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What is the New Normal for Businesses and AP?

business

What is the New Normal for Businesses and AP?

What do the oracles say about society’s return to normalcy? Bill Gates is pinning his hopes on a semi-normal return to life in the spring of 2021, provided we rapidly adopt the vaccine. Dr. Fauci’s more conservative estimate suggests that we’ll enjoy movie theater experiences, indoor dining, and regular school attendance by late fall.  But the experts’ jockeying of vaccine rollout timelines and predictions of how soon we can reschedule that twice-canceled family vacation leave one fundamental question unanswered:

What aspects of normalcy are actually worth returning to? 

The pandemic’s clarifying challenges to businesses were not thoroughly negative. Post-pandemic businesses have adapted by interfacing with technology to get the same tasks done with less redundancy and bulk. Daily operations have stripped down to bare essentials, some bearing costs to the customer, but many renewed in their devotion to make a more human connection with those they serve. Data security issues took a tremendous and necessary spotlight as a historic number of the U.S. workforce scrambled to telecommute.

Covid-19 shattered all illusions about how quickly any industry, company, or market can change. 

There’s no crystal ball to consult when it comes to making big changes with very little advance notice. Data by McKinsey indicates how businesses stayed lean and financially solvent through the initial shutdowns and subsequent quarantine measures. According to McKinsey & Company, businesses that transformed their processes in 2020 nodded to agility as the key ingredient of their success. In the business sense, “agility” is defined by smaller teams that are built to work with rapid efficiency in place of traditional business models with several tiers of leadership per business unit. McKinsey tracked 25 companies across 7 business sectors in their handling of the COVID-19 crisis.

Here is the resounding sentiment of what they found:

Through our research, one characteristic stood out for companies that outperformed their peers: companies that ranked higher on managing the impact of the COVID-19 crisis were also those with agile practices more deeply embedded in their enterprise operating models. That is, they were mature agile organizations that had implemented the most extensive changes to enterprise-wide processes before the pandemic.

The benefits of agility were measured in overall customer satisfaction, employee engagement, and operational performance. They found that swifter decision-making, less time determining priorities, and faster and more flexible response processes lent themselves to the business’ overall success. In other words, being agile made everything easier.

Nimble, clear-communicating teams enabled with good technology outpaced their slower, bureaucratic counterparts.

A clarion call from a pandemic-tested economy is this: the bustling office setting is becoming increasingly outdated. A small, remote team working closely is capable of outpacing any team that sits less than six feet apart–and with less overhead costs.  This is a matter of understanding the amazing flexibility of a business operations model. With technology, we now have the ability to decentralize while staying connected. Sounds paradoxical, but then again, so did social distancing.

While change is good, identifying the right kind of change is essential. Here are three guiding principles:

1. Keep Your Business Unit Nimble With an Agile Mindset

Examples of an agile mindset include giving up meeting-heavy schedules and manual workloads and renewing decision-making agency in small teams. Even if the organization at large is still insistent on doing things the old way, your business unit can lead to small changes with great effect.  What’s not working with your current accounting operations model in accounting, IT, or even on the executive level? Can you digitize any of your backlogged manual tasks to alleviate the stress on your team and improve supplier relations?

But don’t mistake agility for speed. Speed is fast but can be blind. Agility is about delighting both the customer and those who serve them in the delivery of a seamless and elevated process.

2. Add Collaboration Tools as a Lifeline Resource for Your Team

The 2021 workforce demands exceptional collaboration tools. As projections still hang in the air of remote work persisting into the better part of 2021, it is essential that good communication infrastructure is in place to sustain team morale. Longevity is about more than just crossing the finish line, but lifting burdens of redundancy and frustration. As willpower to stay connected wanes and team needs inevitably change, it is essential that touchpoints are added between managers and employees to prevent burnout and ensure team goals are attainable and appropriate. Ask your team what heaving lifting they need assistance with and keep an eye toward any solution that may bolster cross-functionality and productivity within your team.

3. Retrofit for the Employee of the Future

Whether or not we retain the same jobs we had at the outset of 2020, job demands will have changed. Safety and wellness concerns have skyrocketed in the eyes of the consumer while values like convenience or ease of access have diminished in proportion to the limitations imposed on our lives.  Product models will need adjustment. New verticals that businesses once sought to launch into may have dried up, leaving sales teams to pursue other avenues.

Providing the workforce with more analytical tools, businesses can add value to employee roles by grounding decision-making in data points and allowing for greater transparency to daily tasks. Through new technology, the elimination of legacy technology, needless redundant tasks, and paper touchpoints, the workforce can rest more securely in the face of unanticipated threats to their employability.

Our technology, operating models, and accepted biases of ‘how things are’ must all change when presented with the data on how things can be done differently.

Change is no longer a back-of-the-handbook contingency plan. Grit and ingenuity hold the silver lining to a resoundingly difficult year. Perhaps reversing to the way things were is a farce. The next normal will provide us gradations of clarity as waves of vaccinations roll out and restrictions ease in the late months of 2021. Yet what we do with the clear opportunities already here is a truer prediction of future business success.

