"The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams."
- Eleanor Roosevelt
When we are children, we all had some lofty dreams. Dreams of what we want from life and what we want our lives to be. Some kids dream of being an astronaut, others dream of being The President. Some dream of a living in a kingdom of riches while some dream of the person they will marry.
Whatever...we all had great big crazy dreams when we were kids.
So what happens to us as we grow older? What happened to all those wild and crazy dreams we had?
LIFE happened, THAT'S what. At least the life presented to us through our educational system and - DARE I SAY IT? - bad parenting. (OK, I'll cut the parents some slack because THEY have been the victims themselves, but just SOME slack) We go through our formative years in something called a school where we learn the basics of "readin' ritin' and rithmetic" but what we need to survive financially is mostly left up to fate. We get jobs that produce an income AND society teaches us to produce something called "Debt" giving us a life that doesn't match up to our BIG dreams so what do we do?
We adjust down our dreams to be more in line with our income. We tell ourselves that we don't REALLY want that dream house, car, career or __________________ (fill in the blank) because we have allowed someone else to determine our worth and...well, our dreams just didn't fit the plan that someone else has.
Wouldn't it make FAR more sense if this was to be reversed? Shouldn't we design a life instead of just making a living? Shouldn't we adjust and raise OUR INCOMES to support and be more in line with our dreams instead?
But we make excuses. We come up with all sorts obstacles. We convince ourselves that we don't dare to dream big because....what?
So what we have come up with is something that looks like the graphic below:
We have positioned our income and debt in a place where the obstacles we have made, prevent us from seeing our dreams.
Is this sounding even remotely familiar to anyone?
So how can we change this around? That's simple. "Dare To Dream" Make them dreams HUGE! Make them CRAZY! Make them WILD! Dare to dream as a child again. Let's make that graphic again. This time like this:
You see the difference? This is a way that, even where you're at in life right now, you can see OVER the self imposed obstacles - rendering them into nothing more than speed bumps - and STILL be able to see your dream. Eventually your dream will eliminate the obstacles and your income will come more in line with your BIG dreams.
Now just sit back and dream. Dream of what you want out of the next year. Make it HUGE and then go for it. I can help you along the way. Contact me at davecapra@comcast.net
Sunday, December 8, 2013
Friday, December 6, 2013
Mindset Matters
Sometimes it may feel uncomfortable to change.
Change can be where your biggest breakthrough’s are in life and business. Be ready and open to step out of your comfort zone. Don’t look for the negative in change, look for the positive.
Do you spend time with people who affect your mindset?
You may have also heard that your income is dictated by the people you spend time with. A mindset of a millionaire is different, they think differently. Surround yourself with big thinkers, positive people and entrepreneurs that have already reached a goal you are aiming for.
Are you looking back at past experiences that may of been negative in your life? Your beliefs determine your behavior. Change your beliefs so you focus on goals and look ahead. It’s almost impossible to move forward if you are stuck thinking about something negative in the past.
If you look at the word “attraction” at the end of the word is action. There has to be a balance between mindset and action. As you start to take action resources will show up in your life. Your vibration and confidence will begin to rise. Taking action shows that you are confident in your projects.
What is your purpose?
What drives you to get up early in the morning and go to bed late at night? Deep down everyone has a purpose. If you are not sure what it is, you need to find it. Everyone has some unique gift. What are you passionate about? Also, you must limit your excuses. It’s one of the biggest success eliminators.
Don’t look at change as bad, change is good. Be careful at what you spend your time thinking about. Make sure you are taking action daily. Even if it’s small steps, be consistent. Lastly, find out what your purpose is and focus all of your energy on it.
Remember....Mindset Matters!
Contact me for details on how I can help you change your mindset. This is not some weak attempt to sell you on an opportunity, it is a network of like minded folks that Im putting together to help each other.
davecapra@comcast.net
Change can be where your biggest breakthrough’s are in life and business. Be ready and open to step out of your comfort zone. Don’t look for the negative in change, look for the positive.
Do you spend time with people who affect your mindset?
You may have also heard that your income is dictated by the people you spend time with. A mindset of a millionaire is different, they think differently. Surround yourself with big thinkers, positive people and entrepreneurs that have already reached a goal you are aiming for.
Are you looking back at past experiences that may of been negative in your life? Your beliefs determine your behavior. Change your beliefs so you focus on goals and look ahead. It’s almost impossible to move forward if you are stuck thinking about something negative in the past.
If you look at the word “attraction” at the end of the word is action. There has to be a balance between mindset and action. As you start to take action resources will show up in your life. Your vibration and confidence will begin to rise. Taking action shows that you are confident in your projects.
What is your purpose?
What drives you to get up early in the morning and go to bed late at night? Deep down everyone has a purpose. If you are not sure what it is, you need to find it. Everyone has some unique gift. What are you passionate about? Also, you must limit your excuses. It’s one of the biggest success eliminators.
Don’t look at change as bad, change is good. Be careful at what you spend your time thinking about. Make sure you are taking action daily. Even if it’s small steps, be consistent. Lastly, find out what your purpose is and focus all of your energy on it.
Remember....Mindset Matters!
Contact me for details on how I can help you change your mindset. This is not some weak attempt to sell you on an opportunity, it is a network of like minded folks that Im putting together to help each other.
davecapra@comcast.net
Tuesday, November 26, 2013
On The Lighter Side...Happy Thanksgiving Week
For those that know me, you realize that I have a caustic sense of humor and a rapier wit AND that I'm a firm believer in education.
"Know The Rules Before You Play The Game" has been my war cry for several years now and I find it easy to write about topics that I know about. Let's face it, if you're going to learn, learn from the best.
All that being said, I would like to expose my silly side and give you a gift of knowledge FREE of charge as my way of saying THANK YOU for visiting.
I hope that you will be a constant visitor and help spread the word about The Debtonator.
Enjoy!
Just click here for your FREE download. HAPPY TURKEY DAY!
