The franchising way to grow

Lisa Flynn, a mother of two young boys, never relished having her children photographed. For her, birth announcements and holiday portraits meant either spending a small fortune for a professional photographer who didn’t cater to colicky clientele or settling for cheesy props and fuzzy blue backdrops at the mall portrait studio. „I thought, ‚There has got to be a better way to get your kid’s picture taken,‘ “ says Flynn, who was running her own marketing and advertising firm at the time. She looked into buying a franchise that specialized in children’s photography but, unimpressed, created her own studio instead. In 2006 she opened Whippersnappers Studio …more at The Franchising Way to Grow – BusinessWeek.

Flickr photo credit:  Heavenhated

By |2012-01-05T07:37:24+01:00Dezember 5, 2008|Blog, Small Business|0 Comments

What will Obama’s SBA be like?

An Obama Administration could rescue the agency from its Bush-era neglect, if it can get these few things right

Any entrepreneur who’s been through a business turnaround might have some empathy for the folks at the Small Business Administration. During the past eight years, the SBA has been, generally speaking, underfunded, underutilized, and underloved. But it wouldn’t be all that complicated to transform the agency into a powerful advocate for small businesses. Here’s what needs to happen …more at What Will Obama’s SBA Be Like? – BusinessWeek.

Flickr photo credit: radiospike photography

By |2012-01-05T07:37:24+01:00Dezember 5, 2008|Blog, Small Business|0 Comments

Don’t skimp on ad budgets

With corporate managers under enormous pressure to control costs and maintain liquidity in the current credit crisis, advertising budgets often appear to be a dispensable luxury in the struggle to survive. Executives who succumb to that temptation, however, put the long-term future of their companies at risk, according to Wharton faculty and advertising experts.

„The first reaction is to cut, cut, cut, and advertising is one of the first things to go,“ says Wharton marketing professor Peter Fader, adding that as companies slash advertising in a downturn, they leave empty space in consumers‘ minds for aggressive marketers to make strong inroads. Today’s economy „provides an unusual opportunity to differentiate yourself and stand out from the crowd,“ says Fader, „but it takes a lot of courage and convincing to get senior management on board with that.“ …more from Forbes.com. Flickr photo credit: shankar, shiv

By |2012-01-05T06:45:31+01:00Dezember 1, 2008|Administration & Finance, Blog|0 Comments
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