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Lauren Ruef has collaborated with Nvoicepay, a FLEETCOR Company to write about financial technology since 2016. Nvoicepay optimizes each payment made, streamlines payment processes, and generates new sources of revenue, enabling customers to pay 100% of their invoices electronically, while realizing the financial benefits of payment optimization.

business

7 Tips & Ideas to Start a Small Scale Manufacturing Business

The 21 century makes it possible for everyone to launch his or her own business, as most of us have access to such efficient tools as blogs, social media, etc. At this moment, the COVID-19 pandemic modifies the ways to run any kind of business.

However, it is still possible to start something new, and by following some approaches, you will do it safely, minimizing any risks, and getting the most out of your concepts. We are here to help you find these profitable ways and share some effective tips on starting any business.

Let us begin with the most interesting business ideas that can provide you not only with material well-being, but also bring joy and even unlock your creative potential.

Candle Making

Regardless of common preconceptions, winter is not the only sales season for candles. Today, it has become both an essential attribute for house coziness and an integral part of some practices.

Meditation and yoga are quite widespread activities, and many practitioners cannot imagine the process without a bewitching and relaxing scent filling the space around. But also the daily environment requires to be in line with the mood, whether dreamy and chill or refreshing and productive.

Tip: Imagine your target audience and try to foresee their expectations from your candles: where they could use it, what they want to feel while inhaling the scent, etc. This will help you improve their design and also write more attractive product descriptions.

Candle manufacturing is one of the best choices for your first small scale business because you need only basic tools and materials that do not cost much, and the process itself is easy and fast to master.

Bakery & Confectionery Products

If you enjoy cooking, you have a nice opportunity to transform the hobby into a source of income. No doubt, in this case, you will have a huge customer base. People need some special, unique, and delicious sweets on any occasion in their lives.

It is a space for your creativity, which you can use to create feels-like-home treats, wedding cakes, bread with unusual tastes, cupcakes and cookies, pies, gluten-free bakery, organic, vegan, healthy, or fitness-sweets, and other splendid products.

Tip: With such a wide spectrum of possible niches, it is important to focus on a few main directions and follow them to become a professional there. People tend to trust rather highly specialized producers than “Jacks of all trades”.

Depending on the budget, you can open your small bakery or make everything at home. With social media, it is absolutely possible to create a proper and flourishing business within the four walls.

Jewelry

Jewelry has become an extremely popular choice for starting a small-scale business. But it does not mean you have no chance to enter this market successfully. With a quite complex structure, this branch is still affordable and promising.

Again, you can choose an appropriate niche relying on your budget. If you can find suppliers and can afford precious and semi-precious gems and stones, you can go for fine jewelry. Otherwise, you can still find your place in this business, creating either trendy everyday pieces or unique niche jewelry shifting the emphasis on a design – both options from inexpensive materials.

Tip: Jewelry is all about aesthetics, so make sure you develop an eye-catching design for the brand, a unique voice that could tell the potential customers about your pieces.

Ceramic Ware

Pottery can become not only your business idea but also a great kind of entertainment. It is fun and often unpredictable, and the feeling of soft flowing clay is immensely satisfying. Pottery is one of the oldest trades in human history. Nevertheless, it is still a tool that you can use to embody your creativity and personal uniqueness.

To realize your projects, you need to have a number of materials and equipment, such as pottery wheels and kiln, different clays, sculpting and trimming tools, glazes, etc. Make sure you have enough space to store these things and work with them.

Tip: Take into account that unlike other types of manufacturing, pottery requires a number of special tools and devices. Make sure you plan your budget first and buy quality equipment.

If you do not want to dive into ceramic ware, you can always go for clay sculptures, souvenirs, and other little stuff that people buy for gifts and home decor!

Makeup Products

Cosmetics is a quite saturated market that always welcomes newcomers, though. On a low budget, you will unlikely create exquisite makeup or care products, but you can always turn to traditions and inexpensive natural ingredients.

As always, it is better to choose one niche and then grow to new products, if you want. Hair products, lip balms, scrabs, creams – the world of cosmetics has a wide range of possible ways for growth!

Tip: Whatever niche of cosmetic products you choose, you need to be a guru of the process, as low quality here can possibly lead even to severe health problems.

Shoemaking

Shoemaking can easily become a business that is oriented at global concepts: sustainable development, veganism, minimalism, etc. However, it could also be a design resolution that you can use to express creativity.

Choose your target audience and create footwear for daily needs or for those who love to wear fancy things.

Tip: Prototype development is an essential part of the shoemaking process before the final production. At this stage, you can improve your model and see the mistakes you have made before.

Furniture Manufacturing

If you have an inclination for this trade, you will enjoy launching a furniture business. Here you face the same challenges and essential decisions: target audience, aim, and design.

Regardless of what furniture you want to make and which needs to meet, it is a low-budget decision for a small scale manufacturing business. Not only you can create brand-new pieces, but also offer repair and restoration services.

Tip: Make sure the pictures of your pieces are quality and the descriptions contain all the important information, such as size, materials, care and maintenance, etc.

Final Thoughts

Small scale business offers numerous opportunities for people to help others and to make the world more beautiful and convenient. You have the chance to become a part of this process, and you do not need much to start.

After you launch the business, it is essential to maintain its profitability by promoting your brand. To do so, you can start blogging, submit guest posts on business blogs, and use social media marketing.

