Archive for November, 2007

Delaware Incorporation

Monday, November 26th, 2007

Considering Incorporation in Delware? Think Delaware South and Delaware West

Delaware incorporation has long enjoyed a reputation as the choice for many businesses, but that is changing as other states make efforts to foster a business-friendly environment for incorporation, says a new article released by MaxFilings Online Incorporation Service.

The Delaware incorporation article looks at points that businesses should consider when deciding where to incorporate, helping you compare and contrast incorporation in Delaware, Nevada and Florida.

You may also be interested to learn when none of these states may be the best choice for incorporation. Check out the article here: Where to Incorporate: The 3-Man Fight between Delaware, Delaware West and Delaware South

Do you Really Need Venture Capital?

Tuesday, November 6th, 2007

By Jawwad Farid

Yes to have a pot of money simplifies life and removes a number of complications, but is that the right short term goal? The amount of time that you spend searching for venture capital, may be better utilized working with customers, building a product, figuring out how to get to revenues and getting your business closer to your next big productive milestone.

I say this because I have two different experiences. My first involved spending more than two years looking for elusive VC cash, ignoring real customers who could have supported and carried the business further. End result – death by business plan rewrites and the search for a better valuation.

My second experience involved building a business from scratch with no VC funding at all. In the same amount of time it took the first one to fail, the second supported 12 employees and became cash flow positive from its 6th month. Today the businesses grosses 250,000 dollars in revenues in a country where the average per capita income is less 800 dollars a year. Yes it is small but it is ours.

If you run a small profitable business or would like to run one and are not the sharing kind, venture capital is not a good fit for your future plans. Venture capital is expensive risky debt with very onerous terms. The terms make sense when you have pre-established credibility, need to hit key milestones quickly, grow to a certain size inorganically, change the world in a short span of time AND are indifferent to who ends up with the business you have built with your hands.

I would take a look at what I want to achieve and if the four conditions mentioned above don’t apply, see if I can find some way of getting there without VC funding. It will be a slower, more painful journey but at least I will get somewhere.

Jawwad Ahmed Farid,

Desi Startup, Blue Screen of Death,

Alchemy

http://bluescreen.alchemya.com

http://alchemya.com/blog/DesiStartup/desi.html

http://alchemya.com

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Jawwad_Farid

Employee Retention: It’s A Changing Game

Friday, November 2nd, 2007

Mike Beitler

As a management consultant, I have seen some poorly conceived retention policies at otherwise well-run companies. The philosophies underlying these policies lack some basic knowledge of two things:

1. human nature, and

2. the changing world around us

Human Nature

Let’s start with human nature. The practice of management requires an understanding of how people work. Successful managers can be forgiven if they do not know how a particular machine works, or how to debit and credit the general ledger, or how to write HTML code. But, managers must know how people work. Specifically, they need to know how people work well.

People are motivated by goals. their own! Organizations that help individuals achieve their goals and career aspirations have less trouble with retention. Are you helping your best employees achieve their goals?

I recently read some research findings that were just plain silly. The findings you ask: Workers leave organizations for two reasons:

1. they feel mistreated or unappreciated

2. they can get more money/compensation from another organization

The researchers went on to say, most workers are unaware of more money at other organizations until they feel mistreated or unappreciated. Did you catch that? If not, re-read the “two” findings.

Here’s my interpretation: If you treat your workers well and make them feel appreciated they will stay with your organization; money is not the primary driver for workers leaving. Help you workers achieve their goals. I believe “appreciative” workers are more motivated than “happy” workers.

Before you think this is more “soft” management talk, let’s look at some “hard” facts. The average cost of hiring a new worker is one-and-a-half times the worker’s annual salary. And, the average worker will need a year to master his/her job skills.

The Changing World Around Us

As the world changes around us, we must change the way we think about retention (and everything else). Gone are the days of the homogeneous workforce. The world is being changed by unstoppable trends: globalization and an aging workforce.

Future work teams will include three generations of workers (a 23-year-old worker, a 48-year-old worker, and a 73-year-old worker), workers with different religions and nationalities, and workers with dramatically different life experiences.

The brain drain in developed countries can be slowed by retaining older, highly skilled workers. But, that is not nearly enough. Companies must compete globally for talent. (And remember what is necessary to retain these individuals. We must understand their individual goals and career aspirations.)

American companies that hope to depend on American talent exclusively will fail miserably. American knowledge workers are losing their competitive edge. Let’s look at some more “hard” facts:

1. In China, 42% of students earn undergraduate degrees in science or engineering. In the U.S., the figure is less than 5%.

2. Only 70% of U.S. high school students graduate. The U.S. public education system was recently ridiculed by a British news journal. When you consider that the British public school system is arguably the worst in Europe, Americans should hear this as a wake-up call.

3. Only 32% of U.S. students leaving high school qualify to attend a four-year college or university.

Add to this some alarming facts about off-shoring. One organization recently said it was off-shoring jobs to India not simply because the cost was lower, but because the quality of work was better. The off-shoring of high-level professional jobs (such as engineering and IT) is now a common practice.

Conclusion

Organizations must do two critical things:

1. develop retention policies that recognize the need to understand the individual workers’ goals and career aspirations, and

2. learn how to recruit and develop talent from around the world.

These are big changes for most organizations. Is your organization ready for these changes?


Dr. Mike Beitler is the author of “Strategic Organizational Change.” Get a free 7-part mini-course and learn more about the book at http://www.strategic-organizational-change.com