Friday, June 29, 2012

Reuters: Small Business News: Connect with your audience

Reuters: Small Business News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Connect with your audience
Jun 29th 2012, 19:07

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Workers cross London Bridge, with Tower Bridge seen behind, during the morning rush hour in London September 30, 2011. REUTERS/Paul Hackett

Workers cross London Bridge, with Tower Bridge seen behind, during the morning rush hour in London September 30, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Paul Hackett

BOSTON | Fri Jun 29, 2012 3:07pm EDT

BOSTON (Reuters) - Sharing a little something of yourself in the form of personal stories can help even a fledgling public speaker connect better with the audience, says Harvard Business Review.

The Management Tip of the Day offers quick, practical management tips and ideas from Harvard Business Review and HBR.org (www.hbr.org). Any opinions expressed are not endorsed by Reuters.

"Great speakers help listeners understand, relate to, and remember a message by telling stories and using analogies. Narratives make messages more engaging and help listeners connect with a speaker.

Even if you're not a born storyteller, you can share personal stories that help illustrate your message and why it's important.

By comparing your central point to a familiar image or experience you can immediately connect with your audience, conveying an entire experience in a few words."

- Today's management tip was adapted from "Learning Charisma" by John Antonakis, Marika Fenley, and Sue Liechti.

(For the full post, see: here)

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We welcome comments that advance the story through relevant opinion, anecdotes, links and data. If you see a comment that you believe is irrelevant or inappropriate, you can flag it to our editors by using the report abuse links. Views expressed in the comments do not represent those of Reuters. For more information on our comment policy, see http://blogs.reuters.com/fulldisclosure/2010/09/27/toward-a-more-thoughtful-conversation-on-stories/

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Reuters: Small Business News: A club in China to help entrepreneurs go overseas

Reuters: Small Business News
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A club in China to help entrepreneurs go overseas
Jun 29th 2012, 18:28

By Lucy Hornby

BEIJING | Fri Jun 29, 2012 2:28pm EDT

BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese entrepreneur Feng Jun tried five times to set up overseas branches to market his MP3 players and other consumer electronics goods. Three of the branches made money, the other two failed, but he said they were all a "total headache."

It was the headaches that inspired Feng's latest venture, the Aigo Entrepreneurs Alliance (AEA), a club to help private Chinese companies navigate the uncertain world outside China.

Private enterprises account for the majority of jobs created in China, but they are often disadvantaged compared with their state-owned brethren in tapping financing or government support, both at home and overseas.

It is a bigger problem overseas, given the scant knowledge most Chinese entrepreneurs have of operating in alien surroundings. China has a decade-old "going out" policy, but it is primarily oriented toward helping the biggest state-owned firms establish themselves internationally.

"Managing from afar was tough, and also there's the problem of scale," said Feng, who is the founder of Aigo Electronics. The name of the firm translates roughly into 'patriot'.

"Going out by yourself, if you aren't very familiar, it's very hard from a management perspective."

Chinese companies are "going out" in droves, trying to secure raw materials, buy foreign technology and brands or simply sell products without having to go through a middleman.

The notion conjures fears overseas of a monolithic Chinese business juggernaut driving Western firms out of business, undercutting prices and forcing factory shutdowns. But for the Chinese companies, the experience has been far from a uniform success: many have crashed head-on into walls of unexpected regulation, labor laws and unfamiliar languages.

While state-owned enterprises can count on institutional support from the Chinese government, private firms are more often left to fend for themselves, the vacuum AEA hopes to fill.

"This is an excellent solution to a problem in China, which is that the official mechanisms that would help Chinese companies coordinate and pool resources aren't doing that job," said Scott Kennedy, director of the Research Center for Chinese Politics & Business at Indiana University.

The largest state-owned firms account for about 80 percent of China's overseas investment, most of it geared towards acquiring energy and resources and building the infrastructure to bring that back to China. Unlike the private firms, only a few, primarily in the telecoms sector, are engaged in directly selling to external markets.

"The state-owned enterprises are a pillar domestically, but that's hard to translate internationally," said Feng.

PROFITS, PRESTIGE

Private firms account for about a third of China's exports, but many lack the overseas presence to make or market their goods directly in foreign countries.

Overseas markets generally mean better profits, without the margin-killing competition found in China. And success overseas means prestige among status-conscious Chinese consumers.

"If you are only present in China and not internationally then you are not a global brand, only a regional brand," Feng said.