Right now, you have everything you need to embody your amazing ideas and make life a better place. So rally your force and turn over a new leaf!

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Nancy P. Howard has been working as a journalist at an online magazine in London for a year. She is also a professional writer in such topics as blogging, IT and marketing.

seller 7 Things to Plan When Choosing a Third-Party Selling Strategy

8 Common Mistakes Business Sellers Make

All business owners think about selling their business at one time or another. However, for the ones who decide to go forward and sell, there are certain points that need to be addressed if they want to have a successful transaction and get the most money for their business.

After selling over 800 businesses, I decided to list eight common mistakes owners make when selling their business:

1. Trying to sell it yourself. Business owners usually are not objective about their business. Even if you have the financial skills, you’ll have a tendency to overestimate the value. And you are not expected to have the financial skills to be objective in the valuing of your own business. Instead, you are a successful business owner, which is an art in itself. The selling of a business is the combination of both an art and a science, and it is performed by individuals who do this full-time as their profession. You do what you do best, and let a professional intermediary do what they do best.

There is a reason pro athletes and actors have agents – because they get more money and better terms when they hire someone to negotiate for them. Likewise, you simply won’t get as much value for your business trying to sell it yourself and learn on the job. Attempting to sell your own business will devour your time. You know how to run your business, but this is no time to learn how to be an investment banker or business broker.

2. You are too sensitive about your business. You will take comments made by a buyer personally and perhaps kill the deal. Nobody likes to hear they have an ugly baby, and the same is true when you are selling your business. Any negative comments about your business to you will be taken personally regardless of how hardened you may think you are. The solution is to get an intermediary to soften the blow and translate the buyer’s comments into requests that will not be taken personally.

3. You don’t know how to arrive at fair market value. Owners who are unrealistic about the value of their business are the biggest reason why deals fall through. Get the facts and the reality of what businesses like yours are selling for in the current market, and never believe anything you read in the trade magazines as the gospel regarding valuations.

4. You don’t know how to recognize a qualified buyer. Different businesses require different kinds of buyers, and different buyers will pay different amounts for a business. You need to know which buyers are paying the most in today’s market because buyers change with the market.

5. You probably don’t know where to look for the right buyer. Finding the right buyer for your business who will pay top dollar isn’t as easy as running an ad in a trade magazine or newspaper and seeing who contacts you. As a seller, you want to know who really has the money and whether they are serious. Are they cherry pickers or making low-ball offers? Or do they try to claw back on an offer and use the old bait-and-switch technique? Remember, time is money, and buyers are generally working on your time and your money.

6. You fail to realize that selling a business is a process, not an event. Selling a business involves a structured process that takes time – generally between six to 12 months from conception to closing. It is a very detailed process that not all sellers are up to accomplishing without guidance from a trained professional who has performed this process many times before.

7. You have to assemble the right team to get the job done. Just as in sports, if a seller doesn’t have the right team of players in the game, he will either get defeated or hurt in some way. What is the right team? An attorney who has experience in business transactions and understands the sale of a business to a buyer and not to one’s lifelong golfing buddy. An accountant who understands the tax system and is not afraid to give good tax advice, knowing there is a possibility they will lose your account and is looking out for your best interest. And an experienced intermediary who has working knowledge of your industry.

8. You aren’t committed to selling. Selling a business is a lot of hard work. People don’t realize how much work it is to assemble all of the data that is needed by a buyer to get a business sold. A lot of transactions will fall apart because the seller is either not committed to the process or does not have the mental stamina to continue. The solution is to get help from a seasoned intermediary who will coach from the beginning to the end and help you to reap the rewards for all of your many hard years of work.

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Terry Monroe (www.terrymonroe.com) is founder and president of American Business Brokers & Advisors (ABBA) and author of Hidden Wealth: The Secret to Getting Top Dollar for Your Business with ForbesBooks. Monroe has owned and operated more than 40 different businesses and sold in excess of 800 businesses. As president of ABBA, which he founded in 1999, he serves as an advisor to business buyers and sellers throughout the nation. As an expert source he has been written about and featured in The Wall Street Journal, Entrepreneur magazine, CNN Money, USA Today, CEOWORLD, and Forbes.

ITC

Refocusing the ITC to Protect the US Economy

International trade is always transforming, often in exciting ways. However, a little-noticed trend in litigation at the United States International Trade Commission (ITC) portends serious market disruption and harm to US consumers and businesses.

Since 1916, the ITC has been tasked with protecting domestic industries from unfair imports. Under Section 337 of U.S. trade law, the ITC investigates imports claimed to be competing unfairly and affecting U.S. industries, including by infringing intellectual property (IP) rights. In these cases, the ITC can issue an exclusion order to ban all imports of the infringing product from the U.S. but is to refrain from a ban, if the public interest dictates it should not act.

During my tenure as ITC Chairman, the agency took great care to respect the balance of interests in the cases before us; our goal was to strengthen and support the US economy. Time and again, Congress made it clear that the mission of the ITC is to protect domestic industry – meaning US productive capacity and jobs. It is not simply an expedient alternative forum for enforcement of IP claims that could be heard by courts. Congress made it equally clear that focus on the broader public interest was paramount to striking the right balance. If the harm to consumers or healthy market competition outweighed any gains from protecting the patentholder, no import ban should issue.

