Tin tức & Cập nhật mới nhất

Bạn đang muốn cập nhật thông tin về các xu hướng, chiến lược và câu chuyện thành công mới nhất trong kinh doanh? Bộ sưu tập các bài đăng trên blog về kinh doanh và tin tức mới nhất của chúng tôi bao gồm nhiều chủ đề, từ tinh thần kinh doanh và đổi mới đến lãnh đạo và hiểu biết sâu sắc về ngành. Cho dù bạn là một doanh nhân đầy tham vọng, một chủ doanh nghiệp dày dạn kinh nghiệm hay chỉ đơn giản là tò mò về thế giới kinh doanh, thì vẫn có điều gì đó dành cho bạn. Khám phá các bài viết từ những nhà lãnh đạo tư tưởng, nhà đầu tư và chuyên gia trong ngành, đồng thời khám phá những mẹo hữu ích giúp bạn phát triển trong bối cảnh cạnh tranh ngày nay.


Thương mại hợp tác với Heritage Bank và Calvert Capital để triển khai các chương trình cho vay doanh nghiệp nhỏ

Bộ Thương mại Tiểu bang Washington đã triển khai chương trình đầu tiên trong năm chương trình cho vay và đầu tư doanh nghiệp nhỏ được lên kế hoạch nhằm mục đích tăng khả năng tiếp cận vốn cho các doanh nghiệp nhỏ tại tiểu bang Washington, đặc biệt là những doanh nghiệp trước đây không được phục vụ đầy đủ hoặc không được ngân hàng hỗ trợ đầy đủ. Tổng số tiền tài trợ là 163 triệu đô la đến từ Sáng kiến tín dụng doanh nghiệp nhỏ của tiểu bang (SSBCI) thuộc Bộ Tài chính Hoa Kỳ. Bộ Thương mại quản lý các chương trình SSBCI tại Washington.

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Chuỗi đào tạo sẵn sàng phát triển kinh doanh SBA 8(a)

Chính phủ liên bang đặt mục tiêu trao 13 phần trăm tổng số tiền hợp đồng liên bang (15% vào năm 2025) cho các doanh nghiệp nhỏ, yếu thế. Bằng cách được chứng nhận là doanh nghiệp nhỏ 8(a), bạn có thể cạnh tranh và nhận được các hợp đồng liên bang dành riêng và nguồn duy nhất, nhận được hỗ trợ phát triển doanh nghiệp một kèm một, kết nối với các chuyên gia về mua sắm và tuân thủ hiểu biết về các quy định, cùng nhiều hơn nữa.

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Nhỏ nhưng Mạnh mẽ

TUYỆT VỜI NHƯ MỘT PHÒNG NGỦ MỘT HOẶC HAI NGƯỜI


Khi Crystal Tilton, giám đốc điều hành và là nhân viên duy nhất của Phòng Thương mại Foster City (California), được hỏi về cách bà xử lý việc lập kế hoạch sự kiện khi không có người phụ trách sự kiện chuyên trách, bà đã trả lời: "Bạn sẽ ăn cả một con voi từng miếng một".

Đây là thái độ thúc đẩy các phòng nhỏ hơn quản lý khối lượng công việc tương tự như các tổ chức lớn hơn. Từ việc lập kế hoạch sự kiện và tuyển dụng thành viên đến phát triển cộng đồng và kinh tế, họ tìm cách hoàn thành công việc. Họ xuất sắc trong việc quản lý thời gian và sử dụng đại sứ và thành viên hội đồng quản trị để quản lý khối lượng công việc và ngăn ngừa kiệt sức.