"If you do well internationally, it will raise your credibility with Chinese consumers."

With 16 founding members who lend their names to the venture and almost 500 private companies in tow, the AEA organizes investment road shows to potential destinations with the aim of ultimately negotiating joint office space and other services to give members a quick start in setting up overseas.

Feng figures that the global financial crisis has created plenty of office buildings and warehouses eager to give a break to a new group of Chinese tenants.

The idea is that members can plug in to a physical office and tap know-how on how to register their business, hire a secretary, consult a legal adviser and all the other steps that often bewilder an entrepreneur who is big in his home province in China but nowhere else.

About 80 full members pay 200,000 yuan a year while over 400 second-tier "learning and developing club" members chip in 29,800 yuan a year. Both classes of members have a choice in which of AEA's initiatives to sign on to.

The most concrete initiative to date is in Belgium, where property developer Group Bernaerts -- which itself is expanding into China -- has wooed the Chinese arrivals with 300 plane tickets and a year of free rent on an office and warehouse complex still under construction half-way between the port of Antwerp and the European Union capital, Brussels.

The Chinese will provide the base tenants for 200,000 square meters of planned conference rooms and exhibition space in Group Bernaerts planned European Market City.

"We may not forget that for all business people, the step to go global is an important step and must be guided by local people to be successful in a short time and not waste money," Guido Bernaerts wrote in an email.

A second base is underway near the port of Antwerp, the entry into Europe for many Chinese exports.

ONE PLUS ONE CAN BE ELEVEN

The Belgian deal came after an AEA delegation toured Belgium, the Netherlands, Denmark and Britain in December looking for a foothold in the European market. Only the Netherlands failed to make the cut, with members voting that the Dutch had failed to offer enough government or business support.

In Denmark, the group now has a toehold after it set up a contact office, with an eye to establishing a bigger incubator office, the Danish foreign ministry said in mid-June.

An AEA delegation held meetings with business associations and property developers near Greenwich on a follow-up trip to London this week.

Acting collectively has helped overcome a feeling many private Chinese companies have of being ignored overseas, Feng said, adding that part of the feeling could be unfamiliarity with a different business environment.

"Chinese companies when they first go abroad expect it to be a lot like expanding in China - they go talk to the party secretary or mayor first, make sure they are happy and that paves the way for everything else," Kennedy said.

"Americans and elsewhere typically don't roll out the official red carpet and Chinese are not prepared for that."

The main challenge will come in October, when the AEA plans to tour five American cities. That will be just a month before the U.S. presidential election, where the economic reach of China is likely to be a hot topic.

Feng says the key to success for Chinese faced with a daunting international corporate landscape is safety in numbers.

"If everyone helps each other, one plus one can equal eleven. If you are always working alone, then one will always equal one."

(Editing by Brian Rhoads and Raju Gopalakrishnan)

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Reuters: Small Business News: Firms slow to move as global urban growth booms

Reuters: Small Business News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Firms slow to move as global urban growth booms
Jun 29th 2012, 17:46

Vehicles pass over the Guomao Bridge on the 3rd Ring Road in Beijing August 17, 2007. REUTERS/Jason Lee

Vehicles pass over the Guomao Bridge on the 3rd Ring Road in Beijing August 17, 2007.

Credit: Reuters/Jason Lee

LONDON | Fri Jun 29, 2012 1:46pm EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - Businesses are failing to conduct forensic research needed to capitalize on a wave of urbanization across emerging economies that is unprecedented in its speed and scale, McKinsey Global Institute (MGI) said on Thursday.

The research arm of the consultancy McKinsey & Co said it expected one billion extra city-dwellers to be earning enough by 2025 to become significant consumers of goods and services.

About 600 million of them would be living in about 440 cities in emerging market centers that were likely to generate close to half of global GDP growth between 2010 and 2015.

In the latest of a series of reports on urbanization, MGI said it was not an exaggeration to say that the most significant shift in the global center of economic gravity was unfolding.

"What's going on in emerging markets is bigger than the Internet in terms of impact on the world economy; it's bigger than World War One and World War Two put together; and because of the speed at which it's happening, I think it's bigger than the introduction of the plough," Richard Dobbs, a McKinsey director and one of the authors of the report, told Reuters.

The transformation of China is happening at 100 times the scale of the first country to urbanize, Britain, and at ten times the speed, according to MGI. Between 2007 and 2010 alone, three more Chinese cities had reached mega-city status with populations of 10 million or more.

