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Small Business Letter From America - SMB bright spots

uspostage

Let me introduce you to a couple of small business owners from my area.

Con Pekrul and his father Hart grew their hobby of winemaking into a full time business. Over the last seven years, together they’ve gone from just making wine, to creating food products, targeting tourists and offering all sorts of locally-made products. Con is highly involved in his local community, and he constantly promotes other small town small businesses. Making the decision to relocate and expand was difficult.

“At the time we thought, can we afford this? Will this work?” Pekrul said. Their accountant said to try it, but she secretly thought they’d fail in six months. They are now starting on their seventh year in that location.

Tommy Hudson just started his business six months ago. He provides large waste container rental and waste disposal in a rural region. Before starting, he put in tons of work researching and preparing. One of his goals was to start a business that would let him move out of the big city, and back to a small town like the one he grew up in.

“It can be done,” Tommy said. “It can be done with limited means. It can be done from a humble background. I am just a guy that had an idea and put a plan together and sought the right advice and enough advice to convince myself really that it could be done.”

Both of these entrepreneurs have built growing small businesses in uncertain economic times, in depressed local economies. And business is good. Con says holiday sales have started off very strong. Tommy says there have been times this summer when he could have used 10 more units to rent out.

All across the country, America is full of stories like these. Small business owners are working hard, monitoring their finances, and learning new ways to succeed. These are the people who will create all the new jobs to rebuild the economy.

All of the new jobs will come from small business? Yes. Another small business person, Zane Safrit, interviewed Bob Graboyes, Senior Health Advisor at the National Federation of Independent Business and economics professor at George Mason University and Virginia Commonwealth University. Graboyes said 100% of new jobs are created by small business in a recession.

Con and Tommy are up to the challenge.

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Small Business Letter From America - a shattered economy

uspostageIt’s something of a secret about the US economy; it’s shattered. Not in the sense that it’s broken, but in the sense that it is fragmented, with lots of little pieces.

When you hear news reports that the US stock market is dramatically up or down, they are referring to the Dow Jones Industrial Average. That’s made up of 30 stocks of very large publicly traded companies. There are something over 25 million small businesses in the US. So a simple headline just cannot convey the depth of the real story.

What is the real story?

Each region has its own economic indicators. For example, my part of rural Oklahoma looks at petroleum production and wheat crops. We have small banks that stayed careful in their lending, so they remain stable. Our state and local governments do typically seek loans from larger banks and do have investments in the stock market for retirement funds, so they are having some troubles.

Farm commodity prices are dropping, though we expect that to be temporary. If you want to know more about the small town effects, I brought together some research from local newspapers on the financial crisis in small towns.

Some regions are much harder hit. Some had huge increases in house prices, and now they are hurt by their housing prices dropping back down. Some depended on the financial industry. A wave of layoffs in various industries is hurting people all across the country. It certainly looks like we are in for tight credit markets all over, higher unemployment, and other effects I haven’t even considered, I’m sure.

However, I certainly don’t think this economy is going to come close to equaling the Great Depression. I’m taking a cue from my grandmother who survived the Depression and the Dust Bowl; I’m thinking about how today will look after 70 years have passed. I expect we’ll get by.

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Small Business Letter From America - there’s no success like failure

uspostageAs the economy of the USA churns through uncertainty, as businesses along our gulf coast are impacted by hurricanes, and as our quadrennial election season tortures us with partisan politics, I want to ask you, what’s your attitude towards failure?

Businesses will fail today due to the economy, due to disaster, due to health issues, due to mistakes, and due to a myriad of other reasons. The question is, what will those business owners do? In the USA, the odds are high that the entrepreneur in question will be back to start another business in the future. It has to do with our attitude towards failure.

I’m a big fan of failure. Why would anyone be a fan of failure? Because failure is a necessary part of learning, of activity, of business. If you are not experiencing any failures, you probably aren’t moving.

Barry Moltz wrote a whole book on failure, called Bounce! He points out that the American attitude towards business failure is perhaps the most tolerant in the world. That’s not much solace in the face of a big failure, as even Moltz admits.

But if you can’t accept the possibility of failing, you’ll never move forward.

