Monday, April 11, 2016

How to Start a Business: A Step-by-Step Guide

Every year, hundreds of thousands of people across the country take a leap of faith and start their own business. This path requires a lot of hard work, and many end up failing. But for those who survive, the rewards of entrepreneurship are well worth the obstacles they face on the road to success.
Think you're ready to start your first business? Here's a step-by-step overview of what you need to do to make it happen.
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Every new business starts with an idea. Maybe there's something you're really knowledgeable and passionate about, or perhaps you think you've found a way to fill a gap in the marketplace. Wherever your interests lie, it's almost guaranteed that there's a way to turn it into a business.
Another option is to open a franchise of an established company. If you choose to go this route, a lot of the legwork has been done for you. The concept, brand following and business model are already in place; all you need is a good location and the means to fund your operation.
Once you've narrowed your list of ideas down to one or two, do a quick search for existing companies in your chosen industry. Learn what the current brand leaders are doing and figure out how you can do it better. If you think your business can deliver something other companies don't (or deliver the same thing, but faster and cheaper), you've got a solid idea and are ready to create a business plan.
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David Silverstein, a global business consultant and CEO of operational strategy consulting firm BMGI, cautioned would-be entrepreneurs against starting a business for the sake of being a business owner: You need a viable business model, not just an idea, he said.
"Businesses don't start with simple ideas," Silverstein told Business News Daily. "They start with problems to be solved [and] opportunities to do something better. Know your solution and your customer inside and out. Ensure you are passionate about what you are starting because you will be spending all your time with it."
Now that you have your idea in place, there are a few important questions you need to ask yourself. What is the purpose of your business? Who are you selling to? What are your end goals? How will you finance your startup costs? All of these questions can be answered in a well-written business plan.
A business plan helps you figure out where your company is going, how it will overcome any potential difficulties, and what you need to sustain it. A full guide to writing your plan can be found here, but these are the basic sections you will need to cover:
  • What your business is about and how you will accomplish your goals.
  • Your extended goals, and how you will fill your market's needs.
  • Your research on your target market.
  • Organization and management of your company.
  • Your service or product line, including copyright information and R & D activities.
  • Strategies for market penetration and growth.
  • Estimated costs and funding request (if you need financial assistance).
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Starting any business has a price, so you need to determine how you're going to cover those costs. Do you have the means to fund your startup, or will you need to borrow money? If you are planning to make your new business your full-time job, it's wise to wait until you have at least some money put away for startup costs and to sustain yourself in the beginning before you start making a profit.
While many entrepreneurs put their own money into their new companies, it's very possible that you'll need a little bit (or a lot) of financial assistance depending on the type of business you're starting. A commercial loan through a bank is a good starting point, although these can often be difficult to secure. If you are unable to take out a bank loan, you can apply for a small business loan through the Small Business Administration (SBA) or an alternative lender like Kabbage, OnDeck or CAN Capital.
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Startups requiring a lot more funding up front may want to consider venture capital. This is money, usually in the amount of several million dollars, provided to a fledgling company by a firm or business with the expectation that the backers will have a hands-on role in running your business. Alternatively, you could use an angel investor, a private individual that will provide up to about $1 million for a project, or launch an equity crowdfunding campaign to raise smaller amounts of money from multiple backers.
Using a home equity loan or a small business credit card to finance your startup is a viable solution, but it isn't recommended. A credit card is best used as a means to keep your business on course, or to make big-ticket purchases you wouldn't otherwise be able to afford. Personal finance author Eric Tyson told Business News Daily in a previous interview that entrepreneurs using credit cards should carefully compare interest rates and financing terms, and strongly advised keeping business and personal cards separate from each other.
You can learn more about each of these capital sources in our guide to startup finance options.
Before you can register your company, you need to decide what kind of entity it is. Your business structure legally affects everything from how you file your taxes to your personal liability if something goes wrong.
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If you own the business entirely by yourself and plan to be responsible for all debts and obligations, you can register for a sole proprietorship. A partnership, as its name implies, means that two or more people are held liable as business owners. Danielle Wilson, president and CEO of air ambulance transport company Aero Jet Medical and sister company United Medevac Solutions, said these two are the easiest types of businesses to form, and the only difference is the number of people contributing resources and sharing the profits and liabilities.
