

http://www.charlesprimas.com/
http://www.detroitbusinesstoday.net

http://www.businessweek.com/smallbiz/content/oct2009/sb20091023_263258.htm?chan=smallbiz_smallbiz+index+page_top+small+business+stories

Getting Started October 23, 2009, 12:00PM EST text size: TT

The Rise of the 'Homepreneur'

New research shows the economic importance of home-based businesses: They account for more than half of all U.S. businesses and employ more people than venture-backed companies

More than half of all U.S. businesses are based at home. These companies often are dismissed as quaint hobbyist ventures, but new research suggests that's a mistake. An estimated 6.6 million home-based enterprises provide at least half of their owners' household income. Together these "homepreneurs" employ one in 10 private-sector workers, and by many measures they're just as competitive as their counterparts in commercial spaces.

Ask Stephen Labuda, the 35-year-old president of Agency3, a Web development firm he runs from his home in Cambridge, Mass. A former programmer at Deutsche Bank (DB), Labuda started building Web sites as a side job in 2003 and took the venture full time three years later. Agency3's revenue is in the millions, and Labuda is about to hire his fifth employee, who will work remotely, like the rest of the staff and the slew of contractors he taps. "I'm not intending to go rent office space," he says.

You can trace the rise of home-based businesses to the early days of telecommuting in the 1980s and the mass adoption of the Internet in the 1990s. Cloud computing, online collaboration, and smartphones have accelerated the trend, and recent research clarifies the economic significance of companies like Labuda's. "We're seeing more and more home-based businesses that are real businesses," says Steve King, who coauthored the new report with his wife, Carolyn Ockels. (The couple runs Emergent Research, a small research and consulting shop, from their home in Lafayette, Calif.) The pair analyzed U.S. Census data and Small Business Administration research, along with data from the Small Business Success Index, a survey of 1,500 companies sponsored by Network Solutions and the University of Maryland's Robert H. Smith School of Business.

wide acceptance and legitimacy

Here's more of what they found: The 43% of home-based businesses that provide at least half of the owners' household income are, on the whole, smaller than non-home-based companies. Only about 35% have revenue above $125,000, compared to 75% for non-home based businesses. But they measure up to other small companies on key aspects of doing business, including access to capital, benefits to workers, marketing, and innovation. On average they have two employees, including the owners, and together they employ more than 13 million people—more, King notes, than venture-backed companies. (Venture-backed companies employed 12.1 million people in 2008, according to the National Venture Capital Association.)

In some of these companies, the operations are concentrated in the owner's home. Others use their residence as a headquarters but do most of their work at clients' homes or offices. The variety of home-based businesses cuts across industries, but the top sectors are business and professional services, construction, retail, and personal services.

A few trends are driving the growth of sophisticated home businesses. First, technology has made it easier to start and run a business from anywhere. But just as important, there has been a change of consciousness in the business world to recognize home-based enterprises as legitimate.

Labuda has seen that shift at Agency3. "When I first started, I really felt compelled to go rent an office. I felt like in order for me to be taken seriously as a business, I had to have an office that my clients could come to," he says. It didn't matter—clients didn't want to visit him. Labuda meets most of them at their businesses or at coffee shops. He also uses on-demand office space, where he can rent a conference room by the hour, if needed.

lower costs are a competitive edge

Now, Labuda never feels that his working from home damages Agency3's credibility. Instead, it's a selling point. "It's reflected in our pricing that we don't have the same kind of infrastructure costs and fixed costs that some of our competitors do," he says.

Indeed, the most obvious financial benefit for home-based entrepreneurs is lower operating costs. A 2006 SBA study compared tax returns of sole proprietors who deducted home-office expenses with those who deducted commercial rent. That analysis found that home businesses, on average, had lower sales and net profits than companies in commercial spaces. But profitable home-based ventures retained a greater share of their total receipts as net income: 36%, vs. 21% for non-home-based businesses.

King predicts that as large companies try to reduce their fixed costs by outsourcing business functions, small home-based enterprises will play an even larger role in the economy. "Over the next 20 to 30 years, you could see the percentage of people who are self-employed and home-based double, potentially," he says.

Tozzi covers small business for BusinessWeek.com.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Higher jobless rates could be new normal

(Now is the time to start working on that second/third or fourth income stream)

http://www.charlesprimas.com/

http://www.detroitbusinesstoday.net


detnews.com

October 19, 2009 http://detnews.com/article/20091019/BIZ/910190400

Higher jobless rates could be new normal

TOM RAUM
Associated Press

Washington -- Even with an economic revival, many U.S. jobs lost during the recession may be gone forever, and a weak employment market could linger for years.