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27 tháng 4, 2026
Summer is a great time to consider the advantage of temporary labor. You know that project you’ve been putting off? How about the organization structure you wanted to build? What about that technology trial? Or maybe there's something you’ve been doing that could easily be managed by someone else so you can free up your time for things that require your attention? As vacations loom and customer buying patterns shift, it’s an ideal time to explore temporary hires or interns. According to the National Association of Colleges and Employers , businesses expect to hire 3.9% more interns than in the previous year, and 81% say they plan to increase or maintain intern hiring. But if you think you can just bring in an intern, hand over a pile of small tasks, and call it a program, you’re missing a bigger strategic opportunity. The smartest businesses do something different. They don’t use interns just to fill a chair or display them to the community to look like a business that’s worried about the future workforce. They use them to tackle work that matters. Don’t think your business could use an intern? Think again. Here are a few ingenious ways to get things done with the “summer help”: Process Detective One of the best ways to use an intern is as a process detective. Every business has systems that have grown messy over time. Maybe your onboarding is inconsistent. Maybe client files are stored in three places, and no one knows which version is right. Maybe your front desk, inbox, or quoting process depends too much on tribal knowledge. An intern can document workflows, identify bottlenecks (they provide fresh ideas because they don’t know the history), and help organize procedures in a way that saves your team time long after summer ends. It’s not glamorous work, but it’s high-value work and the intern can learn a lot about process, efficiencies, and operations. Customer Experience Reviewer Interns can also be incredibly helpful as customer-experience reviewers. When you’re inside your own business every day, it becomes hard to see friction points. An intern has fresh eyes. Ask them to walk through the experience as if they were a customer. Could they find the right information on your website? Was the contact process clear? Did your social media tell them what you do? Was your location easy to navigate? In almost every industry, there are blind spots the employees stopped noticing years ago. Content Miner Another strong use for interns is content mining. This is especially useful for businesses that know they should be marketing more consistently but never seem to have the time. An intern can help turn existing knowledge into usable content. They can gather frequently asked questions, interview staff, organize customer success stories, pull together blog topic ideas, or help sort photos and video clips you already have. They may not be your final decision-maker, but they can absolutely help uncover the raw material your business has been sitting on. Put them to this task and you may uncover six months’ worth of content that no one can produce but you—an excellent way to stand out on social media. Researcher Summer interns are also well suited for research projects that tend to get pushed aside. Maybe you want to understand what competitors are doing, what events are worth attending, what partnerships might make sense, or what new audience segments you should be reaching. Maybe you want a clearer picture of local market trends or customer reviews. Interns can gather and organize that information (or use AI to do it) so leadership can make smarter decisions without spending hours chasing data. Internal Knowledge Organizer Another overlooked role is internal knowledge organizer. In many small and midsize businesses, important information lives in emails, sticky notes, shared drives, and one very loyal employee’s head. That isn’t a system. It’s a problem waiting to happen. What becomes of your operations if something happens to that employee? At some point every employee leaves. What information would walk with them? An intern can help create shared resources, update templates, build simple reference guides, and make day-to-day information easier for everyone to find. That kind of cleanup can be the difference between having information at your fingertips or having to leave countless messages for past employees. Event Planner or Worker If your business hosts events, supports the community, or depends on local visibility, interns can help there too. They can assist with planning checklists, event follow-up, sponsorship tracking, guest communication, and post-event recaps. They can help your business show up more professionally and more consistently. As we head into a season when networking, festivals, community programs, and business events often increase, that kind of support can make a noticeable difference. But none of this works if the internship is built around filler. Interns don’t need to run your business, but they do need real assignments, some context, and a sense that their work matters. It’s good for them and for you. NACE notes that organized internship programs are linked to better conversion outcomes, and interns who are satisfied with their experience are far more willing to accept an offer from that employer later on. If you’re bringing in summer help, think beyond the 2026 version of coffee runner. Think about what your business needs that your team never has time to tackle. Consider the projects that improve efficiency, strengthen visibility, and make future growth easier. That’s where interns can shine and that’s a much better use of a summer and a desk.
20 tháng 4, 2026
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13 tháng 4, 2026
It’s getting to be that time of year again—the summer scramble for capable employees. Colleges are about to go on break. High schools will finish up soon thereafter, and eager summer employees are looking for jobs now. In the past, you probably posted a job, hired fast as fast as you could, and hoped for the best. But seasonal hiring doesn’t have to feel like a gamble. Done right, it can give you flexibility, protect your margins, and improve your customer experience. Done wrong, it creates more work than it solves. Here’s how to hire for summer without regretting it by July. Start With Demand, not Desperation Most seasonal hiring decisions are based on a vague feeling that “it’s going to get busy.” That’s not a strategy. Before you post a single job, look at last year’s numbers. When did traffic increase? Which days or hours were stretched thin? Where did service break down? Hiring should solve specific problems, not general anxiety. If Saturdays were your bottleneck, you don’t need more staff across the board. You need targeted coverage. When you hire with precision, you avoid overstaffing and protect your cash flow when business inevitably fluctuates. Hire for Flexibility, not Perfection It’s tempting to wait for the “ideal” candidate who can do everything. But in seasonal hiring, that mindset slows you down and limits your options. Instead, look for people who are adaptable, reliable, and willing to learn. A college student who can work varied shifts and pick up new tasks quickly may be more valuable than someone with years of experience who needs a rigid schedule. Summer business is unpredictable. Your team should be able to move with it. Flexibility also applies to how you structure roles. Instead of hiring for one narrow position, think in terms of coverage. Who can help at the front and jump in elsewhere when needed? That kind of cross-functionality is what keeps operations running smoothly when things get busy. Shorten the Learning Curve One of the biggest mistakes businesses make is assuming seasonal hires will “figure it out” or that the summer is short so why train them on everything. First, they won’t figure it out on their own or worse, they will… just not the way you would have preferred. Additionally, summer may be short but doing