 

Unfortunately, in subsequent years, the ITC in 337 cases has forgotten its history and the critical balance of interests that its decision-making requires. The ITC now elevates the protection of one claimant’s IP right over damage to the US economy writ large. It regularly dismisses evidence of future public harm as speculative – because the damage has not yet occurred. This is at odds with logic, law, and economics, including the ITC’s own expert analyses.

The whole point of an ITC exclusion order is to change which goods can enter the U.S. in the future, so of course, the ITC must consider how its actions will affect the public going forward. It requires the same kind of forward-looking analyses the ITC regularly does when, for example, it evaluates the projected impact of a planned trade agreement on the US economy.

The ITC’s analytic missteps have created a monster. We are seeing an increased 337 cases against complex products involving hundreds, if not thousands of patents, like cars and smartphones. Petitioners know that asserting even one minor patent for one minor component threatens the exclusion of an entire category of downstream products. That creates distorted incentives; even US companies steadfastly denying patent infringement pay outsize settlements to avoid the prospect of losing the U.S. market. Worse still, in many of these cases, petitioners are not U.S. companies and have threadbare connections to the domestic economy. They are instead patent-holding entities – often called patent trolls or “nonpracticing entities” (NPEs) – created and backed by financial firms with the sole purpose of litigating to extract big money.

A double case in point: A newly formed Ireland firm, Neodron Ltd., filed two ITC cases accusing the major smart device innovators, including Amazon, Apple, Dell, LG, Microsoft, Samsung, and Sony, of infringing patents related to touchscreens on smart devices. If the ITC determines even one claim of one patent was infringed, more than 90% of tablets, smartphones, and touchscreen computers could be prohibited from entering the country.

Exclusion would devastate American consumers and these companies. Americans rely more heavily than ever on their smart devices during the COVID-19 pandemic to work from home, learn remotely, consult with their doctors, and stay connected to family and friends.

It might be one thing if an import ban on these crucial devices would strengthen the US economy by protecting some domestic industries from unfair trade. But Neodron produces nothing, and the company it licenses its patents to does not make products that compete with (let alone replace) the smart devices that would be excluded. Neodron, and only Neodron, would benefit; the public and the U.S. economy would suffer. It is exactly the type of exclusion order Congress warned against.

Neodron and other NPEs can pursue their patent claims through the courts if they are legitimate. But claims like theirs do not belong in the ITC–an agency whose purpose is protecting trade. The ITC needs to focus on combatting the insidious and growing economic costs of letting NPEs press this kind of exploitive litigation. It should not conflate NPEs’ narrow interest in monetizing their patents with the actual public interest, which Congress has required it to analyze seriously before excluding products from the market. The ITC’s return to its mandate and mission is an urgent priority.

dormant company

5 Ways to Setup a New Dormant Company in UK

Setting up a dormant company comes with its perks. However, many entrepreneurs and businesses looking to register one such company in the UK do not know how to get the process started. Indeed, suppose you know how to register a limited liability company in the UK. In that case, it might interest you to know that the process for setting up a dormant company is the same, aside from some slight variations.

Though you can find dormant accounts advisors in the UK, it’s equally helpful to understand minor details such as what makes a company in the UK dormant, the information required, and why you might want to register a dormant company.

So continue reading to learn all these and more.

What is a Dormant Company

The term “dormant company” is used to describe a limited company that has been set up with a Companies House, but due to any reason, it hasn’t begun trading or will never trade. Such companies have no significant transactions on their accounts in their financial year. For Corporation Tax, dormant companies are considered inactive. This is because they don’t partake in any trading activities such as:

-Maintaining a payroll

-Managing investments

-Buying and selling products and services

-Earning income and interest

-Purchasing or renting properties

-Earning dividends

-Paying bank fees and charges

-Paying salaries for high officials like directors

-Paying accountancy fees and formation cost for the company using a business account.

The moment a dormant account performs any of these transactions, it ceases to be dormant. Its dormant trading status will move into the category for ‘active’ for Corporate Tax.

Nevertheless, certain transactions are considered ‘significant accounting transactions’ that a dormant company can perform. These are:

-Payment of subscriber shares (the first company shareholders during incorporation).

-Payment of fees during annual Confirmation Statements to Company House.

-Penalties paid to Companies House for Late filing.

Why Register a Dormant Company

Given all the information available on dormant companies and their requirements, the question might have crossed your mind. Why would anyone have a limited company remain dormant? Though it’s a simple question, the answer isn’t so straightforward because there are several reasons why a company may choose to stay dormant. Some of these reasons include the following:

-Keeping a trademark or brand name protected

-Reserving a corporate name for use later

-For holding intellectual property or assets

-To allow an existing business to restructure

-A temporary step in case of illness or death of a business owner

A dormant company can maintain its status for any duration of time. However, all limited companies incur some expenses for being in the official register, dormant companies included. Also, there are specific obligatory ways of reporting and filing with the Companies House and HMRC.

Now that you know the basic information of a dormant company, here are five steps to set up in the UK.

1.  Information You’ll Need

To register a dormant company, you’ll get all the necessary information starting with a unique name for your company and a registered office address.

