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Sunday, August 11, 2013

Why buy Boeing is an older Boeing 747

Car dealers are already ready, an old clunker a potential buyer hands to take in order to complete a sale by a shiny new model. Aircraft manufacturers are now to follow their example. Boeing (BA) takes over the previous versions of the 747 from airlines, the appointment of its new, hard-to-sell-747-8. By 19 older 747s, which changed hands this year, Boeing has bought seven, according to data from Ascend online fleets. That makes it the biggest buyer of used jets in 2013.

While the purchases put Boeing on the hook for the search for new operators, it helps, demand for the new 747-8 fuel thirsty maintaining - a class four-engined aircraft, the airlines these days frown. New sales are crucial for the 747 assembly lines sum because Boeing slows stored output 13 percent to 1.75 aircraft per month and some unsold 747-8-s in desert storage. "It is Boeing's problem [airlines], discharges," says Douglas Kelly, senior Vice President for asset valuation at Aviation consultant Avitas. "It is just like trading in products for your car."

While Boeing fell to certain customers or aircraft sale comment Ascend data show that this year, sellers of 747-400 of the world largest Planemaker are all buyers of the 747-8 family, the passenger and all-cargo versions contains. The buyers are Korean air lines (003490: KS) and Cathay Pacific Airways (CPCAY), as well as the Cathay Dragonair unit and its cargo joint venture with Air China (AIRYY).

The 747-400 production ended in 2009. What's new on the 747-8 are improved engines and a stretched version of the hull hump, giving the aircraft its distinctive profile. It after Boeing engineers on the delayed 787 Dreamliner detoured in 2011, two years too late, entered commercial service.

Potential buyers for the 747-8 are dwindling as more and more freight by rail, or in the bellies of passenger versions prefers big twin-engine jets such as the Boeing 777, for its fuel economy and low maintenance costs, cargo ship, says Richard Aboulafia, an aviation consultant.

Older Boeing 747 buying "a very smart move on the part of Boeing,", says aviation consultant Michel Merluzeau. Latest Zampano, which retails for about $350 million, just five orders drawn this year. But there were also five cancellations according to Boeing's website. "I think it's a year at a time for this program," Merluzeau said.

Boeing repurchases help, the 747-8 customers recording losses on older aircraft that they would otherwise struggle to avoid, for sale, in the midst of a global glut of used Jumbo Avitass Kelly says. With weak consumer demand have to air freighter conversions of passenger Boeing 747 cargo carry dried up, he says one of the usual options for airlines crop value extraction of aging aircraft. About 75 747-400 parked in deserts around the world according to Ascend, and ratings have dropped. A 1992-vintage-747-400, which was assessed at $41.6 million in January 2008 is now estimated at $16.7 million, says Kelly.

Korean Air, the six 747-400s since 2010 at Boeing has sold, agreed in June to buy five 747 - 8s as part of a planned $3.6 billion purchase aircraft. The freight forwarder is the second largest global operator of the 747-400 and one of the largest buyers of the newest version of the 747-8, according to ascend.

Cathay Pacific, the 13 the 747s fitted only cargo carry arranged, sold a 747-400, Boeing this year as Air China cargo, namely 49 percent owned by Cathay. Dragon Air Boeing sold three jets.

Lately, Planemakers are especially eager to on four-engined models employ. Last year Boeing, Airbus A340s bought five of his rivals - a four-engined widebody aircraft no longer in production - from China the 20 of the Boeing 777 in a $6 billion took Eastern Airlines (CEA),-deal based on full list prices (often for early discounted be or multiple purchases).

Airbus has sold three of the nine A340s back 10 jets this year after purchase in the year 2012 gained. "In some exceptional cases Airbus bought back to support A340s to new business" Andreas Hermann, Vice President and head of the A340 second marketing at Airbus, said in an E-mail. "Regardless of the negative perception of some continue to the A340-500/600 efficient elevator for the long haul." Boeing officials remain optimistic that will be freight market, workhorse brings back new orders for the latest version of a jumbo jet, the hauling of cargo since the 1970s.

In a way the 747-8, a victim of Boeing is engineering success: the 777 extended version has a maximum distance of 7.725 nautical miles (14.305 kilometers), the airlines the possibility, a twin-engine aircraft on routes to use once accessible only by four-engine jumbos. A 747-8 equipped passengers has a listed range of 8,000 nautical miles.

Boeing has enough work to keep the 747-8 production line busy until the end of 2015, numbers George Ferguson, air and senior analyst for Bloomberg industry 747-8 orders unfilled with 53. "they see a mission for these aircraft," he says. "The market is not exactly tell us."

Bottom line: Boeing takes old Boeing 747 in the trade to promote sales of its newer $350,000747 million jumbo jet.


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Three big Indians, to revive a centuries-old motorcycle brand

And they're gone! Polaris of industries (PII) Chief Executive Officer Scott Wine visited to reveal three Indian motorcycles Bloomberg, which go in the sale this month on Monday. The company had spoken to classic, just the Indian Chief, starting with $18.999. has now begun it, the Indian sale Chief vintage, a $20.999 bicycle with soft-sided leather case and a quick release windshield, the wine shows. in determining that he ordered this model for themselves. (Red leather, for those who care.) The largest is Indian Chief a $22.999, modelled on a locomotive with hard bags, windshield and Bluetooth enabled audio 1930s.

Together the wine are they the first testing a "$ 100 million bet" reviving America's oldest bike brandis called.

Whether the trio will promote enough fans to Harley (HOG) delle dominance remains to be seen, but the vintage-style bikes have drawn a small crowd outside the building in Manhattan Bloomberg. I am now with someone who has seen many a brand that come and go: Jan-Benedict Steenkamp, marketing to promote Professor at the University of North Carolina in the city to his new book, brand breakout. The professor asked the Polaris CEO like this line of Steenkamps 22-year-old son, tempt could, the men, the the midlife crises Associates heavyweight cruisers. The wine's answer: "Start with the fact that it is not Harley Davidson." Also, the Polaris Chief claimed that its sold better company's 15-year-old victory motorcycle line already Harley under military personnel as and he that Indian-style argued, management, and engineering will pull in new buyers.

Nevertheless, wine took pain stress that the Indians and victory tokens remain separate animals in relation to technology and design. to avoid brand confusion, the company has divided all aspects of production, since it bought 2011 Indian held. His nightmare scenario? He said gloomily "Ford Jaguar". Jaguar lost its luster after Ford (F) bought it in 1989, in part, because the US car makers reduce cost with parts from other brands. This changed when Tata Motors (TTM) 2008 took over the year and Jaguar was a self-contained unit. A result: the Jaguar F-type, 2013 started with a line won World car design of the year awards from the Wall Street Journal Dan Neil, known as "the best way to spend $100,000 on a sports car."

This is the kind of success dreams with Indian wine. Uphill ride against Harley could take years, while the new line rave New York Times critic Jerry Garrett has and even Professor Steenkamp, the long impressed. With Polaris, making most of its $3.2 billion last year by all-terrain vehicles and snowmobiles wine seems not to care the waiting time. When the company this year sells three or four thousand Indian bikes, doubled in the next year, he said, that it will be on the way.

Wine also suggested that a marketing push and the prestige of the Indian brand victory also increased capacity. Wine plans have one born relaunch a motorcycle brand, born in 1901, now 1998 give some Polish. "I love our children," he said. "I think it's time to get a bit more attention to victory."


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Aykroyd: Let Me Explain the End of `Trading Places'

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Tweet Facebook LinkedIn Google Plus Email Aykroyd: Let Me Explain the End of `Trading Places' Play August 6 (Bloomberg) -- Bloomberg Businessweek corners legendary actor, comedian and entrepreneur Dan Aykroyd to find out why "Trading Places" is the greatest business movie of all time. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Why Is Jeff Bezos Buying the <em>Washington Post</em>?

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Einen Tag nach der Graham-Familie atemberaubende Ankündigung, dass es der Washington Post, Jeff Bezos zu verkaufen, ist die große Frage bleibt: Warum ist Amazons (AMZN) Gründer Wetten auf alten Medien? Hier ist eine Antwort: Jeff Bezos liebt Inhalt, und er hat immer.

Dies ist nicht immer offensichtlich. Amazons sichtbarsten Bauwerken gehören massive Erfüllung Streckennetz, also geschickt im effizient bewegen Lagerhäuser an Haustür; seine Herrschaft des Universums eBooks aus dem Kindle in die Welt der Inhalt für sie geschaffen; und die Verwaltung großer Mengen von Kundendaten um kalt Amazon-Website für jeden 200 Millionen Kunden personalisieren.