something wrong or a way your customers aren’t used to could cost you loyalty in the long run. If you want temporary employees to perform like permanent ones, you need to set them up for success quickly. That means simple, clear onboarding. Not a binder no one reads. Not a rushed walkthrough during a busy shift. Focus on the essentials. What do they absolutely need to know to do the job well in the first week? Create quick-reference guides, checklists, or short training videos. Pair new hires with someone who knows your standards and can model them in real time. The goal is speed with consistency. The faster they feel confident, the faster they become productive. Build a Team That Can Cover for Each Other Summer schedules are notoriously chaotic. Vacations, last-minute requests, and shifting availability can create constant gaps if your team isn’t structured well. This is where cross-training becomes invaluable. When employees understand more than one role, you gain flexibility without constantly adding headcount. It also reduces stress on your team. No one wants to feel like the entire operation depends on them showing up. Set the expectation early that everyone contributes to the bigger picture. When people understand how their role connects to others, they’re more willing to step in where needed. Don’t Ignore Your Core Team Here’s where a lot of businesses struggle in the first few weeks of summer. They focus so much on bringing in seasonal help that they forget about the people who keep things running year-round. Your core team is the anchor during busy seasons. If they feel overlooked, overworked, or responsible for “fixing” everything new hires don’t know, burnout isn’t far behind. Involve them in the process. Ask for input on where help is needed. Let them contribute to training. Recognize the extra effort they’re putting in. Thank them. Give them a gift card or extra day off to show your appreciation. A supported core team will elevate your seasonal staff. An exhausted one will jeopardize your business future and company culture. Think Beyond the Season Not every seasonal hire is temporary. Some of your best long-term employees will come from these short-term roles. Watch for the people who show up on time, take initiative, and connect well with customers. Those are the ones worth keeping in your pipeline. Even if you don’t have an immediate role, staying in touch gives you a head start the next time you need to hire. Seasonal hiring isn’t just about filling gaps. It’s an opportunity to build relationships and strengthen your future workforce. Use Your Chamber as a Hiring Advantage If you’re trying to solve staffing challenges on your own, you’re doing too much. Your chamber is one of the most underused hiring tools you already have access to. Start with visibility. Many chambers offer job boards, newsletter features, and social media promotion that put your open roles directly in front of a local, engaged audience. These aren’t cold applicants scrolling job sites at midnight. These people are already connected to the business community. But the real value goes deeper than job postings. Chambers are constantly making introductions. That includes connections to local colleges, workforce programs, and training organizations. If you need seasonal help, part-time support, or even interns, those relationships can shorten your search dramatically. Instead of broadcasting your need into the void, you’re tapping into a network that already understands your local market. This is especially helpful when you need something more specific than “extra hands.” If your business requires certain skills, certifications, or experience, let the chamber know. Workforce development is a growing priority for many chambers, and they’re actively working to close gaps between what businesses need and what the local talent pipeline provides. That might look like partnerships with schools, targeted training programs, or initiatives designed to prepare people for in-demand roles in your area. But none of that works if businesses stay quiet about their needs. If you’re struggling to find qualified candidates, express it. If your industry has a skills gap, bring it forward. Chambers can’t build solutions in a vacuum, but they can be incredibly effective when they have clear direction from the business community. At the very least, you’ll get access to better candidates. At best, you help shape a workforce pipeline that works for your business long term. And that beats posting the same job ad three times and hoping the algorithm finally shows your listing. Sure, you can choose to do it like last year, just getting through the season. But while you’re doing the hiring work anyway, why not sure up your business’ future?
6 tháng 4, 2026
Hello. 1999 is calling. They want their business practices back. If you’re old enough, that line may remind you of the classic 90s sitcom Seinfeld. But sadly, many offices are still running the same way that Elaine and George experienced way back when. Why? Because it feels safe. Familiar processes, standard office hours, packed calendars, and old-school management habits may seem like signs of structure. But in today’s workplace, outdated practices slow things down and push good people away. For Your Employees’ Sake Modernizing your business does not mean chasing every new app, copying Silicon Valley, or handing your operations over to a chatbot and hoping for the best. Instead, you need to take an honest look at how people work best today and build a workplace that reflects reality, not 90s office nostalgia. This is not a call for ping-pong tables in the break room and pickleball courts in the parking lot. There’s a workforce need to adapt to employees because they’ve changed. Job candidates have changed. Customer expectations have changed. A business that refuses to evolve can start to feel harder to work for, harder to grow with, and harder to believe in. Ax the Unnecessary Meetings One of the clearest shifts in modern business is the end of the unnecessary meeting. People are tired of gathering for the sake of gathering. If a meeting does not solve a problem, move a project forward, or create true collaboration, it’s probably stealing time from work that matters. Modern businesses are learning to replace some meetings with better written communication, short check-ins, shared project tools, and clear accountability. This respects people’s focus and gives them more room to do their jobs well. Be Flexible Flexibility is another major factor in employee satisfaction. For years, many employers treated rigid schedules as proof of professionalism. Now, more businesses are realizing that results matter more than whether someone is sitting at a desk at exactly 8:00 a.m. every day. Flexible hours, hybrid arrangements, and work-from-home options are now seen as competitive advantages in hiring and retention. That doesn’t mean every business can or should go fully remote. Plenty of roles require people to be on-site. But even in businesses where in-person work is essential, there are often opportunities to offer flexibility in scheduling, shift swaps, compressed workweeks, or greater autonomy over how work gets done. Employees notice when an employer treats them like responsible adults. Embrace Efficiencies Artificial intelligence is another area where modern businesses need a more practical mindset. AI isn’t magic. It’s not a replacement for judgment, leadership, or human connection. But it can be a powerful tool for efficiency. Small businesses can use AI to streamline routine tasks, summarize meeting notes, draft first versions of marketing copy, organize research, improve customer service workflows, and help employees spend less time on repetitive work. Treat AI like an assistant, not an oracle. Businesses that use it wisely can save time, reduce burnout, and create more space for strategy and service. Businesses that ignore it entirely risk falling behind competitors that are learning how to do more with the same team size. Think Employee Experience Modern business