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Advice for Entrepreneurs and Business Owners Facing a Tough Economy: Do What Is Counterintuitive
Garrett B. Gunderson teaches entrepreneurs how to manage their money, both in business and personally. He has advised hundreds of business owners. His advice now: Use counterintuitive thinking to trump the tough economy. His 6 recommendations run against the grain: Raise Salaries. Spend More. Meet Less. Stop Saving for Retirement. Put All Your Eggs in One Basket. Go Back to School. Sandy, UT (PRWEB) August 21, 2008 — The instinctive approach of many entrepreneurs and business owners caught in the swirl of a tough economy is to cut back. ![]() Best-Selling Book for Business Owners
Faced with diminished sales and hesitant prospects, business owners brace themselves by dramatically reducing discretionary spending and often, even cutting core staff members and projects. “Such moves are typical, but they are also misguided,” warns Garrett B. Gunderson, a nationally respected small business advisor and best-selling author. “This economy is actually a window of opportunity for those savvy enough and bold enough to take advantage of the downturn.” Gunderson, who was interviewed earlier this week on FOX Business Network with Neil Cavuto, is recommending six uncommon approaches to trumping this tough economy. (Full details can be found below) 1.? ? ? Raise Salaries. Gunderson’s approach, as presented in his top-of-the-charts book, Killing Sacred Cows: Overcoming the Financial Myths That Are Destroying Your Prosperity, is to defy conventional thinking and build a success strategy around optimizing cash flow, the productivity of assets and - importantly - providing meaningful products and services. “In harsh economies, too many small business owners are quick to think of their own needs - profit, yet fail to ask how well they are serving their customers,” Gunderson says. “Now is the time to bring innovation and creativity to helping your business’s clients weather their own economic storms.” Rather than look for ways to shave payroll, Gunderson encourages his clients to rethink the ways they utilize employees and to even boost salaries. “Too many entrepreneurs believe their real estate, their patents, their brand or their equipment are their businesses’ greatest assets, when in truth, their most dependable and leveragable asset is the loyalty, creativity and productivity of their employees,” he says. Gunderson, who wrote Killing Sacred Cows with Stephen Palmer, has started nearly two dozen businesses and became a multi-millionaire by age 30. Killing Sacred Cows, which has consistently ranked at the top of the sales charts for business and investing books since its publication earlier this summer, guides entrepreneurs on how to override the misguided strategies they’ve had drilled into them on how to run their business and personal financial lives. Here, in detail, is what Garrett is currently advising his clients: 1. Raise Salaries Savvy entrepreneurs recognize that each dollar invested in raising salaries during economic hardships leverages the loyalty and productivity of employees far more than handing out comparable raises during boom times. Now is the time you need to get the best out of your people. Increasing their salaries demonstrates strength, vision, and importantly, gratitude for their contribution to your success. 2. Spend More It is far more conducive to wealth creation to focus on increasing your production, rather than on slicing your expenses. Spend where your money will have the most impact. 3. Meet Less. Instead of sitting around in meetings talking to one another, encourage your employees to get out and improve contacts with customers and vendors. Your team members can’t spot any market opportunities passing time in your company conference room. 4. Stop Saving for Retirement Ultimately, your business is a far better investment than a 401(k) anyway, especially since it can provide ongoing cash flow without the worry of depleting principal. Invest in yourself and in your business. By improving your liquidity, you’ll have cash to fund your enterprise and seize opportunities created by the economic dislocation of others. 5. Put All Your Eggs in One Basket Who are you? Why do you exist? Who do you serve? What can you be the best in the world at? Stay true to yourself in hard times and shed the excesses you’ve allowed yourself along the way. 6. Go Back to School The most successful entrepreneurs I know are those who are constantly reading, attending seminars, engaging with mentors, and exposing themselves to new adventures and ideas. This is even more imperative when the difference between those who weather the economic storm and those who don’t may well be the extra edge and contacts that continuing education provide. Conclusion To learn more about Garrett Gunderson and his breakthrough book, visit Killing Sacred Cows. To meet or interview Gunderson, members of the news media are encouraged to contact Dean Rotbart, chairman, Editor-in-Chief Consulting at 310-492-5858 or via email at dean.rotbart@editor-in-chief.com. See Also:
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