"Know The Rules Before You Play The Game" has been my war cry for several years now and I find it easy to write about topics that I know about. Let's face it, if you're going to learn, learn from the best.
All that being said, I would like to expose my silly side and give you a gift of knowledge FREE of charge as my way of saying THANK YOU for visiting.
I hope that you will be a constant visitor and help spread the word about The Debtonator.
Enjoy!
Just click here for your FREE download. HAPPY TURKEY DAY!
Monday, November 25, 2013
What Are You Thankful For?
As we enter my second favorite time of the year, I find myself reflecting on the past year, as I'm sure a lot of you are.
Last year about this time I found myself in a life situation that was to be a stepping stone and I was ready to take that "next step" and move forward. I had no clue as to the how's or when's but I mentally made that commitment.
And then DISASTER STRUCK!
My family - my wife and dog - woke up to find our apartment was waist deep in flood water from some storms that devastated much of Illinois. We literally lost EVERYTHING except what we could carry out while in shock at 3 AM.
And then something magical happened.
Friends, family members and even strangers reached out with their love and support. I was deeply humbled by their kindness and generosity and we survived a horrible life event. It renewed my faith in mankind and it also showed me the power of people and social media. It also broke me out of some tunnel vision thinking. It changed my life.
So as I sit down to our Thanksgiving meal this year I am thankful for of course family and friends but I am most thankful that I made a decision to improve my situation. It didn't matter that I had no idea as to what I was going to do or how I was going to change things. I made an inner commitment and NOTHING was going to deter me from that.
AND I am thankful for the coming year because I have made ANOTHER decision. And this one is a doozy. All I can say is STAY TUNED because I will do some GREAT things in 2014.
Because I made the decision to.
The morals to be learned for this story are:
1. I made a conscious decision to change my life
2. I reached out for help when I needed to. I wasn't embarrassed to accept the guidance of people.
3.I must ALWAYS exercise my decision making muscles
I recognize that I am more thankful this year than I have been in a very long time.
So make a decision. Drop me a line. Friend request me on Facebook. Together let's make 2014 a prosperous year in all area's of life
Last year about this time I found myself in a life situation that was to be a stepping stone and I was ready to take that "next step" and move forward. I had no clue as to the how's or when's but I mentally made that commitment.
And then DISASTER STRUCK!
My family - my wife and dog - woke up to find our apartment was waist deep in flood water from some storms that devastated much of Illinois. We literally lost EVERYTHING except what we could carry out while in shock at 3 AM.
And then something magical happened.
Friends, family members and even strangers reached out with their love and support. I was deeply humbled by their kindness and generosity and we survived a horrible life event. It renewed my faith in mankind and it also showed me the power of people and social media. It also broke me out of some tunnel vision thinking. It changed my life.
So as I sit down to our Thanksgiving meal this year I am thankful for of course family and friends but I am most thankful that I made a decision to improve my situation. It didn't matter that I had no idea as to what I was going to do or how I was going to change things. I made an inner commitment and NOTHING was going to deter me from that.
AND I am thankful for the coming year because I have made ANOTHER decision. And this one is a doozy. All I can say is STAY TUNED because I will do some GREAT things in 2014.
Because I made the decision to.
The morals to be learned for this story are:
1. I made a conscious decision to change my life
2. I reached out for help when I needed to. I wasn't embarrassed to accept the guidance of people.
3.I must ALWAYS exercise my decision making muscles
I recognize that I am more thankful this year than I have been in a very long time.
So make a decision. Drop me a line. Friend request me on Facebook. Together let's make 2014 a prosperous year in all area's of life
Saturday, November 23, 2013
Give me 15 minutes of your time...
This is the most profitable thing that I have seen come along in a very long time. This is an overview and its only 15 minutes long. Take a look at it and let me know your thoughts on it? Im not trying to sell you on anything but this has saved my life FOR REAL.
I have known this guy for the last seven years and he is one of the most real people I know. I worked with him briefly but for personal reasons, I was forced to quit. BIG MISTAKE on my part because the people that were trained with me are making some big cash today.
He put together this 15 minute overview located at www.Virtualoverview.com
I have known this guy for the last seven years and he is one of the most real people I know. I worked with him briefly but for personal reasons, I was forced to quit. BIG MISTAKE on my part because the people that were trained with me are making some big cash today.
He put together this 15 minute overview located at www.Virtualoverview.com
Friday, November 22, 2013
Grow Your Business
Small is beautiful.
Slow and steady wins the race.
Inch by inch, row by row, that's the way my garden grows.
While such homespun wisdom might be fine for common folk, it can be awfully frustrating for an ambitious homebased business owner determined to take his company to the next level of growth and profitability. Sure, a thriving one- or two-person service business with no inventory, rent or employees can seem like an easy way to make money at first, but when the phone starts ringing off the hook and customers keep coming back for more, homebased business owners who fail to plan often fall victim to their own success. Either they burn out trying to juggle everything themselves or they spend so much time and money hiring people to help them that their profits go down the drain.
Fortunately, there are some ways to take your homebased business to new heights without sacrificing your business's profitability or losing your peace of mind.
Follow these 10 steps to grow your homebased business into the personal and professional success it was meant to be:
1. Focus on a single product or service, and then market it, sell it, promote it-do everything you can to increase sales of that one product or service. While it's tempting to swing for the fences and try to be all things to all people, it's often less risky and more profitable to pick a product or two that you can execute really well and just try to get on base.
Richard Roy, a Sparta, New Jersey landscaper, started a homebased dog-waste removal business called Dr. Pooper Scooper when he got tired of picking up the dog poop from his customers' lawns. Instead of splurging on a retail storefront or an expensive Yellow Pages ad, Roy decided to use his truck as his primary advertising vehicle. Says Roy, "I decorated the truck as a Dalmatian, used full signage and put magnetic business cards on it. By using the truck as my moving billboard, by joining community groups and through word of mouth, I've turned what was once my nightmare into a thriving business serving 100 customers and making 1,100 pickups a week."
