Guest Posts Needed A.S.A.P.
Posted by Ben Jones on May 29, 2008
Small Business and Entrepreneurship made simple!
Monday, December 1, 2008
Posted by Ben Jones on May 29, 2008
Posted by Ben Jones on May 27, 2008
The U.S. Government is the absolute wealthiest customer any small business could ever obtain. The government always has demands for products and services and is not shy about entering into contracts for large sums of money with companies who can satisfy their needs. Despite the obvious monetary benefits, there are usually only a limited number of small businesses competing for these lucrative contracts. The reason that these small businesses don’t go after these big contracts is simple……….. it’s “fear”.
Which is why i decided to write this series. I aim to liberate you of those fears by empowering you with the knowledge necessary to identify, bid on, and obtain a government contract for your small business. To that end, I will dedicate 1 or 2 posts a week to the topic for the next couple of weeks. Today’s post should serve as an introduction to government contracts. As such, the first thing that we have to do is dispel those common misconceptions that strike fear in the hearts of small business owners.
Government Contracts: The Common Misconception
Most small business owners think of government contracts as these humungous deals designed for Fortune 500 companies. Deals that will never be obtainable for small operations like yours. Well, you are so very wrong, and even worse, you may be missing out on tons of profit for your business. The fact is that the U.S. government understands the impact that small businesses have on the economy and have set aside certain contracts for small businesses.
They niche these classifications in such a way that would prohibit the large Fortune 500 vultures from getting them. This leaves only you and me to compete over larger contracts than either of us probably ever imagined. Don’t believe me? Well, take out a pen and paper and answer the next few questions.
Are you a:
Veteran-Owned or Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Business?
Times up! Put your pen down.
If you answered “yes” to any of the questions above, I suggest that you subscribe to rss(don’t worry.. it’s free) or check back often over the next few weeks to make sure that you don’t miss a thing.
Are you currently in contract with the government? Currently writing a proposal? Leave a comment. We want to hear about your experiences.
Posted by Ben Jones on May 23, 2008
Posted by Ben Jones on May 22, 2008
And It’s not because we’re not providing great content(so wipe that look off your face:)); It’s because we’re not promoting that content. We have no sense of community, low/no participation, low/no camaraderie, and the list goes on and on. There is no way that more people are interested in “digital photography” than are interested in entrepreneurship……… Something has to be done.
What Must We Do?
The first thing we must do is to support and participate with other small business bloggers. Use those $50,000 degrees (or more costly informal education) to provide value to our forums. Forums like Young Entrepreneur’s, or Young Go Getter’s , StartupNation, or Business Leader. Leave comments or Trackbacks on blogs. Promote, Stumble, Digg, and most importantly Fetch great content. Take back sites like Small Business Brief that were designed for great content from small business blogs(I guarantee that right now the front page of Small Business Brief includes nothing but posts about SEO, affiliate marketing, and the like). Make ‘em take it to Sphinn! Great content and great ideas should be rewarded…..we seem to be the only blogging “community” that doesn’t think so. But I guess this is what happens when a community has no leader because it consists of leaders.
Posted by Ben Jones on May 21, 2008
On Monday, I posted the 41 Absolute Best Blogs about Entrepreneurship and Small Business. In this post I said that I would update the list when I found other quality business blogs that I may have overlooked. Well folks, it’s time for our first update. I have found nine more blogs that definitely deserved to be on the list. A link to these blogs has been added to the “Update” section of the original post. I have also listed them below. Enjoy……..
Small Business CEO -Steve Rucinski
Seriously Business
Bootstrapme- Shawn Hessinger
Business Opportunities and Ideas- John Crickett
Small Business Answers- Appears to have Several authors
Black in Business- James D. Walton
Up and Running- Tim Berry
Escape from Cubicle Nation-Pamela Slim
Global Small Business Blog-Laurel Delaney
Ladies and Gentleman, our list is now up to 50. Any more exceptional blogs that we may have missed?
Posted by Ben Jones on May 20, 2008
“There is no more miserable human being than one in whom nothing is habitual but indecision.” -William James
Entrepreneurs are faced with tough decisions everyday. Our very value, as leaders, is placed in our ability to identify problems, analyze information, and make decisions. Therefore, having a standard process is key to becoming an effective decision maker. Without it, we are just running in circles; plagued by scrambled thoughts and paralyzed by indecisiveness: . So, what is the best method for making tough decisions? Well, let’s take a look.
The Decision Making Blueprint
1) Identify the problem
This one is pretty self explanatory but it must be done. One of the things that hinders our ability to think clearly is our proclivity to magnify the consequences and obscure the problem.
