Choosing a name for their new business can give founders more sleepless nights than anything else. Getting it right is crucial, but also very tricky, as a brand name can mean a lot to one person and absolutely nothing to another.
The decision depends on a number of factors. For example, is it more important that the name is relevant and easy to spell, so people can find it via search engine queries, or that it communicates exactly what the company offers or sells?
This may worth something:
SouthCoast restaurant owners: We need your business, and we are taking extra precautions - News
FALL RIVER — From single-use menus to hand-washing and sanitizing after every transaction, area food establishments are taking all kinds of precautions to keep their customers safe amid coronavirus fears.
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On its Instagram page, dNB Burgers said they are moving some stools and tables around to help with physical distancing, as well as sanitizing and cleaning "like crazy." "Your downtown businesses need you now more than ever," the post reads.
New specialist helps small business in Humboldt | News, Sports, Jobs - Messenger News
-Messenger photo by Elijah Decious
AJ Flurey, small business development specialist for Humboldt County Development Association, contemplates when he'll next have the chance to use this giant pair of scissors.
HUMBOLDT — Small business owners and those thinking about going into business in Humboldt County now have a local resource they can count on for a wide variety of services.
Filling the new full-time role dedicated to expanding services from Humboldt County Development Association is Andrew “AJ” Flurey.
Along Philly's Main Line, business closures make for an eerily quiet Sunday
An array of businesses along Philadelphia's Main Line all had the same eerie message posted in their windows Sunday: "Per Gov. Tom Wolf's orders, we will be closed until further notice."
Thousands of locally and corporate-owned shops, restaurants, and fitness studios locked their doors across Montgomery, Delaware, Bucks, and Chester Counties after Pennsylvania officials announced Saturday that all "nonessential" businesses should close to prevent the spread of the coronavirus. Officials warned that if the businesses didn't comply, the governor or state's secretary of health could force their closure by invoking a law intended to protect public health.
While you're here, how about this:
Business listings, March 15, 2020 | Entrepreneurs | news-gazette.com
— DeSouza Enterprises Inc., DBA Central Illinois Fighting Game Community, 511 N. Neil St., C, Christopher DeSouza, same address.
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— Jasmine's Helping Hands Private Cleaning Services, 206 Kenwood Road, C, Jasmine Henry, same address.
— O'Neal's Lawncare and Hardscapes, 205 N. Main St., Homer, Brandon Shaffer, same address, and Larry O'Neal III, 374 Wayne St., Mahomet.
Phillipsburg area business owners providing meals to school children in need -
Phillipsburg 's mayor and three area business owners are stepping up to help children in need as schools shut down in response to the coronavirus.
Daniel Risis, the new owner of the Phillipsburg Antique Mall and Toby's Cup in Lopatcong Township, is offering free hot dog lunches for the next two weeks for students in the Phillipsburg and Lopatcong areas. Children can visit Toby's Cup and receive the lunches from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday and Wednesday to Friday -- no questions asked.
Coronavirus Cost to Businesses and Workers: 'It Has All Gone to Hell' - The New York Times
A week ago, Mark Canlis's restaurant in Seattle was offering a $135 tasting menu to a bustling dining room every night. Eileen Hornor's inn on the Maine coast was booking rooms for the busy spring graduation season. And Kalena Masching, a real estate agent in California, was fielding multiple offers on a $1.2 million home.
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Today, Mr. Canlis's restaurant is preparing to become a drive-through operation serving burgers. Ms. Hornor is bleeding cash as she refunds deposits for scores of canceled reservations. And Ms. Masching is scrambling to save her sale after one offer after another fell through.
Business booming for Cam Girls amid coronavirus outbreak
Coronavirus isn't the only thing causing temperatures to rise across the globe — cam girls are, too.
Business is booming for sexy solo performers as millions of holed-up horndogs look to relieve their outbreak anxiety, XXX workers say.
Kennedy, 25, opened an account a week ago on the site OnlyFans, where users pay $10 a month to watch her perform sex acts, fold laundry nude and brush her teeth.
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Miami-based Joslyn Jane — who hawks sexy solo sex videos and partner performances on OnlyFans and sells others for $5.99 to $32 on the site ManyVids — said she has raked in about $1,700 a week in tips and sales, up from an average of $1,050.
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