also includes clearer communication, better technology, and stronger attention to employee experience. People want to know what’s expected of them. They want systems that work. They want onboarding that helps them succeed instead of just handing them a coffee mug and hoping it will work out. Employees want growth opportunities, regular feedback, and confidence that their employer sees them as more than a warm body filling a role. This is critical when it comes to recruiting and retention. Small businesses often assume they can’t compete with larger employers on salary or benefits alone, and sometimes that’s true. But workplace culture, flexibility, professional development, and smart systems can make a major difference. Employees are more likely to stay where they feel trusted, equipped, and respected. Candidates are more likely to say yes to a business that feels current, thoughtful, and well run. Updating your practices also sends a message to customers. A business that adapts well internally is often better positioned externally. It can respond faster, communicate better, and solve problems more efficiently. Modern workplaces tend to be more resilient because they’re built to adjust rather than resist. This is where your chamber can play an important role. Chambers are uniquely positioned to help small businesses stay current without feeling like they must figure everything out alone. Through workshops, networking, peer learning, leadership programs, and expert-led events, chambers can introduce business owners to new tools, new ideas, and new ways of thinking about workforce needs. Just as important, they create opportunities to learn from other local employers who are facing the same challenges and finding practical solutions. And when you join the chamber, all your employees join the chamber. You may not be able to afford leadership training and professional development for all your employees, but they can get it from the chamber. Many businesses don’t think of this perk. They assume there’s one point of contact and that person reaps the chamber member benefits. Becoming a modern business doesn’t require a complete reinvention. It starts with asking better questions. · Are these meetings useful? · Are these policies helping people do their best work? · Are our systems making work easier or harder? · Am I equipping the team for the way business operates now? The businesses that thrive in the years ahead will not necessarily be the biggest. They will be the ones willing to adapt. Modernizing your workplace past 90s sitcom jokes makes you the kind of business talented people want to join, customers want to trust, and your community wants to see succeed.
30 tháng 3, 2026
If you ask a small business owner where most of their opportunities come from, you’ll usually hear some version of the same answer: referrals, word of mouth, “someone who knew someone.” Behind nearly every thriving local business is an invisible network of relationships quietly moving opportunities from one person to another. No big announcements. No flashy campaigns. Just a steady flow of trust being passed along behind the scenes. This is how local economies work. Not just through marketing. Not just through pricing or location. But through connection and loyalty. And those connections take time. The Network You Can’t See (But Feel Every Day) Think about how business really gets done in your community. A contractor needs an electrician and calls someone they’ve worked with before. A new homeowner asks their real estate agent for someone who builds fences or builds organization in garages. A banker hears a client mention they’re expanding and connects them to a commercial realtor. A consultant introduces two clients who could benefit from working together. None of this shows up in a formal report. But it drives real revenue, real growth, and real stability. These moments happen because of relationships. And more importantly, because of trust. When one business refers another, they are putting their own reputation on the line. That doesn’t happen casually. It requires the confidence that the other business will deliver. Over time, these small, consistent exchanges create a network that becomes one of the most valuable assets a business can have. Why This Matters More Than Marketing Alone Marketing gets attention but relationships get action. That’s because people are more apt to act on a word-of-mouth referral than a fancy ad campaign. When someone they trust says, “You should call them,” the decision is already halfway made. That’s the difference between being visible and being chosen. For small businesses especially, this invisible network often outperforms traditional marketing efforts. It’s more targeted, more credible, and more likely to lead to long-term customers. And best if all—more affordable. But you don’t automatically become part of that network just because you opened your doors. You must become known. Build trust through the quality of your good or services. And you have to be top-of-mind when the opportunity arises. There’s no ad campaign that can make that happen for you in a few hours. It’s a commitment to quality. It takes time to build a fully functional referral engine. How Businesses Get Left Out Businesses struggle when they’re disconnected from the flow of relationships in their community. You can do great work and serve your customers well, and still be an unknown. If that’s the case, when opportunities move through the network, they’ll move right past you. People refer who they know. Which means being good at what you do is only part of the equation. Being known for what you do is the other critical half. Where the Chamber Comes In This is where the chamber plays a much bigger role than many people realize. A chamber isn’t just hosting events and sending newsletters. It actively shapes the invisible network of the business community. And chamber membership is like the golden ticket to the business community, if you use it. Every conversation sparked between two members has potential because every time someone learns what another business does, a new connection point is created. The chamber becomes the place where relationships begin, strengthen, and multiply. These introductions are the starting points for future referrals, collaborations, and opportunities. The Compounding Effect of Connection The real power of this network is not in one introduction. It’s what happens over time. You meet one person. That person introduces you to another. That connection leads to a project. That project leads to a referral. That referral turns into a long-term client. And it works the other way too. Maybe you’ve been doing your own books and now you’re ready for someone else to take it over. You know that people you meet through the chamber have a connection to the community. Now multiply those introductions and referrals across dozens or hundreds of relationships. It’s why consistent engagement matters. Showing up once is helpful. Showing up regularly is what builds recognition. And recognition is what leads to being top of mind when opportunities move through the network. A Simple Shift in Perspective Many business owners think of networking as something they must do or conversely don’t have time for. The more useful way to see it is this: You are not just attending events or meeting people. You are positioning your business inside a living, moving network of opportunity. Every conversation makes known who you are and what you do. Every relationship increases the likelihood that someone will think of you when the right moment comes. Every time someone sees you in the community you’re building on that top-of-mind recognition. And those moments happen quietly. In conversations you’re not part of. Between people who trust each other. That’s the invisible network you want working for you because when you’re part of it, your business doesn’t just rely on cold calling and mailers. Interested leads start finding you and wanting to work with you before they’ve even read your marketing copy.
