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Showing posts with label effective. Show all posts
Showing posts with label effective. Show all posts

Saturday, September 7, 2013

10 Reasons To Form A Strategic Business Alliance


Below are 10 good reasons to create a strategic alliance.

1. You could offer your customers a larger variety of products or services. This will allow you to spend less time and money developing new products to sell.
2. Your number of sales people will increase because you are combining with other business. You won’t have to spend time and money hiring new employees.
3. Your marketing and advertising budget will increase. When you form a strategic alliancewith other businesses you both will share the advertising and marketing costs.
4. You can now offer your existing customers more back-end and up-sell products. This will increase your sales and profits.
5. Your business will gain a larger number of skilled people working on the same project. You will gain the knowledge of the other businesses employees.
6. You will be able to beat your competition by selling to a larger target audience. You will also increase the total number of existing customers you can sell your products and services to.
7. You can exchange endorsements with your alliance partners. You’ll add more credibility to your business and gain your potential customers trust to buy.
8. You can expand your business more rapidly. You can develop new products and services faster with a larger work force.
9. You will be able to solve your customer’s problems faster with a larger base of customer service people. You will also learn new ways to improve your customer service from youralliance partners.
10. You will have a larger number of “strategic thinking” people. This will allow both businesses to come up with profitable business ideas quicker than before.

To your successful Business Alliance!