Next, the company will require a minimum of one director, and all directors will have to provide personal demographics and other information including name, nationality, and even eye color. Every shareholder will require the following information:

-Name

-Number of shares owned

-Value of each share

Finally, the people in the company with significant control will also provide details including name, nationality, and other details.

Once you have all this information, you’ll perform a company name search before registering your company name, provided it’s not taken. But it doesn’t end there, because you’ll need to follow certain formalities to keep your company dormant.

2.  Don’t Trade

Apart from ensuring that your company’s accounts remain dormant by avoiding any of the transactions earlier mentioned, you also need to check with Companies House to ensure you don’t have any ‘significant transactions’ during the accounting period of your company.

The moment any transaction of accounting significance occurs, you’ll need to record it in the account of your company. And by doing so, your dormant account will be considered trading. Which is something you’ll want to avoid.

3.  Get HMRC Informed

Apart from not trading, you’ll need to inform the HM Revenue and Custom (HMRC) by corresponding with them. In case you are wondering, the HMRC is primarily the UK’s tax payment and customs authority. The aim is to update them on your company’s status, letting them know that your company is a dormant one.

4.  Prepare Your Confirmation Statement

Even though your new registered company is dormant and not actively trading, the authorities in the UK still have specific requirements you’ll need to fulfill. One such requirement is the filing of the annual confirmation statement for your company. But why is this important?

The annual filing of this statement ensures that Companies House is always updated with any changes that occur with your dormant company. And if nothing changes, they’ll also be in the know. You can do this either at the end of each period or as required as changes occur within the company.

5.  Annual Filing For Your Dormant Accounts

Finally, the law also requires you to file the accounts of your dormant company. You have to first do this no more than 21 months after the company registration. After this, you’ll have to file your dormant accounts every year. And that’s all you need to do to set up a dormant company in the UK and keep it dormant.

Conclusion

For those operating a previously active company but currently dormant, it’s necessary to contact the Corporation Tax department, either by email, post, or phone immediately. They’ll send a ‘Notice to deliver a Company Tax Return’ to your registered office address.

Then you’ll have to put together a Company Tax Return and accounts for the HMRC and make Corporation Tax payments for any profits you earned prior to the dormancy of your company. After these, your previously trading company becomes dormant. However, if you’re looking to open a dormant limited company for any reason, the steps outlined above should help you navigate the procedures easily.

work from home

The Best Cities to Work From Home

While the COVID-19 pandemic has been devastating for many businesses and workers, it has led to greater flexibility for workers in some industries. Employees at major tech companies, including Twitter and Google, for example, have been granted extended opportunities to work from home, sometimes permanently. These changes have afforded many people the ability to work and live where they want, rather than being bound to large cities where their employers have offices. Employees at major tech companies, including Twitter and Google, for example, have been granted extended opportunities to work from home, sometimes permanently.

This shift is leading many workers toward “Zoom towns”—cities that are booming as remote work becomes more popular. While much of the U.S. is experiencing rising home values during the pandemic as a result of low inventory, areas experiencing the largest booms are these Zoom towns, which are increasingly attracting well-educated laptop workers with lower living costs, access to outdoor recreation, and strong (albeit less dense) communities. Unfortunately for many workers, the opportunity for remote work and the ability to relocate to these cities are often only available to workers in tech, financial services, sales, and other similar roles that can be performed remotely.

To find the best locations to work from home, researchers at RetailMeNot ranked cities and states based on several metrics related to 1) community and safety, 2) housing and living costs, and 3) health and weather. In general, the researchers wanted to identify the most affordable locations with low crime rates, good weather for outdoor recreation, and well-educated, healthy populations, among other factors. Their researchers sourced data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, National Centers for Environment Information, the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, and the U.S. Census Bureau to create a composite score for each city.

At the state level, Mountain and Midwest states like Wyoming, Idaho, Utah, and Minnesota offer inviting environments for remote workers, with those states earning some of the highest composite scores for working from home. For example, Wyoming has no income tax, which is appealing for high-income professionals. Idaho, like Utah, offers residents good weather, access to the outdoors, low crime rates, and a large proportion of single-family homes. On the other hand, Southern states like Louisiana, Arkansas, and Alabama provide less appealing settings for at-home work. Despite being affordable, these states tend to have higher poverty and crime rates, more variable weather, and less opportunities for physical activity.

In the city-level analysis, only cities with populations above 100,000 were considered. These areas are typically suburbs of major metropolitan areas, offer easier access to big-city amenities, and appeal to a wider range of workers. Residents in these locations could also theoretically commute to the urban center as needed in the future. For people looking for more rural towns with populations below 100,000 residents, RetailMeNot recommends seeking out locations in the best states for remote workers, especially Mountain states like Wyoming, Idaho, Utah, and Colorado. Like the best states to work from home, the top cities tend to also have lower tax rates, ideal weather for outdoor recreation, healthy citizens, and several other beneficial characteristics for people working from home.

Here are the 15 best cities for remote workers.

