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    Logo Designers - The 5 Point Plan To Designing A Stunning Logo
    If we had a dollar every time somebody gave us their opinions on what makes a great logo we'd be able to at least buy a round or two round The Porter during happy hour (providing they'd allow payment in dollars). So, are there any big secrets to putting together a recognisable brand? Indeed there are my friends, read on if you dare...Sign of the timesBack in the seventies it was reasonable enough for logo designers to simply choose a fat bottomed psychedelic font, add a bit of glitter, stick on a few stars and hey presto you've got yourself a logo. These days clients are a little more discerning and demand you at least use felt tip pens or magic markers to colour in the fiddly bits. So how are things likely to look in ten years time? The canny logo designer always loo
    y down your debt—including repayment of money you have put into the company?
    Calculate all these amounts that pertain to you and add them up. This is the amount of profit from operations you need each year. If you divide this sum by your projected revenue, you get a percentage that shows what proportion of each dollar of sales revenue should be available for these uses. One of the most important uses for this percentage is to set prices that assure the desired level of profitability. Your accountant may gnash his or her teeth over the above paragraph, correctly pointing out that many of these items are business expenses, not profit. I agree. However, for small business owners who are trying to make a transition from a cover-the-costs mentality to a generate-surplus mentality, developing this profit budget is invaluable. These are the very items that they otherwise fail to account for in their planning, their projections and their pricing decisions.

    Need help?
    Several of our books, workshops, and e-tools help you boost your profitability—and to figure out how much profit you need. These include:
    • How to Grow Your Business without Driving Yours
    How To Start A Catering Business
    Are you looking for information on how to start a catering business? Each year hundreds of thousands of dollars are spent on catered parties. Having a catered affair has become a sign of affluence, a way to promote business and a solution to the work-a-day mother. Caterers cover events ranging from lunches, cocktail parties, dinner meetings, birthday parties, graduation parties, wedding receptions, intimate candlelight dinners for two and even breakfast in bed. Catered events have become a growing trend for people of wealth, growing businesses and even the average family. It is an entrepreneurial business that can earn up to $150,000 per year especially in a large city. If a caterer can only work part-time, in a small town, they can still earn an extra $15,000 per year. The
    We all know what profit is: the surplus left over from revenue after covering expenses. Profitability is the measure of profit generated on an ongoing basis. Profit is generally measured in dollar terms; profitability is measured as a percentage of sales. You need to focus on both. For many small businesses, profit equals the owner’s paycheck. If your profitability from operations doesn’t generate enough cash flow, you don’t get paid. The first step is to figure out how much you need to pay yourself—to cover your basic needs and desired lifestyle, savings and retirement, and to pay your taxes. Then, figure out how much money your business needs to bring in to cover its expenses and pay you this amount. This is an eye-opening experience for business owners. Your initial reaction may be dismay: “How can I ever bring in that much revenue? Am I doomed to just scrape by?” But, given your financial goals, you can begin looking seriously at how to restructure your business to give you what you need financially—or else get out of it and go on to something else. Profit is more than your pay Even if you are a sole proprietor, learn to view “profit” as separate from what you pay yourself. Pretend that your company is a corporation, where you earn a regular salary, and that makes a profit beyond that. You get paid to work there, and as owner, you expect a profit dividend. Profit is more than money Here’s how small businesses should look at profitability:

    • Profit is ROI—return on investment. You (and perhaps others) put capital into your business and you expect to get it back someday with a suitable rate of return. For an established yet vulnerable small business, a suitable ROI can be from 20% to 30% per annum.
    • Profit is ROE—return on effort. Many people start their businesses largely with sweat equity, putting in thousands of hours of their own time—unpaid—to get the business up and running. Can you ever recoup the value of your time?
    A business run by the owner should look at profit as the financial return per unit of your effort. For example, suppose you work 2,000 hours in a year, and your company’s profit is $250,000. For that year, you could say that you had a return of $125 for each hour you put in. If you want to operate with greater ease, make sure you don’t increase profit by dint of harder work and longer hours. More on this in chapter 11 of my book “How to Grow Your Business without Driving Yourself Crazy” in the section on “Leverage Your Effort.”
    • Profit is a tuning fork. It tells you how well tuned your business instrument is. When you are doing things right—working productively and cost-effectively, selling the right things to the right people, serving your customers well, treating your own people well—profit is the measure that amply demonstrates that.
    The opposite is also true. When your business is not tuned properly, it sounds the discordant notes of low productivity, unhappy employees, dwindling customer base, and mounting losses. Profit is acknowledgement that the business is tuned properly.
    • Profit is flow. Profit provides the surplus that helps you weather the lean times. Profit allows you to be generous.
    • Profit is energy. Many small business owners say they are more interested in achieving their vision than in making a big profit. But without adequate profitability, you get worn down, burnt-out and discouraged.
    An unprofitable business fails unless outside money is continually pumped in. You cannot make the contribution you want without bringing in a good profit.