20 tháng 3, 2026
If you’re a small business owner, you probably didn’t wake up one morning and declare, “Today, I’m going to be an executive.” That would’ve required time for reflection and who has that when you’re running a business? Most entrepreneurs don’t get that luxury. One day you’re making the thing, selling the thing, fixing the thing, or delivering the service. The next day you’re managing schedules, answering payroll questions, resolving customer issues, and trying to figure out why the printer refuses to cooperate with the accounting software. Somewhere along the way, you stopped being the person who does the work and became the person responsible for making sure the work happens. This is the moment many small business owners quietly become what could best be described as the Accidental Executive. You may never call yourself a CEO. In fact, most owners of small and mid-sized businesses would laugh at the idea. But if you’re overseeing staff, coordinating multiple functions of the business, making financial decisions, and setting direction for the future, you’re already operating at an executive level whether the title exists or not. The Maker Phase Nearly every small business begins in what could be called the “maker phase.” A person has a skill, a craft, or a service people want. A baker opens a shop. A contractor starts taking on projects. A designer begins freelancing. A consultant lands their first few clients. In this phase, success comes from being good at the work itself. You’re the engine of the business. If you stop producing, the business stops moving. You’re also trading time for money and since there is a limited number of hours in the day, you can only grow so much under that structure. For many entrepreneurs, this stage feels natural. The work is familiar. The results are visible. Effort goes in and something tangible comes out. But there is another dynamic at play in those early days. Most of your first customers aren’t buying because of a sophisticated marketing plan. They buy because they know you. They trust you. Someone recommended you. Maybe they met you through a community group, a chamber event, or a mutual connection. You shake their hand. You show up personally. You solve their problem. Those early relationships become the foundation of the business. They lead to repeat customers and referrals. In the beginning, your reputation travels faster than your marketing. Then something interesting happens. Customers start showing up more often. The business grows. And suddenly you can’t do everything anymore. The First Hires Change Everything Hiring the first employee is a proud moment. It signals growth and momentum. But it also quietly shifts your role. Now someone needs direction, training, and feedback. There are schedules to approve, paychecks to process, and questions to answer. Multiply that by three, five, or ten people and the nature of the job changes entirely. The owner is no longer producing the work. You’re coordinating it. Many business owners still think of themselves as the primary worker in the business even after this shift happens. But if your day is filled with conversations, decisions, troubleshooting, and planning instead of the original craft, the role has already changed. You are no longer the maker. You’re the person running the operation. And you need to make that transition if you want to grow. When Clients Miss Seeing You There is another subtle shift that often surprises growing businesses. In the early days, customers bought directly from you. They saw you on every visit. You answered the phone and handled the details. You were the face of the service. As the business grows, that changes. Employees begin doing the work. New team members show up at client sites or in the store. You become the person overseeing the business rather than the person performing the service. Often longtime clients feel that change. They might say something like, “We never see you anymore,” or “We miss working with you.” It’s not necessarily a complaint. It’s simply a reflection of change and people don’t always like change. The client trusted you personally, and now the relationship is shifting from a one-to-one connection to a relationship with the company. For many owners, this moment feels uncomfortable. It can create a sense that something important is being lost. But it doesn’t have to be. The key is making sure the client’s trust transfers from you to the organization. One simple way to do this is to intentionally introduce your team as an extension of you. Let clients know who will be working with them and why you trust that person. Share their strengths. Position them as capable professionals, not just employees filling in for the owner. At the same time, maintain a visible presence in the relationship. A quick check-in call, a brief email after a project, or an occasional visit can reassure clients that you are still engaged and accountable. You may not be doing the work personally anymore, but they are still guaranteeing the quality of the work. The Uncomfortable Truth This stage can feel frustrating because the skills that made you successful early on are no longer the skills the business needs most. Being a great mechanic does not automatically prepare you to manage technicians, negotiate vendor relationships, and analyze pricing strategies. Being a talented photographer does not immediately translate into managing a studio schedule, marketing campaigns, and customer service policies. Running a growing business requires a completely different set of abilities. Leadership. Communication. Delegation. Decision-making. Strategic thinking. These are executive-level skills, even if the business only has