Tag Archive | "ID"

Tags: , , ,

HOW TO: Establish Business Credit

Posted on 18 July 2011 by admin

Nellie Akalp is CEO of CorpNet.com. Since forming more than 100,000 corporations and LLCs across the U.S, she has built a strong passion to assist small business owners and entrepreneurs in starting and protecting their business the right way. LIKE the CorpNet.com Facebook page for exclusive discounts and giveaways! To learn more about Nellie and see how she can help your business get off the ground quickly and affordably, please visit here.

For the small business owner, trying to navigate the credit and lending world can feel like a vicious Catch-22. Most commercial banks and traditional lenders are reluctant to loosen their purse strings until you’ve proven yourself with a strong credit history. But it’s difficult to develop that good record when no one will lend to you in the first place.

Many small business owners rely on the strength of their personal credit to fund their businesses. But when you use personal credit, your mortgage, auto loan and personal credit cards all affect your ability to qualify for a business loan. Using business credit separates your personal activities from that of the business. Your business credit is dependent on your company’s payment history, assets, cash flow and other financials. It doesn’t include your personal debts or other personal financial obligations.

A strong credit history is the foundation for success, as it can lower your interest rates and give you access to more capital when needed. To start building your business credit, here are the initial steps you should take.


1. Set Up a Business Entity


There’s no such thing as a business loan or business credit for a sole proprietor — that’s a personal loan. In order to receive a business loan or investment, you must separate the business from its personal owners by setting up a legal business entity — a corporation or LLC, for example. Your CPA can advise you on the best legal structure for your particular situation, as your choice in entity can have some pretty significant tax implications.


2. Get a Tax ID Number (EIN)


Every business must have a tax ID number, just like each individual has a social security number. The Tax ID number (or EIN) is a nine-digit number assigned by the IRS to business entities operating in the U.S. You’ll use this number to open your business bank account and build your business credit profile. Apply for your business’ EIN online through the IRS site — and don’t worry, the process is fast and simple.


3. Establish a Business Bank Account


Your business needs at least one bank reference. Ideally, if you need to apply for a loan, your bank account will be at least two years old (of course, there’s not much you can do to change this situation other than apply for a business bank account as early as possible). More important than your account’s lifespan, your business bank account should show a cash flow capable of taking on a business debt. Of course, the optimum average daily balance of your account will depend on your type of business and the amount of financing you’ll be seeking.


4. Get Listed with the Business Credit Bureaus


Dun & Bradstreet is one of the main business credit bureaus and runs its own business credit score. D&B gives businesses a separate credit file number (known as a D&B or DUNS number) that rates your credit profile. Go to their site to find out if your business is already listed and has a score. You can also begin the process by applying for a free DUNS number once you’ve established your business entity and have your EIN. The number is how lenders will determine your business’ credit worthiness (most business credit card and lending companies will ask for your D&B number during the application process).


5. Establish Business Credit History


Check if your trade vendors are reporting your payment history to one of the major reporting companies, like D&B. Just like with your personal credit score, the more vendors that report a good payment history, the better your business credit will be. It’s common that small trade vendors won’t report your payment history to D&B. In this case, you should compile a trade reference sheet with at least three references (include their name, contact information and credit limits) to augment your official business credit report. In addition, you should open a business credit card (in the name of the business) and use it wisely — meaning keep your balance low and always pay on time.


6. Maintain a Good Personal Credit Rating


When you’re a relatively new or small company, creditors are going to be looking at the personal credit of the person who owns the business (or any shareholders with more than 20% ownership of the company). In today’s lending environment, you should expect to be asked to sign a personal guarantee on any kind of loan or credit of the business. This isn’t always mandatory, but it has recently become common practice in the lending industry. As a result, anyone with a 20% or higher share in the company should keep a close eye on his own credit rating.

The most important thing to remember is that you can’t build business credit overnight. Business owners should think about their business credit from day one. Even if you’re self-funded now, you never know what challenges or growth opportunities will develop down the road. Having access to credit can only help you adapt to changing conditions and position yourself for success.

Image courtesy of iStockphoto, idrutu

Comments (1)

Tags: , ,

Viber For iPhone Aims To Rival Skype’s App, Is Amazingly Amazing

Posted on 02 December 2010 by admin

Today sees the launch of Viber, a brand new, free iPhone application (iTunes link, or search for ‘viber free’) that basically functions the way pretty much every iPhone user wishes Skype’s mobile application would. My educated guess is that this will become a stunningly big hit in no time.