City  Rank Overall work-from-home score Community & safety Housing & living costs Health & weather Metro area

 

Gilbert, AZ      1           91.04 95.24 85.14 92.74 Phoenix-Mesa-Chandler, AZ
Cary, NC      2           88.55 98.23 77.93 89.49 Raleigh-Cary, NC
Frisco, TX      3           87.73 97.11 76.88 89.19 Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX
Bellevue, WA      4           87.59 93.23 72.18 97.35 Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue, WA
Fremont, CA      5           86.94 94.00 68.97 97.86 San Francisco-Oakland-Berkeley, CA
Carmel, IN      6           86.86 94.75 81.00 84.83 Indianapolis-Carmel-Anderson, IN
Thousand Oaks, CA      7           86.71 95.99 71.80 92.34 Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura, CA
Centennial, CO      8            86.21 90.13 79.52 88.98 Denver-Aurora-Lakewood, CO
Torrance, CA      9            85.38 92.23 67.10 96.80 Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, CA
Olathe, KS     10            85.32 94.28 79.22 82.48 Kansas City, MO-KS
Henderson, NV     11            85.11 84.95 87.49 82.90 Las Vegas-Henderson-Paradise, NV
Carlsbad, CA     12           85.04 88.52 68.87 97.73 San Diego-Chula Vista-Carlsbad, CA
Roseville, CA     13            84.99 90.48 72.06 92.41 Sacramento-Roseville-Folsom, CA
League City, TX     14            84.97 93.05 79.81 82.04 Houston-The Woodlands-Sugar Land, TX
Sandy Springs, GA     15           84.02 95.61 69.17 87.29 Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Alpharetta, GA

 

For more information, a detailed methodology, and complete results, you can find the original report on RetailMeNot’s website: https://www.retailmenot.com/blog/best-cities-to-work-from-home.html

downsizing

The Most Important Things to Consider When Downsizing Your Business

Downsizing a business is never an easy task, however, with many businesses not performing up to standard as a result of the pandemic it has become necessary.

Richard Wayman, CIA Landlord’s Finance Director reveals the most important factors to consider when downsizing during the pandemic.

1. Why should you downsize?

Downsizing is the process of minimizing costs by reducing headcount and the number of employees. These are usually permanent layoffs but during the pandemic, we have seen a rise in furloughs or temporary layoffs in order to survive the lockdown period. This also means that a lot of changes may be necessary for the employees kept on staff. Fewer employees mean many workers have to take on additional responsibilities in the company to compensate for the reduced staff. The closure of certain branches of businesses may also mean the workday is changed for staff as well as changes to certain rolls and how the business functions during the pandemic.

2. Who should you let go?

Before you make any job cuts, it’s crucial to consider who should be kept on and who will have to be let go. If you have any important projects or essential elements to keeping the business moving, you will need to retain the right employees to do the job. If people you let go hold important roles, these will have to be filled whether that’s by other staff or outsourced, so be sure to run this by management teams that it is possible before you make any decisions as it may be more difficult to refill these roles in the long run or train up employees. It’s also important to consider who will work well as part of these smaller teams and be ready to deal with challenges such as burnout and protecting your staff’s mental and physical health during this time.

3. Consider temporary layoffs

Although we are experiencing a turbulent period, you shouldn’t just let go of staff to save money from their salaries, so first, broach the topic of temporary layoffs. However, once you have made any form of lay off from the staff, be prepared that you may lose that employee in the long run, as no one will want to feel uncertain about their position, especially during this time. Before making a permanent or temporary cut on staff, review everyone’s progress and performance in the company with HR so that you can make an informed decision. You should also have a sufficient reason for why you lay off an employee as well as provide as much notice as possible to the employees you are laying off, to be considerate and empathetic to the situation as well as avoid any legal repercussions.

4. Should you outsource the jobs?

Before laying off employees or shutting down departments or roles, make sure you are aware of how you will outsource the essential positions. Investigate where you can get the most cost-effective work for the job without detracting from the performance or value. Outsourcing is typically a great way to save on budget and overall costs; however, this will deviate significantly from business to business so be sure you know what is available. You should also consider temporary contractors or freelancers, as many of them may be out of work currently and offer a better deal for the same job.

5. Set clear objectives

Before you have made any decision and downsized your staff, create a clear strategy of how the business will continue. It’s important that you don’t view this reduction as moving backward but just a temporary setback. Set clear objectives of where you want to the company to be in 6 months, 1 year, 5 years and even 10 years down the line and how you envision reaching these milestones and making a profit. It is also crucial to create a reactive strategy to combat any uncertainty or sudden changes in the market. This may mean updating how you market your business or products as well as revaluating what services you can or could provide amid the pandemic. Always consider the long terms progression and survival of your business and don’t let go of a team or departments you may need in the future to save money in the short term unless it’s vital to the welfare of the business.

eastern europe

Businesses in Eastern Europe Enter 2021 Battered – But Hopeful

The lasting impact of the global pandemic on businesses in Eastern Europe is yet to be seen. Atradius recently released the Eastern Europe Payment Practices Barometer, an annual survey that assesses business payment behavior throughout the world. The prevailing safeguard that many businesses implemented to protect vital assets this year was trade credit insurance.

The protection of trade receivables from the risk of customer payment default is vital for these businesses. Three out of five businesses interviewed reported that they have used trade credit insurance during the pandemic and a significant percent indicated they intend to employ credit insurance next year. This is a clear indication that businesses in Eastern Europe are taking a strategic approach to credit management during the pandemic, which is vital as the global recession continues to pose new and unforeseen challenges.

