| Related sites for http://blog.facteon.com/site/smb/ |
| Fairbanx_Factors_Limited Provider of accounts receivable financing and cash discounting services. | | The_Falk_Company Provides factoring for small to medium size companies. | | First_American_Factoring Provides accounts receivables factoring services. | | First_Bank provides healthcare and medical receivable financing | | First_Commercial_Finance Provides accounts receivable financing. | | FreightCheck Non-recourse freight bill factoring for owner operators and small fleets. Handles all invoicing, processing and collections. | | Gateway_Acceptance_Company Provides commercial accounts receivable funding. | | Gibraltar_Financial Provides factoring accommodations and lines of credit. | | Hamilton_Group_(Delaware)_Inc Specializing in accounts receivable financing for small and mid sized businesses | | Hampshire_Trust_Plc Specializes in commercial mortgages, factoring and litigation funding facilities. United Kingdom. | | Health_Capital_Investors,_Inc_ Provides healthcare financing nationwide. | | Hennessey_Capital Provides factoring and working capital financing. | | High_Falls_Funding,_LLC Providers of factoring and asset based lending services as well as business consulting services. | | Hospital_Staff_Funding Accounts receivable financing for the medical staffing industry with 100% advances. | | Inzap_Inc_ Offers small businesses account receivable invoice factoring. QuickBooks compatible. | | J_D_Factors Provides factoring for small to mid-sized companies. | | J&D_Financial_Corporation Specializes in domestic, international, construction, and government factoring, purchase order and trade financing, and business loans. | | Key_Capital_Factoring providing factoring for small and medium sized businesses. | | K_W__Receivables An accounts receivable factoring firm providing cash flow via the purchase of accounts receivable. | | Loans_for_Merchants Provides working capital based on previous credit card transactions. Similar to factoring, but uses projected credit card receipts instead of accounts receivables. | | LSQ_Funding_Group Provides factoring to small and moderately sized businesses. | | M1_Funding_Group purchases accounts receivables | | Mac_Factors California accounts receivables factoring services | | Marble_Bridge_Funding_Group Provides capital and services to growth oriented, entrepreneurial companies through AR financing, PO Financing, bank partnerships, and letters of credit.Credit. | | MDS_Funding Specialize in accounts receivable factoring and cash flow consulting. Based in GA. | | MFR_Group provides purchase order, production and project funding for complex and difficult projects | | Milberg_Factors a New York based privately owned factoring firm | | Millennium_Funding Provides factoring, P.O. funding, and letters of credit. | | Monterey_Financial_Services,_Inc_ Manages accounts receivables purchased, serviced or collected. | | MyReceivables Provider of accounts receivable funding and management services for small businesses. | | Nationwide_Transport_Finance Provides factoring services for the transportation industry. | | Olympic_Credit_Fund Provides positive cash flow through factoring. | | Pacific_Business_Capital_Corp Providing factoring of receivables and other asset based loans as a direct lender. | | Paragon_Financial_Group Asset based lending, factoring, accounts receivable financing and purchase order funding. | | Peacock_Capital Provides factoring and other financial tools such as lawsuit financing, mortgages and equipment leasing. | | PESWA_Financial_Solutions Provides factoring, equipment leasing, and asset based loans. | | PM_Factors,_Inc_ Family owned firm providing an inexpensive factoring program designed for growing businesses. | | Porter_Capital_Corporation provides factoring, equipment leasing, & Asset Based Loans | | Potential_Finance_plc Provides factoring services and other financing solutions to small and medium sized businesses in the UK | | Prestige_Capital Provides factoring services and credit protection for small and mid-sized businesses that do not yet qualify for traditional bank financing. Based in NJ. |
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Ten Tax Time Considerations Use Barcodes in Your Business 9 Ways to a Growth Business Motorola Unveils E-Commerce Website Fresh New Direction - Sound Familiar, Guess Who? Keeping Company Information Safe Extending Credit - Ten Things to Think About Improve Your Service - Standards Ten Commandments of Customer Service Setting Priorities is the Name of the Game
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Ten Tax Time Considerations
Is your business ready for tax season? While you may only have to file income taxes once a year, it's something you should be thinking about year round. Many business decisions you make will have tax implications and knowing those ahead of time can save you a lot of money.
You should be visiting your tax person at least quarterly, as well as any time you're making a major decision.
1. Change in type of business entity. Tell your tax person if you've changed your business formation--sole proprietorship, Limited Liability Company, corporation, etc.--in any way.
2. Fixed asset changes. Did you buy, trade or sell any of your fixed assets such as property, plants, equipment or vehicles? If so, provide your tax accountant with the dates and dollar amounts of all related transactions. This could affect your tax liability because of depreciation.
3. Use of subcontracted services. If you paid an outside subcontractor more than $600 in a calendar year and the subcontractor is unincorporated, you will need to supply a 1099 form. It should be postmarked no later than January 31 of the following calendar year.
