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Don't
apologize for your small business
"We're just a small business," you mumble
apologetically. In this world where big seems better,
small business owners have developed a strangely distorted
self-image.
Small feels ... well, inadequate. But small business is
great business, and I'll tell you why. I want to lead a
grand cheer for small business owners and employees
because you, my friends, are the salt of the earth.
Now I don't want to downplay the role of big corporations.
We need their economies of scale to build efficient
automobiles, commercial aircraft, and a communications
infrastructure. But sometimes we overlook the fact that
huge businesses have serious weaknesses in areas where
small businesses shine.
Small Businesses Are the
Backbone of the Economy
The US Small Business Administration says that small
businesses create two of every three new jobs, produce 39%
of the gross national product, and invent more than half
the nation's technological innovation. And this kind of
statistic could be repeated in country after country
around the world. Just because you work for or run a small
company doesn't mean you are unimportant. Your
contribution to your country's economy is huge.
Small Businesses
Demonstrate the Essence of Political Freedom
The ability to develop and conduct your own small business
is a wonderful expression of your freedom as a citizen.
You may complain about government regulations, but the
fact is that small businesses are less regulated than
large firms. This gives small businesses the freedom to
focus on what is really important -- caring for customers.
Small Businesses Provide
Better Customer Care
I'm sure you've noticed that the larger a company grows,
the harder it becomes to provide good customer service.
Just try to find the right person to help you on the phone
in a huge corporation -- it'll drive you batty. But when
you ask for the owner of a small business, chances are
you'll be speaking to her or him within a few minutes.
Marketers toss around buzzwords like "Customer
Relationship Management (CRM)," but it's the small
business not the megacorp that really excels at it. Small
businesses know that their livelihood is based on their
customers. Small is great for customers.
Small Businesses Encourage
the Passion Needed to Succeed
Apathy doesn't breed nearly as well in small businesses as
it does in big business. Small business owners and their
workers are focused and immensely proud of what they do.
Small business owners are passionate about their
businesses. How many employees in bureaucratic
organizations can say the same?
Small Businesses Owners
Are Highly Skilled
In a small business, you have to excel at a lot of things
to succeed. Small business owners and their key employees
are masters of dozens of disciplines and perform their
intricate balancing act like pros. So what if they wear
more than one hat? Whom should we admire more -- the
corporate manager or the jack-of-all-trades small business
owner, whose skill-set is sharpened to a razor's edge, and
who survives and succeeds and serves? My vote is with the
latter.
Small Businesses Allow
Owners the Freedom to Innovate
Small business owners learn to be risk takers and
innovators. Corporate employees, on the other hand, too
often interpret their prime directive as keeping their
jobs. Risk-taking can get in the way of career-building.
Innovative small businesses are prize targets of larger
corporations that often find it more cost-effective to
acquire than to innovate on their own.
Small Businesses Can
Change Course Rapidly
Large corporations can be adverse to change, while small
businesses know that their ability to make rapid decisions
and implement course corrections is their key to success.
In the ocean of business, mega-corporations turn like
tankers, while small businesses can zip around them with
the agility of a speedboat.
Small Businesses Can Be
Quite Profitable
Small business is not a synonym for small earnings. In
fact, many small businesses are extremely profitable.
Their advantages of leanness, maneuverability, innovation,
and customer focus mold them into steady enterprises that
earn a significant return on investment year after year
after year.
Being big isn't a worthy goal. But delivering top customer
service, a passion for excellence, a willingness to dream
and create, and the freedom to make timely decisions --
these are worthy of acclaim.
Small businessperson, I salute you for your dedication,
your intelligence, your business acumen, and your
contribution to society. Be proud of your small business.
Stand tall, free, ... and unapologetic. Don't offer
excuses for the size of your business. Small businesses
make the very biggest impact of all!
Copyright © 2002, by Ralph F.
Wilson, http://www.wilsonweb.com
All rights reserved.
(Sweet
and short signature but very effective due to the quality
of the article)
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