Start a Business without a Masterplan for Success and You're 95% Certain to Fail!

Written by Jim Green


Continued from page 1

BLUEPRINT FOR FULFILMENT BEFORE YOU START A BUSINESS

The All-in-One Start a Business Masterplan will empower you to conceive your own exclusive blueprint for a happy, successful and rewarding small business operation. Plans are great things. They show you where you are going, what to do, and how to do it when you get there. Make no mistake though; you will not be creating this blueprint just to get you started. It’s going to be around for a long time and you will want to review and update it regularly to take account of twists and turns alongrepparttar way. That’srepparttar 103544 beauty of it. When you have a blueprint for success, you can legislate for change. Without one you cannot; you’ll be likerepparttar 103545 explorer inrepparttar 103546 jungle without a map.

THE ALL-IN-ONE START A BUSINESS MASTERPLAN

What this is not is a hotchpotch of miscellaneous lame-brained notions and opinions cobbled together to create a sycophantic litany. The All-in-One Start a Business Masterplan isrepparttar 103547 genuine product of my own personal experience as a successful small business owner offline and online.

It consists of 4 comprehensive tutorials, 60 full blown chapters, 555 pages, and covers every aspect of single-minded entrepreneurship: galvanizing into initial action, getting started on your plan, settling on an idea for your enterprise, tackling initial teething problems, overcomingrepparttar 103548 threatening scenarios everyone encounters alongrepparttar 103549 way, and settingrepparttar 103550 course for a lifetime of fulfilment and enrichment.

The good,repparttar 103551 bad, andrepparttar 103552 in-between are all recorded: where I hitrepparttar 103553 target plumb center, where I screwed up, and how I put it right.

Jim Green is a successful Networker and bestselling author with a string of niche non-fiction titles to his credit. His All-In-One Tutorial is available at http://www.writing-for-profit.com/start-a-business.html

Jim Green is a successful Networker and bestselling author with a string of niche non-fiction titles to his credit including ‘Starting Your Own Business’ (How To Books ISBN 1-85703-859-2) and ‘Starting an Internet Business at Home’ (Kogan Page ISBN 0-7494-3484-8 – currently ranking No.3 at Amazon.com out of 27,376 competing titles). His Masterclass Tutorial is available at http://www.start-a-business-masterplan.com


The Demise of the Mittelstand

Written by Sam Vaknin


Continued from page 1

It is remarkable thatrepparttar decline ofrepparttar 103543 Mittelstand coincides with an unprecedented surge in small to medium scale entrepreneurship in both developed and developing countries. It would seem that Germany simply spectacularly pioneered what has become, decades later, an economic fad.

Indeed, it is Germany's overwhelming success - its post-war industrial miracle - that harboredrepparttar 103544 seeds of its decline and fall. Sated, rich people make bad risk-taking entrepreneurs. Germany's unification was its last attempt at rejuvenation. It failed becauserepparttar 103545 west chose to smotherrepparttar 103546 east with an unrealistically priced Deutschmark, a tangle of rules and regulations, an artificial construction bubble and a forced liquidation of its industrial base.

If it ain't broke, don't fix it, goes German folk wisdom. Onrepparttar 103547 surface, everything functions impeccably: German infrastructure is gleaming, its healthcare efficient, its environment pure, its welfare unsurpassed. Why tinker with success? - wondersrepparttar 103548 average citizen of this regional economic powerhouse. Only lately did a few brave souls admit thatrepparttar 103549 miracle has been consumed and that Germany, unreformed, may be facing a Japanese decade.

Germany's second attempt at revitalization is unfolding outside its borders. The enlargement ofrepparttar 103550 European Union to incorporate countries in central and east Europe is largely a German project. Cheap labor, abundant raw materials, hungry, growing consumer markets inrepparttar 103551 new members - promise to resuscitaterepparttar 103552 German industrial sector.

Big German firms have taken note of this repossessed hinterland and moved decisively - but not sorepparttar 103553 Mittelstand.

Preoccupied by their multidimensional crisis, they failed to colonizerepparttar 103554 east. Battered by cost pressures, better-informed customers, aggressive international competition, dizzying and costly technological changes, spiraling needs for investment in R&D, vocational training and marketing -repparttar 103555 Mittelstand companies are punch-drunk and more xenophobic and self-destructively "independent" than ever.

One would be hard pressed to find a substantial Mittelstand representation inrepparttar 103556 German drive to diversify abroad either by establishing a presence in major export markets, or by sourcing from cheaper countries. Asrepparttar 103557 Center for Advanced Studies at Cardiff University notes, Mittelstanders rarely out-source to key suppliers, maintain open-book accounting, engage in simultaneous engineering, sign long-term contracts, or reducerepparttar 103558 number of direct suppliers as part of implementing a lean production strategy.

Many SMEs function as family employment agencies rather than as properly governed businesses. From hubs of innovation and early adoption of bleeding edge technologies -repparttar 103559 Mittelstanders have lately becomerepparttar 103560 bastion of paralytic conservatism. Most of them support self-interested liberalization and deregulation. But few would know what to do with these poisoned chalices, having become far less competitive than they used to be inrepparttar 103561 1970s.

So, isrepparttar 103562 Mittelstand sector doomed?

Not according to a report published two years ago byrepparttar 103563 Institute for Development and Peace atrepparttar 103564 Gerhard-Mercator University in Duisburg. The authors believe that, despite allrepparttar 103565 shortcomings ofrepparttar 103566 Mittelstand business model, it could serve as a blueprint forrepparttar 103567 countries of Latin America and other developing regions.

The Mittelstand have survived largely intact wars and devastation, division and unification. There is no reason why they should not outlive this second round of globalization - they did marvelously inrepparttar 103568 first round, a century ago. Butrepparttar 103569 government must recognizerepparttar 103570 Mittelstand's contribution torepparttar 103571 economy and reward these struggling firms with a tax, financing and regulatory environment conducive to job creation, innovation, ownership continuity and exports.

The reason for hope is that Germany is finally waking up. Universities offer courses in family-orientated management. Offline and online exchanges - such as EuroLink - connect German SMEs to willing private equity investors, strategic partners and fund managers. Small business service centers and one stop shops proliferate.

An army of consulting and trading firms proffer everything from management skills to networks of contacts. Others peddler seminars, Web design and Internet literacy syllabi. Software companies like SAP, IBM and Sybase maintain special small business departments. Think tanks and scholarly institutes devote increasing resources torepparttar 103572 SME phenomenon. There is even an Oscar award for Mittelstand excellence.

Initiatives spring inrepparttar 103573 most unlikely places. DG Bank teamed up withrepparttar 103574 German daily "Die Zeit" to "promote small businesses who have innovative ideas". Mittelstand trade fairs (for instance in Nuremberg last year) are well-attended. Venture capitalists, portfolio managers and headhunters monitor developments closely.

The Business Angels Network of Germany (BOUND) is a group of individual investors who also contribute time and management know-how to fledgling technology startups. Lobbying and advocacy groups, specialty publications, public relations firms - all cater torepparttar 103575 needs of German SMEs.

It looks less like a funeral than a resurrection.



Sam Vaknin ( http://samvak.tripod.com ) is the author of Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain - How the West Lost the East. He served as a columnist for Central Europe Review, PopMatters, and eBookWeb , and Bellaonline, and as a United Press International (UPI) Senior Business Correspondent. He is the the editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories in The Open Directory and Suite101.


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