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Mar 18, 2013

Small Business

President Clinton Helps Kick Off Kiva City Little Rock

Last Friday, we were proud to stand beside President Bill Clinton, Kiva.org and Accion Texas for the launch of Kiva City Little Rock, an initiative that expands the availability of microloans for small business owners and aspiring entrepreneurs. Nearly 300 people from the Little Rock community joined us for the announcement at the William J. Clinton Presidential Center.

Visa’s partnership with Kiva to help U.S. small businesses began in 2010 and led, in part, to the announcement of the Kiva City initiative at the inaugural Clinton Global Initiative America meeting in June 2011. The Kiva City program is focused on expanding Kiva’s efforts to bring the power of the “Internet Community” to more small business borrowers in cities across the U.S.

During the event, the enthusiasm about what this meant for the Little Rock community was palpable. While the loan amounts typically are small (often $5,000-$10,000), the potential impact can be big. I heard this directly from a number of the Kiva City Little Rock borrowers who were in attendance, including representatives from handmade jewelry, artisanal cheese and handmade baby clothing businesses. I look forward to hearing more about the future successes of these businesses.

Commenting on the significance of the announcement, President Clinton noted, “The genius of Kiva is that they took everything we had learned – the lessons of what worked and what doesn’t in microlending – and the promise of crowdfunding and putting it in to building a new economy brick by brick – or person by person, if you will. It’s an exhilarating thing. And I am happy to support it.”

If you would like to help fund a borrower’s dream in Little Rock, visit: www.kiva.org/littlerock

Watch a video of President Clinton introducing Kiva City:

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Posted by: Douglas Sabo, Visa Corporate Responsibility on March 18, 2013 at 3:51 pm

Mar 15, 2013

Guest Blog: President Clinton Helps Launch 4th Kiva City in Little Rock

Visa partners with many organizations, companies and governments as part of our shared goal of reaching full financial inclusion globally by 2020. One of those organizations is Kiva.org, a nonprofit working to alleviate poverty by connecting people around the world through microlending. In 2010, we announced a partnership with Kiva to help more U.S. small businesses tap into microfinance, in part through launching Kiva City in areas of the country where small business is struggling in the economic recovery. Today, we invited Kiva President Premal Shah to share the news of the launch of the latest Kiva City, in Little Rock, Arkansas.

Guest post by Premal Shah, President, Kiva.org

Today, I look forward to standing alongside President Clinton, Visa and Accion Texas to announce the launch of Kiva City Little Rock, an initiative to help more small business owners in Arkansas get access to the financial tools they need to create jobs and a better life for themselves and their communities. As we enter the third year of the partnership between Kiva and Visa, I am thrilled to announce that this is the fourth Kiva City we’ve launched together as a part of our CGI Commitment to Action. Kiva City Little Rock joins initiatives already underway in Detroit, Los Angeles and New Orleans.

In the words of President Clinton, “Successful small business owners in Little Rock and across the country have the power to accelerate job growth and economic opportunity for all of us. They have the plan and the passion; and this Commitment to Action will provide the much-needed capital to start or expand.”

Kiva City Little Rock provides access to capital for small business owners and budding entrepreneurs by crowdfunding loans on kiva.org/littlerock – often $25 at a time – that add up to job creation and economic growth.

The initiative is a collaboration between Kiva, Visa, Accion Texas, and nonprofit organizations in Little Rock working as Kiva Zip Trustees. Accion Texas works to identify small businesses in the Little Rock area that would benefit from a loan and then posts their profiles on Kiva.org for crowdsourced funding opportunities. The real power of Kiva City comes from local people with local solutions for growing new businesses.

In the Little Rock region, there are more than 69,000 small businesses that employ nearly 330,000 people. Through Kiva City, anyone with an Internet connection has a chance to help support local small businesses. Every dollar lent helps create jobs in the community, in turn supporting another local business, and then another. As small businesses grow and expand, local economies start to improve, then take off.

Both Kiva and Visa share the belief that small businesses and the entrepreneurs behind them are the engines of economic prosperity – and that’s what makes our partnership so effective.

For more information on Kiva City Little Rock or to lend to a small business owner, visit Kiva.org/littlerock

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Posted by: Douglas Sabo, Visa Corporate Responsibility on March 15, 2013 at 3:39 pm

Mar 7, 2013

SBA and Visa Business Video Contest: Share Your Export Small Biz Story and you could win $10,000

Each year, businesses across the U.S. produce goods and provide services that are in high demand – in the U.S. and across our borders. In fact, according to an article currently posted on the U.S. Small Business Administration website, 97 percent of all exporters are small businesses.

