Archive for the ‘Business’ category

The Needs For Running The Business Of Newspaper Delivery Route

March 19th, 2011

The Needs For Running The Business Of Newspaper Delivery Route PhotoThe days of a kid on a bicycle prowling the streets with a canvas sack of newspapers are mostly gone. In most communities today, newspapers are delivered by adult subcontractors who use a car or truck to cover large geographic areas and hundreds of subscribers. But, sometimes, you may need to rent, lease, or purchase an appropriate vehicle. In most areas, this is a five- or seven-day-a-week commitment that can be accomplished in the predawn hours. For that reason, it is often a second job. Newspaper companies generally employ their own drivers or a trucking company to deliver large bundles of papers to newsstands and stores. Delivery to homes is usually subcontracted to individual carriers.

In this kind of job, the newspaper company will generally offer a fixed fee for each delivery. Many companies also pay a mileage reimbursement for use of your car. In some communities, carriers are directly employed by the newspaper company, earning a salary plus benefits and mileage reimbursement for the use of their own vehicle. Because most companies do the billing and collection by mail or by automatically charging credit card accounts, newspaper carriers can no longer count on weekly or monthly gratuities from customers. However, in some communities it remains common practice for regular carriers to receive a tip at Christmastime; some carriers encourage the practice by inserting a holiday card with their name and address in deliveries near the holiday. The most important thing is you have to make sure that your insurance agent can offer counsel about commercial vehicle insurance and liability coverage.

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newspaper delivery companies, newspaper delivery business, newspaper carrier business, are newspaper deliveries covered by insurance, running a paper route, newspaper delivery vehicle insurance, newspaper carrier liability, is commercial insurance required for a paper route, holiday cards from paper carrier to customer, holiday card from newspaper carrier

Heat Loss: The Hidden Force That Chips Away At Your Profits

March 13th, 2011

Heat Loss: The Hidden Force That Chips Away At Your Profits PhotoIt does little good to generate more annual revenue if the profits are being drained out through the cracks in your organization’s performance. This heat loss stems from many sources. An example of a big savings is Nortel Networks outsourcing its information technology services to Computer Sciences in August 2000. Along with five other outsourcing pacts, the company expects to save approximately $300 million a year. That is recovery of a big bite of heat loss. But heat loss is not recovered just from outsourcing $3 billion of IT services to Computer Sciences over seven years. Millions of dollars a year are found in the combined little losses. This is called the death of a thousand cuts—an old knife fighter’s metaphor.

Examples of these small cuts are plentiful in the business world around us. Here are nine of them:

1.      Telephone tag with someone who left a message, “Please call me.”

2.      Merchandise returned with no information or return authorization.

3.      Lateness to meetings accepted as part of the cultural norm.

4.      Receipt of 283 e-mail messages in three days, of which only eight were important.

5.      Money spent to complete a project and the materials, programs, or products are never used.

6.      Annual strategic planning conferences that are never completed at the employee level.

7.      Training seminars that are not connected to the business plan that become an education, skill, or knowledge shortfall.

8.      Seminar participants who are not held accountable by management for integrating and implementing training.

Participants leaving conferences and seminars early.

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heat loss