That could add up to a "new normal" of higher joblessness and lower standards of living for many Americans, some economists are suggesting.

The words "it's different this time" are always suspect. But economists and policy makers say the job-creating dynamics of previous recoveries can't be counted on now.

Here's why:

  • The auto and construction industries helped lead the nation out of past recessions. But the carnage among Detroit's automakers and the surplus of new and foreclosed homes and empty commercial properties make it unlikely these two industries will be engines of growth anytime soon.
  • The job market is caught in a vicious circle: Without more jobs, U.S. consumers will have a hard time increasing their spending; but without that spending, businesses might see little reason to start hiring.
  • Many small and midsize businesses are still struggling to obtain bank loans, impeding their expansion plans and constraining overall economic growth.
  • Higher-income households are spending less because of big losses on their homes, retirement plans and other investments. Lower-income households are cutting back because they can't borrow like they once did.

    That the recovery in jobs will be long and drawn out is something on which economists and policy makers can basically agree, even as their proposals for remedies vary widely.

    Retrenching businesses will be slow in hiring back or replacing workers they laid off. Many of the 7.2 million jobs the economy has shed since the recession began in December 2007 may never come back.

    "This Great Recession is an inflection point for the economy in many respects. I think the unemployment rate will be permanently higher, or at least higher for the foreseeable future," said Mark Zandi, chief economist and co-founder of Moody's Economy.com.

    "The collective psyche has changed as a result of what we've been through. And we're going to be different as a result," said Zandi, who formerly advised Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., and now is consulted by Democrats in the administration and in Congress,

    Even before the recession, many jobs had vanished or been shipped overseas amid a general decline of U.S. manufacturing. The severest downturn since the Great Depression has accelerated the process.

    Many economists believe the recession reversed course in the recently ended third quarter, and they predict modest growth in the nation's gross domestic product over the next few years. Yet the unemployment rate is currently at a 26-year high of 9.8 percent -- and likely to top 10 percent soon and stay there a while.

    "Many factors are pushing against a quick recovery," said Heidi Shierholz, an economist at the labor-oriented Economic Policy Institute. "Things will come back. But it's going to take a long time. I think we will likely see elevated unemployment at least until 2014."

    At best, many economists see an economic recovery without a return to moderate unemployment. At worst, they suggest the fragile recovery could lose steam and drag the economy back under for a double-dip recession.

    "We will need to grind out this recovery step by step," President Barack Obama said earlier this month.

    Obama and congressional Democrats are having a hard time agreeing on how to keep the recovery going and help millions of unemployed workers -- short of another round of stimulus spending amid rising voter alarm over soaring federal deficits.

    So far, they've been unable to win even a simple three-month extension of unemployment insurance for people in states with jobless rates above 8.5 percent.

    The extension easily passed the House earlier this month but is bogged down in the Senate over disputes over which states would get the funds. Hundreds of thousands of people have already lost their benefits or are about to lose them.

    The White House credits the president's $787 billion stimulus plan passed in February for keeping job losses from becoming even worse. Since Obama took office in January, the economy has lost 3.4 million jobs.

    Republicans argue that the stimulus program has not worked as a job producer and is a waste of tax money. And last week, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce launched a multimillion advertising campaign to celebrate small business entrepreneurs -- and to argue that further government intervention will not spur permanent job growth.

    Chamber leaders called for creation of more than 20 million new private-sector jobs over the next decade, saying it's needed to replace jobs lost in the recession and to keep pace with population growth.

    "The government can support a few jobs in the short-run" while free enterprise is the only system that can create 20 million of them, said Thomas Donohue, the chamber president.

    To many economists, such a goal seems unreachable given today's altered economic landscape.

    "It's a new normal that U.S. growth is going to be anemic on average for years. Right now, the prospect is bleak for anything other than a particularly high unemployment rate and a weak jobs-creating machine," said Allen Sinai, president of Decision Economics Inc. He says he doubts that unemployment will dip below 7 percent anytime soon.

    Many economists consider a jobless rate of 4 to 5 percent as reflecting a "full employment" economy, one in which nearly everyone who wants a job has one. After the 2001 recession the rate climbed to 5.8 percent in 2002 and peaked at 6.3 percent in 2003 before easing back to 4.6 percent for 2006 and 2007.

    Will unemployment ever get back to such levels?

    "I wouldn't say never. But I do think it's going to be a long time," said Bruce Bartlett, a former Treasury Department economist and the author of the book "The New American Economy: The Failure of Reaganomics and a New Way Forward."

