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10 Financial Tips for Young Entrepreneurs

Posted by     yobucko.com

If you are young entrepreneur or startup, I applaud you. Building a company is truly one of the hardest things I’ve ever tried to do. A year and a half ago, I decided to quit my job to pursue my dreams of entrepreneurship and have learned a lot of lessons along the way. In this article, I’m going to share some of the financial lessons I’ve learned in the process of starting my business in the hopes that you won’t repeat some of the common financial mistakes many young entrepreneurs make.

Young Entrepreneur Regrets Mistakes

#1: Time is Money

When I first started building my business, I spent a lot of time traveling to meetings, meeting with people, planning for meetings, etc. Today, I wish I had all that time back. One of the most valuable assets entrepreneurs have is their time, and every moment you spend doing stuff that is unrelated to your business is time and money wasted. When I was first starting out, I recall one of my advisors saying to me, “a lack of time is a lack of priorities.” It’s true. If you are wasting your time going to meaningless meetings that are unrelated to your business, you can find yourself in a tough financial situation.

#2: Prepare for the Worst, Hope for the Best

Bad things happen to good people, and it pays to be prepared. If you are not financially prepared to take the leap into entrepreneurship, don’t quit your job until you are ready. There is no reason in the world to give up your income when you can work on your project on the side until you have traction. For most single people, I recommend having at least 3 months of living expenses in an emergency savings account. If you are going to be an entrepreneur, I’d recommend setting aside closer to six or nine months of cash in savings that you can fall back on if you need it. Bad things happen, customers don’t always pay on time and you need to make sure you have money set aside to keep you afloat during the tough times.

#3: Learn How to Manage your Cash Flow

One of my advisors shared a piece of wisdom with me recently when he said, “there are three reasons a company fails: they run out of cash, they run out of cash and they run out of cash.” Where I am was an optimist, he was a realist. But his words were very true. Cash flow is the #1 financial metric you should learn how to control when running a company. If you don’t know where your money comes from or where it is going, you put yourself at risk. Creating a budget and sticking to it is very important in a startup.

#4: Set Clear Goals and Milestones

When you are an early stage entrepreneur, it is easy to waste time over-thinking your concept. In reality, the time spent daydreaming about your idea instead of testing your concept with potential customers is wasted time. To mitigate this risk, set measurable milestones and deadlines early on and track your progress along the way. What is the difference between a goal and a milestone? Milestones are like sign posts along the way to your goal that show you how you are doing over time.

#5: Track your Spending

When you are first starting out in business, there is a lot going on. For many entrepreneurs, keeping track of their spending seems secondary to creating a business plan, talking to customers, etc. But it is very important to create a system to track your spending each month so you don’t have to scramble for information when you need it. There is nothing more frustrating than digging through paperwork looking for financial information at tax time or compiling financial reports for bankers when you don’t have the information readily available. So rather than wasting time on the back-end, do yourself a favor and set yourself up right from day one. I’d highly recommend using an online bookkeeping software like Quickbooks and inputting your own information for the first few months. If you find yourself having trouble finding the time, you can always hire a bookkeeper to help you out. Eventually, your information may get more complicated requiring the services of an accountant around tax time. But there is no need to overspend on professional services when you can very easily track your expenses on your own.

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#6: Understand the Value of Employee Benefits

There are a lot of luxuries I took for granted when I had a comfy job in banking – health insurance, parking reimbursements, 401k matching plans, etc. When you start your own company, many of the employee benefits you come to expect go away. So before you hand in your resignation letter, take some time to figure out how much money you’ll have to spend to replace those benefits. First, compare health insurance plans to see how much it will cost you to replace your current coverage. Next, think about what you are going to do with your 401k or 401k plans, IRAs and retirement savings at YoBucko”>retirement plan. You basically have four options: cash out and pay a penalty, roll it over into a new 401k plan, roll it over into an IRA, or leave it in your current plan. Finally, determine how much money you’ll need to earn each month to replace your benefits and factor that into your compensation.

#7: Focus on Finding your First Customer

If you don’t have customers, you are not a business. So rather than spending all of your time and money trying to determine who your customers are, go to a handful of potential customers and ask them a very simple question, “would you buy this?” If they say “no”, then ask, “why not?” The sooner you do this the better off you will be as a company. This was one of my biggest mistakes early on. I went to people I knew personally, who liked me and asked them “do you like this?” Being friendly and nice folks, they naturally said, “of course we like this, and we like you too.” While this made me feel really good about myself, it didn’t help me build a company. Find people other than your mother and best friend who may be potential customers and ask them for real feedback.

#8: Be Open and Honest with Investors and Lenders

There is nothing that gets people into more trouble in business than dishonesty and a lack of communication – this is especially true for early-stage businesses that are looking to raise money or get a loan. If you act shady and secretive, people won’t trust you. Similarly, if you are unable or unwilling to reveal the numbers that drive your business’ success, you can lose the trust of sources of capital. While my investors right now are friends and family, I’ve made it a regular practice to keep them “in the know” on our company’s financial situation. While it isn’t always a pleasant conversation it helps establish credibility and gives them opportunities to help us navigate the tough times. If you are an entrepreneur and don’t have investors, find some advisors and hold quarterly meetings with them to talk through the numbers. It’s both a good practice and a way to get some additional support and ideas for your company.