Thanks to Dr. Pooper Scooper's success, Roy is now planning to phase out his landscaping business and focus on his new venture full time. "When I scoop the poop, I do it 12 months a year and never have to fix or replace equipment," Roy says. "It's also three time easier than landscaping, and I can do it until I can't walk anymore."
2. Expand your product line to offer complementary products or services. Once you've hit on a product or service that customers really like, don't miss the opportunity to bring out related items to diversify your product line. Not only does that give your customers a wider selection, but it also makes your products more appealing to retailers who typically like to stock a line of products as opposed to a single item.
Meredith LiePelt, who runs a company called Contemporary Baby out of her home in Dublin, Ohio, started off making colorful burp cloths for newborns. Now she's expanded her line to include such "go along" products as receiving blankets, bibs and gift baskets. Says LiePelt, "Our retail customers have enjoyed having more gift-giving options, and our wholesale clients are able to offer their customers a wider selection to choose from."
3. Find ways to increase sales to your existing customers. It's a lot cheaper than finding new ones. Even if you can't expand your product line, you can boost revenues by selling more of your existing product or service to the clients you already have. One easy way to do this is through volume discounts. Especially if your products cost little to produce, offering your customers the chance to buy, say, two T-shirts for the price of one lets you ring up additional sales without sacrificing much profit. Another common practice is to reward loyal customers by giving them a punch card that entitles them to a free product or service for every 10 items they buy. This technique is common at hair salons, car washes and arts-and-crafts stores, but homebased businesses can use it, too.
4. Hire someone to help you out-an employee, a freelancer, an intern, an independent contractor, even your kids. Not only does this free up cash flow by adjusting your expenses to the level of work you bring in, but it also enables you to cultivate a large network of talented people you probably couldn't afford to hire full time.
Marc Kirschner, a neighborhood directory publisher in New York City, employs 50 to 75 writers-all of whom are freelancers-to develop his directory's content. This way, Marc saves on payroll taxes, medical benefits, employer liability insurance and all the other costs of hiring full-time staffers. There are other benefits, too. "Bringing in outside help gives you someone else to bounce ideas and strategies off of," Kirschner says. "It prevents you from feeling you're going it alone."
5. Create a Web site to advertise your company or sell products online. Thanks to the Internet, it's no longer necessary to open a store to reach retail customers. For marketers of specialty products like rare books, collectibles and gourmet foods, a Web-based boutique lets you reach millions of shoppers around the world without paying for rent, utilities or garbage collection.
And while creating Web sites once required a big investment and the skills of an experienced Web designer or programmer, do-it-yourself Web sites are now available for less than $30 a month with no technical knowledge required. Typically, the companies that help you register your domain name (Web address) will provide online templates you can use to build your site, host your Web pages on their server and provide you with multiple e-mail addresses as well. E-commerce capabilities can often be had for an additional charge. You can also set up low-cost Web sites through Web hosting companies and search engines.
6. Join forces with another business to promote your company. Partnering with a company in a related industry is one of the cheapest and easiest forms of marketing that you can employ. If you make spa products, for example, you may be able to convince a local health club to carry them in its store by offering a discount to its members. Likewise, you can send a free, one-day health club pass to anybody who buys your lotions and scrubs.
Nancy Tamosaitis, a homebased publicist, says her New York firm, Vorticom, has partnered with a graphic design firm to provide creative services such as Web design and brochures to her corporate PR clients. From time to time, she also joins forces with specialty PR firms to assist clients in fashion, finance and other industries. "Now that I'm working from home, my clients receive infinitely better service and results-at much lower cost-than when I managed a $3 million profit center at a top PR agency," Tamosaitis says.
7. Target other markets. If you sell to teens, start marketing to college students. If you sell to working moms, maybe your product will work for stay-at-home moms with a few modifications. Another strategy is to take a retail-oriented product or service and sell it wholesale. For example, a homebased catering business that specializes in cakes, pies and other tasty desserts can contact local bakeries to sell its goods on a wholesale basis. While the price you get from the bakeries will be lower (because the bakeries need to mark it up to their customers to make a profit), you'll sell more products and generate consistent cash flow that you can bank on.
8. Find new and different ways to market your business through e-mail newsletters or by doing guest-speaking gigs or by teaching a class. Marketing your homebased business doesn't need to involve spending big money on newspaper ads, Yellow Pages listings, or TV or radio spots. Grassroots marketing techniques cost far less and are often much more effective. Most chambers of commerce and community groups are more than happy to provide a forum to a local business owner who's willing to share his expertise at no charge. Sending out a weekly newsletter is also a great way to get your name out in front of new and potential clients. Thanks to the Internet, you can send out your newsletter via e-mail using online templates and automated delivery systems.
9. Expand to another location. That could mean renting "virtual" office space in a business center or by sharing office space with another growing business. Brad Taylor, a CPA in Springfield, New Jersey, spends most of his time at home preparing tax returns, developing tax-planning strategies and revising his clients' QuickBooks files. But when he needs to come to New York City for a meeting, he sometimes rents space at a Manhattan business center operated by HQ Global, a national provider of temporary office space.
For a monthly fee or a la cart, business centers like these offer everything from conference rooms and receptionist services to remote-access voicemail, high-speed Internet connectivity and tech support, offering homebased business owners as much or as little outside office services as they need. Taylor pays just $10 an hour to use the space and is able to bill the cost to his client. "While I still want to run my business from home, this has allowed me to pursue new opportunities and network with other professionals," Taylor says.
10. Think about turning your business into a franchise or business opportunity. While most homebased businesses remain small, yours may have the potential to hit the big time through franchising, licensing or wholesale distribution. The key question to ask yourself is if your business can be converted into a business format that somebody else could operate (a franchise) or if you have a standardized product or service that someone could resell multiple times (a business opportunity). While you may think that expanding your business requires raising capital, hiring employees, buying equipment and leasing office or warehouse space, it's often more profitable-and less risky-to license your product to a big corporation with manufacturing capabilities and an existing sales force to do the work for you.