Business challenges ahead

The majority of Eastern European businesses surveyed said that a decrease in demand represents the greatest challenge to their business. Other challenges to business profitability include maintaining adequate cash flow, collecting outstanding invoices and containing costs.

Not all businesses in Eastern Europe faired the same. Businesses in Bulgaria and Slovakia experienced devastating blows to revenue and cash flow, while businesses in Turkey reported the smallest negative impacts on revenue, cash flow, and sales volume in the region.

Part of the secret to Turkey’s success is a strong, proactive approach to credit management in past years, but especially this year. Businesses in Turkey explicitly stated that they will continue using trade credit insurance in the coming years, which is a distinctive feature of Turkey’s success in the Eastern Europe economic region.

The Payment Practices Barometer has enabled us to evaluate business confidence both before and during the pandemic and recession. Some of the benchmark indicators are shocking, like an 88% rise in overdue invoices, and severe revenue shortfalls felt by almost 60% of businesses in the region during the pandemic.

The toll on industry sectors

The industries across Eastern Europe feeling the greatest shock include hospitality, tourism, and non-essential services. Certain food industries and chemicals are faring slightly better across Eastern Europe if they were able to continue production during lockdowns.

Businesses surveyed in the agri-food, chemicals, steel-metals and ICT/electronics industries mostly shared an optimistic outlook about the future of the domestic economy in their country. Those operating in the electronics industry reported 63% of respondents expecting an improvement in the domestic economy in the coming months while Hungarian businesses in this sector were the most optimistic.

Hope for 2021

Businesses in Eastern Europe are approaching 2021 with cautious optimism. After months of various lockdown measures, reduced consumption and supply-side shocks wreaked havoc on emerging and developed economies alike, a significant proportion of businesses expressed optimism and hope about the coming year. This was most clearly expressed by businesses discussing the future of their domestic economies. Businesses in Turkey and Hungary were particularly upbeat in their assessments of their respective domestic economies in 2021.

The opinion about the global economy is less bright, with 43% of survey respondents predicting a decline in the coming year. For businesses worldwide, the next months are critical. Continued lockdowns may have a severe impact on economic development and rebuilding credit.

Outsourcing credit risk management to external professionals gives businesses a powerful tool that helps securely grow revenues in an unstable time. Credit insurance is designed to help businesses trade safely with more profits while mitigating the risk of customer payment default and other financial pitfalls that can be devastating to an already struggling business.

Much of what the next six months hold is unknown. Around the world, varying degrees of shut down and business as usual are shaping the future for business in each region. With the virus not yet under control in many key economies, it is too soon to say which countries will see strong rebounds and in which industry sectors. What we can see, however, is the strategic approach to credit management in Eastern Europe helping industries securely grow their business while protecting their assets in the uncertain months ahead.

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Silvia Ungaro is a Corporate Communications Manager at Atradius, a global trade credit insurer. She is responsible for the Payment Practices Barometer survey of B2B payment behavior.

cost-of-living

U.S. Cities With the Highest Cost-of-Living Adjusted Salaries

The COVID-19 pandemic has sparked a surge in geographic mobility. According to Pew Research Center, 22 percent of adults in the U.S. have relocated during the pandemic or know someone who did. Interestingly, this reverses a longstanding trend in which Americans were staying put.

Data from the U.S. Census Bureau shows that prior to COVID-19, Americans were moving a lot less. In 1981, 3.4 percent of Americans moved to a different county within the same state while only 2.8 percent moved to a different state entirely. By 2019, those percentages dropped to 2.1 percent and 1.5 percent, respectively. The share of Americans moving across county lines has remained at a relatively flat, low level since 2010.

As people think about where to move during COVID-19 and beyond, job prospects and earning potential will be top of mind. Median earnings for full-time workers in the U.S. was $50,078 in 2019, a 20.6 percent increase since 2010 in nominal dollars. However, the relative cost of living in a given area impacts purchasing power and should be an important factor when weighing employment opportunities. There is significant regional variation in cost-of-living adjusted earnings across the U.S., with residents in the Northeast and Midwest generally faring better than those in the South or West. For example, median adjusted earnings range from a low of $41,063 in Florida to a high of $58,029 in Massachusetts.

To find which metropolitan areas offer the greatest purchasing power, researchers at Smartest Dollar calculated cost-of-living adjusted earnings using data for full-time workers from the U.S. Census Bureau and U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. To improve relevance, metros were grouped into the following categories based on population: small (100,000–349,999), midsize (350,000–999,999), and large (1,000,000 or more).

Similar to the statewide trends, the small and midsize metros offering the highest adjusted earnings are concentrated in the Midwest and Northeast. Unlike the state-level trends, the large metros with the best pay are scattered throughout the country, with similar levels of representation in the Northeast, West, and Midwest.

Here are the large metropolitan areas with the highest cost-of-living adjusted earnings.