#9: Pay Yourself

After a year and a half of eating ramen and Trader Joe’s bean burritos I’ve finally learned an important lesson – you can’t eat equity for dinner. While many early stage companies don’t have enough revenue or cash to pay themselves big salaries, you’ve got to find some way to pay yourself along the way. If you don’t, you are doing yourself and the business a disservice. There is nothing riskier from an investor’s perspective than giving money to someone who “needs it.” People who are in desperate financial situations do irrational things. To avoid this risk, don’t be afraid to pay yourself a salary. Investors understand that you can’t get by on ramen and burritos forever.

#10: Keep your Fixed Expenses Low

In the early stages of starting a business, it is smart to keep your fixed expenses as low as possible. So renting a huge space in Midtown Manhattan on day one may not be the best strategy. As your company’s revenues grow over time, you can start taking on more overhead. But be patient. If you need office space, see if there are any low-priced, month-to-month options available to you. If there is an incubator program in your city, check it out. Also, consider turning your home or apartment into an office space. You’ll be able to write it off on taxes. So before you start signing high-priced two-year contracts with vendors, make sure you have the revenues or cash needed to cover your costs.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KgoapkOo4vg

Article from SFGate.

“Yahoo is laying off 2,000 employees as new CEO Scott Thompson sweeps out jobs that don’t fit into his plans for turning around the beleaguered Internet company.

The cuts announced Wednesday represent about 14 percent of the 14,100 workers employed by Yahoo, which is based in Sunnyvale, Calif.

The company estimated it will save about $375 million annually after the layoffs are completed later this year.

Workers losing their jobs will be notified Wednesday. Some of the affected employees will stay on for an unspecified period of time to finish various projects, according to Yahoo.

The housecleaning marks Yahoo’s sixth mass layoff in the past four years under three different CEOs. This one will inflict the deepest cuts yet, eclipsing a cost-cutting spree that laid off 1,500 workers in late 2008 as Yahoo tried to cope with the Great Recession.

Thompson is making his move three months after Yahoo lured him away from his previous job running eBay Inc.’s online payment service, PayPal.

The layoffs “are an important next step toward a bold, new Yahoo — smaller, nimbler, more profitable and better equipped to innovate as fast as our customers and our industry require,” Thompson said in a statement.

“We are intensifying our efforts on our core businesses and redeploying resources to our most urgent priorities,” he said. “Our goal is to get back to our core purpose — putting our users and advertisers first — and we are moving aggressively to achieve that goal.”

Yahoo shares rose 12 cents to $15.30 in morning trading.”

Read more here.

By Patric Carlsson – Gerbsman Partners BOIC advisor and CEO of Flexolvit.

Smart meters, datamining and cost awareness is driving the release of new, smart software that enables massive cost savings on energy for commercial property owners and private consumers alike. Companies like OPOWER, FuelFirst, Possitive America and Clean Urban Energy are leaning on the SaaS business model and behavioural and social science to enable 5 – 25% savings on private and commercial customers

New web based services, data minings and smart meters enables for a large, and concrete investment and M&A opportunity in the marketplace. Owning the direct dialog with the customer will enable scalable and profitable business models and incentive-based payouts on meassured results.

In the spring of 2011, the Boston-based OPOWER had approx. 600 000 active customers thorugh their service as launched in partnership with regional and national energy corporations. Using familiar strategies of get customers first and find ways to bill them later have generated interest of investors and media alike. With the modest ambition of increase cost effectiveness ranging from 1.3 to 5.4 cents per kilowatt-hour, the untapped potential of submetered promises in commercial building of around 20 % of total consumption and cost – the mere scratch on the surface OPOWER has made is very indicative.

FirstFuel, another Saas energyefficiancy company has chosen instead to focus on commerical properties. Using similarlly sociall and analytical webbased solutions, they act as samrt suggestions for “quick-fix” solutions lowering energy usage and cost around 7-10% for larger commercial property owners. The list of competitors and innovators is rapidly growing, companies like Clean Urban Energy and veteran company EnergyCap to mention a fed also uses the same set-up – use software to identify patterns that will save energy och money.

At the center of this emerging market segment is insight that draws on evidence from behavioural economics and psychology and social networks. Statistics has shown that Social, comparative energy consumption drives motivation and actual behavioural change. Collective purchasing and Social norms encourage broad-scale energy efficiancy though these new kinds of social networks. It also leans on the direct-feedback loop theory by crafting direct suggestions from statistics and incentives thorugh immediate rewards, rather then long-term payback. As user interface now is at the center of the web evolution, the simple touse, direct suggestions and incentives, actually meassure and validate a reduction of energy consumption and does save money.