Viber for iPhone allows you to make 100% free calls to other Viber users over 3G and WiFi, is capable of running completely in the background without draining your battery (even when the app isn’t actually running in the background, but more on that later), works over Bluetooth and still manages to boast both speedy call connections and excellent audio quality.

Everyone who has an iPhone will want this app – and no, I’m not getting paid by the company to write this, I’m just terribly excited.

Why, you ask?

Because the only thing that would hold Viber back from overtaking Skype’s dominance on the App Store when it comes to free VoIP applications is the fact that it’s a fledgling company, which means it could take a while for people to learn about the app and its capabilities.

When you install Viber, the app syncs your phone’s contact list and, by means of a logo, shows you which of your friends are also using Viber. Instantly, you can make free calls to them from your iPhone, regardless of the model you use, no user registration required.

As Viber Media founder Talmon Marco puts it:

“Skype is modeled after a buddy list – you need a user ID and password, and in order to talk to someone you need to ‘add them’, get approved, etc. Viber, on the other hand, is modeled after a phone. So your ID is your phone number (authenticated via SMS) and you can call anyone, as long as you know their number.”

Also unlike Skype, the Viber iPhone app promises to not drain your battery when it’s running in the background. I haven’t had the app long enough to thoroughly verify that claim, but I can acknowledge having Skype run in the background on my iPhone 3GS definitely makes the battery run out of juice much faster than it should.

The cool thing about Viber is that, even if the app is closed and not even running in the background, you can still receive calls through the service. The user is sent a push notification via Apple’s servers, a ring is generated, and as soon as the user clicks “Answer” on the notification, the app is launched and a connection is made in mere seconds.

The company, which was founded by the people behind the successful p2p file sharing service iMesh, says it has dozens of servers deployed all across the globe to handle the load.

Good news for Android users: the company is hard at work at a similar app for Android handsets, and aims to release it in the first quarter of next year. Also on the roadmap: free text messaging between Viber users (something Skype and a slew of other apps are capable of today) and possibly a BlackBerry app down the line.

So how does the company intend to make money, considering that its apps will be completely free? Value-added services, Marco tells me, although it seems that they haven’t quite figured out which ones those will be yet.

Hopefully they’ll come up with a solid revenue model soon, because they’ve done some truly amazing work on this one.

Tags: , ,

ItsMyUrl Puts Your Whole Online ID into a Barcode

Posted on 01 December 2010 by admin

itsmyurls.pngBoston-based ItsMyUrls has added the convenience of QR to their all-in-one online ID service. (Quick-response barcodes are the postage-stamp style codes that are easily scanned by your smartphone.)

By adding each of your ID elements – websites, social networks, IM – to your account you produce a QR that when scanned takes the viewer to your full list of online places.

Scan the QR to the right and you’ll be able to see my one-man anarchic online nation. (Prepare yourself. You’re in for a thrill.)

curthopkinsqr.pngAppearance is everything. Well, it’s something anyway. And the high-profile users the company windows on its website are a strange combination of fairly well-known entertainers, like the rapper Big Boi and reality star Adrienne Curry with scantily-clad gals and gentlemen who are rather too liberal with the word “rockstar.”

Regardless, the innovative use of the QR code as a “social identity” code is interesting. QR codes have currency and the prospect for using them in the service of marketing is growing in importance. The QR code alone is not responsible for ItsMyURLs’ user growth, but it may have had an effect on investors. In the past two weeks since introducing the QR, CEO Eddy Inserra says he’s been approached by three major VC firms.

The key for growing QR as a personal online tools to some degree the same as QR for marketing in general, finding a wide-spectrum use past the initial novelty.

Read more ReadWriteWeb coverage of the Internet of Things.

Comments (11)

Tags: , , ,

Tips For Logging Your Own Statistics

Posted on 08 September 2010 by Leo Pang

Website statisticsGoogle Analytics (GA) is a decent service for tracking activity on your site, however, there are times when it may be necessary to log some statistics yourself.

By its nature, GA does not include any information that would allow you to identify who visited a page or clicked a link. Also, GA does not give immediate updates – you have to wait up to 24 hours to see the current day’s stats.

A site that provides recommendations to registered users may wish to log some of their own statistics (Amazon, for instance). An ad network may want to log impressions and clicks on their widget. What do you need to be aware of when logging your own stats?

Writing to Text Files

If you’re going to run a widget on any site with high traffic, you may run into problems if you try to write to your database directly from the script that runs the widget.