Saturday, August 31, 2013

The young Syrian businessmen making it happen


Abdulsalam Haykal is typical of a new breed of young Syrian businessmen enjoying  a level of wealth, freedom and power unknown to previous generations.Abdulsalam Haykal is a well-known face in both Damascus and Lebanon: at 31, he is a highly successful businessman with fingers in so many pies that piles of business cards line his desk.
Fluent in Arabic and English, he studied at Lebanon's American University of Beirut (AUB) and then at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London and is the son of a successful businessman in the shipping and banking industries. We meet in his office at Transtek, the 60-person software company he heads. Sitting back in his leather chair opposite a flat screen television, Haykal is buoyant about the future of Syria. He has just become the first Syrian to be named as a Young Global Leader by the World Economic Forum. In his other roles, he is the CEO of Haykal Media, one of the largest - and very few - private media companies in Syria. He is also a trustee on the boards of AUB and Kalamoon University, the latter a new private university, 80km north of Damascus.
Young, well-educated and confident, Haykal is typical of a group of businessmen enjoying a freedom and corresponding power and wealth in Syria that past generations could only have dreamt of. Schooled abroad, well-off and well-connected because of their families, they are grabbing the opportunities of economic liberalisation, starting large businesses and providing the services their peers want. "There is a large space for the private sector in Syria now," Haykal says. "We have amazing, unprecedented space in which to work."
Down the road, one of his contemporaries, Adnan Tarabishy, works from his office in Mezzeh Villas, a relatively new neighbourhood in Damascus. At 32, he is the founder and managing director of Y2AD, Syria's top advertising agency, which manages publicity for international brands such as Sony, Nivea and Pepsi. Returning to his homeland after studying at the Lebanese American University (LAU) in Beirut, Tarabishy found unforeseen opportunities open to him. And as a member of another family with a well-established reputation, thanks to its four-generation packaging business, he was familiar with Syria's business world and could rely on his family name. "It was the ideal time," he says. "Advertising was still fairly unknown here - there were no billboards, for example, and there was also no know-how."
Now, with a turnover of several million dirhams per year, Y2AD is Syria's leading company for representing international brands: a list that is expanding steadily as importing to the country becomes easier. "The big space is for services, which are new to older people but normal to young people," Tarabishy says. "In modern service companies, there is less competition and often less start-up capital needed."
Tarabishy and Haykal are not alone: George Chawi, the owner of Dome and O-Lounge, Damascus's hippest bar and restaurant; Karim Tabah, the vice-president of the Nasco group of companies, whose interests run from medical to agricultural supplies; and Majd Suleiman, the head of United Group, a publishing company that has the Middle Eastern concessions to titles such as the women's magazine Marie Claire.
In the few multinational companies operating in Syria, the demographic of middle management is the same as that of the entrepreneurs. From the Four Seasons Hotel to the MTN telecommunications company, those in their late 20s and early 30s are ruling the roost. "The most inspiring people are young people," Haykal points out. "They have the big aspirations and the energy; they are willing and able to take the challenge of running a new business."
The results of the entrepreneurial drive are plain to see. Damascus is no Dubai, but visitors to the country over the past few years would have noticed that it has been changing. Sprouting up are slick, glass malls containing goods and services hitherto unknown to the country's 20 million citizens. Take Damasquino Mall or Damascus Boulevard, for instance, where international brands such as Nike and Lacoste were tempted into the country for the first time; Costa Coffee and Lina's sell coffee at upwards of six times the price charged in an ordinary Syrian cafe, outstripping the price in Europe and the United States.
It's a far cry from the Damascus of even a decade ago: a visit to the city then offered little choice of food or accommodation, and the wealthy went to Beirut or Dubai to shop. These days, new boutique hotels, bars and restaurants are springing up and being featured in magazines such as Haykal Media's unapologetically elite fashion and lifestyle glossy,Happynings. With such developments, Syria is tempting the young and the wealthy to stay - and play - at home. "It's an exciting time for business here," says Haykal. "There are so many opportunities to help shape the country and have an impact."