Dennoch liebte Bezos hat immer eine gute Geschichte — die Art, engrosses Kunden und ermutigt sie, Zeit zu verbringen, mit elektronischen Geräten und Bücher, Musik und Filme (das Konto für ein gutes Stück von Amazons Geschäft immer noch) zu erwerben. In den 1990er Jahren, als sein Ehrgeiz war die größte Buchhandlung im Web erstellen, gebaut Bezos eine große Redaktion Beschäftigung Sicherheitspersonal Amazon in das Äquivalent einer massiven Buch-Kette mit der vertrauenswürdigen Note ein Indie-Buchhandlung zu verwandeln. Jetzt scheint es fast malerischen, aber Bezos hatte große Träume für die Gruppe; Er versuchte, die geschätzte Journalisten wie damals-Time Editor Walter Isaacson zu mieten. Wie ich in meinem demnächst erscheinenden Buch The Store sind alleserzählen, verblasst die Redaktion schließlich während der dot.com Büste inmitten eine direkte, bitter, internen Wettbewerb mit den Algorithmen, die effizienter die Website personalisieren könnte.

Bezos nicht seinen Traum vom Besitz und Bereitstellung von einzigartigen Inhalten aufgeben. Mit dem Aufstieg des Kindle in 2009 begann er eine breite Palette von veröffentlichen Abdrucke zu erstellen, die Autoren zu experimentieren und verkaufen ihre waren direkt an Leser ermutigt. Dies wird oft als wettbewerbsfähige Angriff auf traditionelle DTP umrahmt –einschließlich von uns— aber Programme wie Singles Kindle und Kindle Schriftenreihen Autoren neue ein Publikum zu erreichen gewichen zu sein. Abteilungen wie Amazon Studios, die Unterstützung TV-Shows, sind jenseits des großen TV-Händler geben Schöpfer Freiheit und Flexibilität .

Es gibt starke persönliche Gründe für Bezos im Inhalt zu investieren. Seine Frau, MacKenzie Bezos, ist ein Schriftsteller. Er ist auch ein leidenschaftlicher Leser: Bezos hat Bücher informieren viele seiner wichtigsten Business-Entscheidungen, von der Erstellung des Kindle und Amazon Web Services auf seine bewusste Anbau einer sparsam, aktionsorientierten Kultur bei Amazon gutgeschrieben.

Bei der Arbeit in Bezoss Anschaffung der Post gibt es eine andere offensichtliche Faktor. Warren Buffett, deren Anlagephilosophie Bezoss langfristigen Schwerpunkt bei Amazon deutlich inspiriert hat, hat vor kurzem auf die Wiederbelebung der Lokaljournalismus grosses wetten. Zu Buffett, Lokalzeitungen sind eine große Investition: sie haben starke Bindungen mit ihrer Gemeinschaft, ein Minimum an etablierten Wettbewerb und Mitarbeiter voller ehrgeizig, vielseitig-Journalisten. "Überall dort, wo eine durchdringende Gefühl von Gemeinschaft, ein Papier, das die besondere Information dient der braucht, dass Gemeinschaft unerlässlich, um einen Großteil der Bewohner bleibt", schrieb Buffett. "Charlie [Munger] und ich glaube, dass Papiere liefert umfassende und verlässliche Informationen zu eng gebundene Communities und haben eine vernünftige Internetstrategie für eine lange Zeit lebensfähig bleiben werden."

Mit Programmen wie Amazon Web Services und Kindle Publishing hat Bezos Entwickler und Autoren gegeben Plattformen auf dem Experimentieren und überdimensionierte Belohnungen ernten. Beide Programme haben überdimensionierte Erfolg genossen. Bezos können jetzt Journalisten solche Möglichkeiten erweitern, durch den Kauf der Washington Post.

Bezos sagt, dass er die Post unabhängig von Amazon betrieben wird. Doch als Henry Blodget beobachtet, gibt es viele Möglichkeiten die Zeitung passt in Amazons digital Ökosystems. So betrachten die Post ein weiteres Stück in Bezos eigenen aufstrebenden Erzählung: wie lange unterschätzt Man Montage ist eines der größten Netzwerke von Geräten, Anwendungen und Inhalte, die die Technologiewelt je, Stück für Stück gesehen hat direkt vor unseren Augen.

Stein ist ein leitender Autor für Bloomberg Businessweek in San Francisco. Folgen Sie ihm auf Twitter @BradStone.

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BP oil spill settlement is in was sunk.

Look under rocks, and're likely to find worms. Dig in a multibillion-dollar legislation, and discover probably financial shenanigans. This proves the BP claims chaos in the Gulf of Mexico.

Quick review: as I cover storyreported in a current Bloomberg BusinessWeek-, process the deals 2010 spill Gulf after BP (BP) dough led demands to some pretty far-fetched to oil company. BP, more than 25 billion $ in compensation claims and cleanup costs already paid has, the presiding Federal Judge Carl Barbier of New Orleans asked to intervene. He refused, but appointed in early July by former FBI Director Louis Freeh, to investigate. The next day I predicted , based on my brief encounter with the court documents, Freeh had his big day.

BP now has a renewed request that Barber temporarily from the process due to fresh allegations of fraud. First the company points out, that two private lawyers for the claims facility - worked assessment cases controversial, while their own firms trying represent money BP plaintiffs. If true, that sounds pretty obvious conflict of interest, indicating lax management over the claims.

Secondly, BP says in its new dishes, submission, that two other employees in a claims Office in mobile, Alabama, due to allegations has been exposed that one half of them related and other people to excessive receive payments in return for kickbacks. This revelation follows the earlier suspension of two senior lawyers who work for the operation of claims in New Orleans to Kickback allegations. This bottle clear Red increasingly apparently without effort by Freeh. Sure it's got the advantage of BP lawyer alarming evidence turns just by cross indexing partnerships and by operating a fraud tip line.

The striking of this situation is it is as unnecessary. BP has acknowledged misconduct in connection with the oil spill and opened a company in the course of an industrial disaster the spigot of money, that is, what are we to do. Plaintiff lawyers stand hundreds of millions of dollars for their trouble making, but that was apparently not enough. Coat Don overreaching gave BP the chance of the victim. This additional years of litigation and lengthy distraction from what ever ecological and economic consequences in the Gulf region deserves attention.

And now, a former FBI Director over rocks, who knows is what he will find, wiggle?

Barrett, an Assistant Managing Editor and senior writer at Bloomberg BusinessWeek, is working on a book about the Chevron oil pollution case in Ecuador, which is scheduled for publication by Crown in 2014. His latest book is called GLOCK: the rise of America's gun.

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Saturday, August 10, 2013

Motorola Cheaps out with Moto x $500 million advertising budget

Motorola (GOOG) new phone, Moto-X, has as good a chance as any other on the market to succeed (or not). After having some time with the phone, I tell you, when a product has all that is necessary and no objections.

But building a very good device is not how you win in the Smartphone wars. For this, you need marketing and advertising. That is why Motorola as much as $500 million to the word on his latest phone is reportedly ready to spend . Now $500 million is a lot of money, but let us, in perspective.

In the year 2012, Apple (AAPL) for advertising spent $1 billion .

In the same year, Samsung (005930: KS) for advertising issued $4 billion .

According to Asymcos Horace Dediu, Samsung spent even $5.3 billion on "Promotion," which is French for commissions and in-store displays, training and other expenses. Roll together all Samsung is marketing, advertising and promotion costs and you're on a budget of $11 billion.

Advertising gets much attention, but are arguably more important marketing, sales and advertising. In most cases, the decision is carried out, a certain phone to buy in a shop. And this decision is based on the quality of the display, which know condition showroom mobile phones, and it and the enthusiasm for the sales staff recommendations. It's not like splashy Super Bowl Ad, but it is what makes mobile phones.

Not every dollar (euros or won) in Samsung's marketing budget devoted to smartphones, but many of them are. A: the Samsung display at every wireless retailer show. You will see that all the telephones are switched on, all of them work and have any demo mode to show what they can do. That is far away from some of the other devices you there - don't - those who have turned off or function at all, and that is no coincidence. Samsung spends money to ensure that its equipment in retail stores look chic.

Earlier this year, Samsung mobile marketing chief said DJ Lee me, that the company takes very seriously in-store sales. "We have teams monitoring branches in various countries", he said. "The best way for us to sell our equipment is in storage."

Motorola knows that it must pay the same attention to detail. Last week CEO Dennis Woodside explained how Moto-X would be prominently displayed at points of sale. Based on Samsungs Lee, he said that Motorola "has teams in-store employee on the phone functions, to train especially the new non-contact control functions." AT & T (T) stores appear the full range of colours and options so people can see how much you can customize your cell phone online. To personalize, for those who like to get their account number in a business up but still go home and their equipment also "X cards" containing a code with which a customer to add the account that you set up in the memory on the phone, the online build it, can have AT & T.

