The Impossible Funded Daily – Miracles Funded on Request! Once you learn to quit, it becomes a habit. ~Vince Lombardi
Once you learn to quit, it becomes a habit. ~Vince Lombardi
There are many reasons why people use Voss Solutions; however, the number one reason people come to us is to:
“Start Your Own Business”
Economic downturns are a great time to think like an entrepreneur!
I started Voss Solutions years ago to help people start their businesses initially, and our business grew beyond what we could have imagined. We have evolved into helping people with various and sometimes unique funding needs with clients worldwide. So, long story short, we started a business to help others start their own business, and it proves that time is the right time to start your own business, regardless of whether it is during a good economy or terrible economy. It is. Think about it: thousands of workers can’t find jobs, so the talent pool is large and cheap. Good jobs seem less secure as companies cut hours and salaries, making people more likely to risk working for a start-up. True, loans are more challenging to secure. But even that is more of a hurdle than a roadblock. You don’t live on top of the mountain without someone trying to knock you off, so even if you have not had much success in the past, Voss Solutions can help you find the funding you’re looking for.
Many successful companies, including Microsoft and Southwest Airlines, were started during economic downturns. According to business historians, these businesses don’t share any single start-up formula for success. Instead, it combines luck, good ideas, and the willingness to work killer hours. Most perfect ideas and businesses tend to have someone in charge with an evangelical belief in the project—people who would almost sacrifice their lives to get this done.
Microsoft did more than simply position itself in the right place at the right time. In its partnership with IBM, Microsoft kept the licensing for the PC operating system. The logic was that other manufacturers would inevitably copy IBM’s personal computer, and Microsoft would make even more money licensing software to other manufacturers.
For Southwest, finding success meant finding a niche. 1971, it started limited flights between Dallas, Houston, and San Antonio. Unlike other airlines, Southwest did not assign seating or offer food or entertainment on the flights. It also didn’t operate out of expensive major airport hubs where they would have to go head-to-head with established carriers. It used the tactic of avoiding competition and, at the same time, being the low-cost player at the wrong time. In a period that could have been hostile, they were insulated because of their low prices and operating model. Southwest democratized air travel with fares that were 50-70 percent cheaper than their competition.
What types of successful start-ups will most likely emerge from this recession? Green technology is a good bet. With $11 billion in stimulus money going toward modernizing the electric grid and $14 billion to expanding tax credits for renewable energy facilities, many start-ups that develop technologies and products surrounding wind and solar will get a boost. As the economy rebounds, these small businesses could be a source of innovation and job creation, particularly for workers who want more control over their careers.
Big businesses are the ones making the cutbacks and outsourcing. They have a right to, but it’s small businesses that are providing the jobs; most small businesses start with one or two people with the idea that could cover a never-ending range of ways to make their presence in the business world on their own,” In fact, small businesses created roughly 80 percent of new jobs in 2016, according to the U.S. Small Business Administration’s most recent data.
That’s unlikely to change. “The bad times are the best times for starting companies,” professors of business administration at the Tuck School say.
Tough times require innovation and figuring out how to do more with less; that’s a lesson we could all learn in this economy.
Voss Solutions is dedicated to helping you receive the funding you need to start your own business by matching you with people who can make that happen.
Please get in touch with me if you have any questions and or if you are looking for funding, please send your business plan and or summary to [email protected] or phone: 949-682-9235 or Skype name: kenvoss
Once you learn to quit, it becomes a habit. ~Vince Lombardi
There are many reasons why people use Voss Solutions; however, the number one reason people come to us is to:
“Start Your Own Business”
Economic downturns are a great time to think like an entrepreneur!
I started Voss Solutions years ago to help people start their businesses initially, and our business grew beyond what we could have imagined. We have evolved into helping people with various and sometimes unique funding needs with clients worldwide. So, long story short, we started a business to help others start their own business, and it proves that time is the right time to start your own business, regardless of whether it is during a good economy or terrible economy. It is. Think about it: thousands of workers can’t find jobs, so the talent pool is large and cheap. Good jobs seem less secure as companies cut hours and salaries, making people more likely to risk working for a start-up. True, loans are more challenging to secure. But even that is more of a hurdle than a roadblock. You don’t live on top of the mountain without someone trying to knock you off, so even if you have not had much success in the past, Voss Solutions can help you find the funding you’re looking for.
Many successful companies, including Microsoft and Southwest Airlines, were started during economic downturns. According to business historians, these businesses don’t share any single start-up formula for success. Instead, it combines luck, good ideas, and the willingness to work killer hours. Most perfect ideas and businesses tend to have someone in charge with an evangelical belief in the project—people who would almost sacrifice their lives to get this done.
Microsoft did more than simply position itself in the right place at the right time. In its partnership with IBM, Microsoft kept the licensing for the PC operating system. The logic was that other manufacturers would inevitably copy IBM’s personal computer, and Microsoft would make even more money licensing software to other manufacturers.
For Southwest, finding success meant finding a niche. 1971, it started limited flights between Dallas, Houston, and San Antonio. Unlike other airlines, Southwest did not assign seating or offer food or entertainment on the flights. It also didn’t operate out of expensive major airport hubs where they would have to go head-to-head with established carriers. It used the tactic of avoiding competition and, at the same time, being the low-cost player at the wrong time. In a period that could have been hostile, they were insulated because of their low prices and operating model. Southwest democratized air travel with fares that were 50-70 percent cheaper than their competition.
What types of successful start-ups will most likely emerge from this recession? Green technology is a good bet. With $11 billion in stimulus money going toward modernizing the electric grid and $14 billion to expanding tax credits for renewable energy facilities, many start-ups that develop technologies and products surrounding wind and solar will get a boost. As the economy rebounds, these small businesses could be a source of innovation and job creation, particularly for workers who want more control over their careers.
Big businesses are the ones making the cutbacks and outsourcing. They have a right to, but it’s small businesses that are providing the jobs; most small businesses start with one or two people with the idea that could cover a never-ending range of ways to make their presence in the business world on their own,” In fact, small businesses created roughly 80 percent of new jobs in 2016, according to the U.S. Small Business Administration’s most recent data.
That’s unlikely to change. “The bad times are the best times for starting companies,” professors of business administration at the Tuck School say.
Tough times require innovation and figuring out how to do more with less; that’s a lesson we could all learn in this economy.
Voss Solutions is dedicated to helping you receive the funding you need to start your own business by matching you with people who can make that happen.
Please get in touch with me if you have any questions and or if you are looking for funding, please send your business plan and or summary to [email protected] or phone: 949-682-9235 or Skype name: kenvoss