2) Determine the Importance
How important is this decision? Usually there are 3 basic options. You can make something better, worse, or just a lateral change. If the decision cannot make things worse, it is not a tough decision. We must save our “stress” for truly tough decisions and situations. Remember, your indifference (or lack of knowledge) about a decision does not make it tough. Therefore, learning to identify importance can help to bring clarity to your decision making process.
3) Identify the Facts
What things do you already know to be absolute truths about the situation. Forget all of the hypotheticals that we drum up. Right now, you just need the facts.
4) Identify the Options
Develop a list of options or possible solutions to your problem. In this step, you don’t want to consider consequences. You just want to write down ever possible solution you can think of…even the dumb one’s. Sometimes, what you initially see as “dumb” will look like pure genius once all the smoke has cleared.
5) Consider the Outcome
Identify the worst and best case scenarios. Attempt to associate those scenarios with the options you have already identified. Analyze the likelihood of each outcome being a result of each option.
6) Pray About It
“If any man lacks wisdom let him ask of God who giveth to all men liberally” - James 1:5
“But the wisdom that is from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, and easy to be intreated, full of mercy and good fruits, without partiality, and without hypocrisy.” - James 3:17
Sometimes, prayer will make us more comfortable with a decision and this can be our confirmation from God. Look for guidance from him and you cannot go wrong.
7) Make a Decision
Using the knowledge you’ve gained from steps 4, 5, & 6, make an educated decision.
Create a Backup Plan
Attempt to identify ways that you can absorb some of the shock in case your decision causes things to take a turn for the worse. The reality is that in most cases we are forced to make decisions with limited information. We utilize the limited information available to us at the time, and as such, must make those courageous decisions fully prepared to make adjustments in case of an emergency.
For more on decision making, see: Emotions: The Leading Cause of Death
Can you think of any more steps? Please leave your suggestion in the comments section
Posted by Ben Jones on May 19, 2008
There are thousands of small business and entrepreneurship blogs in the blogosphere. Unfortunately, many of them are not at all useful to the experienced or aspiring entrepreneur. We’ve all seen them. The great majority of which are e-commerce “pros” masquerading as entrepreneurship experts. This makes finding solid, useful information for the traditional small business owner very difficult. Therefore in my frustration, I have decided to create what I like to think of as “The A-List” of entrepreneurship and small business blogs.
The blogs listed in “The List” are solely there on the basis of their knowledge and content. I have given no regard to name recognition, popularity, or any of that stuff. In other words, there is no kissing up and no playing favorites. Now I recognize that there will be some omissions with a list this size but for the most part the “must-reads” are all there. Some of your favorites, or even your own blog, may have been left off the list. It’s probably because they haven’t posted in a forever, their blog isn’t really about entrepreneurship, or it’s just not good enough. So no whining! If you think we missed one just drop me a line in the comments section and we’ll check it out. I’ll update the list when we find some worth adding.
Other than that, enjoy the reading. I’m sure you’ll find some new blogs for the old reader.
(These are listed in no particular order)
Small Business Trends- Written by Anita Campbell.
Simple design, great content, daily posts.
Just for Small Business- Denise O’berry
One of several blogs on allbusiness.com
Small Business Survival- Becky McCray, Jeanne Cole, & Genna Mae
Says for small town small business resource but the information is universal.
Small Business Arena- Kirtok
Hasn’t posted in a while but good resource.
The Entrepreneurial Mind- Jeff Cornwall
Entrepreneurship Professor at Belmont provides very useful information.
Work Happy- Carson McComas
Links and resources to help entrepreneurs work smarter, not harder
Business Opportunities Weblog- Dane Carlson
Interviews, Success Stories, & Advice
Home Based Business Blog- Frank Ross
Business and Marketing Info. Also hosted on allbusiness.com.
Startup Spark- Shannon Cherry
More about running your business after startup but great information nonetheless.
How to Change the World- Guy Kawasaki
Very popular blog by one of the best in the blogosphere. Interviews, Advice, and everything in between.
Entrepreneur Success Blog- Jared Reitzin
2-3 posts per week. Also posts episodes from his pretty funny Internet show.
Entrepreneurs Journey- Yaro Starak
Very popular. Posts a lot about his experiences as an Internet entrepreneur but interesting and inspiring for all aspiring entrepreneurs.
Babe of Business- Crystal Williams
Pretty young blog, erratic posting schedule, but good content, and great design. Definitely one to watch.
Business Know-How- Tim Knox, Janet Attard
Lots of Adsense Ads in the middle of posts but content is worth looking past the visual distractions.
Young Go-Getter- Justin Nowak
Interviews & advice. Also hosts an entrepreneurship forum on this site. Be sure to check it out.
Duct Tape Marketing- John Jantsch
Design is a little busy but author seems to be very knowledgeable. Worth adding to your reader.
