Posts Tagged ‘Profit’

50 Ideas For Increasing Profits and Cost Reduction

December 2nd, 2009

Do you want to know 50 great profit building ideas that you can put to immediate use in your business to increase profits and reduce costs?

If yes, read all these ideas that have been implemented by clients and have benefited them giving their businesses dramatic boost in profitability. Most ideas can be put to action immediately. Each idea has the potential to give you many %points increase in net profits.

Research shows profits increase by 4%-56% and costs reduce by 18%-37% within 2 years using the simple 5 step process called the Profit Maps Model. Usually a 5% reduction in cost is adequate to turnaround most loss making businesses.

Businesses can calculate the value of the savings by these 2 simple formulas

» Read more: 50 Ideas For Increasing Profits and Cost Reduction

Steps To Home Business Success

November 25th, 2009

All around the country, people who want more control over their lives are starting home businesses.

In New Orleans, Rick Hart’s home based cajun Cargo ships seafood nation wide. In Palatine, Illinois, Stephaine Heavey works from home designing and selling original patterns for fabric dolls. And in Dallas, Lisa McElya published the Dallas Party & Event Planners Guidebook from the entire first floor of her two-story home.

These three people are living the new American dream of owning a business, but avoiding the high overhead and start-up costs of a commercial location. If the idea of working from home is appealing, but you don’t know where to begin, here is a step-by-step guide.

» Read more: Steps To Home Business Success

Active Vs Passive Income? No Active and Passive Income

June 11th, 2009

Active Income – Income for which services have been performed. This includes wages, tips, salaries, commissions and income from businesses in which there is material participation. Active income is income from any of the following:

– Wages, salary, commissions, bonuses, or other payments for services rendered;
– Profit from a trade or business in which you are a material participant;
– Gain on the sale or other disposition of assets used in an active trade or business;
– Income from intangible property, if your personal efforts significantly contributed to the creation of the property.

Passive income is income from either of the following:

– Any trade or business or income-producing activity in which you did not materially participate; or
– Subject to certain exceptions, all rental activities, whether you materially participate or not.

» Read more: Active Vs Passive Income? No Active and Passive Income

What Do I Need to Know When I Am Buying a Business?

June 7th, 2009

I often wonder if business owners who are looking at purchasing a business take the same sort of outlook as when they are buying something in the stock market.

Let’s take some thoughts from the way Warrant Buffet looks at a company and determine if we could be using those same successful strategies.

Those strategies tend to be summed up in a very concise manner -> make sure you understand what you are buying, ensure the industry prospects are favorable, and if management is going to stay on in some capacity make sure they know what they are doing!

Many owners I meet look to buy into businesses, or franchises for that matter, in an industry they don’t understand. We would say that if you can’t positively feel good about knowing the real sales potential, how expenses occur, what is the cash flow cycle of the business then you should not by look to purchase that business. Naturally many business owners will often get a strong sense of missing a major opportunity – the business owners forgets that Buffett once said ‘above average results… are often produced by doing ordinary things’.

Many business owners like to focus on buying a turn around business, a business that has been either abandoned or poorly managed by its previous owners. While there are clearly some great turn around stories out there, more often than not these transactions become large challenges and financial nightmares. More simply speaking: The business was cheap to buy for a reason!

» Read more: What Do I Need to Know When I Am Buying a Business?