Posts tagged "network"

New Business Loans: Start Your Business With Adequate Finance

New Business Loans: Start Your Business With Adequate Finance

Starting a new business is a feat that you can achieve only if you have the kind of capital that goes into it. You need to have property where your office can be built, you need to construct the office, you need to buy machinery, you need to hire workers…the list goes on and on. Any sort of cash shortages can put a dent on your project. To make sure your dream business starts successfully, you will have to acquire abundant financial resources. This can be done through a new business loan.

A new business loan covers various expenses that are incurred in starting a business venture:

* Office space/ rent

* Purchase of equipments, furniture and machineries

* Sales promotion/ advertising

* Recruiting employees

* Operating expenses

* Utilities

* Registration process

While applying for a new business loan, make sure you have all the necessary documents to show your lenders. You should provide details of your business plan- what kind of business it is, the location that you have chosen for your office, the estimated expense and manpower, and such related information.

New business loans are available under both secured and unsecured options. If you are ready to provide collateral- maybe your house, real estate or any high value asset- then you can go for a secured new business loan. This will get you a large loan amount- up to a £1000000 at a low interest rate. Repayment tenure can last for a period up to 30 years. If you are not in a position to provide security or do not need such a large amount, then an unsecured form can be availed. The loan amount may be limited to £250000 with a repayment term that could extend up to10 years. However, the rate of interest charged on this type is higher than the secured form.

New business loans can help realize that long-cherished ambition of starting a new business. Lots of lending institutions are providing them so you don’t have to worry about choices. If you want to look for affordable rates, you can go online and compare the free quotes of various lenders.

Michael T.Brian is the author of this article. He is Masters in Business Administration and expert in finance. He writes about various finance related topics. To find new business loans, business loans, business start up loans, secured business loans visit http://www.find-business-loans.co.uk/

Worktopia creatr John Arena
loans for a business

Image by Esthr
you saw the site (previous photo); now here’s the guy who built the company.

Founder John Arenas previously started another office-space company, called Stratis Business Centers, back in 1997. In the 80’s he had started off working for Turner Construction and then for Citigroup’s workout loan group, so he had a good understanding of real estate, and specifically of office space, from a practical and a financial/valuation point of view. His initial idea was to create a network of office space facilities that would license short-term space (hourly, monthly and annually) to customers nationwide as an alternative to conventional long-term lease commitments. In order to grow without much capital (since such an ambitious idea was tough to fund), he created a franchise network. And in order to offer something special, Stratis developed the technology to control the office space and equipment centrally, including interfaces with Nortel phone systems, Pitney Bowes meters and Konica copiers as well as aits own proprietary meeting room reservation system. He ended up selling Stratis to Regus, the temporary-space giant, and left to start Worktopia in early 2004.
….
In essence, just as eBay allowed people to turn stuff collecting dust in attics into valuable inventory , Worktopia is allowing not just unused office space, but the chunks of time that any particular piece of office space is unused, to be turned into valuable inventory. Industries such as airlines – notably! – and hotels, where fixed costs were higher, got into this early on; they couldn’t afford to hold airplane seats or rooms and not use them. Whereas most companies treat real estate as an unoptimized asset, and only recently started thinking about it strategically. How can we get revenue out of that fancy training center the chairman ordered, but that we use only a few times a year? What about the fourth floor, that we have been going to expand into every year since 2001? Or alternatively, should we really lease that new building, when we can place our salespeople in a temporary office and adjust the space to match our pace?

Despite his familiarity with the market, Arenas commissioned a study to figure out exactly how people procure short-term space and how they want to. In short, says Arenas, “They want a sense of control. They want real-time information to compare alternatives, from a trusted, unbiased source. Typically, they’re buying with a leadtime of weeks – not two years like for a convention – and they don’t have time to do a lot of research.” Until now, there was no marketplace where they could find this. Many of them resort to calling hotels directly – hardly an unbiased source – or rely on local colleagues.

Enter Worktopia – which opened to the public last June. So far it is handling about 12,00 searches – resulting in million in transactions – per month. Its revenues include 8 to 10 percent commissions on temporary office space (payable by the supplier). Hotels and other meeting-room marketers can also subscribe for 00 to 00 per hotel per year for a meeting room marketing service, which allows the hotels to offer the rooms commission-free (and overcomes the touchy issue that hotels make much of their money not on the meeting rooms but on the ancillary services and accommodations).

Its users are grateful; much of the challenge is at the other hand. Even among big suppliers such as hotel chains, only Hyatt and Hilton have central databases of availability. Worktopia is currently developing a variety of analytical tools for its users, along with hosted services powered by Worktopia for big providers of office space and ultimately other kinds of short-term business resources.

Finding the long tail of customers is relatively easy compared with finding the long tail of suppliers – and certifying quality. For now, Worktopia is building out a supplier base through industry contacts, but eventually it will probably use customer feedback to create a reputation system, following the lead of many other marketplaces.

7 comments - What do you think?
Posted by xblackmindx - November 29, 2010 at 3:08 am

Categories: Loans For A Business   Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Dare To Be Different!

Adding value to your site, service, or product is one of the most over looked and under rated strategies for improving your internet business.

The internet and modern technology makes it possible for anyone to offer that little something extra that nobody else does, and usually at no additional cost.

Why: First, let’s look at why this is a good business practice.

It’s a good thing to do because you will make more money!

What: Now let’s look at what value adding is!

Value adding is giving surprise high quality and useful gifts.
It’s giving something that your competitors aren’t offering.
It’s promising the world and delivering the universe.
It’s taking care of your clients and always providing something that your clients need and want, when and where they want it.

How: Now let’s look at the different ways we can do this.

If you receive a free gift from someone when you don’t expect it, do you remember that person?
Answer; yes usually.
How can we do this?
Look at the example below for an idea!

If you subscribe to a news letter or ezine, what do you expect?
You expect to get what you subscribed for, right?
Now imagine that you subscribed for a newsletter that distributes information about Poodle breading in France, and when you open the conformation email you find you’ve also received a free ebook containing 20 poodle grooming tips and Grandmas secret poodle pampering techniques. (a book that normally sells for $29)
Wouldn’t that make you more likely to open and read the next issue and the next etc?
That’s one simple example, but where do you get the ebook from? You make it! If you are distributing a poodle breeding newsletter, you might know something about grooming, or know some people that could help you put together the necessary information. Then you can wrap that up in an ebook cover and then send it around to a variety of sites that will post it for you for free and you can sell on your own site, if you have one. (I can see that there are several more articles just on making e-books, posting them on other people’s sites, and setting up a shop front.)

Back to the Poodles! So you can see that by offering this free gift you have achieved several things.
1. You have developed a product (at no cost to you) that you can sell and make a profit on.
2. You have used that product to increase the chances of your new subscriber opening your next email.
3. You have promoted you site/service to other internet marketers that you may wish to do a joint venture with at some time. (see my article on Joint ventures)

Another way to add value for less effort is to offer a 110 percent guarantee instead of a 100 percent.

Another is to make your 20 tips into 30 or more etc, get the idea? It’s all just a matter of finding ways that you can give more.

The more you give the more you will receive.

Be the first to comment - What do you think?
Posted by xblackmindx - March 9, 2010 at 6:34 am

Categories: Business, Online, Service   Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,