The rapid rise is not limited to China. In 2007 the GDP of Latin American cities was 26 percent of the level in Europe; by 2010 the figure had risen to 37 percent.

MASSIVE CONSTRUCTION NEEDS

But how the expanding urban consumer classes spend their rising incomes will vary considerably, and few firms are doing the homework needed to maximize the opportunities, MGI said.

MGI expects Shanghai, Beijing and Tokyo to be the leading growth hot spots by 2025 for elderly higher-income consumers; for young entry-level consumers, the top trio of cities will be Lagos, Dar es Salaam and Dhaka.

For laundry care products, MGI says Sao Paulo will be the place, followed by Beijing and Rio.

"Yet, disappointingly, most companies are still not looking at cities as they calibrate strategy," the report said. A new, separate McKinsey survey found that fewer than one in five executives were making location and resource decisions at the city, rather than country, level.

The boom in urbanization will generate massive construction and infrastructure needs, providing a fillip for the world economy as populations in many advanced countries age rapidly.

MGI forecasts that by 2025 urban centers will need annual physical investment to more than double from today's level to more than $20 trillion, with emerging economies accounting for most of that.

-- By 2025 cities will need to construct floor space equivalent to 85 percent of all today's urban residential and commercial building stock.

-- The capacity of ports to handle container traffic needs to rise by more than 2.5 times from today's level to meet rising consumer demand. MGI estimates the cost at $200 billion, with emerging markets making up 85 percent of the total.

-- Cities will have to invest about $480 billion between now and 2025 to meet demand for municipal water and wastewater treatment of which $200 billion will be spent in the top 440 emerging market cities, MGI estimates, firstly Mumbai, followed by Delhi and Shanghai.

(Reporting by Alan Wheatley; Editing by Louise Ireland)

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Thursday, June 28, 2012

Reuters: Small Business News: Management Tip of the Day: Make creativity a habit

Reuters: Small Business News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Management Tip of the Day: Make creativity a habit
Jun 28th 2012, 13:36

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Workers cross London Bridge, with Tower Bridge seen behind, during the morning rush hour in London September 30, 2011. REUTERS/Paul Hackett

Workers cross London Bridge, with Tower Bridge seen behind, during the morning rush hour in London September 30, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Paul Hackett

BOSTON | Thu Jun 28, 2012 9:36am EDT

BOSTON (Reuters) - Not all of us have the creative firepower of a Charles Dickens or a Steve Jobs, but clearing a pathway to innovative thinking can be surprisingly simple, says Harvard Business Review.

The Management Tip of the Day offers quick, practical management tips and ideas from Harvard Business Review and HBR.org (www.hbr.org). Any opinions expressed are not endorsed by Reuters.

"Creativity is an essential skill for navigating an increasingly complex world. And yet the path to innovative thinking can be surprisingly simple.

To improve your own ingenuity, practice the following:

1. Reduce stress, but not too much. Being overly relaxed won't get your creative juices flowing. Embrace an in-between emotional state, neither complacent nor stressed out.

2. Get out of the office. Walk to work, take public transportation, wander about to see how real consumers behave and spend their time. If you never take the time to fill your creative well, you'll have nothing to contribute.

3. Let your mind wander. Studies show that day dreaming stimulates a unique mental state. You'll connect dots in new ways when you allow your mind to roam."

- Today's management tip was adapted from "Creativity Lessons from Charles Dickens and Steve Jobs" by Anne Kreamer.

(For the full post and to join the discussion, see: here)

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We welcome comments that advance the story through relevant opinion, anecdotes, links and data. If you see a comment that you believe is irrelevant or inappropriate, you can flag it to our editors by using the report abuse links. Views expressed in the comments do not represent those of Reuters. For more information on our comment policy, see http://blogs.reuters.com/fulldisclosure/2010/09/27/toward-a-more-thoughtful-conversation-on-stories/

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Reuters: Small Business News: State regulators warn companies on crowdfunding

Reuters: Small Business News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
State regulators warn companies on crowdfunding
Jun 28th 2012, 14:07

Thu Jun 28, 2012 10:07am EDT

(Reuters) - Some entrepreneurs are becoming so anxious to sell securities in their companies through crowdfunding sites that they are courting investors before federal rules allowing the process are in place, a state securities regulator said on Wednesday.

