Saturday, May 29, 2010

Forces Shaping the Future World of Business

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IBM conducts annual global research on the evolving role of c-level executives in the decade of smart.

They also interviewed 3600 students around the world on their views of forces shaping the future of business. Worth a look.

A snapshot of insights:

You have to base decisions in facts not instinct, but you have to act rapidly which involves a little bit of experience and trusting in yourself. ~ Student Perspective: Mexico

My generation has a completely different view and understanding of unbounded, unlimited social connectivity, science and technology and cultural conglomeration that leads to more open, interconnected ambitions. ~ Student Perspective: U.S.A

I think it's high time to manipulate as much data as possible in order to understand this changing world in a better way. ~ Student Perspective: Argentina
Posted by: The Global Small Business Blog

Friday, May 28, 2010

Sorry Charlie....7/4


Looks like Brown County General dodged the bullet...grapevine (rumours, not the town) has it that more guarantees were needed--by which party? Who knows.

But, that makes how many misses for Essent? There probably are only just so many fish in the sea. Ahh yes, but who's counting.... Just you...and me...and Charlie.

Emerging Countries: Hotbeds of Business Innovation


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Why are countries that were until recently associated with cheap labor now becoming leaders in innovation?

Find out here in this special report on innovation in emerging markets: The world turned upside down | The Economist.

Posted by: The Global Small Business Blog

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Who's the Largest Tech Company in the World?

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IBM, Google, Oracle, Apple or Microsoft?

In terms of market capitalization, the winner is:

Apple

This list of product rollouts tells the story:

  • iMac (Bondi Blue -- pictured above) – 1998
  • iBook (clamshell) – 1999
  • iPod with scroll wheel – 2001
  • Mac OS X – 2001
  • iTunes Store – 2003
  • MacBook (switch to Intel) – 2006
  • iPhone – 2007
  • App Store + iPhone SDK – 2008
  • iPad – 2010
  • Do you aspire to become the world's largest company at what you do?

    Posted by: The Global Small Business Blog

    Tuesday, May 25, 2010

    SMB Exporters Exude Confidence About Their Companies' Future

    iStock/Thinkstock
    According to a survey commissioned by UPS, although concerned about the economy, small- and medium-sized business exporters are confident about their companies' futures, especially when it comes to international sales.

    I've always felt that exporting and boldness go hand in hand.
    "Entrepreneurs who export are self-assured, adaptable and resilient so it doesn't surprise me that the survey shows exporters are confident about meeting their business goals," said Laurel Delaney, owner of small-business consulting firm Global TradeSource, Ltd.
    Yet many SMBs feel -- if only they could get started!
    "Talking to current exporters reveals that for many small businesses, the most difficult thing about exporting is just getting started," said Dan Brutto, president, UPS International. "But with the administration's new export initiative, there's never been a better time for small businesses to give exporting a try. The right partner can serve as a bridge to help businesses ease into global trade and, in turn, find new revenue streams."
    For complete results of the Business Monitor United States survey, visit http://ups.com/businessmonitor/us.

    Did you know? UPS also offers tips and resources for small businesses looking to export at http://pressroom.ups.com/snapshotsforsmallbiz.

    Immediate download (PDF) offering facts and tips on how to take your business global:
    2010 Business Monitor United States fact sheet

    Immediate download (powerful information -- worth a good long look):
    2010 Business Monitor United States full report

    UPS blog, UPSide here.

    So, muster up that boldness (kitty cat confidence as shown in photo) and get exporting!

    Posted by: The Global Small Business Blog

    Monday, May 24, 2010

    Here's What Works in Entrepreneurship Across the Globe

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    This is a phenomenal article by Daniel J. Isenberg in the June 2010 Harvard Business Review. One of the best I've read in a long time on entrepreneurship. Well researched, good case study references, excellent country specific examples and terrific insight into the nine prescriptions for creating an entrepreneurship ecosystem.

    Isenberg is no stranger to entrepreneurship with international wings. He also authored, "The Global Entrepreneur," December 2008 for HBR.

    Please take the time to read, "Start An Entrepreneurial Revolution," in its entirety. The best part is near the end where Isenberg challenges us by posing the question:
    Do you have a strong entrepreneurship ecosystem?
    Do you?
    Note: added 5/24/10 at 9:35 p.m. CDT, an audio IdeaCast:

    How To Create An Entrepreneurial Economy (Daniel Isenberg, professor of management practice at Babson College and author of the HBR article "The Big Idea: How to Start an Entrepreneurial Revolution." Copyright 2010 Harvard Business School Publishing)

    Friday, May 21, 2010

    Are Polish Entrepreneurs Swindlers?

    iStock/Thinkstock
    Well imagine my reaction to reading this headline published by News From Poland (pictured):

    Poles distrust entrepreneurs
    According to a survey by PBS DGA (English here), almost eighty percent of Poles (1,000 people surveyed) believe that Polish entrepreneurs are thieves, cheaters and swindlers.