Metro Rank      Median earnings for full-time workers (adjusted) Median earnings for full-time workers (unadjusted) Percentage change since 2010 (unadjusted) Cost of living (compared to national average)
San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, CA     1        $63,727 $82,463 30.7% +29.4%
Hartford-East Hartford-Middletown, CT     2        $60,357 $61,625 18.1% +2.1%
Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA-MD-WV    3        $59,993 $70,672 17.0% +17.8%
Boston-Cambridge-Newton, MA-NH    4        $59,046 $67,430 24.3% +14.2%
Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue, WA    5        $58,573 $66,129 28.2% +12.9%
Minneapolis-St. Paul-Bloomington, MN-WI    6        $58,512 $60,033 21.3% +2.6%
San Francisco-Oakland-Berkeley, CA    7        $58,331 $76,764 31.5% +31.6%
Baltimore-Columbia-Towson, MD     8        $57,575 $61,432 20.5% +6.7%
Cincinnati, OH-KY-IN    9        $57,222 $51,500 19.8% -10.0%
Raleigh-Cary, NC   10        $56,934 $54,998 19.7% -3.4%
St. Louis, MO-IL   11        $56,624 $51,528 21.8% -9.0%
Denver-Aurora-Lakewood, CO   12         $55,894 $58,633 23.6% +4.9%
Cleveland-Elyria, OH     13        $55,892 $50,359 18.8% -9.9%
Pittsburgh, PA   14        $55,798 $51,948 24.5% -6.9%
Columbus, OH   15        $55,530 $51,032 19.2% -8.1%
United States      –        $50,078 $50,078 20.6% N/A

 

For more information, a detailed methodology, and complete results, you can find the original report on Smartest Dollar’s website: https://smartestdollar.com/research/cities-with-the-highest-cost-of-living-adjusted-salaries-2020

travel

The Role of a COVID-19 Vaccine in the Travel Industry

Hope got rekindled in the heart of individuals, organizations, and nations following the news of producing a potent vaccine that could help end the COVID-19 menace. There has been a recorded increase in the travel industry’s activities with the renewed energy in people to resume travels.

Nations that earn primarily from the participation of foreigners in business, investment, tourism, and so on are hopeful that they can restore their economy and improve their citizens’ living standards when the virus’s vaccine is in use.

As we are expectant of the proper circulation of a vaccine, we should take a moment to analyze the changes the pandemic outbreak has made in our lifestyle, particularly traveling habits.

Ways in Which the Pandemic Outbreak Positively Affected Travels

As much as COVID-19 has presented us with significant challenges, the pandemic outbreak did not leave us without some blessings. In response to the deadly virus, several changes got incorporated, which has improved traveling for good.

The continuation of these changes despite the vaccine’s availability will do both the travel industry and passengers a great deal of good. These changes and policies adopted include the following:

Flexibility

Airlines became a lot more flexible with their payment and refund policies since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic. Various airlines offered a full refund of fares for booked or paid flights to countries with travel bans. Several airlines employed different means to make payment a lot more comfortable for their passengers.

Maintaining flexibility, regardless of the vaccine, could change travel for good. Not to be too hopeful, these airlines might withdraw some of these leniencies, but many would remain.

Traveler’s Behavior

Travelers now prepare adequately for travels. It makes it a lot easier for airlines to control boarding. People are more careful about their health and, as such, are more responsive to regulations. This habit has been a good chance for travels since the onset of the pandemic.

Health and Safety Protocols

The airline now prioritizes safety and health protocols. Airplanes are now well cleaned and sanitized to ensure a virus-free environment.

One would also notice a very high degree of orderliness at the airport due to the social distancing protocol. People do not have to crowd themselves in the queue, making traveling a lot more stress-free for passengers.

Expected Positive Impacts of the COVID-19 Vaccine

With a proper circulation of the vaccine, where everyone can have access to vaccination at an affordable price, travel will experience a significant change for good. Considering how much influence the pandemic outbreak had on our traveling habit, we expect to record the following changes:

Improved Travel Experience

With the release of the COVID-19 vaccine, traveling will be a lot easier. Several boarding protocols that stress out travelers, like getting tested for COVID-19, maintain social distancing at the boarding gate, arriving at the airport many hours before take-off time, may be relaxed. We can finally return to a more comfortable process with the provision of the vaccine.

Cheaper Fares for Travelers

With the vaccine, airlines can allow more passengers on board a flight. It will help reduce flight fares as more people can share the burden of transportation cost per trip. A lesser fee will make transportation more affordable, and people can plan for more trips than before.

Assurance of Safety

The major discouragement with travels was the fear of safety. Several travelers canceled their trips except when it was inevitable. The vaccine would mean that people can now tour the world without fear of contracting the coronavirus disease. They also do not stand as a threat to others’ safety while visiting new places, so long as they have the necessary vaccination.

Reduced Cost on Maintenance of Health

People now have to spend less on maintaining their health with the vaccine. Airlines can also reduce the cost of ensuring a highly hygienic travel environment by the COVID -19 standard. Several regular travelers had to forfeit planned trips because they cannot afford the potential cost of maintaining their health condition if they probably got down with the virus. With this out of the way, traveling will become much more feasible.

Even with the hope of a new vaccine, we have to ensure that we plan adequately for safety ahead of a trip. It would be best if you had all you will need while in another geographical location. You must get an international driver’s license in the likelihood that you will have to drive yourself around while on your trip.

Significant changes have begun already, with the news of the vaccine around the corner. We all cannot wait to experience our world once again, without the fear of a pandemic.