Reports about small business owners who are trying to solicit investors too early were among the concerns that prompted the North American Securities Administrators Association (NASAA), an organization of state securities regulators, to issue an advisory about crowdfunding for small businesses on Wednesday, said Heath Abshure, NASAA's president-elect, in an interview.

Crowdfunding is a capital-raising strategy in which investors buy small stakes in ventures through various websites. The Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act, or JOBS Act, which was signed into law in April, allows small businesses to sell securities through the sites, subject to certain procedures. The sites were initially used as a way to help creative people fund projects such as films and inventions.

But the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission must still adopt rules before small businesses can offer and sell securities to investors through the crowdfunding process. NASAA's advisory on Wednesday reminds small businesses of that point. The JOBS Act directs the SEC to adopt those rules by roughly January 2013.

"We've had a number of businesses getting involved in this ahead of the curve," said Abshure, who is also Arkansas Securities Commissioner.

The NASAA advisory addresses other issues for small businesses to keep in mind, such as their responsibility to disclose certain information about their ventures to investors, before getting involved in a crowdfunding venture.

State regulators are also concerned about the threat of potential con artists, claiming to be crowdfunding brokers or to represent online portals through which future deals must be conducted. "Be aware of unscrupulous persons offering to take fees from you now to help you raise capital over the Internet," the alert reads. The offers could be a scam because the law has not been implemented yet, said regulators.

While the JOBS Act provides for a new approach to funding, launching a small business is still a risky venture, resulting in about half of the them failing within the first three to five years, Abshure said.

"A lot of times, folks get excited about what's new that hasn't been available before," Abshure said. "They think they're getting in on the ground floor of something that will make them rich. And that's not always the case," he said.

(Reporting By Suzanne Barlyn; Editing by Phil Berlowitz)

(The story corrects Heath Abshure's title in the second paragraph, and date by which SEC is to adopt rules in fourth paragraph.)

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Reuters: Small Business News: Firms slow to move as global urban growth booms

Reuters: Small Business News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Firms slow to move as global urban growth booms
Jun 28th 2012, 11:10

LONDON | Thu Jun 28, 2012 7:10am EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - Businesses are failing to conduct forensic research needed to capitalize on a wave of urbanization across emerging economies that is unprecedented in its speed and scale, McKinsey Global Institute (MGI) said on Thursday.

The research arm of the consultancy McKinsey & Co said it expected one billion extra city-dwellers to be earning enough by 2025 to become significant consumers of goods and services.

About 600 million of them would be living in about 440 cities in emerging market centers that were likely to generate close to half of global GDP growth between 2010 and 2015.

In the latest of a series of reports on urbanization, MGI said it was not an exaggeration to say that the most significant shift in the global center of economic gravity was unfolding.

"What's going on in emerging markets is bigger than the Internet in terms of impact on the world economy; it's bigger than World War One and World War Two put together; and because of the speed at which it's happening, I think it's bigger than the introduction of the plough," Richard Dobbs, a McKinsey director and one of the authors of the report, told Reuters.

The transformation of China is happening at 100 times the scale of the first country to urbanize, Britain, and at ten times the speed, according to MGI. Between 2007 and 2010 alone, three more Chinese cities had reached mega-city status with populations of 10 million or more.

The rapid rise is not limited to China. In 2007 the GDP of Latin American cities was 26 percent of the level in Europe; by 2010 the figure had risen to 37 percent.

MASSIVE CONSTRUCTION NEEDS

But how the expanding urban consumer classes spend their rising incomes will vary considerably, and few firms are doing the homework needed to maximize the opportunities, MGI said.

MGI expects Shanghai, Beijing and Tokyo to be the leading growth hot spots by 2025 for elderly higher-income consumers; for young entry-level consumers, the top trio of cities will be Lagos, Dar es Salaam and Dhaka.

For laundry care products, MGI says Sao Paulo will be the place, followed by Beijing and Rio.

"Yet, disappointingly, most companies are still not looking at cities as they calibrate strategy," the report said. A new, separate McKinsey survey found that fewer than one in five executives were making location and resource decisions at the city, rather than country, level.

The boom in urbanization will generate massive construction and infrastructure needs, providing a fillip for the world economy as populations in many advanced countries age rapidly.

MGI forecasts that by 2025 urban centers will need annual physical investment to more than double from today's level to more than $20 trillion, with emerging economies accounting for most of that.

-- By 2025 cities will need to construct floor space equivalent to 85 percent of all today's urban residential and commercial building stock.

