Helpful insights on good business practices, commercial loans, alternative forms of financing and planning your company’s future.

Allied Affiliated Funding Provides $300,000 Working Capital Facility

March 18, 2011

Date Funded 3/17/11

Facility Amount:  $300,000

The Company:  This service company, headquarted in Florida, provides personnel to conduct full-service inspections and consultation to various Energy and Industrial markets such as nuclear power plants.

The IssueIncorporated in late 2009, this company is still fairly new.  To obtain access to larger contracts, the company was seeking a working capital facility to finance their recent growth and the addition of two offices in Pennsylvania and Minnesota.  

The Solution:  This company was referred o Joel Flig by one of Allied’s referral partners, and Allied was quickly able to establish a $300,000 working capital facility.

The Win:   Allied was able to assist this growing company by providing a timely funding to meet their working capital needs.  This “Funding By Allied” will ultimately allow the company to secure larger contracts and focus on building their business.

Small Businesses Continue Cautiously Optimistic Outlook

March 17, 2011

The latest survey tracking the confidence level of U.S. small businesses finds a barely noticeable uptick in optimism; still the stability, lacking in recent years, has given analysts some reason to remain hopeful that levels will continue to remain steady and/or show increases later in 2011.

The National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) unveiled its Index of Small-Business Optimism, which showed a 0.4-point increase for February. This set the reading at 94.5—a historically lackluster, yet solid level compared to recent times.

“This is not a reading that characterizes a strongly rebounding economy,” said NFIB Chief Economist Bill Dunkelberg. “But it is the third-best reading since the fourth-quarter of 2009, when the economy was expanding rapidly. So, it gives us cause for some real optimism. Apparently the future is looking brighter for a few more small business owners, although much will depend on what Congress does this year.”

Key findings in this month’s index include 92% of businesses reporting their credit needs are being met completely, and the vast majority of businesses are uninterested in new credit lines of any kind. Perhaps that’s because conditions are still tight, with somewhat undesirable terms from banks. Or perhaps it’s because only about 9% of respondents to the NFIB survey believe a significant improvement in business conditions will be realized by summer. Still, there appears to be a widening belief among NFIB respondents that conditions will be better by year’s end, and that tentative plans for hiring and spending more toward the end of the year indicate a likely increase in small business activity.

Other interesting findings in the latest index include:

  • A majority of small businesses polled characterize their inventory levels as too low.
  • Only about 4% of respondents reported financing/credit as their top concern.
  • Earnings levels remained steady between January and February, but more than one-quarter of businesses polled registered net-negative earnings.
  • Only 21% of those polled reported higher sales over the last three months; 37% reported a decline.

Brian Shappell, NACM staff writer

http://www.nacm.org/enews.html#7

Top 5 Business Trends 2011

March 7, 2011

Business Trends That Will Affect the Way We Do Business This Year & Beyond

By , About.com Guide

Some of these business trends are sources of good business opportunities; others are trends we need to incorporate into our small business practices to stay competitive and keep or grow our market share. Here are five business trends that small businesses can profit from in 2011.

1. Cloud Computing

Small businesses can directly benefit from the cloud computing1 business trend by using cloud-based applications to cut down on the expense and trouble of doing the same thing themselves. Using someone else’s mail servers through the Internet can be much more cost-effective (and hassle-free) than setting up your own email server in-house, for example, – especially if you don’t have a dedicated IT person or department.

But with more and more large businesses looking to contract out business processes, small businesses are also well-positioned to benefit from the cloud computing trend by picking up some business. It’s not size or location that matters with cloud computing, it’s expertise.

2. Social Media

Social media is one of those business trends your small business can’t afford to ignore. Facebook isn’t just something that kids are using any more and social networks are increasingly becoming business networks as people’s social/personal/business lives converge. Simply put, if that’s where they are, that’s where you need to be if you want to sell more widgets.

That doesn’t necessarily mean that you need to get heavily into social media marketing2 this year (although if you do it properly, it can be a real sales booster). At this time, social media is perhaps best used for small business as a listening post, although it certainly won’t hurt to put up a Facebook page and try to engage customers and get them interested in your products and services.

3. Mobile Computing

Remember when people used to carry around a laptop and a phone? It’s something we’re seeing less and less of because increasingly, what people used to do on their laptops, they now do on their phones. You don’t need a separate computer to browse the Web, work on documents or play games because phones are computers.

One implication of this business trend is that you need to be sure your business is mobile friendly. Are your web pages etc. available in mobile versions so they look good on phone screens? Is it time to get into mobile device advertising? Another implication is that some of the desktops/laptops in your business may be redundant or replaceable with phones.

4. Rise of the Phone App

This business trend is also consumer-driven and closely related to mobile computing. Above, I said the phone is a computer. But it’s also so much more, thanks to the public’s insatiable appetite for phone apps. Business-wise, phone apps are replacing everything from mileage log books through credit card readers. (An iPhone app called Square, for instance, lets you accept credit card payments by plugging a card reader into your iPhone.)

Your small business can benefit from this business trend by using phone apps to eliminate some of your other office equipment and supplies. You might also benefit by creating and selling your own phone app.

5. Corporate Social Responsibility

Corporate social responsibility isn’t just for big businesses; small businesses, too, can reap great benefits by being perceived as good members of the community. It matters to consumers; a 2010 survey by Toronto-based advertising agency Bensimon Byrne found that 66 percent of Canadians said that corporate reputation has a significant impact on the brands they choose (Chris Atchison,Being a good corporate citizen helps small guys compete3The Globe and Mail). And it matters to other businesses, who want to make sure that their suppliers are as green and socially responsible as possible and appropriate to their own corporate images.

The big benefit? It allows small businesses to compete with larger companies and can significantly improve the bottom line. If you don’t already have a corporate social responsibility strategy, this is the year to get one in place and start publicizing your work for good causes.

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