If Motorola ready, $500 million for advertising spend, then harass for them. The company itself got better prepare on an amount equal to large (or larger) on the harder work, that Verizon Wireless employees to drop the Moto-X instead of a Galaxy S4.


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The CBS Standoff and the Enduring Beauty of Bundled TV

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The dispute between CBS (CBS) and Time Warner Cable (TWC) is now being waged as an exchange of letters between CEOs, both of whom want to appear hurt—deeply—by the other.

CBS Chief Executive Officer Les Moonves wrote today to Glenn Britt, his counterpart at Time Warner:

“I was surprised to get your letter yesterday, particularly since I hadn’t spoken to you in more than a week. Come to think of it, you haven’t reached out to me personally, as I have to you on more than one occasion, even once during this entire matter, so your communication was both unexpected and welcome. The fact that you released it simultaneously to the media, however, dampened my enthusiasm somewhat.”

The cable company stopped carrying CBS channels on Friday in several major markets, including New York, Dallas, and Los Angeles, in a spat focused largely on two areas: the price Time Warner Cable should pay to include CBS, and whether cable subscribers will be allowed to watch CBS programming on their mobile gadgets. There’s little enthusiasm from either side for more negotiations. Britt, who retires at year’s end and is seen as a pioneer in the industry, may well be considering his legacy in battling the rising flood of programmers’ fees that bedevil cable operators. For its part, CBS—the highest-rated broadcast network, with such shows as 60 Minutes, NCIS, and Under the Dome—is seeking to boost its carriage revenue to $1 billion by 2017.

In his letter to Moonves on Monday, Britt proposed that both sides stop their squabbling and make CBS an “a la carte” choice for subscribers at a price set by the network, “with 100 percent of that price remitted to CBS. This way, rather than our debating the point, we would allow customers to decide for themselves how much value they ascribe to CBS programming.” He also decried as “beyond the pale” CBS’s decision to block its online content from Time Warner Cable’s Internet customers.

Moonves’s response:

“Anyone familiar with the entertainment business knows that this is an empty gesture. The economics and structure of the cable industry have created a certain way that content is distributed and compensated. We both know that a true a la carte universe is not one that Time Warner Cable welcomes. In fact, if you thought it was a good idea, why aren’t you offering your new, multibillion-dollar Lakers and Dodgers channels to your subscribers in Los Angeles on an a la carte basis? Instead, your subscribers in Los Angeles are already being charged in the neighborhood of $4.00 for the Lakers and likely more than that for the Dodgers—both of which you have pulled off broadcast television entirely.

The “certain way” Moonves referenced—program bundles from entertainment companies such as CBS, 21st Century Fox (FOXA), and Walt Disney (DIS)—led Cablevision (CVC) to sue Viacom (VIA) in February on antitrust grounds. The Long Island-based cable operator argues that it’s been forced to carry Viacom offerings its subscribers don’t want to fund—VH1 Classic, Palladia, and CMT among the dregs—so that it could obtain “commercially critical networks” such as Comedy Central, MTV, and Nickelodeon. (Viacom has six MTV and four VH1 permutations, according to the lawsuit.)

Rich Greenfield, a veteran media analyst with BTIG Research, says there’s “zero chance” content producers like CBS will abandon the bundled-channel model that has proved so lucrative for so many years. “You start picking and choosing, and all of a sudden your reach” with advertisers diminishes, he says, as the size of cable viewing audiences declines.

The bigger question, according to Greenfield, is whether federal regulators will get involved. That could “force CBS to cave,” he says, otherwise the standoff could “drag until late September when Time Warner is forced to cave, when the programming becomes too valuable.” A spokeswoman for the Federal Communications Commission says the agency would become involved in the dispute if one side files a complaint about the other not negotiating “in good faith.”

Paul Sweeney, a media and Internet analyst with Bloomberg Industries, predicts no traction for an a la carte pricing model until cable subscribers—who typically pay $75 to $90 per month for video and broadband Internet—revolt over the rising costs. “It does not appear that we are there yet,” he wrote in an
e-mail.

If nothing else, the start of the NFL season next month could alter the balance of the money fight and make Time Warner Cable shut up and pay. No company gets between a football fan and the game. Even then, however, there’s that ancient method of watching even digital TV broadcasts from networks like CBS: a $5 rabbit-ear antenna.


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Airlines battle of Los Angeles

There are more than 50 flights a day between Los Angeles and San Francisco, enough for one of every 20 minutes from 06 to 22:30 Delta Air lines (DAL) still sees room for more.

The airline making a splash on Aug. 1, when it announced new hourly shuttles between LA and San Francisco, along the lines of the service it operates between New York and Boston, Chicago and Washington. Shuttles are only scheduled flights with separate, faster check-in desk, a Liberal, 30 minute check-in the window and during the flight of free newspapers, wine and beer. (In California, Delta two counters from the State go with Sierra Nevada and Wente,.) The shuttle extension is a push by Delta on its market share at the Los Angeles International, boost, where it invested in a new terminal 5 and new clubs, a project, which be expected to be finished in 2015.

Los Angeles, a hub of United (UAL) is the site of a modest skirmish between Delta and American (AAMRQ), who are planning new domestic flights this summer. American, which is on the verge of a merger with US Airways Group (LCC), sees Los Angeles as an important market which allow its corporate reconstruction business. Not stops the airline of new LA are based on medium-sized markets, are home to large companies: Pittsburgh. Columbus, Ohio; Hartford. Conn; and Bentonville, Ark (airline blogger Brett Snyder called American Los Angeles intending to "Let us a bunch of money losing, before new management coming 2012 tour summer.")

In July, on the basis of Atlanta Delta announced new flights from Los Angeles to Portland, Oregon/United States, as well as expanded service in Oakland, California; San Jose; New Orleans, Louisiana Kansas City, MO; Indianapolis; Columbus; Tampa; Raleigh, NC; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; and limited service in three cities in Montana. The new shuttle operation carried by 76-seat of regional jets, is largely an extension of the Delta strategy California travelers a viable option for United, especially between the two most important business centres of the country.

United and American both serve about 19 percent of the traffic at LAX, followed by Southwest (LUV), according to the Bureau of transportation statistics. Delta was fourth, with 13.6 percent. San Francisco and Los Angeles were the top traveler destinations from any city or some 1.68 million passengers per trip in the 12 months that 2013?? is New York to April ranked second by two California cities.

"[LAX] always somehow a Boston;""No one has ever really has everything," Delta spokesman Anthony Black said Monday.

Added to flights, Delta Shuttle service of its existing lineup only three flights from September with 14 days of the week, and it will still add up to one less flight each day as United (UAL) currently offers. The two carrier business already find many Nonstops on the LA-SF line: Southwest flies 11, Virgin America has nine and American six.

In 1994, United shuttle by United, began a separate West Coast unit designed to have lower costs. It survived airline downturn not 2001.


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This Is What Would Happen If Fast-Food Workers Got Raises

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Even McDonald’s (MCD) own hypothetical household budget (pdf) for its restaurant employees seems to suggest it’s difficult, at best, for many in its low-wage workforce to make ends meet. And all this week thousands of fast-food workers at many of the biggest U.S. restaurant chains have staged short-term walkouts in seven cities: New York, Chicago, St. Louis, Detroit, Milwaukee, Kansas City, Mo., and Flint, Mich. The workers are demanding a pay raise to $15 an hour, compared with current average wages across the industry that are closer to the federal minimum wage of $7.25. President Obama has proposed raising the lowest wages to $9 an hour, which would be a 24 percent jump over the minimum wage.

Food-service workers are among the lowest paid in the country. Here’s what Payscale.com data, based on about 3,000 employee surveys, show about how much workers are making at the country’s 10 biggest fast-food chains compared with workers in other fields. Not all the chains listed here are facing protests this week—they are instead being highlighted for the size of their workforces:

So how much could restaurant chains stand to increase their wages before profits evaporate? It’s a complicated question. Based on years of research, some economists are now advocating a minimum wage of $10.50 (PDF), which they claim would increase a chain’s costs by only 2.7 percent. Roughly half of food-service workers currently make less than that proposed $10.50 rate, so not everyone would be affected. The companies could make up the difference through a combination of price increases—say, a nickel more for a burger—reduced turnover, productivity gains, and “a slightly more equal distribution of companies’ total revenues,” which is a nice way of saying the highest-paid employees would see their incomes increase more slowly, explains Jeannette Wicks-Lim, an economist at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and one of the signees of the petition.

