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How Small
Businesses Affect Our Economy
Very few of us are aware of the contribution small businesses
make to the American economy. According to the Small Business Administration, in
1988, the United States had approximately 19 million businesses. Of those, 15.7
million were operated as sole proprietorships - the businesses that
traditionally train the work force by employing young people in their first jobs
and women returning to the work force in local or part-time jobs.
Of the remaining 3.3 million corporations and partnerships, a
full 99.8% employ fewer than 500 people and are classified as small businesses
for Small Business Administration programs. And of the 10.5 million jobs created
in the private sector between 1980 and 1986, 6.6 million (or 63.5%) were created
by small business!
Since people who own and operate their own business take
"pride" in their work, it is common for their quality and efficiency to be much
higher. In many cases small businesses are known for providing their customers
personalized and customized, high-quality products and services.
Just compare a "temp help" in a big company with an
independent home-business owner. If a temporary is hired for 40 hours per week,
he or she may not give the customer-company 40 hours in production. Part of
those 40 hours is spent on orientation, gathering office supplies, getting the
computer turned on and paper loaded, etc.) This breaks down the actual time
spent working and producing for the company to about 25 hours, with 15 hours
lost per week through no fault of your (or their) own.
However, the home worker is different. The home worker will
charge for time actually spent on the job. If you produce 10 pages of text at a
price of $4 per page, you would charge $40 for the completed job. The company
does not pay you per hour, but for the amount of work you complete. This saves
the company money - and we mean BIG money. Now all you have to do is convince
the larger companies of this concept and your business at home will flourish!
There is only one drawback to being in a small business.
People do not take you seriously at first. Companies will try and take advantage
of you when you are not established. Why? Because they know you need the
business and they want to continue receiving "something for nothing."
If you could purchase a higher-quality product from a small
business for $15, why would you go to the mall and purchase a lower-quality
version for $60? There are many small businesses that design crafts that could
never be purchased in a store. These crafts show human pride and quality that
could never be mass produced. But why do people continue paying for lower
quality at a higher price? Is it the money-back guarantee? No, because the toys
you purchase at premium rates around Christmas time normally break and are
destroyed by December 26. Do you return them? Most people don't, so what good is
a money-back guarantee?
And wouldn't a hand-crafted product withstand more abuse than
it's store-bought counterpart? So what if you have to make your purchase at
someone's place of residence? Don't they offer a money-back guarantee also and
wouldn't they be easier to locate if you did want a refund? Wouldn't all this be
much more personable than a mall with 1,000's of screaming people fighting you
to the next Blue Light special?
Larger businesses will try and take advantage of smaller
companies. Why? Who knows. If youI had to pay $80 per hour to have yoiur
computer serviced by IBM, but you knew a small business owner could do the same
job for $25 per hour, you'd be more than happy to pay the small business their
$25.
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