-- The capacity of ports to handle container traffic needs to rise by more than 2.5 times from today's level to meet rising consumer demand. MGI estimates the cost at $200 billion, with emerging markets making up 85 percent of the total.

-- Cities will have to invest about $480 billion between now and 2025 to meet demand for municipal water and wastewater treatment of which $200 billion will be spent in the top 440 emerging market cities, MGI estimates, firstly Mumbai, followed by Delhi and Shanghai.

(Reporting by Alan Wheatley; Editing by Louise Ireland)

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Reuters: Small Business News: Lawson Products cuts jobs, has new credit facility

Reuters: Small Business News
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Lawson Products cuts jobs, has new credit facility
Jun 28th 2012, 12:00

Thu Jun 28, 2012 8:00am EDT

(Reuters) - Industrial products distributor Lawson Products Inc (LAWS.O), facing growing competition and sliding sales, said it would eliminate about 100 jobs and take other steps including cutting marketing and shipping costs to save about $20 million a year.

Lawson said it would take a one-time severance charge of about $7 million in the second quarter as well as a non-cash goodwill impairment charge of $28 million and a non-cash $5 million charge related to inventory reserves.

The company, whose larger rivals include WW Grainger Inc (GWW.N) and Fastenal Co (FAST.O), said it has received a commitment for a five-year $40 million credit facility that will replace an existing facility and provide the company with greater flexibility to meet its financial commitments.

Shares of the company, which have fallen more than 40 percent this year, closed at $8.95 on the Nasdaq on Wednesday.

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Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Reuters: Small Business News: Italy's business capital Milan seeks start-ups

Reuters: Small Business News
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Italy's business capital Milan seeks start-ups
Jun 26th 2012, 15:17

MILAN | Tue Jun 26, 2012 11:17am EDT

MILAN (Reuters) - Milan has asked the Rome government for tax breaks on new start-up companies in the area, in a bid to attract fresh investments and maintain its role as Italy's business capital.

Milan's Lombardy region - Italy's richest - has been hard hit by the recession which is crippling the euro zone's third-largest economy.

Corporate bankruptcies have been relatively more frequent here than elsewhere in the country, given the higher number of companies operating in the region.

"The government is asking us to create favorable conditions for new companies that get started in our region," Milan's Councilwoman for Economic Development Cristina Tajani said in a statement.

"The city is doing its part ... We now ask the government to add to our measures some incentives, including on taxes, to turn Milan into a no-tax area for young companies."

The statement said a government decree was expected in July containing measures to help start-up companies.

Cash-strapped Italy is striving to come up with initiatives to prop up its shrinking economy and counter the damaging impact of harsh austerity measures adopted to stave off the threat of contagion from the euro zone's debt crisis.

(Reporting by Valentina Za; Editing by Jon Loades-Carter)

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Reuters: Small Business News: Should you take that job?

Reuters: Small Business News
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Should you take that job?
Jun 27th 2012, 11:55

BOSTON | Wed Jun 27, 2012 7:55am EDT

BOSTON (Reuters) - Determining whether to take a job offer can â€" and should â€" be a difficult decision, even in a difficult economy, says Harvard Business Review.

The Management Tip of the Day offers quick, practical management tips and ideas from Harvard Business Review and HBR.org (http:\\www.hbr.org). Any opinions expressed are not endorsed by Reuters.

"Deciding whether to accept a job offer can, and should, be a difficult decision. Before you say "yes," evaluate the situation carefully:

1. Shape the offer beforehand. During the interview, be clear on your expectations and desires about the job. This increases the likelihood that the offer includes what you want most.

2. Do your research. Find out as much as you can about the organization, its future prospects, the culture, and your new co-workers.

3. Think through your other prospects. You'll likely receive your first offer when other employers are still considering you for a position. Be realistic about what is likely to come down the line."

- Today's management tip was adapted from "Accept the Job Offer or Walk Away?" by Amy Gallo.