Here’s a rough look at how fast-food financials break down. There are two kinds of restaurants: those run by the company, and those run by independent franchisees who set their own wages and pay royalties to the company (at many chains, most locations are franchised). Together, company-owned and franchise McDonald’s locations last year contributed $3.9 billion in economic value added, a measure of profit that subtracts for taxes and the cost of capital, according to Craig Sterling, managing director and global head of equity research at evaDimensions. Burger King’s (BKW) economic profit was $61 million by this EVA metric.

As companies report financials only for company-owned locations, here’s what payroll expenses and margins look like at company-owned stores at two chains, based on their annual filings.

Based on these numbers, raising the hourly wage to $15—about two-thirds more than what the average employee earns now—would likely wipe out profits at these company-owned stores. “If wages are the majority of labor [costs], and it doubled to more than 50 percent of revenue, restaurant operating income would clearly be a loss, assuming static menu prices,” explains Sharon Zackfia, an analyst at William Blair & Co. Assuming all wages double and other expenses don’t decrease, menu prices at McDonald’s would have to go up about 25 percent, which means an extra $1 for a Big Mac and a “Dollar Twenty-Five Menu” in place of the Dollar Menu, estimates the Columbia Journalism Review, which would be a big deal to consumers. A smaller price hike is perhaps more feasible.

Wages at franchised locations are a separate issue all together. Margins at these stores are likely lower than the figures above because of expenses and royalties that company-owned stores don’t have to pay. So before they could increase wages, franchisees would likely have to work out a better deal with the company.

Franchisees currently contribute about one-third of McDonald’s revenue and 40 percent at Burger King, so lower fees would certainly hit their bottom lines, as it would with any chain using that model. But, as Sterling noted in an e-mail, “the bottom line is that these firms have plenty of profits to go through before they go out of business.” Still, any move that would affect profits would provoke an almost certain Wall Street response: “Don’t think investors won’t care or react,” he said.

Of course, these are all hypothetical changes, and there’s no reason to think that the fast-food industry will suddenly stop protecting its profits in the face of these protests. If higher wages do come, raising prices is the preferred way to get there. “Inevitably, we anticipate most restaurants will pass on the wage increase to customers via price increases,” William Blair & Co. states in a report. So if workers succeed in their push for bigger paychecks, get ready for pricier Big Macs.


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CVS Is Pushing Obamacare. Will it Backfire?

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The Affordable Care Act is a bit of a Rorschach test. The law’s legions of opponents see what they call “a government takeover of health care.” Fans see a new social program that’ll become “extremely popular.” When pharmacy chains look at Obamacare, they see new customers.

CVS Caremark (CVSrecently announced that it would use its retail stores to promote the new health law to uninsured Americans who will be eligible to buy coverage through new online insurance marketplaces, starting on Oct. 1. Stores may host so-called “navigators,” who will be employed by states to act as advisers helping people enroll; this means that confused shoppers could walk into a CVS store armed with questions and walk out having figured out which health plan suits them best. Walgreen (WAG) last month made a similar announcement that it would help get the word out about Obamacare’s options online and in stores.

It’s a pretty simple equation: The U.S. market for health care is about to grow as millions of people become insured, and companies that sell medicine are trying to capture as much of the growth as possible.

What about the potential backlash from Obamacare foes? A Minnesota group called Citizens Council for Health Freedom blasted CVS in a news release on Monday, calling on shoppers to stay away. “Don’t alienate customers with politics and push away more than half of Americans who disapprove of Obamacare,” the group wrote. Asked if it’s worried about angering ACA critics, a CVS spokeswoman said in an e-mail that the company wants to help customers “make informed decisions” about health-care options.

CVS is the country’s second-largest drug-benefit manager, with a retail footprint of 7,400 stores. It seems pretty clear that the company figures it has much more to gain from new Obamacare customers picking up everything from greeting cards to toilet paper on a trip to the pharmacy than it stands to lose by disaffecting right-wingers, who may shop elsewhere. “We have a unique opportunity to introduce [customers] to the other products and services available across the entire store,” Mark Cosby, president of CVS’s retail business, said on the company’s earnings call on Tuesday morning, according to a transcript. CVS reported $31.2 billion in revenue and adjusted earnings-per-share of $0.97 for the second quarter, slightly above analysts’ estimates.

Pharmacy chains are increasingly moving beyond simply selling medication to directly providing such health-care services as flu shots and exams. CVS operates 684 clinics in stores and plans to have nearly 800 by yearend. The company sees opportunity with so many new patients getting insurance and not enough primary care doctors to treat them. “Our longer term goal is to create a national primary care platform,” Chief Executive Larry Merlo said on the call today. Helping people sort through their health-plan choices just might be a natural fit.


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Margarine: Unilever can't believe it is not for sale

Unilever (ULVR) business of spreads looks about as tight as hot margarine. The spreads category includes such hidden Staples like butter, peanut butter, cream cheese, Marmite, even Nutella - see how it works. Spreads make up 7 percent of sales at Unilever and consumer goods conglomerate concentrates strongly on the butter substitute - spread sadness largely a history of margarine to decline seems. The company sold the stuff under a dizzying array of brand name - I can't believe, there is no butter, country crock, Imperial, Brummel & Brown, promise, Becel, flora, Rama and blue band, among them - and there is little advantage in the game.

Last week, when sales for its food in the first half of the year fall Unilever a 1 percent reported , noted the special pain caused the company by "a decline in spreads" and highlighted some problems with margarine as the culprit. Consumers don't like the taste of certain brands (flora, in particular, is not fool anybody to think it would be butter), rivals have been compete on price and shoppers now prefer natural products of the people caused fat come, seem like a useless idea. While growing health awareness can be a factor, consumers seem not categorically averse to buying fat sale of Unilever Hellmann products grow. A variety of nonbuttery alternatives vying for toast topping privileges, including The fast-growing segment of the hummus. These are problems that would be powerless to resolve also Fabio flowing locks.

Maybe this is more a Unilever problem than a worldwide rout of margarine. While global sales of butter and spreadable oils ticked down in 2012, according to data from Euromonitor international, investment business margarine post - an increase of 1.1 percent. But sales is one of the largest U.S. brands of Unilever, I can't believe it's not butter, by 3.9 percent to $418 million.

Unilever Chief Paulus Gerardus Polman said last week earnings conference call, that rotate the spread business requires more than compete on price. "It's about the right taste," he said. "And it's about the perceived naturalness of our products." What Unilever sees, such as his "better-tasting products", such as Becel introduces gold, more markets and "do well", said Polman. The company plans to improve the marketing of its spread as "the healthy alternative to butter", he noted. Unilever does not respond to a request for comment.

Polman says he sees business improve the printed sheets so as it remains "a difficult market." So you dry oily tears.


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Friday, August 9, 2013

SBA Signs Memorandum of Understanding with the Asian Pacific American Chamber of Commerce and Entrepreneurship

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by Marie Johns, SBA Deputy Administrator

Created: May 30, 2013, 9:32 pmUpdated: May 30, 2013, 9:32 pm

As we mark the end of Asian-American Pacific Islander (AAPI) Heritage Month this May, the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) recognizes how important the success of America’s 1.5 million AAPI- owned businesses is to the strength of our economy. 

With more than 2.8 million workers, these firms are fueling job creation and strengthening our communities at a critical time in our economic recovery – and SBA is here to help them grow and succeed.

Four years ago, America’s small businesses and entrepreneurs were struggling in the face of the worst economic environment since the Great Depression – and a banking sector that was frozen.  Since that time, President Obama has worked to expand opportunities for AAPI business owners – particularly through increased access to credit.

And we’ve seen real progress.

We already know that SBA loans are three to five times more likely to be made to minority- and women-owned businesses than conventional small business loans made by banks.  And between January 2009 and March 2013, over $19 billion went to AAPI small businesses through 27,485 SBA loans.

We’ve also been working closely with our partners at the White House and throughout the Administration to reach more AAPI small business owners across the country - owners like Mei Xu, the founder of Chesapeake Bay Candles.

Mei’s is a classic story of American success.  In early 1994, she and her husband both left their jobs to follow their entrepreneurial spirits and establish Pacific Trade International and their premier brand Chesapeake Bay Candles.  They used an SBA loan in 1995 to invest in their business and scale their operations, and Mei recently opened Chesapeake Bay’s first American manufacturing facility in Maryland, which will employ over 100 people and produce 16,000 candles a day.   

At SBA, we’re constantly looking for more ways to help business owners like Mei, who have the creativity and drive to build a successful small business.  And while we’ve made progress, we know that there is more work to do.

Private sector partners like the Asian Pacific American Chamber of Commerce and Entrepreneurship (ACE) play a key role in connecting America’s entrepreneurs with the opportunities they need to start a business, or take an existing company to the next level.

