Small business marketing 101: How to boost your business
Small business marketing doesn’t have to be intimidating. In fact, if you take a common sense approach and have a plan, you can succeed with ease.
Small business marketing doesn’t have to be intimidating. In fact, if you take a common sense approach and have a plan, you can succeed with ease.
Many small business owners believe that their business is too small to be targeted by fraudsters and scammers. This could not be further from the truth.
Shareholder buy/sell agreements are the perfect way to ensure your business continues to run smoothly, even when the unexpected occurs.
Having been conditioned to believe that things like ‘7 minute’ abs are possible, who could blame us for expecting to see our ‘brilliant ideas’ to be implemented overnight, and to see results quickly?
Your organisation may be making sales left and right, but if you’re not collecting funds from these transactions, you may find yourself with insufficient cash during critical periods.
Although it’s probably unrealistic to expect to be able to promote and market your business without spending a single cent, effective marketing doesn’t have to cost an arm and a leg.
Part 2 looks at: Getting the format right, how to make content easy to share, measuring your content marketing success, & ways to repurpose, reuse and recycle content.
A family business can be a psychological minefield if you’re not careful. The questions can, and do, keep you up at night. But a simple list of the pros and cons might help you make a decision.
You can be swayed thinking that your new customer is going to be one of your best – so, really, is there that much risk in providing them some credit? You have crosschecked the credit application against an ASIC search and there are no discrepancies – so what could go wrong?
A good invoice is your first step to making sure you get paid. Issuing an invoice should be the first thing you do after you have supplied your goods or service. Here’s what your invoice should contain…