To celebrate small business success in international exporting, and to increase awareness of government assistance available for small business exporters, the Office of International Trade at the SBA and Visa Business invite small businesses to share their export story via a three minute video. The winning video, in accordance with the Official Rules, will be awarded $10,000.

The contest opened February 25 and runs through April 22*. Details on the video challenge can be found at http://exportvideo.challenge.gov/.

All eligible videos will be scored by a panel assembled by the SBA and will select five winning videos from each of the following categories:

  • Manufacturing
  • Consumer products
  • Professional services
  • Technology
  • Agribusiness

Winners will be awarded cash to help with their business, and could receive an additional $1,000 for travel reimbursement and hotel to participate in the awards ceremony in may in Denver, CO.

  • 1st Place: $10,000
  • 2nd Place: $8,000
  • 3rd Place: $6,000
  • 4th Place: $4,000
  • 5th Place: $2,000

Check out the 2011 winning video!

*The video submission deadline has been extended. The new deadline is April 22nd by 5:00 p.m. EDT. Visit http://exportvideo.challenge.gov/ for more information, to see the Official Rules and to enter to win.

Ready, set, GO!

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Posted by: Janet Zablock, Head of Global Small Business, Visa Inc. on March 7, 2013 at 2:41 pm

Feb 28, 2013

SBA and Visa Video Contest: Share Your Export Small Biz Story and you could win $10,000

Each year, businesses across the U.S. produce goods and provide services that are in high demand – in the U.S. and across our borders. In fact, according to the U.S. Small Business Administration, 97 percent of all exporters are small businesses.

To celebrate small business success in international exporting, and to increase awareness of government assistance available for small business exporters, the Office of International Trade at the SBA and Visa invite small businesses to share their export story via a three minute video. The winning video in accordance with the Official Rules will be awarded $10,000.

The contest opens February 25 and runs through April 5. Details on the video challenge can be found at exportvideo.challenge.gov. All eligible videos will be scored by a panel assembled by the SBA and will select a total of five winning videos from the following categories:

  • Manufacturing
  • Consumer products
  • Professional services
  • Technology
  • Agribusiness

Winners will be awarded cash to help with their business, and could receive an additional $1,000 for travel reimbursement to attend the awards ceremony in may in Denver, CO.

  • 1st Place: $10,000
  • 2nd Place: $8,000
  • 3rd Place: $6,000
  • 4th Place: $4,000
  • 5th Place: $2,000

Check out last year’s winning video!

 

The video submission deadline to enter your small business is April 5th by 5:00 p.m. EDT. Visit exportvideo.challenge.gov for more information, to see the Official Rules and to enter to win.

Ready, set, GO!

 

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Posted by: Janet Zablock, Head of Global Small Business, Visa Inc. on February 28, 2013 at 8:59 am

Feb 19, 2013

#LoveCustomers Tips for Small Business Owners: Keeping Customers Coming Back—Getting Customers to Love You

Last week, we shared tips from our Love Your Customers guide on how small business owners can attract new customers. In this week’s blog, small business expert and USA Today columnist, Rhonda Abrams, shares her secrets to continuing the courtship with your customers. 

Janet – @jzablock

Once you’ve landed a customer you certainly want to keep them. After all, it costs a whole lot more to get a customer in the first place than it does to sell repeatedly to a current customer. But, often, small businesses (and big corporations too!) spend more time courting new business than in serving the customers they worked so hard to get.

What’s the best way to keep customers coming back? To make them fall in love with your company? By offering stellar customer service. Customers value great service. Many companies are renowned for their customer service and have built entire marketing strategies around it.

Some small businesses assume they’re doing just fine by way of customer service because they don’t receive many complaints. But you can’t judge how well you’re serving your customers merely by the number of complaints you receive; the unhappy customer who doesn’t complain is almost certainly a lost customer.

Give customers little reason to complain. Train your employees in customer service. Be flexible so you can handle unusual requests. Empower employees to make certain customer service decisions on the spot. And solicit customer suggestions and feedback so you know what they’re thinking – and how you can improve.

For some small business owners—and their employees—the first step in providing great customer service may require an attitude adjustment. Approach interactions with customers as a means to nurture the relationship, not just to execute a transaction.