    "The linkage between growth in the economy and growth in jobs is not what it was. I don't know if it's permanently broken or temporarily broken. But clearly we are not seeing the sort of increase in employment that one would normally expect," said Bartlett.

  • Monday, October 12, 2009

    Legitimate Home Based Businesses & What You Need To Know To Find Them

    http://www.charlesprimas.com/
    http://www.detroitbusinesstoday.net

    http://www.pr-inside.com/legitimate-home-based-businesses-r1522244.htm
    Business

    Author:Pamela Lindberg

    Web: budurl.com/c6uz

    Legitimate Home Based Businesses & What You Need To Know To Find Them

    2009-10-12 11:16:34 - Finding legitimate home based businesses is not as hard to do as some people think it is. There are some things that you need to find out to see whether it is legitimate. Some opportunities are scams but there are more legitimate opportunities than you may think.

    Legitimate home based businesses used to be hard to find online. However, now there are all kinds of legitimate home based businesses that you can choose from. All you need to do is to search for them.

    However, there are some things that you need to do when you are trying to decide if a home based business is legitimate or not.

    First, you need to check out the company thoroughly. Find out what type of customer service they have. You can do this by contacting them and see how long it takes for them to answer you. You also want to pay attention to how they respond, in other words what they say when they do respond.

    Second, find out what type of products that they have and whether they would be something that you would want to promote. You don’t want to promote a home based business when their products are not worth promoting.Third, you need to check with the Better Business Bureau to check and see if they have any complaints against them. This is important to know before you join any business opportunity.

    Fourth, talk to other people that are already involved in the business. They will be able to tell you better than anyone whether it is a legitimate home based business. The more people you talk to the better idea you will have of whether this is a good home business.
    Fifth, find out if they actually pay on time. This is something that everyone wants to know because they start a home based business to make money. You don’t want to work hard to make money only to find out that the company will not pay you when and how much they say they will.

    Sixth, find out how long they say it will take you to make money and what type of help they will provide you to get you making money. You don’t want to join a home based business that will promise you that you can get rich quick. These are usually scams. It will take some time and effort on your part to start making money with any business opportunity.

    These are just a few things that you want to find out about a business before you join. You will be able to tell if this is one of the legitimate home based businesses out there very quickly by checking into all of these things. When you are satisfied that you have found the home based business that you like and you know that it is legitimate then join it and start on your way to making some money.

    Tuesday, September 29, 2009

    Income gap widens

    http://www.charlesprimas.com/

    http://www.detroitbusinesstoday.net

    Income gap widens as poor take hit in recession
    Census: Income falls for all groups, but those at bottom feel worst effect

    U.S. income gap widens in recession Census: Income falls for all groups, but those at bottom feel worst effectThe Associated Pressupdated 9:20 a.m. ET, Tues., Sept . 29, 2009WASHINGTON - The recession has hit middle-income and poor families hardest, widening the economic gap between the richest and poorest Americans as rippling job layoffs ravaged household budgets.

    The wealthiest 10 percent of Americans — those making more than $138,000 each year — earned 11.4 times the roughly $12,000 made by those living near or below the poverty line in 2008, according to newly released census figures. That ratio was an increase from 11.2 in 2007 and the previous high of 11.22 in 2003.

    Household income declined across all groups, but at sharper percentage levels for middle-income and poor Americans. Median income fell last year from $52,163 to $50,303, wiping out a decade's worth of gains to hit the lowest level since 1997.

    Poverty jumped sharply to 13.2 percent, an 11-year high.

    "No one should be surprised at the increased disparity," said Richard Freeman, an economist at Harvard University. "Unemployment hurts normal workers who do not have the golden parachutes the folks at the top have."

    Layoffs eyed as causeAnalysts attributed the widening gap to the wave of layoffs in the economic downturn that have devastated household budgets since the recession officially began in December, 2007. They said while the richest Americans may be seeing reductions in executive pay, those at the bottom of the income ladder are often unemployed and struggling to get by.
    Large cities such as Atlanta, Washington, New York, San Francisco, Miami and Chicago had the most inequality, due largely to years of middle-class flight to the suburbs. Declining industrial cities with pockets of well-off neighborhoods, such as Pittsburgh, Cleveland and Buffalo, N.Y., also had sharp disparities.

    Up-and-coming cities with growing middle-class populations, such as Mesa, Ariz., Riverside, Calif., Arlington, Texas, and Henderson, Nev., were among the areas showing the least income differences between rich and poor.

