Small Business Blog Post Material

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Revision as of 14:02, 22 April 2016 by imported>Jason
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Small Businesses On What Matters:

  • Expansion of overtime eligibility
  • Department of labor’s legal counseling disclosure movement
  • Osha environmental regulation that affects manufacturing and farming
  • ESBA’s retirement reform could hinder small business retirement plans

(NFIB)

  • Many of the regulatory costs are fixed costs thus businesses with 5 and 500 employees pay the same costs
  • 42% of businesses surveyed say that few or no qualified individuals applied for an open position
  • Many other businesses cite that attracting customers to the business is their biggest problem

Small Businesses Want to Grow: How Can they?

Numerous reports have cited that small businesses have plans to expand within the next year. An analysis conducted by the Wallstreet Journal in January 2016, highlights fifty-four percent of small businesses surveyed say they expect their employee base to increase. Twenty-seven percent of businesses interviewed for a New York Federal Reserve report, detail plans to increase their full time staff within the next year. A report in February 2016 by the National Federation of Independent businesses however, documents forty-two percent of small business have encountered obstacles in identifying qualified applicants for open positions. Similarly, survey results indicate that numerous businesses have expectations to increase profitability and/or sales revenue, while a complimentary majority cite difficulty in attracting customers and identifying new markets. To summarize the current state of affairs, it appears that small businesses share a desire to expand both financially and physically, but face disparities in realizing that goal. This therefore prompts the question: How should small businesses go about achieving affective and meaningful growth?


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