Be Excellent- Skip Reardon
Simple design but consistently good content.
Branding and Marketing- Chris Brown
Clean design, daily posts, passionate author
Young Entrepreneur- Matthew and AdamToen
Great blog, great forums
JD’s Blog- Jason Drohn
Incredibly attractive design, invaluable information
Marketing Hackz- Jason Drohn
All-inclusive marketing information. Another nice design by JD.
Small Biz Labs- Steve King, Carolyn Ochels, Anthony Townsend
Business Research, tactics, and trends
Genius Types - Brian lee
Business Opportunities & ideas to build passive income
The Savvy Entrepreneur- Christina Favreau
A little bit difficult to navigate because of some design issues but the entrepreneurship category has some interesting articles.
Small Business Mentor- Yvonne Russell
Clever topics, tons of information
Seth Godin’s Blog- Seth Godin
Insanely popular. Not strictly entrepreneurship but entertaining and informative.
Weakest Link Consulting- Erik Johnels
Young Blog but knowledgeable author. A good for the reader.
Instigator Blog- Ben Yoskovitz
Co-founder of “Standout Jobs” writes on everything from VC’s to BP’s
OkDork- Noah Kagan
Fun blog, very popular, lots of marketing info.
Feld Thoughts- Brad Feld
Just read it
Entrepreneurship and Positive Living- Timothy Winston
Lot’s of tips on how to remain productive when your you’re own boss
Entrepreneurship: A Different Mindset- Ryan Mapes
One of the founders of the Go Bog Network covers a lot of ground in his blog
Personal Branding- Dan Schawbel
A great marketing blog. Deals largely with personal branding
Branding Strategy Insider- Tom Asacher, Brad Van Auken, Derrick Daye
Wildy popular and for good reason. Definitely one for the reader
Marketing Caddy- Walt Goshert
Nice design, daily posts, great content
Marketing Deviant- David Kam
More psychology than strategy….but isn’t our psychology what sets entrepreneurs apart anyway?
Small Business Branding- Several notable Authors
Very useful content by experienced authors. One of the best
Chris Brogan- Unknown. lol
marketing, social media, personal branding
Business Pundit- Seems to be by several authors
Verve Coaching- Erek Ostrowski
Entrepreneurship, Leadership, & Small Business-ship
Ben Means Business- Ben Jones
Last but definitely not least. The grandaddy of entrepreneurship/small business blogs. A must-have for your reader
**Update**
Great blogs that were originally overlooked
Small Business CEO -Steve Rucinski
Seriously Business
Bootstrapme- Shawn Hessinger
Business Opportunities and Ideas- John Crickett
Small Business Answers- Appears to have Several authors
Black in Business- James D. Walton
Up and Running- Tim Berry
Escape from Cubicle Nation-Pamela Slim
Global Small Business Blog-Laurel Delaney
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Posted by Ben Jones on May 12, 2008
This is a guest post by Cristian Dorobantescu, author of both the Energybyte and Entrepreneur Interviews blogs.
Quote: Youth is the best time to be rich and the best time to be poor. ~ Euripides
So what’s the best age to start a business?
I would say Mid-20’s. I remember some 4-5 years ago I was working in an IT start-up, where everybody from the least employee to the owners were below age 30. The owners of that IT company are now millionaires (they did it before turning 30). Looking back, I realize that starting a business in the mid twenties comes with a set of advantages which where not so obvious at that time. I can now recognizing some of the advantages of starting so early. Let’s discuss a couple of them:
Reasons to Start a Business while Your Young
1) The lack of experience is conducive to open-mindedness and creativity. I mean if you ask me now to start a project, I will probably follow the same patterns that I picked up from years of work experience. This might get things done but it definitely doesn’t allow for experimentation which is usually good for entrepreneurs because it causes you to stumble upon better ways of doing things.
2) Your lack of experience will also cause you to be a more ready learner, to stay up to date, and to make the most of what you know. This is one of the interesting things about the human mind. When we are forced to learn to do things on our own, we are usually more inclined to keep learning. Some of my professors at the University did not learn this way and they would often teach methods that were outdated.
3) Your youth allows for more failures. Yes, this is a good thing. As strange as it sounds, if you are to fail (and most of us do) it’s better to do it while young – it gets you some experience for the latter and the failures are easier to overcome.
4)Young entrepreneurs don’t have many responsibilities yet so they are at liberty to take some high risk, high reward opportunities. The lack of family to support allows younger entrepreneurs to work late hours and to focus more on their business.
5) Young entrepreneurs usually have less egos and more desire to make things happen. They are usually striving for acceptance and accomplishment. This is what motivates them in the first place.