    The uses of profit

    As your attitude toward profit shifts from (a) what’s left over that you use to pay yourself, to (b) a resource you use for critical business needs, you can plan your operations so that they regularly generate profit beyond what you pay yourself. You can create a “profit budget” to calculate how much you need to cover such items as:

    • Fund for expansions or upgrades. How much do you need to set aside each year for anticipated upgrades and expansion?
    • Cushion to cover downturns. How much should you set aside each month to provide an insurance policy against short-term financial reverses?
    • Fund for bonuses and financial incentives and profit sharing. What proportion of sales revenue should you allocate to incentives and bonuses in order to motivate top performance?
    • Retirement programs. What proportion of salaries and wages should you set aside to fund retirement plans for you and your employees?
    • Paying taxes. How much must you set aside each month to pay taxes on the profit you anticipate?
    • Debt repayment. How much cash flow must be available after taxes to pay down your debt—including repayment of money you have put into the company?
    Calculate all these amounts that pertain to you and add them up. This is the amount of profit from operations you need each year. If you divide this sum by your projected revenue, you get a percentage that shows what proportion of each dollar of sales revenue should be available for these uses. One of the most important uses for this percentage is to set prices that assure the desired level of profitability. Your accountant may gnash his or her teeth over the above paragraph, correctly pointing out that many of these items are business expenses, not profit. I agree. However, for small business owners who are trying to make a transition from a cover-the-costs mentality to a generate-surplus mentality, developing this profit budget is invaluable. These are the very items that they otherwise fail to account for in their planning, their projections and their pricing decisions.

    Need help?
    Several of our books, workshops, and e-tools help you boost your profitability—and to figure out how much profit you need. These include:
    • How to Grow Your Business without Driving Yourse
    Keeping the Books: Have-to and Ought-to
    Many feel that once an entrepreneur has gotten a business up and going, they are bored by operating the business and ready to move on to their next startup challenge. In fact, the proof of the entrepreneur's mettle is in demonstrating that the plan for the business was sound, and that the strategy was executable.This often requires that they stay with a business for several years to prove the concept, before selling or going public, and possibly bringing in longer-term professional management. In any case, the quality of the records kept by a business can be a significant factor in taking the business to such a "liquidity event," that is valuing the business in a way to convert equity to cash. Some generally accepted principles for this record keeping include:• A busi
    ay yourself. Pretend that your company is a corporation, where you earn a regular salary, and that makes a profit beyond that. You get paid to work there, and as owner, you expect a profit dividend. Profit is more than money Here’s how small businesses should look at profitability:

    • Profit is ROI—return on investment. You (and perhaps others) put capital into your business and you expect to get it back someday with a suitable rate of return. For an established yet vulnerable small business, a suitable ROI can be from 20% to 30% per annum.
    • Profit is ROE—return on effort. Many people start their businesses largely with sweat equity, putting in thousands of hours of their own time—unpaid—to get the business up and running. Can you ever recoup the value of your time?
    A business run by the owner should look at profit as the financial return per unit of your effort. For example, suppose you work 2,000 hours in a year, and your company’s profit is $250,000. For that year, you could say that you had a return of $125 for each hour you put in. If you want to operate with greater ease, make sure you don’t increase profit by dint of harder work and longer hours. More on this in chapter 11 of my book “How to Grow Your Business without Driving Yourself Crazy” in the section on “Leverage Your Effort.”
    • Profit is a tuning fork. It tells you how well tuned your business instrument is. When you are doing things right—working productively and cost-effectively, selling the right things to the right people, serving your customers well, treating your own people well—profit is the measure that amply demonstrates that.
    The opposite is also true. When your business is not tuned properly, it sounds the discordant notes of low productivity, unhappy employees, dwindling customer base, and mounting losses. Profit is acknowledgement that the business is tuned properly.
    • Profit is flow. Profit provides the surplus that helps you weather the lean times. Profit allows you to be generous.
    • Profit is energy. Many small business owners say they are more interested in achieving their vision than in making a big profit. But without adequate profitability, you get worn down, burnt-out and discouraged.
    An unprofitable business fails unless outside money is continually pumped in. You cannot make the contribution you want without bringing in a good profit.