    How could this be?

    Half of the respondents claim that businessmen manage to achieve success and grow rich through backdoor activity and contacts with politicians. Every fifth Pole thinks that financial success can be achieved only by violating the law, i.e. fixing tenders, giving bribes or stealing confidential information from rival companies.
    Care to weigh in with your comments or share your experience? As always, we welcome hearing from you!

    Thursday, May 20, 2010

    It Keeps On Rolling....5/28

    Been over to the ER lately? Recognize the staff? If you do, you're lucky, since the majority are temp service/agency nurses.


    What's the harm, it infuses the hospital with new people??? Yeah, but when the location of the simplest things takes a question, and it pulls another nurse away from patients.....


    But we can see if we like a nurse's work before we offer them a postion.... How many actually take an offer from here?

    You really can't fault the nurses--the ones we had have a good chance of being agency in another hospital....


    No truer words have been spoken than: Familiarity breeds contempt.

    How to Compete Globally

    Purestock/Thinkstock
    It starts with participating in export seminars and utilizing a sort of Cliff Notes on how to do business in six (6) different countries.
    UPS, a longtime advocate of the benefits of international commerce, today announced a series of key global trade initiatives aimed at helping small- and medium-sized businesses expand and compete in today's rapidly changing global business environment.
    Learn more here.

    The Cliff Notes (snapshots, if you will, provide an overview of global markets that present significant opportunity to U.S. small businesses, whether you are just beginning to explore international trade or already expanding to new markets) can be found here and include Brazil, Canada, China, India, Poland and Vietnam.

    Complete global toolkit can be found here.

    Posted by: The Global Small Business Blog

    Wednesday, May 19, 2010

    Localization Intelligence Across Borders

    iStock/Thinkstock
    What predominant color should your billboard be in Argentina? How many units should you pack in a gift box for Japan? Can your site communicate effectively across borders?

    There's a company that claims to translate global business (right up our alley :-).

    Learn more about it here.

    Posted by: The Global Small Business Blog

    Tuesday, May 18, 2010

    International Trade Data for March 2010

    iStock/Thinkstock
    According to the U.S. Census Bureau's Foreign Trade Division, March 2010 exports are up $25.0 billion (20.4%) and imports are up $36.6 billion (24.2%) compared with March 2009.

    Go here to learn what to monitor in terms of recent disasters (e.g., volcano and oil spill) that could interrupt U.S. trading patterns in the future.

    Monday, May 17, 2010

    How to Make a Global Deal Work

    Creatas/Thinkstock
    Two CEOs lived on different continents and barely knew one another. They each had their share of challenges. Find out how they struck a global merger here.

    Questions for everyone:
    1. Will the lack of a shared history together have negative repercussions on the merged firm in the future?
    2. How will they decide to fairly allocate resources to the merged entity?
    3. Was this global merger born out of desperation or to optimize the growth of a business?
    As always, we welcome your comments.

    Saturday, May 15, 2010

    Exports Strengthen Global Trade

    iStock/Thinkstock
    According to the Commerce Department, the U.S. trade deficit expanded 2.5% to $40.4 billion in March, compared with the prior month.
    The March rise in exports and imports was a positive indicator for U.S. demand, as well as for international trade, signaling that more economies around the world are recovering from the downturn.
    U.S. exports rose 3.2% to a seasonally adjusted $147.9 billion, while imports increased 3.1% to $188.3 billion.
    Read more here.
    Posted by: The Global Small Business Blog

    Friday, May 14, 2010

    Fearless About Going Global?

    iStock/Thinkstock
    One has to be fearless when it comes to taking a business global but ... did you know ... there is a new magazine called fear.less?

    There is indeed and here it is. Want to know more? Go here.

    Full 38-pages here.

    Posted by: The Global Small Business Blog

    Thursday, May 13, 2010

    Revolutionizing Cycling on a Global Basis

    iStock/Thinkstock
    Can bicycling promote Third world development?
    Frederick K.W. Day recalls his first long car ride in Zambia in 2006. "We're looking out the window and we keep seeing bike carcasses piled up alongside the road," he says. "It was like something out of The Andromeda Strain."
    Find out what Day does as a result here.

    Moral of story? Build a better bike and then teach them how to make it for themselves.
    Visit Scram.