Four key elements to superb customer service are:

  • Be honest in all your dealings. Honesty is not only the right thing, it also directly affects your ability to make sales, retain customers, and (ultimately) stay in business. In an age when any customer can rate your company on online user-review sites, you must treat each and every customer with care, respect, and honesty.
  • Promise only what you can deliver. This has a direct impact on customer satisfaction and how you’ll be rated. It’s much better to under-promise and over-deliver than to oversell and overhype and then disappoint your customers.
  • Follow through with commitments. If you say you’re going to do something, do it. Period. If you promise to be on call to customers 24/7 to fix any problems make sure you do exactly as you’ve promised.
  • Make it easy for customers to contact you. Provide an online contact form, phone number, or an email address. Or handle inquiries on Facebook, Twitter, or other social media sites.

Visit www.visa.com/business/loveyourcustomers to download the Love Your Customers guide and learn more!

Enjoy!
Rhonda Abrams @RhondaAbrams
USA Today Small Business Columnist and Expert

Disclaimer: Practice recommendations are intended for informational purposes only and should not be relied upon for legal, financial, tax or other advice.  When implementing any new strategy or practice, you should consult with your legal and financial advisors. Visa makes no representations and warranties as to the information contained herein.

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Posted by: Janet Zablock, Head of Global Small Business, Visa Inc. on February 19, 2013 at 9:12 am

Jan 8, 2013

Small Business Owner Perspective: What Lies Ahead in 2013

For many of us, the New Year is filled with excitement and anticipation, but for the new neighborhood coffee shop opening downtown, or the Etsy artisan working on a fresh line of handmade jewelry, the New Year can also be a time of uncertainty.

So, what are small business owners thinking about now that we are in 2013? According to our latest Small Business Spend Insights*:

  • Small business owners have remained cautiously optimistic about the economy:
  • Business owners anticipate spending more on advertising, marketing and inventory supply:
  • The top three areas of concern for more than 50 percent of small business owners, include: Cost of health insurance, attracting new customers and rising taxes

For more Small Business Owner perspectives, view the full Small Business Spend Insights report  and visit the Visa Business Facebook page.

*survey conducted in October 2012

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Posted by: Janet Zablock, Head of Global Small Business, Visa Inc. on January 8, 2013 at 8:47 am

Dec 10, 2012

#HolidaySuccess Tips for Small Business Owners: Post-Holiday Management

The New Year’s light at the end of the tunnel is near, but don’t let the last few holiday moments distract you from making the most of the holiday rush.

Our final blog series from USA Today small business columnist Rhonda Abrams, reminds small business owners what they need to do to help take advantage of the final days of the holiday season and make them last throughout the New Year.

For more information on other holiday planning advice, download the full Small Business Holiday Success Guide at www.visa.com/holidaysuccess

Happy Holidays!

Janet – @JZablock

Phew! We’re almost to the end of the holiday season. But that doesn’t mean you’re out of the holiday woods. You’ll still have post-holiday customers, and you certainly want to find ways to keep the customers you acquired during the holidays and turn them into year ‘round fans.

As you prepare for the post-holiday season, concentrate on four major objectives:

    1. Keeping holiday customers
    2. Redeeming gift cards
    3. Handling returns
    4. Planning post-New Year promotions

Keeping holiday customers. Every name and email address you capture, with consent, every new follower on Facebook or Twitter, is an extremely valuable lead and potential future customer for your business. After all, these folks have already sought you out—either by walking into your storefront, visiting your website, “liking” your Facebook page, or otherwise connecting with you.

Be creative about how you capture contact info. Of course you can simply ask people for their information at checkout, but you can also hold weekly drawings for gifts when people give you their business cards at your place of business or “like” you on Facebook or other social media, offer discount coupons on your eCommerce website if prospects register for your newsletter. (You do have a newsletter, don’t you?)

Just be sure to ask the customer’s permission before adding them to your mailing list – and of course, promptly honor any unsubscribe requests you receive.

Gift card redemption. One of the best things you’ll deal with after the holidays are all those customers coming to redeem gift cards, if you’ve offered them for sale during the holidays. Many of these customers may be new to you—the happy recipients of a gift card. So make sure you encourage them to sign up for your newsletter or Facebook page. Also, make certain you’re set up to give them excellent service—have enough inventory and staff to handle demand. Keep in mind, many gift card recipients spend more than the amount of the card, so be sure to merchandise your products or services well during this time.