    The uses of profit

    As your attitude toward profit shifts from (a) what’s left over that you use to pay yourself, to (b) a resource you use for critical business needs, you can plan your operations so that they regularly generate profit beyond what you pay yourself. You can create a “profit budget” to calculate how much you need to cover such items as:

    • Fund for expansions or upgrades. How much do you need to set aside each year for anticipated upgrades and expansion?
    • Cushion to cover downturns. How much should you set aside each month to provide an insurance policy against short-term financial reverses?
    • Fund for bonuses and financial incentives and profit sharing. What proportion of sales revenue should you allocate to incentives and bonuses in order to motivate top performance?
    • Retirement programs. What proportion of salaries and wages should you set aside to fund retirement plans for you and your employees?
    • Paying taxes. How much must you set aside each month to pay taxes on the profit you anticipate?
    • Debt repayment. How much cash flow must be available after taxes to pay down your debt—including repayment of money you have put into the company?
    Calculate all these amounts that pertain to you and add them up. This is the amount of profit from operations you need each year. If you divide this sum by your projected revenue, you get a percentage that shows what proportion of each dollar of sales revenue should be available for these uses. One of the most important uses for this percentage is to set prices that assure the desired level of profitability. Your accountant may gnash his or her teeth over the above paragraph, correctly pointing out that many of these items are business expenses, not profit. I agree. However, for small business owners who are trying to make a transition from a cover-the-costs mentality to a generate-surplus mentality, developing this profit budget is invaluable. These are the very items that they otherwise fail to account for in their planning, their projections and their pricing decisions.

    Need help?
    Several of our books, workshops, and e-tools help you boost your profitability—and to figure out how much profit you need. These include:
    • How to Grow Your Business without Driving Yours
    Rigs on Biz...Relationships, Your Secret Tie Breaker
    Have you ever wondered, how come the other guy got the business? Great Biz Relationships are the answer.You know that, your product is as good, your service is as good and your price is as good as the other guy’s. But, you didn’t get the business—Biz Relationships again. Today, ya gotta have a tiebreaker to get the business, and outstanding Biz Relationships is a magnificent tiebreaker. Let’s look at this from the perspective of you being the customer.So many business owners have told me, “When it all goes to crap, that’s when I know who my real suppliers are.” They continue to say, “That’s when relationships really matter!” Don’t you feel the same way? Sure suppliers can fill the pipeline, but what about when supply is disrupted?If you know, understand and lik
    urs. More on this in chapter 11 of my book “How to Grow Your Business without Driving Yourself Crazy” in the section on “Leverage Your Effort.”
    • Profit is a tuning fork. It tells you how well tuned your business instrument is. When you are doing things right—working productively and cost-effectively, selling the right things to the right people, serving your customers well, treating your own people well—profit is the measure that amply demonstrates that.
    The opposite is also true. When your business is not tuned properly, it sounds the discordant notes of low productivity, unhappy employees, dwindling customer base, and mounting losses. Profit is acknowledgement that the business is tuned properly.
    • Profit is flow. Profit provides the surplus that helps you weather the lean times. Profit allows you to be generous.
    • Profit is energy. Many small business owners say they are more interested in achieving their vision than in making a big profit. But without adequate profitability, you get worn down, burnt-out and discouraged.
    An unprofitable business fails unless outside money is continually pumped in. You cannot make the contribution you want without bringing in a good profit.

    The uses of profit

    As your attitude toward profit shifts from (a) what’s left over that you use to pay yourself, to (b) a resource you use for critical business needs, you can plan your operations so that they regularly generate profit beyond what you pay yourself. You can create a “profit budget” to calculate how much you need to cover such items as:

    • Fund for expansions or upgrades. How much do you need to set aside each year for anticipated upgrades and expansion?
    • Cushion to cover downturns. How much should you set aside each month to provide an insurance policy against short-term financial reverses?
    • Fund for bonuses and financial incentives and profit sharing. What proportion of sales revenue should you allocate to incentives and bonuses in order to motivate top performance?
    • Retirement programs. What proportion of salaries and wages should you set aside to fund retirement plans for you and your employees?
    • Paying taxes. How much must you set aside each month to pay taxes on the profit you anticipate?
    • Debt repayment. How much cash flow must be available after taxes to pay down your debt—including repayment of money you have put into the company?
    Calculate all these amounts that pertain to you and add them up. This is the amount of profit from operations you need each year. If you divide this sum by your projected revenue, you get a percentage that shows what proportion of each dollar of sales revenue should be available for these uses. One of the most important uses for this percentage is to set prices that assure the desired level of profitability. Your accountant may gnash his or her teeth over the above paragraph, correctly pointing out that many of these items are business expenses, not profit. I agree. However, for small business owners who are trying to make a transition from a cover-the-costs mentality to a generate-surplus mentality, developing this profit budget is invaluable. These are the very items that they otherwise fail to account for in their planning, their projections and their pricing decisions.

