2010 has been a very good blogging year for CFOwise®.
2010 has been a very good blogging year for
1. 4 Signs your Business Partnership will fail: I wrote this post a little less than a year ago, just after the new year, after reflecting on a conversation I had at a Christmas party. I met a new
2. 10 Accounting and Finance Secrets for Startups:This was a fun post to write. I turned it into presentation with pictures for each the points and gave it a few times during the year.
3. Top 10 2010 Trends for Entrepreneurs: This post received so much feedback I’m going to review my prediction and make some new ones before the end of the year in a new post.
4. The Key Business Metrics Every Entrepreneur must know: I have since honed and refined a few of the ideas, but the concepts are dead-on.
5. Great SMB Resources and Information: I had received many questions about the resources to which I refer and those that I regularly check to stay in touch with the thoughts and trends impacting SMBs. I figured I’d just turn it into a blog post and refer people there instead of trying to remember them all each time I am asked the question.
6. A Mug, Dry Cleaning, and Customer Loyalty: I honestly didn’t think this would get much attention. I just had some quick thoughts from some customer service experiences, but a lot of people really liked it.
7. The Biggest Motivating Factor for Employees–Progress: Brad Jones hit the proverbial nail on the head with this one. A great read!
8. 5 Ways Entrepreneurs improve Cash Flow with Benchmarking: Who doesn’t want more cash right? So many entrepreneurs dismiss benchmarking as a waste of time I took on the challenge of proving how it could improve cash flow, hopefully persuading some of the naysayers to reconsider their ways.
9. I do and I understand: A great quote from Confucius inspired this post. Timeless truth is always relevant, isn’t it?
10. The 2 Problems with Dashboards: Yep, this is a bit of a rant. Look for our firm to make some very poignant progress in bridging this gap in 2011.
11. Please define Business Model: I asked this at the beginning of an entrepreneurial finance class I taught and was shocked by the blank stares and empty answers.