As companies struggle to stay afloat using restructuring, reorganization and retrenchment strategies, nowadays it’s easy for even the most skillful employees to lose their jobs.
If you’ve been laid off due to cost-cutting measures, your unemployment could actually be a blessing in disguise as many have come to realize the benefits of starting a consulting business instead of applying for similar jobs in other companies.
Change in your job situation can be a good thing for as long as you open yourself to new experiences and challenges.
In the bestselling book “Who Moved My Cheese”, author and psychologist Spencer Johnson emphasizes the point that change in most aspects of life is inevitable and that the sooner we move to a new direction, the sooner we are able to find something better to replace them with. Read More »
You have the skills and the mindset to start your marketing business and your next step is getting your first clients.
Almost every small business marketing consultant had a friend, colleague or someone in the immediate circle as their first customer. So, the easiest way to get your cash flow is by selling your services to an existing network of family and friends.
But but before too long you will have to push your business to a wider audience if you want to secure a steady recurring income from consulting. Read More »
February 16, 2010
In Uncategorized
Although it might sound very typical when big words like accounts payable and receivable are merged together in the business world but these two terms act like two sides of a single coin. Both the terms have its own sign of important and both swings in a synchronizing way. Where accounts payable explains regarding the money that the company owes to the supplier for the products or the services that the company has already received. On the other hand, accounts receivable is an act that explains regarding the billing of the customer who owes money to the company for the good and the services that have been provided to the customer. Read More »
February 16, 2010
In Uncategorized
Although it might sound very typical when big words like accounts payable and receivable are merged together in the business world but these two terms act like two sides of a single coin. Both the terms have its own sign of important and both swings in a synchronizing way. Where accounts payable explains regarding the money that the company owes to the supplier for the products or the services that the company has already received. On the other hand, accounts receivable is an act that explains regarding the billing of the customer who owes money to the company for the good and the services that have been provided to the customer. Read More »