A safer though not particularly elegant solution is to write to text files instead. Each file should allow you to easily recognise what it’s for, e.g. the filename “Advert1000″ could be used to log stats for advert ID 1000. Or, you could store all advert stats in a folder called advert-stats and just put the ID in the filename.

Beware of Write Clashes

If you’re using text files, it may be safest to log a random number as part of the filename in case a large number of visitors clock up stats at the same time. e.g. “Advert1000_12345678″. The ID is still in the filename, and the random number appears at the end of the filename, with an underscore as a delimeter.

Of course, don’t just hard-code the same random number for each file or it’s not going to work.

Gather the Stats Regularly

You’ll need to set up a cron job to regularly parse and then delete your stats files. If you’re using a random number in the filename, it’s much less likely that you’ll lose some stats by reading a file, writing to your database and deleting the file afterwards – on a busy site, you may find that some views have been logged in the file since you started reading it.

Look At Alternative Database Options

Logging a lot of statistics for a lot of sites is going to result in you having to store a lot of data. Typically, this type of data only needs to be stored and retrieved – once you’ve collected all of your stat files for a given day, you won’t be going back and updating those values.

As a result, it’s worthwhile looking at other databases for storing your stats. Infobright is one option you could look at. It allows you to store very large amounts of data and run queries against it in a fraction of the time that it would take, say, MySQL.

You don’t have to change your entire application to use a different database engine – in fact it’s probably best that you don’t. Just the statistics will do.

Start Small, Work Up

Once you start logging your first statistics, you may start thinking of many other stats that you could log. It’s really important to get it right with your first attempt before adding more statistics to your site. Starting with something such as total pageviews is best. You can then look at unique views, clicks and so on once your stats have started to build up.

Watch out for today’s Hack of the Day, where I’ll be showing you a tool that can be used to display your stats in a graph.

Photo by kevindooley

Comments (87)

Tags: , , ,

Netflix Instant Streaming Goes 1080p This Year [Updated]

Posted on 09 February 2010 by Leo Pang

Update: Netflix contacted CNET and retracted its statement regarding plans for 1080p streaming, saying it has no plans for 1080p this year. However, the company stood its ground on the 5.1 surround sound plans, so you can still keep your ears open for that upgrade.

-

Netflix plans to bump the video quality of its Watch Instantly streaming service up to 1080p on some devices, CNET claims. It will also roll out 5.1 surround sound support. Both upgrades will occur by next year.

Currently, Netflix Watch Instantly is available in 720p HD on the Xbox 360, the PlayStation 3, and some set-top boxes. 1080p is a much higher resolution, and the existing devices don’t stream Netflix content with 5.1 surround sound.

Netflix’s CEO has in the past predicted that streaming will overtake DVD-by-mail as the company’s main business. The library keeps on growing – for example, the Criterion Collection just contributed a ton of art-house and foreign films – and the number of devices you can watch the content on is growing too.

No time frame for the upgrade has been given, but the core technology that powers Netflix Watch Instantly – Microsoft Silverlight – got the capability last year. You can already watch 1080p streams on the Xbox 360 through the Zune Marketplace using Silverlight.

In some ways, streaming stole HD’s thunder. While the high definition digital video disc format Blu-ray was counting on viewers’ interest in quality, it turned out that more users have been interested in the convenience of watching content when and where they want. That has meant a sacrifice in resolution among other things, but 1080p Netflix is a first step towards closing the gap between quality and convenience.

The highly compressed 1080p streams that are possible over the United States’ broadband infrastructure are still not high enough on the quality scale to beat Blu-ray head-to-head, but they will still be better than most people are used to.

Comments (51)

Tags: , , ,

Sergey Brin’s Surprise Web 2.0 Visit: The Video

Posted on 25 October 2009 by Leo Pang

On Thursday, Google co-founder Sergey Brin made a surprise visit to the Web 2.0 Summit and was interviewed on-stage by John Battelle for about 18 minutes. Our full notes from that day are here, but the video above gives a good sense of where Brin’s head is at right now. Also check out his what he’s wearing on his feet at the beginning. I’m not sure if those are shoes or rubber socks.

Brin touches on Twitter, Bing, Android, the growing network of Google alums heading up other companies, the book settlement, his surprising lack of baseball knowledge, and Chrome for Mac, among other subjects.

He points out that search ads were at the bottom of the barrel when Google started. They were considered the equivalent of remnant ads, but that Google’s success is due to seeing value where nobody else was looking. In the same way, he says, it is impossible to predict where the most value will be created on the Web in the future.

Comments (118)

RELATED SITES

Translator