a handful of employees. The uncomfortable truth is that many owners are never formally taught how to make this transition. Most are figuring it out in real time while trying to keep the business moving forward. Why This Transition Matters When business owners don’t recognize their role has changed, they often continue trying to operate as the primary worker while also managing the entire organization. That combination rarely works for long. Owners become overwhelmed. Employees feel micromanaged and confused about their role. Recognizing the shift from maker to accidental executive allows owners to approach their role differently. Instead of trying to do everything personally, the focus moves to building systems, developing people, and creating structure that allows the business to operate effectively. Your work becomes less about personal output and more about guiding the entire operation. Over the course of your business’ lifetime, your role will likely transition several times from doer to manager to executive leadership where operational duties fall to others. The Chamber Can Help This is exactly where business networks and community support become valuable. Many small business owners are navigating these leadership shifts. Connecting with other business owners provides perspective that cannot be found inside the walls of your company. Conversations at networking events, leadership programs, workshops, and peer groups often reveal something powerful. Nearly everyone is figuring it out as they go. Hearing how other owners approached hiring, delegation, growth, and leadership challenges can shorten the learning curve dramatically. The chamber environment creates space for those conversations to happen (and sometimes the leadership training too). The Title Isn’t the Point Whether someone calls themselves an owner, founder, partner, or president does not really matter. What matters is recognizing the moment when the business begins requiring executive-level thinking. Once you shift from doer to manager (or exec), the path forward changes. The goal is no longer simply doing the work well. The goal becomes building a business where many people can do the work well and thrive. That’s the real difference between doing a job and leading an organization.
9 tháng 3, 2026
For a small business owner, the most critical piece of equipment isn't your laptop, your CRM, or your delivery van—it’s your brain. When you are the visionary, the strategist, and the customer service department, your cognitive clarity determines your bottom line. However, "founder’s fatigue" often leads to the dreaded brain fog: that sluggish, scattered feeling where making a simple decision feels like wading through molasses. Here’s how to optimize your neural hardware for peak performance and clear the fog of overload. You do it for your equipment. You deserve (at least) the same level of care. 1. Master the "Context Switching" Fee Every time you jump from an invoice to a marketing tweet to a customer complaint, your brain pays a switching fee. Research suggests this can lower productivity by up to 40%. The Fix: Time-Batching. Group similar tasks together. Dedicate Tuesday mornings solely to social media content for the month and Thursday afternoons to invoicing. This allows your brain to stay in one "mode" and reduces the cognitive load of pivoting between these very different tasks. 2. Fuel the Biological Machine Your brain represents only 2% of your body weight but consumes about 20% of its energy. If you fuel it with erratic caffeine spikes and skipped lunches, it will underperform. The Fix: Prioritize neuro-protective fats (like Omega-3s) and complex carbohydrates that provide a steady stream of glucose. Most importantly, hydration is non-negotiable; even 2% dehydration can significantly impair tasks that require attention and memory. 3. Implement an "External Brain" Brain fog is often the result of Open Loop Syndrome—the mental exhaustion caused by trying to remember ten different unfinished tasks. Just like on your computer when you have too many tabs open, performance decreases. The Fix: Use a Capture System. Whether you use a digital app or a physical notebook, get every "to-do" or concern out of your head the moment it appears. When your brain knows the information is recorded safely elsewhere, it can stop using energy on that thought, freeing up bandwidth for deep work. 4. Optimize Your Sleep Architecture Sleep isn't just downtime. It’s when your brain’s glymphatic system flushes out metabolic waste (essentially "washing" your brain). For a business owner, a missed hour of sleep is a direct hit to your emotional intelligence and decision-making speed, not to mention it often impacts your personality and desire to do the difficult work. The Fix: View sleep as a non-negotiable business appointment. Aim for a consistent "wind-down" period 30 minutes before bed where screens are banned. Quick Tips for Immediate Fog-Clearing When you hit a wall in the middle of the workday, try these easy pattern interrupters: · The 10-Minute Walk - Increases blood flow to the hippocampus and resets focus. · Box Breathing - Inhale for 4, hold for 4, exhale for 4, hold for 4. Calms the nervous system. · Single-Tasking - Close every tab except the one you’re currently working on. · Cold Exposure - A splash of cold water on the face triggers the diving reflex, slowing heart rate and increasing alertness. You don’t need to work more hours. Instead, make the hours you work more effective. By treating your brain with the same respect you give your business finances or equipment, you'll find that the fog lifts, leaving room for the clarity and innovation that started your business in the first place.
