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Posts Tagged ‘steven fisher’


#GrowSmartBiz Video: SmallBiz Quick Tips: 10 Rules for Killer Business Cards – Steven Fisher

September 30th, 2009 ::


About Steve Fisher:

Steve currently is Managing Partner of AppSolve. In its 10th year, Appsolve specializes in user experience design, enterprise web development and online community management. Through AppSolve, he works with Network Solutions to manage its online small business community. Prior to that he was founder and CEO of Slipstream Air, a software provider to the private air travel industry. It was sold in 2008 to JIT Airline Resources, which rebranded as Slipstream Aviation Software. Steve has also held key leadership positions at Global Network Solutions, OnSite Technologies, IKON, USConnect, Ryland and Wells Fargo.

He has published several e-books on Small Business Management, User Experience, Online Marketing and Innovation. Currently, he is working on his first book, “101 Rules for Entrepreneurs” slated for a Spring 2010 release.

He holds a Bachelor of Science in Business from University of Baltimore and on a personal note he is a private pilot, musician and concert photographer. He cur¬rently resides in Columbia, MD, USA.

You can reach out to Steven Fisher at the Network Solutions Blog

Happy Labor Day and Some of the Best of Grow Smart Business

September 7th, 2009 ::

Here in the United States we are celebrating Labor Day which is the “unofficial end of summer” and when everyone is heading back from summer vacation ready to get back to work. We won’t be publishing anything else today but in the mean time there are two things we wanted to share with you:

Grow Smart Business Conference – Register Now!

Don’t forget to register for the first Grow Smart Business conference coming up on Sept 29 in Washington, DC at the Renaissance Hotel. Here is the summary on the event:

Join us for a premier one-day event featuring renowned small business leaders and well-known industry experts, including keynote speaker Chris Anderson.

Small business owners and entrepreneurs should attend to learn how to overcome challenges that all small businesses face. Attendees will hear from an outstanding group of panelists for concrete takeaways including:

  • Proven strategies for business growth despite the current economy
  • Executable, cost-effective ways to market and promote their businesses
  • Knowledge of what banks believe is the key to securing small business financing
  • Actionable ideas for integrating and leveraging social media into existing marketing and communications efforts

Presented By:

Great Content from the Grow Smart Business bloggers and contributors

Many of you come to the blog on a regular basis and know that Michael Dougherty recently joined the blog team on a regular basis. You might not be aware that we have a growing group of “Smart Business Contributors” who write on their specific area of expertise in small business. This is why we thought we would share some great posts from Grow Smart Business that you might have missed:

A Parable On Getting Your First Website by Michael Dougherty

The Entrepreneur’s Handbook – Start with these 10 Resources For First Time Entrepreneurs by Steven Fisher

What to do if you are downsized by Lorne Epstein

Evian babies in your face. Just like their GenX parents by Jessie Newburn

Email Marketing and You: So Happy Together by Monika Jansen

Rules for Entrepreneurs #7 – If You Never Ask, They Can Never Tell You "Yes"

August 4th, 2009 ::

“If you don’t really take the time to learn about yourself and improve, you will never realize your full potential.”

-Steven Fisher (2009)

Sure, I guess I can create my own quote book, heck I am creating my own rule book based on a decade of entrepreneurial experiences (good and bad) so I know that if you don’t try and know yourself better and overcome the things you are weak at you will never be able to realize your full potential.

This is why I give you Rule #7 – If You Never Ask, They Can Never Say Yes

That sounds weird doesn’t it? Usually you hear the statement “you should always ask because the worst they can say is “no”. In turn, we are conditioned in sales to turn a “no” into “yes” yet we never address the anxiety many people feel when having to ask for something, especially if it is for free. During the last year I have been part of a project that is non-profit and we are kind of expected to ask for free stuff (free time, free materials, free everything) and if you are not used to asking it can be kind of uncomfortable.

I am the first to admit it made me really nervous and that was because I didn’t have the confidence in what I was asking and the almost cocky believe that people should believe in my cause. Some times I would put that call or email off being the procrastinator or then just sounding so nervous with the person I pretty much said “no” for them before they got a chance to say “yes”.

It was only when I started to see others around me getting things they asked for that it started to occur to me that having them say “no” was not the end of the world because there was someone else out there who that would support my cause.

This leads my to how you can apply this rule to your own business, be it for-profit or non-profit. Always ask whether it be for the sale, for a resource or even a little extra mayo on your sandwich. Here are three rules to apply:

1.) A Pleasant Demeanor goes a long way – Ever try and get some one to do something for you when you are in an angry mood? Yeah, the ticket agents at the airport love it when you are like that and can magically lose your luggage if you are a real jerk. Being nice is the first step and puts people in the same frame of mind especially when you can make them feel better from an early bad mood they got from a previous person.