In the regional context, Syria and its young entrepreneurs are playing in the small league compared to neighbours Jordan and Lebanon, but they are enjoying a faster ascent due to its lower starting point. Reliable figures are hard to come by, and GDP growth is distorted by oil revenues, but there are other indicators of the country's rise. Retail space in malls is one. In 2008, Syria was estimated to have had just 55,000 square metres of shop floor space in malls, according to UK consultancy group Retail International. In the following year it doubled in size and is still expanding.
This consumer trend is driven by the top sector of society, says Mohammed al-Mallah, an expert on the Syrian retail scene. "You see the malls are full of labels because that's what the demand is for," he says. "The top sector of society got wealthier and wants to be able to get these things at home." The two trends feed off one another: the young elite have more money to spend, so this encourages better services in Syria, while the demand grows, so more services are needed. But a more important change, according to the young entrepreneurs, is the wider field the government has created with its economic changes.
In the past few years, Syria has been moving away from its former centrally planned economy under which the private sector was scorned. Despite a few attempts to loosen the economy in the Eighties, reform slowed as Syria sat back and enjoyed revenues from newly discovered oil reserves. In 2000, the new president Bashar al Assad came to power. He had big plans for business, which were boosted in 2005 when the transition to a social market economy was announced.
The international isolation that Syria endured after the assassination of the Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri, in 2005, for which the country was widely blamed, slowed progress down, but it is now regaining ground. And the generation of recent graduates is well placed to take advantage of the new scene."We have population growth and at the same time, globalisation, which means more people want more things, as well as needing schools and colleges and healthcare," says Haykal. "The government has realised it can no longer even maintain the status quo, and that's where we come in."
While there is excitement over the opportunities, there is also a healthy dose of disbelief at the freedom being given to those operating in the private sector. After all, many of the young men in the business elite are family friends who have studied together and can help each other out with networking. Tarabishy acknowledges that the benefits don't extend to a large majority of Syrians. "The opportunity is theoretically there for all, but the ones able to take it are the ones who are well placed."
And he readily admits his own business was aided by being the son of an influential businessman. "Because of my name I got credit, even though I wasn't in the family business," he says. "When I say credit, I don't just mean financial - you get priority or special treatment." But Haykal points out that there are usually only a small group of people at the top. "Realistically, anyone starting a business needs the right ingredients - the team, an idea, good timing, financial support, expertise, and the network and connections. There are people who can do this, and there are people who cannot.
"But," he says, "it is essential that we encourage small- and medium-size businesses to create inclusive economic growth." That is why he and others like him are using their power to help entrepreneurs who aren't so fortunate. The Syrian Young Entrepreneurs Association (SYEA) was set up by Haykal and other young businessmen to give grants and business advice. Another, Bidaya, which means "beginning" in Arabic, funds 18- to 35 year-olds from low-income backgrounds. With this support, young people have had more opportunities to start small businesses. Enas Essa, for example, is a 32-year-old founder of an audiobook business. Mouayad Hamoudeh, 22, started his own dental implements business in a relatively poor area on the outskirts of Damascus.
Some young businessmen are helping others in more personal ways. Hassan Daboul, 31, is among those who benefited from education outside Syria, getting an MBA at Beirut's LAU. Now a board member of his father's aluminium company, he is also supporting a friend's glass art business. "I give some financial support and also put in a call when she can't access the people she needs," he says. "She can't do it alone as she doesn't have the financial resources or the big PR network."
Women are another group who have yet to see the full benefits of Syria's changes filter down to them. Many young women work, but few have yet made it to the big business boardrooms. "There are still expectations and family assumptions about the role of women in society," says Dia Haykal, 22, the sister of Abdulsalam, who works alongside him at Transtek. "But for our generation of young women, the situation is improving, gradually."
Where will Syria's economy go from here? Tabah says the future is hard to predict. "I am not in a position to make forecasts," he says. "I would like to see medium-size businesses as the basis of the economy, but here, family businesses are normal. Even big businessmen are individual not institutional, and so big changes are needed." In the meantime, the country's able young men are taking advantage of the opportunities open to them in the ever-expanding private sector, and changing the face of Syria, at least superficially.