Read the remaining Ten Tax Time Considerations
Posted by Anita Campbell February 18, 2007 | Permalink
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Use Barcodes in Your Business
Barcodes have evolved into a useful tool for millions of businesses in a wide variety of industries. Barcode technology is faster and more accurate than entering information by hand on a keyboard — about 15 times faster and 10,000 times more accurate.
Barcodes are a sort of Morse code that uses bars and spaces to represent critical data about a product or document. Unfortunately, not all barcodes are the same, and there's no universal business application.
If barcoding is something your business is considering you might want to check out this guide to Using Barcodes in Your Business
Posted by Anita Campbell February 15, 2007 | Permalink
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9 Ways to a Growth Business
There are essentially nine basic sources of growth for your business. All are potential opportunities for creating new growth trajectories.
1) Natural growth, where the market for what you make is strong and expanding
2) Gaining market share through low cost -- high productivity growth, rapid cycle times, high asset turnover.
3) Proprietary or patented technology.
4) Highly-developed distribution channels that you have built over time.
5) Opening new markets for your existing products -- for example, globalization.
6) Gaining power in the marketplace via acquisitions, alliances, vertical integration.
7) Expanding your pond.
8) Resegmenting your markets.
9) Moving into adjacent segments.
The first six are very familiar: If you haven't tried them, you can read about them in many books and countless articles.
The last three are not part of the standard repertory. In fact they are more ways of thinking than anything else. They represent outside-in thinking and you should give them some thought.
A good resource for 9 Ways to a Growth Business
Posted by Anita Campbell February 12, 2007 | Permalink
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Motorola Unveils E-Commerce Website
Motorola Inc. is getting into the e-commerce business: The 79-year old, $35 billion company has launched an online store, Store.Motorola.com.
It offers Motorola products as well as wireless service plans for various telecommunications companies to go with its numerous mobile phones.
The site also includes a section for digital content--ringtones, wallpapers and games designed for use on mobile devices. Additionally the web store is promoting offers exclusive to the online sales channel.
The website is part of a strategic plan Motorola hopes will change the way consumers purchase mobile phones and wireless services.
I wonder how their other sales and channel partners feel about this new strategy?
Posted by Anita Campbell February 08, 2007 | Permalink
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Fresh New Direction - Sound Familiar, Guess Who?
Guess what company this is speaking?
There are three pillars to my plan:
1. Focus the vision.
a) We need to boldly and definitively declare what we are and what we are not.
b) We need to exit (sell?) non core businesses and eliminate duplicative projects and businesses.
2. Restore accountability and clarity of ownership.
a) Existing business owners must be held accountable for where we find ourselves today — heads must roll,
b) We must thoughtfully create senior roles that have holistic accountability for a particular line of business (a variant of a GM structure that will work with Yahoo!’s new focus)
c) We must redesign our performance and incentive systems.
3. Execute a radical reorganization.
a) The current business unit structure must go away.
b) We must dramatically decentralize and eliminate as much of the matrix as possible.
c) We must reduce our headcount by 15-20%.
See who the company is: Fresh New Direction - Sound Familiar, Guess Who?
Posted by Anita Campbell February 05, 2007 | Permalink
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Keeping Company Information Safe
According to Privacy Rights Clearinghouse, 91 million data records affecting nearly 10 million U.S. citizens have been exposed due to security breaches since February 2005.
Breaches occur from someone hacking into a database, a disgruntled employee stealing information, or sheer stupidity -- as in a lost or misplaced disk or laptop.
Based on the public outcry, the U.S. Congress has proposed new laws to address general data privacy and security concerns, although none has yet been enacted.
However, 33 states, including New York, New Jersey and Conneticut, have passed data breach legislation within the past three years.
What does this mean for small businesses? In short, more compliace requirements.
Read more on Keeping Company Information Safe
Posted by Anita Campbell January 31, 2007 | Permalink
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Extending Credit - Ten Things to Think About
1. Do you actually need to extend credit to your customers? Is it necessary to offer credit in your business, or are you able to operate profitably by expecting to be paid in cash?
2. Will you accept checks? Most people don't think of accepting checks as extending credit, but you do take a credit risk when you accept a check for payment. If your customer doesn't have money in his or her checking account to cover the amount of the check, your customer's bank will "bounce" the check (return it to you unpaid).
3. Will you accept credit cards? You don't take a very big risk by accepting credit cards, particularly if you are careful about following the credit card company's policies and procedures. When you accept a credit card as payment, your bank (as a "merchant" bank) collects the money from your customer for you. In return, you pay the "merchant" bank a fee for doing so, usually from 2 to 6 percent of the bill for most small businesses.
4. Will you offer credit terms? "Credit terms" means the amount of time you give your customer to pay your bill. The type of business that you operate will help determine the type of credit terms that you offer.