2.) Believe in your product/service or cause comes through – If you don’t believe then they surely won’t. Your passion or boredom comes through in your voice and your body language and you might not even know it. Believe in what you do and others will want to be a part of it.

3.) Find other resources to give you a mental backup plan – It is when you might not have another place to ask or go is when you might be your worst and an air of desperation might come through. Have a backup plan in your mind so you come across as you need me more than I need you and in many cases they will probably say “Yes”

So go out and start asking. You will be amazed with the results, I guarantee it.

Unintentional Entrepreneur Event in Atlanta with Network Solutions

July 22nd, 2009 ::

Many of you might not have heard of a new blog from Network Solutions called the Unintentional Entrepreneur. The Unintentional Entrepreneur is focused on providing tips and advice on accounting and finance for small business owners. They also are starting events around the country called, you guessed it - The Unintentional Entrepreneur. Here are the details for the Atlanta event coming up on Wednesday July 15, 2009:

Unintentional Entrepreneur: Atlanta
The 3rd stop of a 5 city tour of the Unintentional Entrepreneur will make its way to Atlanta on 7-28.   The sponsor of the event, Network Solutions, is introducing small business owners and prospective entrepreneurs to the available resources and tools that they can take advantage of right now to be successful in today’s economic environment.

Network Solutions helps small business owners achieve their goals by providing tools and resources to start, grow, and manage their businesses online. Network Solutions has been involved with the Internet since its inception and leverages this experience and expertise to help businesses succeed in an increasingly digital world. Randy Windsor, director of Online Marketing at Network Solutions, will speak about noticeable trends that small businesses are using online today to get the most out of the web.

Also speaking on July 28, Brent Leary, Co-founder and Partner of CRM Essentials LLC, a Customer Relationship Management consulting/advisory firm, will focus on small and mid-size enterprises.  He hosts the Technology for Business Sake program, which airs on Business Talk 1160AM andwww.BusinessTechnologyRadio.com. His popular blog can be found at www.brentleary.com.

Technology For Business Sake is a radio program aimed specifically at those small business folks who are trying to understand the technology maze and figure out what tools, services and applications can help make them more productive and profitable.

Network Solutions has enlisted the help of the Gwinnett County Chamber of Commerce to host this event.  Their state of the art educational room will comfortably fit 150 attendees.  The event will take place between 4:00 and 7:00 at 6500 Sugarloaf Parkway, Duluth GA.  Pizza, beer and soft drinks will be served during the event to registered participants.   Limited space is available for this event.  Please register by 7-27 at http://ueatl.eventbrite.com.

For more information contact Tony Casteel, local marketing manager, Network Solutions at 770-309-4154, or by e-mail at  tony.casteel@networksolutions.com

Rules for Entrepreneurs #4 – 5 Ways to Avoid Small Business Death by $100 Expenses

June 10th, 2009 ::

This article was originally posted on Solutions Are Power, but the series is now residing on Grow Smart Business.

broken-piggy-bank-smallWhen I started my first business as an adult and left the warm blanket of a steady paycheck I also left the fuzzy fun of expense reports. Those detailed reports on excel spreadsheets full of stapled pages of photocopied receipts that we got paid back on eventually (usually in 2-4 weeks) and were part of the work experience when you traveled or did anything company/client related.

Back then they were a tedious chore because I really wished I had a corporate credit card but that was only available to the executives. However, I never noticed how those expenses added up because they weren’t mine and they were usually billed back to the client.

Then I launched my first business.

Eyes Wide Shut

I started my own business and my eyes were wide open – shut to the realities of how quickly things add up. I thought I was being conservative and budget conscious but I was still doing lots of business lunches, buying lunch for the team a few times a week, paying for drinks on Friday because I thought I was the “cool boss”. We sponsored various events at small levels because we were more concerned with seeing our logo out there than actually demanding that there be some type of measurable return. Very soon the $50 here, $50 there, $100 for this sponsorship, $250 for that sponsorship and lots of $75 for happy hour rounds started to really add up and we were spending $2000-4000 a month for non-sensical things but it didn’t stop until the party was over and we burned out.