Earlier today, I had the pleasure of joining ACE Chairman Bill Imada and members of the Chamber’s board to sign a Memorandum of Understanding between our two organizations.

This strategic alliance lays the groundwork for our future partnership and will ensure that entrepreneurs across the country have the tools they need to start and grow businesses and create jobs.

As President Obama has said, “The story of America’s success is written by America’s entrepreneurs; men and women who took a chance on a dream and they turned that dream into a business, and somehow changed the world.”

This memorandum brings us one step closer to helping AAPI men and women achieve this dream.

And together we’re building a more resilient and more inclusive vision of entrepreneurship – one that creates jobs and strengthens our economy nationwide. 

Marie Johns's Profile PictureMarie Johns is Deputy Administrator of the U.S. Small Business Administration. She is responsible for management and oversight of the agency, and leads the agency’s efforts to reach underserved communities.Tags: Official SBA News and Views, Open For Business, SBA News and Views

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Take Time this 4th of July to Learn about SBA Programs & Initiatives for Veteran Entrepreneurs

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On this Fourth of July, as we celebrate our freedoms, I want share with you the ways SBA and the Office of Veterans Business Development are celebrating veteran entrepreneurs. 

The Administration and SBA are committed to ensuring that the federal government continues their dedication to our returning veterans.  As part of this, for the first time ever, in FY 2012 the federal government exceeded the three percent goal to contract with Service Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Businesses. Small businesses won a record $12.56 billion in federal prime contracts – an increase of more than $1 billion from FY 2011. This dollar amount represents 3.03 percent of all federal prime contractor spending.

This news is truly exciting, especially considering that nearly one in 10 small businesses nationwide is veteran-owned.  As a whole, these 2.4 million small businesses employ nearly six million Americans and generate more than $1 trillion in receipts. And, in the private sector workforce, veterans are 45 percent more likely than those with no active-duty military experience to be self-employed.

Additionally, SBA is working hard to improve access to capital for veteran entrepreneurs through the Veterans Pledge Initiative.   With the support of SBA’s top 20 national lending partners, and approximately 100 additional regional and community lending partners across the United States, SBA expects to assist an additional 2,000 veterans obtain loans to start or expand small businesses by increasing lending by $475 million over the next five years.

Veteran entrepreneurs can find more information about this initiative, and locate one of SBA’s 68 district offices here.  The site also identifies lending institutions participating in the veteran lending initiative. In addition, SBA has developed a checklist to assist veterans applying for access to capital. 

And, as we look at how to help those who are dreaming of owning their own business, SBA is laying down the foundation to help service members transitioning from active duty to learn more about entrepreneurship and franchising through its Operation: Boots to Business Program.  Many service members will apply the skills and experience they developed in the U.S. Armed Forces to their civilian communities as doctors and police officers, engineers and entrepreneurs.

Again, I wish you all a happy and safe Fourth of July as we celebrate our freedoms and the essence of what makes this country a great place to live and work as small business entrepreneurs.  

Rhett Jeppson is the Associate Administrator for SBA's Office of Veterans Business Development.Tags: Official SBA News and Views, Open For Business

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How to Up the Ante and Start Selling to Big, Corporate Clients

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by Caron_Beesley, Community Moderator

Created: December 27, 2012, 7:44 amUpdated: January 16, 2013, 1:24 pm

Want to secure your first million-dollar deal in 2013? Crossing that threshold will probably mean that you'll have to start selling to large corporate clients for the first time. It can be tough for small businesses, but not impossible. So what does it take? Here are some tips for upping your ante and selling to big, corporate customers.

Do Your Homework

Breaking into a new market or new client base requires planning. Start with identifying your new target market and then defining the value your small business can offer them.

Use online research to identify businesses that might be the right fit for your products or services. Specifically, try to identify potential weaknesses or threats they may be facing by reading press releases, reviews, media coverage, and financial reports. This will help you determine potential pain points. Check out what your target’s competition is up to – what are they doing that your target client isn’t?

Consider ways in which your business can help these prospects with their pain points and challenges. How can you help them succeed, be more efficient, save money or achieve their business goals? Don’t forget to assemble proof points and examples of how you’ve helped other (perhaps smaller) companies do the same.

Be Clear About Your Differentiators

Now that you know your target clients, what is it about your business that will make you stand out? Build a picture of your company – its culture, values, existing customers, products and services – and think about ways these combine to differentiate you. This blog can help guide you through this process: 5 Tips for Using Differentiators to Increase Your Small Business Sales.

Getting a Meeting

Getting that all-important first meeting will take time and there are many ways to go about it. Which combination of tactics will work really depends on who your customers are and what influences them. Which conferences/networking events do they attend? What information are they seeking online to help them make informed purchasing decisions (this will help define your web-based calls to action)? Which media do they read? You may also want to consider hiring a sales rep with experience selling to larger corporations.

Some techniques to consider include:

For the best result, integrate your chosen techniques so that your messaging and your end goals are consistent across each tactic.

Making Your Pitch

This is your chance to make your homework work for you. Concentrate on your prospect’s pain points. How can your business help them ease their problems? Your pitch should be less about the product and more about why you are different, the value you bring and how you can make your client’s life easier and more profitable. Remember, larger corporations can be reluctant to switch vendors and may think it risky to work with a small business, so it’s vital that your business case focuses 100 percent on why it makes sense for your client to make the switch from another vendor to you.

Be Prepped and Ready for Questions

Aside from the points you make in your pitch, one of the most effective ways to stand out from your competitors is to come ready and prepared for all questions. Your meeting may include senior management and staff from pricing, contracts, legal, operations and procurement, so expect a diverse range of questions about your product, pricing, and terms, and be ready to answer promptly and clearly. If you can’t, quickly state that you will get back to them with a response within 24 hours, or one business day.

Alleviate Any Concerns About Your Being a “Small Business”

Small businesses can be a risky investment for corporations. They may be worried you can’t scale to their production needs or that you may go out of business or be acquired during the life of the contract.

Don’t ignore this concern. Be prepared for it and use your pitch to emphasize the benefits of doing business with a smaller company. Stress your agility, responsiveness, ability to customize products, etc. Mention any partners that can fill gaps that may leave them vulnerable. Act like a larger business by having a product road map or timeline that clearly shows what will happen when and when you anticipate your client will start to see results. By doing so, you’re already starting to prove your value before a contract has even been drawn up.

Have you upped the ante and started selling to larger, corporate clients? Share your experiences below.

Related Blogs

Caron_Beesley's Profile PictureCaron Beesley is a small business owner, a writer, and marketing communications consultant. Caron works with the SBA.gov team to promote essential government resources that help entrepreneurs and small business owners start-up, grow and succeed. Follow Caron on Twitter: @caronbeesleyTags: Community Blogs, Small Business Matters, Managing, Marketing

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8 Ways Your Business Can Get Ready for the 2013 Tourist Season

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While the U.S. economy continues to see positive signs of growth, consumer spending in one sector is booming – tourism.

Consider the facts – spending by international travelers to and within the U.S. increased 10.5 percent in 2012 (source: U.S Travel Association). Travel also continues to lead export growth, accounting for a 23 percent rise in U.S. exports. Home grown tourism is also experiencing a surge, with more and more Americans opting to take “staycations” – enjoying recreational and entertainment options closer to home – as opposed to hitting the roads and skies.

The forecast is good too. The Department of Commerce predicts that the U.S. can expect a 3.6 to 4.3 percent average annual growth in travel and tourism over the next four years.

To further spur tourism in the U.S., the federal government has set a goal of increasing American jobs by attracting and welcoming 100 million international visitors annually by the end of 2021, bringing an estimated $250 billion per year into the U.S. (read the National Tourism and Travel Strategy for more information).  

This all represents a unique opportunity for the U.S. tourist industry and the businesses that underpin it. So what can your small business do to take advantage of this uptick in tourism? Here are eight marketing and management tips to help you get ready for the 2013 tourist season!

1. Make it Easy for Tourists to Come Back to Their Favorite Spots

Start with a plan to reach your low hanging fruit – repeat visitors. The best way to do this is to stay in touch with them all year round with special offers, email marketing and social media updates. Let them know what plans you have for the tourist season this year, any upgrades you’ve made to your business and so on. If the summer is your peak season, then fall, winter and even early spring should be your busiest marketing seasons.  