If you want to separate your personal liability from your company's liability, you may want to consider forming a corporation. This makes a business a separate entities apart from its owners and therefore, corporations can own property, assume liability, pay taxes, enter into contracts, sue and be sued like any other individual, Wilson said. If you decide to make your business a corporation, you'll need to choose C or S. The main difference between these is the income taxing, with an S corporation owner only being taxed on a personal level. 
One of the most common structures for small businesses, however, is the limited liability corporation (LLC). This hybrid structure has the legal protections of a corporation while allowing for the tax benefits of a partnership. Wilson noted that any lawful business can form an LLC, with the exception of businesses in banking, insurance or a few other specific professional service operations.
Ultimately, it is up to you to determine which type of entity is best for your current needs and future business goals. More details about the different business structures are outlined on the SBA website.
To become an officially recognized business entity, you must register with the government. If you are registering as a corporation, you'll need an articles of incorporation document, which includes your name, business purpose, corporate structure, stock details and other information about your company. Otherwise, you will just need to register your business name, which can be your legal name or a fictitious "Doing Business As" name (if you are the sole proprietor) or the name you've come up with for your company. You may also want to take steps to trademark your business name for extra legal protection.
After you register your business, the next step is obtaining an Employer Identification Number (EIN) from the Internal Revenue Service. While this is not required for sole proprietorships with no employees, you may want to apply for one anyway to keep your personal and business taxes separate, or simply to save yourself the trouble later on if you decide to hire someone else. TheIRS has provided a checklist to determine whether you will require an EIN to run your business. If you do need an EIN, you can register online for free.
Regardless of whether or not you need an EIN, you will need to file certain forms to fulfill your federal and state income tax obligations. The forms you need are determined by your business structure. A complete list of the forms each type of entity will need can be found on the SBA website. You can also find state-specific tax obligations there. Some businesses may also require federal and/or state licenses and permits in order to operate. You can use the SBA's database to search for licensing requirements by state and business type.
Silverstein also advised entrepreneurs to consider their intellectual property, and be absolutely certain that they own it before going ahead with their business.
"Things like legal structure are simple and can be changed later," Silverstein said. "If you are working with other people, be sure you understand who really owns your concepts and ideas, familiarize yourself with the basics of the patent laws that have changed dramatically over the past few years [which is] now a first-to-file system."
Unless you're planning to be the sole proprietor and employee of your business, you're going to need to hire a great team to get your company off the ground. Joe Zawadzki, CEO and founder of MediaMath, said entrepreneurs need to focus on the "people" element of their business with the same attention they give their product.
"First-time entrepreneurs [tend to] focus on product-market fit," Zawadski said. "It's critical, to be sure, but your product is built by people. Identifying your founding team, understanding what gaps exist and [determining] how and when you will address them should be top priority. Figuring out how the team will work together ... is equally important. Defining roles and responsibility, division of labor, how to give feedback, or how to work together when not everyone is in the same room will save you a lot of headaches down the line."
A great startup idea won't do you any good if people don't know about it. While there's still a lot of value in word-of-mouth advertising, you're going to need to do more than just tell your social circles that you're starting a business. Before you start selling your product or service, you need to build up your brand and get a following of people ready to jump when you open your literal or figurative doors for business.
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A company website and social media profiles are practically essential for any small business in today's world. Create a logo that can help people easily identify your brand and be consistent in using it across all of your platforms. Use social media to spread the word about your new company. You can even use it as a promotional tool to offer coupons and discounts to followers once you launch. Be sure to keep these digital assets up-to-date with relevant, interesting content about your business and industry as well.
Once you've fleshed out your business's product and brand, Zawadski recommended getting out into the market and testing your product to get feedback from real customers.
"Sell the MVP [minimum viable product] and be honest about what it is, and what it isn't, Zawadski said.  Once you have your first few clients, work with them to find the common truth in your customer base." 
For more information on creating an effective marketing plan for your business, visit our guide here.
Your launch and first sales are only the beginning of your task as an entrepreneur. In order to make a profit and stay afloat, you always need to be growing your business. It's going to take time and effort, but you'll get out of your business what you put into it.
Collaborating with more established brands in your industry is a great way to achieve growth. Reach out to other companies or even influential bloggers and ask for some promotion in exchange for a free product sample or service. Partner with a charity organization and volunteer some of your time or products to get your name out there. There are also a lot of great tech tools available to help small businesses reach the next level of growth.
Starting a business can be risky and challenging, but armed with the proper tools and information, you put yourself on the path to entrepreneurship.
- See more at: http://www.businessnewsdaily.com/4686-how-to-start-a-business.html#sthash.4f0Ykte3.dpuf