Burn Rate? More like “Burn Out Rate”

You might have heard of the term “burn rate” during investment conversations and discovered that it is the amount spent on a monthly basis that you burn through and includes fixed and estimated variable expenses. The purpose of knowing this number for investors is to understand how much money you would burn based on the level of growth as you scale up to reach certain revenue/customer milestones. This concept can be applied to any business regardless of whether you get outside investment because it will be readily apparent in a cash flow statement when you would run out of money based on current operations if you are spending more than you earn. When I started the business, I had a fair amount of savings stocked away and as I ramped up and felt that I need to quickly scale to “run with the bulls” so I felt I was spending money to make money. Really I was just spending money. Clients would sign with me regardless if I took them to a coffee house or a fancy steak house.

These little expenses felt like paper cuts that all together were causing the company to bleed out and be on the verge of death. Things had to change.

5 Ways to Avoid the $100 Business Expense “Paper Cut Bleed Out”

Paper cuts are unexpected and happen in the worst places. The shallow ones sting and bleed a little bit. The deep ones bleed a lot more than you think. If you had 100 or 1000 of them happen at once, you could actually bleed out and die. I apologize for the morbid description but there is no better analogy than a paper cut.

We realized that since we were like most companies that did not have investors, our high burn rate was leading us down the path of burning out. We decided at that moment that we must first get our expenses under control then evaluate or correlate expenses to things that helped our business grow. We came up with five simple ways to make things work:

1.) Know your burn rate

2.) Question the expense before you spend it

3.) Budget for recurring expense amounts each month and keep it in check

4.) Find cheaper alternatives to off site meetings – If you meet a client off site, coffee is much cheaper than a meal and really cheaper than rounds of cocktails

5.) Get your employees to think creatively and reward them with saving the company money – if they can save $500 for you, give them $50 extra

How Have You Prevented Burn Rate “Burn Out”?

These five ways seem like no-brainers but you would be surprised how hard it is to actually admit you have a problem and understand the depth of it in order to make the change.

Rules for Entrepreneurs #3: Avoid Founderitis at All Costs

June 9th, 2009 ::

This article was originally posted on Solutions Are Power, but the series is now residing on Grow Smart Business.

leadershipbuttonIn this next rule in our series “Rules for Entrepreneurs”, Rule #3 deals with the affliction of “Founderitis”. Don’t know what it is? Sound like a weird dermal disease?

Wikipedia defines Founderitis as “the unhealthy condition that afflicts many companies whose founders maintain a stranglehold on organizational leadership. While many companies owe their success — and in fact their very existence — to their founders, those same individuals can create chaos that ultimately leads to the organization’s collapse. The challenge to founding CEOs and boards of directors is to take steps to change conflict and chaos into opportunities for growth.”

Founders, because they are not detail-oriented and are driven by their exclusive devotion to mission, often disdain management tasks. At some point, staff members begin to complain to the CEO or perhaps even directly to the board, calling for more systems to be established. Founders, comments Linnell, may “see all such challenges as malicious or wrongheaded or an abysmal waste of time in the face of the real (mission) work of the organization. This can lead to all-out battles between the champions of mission and the champions of systems.

While this may not be a disease that makes you sick, you sure can feel stressed and nauseous working for someone with this “affliction”. Unfortunately, I was someone who used to have this problem in a bad way. Over time I have learned that hiring people smarter than you and getting the hell out of their way is usually the best way to build a company. More on that topic in a future “Rules for Entrepreneurs”.

Symptoms of a Larger Disease that can Kill Your Company

Founder’s syndrome manifests in numerous ways. The Center for Association Leadership has an excellent list of the symptoms. The leader who suffers from founderitis exhibits these types of behaviors:

  • Gives short shrift to planning activities, staff meetings, and administrative policies;
  • Is reluctant to relinquish strategies and procedures that worked in the past, although circumstances may dictate new approaches;
  • Neglects to institute new systems, even though the board has formally requested them;
  • Seeks and accepts little input from others in making decisions;
  • Sees all challenges as hostile and drives away staff and board members perceived as disloyal; and
  • Refuses to delegate authority.

Treat the Personality not the Problem

Managing through a fit of founderitis requires a tricky mixture of growth opportunities, board involvement, and a firm delivery method. In the mean time, here are a few things you MUST do to beginning shed the affliction of Founderitis from infecting your company:

  • Respect the need for planning activities, staff meetings, and administrative policies;
  • Realize that as the company grows circumstances may dictate new approaches;
  • Institute new systems with approval of your board;
  • Seeks and accepts input from others in making decisions;
  • Delegate, Delegate, Delegate
  • Accept the fact that you can’t do everything themselves and you need to bring on people whose strengths complement your own.
  • Separation of your identity and goals from your role as a founder.
  • Accept that the organization’s success no longer depends solely on your creativity and decisions but instead requires the input of partners who are equally or perhaps more skilled than you.
  • Dance around the room to let things loose
  • Shift responsibilities to worthy successors and trust them to fail and succeed.