6) Young entrepreneurs still have the support of mommy and daddy (and maybe even some older brothers or sisters). Therefore, you can throw your few pennies into your business and eat on mommy and daddy’s dime (lol). Plus they’re is probably secretly expecting you to fail anyway. This takes some pressure off of you – especially if you do fail.
So, should we prefer the wisdom we’ll have as an older entrepreneur over the creativity and freedom we get as a younger one? I would say emphatically “NO” but I would like to see your thoughts on the subject in Ben’s comments section. Also, check out Ben’s post Is College Necessary for Entrepreneurs
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About the Author
Cristian Dorobantescu is a part time entrepreneur from Eastern Europe that started blogging back in 2005, with his Small Business Entrepreneur blog (Energybyte). He enjoys writing about real life Entrepreneurship experiences, small businesses and knowledge resources for any entrepreneur wanna be.
See Christian’s original post on this topic here.
Posted by Ben Jones on May 8, 2008
Clate Mask wrote an incredible article over at Small Business Trends earlier this week and I thought that a few points he made would be very helpful to our audience here at Ben Means Business. Clate used the example of the “on again, off again” couple (I know a few who still can’t let go of each other.lol) to show how most small business owners approach marketing. The meaning of this metaphor is that when sales are down we feel that we must go out and do things to increase them; and when sales are up, we don’t market at all. Then this cycle just continues over and over again. Sound familiar?………..Yup, it did to me too!
The Lesson for Small Business Marketers
I loved the authors overall point of this article and there were a lot of points in it that really hit home with me (its a shame b/c its a pretty short article. lol); but there was one point that I think really said a lot about marketing and I wanted to share it with you as food for thought. This point was listed as one of three small business marketing truths and it read as follows:
“You are a marketer of information about the problems your product or service solves. You’re not a marketer of product x or service y. “
This statement was so important because it let’s us know that not only are some of us not consistent enough with our marketing, most of us are marketing the wrong thing. This caused some intense thought and what I realized is that all of the most successful products or services solve a popular problem. The first thing that you think of when you picture those products is the problem that they solve or need that they address. We buy most of these products because we want them and not necessarily because need them. So the fact that we still think of them as a solution is due to excellent marketing.
How this applies to your Business
Sometimes we attempt to sell our product or service on the strength of it’s price or individuality because we are trying to seperate ourselves from the pack and that’s fine. However, we must not forget to address the problem. The truth of the matter is that people spend money on things that address their needs(or at least claim to). For instance, even if you have the cheapest toothpaste, but you don’t market the fact that it cleans well, no one will buy it. Most people will write it off as a “cheap knock-off” and then go buy some Crest or Colgate.
So the point here is that no matter what advantages you identify for your product(price, health benefit, etc..), your primary marketing goal should be to show your customers that your product or service addresses their needs. Once you get their attention, you can reel them in with your other strengths.
Small Business Marketing Secret: Keep the main thing the main thing.
What valuable information can you draw from Clate’s statement? Anything you want to add to my point? Leave me a comment…Let’s discuss it
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Posted by Ben Jones on May 6, 2008
1) Buy More Inventory
Most small businesses are forced to use profit from previous sales to buy more “product”. However, there’s nothing better than being able to earn a direct profit from capital that you did not produce. This frees up funds and opens the door for some very smart bookkeeping. Your business will immediately move to the next level.
2) Buy Marketing Materials
Marketing is one of those important things that small businesses neglect because they lack the funds to do it successfully. However, your tax rebate check is a great way to expand your marketing efforts. So go out and buy ads, get that website built, buy business cards, etc… Do anything that will create brand awareness. Trust me, you will be glad you did!
3) Expand to New Markets
Preferably foreign markets..but if your business is local or regional, you should look at what it would cost you to offer your business to a wider market. With the many uncertainties that surround the U.S. economy, it is imperative that we broaden our reach so that our businesses do not go under in the event of some type of crisis. (see also: Export Trade)
4) Buy Back your Freedom
Some people pay for part of their business on loaned or borrowed money and have been using a cut of profit to pay back these funds; Others get partners or stockholders to help cover expenses. If either of these apply to you, I suggest that you use your tax rebate to help buy back your freedom. You want to get rid of all the entitlements while your company is still small. A “buyout” will cost you a lot more in the future and you want sole possession of all profits when your business reaches maturity.
5) Put Rebate In Business Savings
I am not a fan of this method but it is a lot better than blowing the money. At least with this method the money will grow, it will just grow at a much slower rate.
No matter what you decide to do with your rebate check, just make sure that it will generate some money for your business. Spending the check on things that you have the ability to do already is a bad idea. Use Robert Kiyosaki’s principal on this one, “put the money to work for you.” Anything else would just be considered a blown opportunity(and a blown check)!