(For the full post and to join the discussion, see: here)

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Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Reuters: Small Business News: Zynga plans to build a gamers' social network

Reuters: Small Business News
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Zynga plans to build a gamers' social network
Jun 27th 2012, 00:12

Zynga Chief Mobile Officer David Ko speaks during the Zynga Unleashed event at the company's headquarters in San Francisco, California June 26, 2012. REUTERS/Stephen Lam

1 of 3. Zynga Chief Mobile Officer David Ko speaks during the Zynga Unleashed event at the company's headquarters in San Francisco, California June 26, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Stephen Lam

By Gerry Shih and Malathi Nayak

SAN FRANCISCO | Tue Jun 26, 2012 8:12pm EDT

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Zynga Inc unveiled a social network for gamers dubbed "Zynga with Friends" on Tuesday, hoping to wean itself from a longstanding, symbiotic relationship with Facebook Inc that has shaped two of Silicon Valley's closely watched Internet companies.

The game publisher, which has been under pressure to reverse a steep slide in stock price in recent months, said its new network will pair gamers with opponents and make features like player profiles, an activity stream and chat available for all users, regardless of whether they play Zynga games on mobile devices or on desktop computers.

Zynga with Friends is "one network, one unified experience, and one social lobby that will for the first time connect all of our players, no matter where they're playing," Manuel Bronstein, a senior Zynga executive, told reporters at a press event in the company's headquarters in San Francisco.

"The new social features and services are designed for the sole purpose of bringing more people to play together," Bronstein said.

Zynga will also provide programming tools to help third-party developers publish online and mobile games based on its own software, executives said, in order to foster a Zynga "ecosystem" that will expand its slate of titles beyond mainstays such as "Farmville" and "Zynga Poker."

Still, Zynga shares closed nearly 5 percent lower on Tuesday as investors saw little in the announcement - which included the planned social network, as well as a bevy of new game titles - to drive strong long-term growth.

The company announced "FarmVille 2," a sequel to its megahit resource management title, as well as "Matching with Friends," an addition to a suite of smartphone games that includes the popular "Words with Friends."

"One of the worries is that the whole idea of social gaming seems to be waning somewhat," said Paul Verna, a gaming analyst at eMarketer. "There doesn't seem to be a lot of growth left, and the idea of unveiling another Ville game or FarmVille 2 - I don't get the sense that's very exciting to the financial investors."

COZY PARTNERSHIP

Zynga's moves, while long expected, have stirred speculation around the future of its cozy partnership with Facebook, a company that owed 15 percent of its first quarter revenue to fees from Zynga. The two companies also confirmed recently that Facebook has begun showing ads from its inventory inside Zynga games, which are played by some 290 million people.

Meanwhile, Facebook's reach of close to 1 billion users has helped distribute Zynga's games and propel the publisher to a dominant position in the social gaming industry, but analysts have warned that Zynga needs to seek greater independence to sustain growth, especially as Facebook's expansion inevitably slows.

Colin Sebastian, an analyst at R. W. Baird, said the Zynga with Friends network "is a natural step in the right direction as they leverage their technology infrastructure and user base. On one hand it might help them become less dependent on Facebook, but from a practical perspective they will continue to remain dependent on Facebook for quite some time."

Asked to comment, Facebook issued a statement that betrayed no concern about Zynga's announcement. "It's exciting to see Zynga continue to build with Facebook across web and mobile platforms."

Responding to questions from reporters on Tuesday, Zynga executives took pains to stress that the expansion of its own social network did not threaten its existing relationship with Facebook.

"We've had a longstanding agreement with Facebook that we would do these kinds of things," said Reed Shaffner, Zynga's director of product. "In no way are we trying to use that to say you have to play on this platform."

"The idea is that we'll help you find the best gaming friends anywhere you play," he added.

Executives said the platform could potentially have as many as 290 million users with some 2.8 billion daily social interactions once it is rolled out, although a launch date was not specified.

TARGETING MOBILE

Zynga acknowledged on Tuesday that it is also trying to boost mobile usage, targeting a small but faster-growing wireless device gaming market that is quickly becoming a crucial battleground for so-called casual or social gaming.

To bolster its mobile offerings, Zynga purchased New York-based game developer OMGPOP for $183 million in March.

The company said Tuesday it will also team up with Atari SA to develop games, but did not elaborate.

Zynga executives said they will provide developers a set of "application programming interfaces" - APIs - to make it easier for them to craft games using Zynga's software.

"We're opening our doors today and opening Zynga Partners for Mobile. We are inviting developers from all over the world to come and join our network," said David Ko, chief mobile officer.

Zynga wants to create an ecosystem with "best-in-class mobile developers and best-in-class mobile games," Ko said.

The company also announced new titles including ChefVille, a kitchen management game, and The Ville, a game resembling "The Sims" that allows users to build homes and dress their avatars to interact and pursue romantic relationships with other users.