Handling returns. If you have a physical location or are an eCommerce company, you’ll likely have some returns. Make sure you schedule extra staff for the first week or so after Christmas specifically to handle returns. And have a very clear and specific return policy in place (ideally, this should have been clear to buyers before they made a purchase). Your policies may be very strict, such as no cash refunds, only merchandise exchanges, and only items unopened in original boxes, but such policies discourage future purchases. You can certainly have more lenient policies if returns are rare. Whatever your policy, make sure your employees understand its terms. And emphasize to your staff the importance of accepting returns gracefully. Few things are more off-putting than a store that handles returns impolitely. Remember, your goal is to create lifelong customers!

Post-New Year promotions. Last but not least, as the holidays wind down, start thinking of creative ways to keep people coming in, even during the typical doldrums of late January and February. Tactics include:

  • Beginning-of-the-year sale
  • Two-for-one specials for slow periods
  • Multiple purchase packs of your goods or services
  • Loyalty programs
  • Free trials

If you’re diligent about capturing contact information (paying close attention to getting your customer’s consent first) throughout the holidays—and afterward—you could have a large audience for your 2013 marketing campaigns.

Enjoy!
Rhonda Abrams  @RhondaAbrams

Disclaimer:  Practice recommendations are intended for informational purposes only and should not be relied upon for legal, financial, tax or other advice.  When implementing any new strategy or practice, you should consult with your legal and financial advisors. Visa makes no representations and warranties as to the information contained herein.

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Posted by: Janet Zablock, Head of Global Small Business, Visa Inc. on December 10, 2012 at 1:17 pm

Dec 3, 2012

#HolidaySuccess Tips for Small Business Owners: Keep Them Coming Back with Email Newsletters and Gift Cards

In the flurry of making sales during the holidays, we sometimes forget how the influx of “today” customers, can be turned into “future” customers.

As part of our #HolidaySuccess tips for small business owners, USA Today small business columnist, Rhonda Abrams shares a few tips on how to take the holiday momentum through the New Year!

For more information on other holiday planning advice, download the full Small Business Holiday Success Guide at www.visa.com/holidaysuccess

Happy Holidays!

Janet – @JZablock

How do you connect with holiday customers now and keep them coming back after the new year? Two great marketing strategies make it easier for you to make money during this all-important season and build ongoing relationships with customers at the same time:

  1. Email newsletters – the number one way to encourage online customers to return, according to Forrester; and
  2. Gift cards – one of the most popular gifts for the holidays—often redeemed after the new year.

Email newsletters. If you don’t have an email newsletter, start one now. It can be easy, inexpensive, and effective.

Having an email newsletter gives you a reason to collect contact information from the many customers and prospects you interact with this holiday season. Take the opportunity to collect their contact information for your email newsletter campaigns. Just be sure to ask for their permission first and make it easy for them to opt out if they change their preference.

Once you’ve gathered names for your newsletter, you’ll need content. Keep it simple. You don’t have to be a great writer. Check out the Small Business Holiday Success Guide on what to do next!

Gift Cards. You like them. Your customers like them. Most everyone likes getting a gift card.

Offering gift cards is one of the easiest sales you can make this holiday season—and one of the easiest gifts your customers can buy.

Gift cards are one of the best ways to ring up more sales during the holidays. They’re a tremendous last-minute or impulse gift, so they’re particularly popular with those who put off their holiday shopping ‘til the last minute (don’t we all know someone like that?).

There’s a major added benefit as well. Gift cards can bring new customers to your business—often after January, when your sales may have slowed. They can give you a chance to develop an ongoing relationship with the user and turn a one-time holiday sale into a long-time customer.

Enjoy!
Rhonda Abrams @RhondaAbrams

Disclaimer:  Practice recommendations are intended for informational purposes only and should not be relied upon for legal, financial, tax or other advice.  When implementing any new strategy or practice, you should consult with your legal and financial advisors. Visa makes no representations and warranties as to the information contained herein.

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Posted by: Janet Zablock, Head of Global Small Business, Visa Inc. on December 3, 2012 at 11:23 am

Nov 27, 2012

#HolidaySuccess Tips for Small Business Owners:

Last week,  USA Today small business columnist, Rhonda Abrams, shared her first of four #HolidaySuccess tips for maximizing the business potential of the holiday season. This week Rhonda brings us some tips on managing cash flow – one of the top concerns keeping small business owners up at night, according to our 2012 Small Business Cash Management Survey.

For more information on cash management tips and other holiday planning advice, download the full Small Business Holiday Success Guide at www.visa.com/holidaysuccess

Happy Holidays!

Janet – @JZablock

 

Let’s talk about money—the lifeblood of all businesses.