Rosalind Resnick is president and CEO of Axxess Business Centers, Inc., a boutique consulting firm for startups and small businesses. She can be reached via her Web site at www.abcbizhelp.com .
Slow and steady wins the race.
Inch by inch, row by row, that's the way my garden grows.
While such homespun wisdom might be fine for common folk, it can be awfully frustrating for an ambitious homebased business owner determined to take his company to the next level of growth and profitability. Sure, a thriving one- or two-person service business with no inventory, rent or employees can seem like an easy way to make money at first, but when the phone starts ringing off the hook and customers keep coming back for more, homebased business owners who fail to plan often fall victim to their own success. Either they burn out trying to juggle everything themselves or they spend so much time and money hiring people to help them that their profits go down the drain.
Fortunately, there are some ways to take your homebased business to new heights without sacrificing your business's profitability or losing your peace of mind.
Follow these 10 steps to grow your homebased business into the personal and professional success it was meant to be:
1. Focus on a single product or service, and then market it, sell it, promote it-do everything you can to increase sales of that one product or service. While it's tempting to swing for the fences and try to be all things to all people, it's often less risky and more profitable to pick a product or two that you can execute really well and just try to get on base.
Richard Roy, a Sparta, New Jersey landscaper, started a homebased dog-waste removal business called Dr. Pooper Scooper when he got tired of picking up the dog poop from his customers' lawns. Instead of splurging on a retail storefront or an expensive Yellow Pages ad, Roy decided to use his truck as his primary advertising vehicle. Says Roy, "I decorated the truck as a Dalmatian, used full signage and put magnetic business cards on it. By using the truck as my moving billboard, by joining community groups and through word of mouth, I've turned what was once my nightmare into a thriving business serving 100 customers and making 1,100 pickups a week."
Thanks to Dr. Pooper Scooper's success, Roy is now planning to phase out his landscaping business and focus on his new venture full time. "When I scoop the poop, I do it 12 months a year and never have to fix or replace equipment," Roy says. "It's also three time easier than landscaping, and I can do it until I can't walk anymore."
2. Expand your product line to offer complementary products or services. Once you've hit on a product or service that customers really like, don't miss the opportunity to bring out related items to diversify your product line. Not only does that give your customers a wider selection, but it also makes your products more appealing to retailers who typically like to stock a line of products as opposed to a single item.
Meredith LiePelt, who runs a company called Contemporary Baby out of her home in Dublin, Ohio, started off making colorful burp cloths for newborns. Now she's expanded her line to include such "go along" products as receiving blankets, bibs and gift baskets. Says LiePelt, "Our retail customers have enjoyed having more gift-giving options, and our wholesale clients are able to offer their customers a wider selection to choose from."
3. Find ways to increase sales to your existing customers. It's a lot cheaper than finding new ones. Even if you can't expand your product line, you can boost revenues by selling more of your existing product or service to the clients you already have. One easy way to do this is through volume discounts. Especially if your products cost little to produce, offering your customers the chance to buy, say, two T-shirts for the price of one lets you ring up additional sales without sacrificing much profit. Another common practice is to reward loyal customers by giving them a punch card that entitles them to a free product or service for every 10 items they buy. This technique is common at hair salons, car washes and arts-and-crafts stores, but homebased businesses can use it, too.
4. Hire someone to help you out-an employee, a freelancer, an intern, an independent contractor, even your kids. Not only does this free up cash flow by adjusting your expenses to the level of work you bring in, but it also enables you to cultivate a large network of talented people you probably couldn't afford to hire full time.
Marc Kirschner, a neighborhood directory publisher in New York City, employs 50 to 75 writers-all of whom are freelancers-to develop his directory's content. This way, Marc saves on payroll taxes, medical benefits, employer liability insurance and all the other costs of hiring full-time staffers. There are other benefits, too. "Bringing in outside help gives you someone else to bounce ideas and strategies off of," Kirschner says. "It prevents you from feeling you're going it alone."
5. Create a Web site to advertise your company or sell products online. Thanks to the Internet, it's no longer necessary to open a store to reach retail customers. For marketers of specialty products like rare books, collectibles and gourmet foods, a Web-based boutique lets you reach millions of shoppers around the world without paying for rent, utilities or garbage collection.
And while creating Web sites once required a big investment and the skills of an experienced Web designer or programmer, do-it-yourself Web sites are now available for less than $30 a month with no technical knowledge required. Typically, the companies that help you register your domain name (Web address) will provide online templates you can use to build your site, host your Web pages on their server and provide you with multiple e-mail addresses as well. E-commerce capabilities can often be had for an additional charge. You can also set up low-cost Web sites through Web hosting companies and search engines.
6. Join forces with another business to promote your company. Partnering with a company in a related industry is one of the cheapest and easiest forms of marketing that you can employ. If you make spa products, for example, you may be able to convince a local health club to carry them in its store by offering a discount to its members. Likewise, you can send a free, one-day health club pass to anybody who buys your lotions and scrubs.
Nancy Tamosaitis, a homebased publicist, says her New York firm, Vorticom, has partnered with a graphic design firm to provide creative services such as Web design and brochures to her corporate PR clients. From time to time, she also joins forces with specialty PR firms to assist clients in fashion, finance and other industries. "Now that I'm working from home, my clients receive infinitely better service and results-at much lower cost-than when I managed a $3 million profit center at a top PR agency," Tamosaitis says.
7. Target other markets. If you sell to teens, start marketing to college students. If you sell to working moms, maybe your product will work for stay-at-home moms with a few modifications. Another strategy is to take a retail-oriented product or service and sell it wholesale. For example, a homebased catering business that specializes in cakes, pies and other tasty desserts can contact local bakeries to sell its goods on a wholesale basis. While the price you get from the bakeries will be lower (because the bakeries need to mark it up to their customers to make a profit), you'll sell more products and generate consistent cash flow that you can bank on.