5 tháng 3, 2026
Starting a business is exciting. It’s also easier when you have a clear plan. A business plan does not have to be long or complicated. It just needs to answer a few important questions: · What are you building? · Who is it for? · How will it make money? · And how will it operate day to day? Whether you are launching a side hustle, opening a storefront, or preparing to apply for financing, this framework will help you create a solid foundation and answer the questions you’ll need to answer to be successful. For this framework, we walk you through the steps with a fictitious business (Sunrise Bookkeeping) so you can understand how you might draft each step. Step 1: Start with Your Business Snapshot This is your quick overview. Short and clear. Answer these questions: • What is the name of your business? • What product or service do you offer? • Who is your ideal customer? • What problem do you solve? • How will you make money? Example: “Sunrise Bookkeeping provides monthly bookkeeping services for small local businesses that want clear financial reports without hiring a full-time accountant. We offer flat-rate packages and virtual support.” If you can explain your business in a few sentences, you’re on the right track. Step 2: Define the Problem and Your Solution Every strong business solves a problem or meets a need. Ask yourself: • What challenge does your customer face? • Why does that challenge matter to them? • Why is your solution better, easier, or more convenient? For Sunrise Bookkeeping, the problem is simple: many small business owners don’t have time to manage their books. They feel overwhelmed by tax season. The solution is ongoing, organized financial support at a predictable monthly cost. Be specific. Clarity builds confidence. Step 3: Identify Your Target Customer Avoid saying “everyone” when it comes to who you sell to. Successful businesses start by focusing on a clear audience. Describe: • Who they are • What stage of life or business they are in • What they value most (price, speed, trust, expertise, convenience) • Where they find services like yours For example, Sunrise Bookkeeping may target local service businesses with 1–10 employees that need reliable reporting but are not ready to hire in-house staff. The clearer you are about your customer, the easier marketing becomes. Step 4: Outline Your Products or Services List what you sell and what customers receive. For each offer, define: • What is included • How much it costs • What outcome the customer gets Example packages: Basic Monthly Bookkeeping – $400 per month – Includes transaction categorization, monthly reports, and reconciliations Growth Package – $650 per month – Includes bookkeeping plus quarterly financial review meetings Clear offers help customers say yes faster. Step 5: Understand Your Market and Competition You do not need complex research, but you should know who else serves your audience. Answer: • Who are your top competitors? • What do they do well? • Where is there room for improvement? • What makes your business different? Your competitive advantage might be: • Personalized service • Faster turnaround • A niche specialty • Flexible pricing • Strong community presence Chamber membership itself can become part of your advantage through visibility and local credibility. Step 6: Create a Simple Marketing and Sales Plan Now answer two important questions: How will customers find you? How will they buy? List your main marketing strategies. Examples: • Referrals and networking • Social media • Partnerships with other businesses • Search engine visibility • Local events Then outline your sales process. For example: Inquiry → Discovery Call → Proposal → Agreement → Service Delivery → Follow-Up Keep it simple and repeatable. Step 7: Plan Your Operations Explain how your business will function day to day. Consider: • Where will you operate? • What tools or equipment do you need? • What are your business hours? • Will you hire help or work alone? • What systems will you use for payments, scheduling, or customer service? Operational clarity builds stability. Step 8: Review the Financial Basics Even a simple plan should include realistic financial thinking. Outline: • Startup costs (equipment, website, inventory, deposits) • Monthly fixed expenses (rent, software, insurance) • Variable costs per sale • Average price per sale • Estimated number of sales per month Then estimate: Monthly Revenue = Price × Number of Sales Break-even point = Monthly Fixed Costs ÷ Profit per Sale These numbers do not need to be perfect, but they should be thoughtful and grounded in research. Step 9: Set Your First 90-Day Milestones Turn your plan into action with clear goals: • Finalize pricing • Secure space or suppliers • Build website and online listings • Join professional organizations (these can be critical for networking, advice, and credibility) • Launch with a promotional offer • Gain your first 10 customers • Collect reviews A plan only works if it leads to progress. When You May Need a Longer Business Plan A basic plan works well for many small businesses. However, you may need a more detailed version if you are: • Applying for a bank loan • Seeking investors • Purchasing a franchise • Opening multiple locations • Launching a capital-intensive operation In those cases, your plan may require expanded financial projections, cash flow forecasts, and deeper market research. Keep in mind, a business plan is not about perfection. It’s about clarity. It helps you make better decisions, communicate your vision, and build confidence in yourself and others. Most importantly, it gives your idea structure. If you are starting or growing a business in our community, the Chamber is here to support you with connections, education, and local insight. We encourage you to take the next step and turn your idea into a well-planned reality.