What does it all mean?

Long established companies like Siemens, Schneider Electric, GE and Hitatchi has tradtitionally dominated the techical systems segment of the commercial property market by installing their stearing and monitoring systems. With these new competitive services that are being launched, The old-fashioned modell of installing isolated system in each building, focusing on the property management and stearing functions of each building or propery portfolio are struggeling to keep up on customer demand.

Large scale propery owners, as well as and private consumers for that sake, are seeing increased economic pressure from rising energy prises, increased demand of profits and marketshares from shareholders. Combined, the industry now are at a important threshold of old getting mixed and ourcompeted by these new kind of services. Energy corporations are much in the same situation – the lack of ability to communicate with each user generates a distance and disconnect.

Maturity of a cleantech segment.

Looking back a few years, green tech and cleantech segments have seen quite a shakeout in the infrastructure layer. The mautrity of winning concepts are settling in and new core technology have broadly started to replace old, in-efficient and polluting solutions. With the emergence of webbased services, connected stearing systems and smart meters a new highly scalable, and potentially profitable opportunity is quickly getting visable.

Likely scenarios and a large opportunity!

As a industry indsider, my views are colored. In some settings that might actually be a negative thing – here I view it as a blessing. The launching of a smart analysis SaaS company on the Scandinavian market during the last 24 months have given me the inside look of the severity of the situation for these large corporations that have dominated this segment for the last 25 years. Here are som points that I feel being the underlaying reason why there is an M&A opportunity in the near future.

  • They lack the vision of what the web is capable of. Having relied on onsite installation and maintainance of each individual building, the connecting of each system has proven to be a giant challenge, To now launch webbased, userfriendly, smart solutions is proving to be more difficult then predicted. Old patterns and comfort is hard to shred. Innovatros are launching in rapid pace and prove that new concepts and simplicity makes greatest impact. The end-user, corporate or individual is willing to get the information presented in a easy-to-use way.
  • Open standards and social networks generate large knowledgebases. Smart meters, open protocols for datatransmission and SaaS principles pushes the technology out to the individual that will make the difference in saving monety and energy. The new generation of companies are not held back by legacy systems and legacy contracts. The SaaS model is proving to be beneficial for energy corporations that struggles with public profile and direct dialogue with its users. The database driven services enables for broad statistical comparissons previously only available to power companies and such – service portals like those mentioned above harness large amounts of data to generate automatic analysis on patterns. This is a whole new ballgame for the older competitors
  • Evolving business models are likely to generate a shakeoutLets face it, we know that every business needs to make moeny. Facebook and others have proven that there is a twist to it, attract vast numers of users and slowly but clearly insert business models on users interactions or results – and the income will start grow beyond what was previously possible. Looking at OPOWER and FirstFuel, the game of scale is in full swing. If you look at the european markets, who has had smart meters for 10 years readlly available for same kind of services – there is a plehtora of service and software vendors offering their services. The last 2 years the EPC (Energy Performance Contract) model is more and more making its entry. In short, service vendor and customer engage with a SaaS program over a defined period of time and verified savings are spilt between user and company. The scalability have proven to be enormously successful. Its a hit and miss market where skilled analysis can generate vast income in short amount of time on a very undeveloped market. The M&A discussions are very present on the european markets allready where smaller technology and service packaging is getting rolled into older structures to renew customer engagements in new ways.

Conclusion

With a such a clearly defined need as this, both from the corporate and government sida, as well as the private consumerside – its a scramble to reach for customers by the new, and purchase innovation to keep the customers from the old – the cycle is very familiar. The emergence of large property analysis organisations and the emergence of smart software with verifyable results is to hot to miss – there are billions of dollars up for grabs from those who can visualize the consumption and generate savings for all users.

To reach Patric Karlsson please email at patric@flexolvit.se

About Gerbsman Partners

Gerbsman Partners focuses on maximizing enterprise value for stakeholders and shareholders in under-performing, under-capitalized and under-valued companies and their Intellectual Property. Since 2001, Gerbsman Partners has been involved in maximizing value for 69 Technology, Life Science and Medical Device companies and their Intellectual Property, through its proprietary “Date Certain M&A Process” and has restructured/terminated over $800 million of real estate executory contracts and equipment lease/sub-debt obligations. Since inception, Gerbsman Partners has been involved in over $2.3 billion of financings, restructurings and M&A transactions.

Gerbsman Partners has offices and strategic alliances in Boston, New York, Washington, DC, Alexandria, VA, San Francisco, Orange County, Europe and Israel. For additional information please visit www.gerbsmanpartners.com.

 

Subject: Charlotte and Jonathan – Britains got talent 2012 auditions BU

Britains got talent 2012 auditions – Charlotte and Jonathan duet

Being judged by Simon Cowell, Carmen Electra, Alesha Dixon and David Walliams.

http://www.youtube.com/watch_popup?v=oaalBHEuTTA&feature=player_embedded