8. Find new and different ways to market your business through e-mail newsletters or by doing guest-speaking gigs or by teaching a class. Marketing your homebased business doesn't need to involve spending big money on newspaper ads, Yellow Pages listings, or TV or radio spots. Grassroots marketing techniques cost far less and are often much more effective. Most chambers of commerce and community groups are more than happy to provide a forum to a local business owner who's willing to share his expertise at no charge. Sending out a weekly newsletter is also a great way to get your name out in front of new and potential clients. Thanks to the Internet, you can send out your newsletter via e-mail using online templates and automated delivery systems.
9. Expand to another location. That could mean renting "virtual" office space in a business center or by sharing office space with another growing business. Brad Taylor, a CPA in Springfield, New Jersey, spends most of his time at home preparing tax returns, developing tax-planning strategies and revising his clients' QuickBooks files. But when he needs to come to New York City for a meeting, he sometimes rents space at a Manhattan business center operated by HQ Global, a national provider of temporary office space.
For a monthly fee or a la cart, business centers like these offer everything from conference rooms and receptionist services to remote-access voicemail, high-speed Internet connectivity and tech support, offering homebased business owners as much or as little outside office services as they need. Taylor pays just $10 an hour to use the space and is able to bill the cost to his client. "While I still want to run my business from home, this has allowed me to pursue new opportunities and network with other professionals," Taylor says.
10. Think about turning your business into a franchise or business opportunity. While most homebased businesses remain small, yours may have the potential to hit the big time through franchising, licensing or wholesale distribution. The key question to ask yourself is if your business can be converted into a business format that somebody else could operate (a franchise) or if you have a standardized product or service that someone could resell multiple times (a business opportunity). While you may think that expanding your business requires raising capital, hiring employees, buying equipment and leasing office or warehouse space, it's often more profitable-and less risky-to license your product to a big corporation with manufacturing capabilities and an existing sales force to do the work for you.
Rosalind Resnick is president and CEO of Axxess Business Centers, Inc., a boutique consulting firm for startups and small businesses. She can be reached via her Web site at www.abcbizhelp.com .
_________________________________________________________________________________
Do you have an existing business or have you been contemplating "doing your own thing" but just cant seem to pull the trigger on it?
Let me help!
I am part of a large Business Development Company and our mission is to:
1. Educate people on finances.
It is a subject that is barely taught in schools yet it is the life's blood of American families, used primarily by common folks that quite frankly DO NOT know what they are doing.
2. Get involved. We seek out those that may have fallen victim to our floundering economy and set them on a different track more atune to their goals.
3. END POVERTY! We declare war on the things that are keeping us down, trapped and enslaved. We show you how to obtain and maintain TRUE freedom.
THIS IS NOT MLM AND THERE IS NO FINANCIAL INVESTMENT REQUIRED TO GET STARTED.
Email: davecapra@comcast.net for details
Let me help!
I am part of a large Business Development Company and our mission is to:
1. Educate people on finances.
It is a subject that is barely taught in schools yet it is the life's blood of American families, used primarily by common folks that quite frankly DO NOT know what they are doing.
2. Get involved. We seek out those that may have fallen victim to our floundering economy and set them on a different track more atune to their goals.
3. END POVERTY! We declare war on the things that are keeping us down, trapped and enslaved. We show you how to obtain and maintain TRUE freedom.
THIS IS NOT MLM AND THERE IS NO FINANCIAL INVESTMENT REQUIRED TO GET STARTED.
Email: davecapra@comcast.net for details
Thursday, November 21, 2013
What's Holding You Back?
I have ALWAYS professed: "Know The Rules Before You Play The Game" and if you TRULY want to change your life, the first step is education. KNOWLEDGE accompanied by a proven plan of action.
Sounds like a simple enough plan right?
So what are you waiting for? Write your excuse in the comments. I'm curious
So if it is a change you seek and realize that you need a coach and a mentor to guide your every step and you would do me the honor of introducing you to the very people that changed my life...I raise my cup in toast!
"Here's to the crazy ones. The misfits. The rebels. The troublemakers. The round pegs in the square holes. The ones who see things differently. They're not fond of rules. And they have no respect for the status quo. You can quote them, disagree with them, glorify or vilify them. About the only thing you can't do is ignore them. Because they change things. They push the human race forward. And while some may see them as the crazy ones, we see genius. Because the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world, are the ones who do"
CHEERS!!!
Dave Capra "The Debtonator"
davecapra@comcast.net
Sounds like a simple enough plan right?
So what are you waiting for? Write your excuse in the comments. I'm curious
So if it is a change you seek and realize that you need a coach and a mentor to guide your every step and you would do me the honor of introducing you to the very people that changed my life...I raise my cup in toast!
"Here's to the crazy ones. The misfits. The rebels. The troublemakers. The round pegs in the square holes. The ones who see things differently. They're not fond of rules. And they have no respect for the status quo. You can quote them, disagree with them, glorify or vilify them. About the only thing you can't do is ignore them. Because they change things. They push the human race forward. And while some may see them as the crazy ones, we see genius. Because the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world, are the ones who do"
CHEERS!!!
Dave Capra "The Debtonator"
davecapra@comcast.net
College Graduates That Cant Find Jobs
More than half of America's recent college graduates are either unemployed or working in a job that doesn't require a bachelor's degree, the Associated Press reported this year. The story would seem to be more evidence that, regardless of your education, the wake of the Great Recession has been a terrible time to be young and hunting for work.
First, here's the nut of the AP's findings based on data from the Census Bureau's Current Population Survey and the U.S. Department of Labor:
It's hard to imagine why any of this might be, other than that some recent grads may simply not be willing to take the low level jobs available to them.