Don’t worry if you can’t over come this there is a simple solution. Get your board to hire a professional CEO and take a long vacation.

Do you have Founderitis and not even know it?

Do you see yourself in these words? Have an errie feeling that you might be like this or working in an environment where you engender Founderitis?

First, read this article again and see how many symptoms you may have already. If you notice some, ask those around you if you fit this profile. Tell them it is ok to tell you if you do and be very honest. If you are a classic case of Founderitis then go back one section in this post and follow the instructions on beginning to let go. This is not something that will happen over night. It took you all your life to build up these habits and it can take just that long to work them out of your system.

Photo Source: iStockPhoto

Rules for Entrepreneurs #2: Pay Yourself First

June 9th, 2009 ::

This article was originally posted on Solutions Are Power, but the series is now residing on Grow Smart Business.

I originally wrote this on VentureFiles which is now part of the Technosailor Galaxy of Blogs but as Aaron Brazell, Editor and fearless leader of Technosailor.com said, this post is more relevant than ever when you are trying to keep your business running and growing (even in this economy). I originally wrote the post about a year ago so below is the original post and after that is an update that tries to do a little reflection on doing this during the current state of the economy.

Original Post:

Over the last 9 years and two startups I have learned many things and screwed up royally in some cases. This series is about providing you best practices of lessons learned and avoiding the mistakes I have already made.

In the past, I have had good years and bad years. When you have employees, they expect to be paid and when you mess with payroll (and payroll taxes, but that is a post for another time) you create such a negative culture that nothing will get done.

With that said, when you are starting your business regardless if it is a service or product company, you will have startup costs and probably forgo paying yourself for 6-12 months to keep growing the business. That is fine and to be expected. What you should not do (and what I did) is keep adding staff and sacrifice your own salary in the name of growth. If you keep going like that and have a bad quarter you will have nothing saved for a rainy day and if the business fails you will probably be in immense debt and get nothing out of the business.

Granted, the balance between growth and cash flow is a tenuous one but it is one thing you should never defer to someone else in beginning. Plus, there is a difference between creating a lifestyle business and an enterprise. A lifestyle business is really making enough money for yourself and having some contractors or 1-2 people that gives you a good salary but is more about freedom. An enterprise is a business that scales and gets big over time but you will be working intense amounts in the beginning but will need to hire those smarter than you with the intention that you are looking for an exit and will have time for freedom when you cash out.

So when you are growing the business you should work the first 6-12 months paying off the initial capital expenses and getting about 6 months of cash flow for yourself before you hire anyone else. Once you have that done, start paying yourself something, even if it is small and will ramp up over six months, pay yourself first. This will get you in the habit of being committed to making the business pay for itself and you so you are not worrying about living month to month and lets you find some resources to help you deliver while you continue to sell and grow the business.

Once you are looking at hiring someone use these two rules as a starting basis:

- Have six months of payroll for that person in the bank on top of your salary

- Have 90 days of projects or sales committed for that person to deliver so they not only have something to do but are earning their keep.

You may have to be conservative at first in your growth but in the end you will scale better and create a business that is focused on delivery and customer service without putting you and your employees on a cash flow roller coaster.

Update, One Year Later:

When I read that post I reflect on the mistakes of past and having had a business through the dot com bust and subsequent recession. Granted, it was not as deep or as long as this one, but the word that comes to mind is, balance. And while it holds true that you need to pay yourself first before you keep growing, the original post was written with the tone of growth and not reduction which may be more likely these days.

When you are growing you are tempted to throw caution to the wind and sacrifice your pay in order to hire that extra person that keeps the idea factory turning out wonderful widgets. When times are good and the sales are going upward, your risk threshold increases. When times are tight, you might feel like you are holding on with your fingertips to a 5,000 overhang below you and no way to see up over the ledge. In these cases, it is natural for people have a tendency to pull WAY back into their shells and not hire when they know they need to or lay people off in order to stay cash positive. In this case, you might sacrifice your entire salary to keep people on board. While this might sound noble, I have done this and it usually ends badly.

This is where the word “balance” comes in.

You can only go so far to reduce staff and pile tasks up on people that are probably already overworked, but cutting down too much can keep you from potentially delivering to clients in the end making things worse. Look to reduce costs in other ways, like office services you may not critically need, or ask if people would volunteer (including you) to take a 5% pay cut so we can keep everyone and deliver at the level of quality clients have come to expect so we can keep our clients happy and ride out this recession together.