Even so, analysts said Zynga, facing mounting scrutiny from investors, may need to look beyond its familiar repertoire to attract new gamers and keep existing ones hooked.

"One area where they may have disappointed people is, they are not showing any games in development that target a more core gamer, or so-called mid-core gamer," said Sebastian, the Baird analyst. "That's something where we've seen a lot of growth for Facebook, and that's potentially a missed opportunity for Zynga."

(Editing by Edwin Chan, Tim Dobbyn and Andre Grenon)

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Reuters: Small Business News: From cuisine to circuses, summer camps target bored kids

Reuters: Small Business News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
From cuisine to circuses, summer camps target bored kids
Jun 26th 2012, 22:00

Zeke Andreassen, 11, cuts an orange into a decorative basket in the kitchen of the Vermont Kids Culinary Academy during a residential cooking summer camp in Highgate, Vermont June 19, 2012. REUTERS/Herb Swanson

1 of 10. Zeke Andreassen, 11, cuts an orange into a decorative basket in the kitchen of the Vermont Kids Culinary Academy during a residential cooking summer camp in Highgate, Vermont June 19, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Herb Swanson

By Jason McLure

HIGHGATE, Vermont | Tue Jun 26, 2012 6:00pm EDT

HIGHGATE, Vermont (Reuters) - Ten-year-old Max Oreck had been planning to spend much of his summer vacation playing computer games and watching television.

Then his mom told the Asheville, North Carolina fifth-grader he was going to summer camp.

Now Max is learning to wield a melon-baller, carve an orange into a basket-shaped dessert garnish and make flowers out of frosting at the Kids Culinary Camp of Vermont, one of dozens of summer camps that offer alternatives to traditional fare.

"I came for two reasons: I like to cook a lot, and my mom made me," says Oreck, dressed in a chef's hat and smock during a break from preparing grilled bacon and cheese sandwiches in the camp's commercial kitchen.

From high-wire walking to plankton propagation to posture lessons, summer camps are offering an increasingly diverse range of activities compared to the traditional canoe trips, swim lessons and marshmallow-roasting.

The popularity of alternatives is helping fuel growth among the estimated 12,000 summer camps in the United States.

Despite the stagnant economy, revenues at day camps grew by 23 percent between 2008 and last year and by 7 percent at sleep-away camps, according to the American Camp Association, which says the 2,400 organized camps it accredits have combined annual revenues of $2.8 billion.

"We see more specialty camps cropping up every year because there seems to be more of a demand for it," Peg Smith, chief executive of the American Camp Association, said in an email.

That includes demand for activities like pie-throwing lessons, which is how 10-year-old Elsie Harrison, an aspiring clown, concluded her recent stay at a day camp run by Vermont-based Circus Smirkus. Other activities included trapeze, juggling and spinning plates.

Her mother, Laurie Harrison, of Great Barrington, Massachusetts, said the five-hour drive each way for the one-day camp was worth it, despite having to "jump through hoops" to gain admission. Registration for the camp closed within hours after opening last November.

FUTURE OCCUPATIONS?

Some camps may help kids figure out what they want to do when they grow up, something their parents often didn't address until after high school.

Ocean chemistry, plankton biology and tidal studies are among the activities offered at Whale Camp on Grand Manaan Island, just across the Canadian border from Maine. For $1,395 campers get a week of activities like puffin photography, sea-kayaking and whale-watching in the Bay of Fundy.

"It's the closest kids can get to actually being a marine scientist before college," says Dennis Bowen, president of the camp. "Once they get immersed in this it really helps them become committed to preservation and conservation."

Meanwhile, kids as young as 7 or 8 years old who are interested in money, business and economics may attend one-week financial literacy day camps offered by the Young Americans Center for Financial Education in suburban Denver.

Activities include lessons on foreign currencies, banking and budgeting, and those 12 and older can also apply for a VISA credit card with a $100 limit issued by the center's bank.

"These are kids who really like to take ownership of their finances," says Katie Payer, a spokeswoman for the camp. "They have an entrepreneurial spirit."

Aspiring fashion designers in the San Francisco Bay area can attend a fashion day camp offered by the sewnow! studio, where activities include textile design, precision pattern cutting and an end-of-camp fashion show.

Tight budgets, family vacations and a desire to give children different, specialized experiences are driving a trend towards more varied offerings, says the ACA's Smith.