On the other hand, many obviously are. As the AP notes, recent graduates are now more likely to work as "waiters, waitresses, bartenders and food-service helpers than as engineers, physicists, chemists and mathematicians combined." This is a problem for any number of reasons, but here are two big ones: First, a degree is more expensive than ever, and students are piling on debt to finance their educations. It's much harder to pay back loans while working for tips at Buffalo Wild Wings than when you have a decent office job. Second, when college graduates take a low-paid, low-skill job, they're probably displacing a less educated worker, For every underemployed college degree holder, there's a decent chance someone with just a high school diploma is out of work entirely.
So is a college education simply less valuable than in the past? In some respects, yes. According to the Census, the number of Americans under the age of 25 with at least a bachelor's degree has grown 38 percent since 2000. Not nearly enough jobs have been created to accommodate them, which has resulted in falling wages for young college graduates in the past decade, as well as the employment problems we're now seeing.
That said, not all degrees are created equal. The AP reports that students who graduated out of the sciences or other technical fields, such as accounting, were much less likely to be jobless or underemployed than humanities and arts graduates. You know that old saw about how college is just about getting a fancy piece of paper? Not true. For an education to be worth anything these days, it needs to impart skills.
When there were fewer graduates, a generic college degree used to be a valuable credential. Now that the market is flooded, diplomas count less, and specific skills count more. This means that, in many instances, associates and technical degrees may be more financially valuable than a liberal arts degree. After all, some of the fastest growing job categories are expected to be in so-called "middle-skill" positions such as nursing, which do not require a full, four-year education. It's one more sign that, for people seeking to fix America's employment picture, "college for all" is the wrong mantra.
We need to be talking about "skills for all" instead.
Its far better to have marketable skills than education based on paper.
Register for my FREE WEBINAR to learn some truly profitable and marketable skills.
Learn today's real estate secrets!
Make money from foreclosure, short sales, fix and flip, no money down and SO much more!
Drop me an email to register davecapra@comcast.net or check out the 15 minute overview here.
First, here's the nut of the AP's findings based on data from the Census Bureau's Current Population Survey and the U.S. Department of Labor:
About 1.5 million, or 53.6 percent, of bachelor's degree-holders under the age of 25 last year were jobless or underemployed, the highest share in at least 11 years. In 2000, the share was at a low of 41 percent, before the dot-com bust erased job gains for college graduates in the telecommunications and IT fields.
Out of the 1.5 million who languished in the job market, about half were underemployed, an increase from the previous year.These numbers are hard to fathom, and the more you compare them to other measures of unemployment, the more bizarre they seem.Their analysis implies that about a quarter of the post-collegiate population is outright unemployed. By comparison, in December 2011, only a fifth of 16 to 19-year-old Americans couldn't get work. Meanwhile, according to the OECD, just 18.4 percent of all Americans under the age of 25 were unemployed in 2010. By those measures, college grads are actually faring worse in the job market than the overall youth population. They're also suffering terribly compared to the older college-educated populace, which has an unemployment rate of 4.2 percent.
It's hard to imagine why any of this might be, other than that some recent grads may simply not be willing to take the low level jobs available to them.
On the other hand, many obviously are. As the AP notes, recent graduates are now more likely to work as "waiters, waitresses, bartenders and food-service helpers than as engineers, physicists, chemists and mathematicians combined." This is a problem for any number of reasons, but here are two big ones: First, a degree is more expensive than ever, and students are piling on debt to finance their educations. It's much harder to pay back loans while working for tips at Buffalo Wild Wings than when you have a decent office job. Second, when college graduates take a low-paid, low-skill job, they're probably displacing a less educated worker, For every underemployed college degree holder, there's a decent chance someone with just a high school diploma is out of work entirely.
So is a college education simply less valuable than in the past? In some respects, yes. According to the Census, the number of Americans under the age of 25 with at least a bachelor's degree has grown 38 percent since 2000. Not nearly enough jobs have been created to accommodate them, which has resulted in falling wages for young college graduates in the past decade, as well as the employment problems we're now seeing.
That said, not all degrees are created equal. The AP reports that students who graduated out of the sciences or other technical fields, such as accounting, were much less likely to be jobless or underemployed than humanities and arts graduates. You know that old saw about how college is just about getting a fancy piece of paper? Not true. For an education to be worth anything these days, it needs to impart skills.
When there were fewer graduates, a generic college degree used to be a valuable credential. Now that the market is flooded, diplomas count less, and specific skills count more. This means that, in many instances, associates and technical degrees may be more financially valuable than a liberal arts degree. After all, some of the fastest growing job categories are expected to be in so-called "middle-skill" positions such as nursing, which do not require a full, four-year education. It's one more sign that, for people seeking to fix America's employment picture, "college for all" is the wrong mantra.
We need to be talking about "skills for all" instead.
Its far better to have marketable skills than education based on paper.
Register for my FREE WEBINAR to learn some truly profitable and marketable skills.
Learn today's real estate secrets!
Make money from foreclosure, short sales, fix and flip, no money down and SO much more!
Drop me an email to register davecapra@comcast.net or check out the 15 minute overview here.
Wednesday, November 20, 2013
Are You Too Old To Pursue Your Dreams?
by Robert Ringer
Courtesy of Early To Rise
When it comes to having the courage to make a major change in one's life, my memory takes me back many years ago to a chance meeting in Palm Springs, California, where a friend and I happened to stop in at a hotel lounge one evening.
Without fanfare, the act for the lounge was introduced -- a stunningly beautiful female singer ("Dionne"). She bore a striking resemblance to the legendary Lena Horne, and carried herself with the style and grace of royalty.
From the moment she began singing, patrons in the small lounge were mesmerized. In this unlikely venue, Dionne received numerous standing ovations, including several encores. I had never seen anything quite like it. There was no question in my mind that I was witnessing the birth of a star.
After finishing her act, Dionne sat at a table and chatted with some acquaintances. Being the young and impetuous entrepreneur that I was, I scribbled a note to her on the back of my business card, asking whether she had a manager, then had a waiter deliver the card to her.