These articles offer some useful tips for staying in touch with customers:

2. Staycationers –  How to Attract These Lucrative Tourists

Just as you want to reach out to travelers and tourists from out of town, don’t forget to focus some of your marketing and advertising efforts closer to home. Be persuasive in your benefit statements. For example:

Explain what differentiates you – Are you family/pet friendly? Do you stock/grow local products? How easy is it to get to you?  Do repeat visitors receive any special discounts?Source local – Even if you don’t grow or produce your own products, look for ways to integrate local produce into your business so that customers get a real flavor of what your community offers and the dollars stay local. Ask fellow businesses to reciprocate too.Team up with complementary businesses to cross-promote and market your businesses – with something for everyone, tourists might be more likely to make the trip to your community and stay for a while! Get some tips for doing this in this blog from Rieva Lesonsky:  Forget Competition it’s Time for Co-Opetition.Cash in on what your region has to offer – Is your region known for its wine or green credentials? Are there certain certifications that you can seek out to help promote your business?Develop messages and advertising that targets larger groups – Can you handle bus tours or school field trips? Any incentives or package deals for larger groups or families?Remind visitors that they will save money on gas, lodging, airfare and even time by vacationing near home.Get Involved in Local Events/Festivals – Community fairs, farmers markets, sponsored sports events and concerts offer great opportunities to reach locals and tourists alike. Read guest blogger Rieva Lesonsky’s: Marketing Your Business with Events and Sponsoring or Hosting an Event – 6 Ways to Maximize your Return.

3. Use Location-Based Services to Attract Passersby

Don’t forget to take advantage of mobile technology. Promoting your small business to tourists who might be passing by using mobile apps isn’t that difficult. Groupon, Living Social, FourSquare and ThinkNear, among others, let you post information about your latest offers and limited-time deals to consumers within a certain distance of your business. You can also schedule deals so they get delivered during key hours. Keep your Google, Yelp, Yellow Pages and other online listings up to date too.

4. Take Your Business on the Road

If the best way to reach tourists is to take your business on the road, a concession stand or a booth at a craft or community fair is a great opportunity to bring in extra dollars and spread the word. These articles offer some advice:

5. Become a National Park Concession Business

Did you know there are opportunities for small businesses in national parks? Food, lodging, tours, whitewater rafting, boating, and many other recreational activities and amenities in more than 100 national parks are managed by private businesses under contract to the National Park Service. The services, provided by more than 600 concessioners, gross more than $1 billion every year and provide jobs for more than 25,000 people peak season. Every year, the Park Service issues prospectuses that detail these business opportunities; it also publishes notices at www.fedbizopps.gov. Many of these opportunities are smaller operations featuring unique recreation activities.

6. Need Short-Term Capital?

Seasonal businesses often have to pour capital into business improvements, marketing, inventory and staff long before they can expect to make a profit. If you don’t have sufficient cash flow or funds to prepare your business for the 2013 tourist season, you may want to consider a short-term loan or line of credit. SBA’s CAPLines Program, for example, provides advances against inventory needs and accounts receivable to help you weather seasonal sales. Read more and talk to your regional SBA Office for more information.

7. Plan Your Seasonal Work Force

If your business counts on the summer season or tourist trade, then start planning your seasonal workforce now. If you’re new to this process or have questions about hiring and compensating seasonal workers (for example, do you need to pay unemployment taxes for seasonal workers?), check out this blog – 5 Things to Know Now about Hiring Temporary or Seasonal Workers – for tips on hiring and working with seasonal workers within the law.

8. Partner with Local Business Groups

Reach out to your local Chamber of Commerce and local tourism associations or sector organizations that promote clusters of businesses in the same business sector such as hotels, restaurants, tour operators, B&B’s, camp grounds and so on. Many of these offer small businesses an opportunity to participate in their targeted and collective approach to seasonal marketing.

What are you going to do to boost your revenues this tourist season? Leave a comment below!

Caron_Beesley's Profile PictureCaron Beesley is a small business owner, a writer, and marketing communications consultant. Caron works with the SBA.gov team to promote essential government resources that help entrepreneurs and small business owners start-up, grow and succeed. Follow Caron on Twitter: @caronbeesleyTags: Community Blogs, Small Business Matters, Managing, Marketing

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Dish Network, the Meanest Company in America

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For 2012, the website 24/7 Wall St. determined that the worst company to work for in America was the Dish Network (DISH), the Englewood (Colo.)-based company that provides satellite TV to more than 14 million subscribers. To pick its winner, the site began by sifting entries on glassdoor.com, an online service where people gossip about their jobs. It was hardly the most scientific of methods. Still, the volume of miserable tales about Dish is impressive; 346 former or current employees had taken the time to write not-so-nice things about the company. On a scale of 1 to 5, they ranked their company an average of 2.2, beating Dillard’s (DDS) and RadioShack (RSH) for the spot at the bottom.

The most common complaints were long hours, lack of paid holidays, and way too much mandatory overtime. Some posts suggest that merely setting foot in Dish’s headquarters is a danger to the soul. “Quit” was the recommendation to one Dish employee who sought management advice. “You’re part of a poisonous environment?…?go find a job where you can use your talents for good rather than evil.” The roundup noted one other thing: The share price was up more than 30 percent for most of the year.

Ergen, circa 1999, with his satellite dish, the first to offer 500 channelsPhotograph by Steve Marcus/ReutersErgen, circa 1999, with his satellite dish, the first to offer 500 channels

Much of the malice, and value generation, can be traced to one man: Charlie Ergen, 59, the founder and chairman of Dish. Although he turned over the role of chief executive officer to former Sirius XM Radio (SIRI) head Joseph Clayton in 2011, Ergen remains the core of Dish—and its largest shareholder, with 53.2 percent of the outstanding shares and 90.4 percent of the voting rights.

Ergen founded Dish more than 30 years ago, installing satellite systems with partner Jim DeFranco. Dish is now the second-largest satellite TV provider in the U.S., with 26,000 employees. Ergen, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, has an estimated net worth of $11 billion. That puts him among the world’s richest men and makes him one of America’s greatest entrepreneurial success stories. He’s also a living rebuke to a library of management textbooks that suggest fostering happy, self-actualized employees in a transparent environment of trust and communal effort is the path to wealth.
Michael Neuman knew the risks going in when he accepted Ergen’s offer to be Dish’s president and chief operating officer in 2005. Before Neuman, no president had lasted more than four years. Still, for Neuman, a man who’d known Ergen for more than a decade and had run a Dish-like satellite service in Canada, the opportunity was too tempting to pass up. Unlike its major competitor, DirecTV (DTV), Dish was fully integrated: It engineered, built, and sold all its own set-top boxes and ran its own installation fleet and customer service. (The company split in 2008, with EchoStar (SATS) building the boxes and Dish doing everything else. Ergen remains chairman of both companies.) “If you’re a student of management like I am, it was irresistible,” says Neuman.

At first, Neuman loved working at Dish. The company had attracted cable subscribers for a decade by offering clearer picture and sound for a cheaper price. Dish was so notorious for undercutting its competition, especially when it came to the cost of satellite dishes, that Preston Padden, former CEO of rival Rupert Murdoch’s American Sky Broadcasting, joked that the company’s slogan would one day be “Take this free dish, and we’ll buy a house to bolt it onto.” Digital cable had somewhat leveled the playing field, and for Neuman’s first few months on the job every day seemed to bring a new challenge.

Over time, Neuman says, he came to realize why former presidents such as John Reardon, who lasted less than a year, described Ergen as “pounding people into submission.” The hours were long, yes, but it was Ergen’s habit of unilaterally making decisions that most irked Neuman.

Although Dish had more than 100 people employed in its marketing department and reams of customer data to analyze, when it came time to figure out how much it was going to charge for satellite service, Ergen went into his office and came up with the final number alone. “It would be like the CEO of Kraft (KRFT) getting up in the morning and determining how much they were going to charge at retail for 12 slices of American cheese,” says Neuman. “It wasn’t that he didn’t invite input or share his thought process, because he did both. It’s just that he’d had his hands on the wheel for so long that he trusted his own judgment the best.”

What made it worse, Neuman says, is that Ergen was almost always right. Eight months after accepting the job, Neuman resigned.

Judianne Atencio left Dish not long after. As head of communications for a decade, she had witnessed some of the company’s biggest triumphs, including the successful launch of its satellites and the signing of its 10 millionth subscriber. She had also been around for some of its most crushing defeats, such as Murdoch’s last-minute cancellation of a planned merger and the federal government’s denial of another with competitor DirecTV.

“I didn’t have a life for 10 years,” she says. “I couldn’t even have a dog.” There were times when Ergen screamed so loud at Atencio that she packed up her stuff and had to be persuaded in the parking lot to return to work by an apologetic board member. A friend who had worked in the White House even tried to comfort her by saying, “Charlie’s like Clinton—he only screams at the ones he cares about.”

