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Tag: Growing a Business

Why You Need to Understand Ecommerce Trends to Prepare Your Business for the Future

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own. Ecommerce is a growing force in the modern economy. While the popularity of online shopping was growing...

4 Overlooked B2B SaaS Lead Generation Strategies to Help Scale Your Startup

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own. So, you've tried it all, from pay-per-click advertising to inbound marketing and everything in between. You get...

4 Strategies for Ecommerce Customer Retention

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own. One of the most critical areas for brands to audit is the cost of acquiring new customers...

Don’t Just Open an Online Store. Build an Ecommerce Brand

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own. The ecommerce space has seen rapid expansion since the pandemic. As physical retail stores were forced to...

How Customer Enablement Drives Product-led Growth

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own. Product-led growth is a sales enablement method that has gained traction from its significantly lower customer acquisition...

Colorado Launches Cannabis Social Equity Grant Program

Colorado has launched a pilot grant program to help social equity cannabis applicants develop and grow their businesses.

The post Colorado Launches Cannabis Social Equity Grant Program appeared first on High Times.

Data Analytics is Fundamental to Next-Gen Marketing for New Businesses

Data analytics has become a very important part of business management. Large corporations all over the world have discovered the wonders of using big data to develop a competitive edge in an increasingly competitive global market. American Express is an example of a company that has used big data to improve its business model. They […]

The post Data Analytics is Fundamental to Next-Gen Marketing for New Businesses appeared first on SmartData Collective.

BlueVine sells its founding invoice factoring business to Canadian rival FundThrough

The acquisition fast tracks the FundThrough's expansion efforts in the US market.

Canada’s FundThrough to Acquire Invoice Factoring Business from BlueVine

BlueVine, an SME financing company that made its Finovate debut in 2014, announced this week that it is selling its invoice factoring business to Toronto, Canada-based FundThrough. FundThrough noted that the deal is designed to accelerate both its commitment to embedded finance as well as fuel expansion plans for the U.S. market. Specifically, FundThrough believes Read more...

The post Canada’s FundThrough to Acquire Invoice Factoring Business from BlueVine appeared first on Finovate.

New Research Study from IP Australia Confirms IP Rights Ownership as a Signal to Identify Successful SMEs

New Research Study from IP Australia Confirms IP Rights Ownership as a Signal to Identify Successful SMEs

The role of IP rights in the growth of SMEsIf you are a policy-maker, prospective business partner or investor, IP Australia wants you to know that a useful way to identify small and medium enterprises (SMEs) with high growth potential is to look at their IP activity.  A new research report from the Office of the Chief Economist, titled Intellectual property rights and enterprise growth: The role of IP rights in the growth of SMEs, describes a study using data on the full population of Australian businesses – around 600,000 SMEs over the period 2002–2017 – to examine correlations between IP activity, employment, and growth of SMEs.  The study finds that, on average, SMEs that own IP rights (IPRs) are 3.5 times larger than SMEs with no IP rights (7 employees compared to 2 for SMEs with no IP rights).  Furthermore, rights-holders pay their employees better, with median annual wages being A$53,755 per employee compared to A$43,304 for SMEs with no IP rights.

My opening sentences above were very carefully chosen.  There is a risk that this study may be understood or reported in some quarters as implying the presence of a causal relationship between ownership of IP rights and business success.  It should go without saying, however, that (in the absence of evidence otherwise) correlation is not causation.  This is expressly acknowledged in the report itself (page 10), but IP Australia is also choosing its words carefully in promoting the report.  In information provided to media, the Director General, Michael Schwager, is quoted as saying:

This research paper presents evidence, for policy makers and business investors, that SMEs who file for IPRs are more likely to experience high growth than those who do not file for any IPRs.

On average, SMEs that own IP rights are around 3.5 times larger, are older and pay a higher median wage. SMEs filing for all the three types of IPRs, namely patents, trade marks, and designs, are the most likely to achieve high growth in terms of both turnover and employment.

To the casual reader, these statements might be taken to imply a causal relationship.  Saying that entities that do X are more likely to achieve Y arguably implies that X might be a good thing to do if your goal is to achieve Y.  But of course that is not true here.  If all anybody needed to do to succeed in business was to file a trade mark application, then I am sure everybody would be doing it!  An economist or statistician reading the above statements would merely find a few interesting facts regarding the observed relationships between IPR ownership, business growth, company size, longevity, and employee remuneration.  They would see nothing regarding any causal relationship among these characteristics.  All they would learn is that entities represented in the study data that have achieved Y are also more likely than average to have done X.

It is also notable that Michael Schwager’s statements specifically address policy makers and investors.  What about business owners?  Surely they would want to know how to maximise their prospects of success?  Well, of course they would.  But this study, by itself, tells them nothing about how to achieve that outcome.  Just because more successful businesses are more likely to own more IPRs does not imply that simply filing more applications for IPRs is the hidden secret to business success!

So, let’s delve a little more deeply into this report and see what else it tells us about IPRs and successful SMEs, and attempt to infer, from its findings, something about what makes an SME successful, and where other SMEs should be looking to find exemplars from which they can learn.

Read more »

An Affiliate-Marketing Program Might Be the Perfect Move

The affiliate-marketing industry offers an enticing opportunity for brands to connect with influencers and other partners, but how can entrepreneurs get the most out of it?

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