To my pleasant surprise, she sent back a note saying that she, in fact, did not have a manager. After a couple more notes back and forth, I set up an appointment for Dionne to meet with me in my office later in the week.
Our initial meeting went well and, after a couple weeks of negotiations, I succeeded in signing her to a management contract. Among other things, the contract called for me to finance a demo tape, arrange for the production of an album, and use my marketing skills to promote her talents.
In the course of filling out a variety of forms, Dionne told me she was thirty-two years old, which surprised me, because I had guessed her age to be in the mid-twenties. I wondered why someone with her beauty, presence, and, above all, extraordinary talent was not already a household name by age thirty-two.
Dionne explained to me that she had studied classical music in college but had not pursued a career, opting instead for marriage and the life of a traditional housewife. She described the hunger she had felt inside her for so many years, believing that her purpose in life was far different from the way things had unfolded for her up to that point in time.
She realized that she had been given a gift at birth, and a little voice from within kept telling her that it was wrong not to use that gift. Finally, one day, she made up her mind to take bold action to change her circumstances, and thus began her belated singing career.
But the most impressive thing Dionne said to me was in response to my warnings about how tough the music business was and how fickle and unpredictable the public could be. In a characteristically self-confident manner, she smiled and told me that if she never became famous -- if she was relegated to playing in small lounges the rest of her life -- it wouldn't matter to her, because she was doing what she loved.
The stage, no matter how small, was her world, and an appreciative audience, no matter how sparse, her reward. I was really impressed with her purist attitude and her passion for performing.
As things progressed -- cutting a demo tape, making an appearance on a national talk show, and preparing for an album -- it occurred to me that, considering the large investment I was making in Dionne, I had better take out a life-insurance policy on her.
When I explained that she would have to take a physical exam, she wavered a bit, but, because it was called for in our contract, she had no choice. However, when it came time to fill out the insurance application form, she asked if she could first speak with me in private, so we set up a time for her to come to my office.
At the meeting, Dionne assured that, with one exception, everything she had told me about herself was true -- her study of classical music in college, initially playing the role of the traditional housewife, then pursuing her destiny as a singer, and the fact that she had no manager. The part of the story that had not been true, however, was her age.
Given that I had thought she looked younger than the thirty-two years of age she had admitted to, it would be an understatement to say that I was not prepared to hear her real age. Dionne was not thirty-two, and certainly not in her mid-twenties as I had originally supposed. Dionne was forty-seven years old -- a medical miracle!
As things turned out, my relationship with Dionne lasted only about a year, chiefly because I couldn't afford to continue the level of investment I felt was required. The music business gives new meaning to the term dirty, and it became apparent that, despite Dionne's talent, it was going to be a long, hard road to the top -- and long was something that was in very short supply in her case.
When we parted ways, Dionne reiterated her feelings that even if she never became famous, she would be more than satisfied just doing what she loved. I haven't seen her in more than twenty-five years, and the thought that she is about seventy-five years old now is unfathomable to me. And so, too, is the thought that she may even look almost forty by now!
Dionne knew in her heart what was right for her, but I believe that's true of most people. What made her unusual was that, notwithstanding her age, she had the mental toughness to take action to change the course of her life.
She made a shambles of the overused excuse of millions of people who insist that it's too late for them to get started in something new. I would be surprised if she isn't still on stage, still smiling, still getting standing ovations in small lounges across the country.
Dionne's bold action should be an inspiration to those who make the mistake of playing it close to the vest and waiting for something to happen. If you want something to happen, make it happen!
And, remember, you don't have to wait for the perfect pitch in the hopes of hitting a grand-slam home run. Grand-slam home runs don't come along very often. Striking out swinging is a noble action; striking out with the bat on your shoulder represents a lack of action.
Regardless of your age and regardless of your circumstances, take a cue from Dionne and start doing what you love today. You owe it to yourself.
For help on how you too can PURSUE YOUR DREAMS contact davecapra@comcast.net. Keeping the dream alive!
Courtesy of Early To Rise
When it comes to having the courage to make a major change in one's life, my memory takes me back many years ago to a chance meeting in Palm Springs, California, where a friend and I happened to stop in at a hotel lounge one evening.
Without fanfare, the act for the lounge was introduced -- a stunningly beautiful female singer ("Dionne"). She bore a striking resemblance to the legendary Lena Horne, and carried herself with the style and grace of royalty.
From the moment she began singing, patrons in the small lounge were mesmerized. In this unlikely venue, Dionne received numerous standing ovations, including several encores. I had never seen anything quite like it. There was no question in my mind that I was witnessing the birth of a star.
After finishing her act, Dionne sat at a table and chatted with some acquaintances. Being the young and impetuous entrepreneur that I was, I scribbled a note to her on the back of my business card, asking whether she had a manager, then had a waiter deliver the card to her.
To my pleasant surprise, she sent back a note saying that she, in fact, did not have a manager. After a couple more notes back and forth, I set up an appointment for Dionne to meet with me in my office later in the week.
Our initial meeting went well and, after a couple weeks of negotiations, I succeeded in signing her to a management contract. Among other things, the contract called for me to finance a demo tape, arrange for the production of an album, and use my marketing skills to promote her talents.
In the course of filling out a variety of forms, Dionne told me she was thirty-two years old, which surprised me, because I had guessed her age to be in the mid-twenties. I wondered why someone with her beauty, presence, and, above all, extraordinary talent was not already a household name by age thirty-two.
Dionne explained to me that she had studied classical music in college but had not pursued a career, opting instead for marriage and the life of a traditional housewife. She described the hunger she had felt inside her for so many years, believing that her purpose in life was far different from the way things had unfolded for her up to that point in time.
She realized that she had been given a gift at birth, and a little voice from within kept telling her that it was wrong not to use that gift. Finally, one day, she made up her mind to take bold action to change her circumstances, and thus began her belated singing career.
