Being a small business owner comes with its challenges. One common challenge is that you need to have a strategy in place to consistently market your business and attract new customers.
Let's face it: Relying solely on word of mouth will never be a wise move. The best ways to become more visible are to be proactive and to market your business online. This allows you to reach more people in a shorter timeframe. However, what are your options when you have limited marketing dollars?
While you're here, how about this:
SWMC Adds Dean of Business - Inside INdiana Business
Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College has added a new position, the dean of business and leadership, to support academic programs and has promoted Lamprini Pantazi to the role from graduate director and professor of leadership. She began with SWMC as a faculty member in 2007 and was named director of the Master of Leadership program in 2018. Pantazi holds a bachelor's degree and Ph.D. from Panteion University of Social and Political Sciences and a master's degree from Indiana State University.
Thursday's business headlines - WISH-TV | Indianapolis News | Indiana Weather | Indiana
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — Here’s a look at Thursday’s business headlines with Jane King.
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Based in Moberly, Missouri, Orscheln farm and home is a 60-plus-year-old family-operated retailer with 167 stores in 11 states, including Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa, Indiana, Oklahoma, Illinois and Ohio.
Walmart will hold its investor event today and may talk about price cuts on some products, especially food prices.
Business: Saudi Arabia plans oil increase
As home prices have soared this past year, home owners have witnessed their wealth skyrocket thanks to rising home equity. But achieving homeownership remains much more difficult for people of color in this country, especially Black Americans. A new report from the National Association of Realtors finds that only 42% of Black Americans own homes, compared with nearly 70% of white Americans. The Black homeownership rate is also lower than the rates for Asian-Americans and Hispanic Americans.
This may worth something:
Smart Machines: AI technology's impact on Florida's business sectors
Editor's note: This article originally was published in the February issue of Florida Trend magazine .
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"It's no longer, 'is artificial intelligence going to work?' It does work, and there's numerous applications that are out there — medical imaging, credit fraud detection, movie selections — that use sophisticated artificial intelligence algorithms to make business better," says Jeff McFadden, chief technology officer for Xonar Technology, a Largo-based company that designed an AI-enabled security surveillance system to detect weapons.
Debate shutdown on COVID-19 business protections sparks 'fireworks'
The House's version of the legislation was muscled through its final committee Tuesday night, ensuring it could become one of the first measures passed during the legislative session that will start March 2.
But a decision by House Judiciary Chairman Daniel Perez, R-Miami, to shelve without discussion five amendments proposed by Democrats has irked some Judiciary Committee members and caused others who were leaning toward supporting the bill (HB 7) to back away.
Comcast Business Announces Nearly $1 Million Investment to Extend High-Performance Network to the
PHILADELPHIA , Feb. 18, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- Comcast Business announced it is investing nearly $1 million to extend its internet infrastructure to Main Street Chester in Delaware County , making its affordable suite of connectivity services accessible to dozens of businesses for the first time while benefiting hundreds more through this localized buildout.
While the Comcast Business network already serves thousands of residents and businesses in the area, this concentrated expansion deploys more than 2.5 miles of infrastructure in and near Chester's main business district, which has experienced a redevelopment boom in recent years. New and existing area businesses will now have access to advanced broadband services.
Illinois business leaders criticize Pritzker for raising taxes to balance budget
With unusual vehemence, business leaders are charging the governor wants to undo job incentives he bragged about enacting only two years ago; put Illinois businesses, in some ways, in the worst competitive position in the country; and whack many firms at the worst possible time, when they’re still recovering from the COVID-19 pandemic.
“The governor’s rhetoric of helping business doesn’t match his deeds,” said Illinois Retail Merchants Association CEO Rob Karr. Pritzker talks about helping get federal COVID recovery money to Illinois companies, “and then he takes it away. . . .The governor talks about the need to recover, but these (proposed taxes) are the exact opposite of that.”
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