Read more: http://www.thenational.ae/arts-culture/the-young-syrian-businessmen-making-it-happen#ixzz2dUz3763y
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Tuesday, August 27, 2013

27 Inspiring Young Online Entrepreneurs

27 Inspiring Young Online EntrepreneursOne of the fantastic things about the Internet is that there is no such thing as age discrimination when it comes to being successful online.  It doesn't matter if you're 13 or 83 — you have as much chance as anyone to become rich and famous through your online efforts.  To prove the point, here are 27 young entrepreneurs who are making their dreams a reality through online business.
Juliette Bindak, 20 of MissOandFriends.com — Juliette Bindak founded her company, Miss O and Friends, a site for girls, by girls, at the age of 10.  By the time she was 19, just last year, the company had a value of more than $15 million.  She also published her first book at the age of 16, which has sold over 120,000 copies.  Juliette is a true inspiration to any teen, pre-teen, or adult looking to start an online empire!
Twitter: @MissOandFriends
Pete Cashmore, 24 of Mashable.com – From the Mashable site: "Pete Cashmore is the 24 year-old CEO and founder of Mashable.com, a Technorati Top 10 blog worldwide. He founded Mashable in a small Scottish town in 2005 at age 19. In 2009, Cashmore was chosen as one of Inc Magazine’s 30 Under 30, Forbes’ Top 25 Web Celebs and the Huffington Posts’ Top 10 Game Changers 2009."
Twitter: @petecashmore and @mashable
Michael Dunlop, 21 of IncomeDiary.com — Michael Dunlop started his first profitable website when he was just 16 years old.  Now, at the ripe old age of 21, Michael is truly living what he calls the Internet Lifestyle.  Michael's blog is all about helping others achieve this same dream.  Through interviews with some of the true thought-leaders in online marketing, as well as instructional content, Michael brings great information to anyone looking to become a pro blogger.
Twitter: @michaeldunlop
Adam Horwitz, 18 of AdamHorwitz.tv – 18-year-old Adam Horwitz says on his site that he has a goal to make a million dollars a year by the time he's 21.  All signs point to that becoming a reality.  Adam started out in Internet marketing at the age of 15 and has become an expert in the areas of affiliate marketing and PPC (pay-per-click) advertising.  Now he makes money teaching others to make a living in these areas.  His blog is full of informational videos, tips, and lots of goofy stuff that might not make you a better entrepreneur, but just might make you laugh.
Twitter: @AdamHorwitz
Jonathan Mead, 23 of IlluminatedMind.net – Full-time blogger and life coach Jonathan Mead delivers a steady dose of inspiration and how-to content on his blog, and through his popular e-books, Reclaim Your Dreams, and The Zero Hour Workweek " How I Liberated Myself From the 9 to 5 by Getting Paid to Be Me. At just 23, Jonathan has figured out the "secret formula" for becoming a successful entrepreneur by sharing his story and expertise through blogging.
Twitter: @jonathanmead
Kevin Sproles, 25 of Volusion.com – Kevin Sproles started designing web sites at the age of 16.  After receiving lots of requests for a shopping cart solution, Kevin, with very little money and a great deal of perseverance, started coding shopping cart software.  Now, at the age of 25, his company supplies the most award-winning e-commerce solution to over online 100,000 entrepreneurs as well as major companies.
Twitter: @volusion
Catherine Cook, 20 of myYearbook.com – Since co-founding myYearbook with her brother in 2005, at the age of 15, Catherine Cook and her team have raised over $20 million in capital and have grown the site into one of the largest US social media sites with over 20 million members.  The site makes meeting new people easy by introducing members to innovative social games that are all tied together by a single virtual currency called “Lunch Money.”
Twitter: @myYearbook
Aaron Levie, 24, and Dylan Smith, 24 of Box.net - Aaron Levie originally created Box.net as a college business project with the goal of helping people easily access their information from any location. Box.net was launched from Aaron’s dorm room in 2005 with the help of co-founder, and now CFO, Dylan Smith. Aaron is the visionary behind Box’s product and platform strategy. He has spoken about content and collaboration tools at events such as Accenture Global Summit, South by Southwest, and Svase.  Dylan has been instrumental in Box.net’s growth and development since starting the company with Aaron.
Twitter: @levie & @boxdotnet
Sam Lessin, 26 of Drop.io – After graduating from Harvard, Magna Cum Laude in 2005, Sam Lessin started Drop.io.  Drop.io is a simple, private, real-time, sharing, collaboration, and presentation site where users can upload files of any kind and have the ability to access, share, and edit those files from any Internet-connected computer.  Sam is also the co-founder of SocialGreat.com, a location-based social media site with a growing user-base.
Twitter: @lessin
Gurbaksh Chahal, 27 of gWallet.com – Gurbaksh Chahal has an amazing entrepreneurial story.  After dropping out of high school in San Jose at age 16 to start ClickAgents, a performance-based ad network, he grew the company for two years, at which point it was acquired by ValueClick in a $40 million all-stock deal. His next venture, another ad network called BlueLithium, was acquired in 2007 by Yahoo! for $300 million cash.  Gurbaksh started gWallet, a virtual currency platform for social media, in September of 2009.  In 2008, Gurbaksh published his memoir in a book called The Dream.
Twitter: @gchahal
Nat Turner, 23; Zach Weinberg, 23; and Scott Becker, 23 ofInviteMedia.com – Nat Turner and Zach Weinberg had the idea for Invite Media, a buying platform for online display media, while in college.  They, along with Scott Becker and Michael Provenzano, launched the company in 2007 and have since landed millions in venture capital funding.  Invite Media is the first “universal buying platform” for display media, and their board of directors includes those involved early on in such companies as Real Media, Tacoda, Strategic Data Corporation, and Right Media.
Twitter: @natsturner@zachweinberg (protected tweets), and @scottbecker