Free life skills qualification

Our life skills courses and qualifications can help you gain some essential skills you need to get on in life and at work, giving you a solid basis for further learning and employment.
Details
You'll learn about managing your time and money, cooking and making healthy choices, and engaging with your local community. You can also cover expectations at work and how to plan your career.
We offer qualifications at entry level 3. Here's a simple guide to our different levels of qualifications. Before you start we'll check which level of qualification you should be working towards and the skills you already have in the different areas of the qualification, like time management or healthy eating. This helps us work out which courses are right for you, so you don't cover things you already know.
Your qualification could be made up of courses in managing your money, planning your time, community action, healthy living and eating, or getting and keeping a job.

Modules
Whether you're looking for work, changing career or you'd like to progress in your current job, our courses on work will help you.
Managing your Money
In these tough times, we all need to make our money go further. As the credit crunch bites, many of us are worried about being in debt and need help getting out of it. Our courses on money are packed with practical tips, techniques and advice to help you.
Planning your Time
Do you ever make plans to do something but never manage to get everything finished? We'll help you improve your management skills.
Healthy Living and Eating
Taking regular exercise and eating a healthy diet can improve your chances of a longer, healthier life. These courses give you practical advice on how you and your family can enjoy a healthier life and make the right food choices.

Features
  • Thanks to government funding your courses and qualification could be free. We'll confirm this with you before you start.
  • Enrol and learn online at one of our centres, where you'll get face to face support from our friendly staff.
  • Your tutor will be there to give you advice, and you'll have regular progress reviews to keep you on track.
  • When you've completed all your courses, you'll either take a test or present your work as a portfolio of evidence. Your centre will explain this to you and in either case make sure you have lots of practice beforehand so you're totally prepared.
  • Join our online community where you can talk with other learners, ask for help and make new friends too.

10 Sources for Free Online Technology Courses


Online Technology Courses for Credit

Free technology courses are available online that don't require students to register or pay tuition. However, these courses don't lead to college credit. Students who want to earn college credit might want to consider online sources that charge a nominal fee for online lessons. These fee-based courses can help students earn college credit.
Study.com's short, engaging video lessons and quizzes are available to registered members who pay a small fee. There are also free transcripts available for the videos. Both of these options can be used to earn college credit. Students can check out some of the chapters found in Study.com's Business 104: Information Systems and Computer Applications course below:
  • Hardware and Systems Technology - Examine computer system components, computer memory devices, storage devices and ASCII and Unicode.
  • Systems Software and Application Software - Topics in this chapter include hardware and software resources, operating system functions, file extensions, desktop publishing software and communication software.
  • Decision Support Systems and Specialized Information Systems - Get info about decision making in organizations, business intelligence, management information systems, geographic information systems and statistical analysis.
  • Data Management - Study database structures, management system models, relational databases, structured query language and data mining.
  • Introduction to Programming Subjects include validation tools, analysis and design tools, code mapping, logic and syntax, object oriented programming and programming languages.

Free Online Non-Credited Technology Courses

Harvard University

In the Computer Science 50 course, lecture topics include source code, JavaScript, computer security, HTTP, HTML and computer forensics. Students have the opportunity to learn through lectures, problems and other resources. Quizzes with answers are also provided for students to practice their knowledge. The final project outline PDF is also included.

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

In the Practical Information Technology Management course, students learn about information technology logistics, managing information technology in businesses and information technology project management. The Database, Internet, and Systems Integration Technologies course can provide students with skills in software development, application development, system integration, system security, data modeling and databases. Students can also practice with course exams, since solutions are provided.
The Information Technology Essentials course covers topics in hardware and operating systems, software development, electric commerce, networks and computer security. The Introduction to Computer Science and Programming course provides students with a fundamental overview of programming using handouts, slides and lecture videos. However, students need to install the Python programming language and the IDLE interpreter to follow the programming instructions.
Computer System Engineering is a course containing video lectures, projects, assignments and exams. Students can learn about software and hardware engineering, networks, virtual memory, encryption and security.

University of California - Berkeley

In the Computer Science 169 course, students are able to learn about designing software systems, project management and programming. This course is composed of recorded lectures, most of which are more than an hour in length. Taught by Professor Armando Fox, these lectures are available on YouTube.

University of California at Davis

The University of California at Davis course materials can be accessed online through a web page. Students can also find instruction on Linux installation if they choose to install the free software. The Unix and Linux Tutorial Center course materials provide students with information on topics like Unix process management, bits and bytes, C programming, recursion and signals.

