Bizbee

Small to medium enterprises are the life blood of modern economies!! This sector which is considered as the growth engine of the economy is one such priority sector which has been hit hard. In the recent past, things have become glaringly more complicated for SMEs who are finding it increasingly difficult to retain business orders and obtain credit. Bizbee will talk about SME as the recession deepens, how businesses are scrambling to adapt and what the world think tanks have to say. In this recession, some are in serious trouble and looking for a lifeline. Others in better shape are searching for smart ways to take advantage of soft markets or weakened competitors. From either perspective, these are times that test a company’s resilience and savvy. Those who make smart decisions now can survive — and may even come out ahead. Keeping in mind that recessions typically last less than a year and therefore any short term wage saving obtained from a hasty layoff can never be a wise option to fight back. We feel that winners will be those who now double their efforts to get people on the street and pick up some abandoned gems. If you dare not do that, doing the opposite can still be avoided. Don't blindly follow the big brothers who can cut jobs in thousands and still can manage to smile with pride. Nobody can tell what awaits your business just yet. Go through any article talking about the possibility of a recession and do not be surprised to find that it ends with a Shakespearean 'to be or not be' note. So how should SMEs react at this moment of sheer uncertainty? It is better to be safe than sorry later. So take measured steps - organize your records so that it becomes easier to forecast future growth, prepare a cash flow projection for the next 12 months, boost your advertising campaigns, dare to invest in R&D activities.... and please stop overreacting.

Warning Bells Toll for Indian Media Houses

Schadenfreude isn’t a sentiment most of us would admit to very easily- we usually like to think we are better than that. But as the world recently watched the royalty of global media squirm and wriggle in visible discomfort on prime time TV, not too many tears would have been shed for the father-son duo that has lorded over the biggest media empire in the world, and created more enemies than friends in the course of its almost inexorable rise to the top.

Fukushima Does Not Change Indian Realities

The recent announcement by German Chancellor Angela Merkel, that her country intends to phase out all nuclear reactors by 2022 has once again set tongues wagging amongst the nuclear naysayers back home.

Good opportunities for SMEs in Paraguay (an interview with the Ambassador of Paraguay, Genaro Vicente Pappalardo)

 Good opportunities for SMEs in Paraguay (an interview with the Ambassador of Paraguay, Genaro Vicente Pappalardo) 

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