Tuesday, January 19th, 2010 9:35 am | by admin
There are a dozen strategies to help promote your business locally. However thanks to technology promoting your business locally just got a whole lot easier thanks to Social Media. Social media has emerged as a huge part of the web landscape. When properly executed, social profiles on social networking sites improve your image, build your brand, and send more traffic to your website.
John Jantsch, DuctTapeMarketing, put out a great list of resources on OPEN.
For starting a local group
- Ning
- Facebook
- LinkedIn
- Groupon
- Twitter Lists
- Slideshare
- Wishlist Member
Finding local bloggers
- Placeblogger
- Twellow
- Bloglines
Creating local meetings
- Eventbrite/li>
- MeetUp/li>
- Biznik/li>
To mine local leads
- Search.twitter
- Twellowhood
- Tweepsearch
- LocalTweeps
- Bing Maps Twitter App
- Universal Business Listing
- Yelp!
- Insider Pages
- Citysearch
Calacles Interactive local search optimization services help businesses be found by people searching for local businesses. The amount of people searching for local services continues to increase, so the opportunity to get more business from local search is also growing. Contact us today!
Category: Social Marketing
Tags: local marketing, local search, Market Research, Marketing and Advertising, san diego, san diego business consulting, san diego consulting, small business consulting, social media local tools, starting a new business, startup guides
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Tuesday, December 1st, 2009 12:46 pm | by admin
Small business valuations
There are many ways to value an existing company. Many startups are no more than an idea, some market research, and half of a team (hopefully with some experience). If you think about it for long enough, these companies have no proven value–$0! What some do have, however, is potential value; and fortunately that is something some investors are willing to pay for. (Not to be the pessimist, many startups have much more than stated above, including certain milestones and revenue, which could constitute proven value).
So how is a startup valued? It is important to have proper financial projections with enough information (verifiable data) to allow investors to glean there own valuation data. It is also important to come up with your own valuation on your company to start the negotiation. Realistically, your valuation should be less than $3 million…but that’s the point. It is a best estimate!
The true value of the company falls out in the negotiation. If the investor tries to take too much, you’ll walk away. If you ask for too much, the investor will lose interest and go with one of the other many options he/she has. In the end, if you do settle on a price, there is your valuation.
Just as in life, the value of potential is worth the perception of the parties involved. Barring obvious exceptions, transactions (in all forms) do not occur if the costs and benefits to the various parties are not perceived as agreeable enough.
Our process leverages best practices to help small businesses reinvent their strategic planning processes. We help provoke questions and facilitate conversations rather than create documents, rely on facts to make key decisions, and involve those expected to implement the strategy in the planning process. We help small businesses decide where to focus and how to allocate resources.
To learn more about our financial services please visit Financial Consulting
Tuesday, December 1st, 2009 11:44 am | by admin
Step 3. Calculate the Return on Investment (ROI)
In step 2, your research inevitably helped you to identify key determinants of your business. A determinant is simply a factor or component relevant to your business. In this step, you will use this knowledge to create a financial spreadsheet, which may be called a “pro forma” or simply “financials” by other business folk. Remember the flowchart you started in Step 2? The information you entered into the chart can be very helpful in creating a spreadsheet.
Each determinant you have identified becomes a line item on your accounting spreadsheet and will result in outputs or financial cash flows—either positive or negative. For example, your research may have turned up valuable information about the typical cost to a consumer of your proposed service or new product. Once you enter this information into your spreadsheet, you have essentially estimated how much income you will achieve from selling each item or service unit. Similarly, your research probably helped you determine the necessary components of your product or service and the cost of each component. Entering all of the component costs into the spreadsheet will help you estimate the total cost to create your new product or service. Once you have entered all of the determinants, you can quickly begin to weigh the costs and benefits of starting your new business or manufacturing a new product: in short, you can calculate a return on investment.
The more detail you can add to the spreadsheet—especially in terms of start-up costs—the better the picture you will have of the costs and benefits on a short-term and long-term basis. What you are trying to achieve is a realistic picture of what it will cost you to launch your business and how quickly that business will return your investment. That said, if you decide to launch, you will revisit your financials many times to refine and expand your ideas—so you will have other opportunities to improve your first draft.
Make a decision to move ahead or hold
After completing the three steps we have outlined, you should be ready to make a decision to move ahead to launch your business, hold up for a future launch, or abandon your idea. Whatever you decide, you have made a decision based on solid information. If you decide to put your idea on hold, revisiting the three steps when you are ready to move forward will produce new information based on the market conditions at that time. In fact, the process of moving through the three steps can open up new avenues for products or services for a business at any stage.
Coming in the next Calacles Blog: “I’m launching a new business—what do I do first?”
Part 1 of To Launch or Not to Launch
Part 2 of To Launch or Not to Launch
Category: Small Business Strategies
Tags: Business, Competition, Consulting, Consumer, Information, Market Research, Market share, Marketing and Advertising, new businesses, product launch, Research, san diego, san diego consulting, small business, startup guides
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Tuesday, December 1st, 2009 11:09 am | by admin
Step 2. Become an Expert
Before beginning a new business, there is no substitute for research. Your goal should be to fully understand the business space you are thinking of entering. To do this, you have to become an expert so that you can assess the positive and negatives aspect of your idea. As you move forward on your research, you want to examine both qualitative and quantitative aspects. There is no such thing as doing too much research. If you imagine that you are on a discovery mission and that your role is to uncover both obvious and hidden information, you will explore all avenues related to your business idea—and, hopefully, carefully document the information and where you found it.
To begin, you should identify all of the competition you will face in your new business. For each competitor, you want to identify relative market share, production cost(s), distribution, consumer price(s), product reviews and consumer feedback, search rankings, and possible vulnerabilities. You want to think deeply about the competition and if and how your business can successfully vie for market share.
Research can also assist you in identifying what your business will require in terms of resources and material sources. You can develop a flowchart for creating a new product or service and insert real costs based on real sources. Research may lead you to manufacturers of components or similar products or suggest alternative ways to create a product. As you carry out your research, you will have the opportunity to talk with other business owners or vendors—this can be invaluable as you develop an understanding of your prospective business.
At the end of your research, you should have developed a robust understanding of the nitty, gritty details of your new business. You should be able to confidently estimate the costs associated with your business as well as the potential income. As an expert on your idea, you will know the potential benefits and liabilities of launching your new business.
Read Part 1 of To Launch or Not to Launch
Category: Small Business Strategies
Tags: Business, Competition, Consulting, Consumer, Information, Market Research, Market share, Marketing and Advertising, new businesses, product launch, Research, san diego, san diego consulting, small business, startup guides
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