Eric Koger, 25, and Susan Koger, 24 of ModCloth.com – High School sweethearts Eric and Susan Koger founded ModCloth, an online clothing, accessories, and decor retailer in 2002, while they were freshmen in college.  The company has since grown to over 100 employees and more than $15 million in annual sales.  What sets ModCloth apart from other online clothing retailers is their focus on connecting with customers through various social media outlets.
Ryan Allis, 25 of iContact.com – Ryan Allis is the co-founder and CEO of iContact, a leading provider of email marketing tools for small businesses.  Ryan has built North Carolina-based iContact from its start in 2003 to its current size with more than 175 employees, 50,000 customers, and $28 million in annual sales, while raising $10.8 million to grow the firm.  Ryan is also the author of the book Zero to One Million, which reached the Wall Street Journal Bestseller list in 2008.
Twitter: @ryanallis
Matt Mickiewicz, 25 of SitePoint.com – Originally called Webmaster-Resources.com, Matt Mickiewicz founded what is now known as SitePoint in 1998.  The site has grown to be one of the most visited sites on the Internet with half a million newsletter subscribers.  Matt is also the founder of 99Designs.com, a community-based site where those in need of design expertise can connect with designers of all disciplines to fill their needs.  The site currently has over 180,000 members.  Additionally, Matt is co-founder ofFlippa.com, a site that facilitates the buying and selling of websites.
Twitter: @sitepointmatt
Milun Tesovic, 25 of MetroLyrics.com – Started in 2001, while Milun Tesovic was a Vancouver, BC high school student, MetroLyrics is now the most popular music lyrics site on the Internet.  Metrolyrics gets more than 32 million unique monthly visitors and is the sixth most popular music site on the web.  Milun was named the 2009 National Student Entrepreneur Champion by Advancing Canadian Entrepreneurship (ACE) Canada, and received the Simon Fraser University Entrepreneur of the Year Award in 2008.
Twitter: @miluntesovic
Derek Johnson, 25 of Tatango.com – Derek Johnson was bit by the entrepreneur bug early in life, starting his first business of selling candy bars to fellow students at recess by the age of eight. Derek, a self proclaimed workaholic, puts in 100+ hour workweeks to help fulfill the vision of Tatango.com.  Originally launched as networkText.com in 2007, Tatango has since facilitated the sending of tens of millions of text messages to groups of varying sizes, through their simple-to-use group texting platform.
Twitter: @TheDerekJohnson
David Karp, 23 of Tumblr.com – Started by David Karp in 2007, the Tumblr platform now has 4.2 million users and has landed $5.5 million in venture capital.  Tumblr is a free online service that lets you effortlessly share anything.  Users can post text, photos, quotes, links, music, and videos, from their browser, phone, desktop, email, or wherever they happen to be.  To date, Tumblr has facilitated over 500 million posts of all kinds.
Twitter: @davidkarp
Zhang Rui, 30 of Mosh.cn – Zhang Rui is founder of Mosh.cn, one of China’s largest social networking websites, a site that has taken China’s young people by storm in the past few years.  Unlike other social networking sites, one focus of Mosh is to encourage face-to-face meetings among its members.  As the site is in Chinese, not much information could be obtained directly, but as of 2006, the site had 300,000 users and was growing at over 700 users per day.  If the rate remained steady, they should be at well over a million users today.
Twitter: N/A
Kevin Rose, 33 of Digg.com – In the fall of 2004, Kevin Rose withdrew $1000 out of his account and paid a freelance web developer $12 an hour to mock up a webpage, and purchased some server space for $99 a month.  He then paid $1200 for the domain name digg.com, and the project began.  Today Digg has over 40 million users, and Kevin's net worth is estimated at over $60 million.  Rose also co-hosts a weekly podcast Diggnation with Alex Albrecht, where they discuss the top stories from Digg.com.
Twitter: @kevinrose
Jake Nickell, 29 of Threadless.com – With $500 and an idea for what Jake Nickell thought was going to be a side project, he started Threadless.com 10 years ago.   Today, the company has turned into what Jake describes as, "a global t-shirt phenomenon."  The site features t-shirt designs submitted and voted upon by its thousands of members.  Jake also recently invested in Graphic.ly, which provides an immersive social experience and marketplace around digital comics and associated merchandise.
Twitter: @threadless
Andrew Gower, 31 of Runescape.com – As founder of Jagex, Ltd., Andrew Gower wrote the code and developed the concept of Runescape with his brother Paul in 2001.  Today Runescape is the #1 free multiplayer game on the Internet with over 150,000 players online at any given time, and Andrew shares with his brother and estimated net worth of $217 million.
Twitter: @OfficialJagex
Adam Toren & Matthew Toren of YoungEntrepreneur.com – Ok, so this is perhaps a shameless plug, but my brother Matthew and I do have a great young entrepreneur story.  We are proud to say that we truly epitomize the entrepreneurial spirit. In addition to being co-founders of YoungEntrepreneur.com (which launched back in 1999), we have many teaching and research interests including marketing, business development, entrepreneurial emergence, entrepreneurial strategy management, business growth techniques, innovation, and new venture creation. We have bought, sold and still operate several online ventures. We have recently released a book called, Kidpreneurs, and operate the blog site, Blogtrepreneur.com.
Twitter: @thebizguy & @matthewtoren
After reviewing this list of success stories, ask yourself – What can they do that you can't?  Chances are you won't find that they have anything special, beyond a drive to succeed, and the belief that it's possible.  So whatever your age, whether you're younger or older than those above, know that you too can make your dreams of business success a reality, if you'll just go for it and keep at it through whatever may come.
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Adam Toren is a serial entrepreneur, mentor, investor and co-founder ofYoungEntrepreneur.com. He is co-author, with his brother Matthew, ofKidpreneurs and Small Business, BIG Vision: Lessons on How to Dominate Your Market from Self-Made Entrepreneurs Who Did it Right (Wiley). He's based in Phoenix, Ariz.

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