23 tháng 2, 2026
It’s a question that feels complicated. If you’re in business long enough, you’re going to have to raise your prices at some point. And yet when you do, it’s possible loyal customers may have big feelings about it. So how do you raise your prices without alienating the people who go you to where you are? Why Pricing Conversations Get Weird Costs creep up, your calendar fills, and suddenly you’re working harder for the same money. That’s not a growth plan. It’s a slow leak. But you can adjust pricing without drama, without apologizing, and without putting your reputation on the line. Pricing touches three sensitive areas at once for most business pros: · Your confidence: Am I actually worth this? · Your customers: Will they get mad and leave? · Your market: What if competitors are cheaper? You won’t lose customers because you raised prices. If your customers leave it’s because they don’t understand the value, or they feel surprised. Price increases feel like betrayal when they feel sudden or inexplicable. No one wants to pay more, but when they see the value of what you’re providing and they understand what’s behind the increase, you can likely keep them as a customer. Before You Raise Anything, Do This Quick Check You’re trying to run a healthy business. Remember that. Costs increase. There’s no way to continue to provide your goods or services at the same rate you did a few years ago (unless you had a ridiculous markup—and if so, good for you). But for most of us, this is a necessary cost of doing business these days and you have to keep up with the times. Start with these questions: 1. What’s changed since your current pricing was set? If your costs, time, labor, or demand have changed, your pricing should change too. Inflation is a business reality. 2. What’s the real cost to deliver your product or service? Not just materials or payroll. Consider time, tools, admin hours, software, insurance, travel, prep, cleanup, follow-up, knowledge acquired to get you to this point. If you don’t count it, you’re donating it. 3. Where are you losing money without realizing it? Common culprits: · Custom work that turns into endless revisions · Meetings that don’t lead anywhere · Last-minute changes and reschedules · Free add-ons that became “expected” Three Pricing Moves That Don’t Scare Customers Off You don’t have to “raise prices across the board.” Sometimes the smartest move is reshaping how people buy from you. Move 1: Repackage instead of simply increasing If you’re worried about blowback, don’t just raise the number. Raise the clarity. Examples: · Instead of “$125 per visit,” create “Standard” and “Priority” service tiers. · Instead of “$2,000 project,” define three packages with different scopes. · Instead of a single offering, create an upfront charge or membership, like a wine bar offering a membership club that’s more affordable in bulk than just a single glass, which benefit loyal members · Instead of “hourly,” offer a flat-rate option for common work. When you package, customers can see what they’re paying for. It becomes less about you being “more expensive” and more about them choosing what fits. Move 2: Increase your minimums This is the quiet hero of profitability. Examples: · Minimum project size · Minimum order quantity · Minimum monthly retainer · Minimum delivery fee Minimums cut out low-margin work that eats your week. You’ll likely lose the most price-sensitive customers, which sounds scary until you realize they’re also the most demanding per dollar. Move 3: Adjust for urgency and complexity Not all work is equal. Not all customers are equal. Pricing can reflect that. Consider: · Rush fees · After-hours fees · Complexity fees for extra revisions or custom requests · Travel or onsite fees · “Done-for-you” vs “DIY” options When to Raise Prices Timing matters because you want the change to feel intentional and not random. Three good moments to adjust pricing: · When demand is high and you’re booked out · When costs have increased significantly · When you’ve improved your results or delivery (faster, better, smoother) · When you’ve gained new expertise or value · When you roll out something new If you’re already overloaded, raising prices can improve customer experience. You deliver better quality, which means higher prices. The Conversation This is where a lot of business owners hurt themselves. They over-explain, apologize, or sound defensive. Don’t do any of that. Your message should follow the four Cs: cursory, clear, confident, and customer-aware. Here are a few scripts you can adapt for your business. Script 1: Simple and direct “Starting April 1, our pricing will be updated. This change reflects increased costs and allows us to continue delivering the level of quality and service you expect.” Script 2: For loyal customers “As a valued customer, you’ll have access to current pricing through May 1. After that, updated rates will apply. We appreciate your continued support.” Script 3: When you’re shifting packages “We’re updating our service options to make them clearer and more flexible. You’ll now be able to choose between three packages based on your needs. The new options begin April 2.” You’re not asking permission. You’re informing them. What If Customers Push Back? Some will. That’s normal. The goal is not to avoid it, but to handle it professionally. If someone says, “That’s too much,” try: “I understand. If budget is a concern, we can look at an option with a smaller scope.” Or: “I hear you. Our pricing reflects the time and expertise required to deliver it well.” If someone threatens to leave, stay calm: “I’d hate to lose you, but I understand you need to choose what’s best for you.” Most of the time, the customers you want will respect you more for being steady. If you are still worried about raising prices with your loyal customers, grandfather them into their original pricing structure and raise prices for all new customers. However, this only works when you have room to take on new customers. Eventually it will be inevitable that even your grandfathered customers will see a price increase. But if you want to put it off, that’s a way to do it. A Quick Action Plan for This Week 1. Pick one pricing move: repackage, minimums, or urgency fees 2. Decide your effective date: give customers a reasonable notice window 3. Write your message: two to three sentences, no apologies 4. Update your materials: website, menus, quotes, proposals, booking links 5. Practice your response so you don’t panic when someone asks why Then stand firm. Pricing without panic is really about leadership. You don’t raise prices because you’re greedy. You raise prices because your business has to be sustainable to serve anyone at all. You’re building something that should last. Pricing is one of the ways you make sure it can.  And if you want a sounding board, a few examples, or a sanity check before you hit “send” on the announcement, your chamber community is exactly the place to start.
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