Ergen’s successor as CEO, Clayton, and friend in September 2012Photograph by Kris Connor/Getty ImagesErgen’s successor as CEO, Clayton, and friend in September 2012

Like a lot of former employees, Atencio’s relationship with Ergen was a complicated mixture of dread and respect. Early in her tenure, Ergen paid her and some other employees in cash and Dish stock options. Atencio’s personal finances were tight, and she had a mortgage payment coming due. She went to Ergen to ask for more money in lieu of stock options. He refused, saying she’d thank him later. It was classic Ergen, requiring short-term pain for long-term gain. Not long after, the company’s stock shot up in value, and Atencio profited handsomely.

Two years after she’d left Dish, Atencio saw Ergen and his wife, Candy, at a restaurant, and she went over to say hello. Atencio had started her own PR firm after leaving Dish, and she was taken aback when he told her how proud he was of her. “He’d always been so dismissive of employees,” she says. “Like we were just cattle to be put into a pen.”

The difference now, Atencio could see, was that she was an entrepreneur, someone Ergen could respect. But what she couldn’t figure out is why he kept staring at her. When she asked him, he said: “Did you get a face-lift?”

“I haven’t had a face-lift, Charlie,” she replied. “I just don’t work for you anymore.”
A self-described “country boy from Tennessee,” Ergen is capable of a Warren Buffett-style folksy charm. He often packs his own brown bag lunch and has lived in the same house for 20 years. He declined requests to participate in this article; he did permit Dish representatives to confirm facts.

Ergen and his four siblings grew up in Oak Ridge. His father was an Austrian-born nuclear physicist who worked on the Manhattan Project. Ergen’s first real job out of school was as an accountant at Frito-Lay. He quit to work as a professional gambler, with blackjack his preferred game. He was so good at counting cards that he has told reporters he was once tossed out of a Las Vegas casino.

At Dish, he still keeps a counter’s eye on the numbers. Up until a few years ago, as he noted at a recent talk at the University of Colorado, Ergen signed every check that left Dish headquarters, a process that took him three to four hours a week and left him with an unparalleled understanding of how money was moving out of the company. He still signs company checks today, though now that Dish has $14.3 billion in annual revenue and $2.4 billion in operating expenses, Ergen reserves his signature for anything over $100,000.

At Dish headquarters in Englewood, a suburb of Denver, the day begins no later than 9 a.m. Badges used to be the preferred method of entry into the building. But a few years ago, after noticing that some employees were taking advantage of the system by having others badge-in for them, Ergen upgraded to fingerprint scanners. If a worker is late, an e-mail is immediately sent to human resources, which then sends another to that person’s boss, and sometimes directly to Ergen.

Multiple ex-employees say it’s not uncommon to see Ergen publicly berate an executive for scanning in a few minutes late, even if that executive had spent the previous 12 hours at home working through the night. Neuman, when he was still president, refused to implement Ergen’s proposed strict badge-in policy. He worried it might be “demoralizing.”

At a quarterly meeting a few years ago, Ergen expressed frustration that some employees couldn’t make it to work on time when there was snow on the ground. As a solution, he encouraged employees to book nearby hotel rooms—at their own expense—when the weather report called for a few inches of powder.

Employees, both current and former, describe an Ergen-created culture of condescension and distrust. Vikas Arora, a manager on Dish’s international content acquisition team, had never worked anywhere else in the U.S. until he left the company last year. That’s when he discovered that “outside of Dish, people are actually treated like adults.”

Whereas many companies are doing their best to cater to millennials who demand flexibility among other benefits, Dish doesn’t allow its employees to work from home. It offers no company credit cards. And according to a former regional manager, for many years, if an employee expensed a meal where they’d tipped more than 15 percent, the extra amount was then subtracted from his paycheck, even if he’d only gone over by a nickel.

One employee, who still works for Dish and asked not to be named to protect his employment, described a rare gift from the company a few years ago. As in most quarters, Dish had set up a new-subscriber goal. When that target was met, the company told employees they didn’t have to come in on the day after Thanksgiving. It was, the employee says, the first and last four-day weekend he’s ever had in 10 years at Dish.

Turnover is said by many employees to be constant, and while no one knows exactly how many employees are laid off during regular quarterly cullings, all employees are aware of the company’s euphemism for the bloodbaths: “talent upgrades.” There’s a running joke on glassdoor.com that Dish is an acronym for “Did I sleep here?”

Ergen treats outsiders, including major investors, with equal disdain, and Wall Street gets little love from him. Longtime analyst Craig Moffett still remembers the first e-mail he received from Dish. It was 10 years ago, and he had just started his job as senior analyst of U.S. telecommunications, U.S. cable, and satellite broadcasting at Sanford C. Bernstein (AB). He asked if he could fly out to Denver to sit down with management to get a better idea of how Dish did business. The response: “We’re too busy creating value around here to sit down and talk about it. Thanks but no thanks.”

Moffett’s relationship with Dish hasn’t changed, even though Moffett has been ranked the No.?1 analyst in his field seven years in a row by Institutional Investor magazine. “I don’t think there’s a company like Dish on Wall Street,” he says. “It’s not hostility; it’s absolute apathy. They just don’t show any signs of being concerned with what the sell-side community thinks. I’ve almost given up trying to contact them. Eventually you get trained; it’s just not worth your time to ask.”

Some investors have gone to extraordinary lengths to buttonhole Ergen. During the 2008 presidential race, he hosted a $2,300-a-plate fundraiser for Hillary Clinton at his home. When the Clinton campaign team discovered that one of the attendees was a first-time donor to the Democratic Party, it offered him a private meeting with the candidate, according to someone with knowledge of the event but who agreed to speak on the condition of anonymity. To the campaign’s surprise, the man declined. “No, no, no,” he said, “I just want to meet Charlie.” (Ergen ended up supporting John McCain.)

Even the largest investors get the cold shoulder. Chris Marangi is a portfolio manager at Gamco Investors, which holds 4 million shares. Marangi says Dish goes out of its way to be uncooperative. Despite traveling to Denver often, he has yet to meet with Ergen or any other Dish executive. Like every other company, Dish sends out a press release at the end of the quarter to announce earnings. But Marangi contends that Dish sends its release out just late enough to be of no use to him and other analysts, so they’re forced instead to search through its 10-Q, the long Securities and Exchange Commission-mandated filing that can run more than 50 pages. “They’re probably the least transparent company of any I’ve ever dealt with,” says Marangi.

Yet Gamco, along with scores of other institutional money managers, continues to invest in Dish—and mostly because of Ergen. “Dish is run for shareholders, and one shareholder in particular,” Marangi says of Ergen. “It’s his money. And he’s got far more riding on the line than we do.”

Ergen has maintained majority voting interest in both his companies: over 90 percent in Dish and more than 75.6 percent in EchoStar. According to Bob Scherman, the editor of Satellite Business News, Ergen once said that former MCI Chief Executive Bert Roberts Jr. told Ergen that if he wouldn’t let Roberts buy Dish he might face a hostile takeover. Ergen, with almost complete control, laughed at him. “Good luck to you,” he told Roberts.
The only surefire way to meet Ergen has been in court. Under Ergen, the company has racked up a long record of suits and countersuits. What may seem like malicious paperwork to some is aggressive protection of the company’s interests to others. “Dish is unique in that it uses litigation as a profit center,” says Moffett. Other analysts agree.

“I may be the only CEO who likes to go to depositions,” Ergen said at the University of Colorado talk. “You can live in a bubble, and you’re probably not going to get a disease. But you can play in the mud and the dirt, and you’re probably not going to get a disease either, because you get immune to it. You pick your poison, and I think we choose to go play in the mud.”

In a 2001 deposition, Dish’s then lead counsel estimated that the company had employed more than 100 law firms in 10 years. Dish once even sued its own lawyers, Chicago-based Bartlit Beck Herman Palenchar & Scott, only to end up on the wrong side of a $40 million judgment and with an admonishment from a panel on behalf of the American Arbitration Association that its conduct—which included making claims of unethical conduct against the law firm that were “patently false”—was “egregious.”

Dish’s battle with TiVo (TIVO) over patent infringement took nearly a decade to settle. A federal judge once said of three Dish lawyers that their conduct didn’t “even meet law-school student behavior,” and “presented the saddest day I have seen in my many years in court.” (The lawyers were accused of filing lengthy briefs and motions with no merit as a stall tactic—a familiar charge leveled at Dish attorneys.)

Dish Network’s Cheyenne (Wyo.) uplink centerCourtesy DishDish Network’s Cheyenne (Wyo.) uplink center

Ergen, who has called himself a “dog with a bone” when he gets into a dispute, has let that willingness to go to war spill over into his personal life. When he wanted to build a road on Telluray, his 6,200-acre ranch in southwestern Colorado, neighbors objected because it cut through their property. What followed was another decade-long court battle that eventually ended in a partial victory for Ergen. He never ended up building the road, though, a detail that continues to confound John Steel, the lawyer who represented his neighbors. “We would have made any deal he wanted, but [Ergen] didn’t care,” he says. “He just has this pathological need to sue people.”