    Continued inequality in major cities?It's unclear whether income inequality will continue to worsen in major cities, said William H. Frey, a demographer at the Brookings Institution. Many Americans are staying put for now in traditional cities to look for jobs and because of frozen lines of credit.

    "During the years of the housing bubble, there was middle-class movement from unaffordable metros with high-income inequality," Frey said. "Now that the bubble burst, more of the population may be headed back to the high-inequality areas, stemming their middle-class losses."

    Among other findings:

    Income at the top 5 percent of households — those making $180,000 or more — was 3.58 times the median income, the highest since 2006.

    Twenty-one states and the District of Columbia had higher poverty rates than the national average, many of them in the South, such as Mississippi (21.2 percent), Kentucky, Arkansas and Louisiana (each with 17.3 percent). That's compared with 19 states and the District of Columbia that ranked above U.S. poverty in 2007.

    Use of food stamps jumped 13 percent last year to nearly 9.8 million U.S. households, led by Louisiana, Maine and Kentucky. The increase was most evident in households with two or more workers, highlighting the impact of the recession on both working families and unemployed single people.

    Pharr, Texas, and Flint, Mich., each had more than a third of its residents on food stamps, at 38.5 percent and 35.4 percent, respectively.

    Between 2007 and 2008, income at the 50th percentile (median) and the 10th percentile fell by 3.6 percent and 3.7 percent, respectively, compared with a 2.1 percent decline at the 90th percentile. Between 1999 and 2008, income at the 50th and 10th percentiles decreased 4.3 percent and 9 percent, respectively, while income at the 90th percentile was statistically unchanged.

    Plano, Texas, a Dallas suburb, had the highest median income among larger cities, earning $85,003. Cleveland ranked at the bottom, at $26,731.

    The 2008 figures come from the Current Population Survey and the American Community Survey, which gathers information from 3 million households. The government first began tracking household income in 1967.

    More on: Household income

    URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/33066877/ns/business-stocks_and_economy/

    Saturday, September 19, 2009

    Home Business - Finding Success In Network Marketing

    http://www.charlesprimas.com/
    http://www.detroitbusinesstoday.net

    Home Business - Finding Success In Network Marketing

    Every day, thousands of people around the world search online for a way to get out of their financial ruts and make a better life for themselves.

    By Joseph W Elliott

    http://www.powerhomebiz.com/News/092009/network-marketing.htm

    September 18, 2009 ( PowerHomeBiz.com ) - Every day, thousands of people around the world search online for a way to get out of their financial ruts and make a better life for themselves. Many of these people will test out a number of different opportunities, hopping from one new system or program to the next, looking for that one that will finally earn them some real money. Network marketing is one of the best ways to be successful in creating a lasting home-based business. People realized that it was through the connections and friendships they were forging in social networks that eventually created wealth.

    Firstly, you must find a program that you believe in. If you aren't passionate about your product, how can you expect that others will be? There are a few basic things to look for when you are reseaching a good program. The most important thing is to find out if you can reach an actual live person who is working the program to get your questions answered. If you can't, run! Next, what is the compensation plan for the program? Are they interested in helping their resellers make money, or are they in it for themselves? Do they have training materials, forums, and live web seminars where potential resellers and members alike can get the proper training and get their questions answered to be successful? The secret to success is finding a good system and then teaching your recruits and prospects to implement the same system. Find something you are passionate about promoting, then help others do the same.

    Secondly, you need to be clear on how you are going to market your program. There are so many different ways you can accomplish this. You can join the traffic exchanges, send out emails to safe lists, write articles and blogs, or purchase ads. All of these can be great ways to drive traffic to your opportunity. But, for quality leads that are likely to convert to your program, a presence on the social networking sites is a must. There you can meet like-minded individuals that you know already have an interest in network marketing. The people on those sites get to know you as a person and are far more likely to check out your opportunity over clicking some ad written by who knows who. Networking is all about the people. If you are not a people person, network marketing will in all likelihood not work very well for you.

    The quality leads that you generate predict your future success. So if you have a network marketing business try marketing to other network marketers instead of everybody under the sun. The only leads you want to generate are people who have been in network marketing before, who are in it today, or leads who are actively buying information to learn and better themselves in the business, not people who merely seek out information.

    If you believe in your business, work at it every day, and genuinely want to help others find a great opportunity, you will find success in network marketing.

    About the Author

    J Elliott has been a network marketer for the past four years and has had many successes through trial and error running online businesses.