Read the rest of Extending Credit - Ten Things to Think About
Posted by Anita Campbell January 28, 2007 | Permalink
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Improve Your Service - Standards
If you want to succeed and grow, you must achieve high standards in four essential categories.
1) You must create excellent products and services.
2) You need terrific delivery systems to keep tack and get the products to your customers on time.
3) You have to attract and keep great staff with a winning service mindset.
4) You must build long-term customer relationships that endure and mature over time.
Then you need to answer these questions:
In each category, how good are you now, and how good do you plan to be?
What does it take to keep your customers happy, and keep them coming back for more?
Is it enough to be average? Just like all the others? Or do you need to reach higher? And if so, how high?
More on Improve Your Service - Standards
Posted by Anita Campbell January 24, 2007 | Permalink
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Ten Commandments of Customer Service
For your consideration.
1 - Bring them back alive.
Ask customers what they want and give it to them again and again.
2 - Systems, not smiles.
Saying please and thank you doesn't insure you'll do the job right the first time, every time. Only systems guareantee you that.
3 - Underpromise, overdeliver.
Customers expect you to keep your word. Exceed it.
4 - When the customer asks, the answer is always yes.
Period.
5 - Fire your inspectors and consumer relations department.
Every employee who deals with clients must have the authority to handle complaints.
6 - No complaints? Somethings wrong.
Encourage your customrs to tell you what you are doing wrong.
7 - Measure everything
Baseball teams do it. Football teams do it. Basketball teams do it. You should do it too.
8 - Salaries are unfair.
Pay people like partners.
9 - Your mother was right.
Show people respect. Be polite. It works.
10 - Japanese them.
Learn how the best really do it; make their systems your own. Then improve them.
Warning: These ten rules aren't worth a damn...unless you make a profit. You have to make money to stay in business and provide good service.
More on the Ten Commandments of Customer Service
Posted by Anita Campbell January 22, 2007 | Permalink
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Setting Priorities is the Name of the Game
Examine the life of any great leader and you will see him putting priorites into action.
Every time Norman Schwarzkopf assumed a new command, he didn't just rely on his leadership intuition; he also reexamined the unit's priorities.
When Lee Iacocca took over Chrysler, the first thing he did was to reorder its priorities.
When explorer Roald Amundsen succeeded in taking his team to the South Pole and back, it was due, to his ability to set the right priorities.
Successful leaders live according to the Law of Priorities. They recognize that activity is not necessarily accomplishment. In fact they have an uncanny knack for addressing multiple priorties with every action taken.
Do you set priorities effectively for your organization?
Setting Priorities is the Name of the Game
Posted by Anita Campbell January 17, 2007 | Permalink
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Get Your Staff to Do What You Want Them to Do
The number one reason people don't do what you want them to do?
They don't know what you want them to do!!!
You might not believe this, but there are a bunch of people stumbling around out there who don't have a clue what's expected of them -- 50 percent of all people if you pay attention to the research.
Some of these people report to you -- and as frustrating as you might find this, they simply don't know prcisely what you want them to do.
Communicating explicit expectations may well be the most dificult aspect of a managers job. But it is absolutely essential to creating a high performance workplace.
At the very least, the expectations you communicate to your direct reports must include quantity, quality, and time frame.
I suggest you find a quiet room and start making a list of what you expect from each of your direct reports. A specific list. You might be surprised how difficult this is.
Then meet with each of your people individually and ask them what they think you expect of them. As them what specific results they think they are responsible for.
It will make you want to scream. But it's worth it.
More on Getting Your Staff to Do What You Want Them to Do and other wisdom.
Posted by Anita Campbell January 15, 2007 | Permalink
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Document Retention Policies
Tip of the hat to Sallie Lux of the law firm Brouse McDowell for the advice below.
Just having a document retention policy is not good enough. It must be implemented and reviewed on a regular basis. In fact it is good practice to review it annually just to make sure there haven't been any major changes in the legal requirements with with respect to any different areas of document retention.
Here are five additional tips to lesson the likelihood your firm will get in trouble.
1. Have and follow a written document retention and destruction policy that complies with applicable statuatory or regulatory laws governing retention of certain types of documents.
2. Make sure that any retention policy contains suspension procedures to be employed when litigation becomes reasonably foreseeable.
3. Communicate with employees to ensure that they are aware of the company's obligation to preserve evidence and what types of information might be subject to preservation.
4. Involve counsel early to identify types and locations of electronically stored data that may contain information that is relevant to a lawsuit.
5. Involve in-house technology personell to maintain and preserve potentially relevant information.
Once developed, policies must be implemented consistently. Just having a policy is not good enough, you need to follow it.
**Kudos to Smart Business Magazine for sharing this timely information.
Posted by Anita Campbell January 09, 2007 | Permalink
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