Dish is involved in two suits with the federal government, which claims the company is too aggressive in its telemarketing. It’s also in the midst of litigation with all four major broadcast networks over AutoHop, its new DVR feature that automatically skips commercials, which infuriates networks. At a recent meeting of TV executives, CBS (CBS) CEO Les Moonves summed up the industry’s opinion of Dish with a rhetorical question: “How does Charlie Ergen expect me to produce CSI without commercials?”

A blackout is the height of hostility between a carrier and a network. According to the American Television Alliance, a coalition of consumer groups and cable companies, no carrier is more willing to do battle than Dish, which is responsible for 22 of the 42 blackouts recorded since March 2010. DirecTV, with 5 million more subscribers, has been involved in six.

In 2006, Dish signed a deal to carry Voom HD Networks, a suite of 15 high-definition channels owned by AMC, then known as Rainbow Media and a subsidiary of Cablevision (CVC). When Dish soured on the deal in 2008, Voom effectively went under. The company’s offices were so small that it didn’t have a conference room large enough to lay off all of its 200 workers at once; it had to break the bad news in three waves.

Cablevision sued Dish, alleging a breach of contract, and the suit provided months of content for news outlets. Last June, in a clear play to pressure Cablevision, Dish dropped AMC Networks, home of such critically acclaimed series as Mad Men and Breaking Bad. Ergen presented the decision as one based purely on the bottom line. “We skew a little older and more rural,” he told Bloomberg News. “The vast majority of our customers don’t watch Mad Men.”

When Dish dropped AMC and its hit “The Walking Dead,” some subscribers went hungryPhotograph by Paul Morig/Getty ImagesWhen Dish dropped AMC and its hit “The Walking Dead,” some subscribers went hungry

When Cablevision’s case came before a court on Sept. 19, it did so after two years of setbacks for Dish. The trial began with an order to the jury to assume that Dish had intentionally destroyed documents that supported Cablevision’s claims. A Greek chorus of industry analysts was yelling for Ergen to settle. Ever stubborn, he and Dish waited three weeks. Days before Dish settled the case for $700 million and, as part of the settlement, agreed to return AMC to its lineup, a last-minute Cablevision audit uncovered an e-mail from a Dish executive to Ergen that seemed to suggest that he and the company had long planned to back out of the deal.

Ergen, leaving court during the trial, was chased by a New York Post photographer. Instead of disappearing into a waiting limo or calling a cab, Ergen, a former walk-on basketball player at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville, spent five minutes sprinting around a New York City promenade, ducking behind cars, and running up and down subway stairs in an attempt to evade the photographer’s lens.
“We’re a one-trick pony,” Ergen has said of Dish, which has a sole product: satellite TV. In a November earnings call, Ergen talked about how his five kids—most of whom don’t even have cable subscriptions—think he’s “crazy” to be in the pay-TV business. To address that, Ergen has spent nearly $3 billion in the past two years buying wireless spectrum from bankrupt companies and just received word of a favorable Federal Communications Commission decision that may allow him to deliver video to tablets and cell phones. He’s also made it clear that he’d like to try again to merge with DirecTV and have his own mobile network to compete with telecom giants such as AT&T (T) and Verizon (VZ), though a succession of recent wireless industry consolidations has possibly imperiled those plans.

Since Ergen relinquished the CEO role, Dish employees say the company has relaxed some. It is, according to the former regional manager, now possible to leave a 17 percent tip without incurring a personal charge. But austerity and meanness still have their place. In response to the economic downturn, it takes longer to accrue vacation days, and holiday parties have been scaled back. The company reports earnings on Feb. 22. It’s beaten estimates five out of the last eight quarters.

Hannan is a Bloomberg Businessweek contributor.

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Thursday, August 8, 2013

7 Inspiring Home Business Ideas for Stay-at-Home Moms (or Dads)

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Home businessAre you a stay-at-home mom (or dad)? Hoping to kick start an entrepreneurial dream or simply looking to bring in some extra income?

Starting a home-based business is a great way to do this. In fact, 52 percent of U.S. companies operate as home businesses (source) and many of today’s biggest brand names were established by stay-at-home moms – (Dorothy) Gerber, Mrs. (Debbi) Fields, and Julie Aigner-Clark (Baby Einstein), to name but a few. But what types of businesses can grow and thrive in the home environment?

Here are some business ideas and considerations for stay-at-home moms!

Freelancing

Perhaps the easiest form of business to delve into and operate is freelancing. Whatever your skill – writing, web design, marketing, tax advisor, or photography– freelancing affords an enormous amount of flexibility and freedom, and can be started with little cost or paperwork. Many freelancers get their start by approaching a former employer or customer who could benefit from their services, then branch out as their body of work and reputation grows.

Freelancing does have its challenges and requires discipline—you are running a business after all. Common mistakes freelancers make include not setting the business up properly and legally (getting the right permits, or licenses), forgetting to put money aside to pay estimated taxes, and not planning for peaks and valleys in cash flow.  

Check out these blogs for tips and guidance to help you through the process of starting and operating your freelance business:

Become a Virtual Assistant

Virtual assistants (VAs) provide a wide variety of “virtual” services to other businesses including administrative, marketing and technical support from a home office. My local window cleaner, for example, uses a VA to answer his calls and manage his calendar while he’s busy on-site. VAs are growing in popularity, too, as firms look to cut costs and outsource administrative functions. If you are organized and have an administrative background, this might be for you. Start with your own connections or take advantage of the services of a VA organization or association who can help you get started and connect you with clients.

Make Money from Blogging

Yes, you can make money by blogging. I follow several stay-at-home moms who happen to be fashion and style bloggers – and it’s their business. If you can write and have a passion for a specific topic or hobby that you know will garner some attention, then this might be for you. Income generation opportunities can come in the form of affiliate marketing and advertising on your website or from companies who ask you to review and blog about their products. Look for ways to get traffic to your website through social media, search engine optimization and by getting involved in the wider blogosphere (networking with and commenting on the blogs of others in your niche).

Start a Creative Business

Whether it’s making gift baskets or offering interior design consultation services, if you have a creative streak and the room to store and create, then why not consider making money out of your talents? Get to know the market and do some planning to identify an untapped niche. SBA has several tools that can help including the Build your Business Plan tool and SizeUp a market and business analysis tool that lets you benchmark your business against competitors, map your customers, competitors and suppliers, and locate the best places to advertise.

Start a Home-Based Bakery or Food Business

Food production from a home is heavily regulated but it’s not impossible. Take Martha Stewart, for example—she famously entered the food service business with a basement-based catering company in 1976. Before you start a home-based food business you will need to understand the rules and regulations that govern the production of food for public consumption in an at-home environment. For example do you need a separate kitchen? What about product labeling? And so on. For tips and insight, read: Starting a Home-Based Food Production Business: Making Your Culinary Hobby Your Job.

Child Day Care

Home childcare businesses offer a potentially lucrative and long-lasting business opportunity. A home environment is often appealing to parents and once their kids are settled (and assuming you are doing a great job), then it’s likely you’ll have that business until they are old enough not to need care.

Of course, this is another regulated business and you’ll need to ensure you comply with state and local regulations that govern issues such as the provision of meals, minimum space requirements per child, and the number of licensed care workers per child. For information on starting a child care business including financing options, licensing requirements, and other regulatory matters read: Starting a Child Care Business? Government Tools and Resources that Can Help.

Start an Online Marketplace Store

If you have clutter that you want to get rid of and like the idea of selling products to an established worldwide network of consumers, consider starting a business on eBay, Etsy or Amazon. You can source products to sell from junk/yard sales or charity shops. If you want to get a bit more sophisticated, then consider buying wholesale or adopting a drop-shipping model. The goal is to find products that are in high-demand and not readily available from other sources. Read more about getting started here: More Than Just a Seller – How to Start a Business on an Online Marketplace.

More Ideas

Other business ideas including a dog walking/pet care business, a travel agent, start a home-based franchise business, event planning, architectural design, or tutoring students!

Whatever your idea make sure you start, structure and operate your business according to legal and regulatory requirements. Check out SBA’s 10 Steps to Starting your Business for the facts.

Caron_Beesley's Profile PictureCaron Beesley is a small business owner, a writer, and marketing communications consultant. Caron works with the SBA.gov team to promote essential government resources that help entrepreneurs and small business owners start-up, grow and succeed. Follow Caron on Twitter: @caronbeesleyTags: Community Blogs, Small Business Matters, Starting

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