University of Michigan

The Introduction to Information Studies course provides students with handouts and lectures. These materials contain information about intellectual property, computer and network architectures and computer hardware. There are 27 lectures that are podcast, and some include PowerPoint presentations or PDF files.

International Networking

*If you can't find gainful employment where you live I encourage you to network in other countries. The process isn't that difficult and the greater portion of the paperwork can be done through the American embassy.
 Just a thought.
 "Niko J"
                             

Sunday, April 10, 2016

Self-Reliance: A Philosophy of Disengagement?

"Turn on, tune in, drop out."

Coined by psychologist-turned-counterculturalist Timothy Leary, this iconic phrase could just as easily have been uttered by Ralph Waldo Emerson. And just like Leary's pseudoscientific prescriptions for enlightened living, Emerson's philosophy of individualism is unhelpful in establishing a progressive society in which individuals can achieve their full potential. 
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In his famous essay Self-Reliance, Emerson laments the stifling of individual thought and creativity by the larger social matrix within which every individual is situated. "Society everywhere is in conspiracy against the manhood of every one of its members," he argues, suggesting that achieving personal fulfillment requires disengaging from society and embracing physical and intellectual solitude.

It's an easy criticism to make for a financially stable Harvard University graduate descended from a leading Boston family. Unencumbered by the pursuit of money or the procurement of food, medicine, or shelter, Emerson wrote from a standpoint of financial and social privilege unimaginable to most of his contemporaries.

And his writing shows it.

A well-educated white male with landholdings and steady employment, Emerson could afford to spend time thinking about how man is "clapped into jail by his own consciousness," how virtues are "rather the exception than the rule" and how "truth is handsomer than the affectation of love." Profound, incisive, and thought-provoking, Emerson's writings are nonetheless the musings of a man with few concerns aside from personal fulfillment and the satisfaction of intellectual curiosity.

Underlying Emerson's call for individuality and self-reliance is an insidious assumption that individuation and self actualization are universal priorities for all people. This couldn't be further from the truth: while giving voice to the "divine idea which each of us represents" is surely a worthy aspiration, the reality of most individuals' lives precludes placing high priority on such esoteric, self-centered goals. In truth, one's ability to focus on self actualization is a direct function of one's material circumstances.


Contrast Emerson with his fellow New Englanders at the turn of the 19th century. In a society predominated by farmers and laborers, concerns about "the relations of the soul to the divine spirit" were surely secondary to the five hungry children at home, the broken furnace in winter, or the sick mother in need of medicine. Indulged once a week during Sunday services, these questions of existence, individuality, and the divine were a release from--not an engagement with--the realities of everyday existence.

Aside from glossing over the role of privilege in determining an individual's capacity to prioritize connecting with his inner genius, Emerson's Self-Reliance rests on a second controversial assumption: that our genius comes exclusively from within and is obscured by the "noise" of the society that surrounds us. 

In reality, the opposite is true: while every individual holds the capacity to think creative, ingenious thoughts, it is only through our interaction with external people, ideas, and institutions that we are able to fully discover our genius. 

*I disagree.
Emerson of all people should have known this: having spent four years as an undergraduate at Harvard and additional time at Harvard's divinity school, Emerson experienced firsthand the value of argument and exchange in the formation of ideas and worldviews. Indeed, Emerson's own genius and non-conformity were undoubtedly informed by his interactions with professors, peers, and established intellectual traditions. 

The problem with Emerson's vision of individual genius is that it leaves no room for discursive exchange. In reality, it is only through the expression of our personal ideas to others that we are able to fully discover what these ideas are. Social structures--and the discursive exchanges they facilitate--are instrumental in bringing clarity and focus to the ideas that emerge from each individual's inner genius.

In confining genius to each individual's psyche and calling on individuals to prioritize non-conformity above all else, Emerson dismisses political action, social progress, and intellectual discourse as distractions to the more important goal of actualizing inner genius and communing with the divine. In so doing, he presents a vision for a society marked by political apathy, social disengagement, and a lack of intellectual exchange.

Self-Reliance is compelling because it lays out a radical path toward individual actualization that few had before considered. But in the end, achieving individuality--like turning on, tuning in, and dropping out--is not worth abandoning the very social and political structures that allow individuality to flourish.

Self-reliance may be useful as a starting point from which to enter larger social and political systems, but it cannot be an end in itself. 

*I post things that I don't fully agree with, all ideas contemplated.

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