For some businesses, the holidays can represent almost half of annual sales. But expenses can peak long before sales actually come in. The result? Steep income and expense curves. Those kinds of extremes may be thrilling if you’re hitting the slopes this winter, but as a small business owner, you want a smoother ride.

Here are four ways to help even out your cash flow this holiday season:

1.     Sell sooner. You can accomplish this in a few ways: Offer discounts for pre-paid products or services when purchased early in the season; Attract customers early with special sales and events; Sell gift cards and get paid before you actually provide the product or service.

2.     Get paid faster. You can encourage customers to pay quickly by accepting credit cards either online or in your store, or, if you’re on the go, with a mobile credit card reader. For businesses that bill clients, remember you can accept credit cards too. And consider requesting pre-payment or require payment on delivery.

3.     Reduce expenses. The most obvious way to do this is to avoid buying stuff you can’t sell or don’t use. Remember also to forecast costs; purchase carefully; read your financial statements so you know where your money goes; and reduce waste.

4.     Defer payments. If you pay by credit card, you can stretch out your payments if necessary. If you have a stellar track record, ask your vendor for longer payment terms or ask for an installment plan. If you are able to do this and pay with a credit card, you’ve just extended your payment period dramatically. 

Even if you run a business that is typically slow during the holidays, you may still find these cash flow techniques useful.

Enjoy!
Rhonda Abrams

@RhondaAbrams

 

Disclaimer:  Practice recommendations are intended for informational purposes only and should not be relied upon for legal, financial, tax or other advice.  When implementing any new strategy or practice, you should consult with your legal and financial advisors. Visa makes no representations and warranties as to the information contained herein.

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Posted by: Janet Zablock, Head of Global Small Business, Visa Inc. on November 27, 2012 at 2:54 pm

Nov 19, 2012

#HolidaySuccess: Tips for Small Business Owners

A few weeks ago, we shared the Small Business Holiday Success Guide that we recently launched with USA Today small business columnist, Rhonda Abrams. As the holiday season is upon us, we are excited to bring you the first in a series of posts that will provide you with more in-depth strategies to help make this a successful holiday season for your small business. In this series, we will cover money management, holiday marketing techniques, tips for extending holiday success into the New Year, and more. – Janet Zablock @jzablock

6 Tips for Social Media Holiday Success

Social Media 411 chart

Whether it’s money management or marketing, every aspect of your business requires a plan. That includes social media marketing. Keep in mind the following six tips when developing your social media strategy:

  1. Remember, it’s better to give than to receive.Anything you tweet, post, pin, or blog should offer value. Just like you’ll tune out your know-it-all brother-in-law at Thanksgiving dinner, your followers will drop you if all you do is talk about your product or service and why they should buy it. Instead:
    • Write blogs showing how you meet customers’ holiday needs
    • Post links to articles and videos your followers will find useful or entertaining.
    • Discuss promotions and special items you’re offering just for the holidays.
    • Refresh your content often during the holidays to bring customers back.
  2. Write your content in advance. Before you’re knee deep in gift wrap, write as many of those blogs, tweets, and Facebook posts as you can, and merely publish them according to the calendar. Brainstorm the topics, themes, and promotions you’ll cover. Then create a calendar of what to post when (a spreadsheet is best, but a physical calendar also works).
  3. Regift. No, I don’t mean unload that itchy orange and purple sweater your mother gave you last year. I’m talking about repurposing your content. You’ve already taken the time to write your blogs and email newsletters. Now save time. Pull material out for tweets, Facebook posts, and LinkedIn updates.
  4. Put some tasks on auto-pilot. During the holidays especially, you don’t have the resources to update and like posts on Facebook all day. Of course, you’ll still pay attention to the conversation. With tools like Hootsuite, Tweetdeck, and Manageflitter, you can pre-load all that content you wrote in advance and schedule it to post later.
  5. Encourage engagement. Create surveys. Ask questions. Run a contest. Do what you can to encourage followers to engage. When they do engage, respond.
  6. Manage review sites. According to SearchEngineLand,76 percent of customers visit sites such as Yelp, TripAdvisor, and Zagat to find the best meal, store, hotel, and more. Make it easy for your customers to post positive reviews. The tool ReviewBiz allows you to embed an icon in your website that will take your customers directly to local review sites.

Visit www.visa.com/holidaysuccess to download the Small Business Holiday Success Guide and learn more!

–Rhonda Abrams (@RhondaAbrams), USA Today Small Business Columnist and Expert

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Posted by: Janet Zablock, Head of Global Small Business, Visa Inc. on November 19, 2012 at 2:00 pm