Small business owner Rex Hammock said this back in 2000:

Even smart businesses managed by smart individuals and smart investors die. Businesses start and die every day. They always have. They always will. I am old enough - and have been fortunate enough - to have succeeded significantly and failed miserably and frankly, the failures have done more for me than the successes.

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Small Business Letter From America - the wind is picking up

uspostageAfter years of relatively slow development, wind power seems to be really picking up in the US.

In western Oklahoma, we’ve built up from one tentative test project to an all out boom in development. A recent public meeting in Enid, Oklahoma, drew more people than they had room for. Hundreds of landowners turned out to listen.

Drive up the Interstate highways of Oklahoma, Kansas, Texas, Iowa or many other Heartland states, and you’ll see the huge turbine blades being trucked to construction sites all over. Small manufacturers all across the mid-west are benefiting from this new industry. The cost to produce and install the turbines is approximately $2 million per megawatt of production capacity. And turbines are on back order.

What’s driving this activity? First, the high price of oil has also brought up natural gas prices, and natural gas is one of the top fuels used to generate electricity. That makes it easier for wind power to compete on price. Second, a production tax credit offered by the federal government has made it more attractive. That tax credit is scheduled to expire at the end of the year. Has it served its purpose? Yes.

Photo by Becky McCray - use with permission

Photo by Becky McCray - used with permission

Should it be renewed? That’s up for discussion.

Wind energy leases offer a way to produce extra income from farm and ranch land. Only about 5% of the surface is removed from agriculture, so most of the ground can still be productive. That’s an important side benefit of wind development.

The demand for electricity in the US isn’t going to decline. But there is another hurdle to overcome: our incredibly limiting power grid. Different regions of the USA use slightly different power transmission, and inter-connectivity is a problem. Also, much of the big power infrastructure is either insufficient or outdated. Considering that no matter how we produce our power, we have to transmit it, the US electrical grid is one of our biggest infrastructure needs.

Other innovative alternatives are being implemented all over. But wind power is benefiting from being ready to go at the right time. And from my windy corner of Oklahoma, that’s OK by me.

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Small Business Letter From America - healthcare headache

uspostageNo one questions that small businesses are a key driver of the American economy. But US small business owners face a critical hurdle: healthcare costs.

The National Federation of Independent Business, quoted by Zane Safrit, has the count.

Of the 47 million Americans without health insurance, more than 28 million are small business owners, employees and their dependents. Under current law they generally do not enjoy the same tax treatment, coverage or pooling options as large businesses and corporations; on average, they pay 18% more for the same healthcare benefits. On top of this, over the last eight years, insurance premiums have increased an alarming 129%.

This problem hits the economy where it hurts: innovation and small business. Because of arcane rules about switching health insurance carriers, especially with pre-existing conditions, many people stick with a less-than-challenging or less-than-motivating job because they must to keep their coverage. And because of the astounding costs of buying individual or small group policies, lots of small businesses just don’t provide any coverage at all.

Jon Swanson shared the story of one small business owner who had to sell out after 15 years. Her husband developed lung cancer, so she was in great need of health insurance. Her small business couldn’t pay to cover her whole family, so she turned to a job that could. Unfortunately, it also means she’s locked into that job. She can’t go anywhere until probably retirement. She’s not working where she can provide her best service; she’s working to try to protect her family.

Why doesn’t US law give small business the same treatment as big business? Well, to be blunt, big business contributes more to political candidates than small business. That’s my opinion. With all the other issues in front of them, I don’t expect our political leaders to make changes any time soon, no matter which presidential candidate is elected. But at least we’ve managed to get them talking about it.

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  • David Tebbutt: Cheers Simon. That one’s been popular with BrainStorm users for years. It’s pretty relaxed...
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  • Alex Bellinger: Thanks Martyn, the cashflow issue hadn’t occurred to me and exactly why your insight here is so...
  • Martyn: >> Non-registered Agreed that their inputs will fall by 2% but they may have to cut their prices to...
  • Alex Bellinger: Hi Martyn Indirectly, I guess, assuming it helps to stimulate spending. Alex P.S. Forgot to say, many...
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