    Tuesday, September 15, 2009

    No Job Is Safe in Today's Tough Labor Market

    http://www.charlesprimas.com/
    http://www.detroitbusinesstoday.net

    September 14, 2009
    No Job Is Safe in Today's Tough Labor Market
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    Filed at 1:11 p.m. ET

    http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2009/09/14/business/AP-US-Your-Career-No-Job-Security.html

    NEW YORK (AP) -- As the unemployment rate climbs to almost 10 percent, no industry or profession has been spared when employers needed to cut jobs. That includes fields once considered untouchable.

    Big national law firms are letting partners go. Following them out the door are senior associates who were on the partner track. The same is true for tenured teachers and professors, high-ranking accountants at top-tier firms and white-collar corporate managers.

    ''Imagine along your career, you never were thinking about the possibility of being laid off. You might not have a financial cushion on place. You haven't spent time networking. You haven't kept up your skills,'' said Peter Cappelli, a professor of management at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of Business.

    ''It is a worse situation than for folks in jobs who had some expectation that their jobs weren't safe,'' he said.

    It's difficult to deal with the reality that your seemingly secure job is gone, but there are ways to get back into the working world. First, you need to formulate a plan:

    STOP THE BLAME GAME

    No one is saying you have to wake up the morning after a stunning job loss recharged and ready to pursue the next phase of your life. When you've built a career at a particular job, there's likely to be a mourning period after a layoff.

    Accept that you are going to feel down, and don't beat yourself up for what has happened.

    ''This is such a bad economic downturn that it is crushing organizations,'' Cappelli said. ''It's like a one-in-a-100-years flood.''

    Understanding that should help get you back on your feet faster.

    FACE THE FACTS

    More than 6.9 million jobs have been cut in the United States during the recession, and there is a good chance many won't come back as soon as economic growth picks up again, or possibly ever.

    For instance, 1,004 teaching jobs in Detroit have been cut, and 397 were tenured positions, which typically means they have seniority and are covered under strict termination and due process requirements.

    The layoffs were forced by economic necessity. The school district is projecting budget deficits as its enrollment plunges, according to Keith Johnson, president of the Detroit Federation of Teachers.

    That means those teachers can't count on being rehired by the Detroit school district anytime soon. They will have to find work elsewhere.

    GET SMART

    It's easy to get complacent with your skills when you work at the same place for a long time. A job loss forces you to break out of the comfort zone.

    Teachers might want to consider different subject areas -- for example, a high school history teacher might want to think about switching to literature. Accountants might need to become proficient in other areas of corporate financial reporting or the tax code.

    Sam Pollack was laid off from the law firm Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft in August 2008 as the financial crisis began to intensify. The 32-year-old had worked on deals involving mortgage-backed securities, a market that completely froze as demand for such assets evaporated amid the downturn in real estate.

    ''If you work hard, go to good schools, you believe you will be in a good place,'' Pollack said. ''I knew my layoff wasn't due to my personal performance, but it still hasn't been easy.''

    To make himself marketable to new employers, Pollack is trying to sharpen his skills. He has taken continuing education courses in areas of the law where he isn't as knowledgeable, such as bankruptcy, and he's making sure he's up to date on new securities rules and regulations. He also is networking ''like crazy,'' hoping that will land him an in-house legal job at a company.

    Ramping up your knowledge doesn't have to be costly. Seek out free programs, which often can be found through trade organizations or businesses in your industry.

    For instance, LexisNexis is offering the Lend a Hand program for out-of-work attorneys. The program includes a free six-month profile to both its Lawyers.com Web site, which consumers and small businesses use to find lawyers, and its Martindale.com Web site, which provides information on attorneys and law firms. In addition, participants can get access to the company's Martindale-Hubbell Connected site, an online community for legal professionals, and the Martindale-Hubbell Career Center, which is a resource to help attorneys find legal jobs in local areas.

    DON'T BE TOO PROUD

    You got to a comfortable place in your career by working hard. Unfortunately, you'll have to do it all over again.

    That means being flexible in your job search. It's OK to accept positions below your previous title if it gets you into the door. Then you can prove yourself a valuable asset to your new employer, said Mickey Matthews, vice president for North America at the executive recruiting firm Stanton Chase International.

    For instance, if you worked at a big firm, don't look down your nose at a boutique firm that is offering you a position as partner. Same goes for someone who was a vice president of a company but now can only get a job with a director title.

    ''You have to get over the embarrassment factor,'' Matthews said. ''You can't take a job loss personally today.''

    ^--------

    On the Net:

    www.lawyers.com

    www.martindale.com/connected

    www.martindale.com/Careers/Careers.aspx

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