    Need help?
    Several of our books, workshops, and e-tools help you boost your profitability—and to figure out how much profit you need. These include:
    • How to Grow Your Business without Driving Yours
    The Advancement in an Individuals Ability to Print Postage Stamps
    When the USPS allowed customers to print postage stamps from online sources, they opened up a whole new world. Almost everyone has a need for postage at one point or another. It is safe to say that everyone will use at least one stamp in their lifetime. Before online postage a person had to go to the post office or other approved retailer to get a postage stamp. Sometimes this could be rather inconvenient and even annoying. With the availability to print postage stamps at home people are finding postage is no longer adding another errand to their day. They can easily and quickly get the postage they need right in the comfort of their own home.There has been a way to print postage stamps for quite some time. Postage meters allow a person to print their own postage, too
    without bringing in a good profit.

    The uses of profit

    As your attitude toward profit shifts from (a) what’s left over that you use to pay yourself, to (b) a resource you use for critical business needs, you can plan your operations so that they regularly generate profit beyond what you pay yourself. You can create a “profit budget” to calculate how much you need to cover such items as:

    • Fund for expansions or upgrades. How much do you need to set aside each year for anticipated upgrades and expansion?
    • Cushion to cover downturns. How much should you set aside each month to provide an insurance policy against short-term financial reverses?
    • Fund for bonuses and financial incentives and profit sharing. What proportion of sales revenue should you allocate to incentives and bonuses in order to motivate top performance?
    • Retirement programs. What proportion of salaries and wages should you set aside to fund retirement plans for you and your employees?
    • Paying taxes. How much must you set aside each month to pay taxes on the profit you anticipate?
    • Debt repayment. How much cash flow must be available after taxes to pay down your debt—including repayment of money you have put into the company?
    Calculate all these amounts that pertain to you and add them up. This is the amount of profit from operations you need each year. If you divide this sum by your projected revenue, you get a percentage that shows what proportion of each dollar of sales revenue should be available for these uses. One of the most important uses for this percentage is to set prices that assure the desired level of profitability. Your accountant may gnash his or her teeth over the above paragraph, correctly pointing out that many of these items are business expenses, not profit. I agree. However, for small business owners who are trying to make a transition from a cover-the-costs mentality to a generate-surplus mentality, developing this profit budget is invaluable. These are the very items that they otherwise fail to account for in their planning, their projections and their pricing decisions.

    Need help?
    Several of our books, workshops, and e-tools help you boost your profitability—and to figure out how much profit you need. These include:
    • How to Grow Your Business without Driving Yours
    Information Technology (IT) Job Descriptions
    The various types of jobs available to computer-savvy students and young people are increasing by the day. Students graduating from arts and science streams are learning computer programs to improve their IT skills. In fact, knowledge of computer software that is widely used for a range of applications is becoming a must-have skill for the job applicant.For instance, in geological jobs, the use of spatial technology computer applications is essential. The Global Positioning System (GPS) technology is used by a number of other professionals such as law enforcement agencies. It can be used to locate the earth’s resources, track vehicular movement, keep track of employees’ position and pace and check on flight movement across the nation.In a similar way, technology has a
    y down your debt—including repayment of money you have put into the company?
    Calculate all these amounts that pertain to you and add them up. This is the amount of profit from operations you need each year. If you divide this sum by your projected revenue, you get a percentage that shows what proportion of each dollar of sales revenue should be available for these uses. One of the most important uses for this percentage is to set prices that assure the desired level of profitability. Your accountant may gnash his or her teeth over the above paragraph, correctly pointing out that many of these items are business expenses, not profit. I agree. However, for small business owners who are trying to make a transition from a cover-the-costs mentality to a generate-surplus mentality, developing this profit budget is invaluable. These are the very items that they otherwise fail to account for in their planning, their projections and their pricing decisions.

    Need help?
    Several of our books, workshops, and e-tools help you boost your profitability—and to figure out how much profit you need. These include:
    • How to Grow Your Business without Driving Yourself Crazy, esp. Chapter 13, “Build a Culture of Profitability” and Chapter 15, “Calculate the Benefit and Cost.”
    • “Build a Culture of Profitability” available as e-book and tel-online workshop.
    • “Sources and Uses of Cash” template. A crucial tool in projecting cash flow.
    • “Success in 2007” plan workshop helps you put profit in the context of all other facets of your business.

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