"Camps are responding to what they see as demand from families for more kinds of options and shorter sessions," she said.

TRADITIONAL VARIATIONS

Even more traditional cabins-and-campfires camps are broadening their offerings. Camp Lohikan in Pennsylvania offers a week-long Spy Camp for sleep-away campers, with a roster of activities including evasive driving lessons on all-terrain vehicles, surveillance techniques and code-breaking.

There seems to be a specialty camp for every niche, no matter how rough or refined. Outdoor Texas Camp offer kids as young as 9 years old hunting camps that typically last a week, with lessons on antler scoring, trailing wounded deer and duck and goose calling.

Alternatively the Charleston School of Protocol and Etiquette in South Carolina offers five-day "Civil Savvy" camps that include tea parties, thank you note etiquette and ballroom dancing for $1,295. The camp has two girls for every boy.

"We do dress, we do skin care, we do nail care - even for boys," says Cindy Grosso, the founder of the program. "Then every day we have a dining lesson."

The range of options has helped happy campers like Michael Watson, 12, from Dallas get a head start on his journey toward becoming a Renaissance Man. He has attended a traditional archery and swimming camp affiliated with a church in Texas, but prefers his days in the kitchen at Kids Culinary Camp.

"I love being outdoors and all," said Watson, who just finished sixth grade and enjoys making fettuccini by hand. "But this is what I want to do."

(Editing by Barbara Goldberg, Eric Walsh and Jim Loney)

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Reuters: Small Business News: Zynga says wants to help developers create games

Reuters: Small Business News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Zynga says wants to help developers create games
Jun 26th 2012, 18:27

The corporate logo of Zynga Inc, the social network game development company, is shown at its headquarters in San Francisco, California April 26, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Robert Galbraith

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Reuters: Small Business News: Number of U.S. businesses fell in 2010: Census Bureau

Reuters: Small Business News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Number of U.S. businesses fell in 2010: Census Bureau
Jun 26th 2012, 16:01

WASHINGTON | Tue Jun 26, 2012 12:01pm EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The number of U.S. businesses with paid employees fell for a third straight year in 2010, but the rate of decrease slowed, the Census Bureau said on Tuesday.

U.S. businesses numbered 7.4 million in 2010, down by 36,800 from the previous year. The decline between 2008 and 2009 was 168,000 establishments, according to the bureau's "County Business Patterns: 2010" report.

Total employment was 112 million in 2010, a decline of 2.5 million workers. The drop from 2008 to 2009, at the height of the U.S. recession, was 6.4 million employees.

"This year's release of the County Business Patterns shows the overall decline in employment is slowing," William Bostic Jr., associate director for economic programs at the Census Bureau, said in a statement.

Among the top 50 counties by number of businesses, California's Los Angeles County had the biggest decline in total annual payroll, the statement said. The county had a drop of nearly $2 billion, or 1.1 percent, from 2009.

Only Kings County, New York, which comprises the New York borough of Brooklyn, showed an increase in the number of employees, with a rise of 4,400 from 2009.

Among business sectors, construction showed the biggest percentage decline, falling 4.2 percent. The biggest gains were in utilities, healthcare and social assistance, rising 1.7 percent from 2009.

(Reporting by Ian Simpson; Editing by Vicki Allen)

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Reuters: Small Business News: Management Tip of the Day: Communicate your charisma

Reuters: Small Business News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Management Tip of the Day: Communicate your charisma
Jun 26th 2012, 14:33

BOSTON | Tue Jun 26, 2012 10:33am EDT

BOSTON (Reuters) - The ability to communicate a clear, visionary, and inspirational message that captivates and motivates an audience is not as elusive as it seems, says Harvard Business Review.

The Management Tip of the Day offers quick, practical management tips and ideas from Harvard Business Review and HBR.org (http:\\www.hbr.org). Any opinions expressed are not endorsed by Reuters.

"Charisma is not innate. True, no amount of practice will turn you into Winston Churchill or Martin Luther King Jr., but you can still win over your followers by changing how you communicate.

Whenever possible, express your conviction to a project or idea. This will reveal the quality of your character, which establishes your credibility with listeners so they identify and align themselves with you.

Demonstrate authority by setting high goals and conveying confidence that your team can achieve them. A leader will inspire her followers when she truly believes that they can reach their goal."

- Today's management tip was adapted from " Learning Charisma" by John Antonakis, Marika Fenley, and Sue Liechti.

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