    Posted by: The Global Small Business Blog

    Wednesday, May 12, 2010

    Truth or Dare to Be Innovatively Global?

    iStock/Thinkstock
    My latest contribution (via Small Business Trends) over at the American Express OPEN Forum.

    6 Ways to Be iNNOVATIVELY Global
    Foreign market entry does not always require a major investment. If you follow these six tips, overseas business will be at your doorstep in no time at all.
    Read the entire article here. If you like it, chirp a bit or (re)Tweet it.

    Posted by: The Global Small Business Blog

    Tuesday, May 11, 2010

    Are You World Savvy?

    iStock/Thinkstock
    If you think beyond borders, you would be considered world savvy.

    But in this case:
    World Savvy is a global education nonprofit serving youth and educators through three core programs in three offices nationwide. Our mission is to educate and engage youth in community and world affairs, to prepare them to learn, work and live as responsible global citizens in the 21st century.
    Learn more and find out how you can get involved here.

    Posted by: The Global Small Business Blog

    Monday, May 10, 2010

    Tough as BRIICS

    iStock/Thinkstock
    Meet, BRIICS, the new tough and high potential set of emerging markets in the world: Brazil, Russia, India, Indonesia, China and South Africa. They have fairly large populations, natural resources and face different challenges and opportunities as the global economy recovers.

    Read this SPECIAL Report by Euromonitor and learn about:
    • Economic performance
    • Consumer markets
    • Business environments and opportunities
    • Challenges ahead
    • Prospects
    Posted by: The Global Small Business Blog

    Friday, May 7, 2010

    Going Global Can Take Place Anywhere in the World

    iStock/Thinkstock
    Repeat: You can take your business global from any point in the world (such as this small town shown above) provided you have access to the Internet to help facilitate things. Got it?

    Read this Portfolio (now available only online) article:

    Small Town, Big World

    Entrepreneurs in Sonoma have figured something out. You don’t have to be in New York, Chicago, or Los Angeles to go global. Sometimes, you can do it right in the backyard of your own little California town.

    Wednesday, May 5, 2010

    How To Become a Global Media Brand in 60 Minutes

    iStock/Thinkstock
    In case you have been living in a cave, come out and explore this practical and fun piece by David Brewer!

    Becoming a global media brand in 60 minutes

    It's a six step process that goes like this:

    Step 1: Words (10 minutes)
    Step 2: Distribution (10 minutes)
    Step 3: Audio/Video/Images (20 minutes)
    Step 4: Creating a network (10 minutes)
    Step 5: Convergence and cross-promotion (10 minutes)
    Step 6: Sit back and enjoy (ongoing)

    Read more here.

    Posted by: The Global Small Business Blog

    What High Achievers Do: Go Global

    Wavebreak Media/Thinkstock
    We are delighted to reconnect with one of our favorite entrepreneurs/journalists/editors, Rieva Lesonsky, over at GrowBizMedia on a fantastic article she wrote for Success Magazine June 2010:

    Taking Your Business Global
    A world of opportunities awaits business owners seeking to sell or source products overseas.

    Many thanks to Rieva and her brilliant team for including us in this article and for getting the message across on how important going global is to small businesses.

    As Rieva says:
    ... proof that even the smallest business can take advantage of expanding opportunities in global trade.
    Posted by: The Global Small Business Blog

    Tuesday, May 4, 2010

    What's the Recipe for Transformative Change on a Global Scale?

    iStock/Thinkstock
    According to John Elkington, What Matters, McKinsey & Company, change starts with four different steps that have to do with individual beliefs and behavior: mindsets, behaviors, paradigms and cultures.

    His lead to this fascinating piece:
    Still, I have now spent 35 years helping CEOs and other leaders wake up to—and tackle—the new risks and opportunities thrown up as a series of societal pressure waves have pounded, shaped, and powered markets.
    It appears from his commentary that integrating human values into the core of business purpose, strategy and behaviors works wonders when it comes to social entrepreneurship or activities that drive social change.

    Read the entire thoughtful piece here.

    What do you think?

    Monday, May 3, 2010

    Which Apps are Global?

    iStock/Thinkstock
    We've been a long time fan of John Yunker over at Global by Design and last week did a blog post about which apps are "international ready." Here's a snapshot of his tally thus far:
    • PayPal Mobile: 15 languages
    • Google Mobile: 15 languages (shown above)
    • Facebook Mobile: 7 languages
    • Monopoly: 6 languages
    Read more here. Interesting. What's your take on it? Is he missing anything? Be sure check out his Web Globalization Report Card 2010 -- worth a look.