Simple small business software to make y…
Simple Small Business Software to make your Life Easier Simple small business software is all many companies need. in fact, choosing powerful accounting software may be a big mistake. You see there’s more cost to an accounting system than meets the eye. The initial cost of a system is just the start. The costs that continue are the ones that may get you. The right accounting programs should save you time, money and stress too. Here’s how… Simple to Fit. Many small businesses fail due to poor financial controls. With good controls on the money part of your business, you have a better chance of success. Now you need a system that fits what you do. in most cases there is a ready to use solution already being used by hundreds of companies just like yours. look at he major software companies like Microsoft, Peachtree, and QuickBooks. their simpler systems may be just the answer. Simple to Learn. A major cost of any software is the learning cost. Training and learning have high costs. Buying more software than you need forces you to pay the learning cost even though you don’t use the power of the software. Don’t buy less than you need, but don’t buy far more complexity than required either. ask some questions about the learning phase before you sign on for software. who will you call with questions? how much does support cost? is there a local resource for training? often local accounting firms can train you with major software brands. know where you will get help before you buy. Simple to Upgrade. Buying too much software is expensive, but so is buying too little.
how will you upgrade if you need more accounting power? if you buy a major brand like Peachtree or Quickbooks, the upgrade path is clear. You just choose the upgrade version and the new version is similar to the old. go from one brand to another and you get to pay that learning cost all over again. That’s why you should think long and hard about choosing a simple accounting system that’s a dead end with no upgrade version. You’ll pay a high price for dead end software if you make a change. You’ll get to learn a more powerful software that will do the job, but you’ll start your learning from the ground floor. Simple small business software may be all you need to help you save money, time, and stress. Get software that fits how you do business, but be ready to pay the learning cost. buy enough system and an upgrade can be relatively painless. buy too little and you may be looking at a dead end if you need more accounting power. Than you’ll get to pay the learning cost all over again. often the best solution is a simple version of one of the major selling software brands. those include Peachtree and Quickbooks and a few others. With a major brand you get low initial cost plus a clear support structure and usually you will find experts that can help you right in your area. That’s a big plus. Al Bullington is a CPA(retired) who also spent 15 years as a project manager with Fortune 500 companies. his main work focus now is small business start-ups. Find More Small Business Software Articles Share and Enjoy: Tagged with: Business • Easier • Life • Simple • small • Software Filed under: Finance Like this post? Subscribe to my RSS feed and get loads more! Simple Small Business Software to Make Your Life Easier
yes, website i required a we are going closer with each other in this globalization world, so hire web development company like "sped limit studios"..
By profession I'm a web application programmer. I've built sites on the side for family. They cost (for a site that has good support and allows custom applications to run) about $75/yr and up. A True small business can do fine under $150/yr. Prices go up when you start taking credit cards. If you have your own servers - you can cut your cost down to a network amdinistrative staff to maintain your servers (oh wait - that's about 40-60k a year) Startup costs can be from $200-$1000 It depnds on where you are and where you want to go with your website. Most applications for a website take anywhere from 1 day to several months to write. Depending on the complexity. Find yourself a consultant, or better still someone willing to answer your questions freely. Here are the things to keep in mind about a website: 1) Look and Feel - how your site looks to the user, and ease of navigation 2) Forms - process for your users to contact you 3) Applications - Special programs that allow you to interact with your clients based on information you already have. (IE - I'm in Arizona, so you display a picture of a cactus) 4) DataBases - where data is stored 5) Documentation - something you can fall back on when your programmer quits. You need to knwo what was done/where/why/how.. etc... When you start talking to someone new - remember your site may have been around for you - but it's new to that person. So you'll have to start at the beginning. Be specific with your questions, and don't be afraid to start your website over, with a different programmer. (Programatically it may be faster to get where you want to be) I almost forgot a couple other important things.... 1) Custom programming typically costs you $$$/hr - depending on the request and who you ask. 2) Advertising your website. If you plan to use pay-per-click ads you need to know if these ads were successful. You also have to pay for the ads. Some sites spend 20k+ a month and net over 60k in ads, while others see 2000+ unique customers a month and get no business. Get someone who'll be honest with you and tell you if you need to stop what you're doing. (This isn't a person who'll tell you how to run your business - just advise you where money is being wasted in regards to your site) 3) Search Engine Optimization. Getting your site recognized by search engines - you can make a batttle of it - if you really want to.
Joomla! http://joomla.org some people would say Drupal, but I hear it's too messy. Wordpress [www.wordpress.org] is also turning into a CMS from a blog mgmt system. There's also tonnes of wiki apps. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wiki#Wikis_and_content_management_systems I'd suggest you do research based on your own criteria [like you might need some feature X and one system doesn't have it] starting point: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Content_management_system
A simple solution is to collect credit card payments by paypal, and use paypal recurring payments & subscriptions for your subscriptions. Their fees are competitive. You can read about it here: https://www.paypal.com/pdn-recurring