Sunday, May 5, 2013

College Costs Rise Faster Than General Inflation


Many costs are rising faster than inflation. The most important is that of going to college.
                       
One reason is that the government subsidizes this effort with tax breaks. Schools are, therefore, not under pressure to reduce charges. They do give scholarships, but charges tend to rise far too much beyond normal inflation.
                       
Schools claim their own expenses are rising but they may not be exerting enough effort to curtail budgetary outlays, with government subsidies and income tax accommodations assured. (See the Earl J. Weinreb NewsHole® comments and @BusinessNewshole at Twitter.)             

                                   

   


Saturday, May 4, 2013

Make Career Choices From Experiences and Skills


The choice of career should depend on your individual experiences and skills. 

Well-paying skills can be acquired without an expensive, time-consuming college degree. Experience learned over the years as a part-timer may come in handy in the future. That paper signifying a degree with non-specific training it decrees, could become a meaningless job qualifier.

Apart from individual job preferences, it’s always a good idea to anticipate future availability and job-paying prospects over the next ten, twenty years, at skills in which you hope to work. (See the Earl J. Weinreb NewsHole® comments and @BusinesNewshole at Twitter.)

                                   

   






                               

        

Friday, May 3, 2013

Importance of Your Business Choice

Be certain you have a solid background for any business you are planning to enter. The odds will be tough enough if you have the required experience. They can be insurmountable if you don’t.

Also be alert to relative risks that businesses entail; sit-down restaurants are far riskier than fast food operations.

Be sure you plan properly, with a formal, written business projection that includes a budget. The complete business plan will give you a much better indication of needed capital. 

Once you come up with that financial estimate, add at least 50% more for further assurance, to help keep your business afloat until you start to break even.(See the Earl J. Weinreb NewsHole® comments and @BusinesNewshole at Twitter.)



Thursday, May 2, 2013

College Is Becoming an Option, Not a Necessity


I constantly comment on college attendance, which I feel should be an option for scholars only. College can otherwise be an expensive luxury, despite media hype. Thus, I repeat the message to help counter-balance that media exuberance.

Yes, “college” should preferably be added to a job resume, but it’s not the ultimate asset you’ll need. It can be a tool for lazy recruiters

Unless you are a scholar capable of receiving a scholarship or an athlete capable of getting one, consider college part-time or not at all. Other well-paying skills can be acquired without such “advanced” school attendance. (See the Earl J. Weinreb NewsHole® comments and @BusinesNewshole at Twitter.)

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Start Up or Buy an Existing Business?

                                                
It’s often a concern of relatively small individual business men. It is also a question for securities investors. So this should be of interest to many of you.

Larger companies often have to decide whether to build their business or a new operation from scratch or buy a company outright, that is, one already in operation.
                       
Many companies, especially in the pharmaceutical business, prefer the acquisition route. It’s expensive because you pay a big premium for a company after it has developed an expensive new drug.
                       
On the other hand, if you attempt to research new drugs, with all start up losses and heartbreak expenses, you have lots of cost as well.
                       
My feeling from my observations is this: In the long run, pharma companies, at least, will pay less for in-house drug product development; there’s a major premium for successful products. (See the Earl J. Weinreb NewsHole® comments and @BusinessNewshole at Twitter.)             

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Disadvantages of Franchise Ownership

                                        
Do you know what should be the two major reasons for buying a franchise? Advantages it’s hard for most franchise seekers to get?
                       
One is name recognition. The other is the training that they ought to give you. However, few franchisers give you real name recognition and training.
                       
Moreover, franchises are not cheap. You pay up front for a license, and the royalties thereafter will be a big cut of your bottom line. In fact, those royalties may equal half your net profits, if you ever manage to get any real returns for yourself.
                       
I usually don't recommend the purchase of a franchise because franchisees hardly ever get true name recognition, nor the required training from the average franchiser. Only a handful of franchises are worth buying. (See the Earl J. Weinreb NewsHole® comments and @BusinessNewshole at Twitter.)                                    

   

Monday, April 29, 2013

Why Chase After an MBA?

                                                
An MBA or Master of Business Administration degree is available for almost any college program from accounting, business management, criminal justice, education, engineering, finance, government, politics, real estate, to a variety of arcane subjects.


There’s an overabundance of MBA students and graduates with MBA degrees.They have become relatively useless, except, for their use in a resume.There are simply too many to attract the attention they formerly did.
                       
MBAs are expensive to get and, someday, students may realize they are not even worth their use on a resume. (See the Earl J. Weinreb NewsHole® comments and @BusinessNewshole at Twitter.)