But the most impressive thing Dionne said to me was in response to my warnings about how tough the music business was and how fickle and unpredictable the public could be. In a characteristically self-confident manner, she smiled and told me that if she never became famous -- if she was relegated to playing in small lounges the rest of her life -- it wouldn't matter to her, because she was doing what she loved.
The stage, no matter how small, was her world, and an appreciative audience, no matter how sparse, her reward. I was really impressed with her purist attitude and her passion for performing.
As things progressed -- cutting a demo tape, making an appearance on a national talk show, and preparing for an album -- it occurred to me that, considering the large investment I was making in Dionne, I had better take out a life-insurance policy on her.
When I explained that she would have to take a physical exam, she wavered a bit, but, because it was called for in our contract, she had no choice. However, when it came time to fill out the insurance application form, she asked if she could first speak with me in private, so we set up a time for her to come to my office.
At the meeting, Dionne assured that, with one exception, everything she had told me about herself was true -- her study of classical music in college, initially playing the role of the traditional housewife, then pursuing her destiny as a singer, and the fact that she had no manager. The part of the story that had not been true, however, was her age.
Given that I had thought she looked younger than the thirty-two years of age she had admitted to, it would be an understatement to say that I was not prepared to hear her real age. Dionne was not thirty-two, and certainly not in her mid-twenties as I had originally supposed. Dionne was forty-seven years old -- a medical miracle!
As things turned out, my relationship with Dionne lasted only about a year, chiefly because I couldn't afford to continue the level of investment I felt was required. The music business gives new meaning to the term dirty, and it became apparent that, despite Dionne's talent, it was going to be a long, hard road to the top -- and long was something that was in very short supply in her case.
When we parted ways, Dionne reiterated her feelings that even if she never became famous, she would be more than satisfied just doing what she loved. I haven't seen her in more than twenty-five years, and the thought that she is about seventy-five years old now is unfathomable to me. And so, too, is the thought that she may even look almost forty by now!
Dionne knew in her heart what was right for her, but I believe that's true of most people. What made her unusual was that, notwithstanding her age, she had the mental toughness to take action to change the course of her life.
She made a shambles of the overused excuse of millions of people who insist that it's too late for them to get started in something new. I would be surprised if she isn't still on stage, still smiling, still getting standing ovations in small lounges across the country.
Dionne's bold action should be an inspiration to those who make the mistake of playing it close to the vest and waiting for something to happen. If you want something to happen, make it happen!
And, remember, you don't have to wait for the perfect pitch in the hopes of hitting a grand-slam home run. Grand-slam home runs don't come along very often. Striking out swinging is a noble action; striking out with the bat on your shoulder represents a lack of action.
Regardless of your age and regardless of your circumstances, take a cue from Dionne and start doing what you love today. You owe it to yourself.
For help on how you too can PURSUE YOUR DREAMS contact davecapra@comcast.net. Keeping the dream alive!
Wednesday, June 5, 2013
What is The Durbin Amendment?
When you use your debit, credit or prepaid card at a store, the merchant has to pay an interchange, or “swipe,” fee. The fees vary in proportion to perceived security risk, based on:
Supporters of the Durbin Amendment contend that this opaque pricing system unfairly burdens small merchants and the poor. Interchange fees take up an outsize portion of small business’ budgets, and before Durbin, they were not allowed to offer discounts for cash or enforce credit card minimums. The poor are less likely to see perks like credit card rewards, but still pay more to cover the merchants’ higher costs. Durbin sought to address these problems.
The amendment had two major goals: to introduce competition into the debit processing network, and to cap swipe fees just in case competition didn’t lower prices.It explicitly exempts financial institutions with less than $10 billion in assets, a designation that includes most community and state banks, and all but three credit unions, and will be implemented in full in 2013.
Among the quickly implemented, less controversial provisions:
For further information on The Durbin Amendment and how this landmark decision can impact your business, feel free to contact Dave Capra "The Debtonator" at 888.729.8429 and request a FREE cost analysis of your credit card processing.
- The card used: Debit cards have the lowest interchange fees, while high-limit signature rewards cards have the highest.
- The method of payment: Card-not-present transactions (like buying online) have high fees, while PIN transactions have low fees.
- The type of merchant: Gas stations, small restaurants and small business owners pay the highest fees, while big box retailers like Walmart and Safeway are able to negotiate lower prices.
Supporters of the Durbin Amendment contend that this opaque pricing system unfairly burdens small merchants and the poor. Interchange fees take up an outsize portion of small business’ budgets, and before Durbin, they were not allowed to offer discounts for cash or enforce credit card minimums. The poor are less likely to see perks like credit card rewards, but still pay more to cover the merchants’ higher costs. Durbin sought to address these problems.
The amendment had two major goals: to introduce competition into the debit processing network, and to cap swipe fees just in case competition didn’t lower prices.It explicitly exempts financial institutions with less than $10 billion in assets, a designation that includes most community and state banks, and all but three credit unions, and will be implemented in full in 2013.
Among the quickly implemented, less controversial provisions:
- Merchants can impose a $10 minimum on credit card transactions (this number can be adjusted by the Fed as they see fit). Previously, Visa and MasterCard banned this practice in their merchant agreements.
- Merchants are allowed to give discounts at the register to those who pay with cash or debit cards. Previously, Visa and MasterCard banned this practice in their merchant agreements.
- Cap debit interchange fees at a reasonable rate that would still cover fraud protection costs, and
- Eliminate requirements that debit cards be processed on only one network.
- Debit card interchange rates are capped at 21 cents plus 0.05% of the transaction, with the possibility of an additional cent if certain security criteria are met.
- Each network must be able to be processed on two independent networks, one for signature debit and one for PIN.
For further information on The Durbin Amendment and how this landmark decision can impact your business, feel free to contact Dave Capra "The Debtonator" at 888.729.8429 and request a FREE cost analysis of your credit card processing.
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