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International Business Consulting Firm

Integrated Business Analysis, an International Profit Associates (IPA-IBA) alliance , takes a proactive approach to solving complex business issues. From the analysis to an expeditious problem resolution, we work together with our partners to provide ...

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Integrated Business Analysis - PR.com

Produce company Turners & Growers wants Prime Minister John Key to smash kiwifruit marketer Zespri's monopoly after it was locked out of a collaborative market agreement with the exporter in April. It is also arguing Zespri has breached 1999 ...

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T&G fires first kiwifruit salvo - Stuff

For Minneapolis-based Ginger Consulting, spicing up brand strategy for OfficeMax, Nordstrom and other national clients is a recipe for growth. The secret ingredients, according to Ginger principals Mary Van Note and Beth Perro-Jarvis, are the project ...

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Ginger spices up brand strategies - Minneapolis Star Tribune

Founded in 1948, Robert Half International Inc. (NYSE symbol: RHI) is the world’s first and largest specialized staffing firm and a member of the S&P 500 index. RHI is a recognized leader in professional staffing and consulting services, and is the ...

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Robert Half International Inc. - Birmingham Business Journal

GoAhead Consulting, a start-up IT Consulting, Outsourcing and Search firm just started its trading in London. The Mission is “To perform each task for the clients in the scope of operation that could binocular our client’s stakeholders smiling ...

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Recession Made IT Consulting Firm, GoAhead Consulting Started its ... - pressbox.co.uk

MINNEAPOLIS, June 22 /PRNewswire/ -- RSM McGladrey , the nation's fifth largest accounting, tax and business consulting firm, today released the results of its fourth annual Manufacturing and Wholesale Distribution (MWD) National Survey. Respondents ...

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RSM McGladrey 2009 Manufacturing and Wholesale Distribution Survey ... - PR Newswire

The Automation Federation in Research Triangle Park was honored at the Progressive Manufacturing Awards Gala for the development of the Automation Competency Model with the U.S. Department of Labor. Southern Rehabilitation Network in Raleigh ...

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Kudos for June 27 - Raleigh News & Observer

Jennifer Zdon/The Times-Picayune Charnetta Stenson of New York dances to Mary J. Blige on the main floor of the Essence Music Festival in 2008. With a stellar musical line-up, aggressive marketing and a bevy of new events, the 15th annual Essence ...

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Essence Music Festival bright spot for tourism industry this summer - New Orleans Times-Picayune

140 Employees to Downtown by Year-end ATLANTA , June 19, 2009 – HealthPort, a top-25 company in the healthcare information technology industry, plans to relocate its main solution services facility to Downtown Columbia, South Carolina, by the end ...

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Healthport’s Solutions Services Division to Relocate - dBusinessNews.com

Allegations that Metro Vancouver garbage in the Cache Creek regional landfill is leaching toxins into the local environment have been largely refuted by an independent review commissioned by the provincial government. The environmental consulting ...

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Questions others have asked about International Business Consulting Firm

Resolved Question: Please, what do you think about my cover letter?

Dear Ms. Schmidt: I am student of Business Administration and Economics at University of Frankfurt in Germany, and I am writing to express my interest in obtaining a summer internship position with Microsoft. I would enjoy the opportunity to work with a global company such as Microsoft ,and to be a part of your management team. My qualifications are based on a combination of my education, international experience, analytical and teamwork abilities. My strongest qualification comes from having spent more than five years studying in Germany while also building global skills and gaining valuable experience through completing international internships in South Africa and Italy. I previously worked for one year as office assistant at E.C. Electrical Contractors, Johannesburg, South Africa. My recent successful work at ITB-Institute of Technology and Education, my unique mix of prior work experience as junior consultant at Balance Technology Consulting and as an assistant financial controller at Delmod International, further demonstrate my professional skills. My enclosed resume provides additional details about my background and qualifications. I speak French as my mother tongue and my German, Spain and English skills are fluent. Additionally, I have improved my Italian skills during my internship in Verona, Italy. Furthermore, I bring to the table advanced computer skills in MS Office, and programming languages including Java, JavaScript, HTML, and XML. I have made a career commitment to international management. I would appreciate the opportunity to discuss a future with your firm. If you need additional information, please do not hesitate to contact me at any time. Thank you very much for your time and consideration. Best regards from Germany, Samauel Kinsman Thank you Minta and Harry for your remarks! Are there another grammer mistakes or maybe not clearly words? Once again thank you for your helps!  more

Resolved Question: Are CEO's just not down with the mainstream American?

By VINNEE TONG, AP Business Writer Vinnee Tong, Ap Business Writer – Fri May 1, 12:07 am ET NEW YORK – U.S. companies remain generous with the perks they give to CEOs, including some that are unfathomable to the average American worker: chauffeured cars, bodyguards, club memberships and free travel in company jets. The median value of these and similar perks rose nearly 7 percent in 2008, according to an Associated Press analysis of regulatory filings from 309 companies in the Standard & Poor's 500. The increase came even as overall CEO compensation fell 7 percent to $7.6 million. Perks rose despite a public backlash against such benefits, which many investors and lawmakers deem excessive. They argue well-paid executives should cover the costs of life insurance, charitable donations and financial planning themselves, especially as companies struggle with falling profits, slumping stock prices and massive job cuts. Even some compensation consultants are saying enough is enough. "Those are things the average person, the average Joe, doesn't have, so we're saying, don't give them perks," said Paul Dorf, a managing director at pay consultant Compensation Resources Inc. But plenty of companies are keeping the spigots open. Occidental Petroleum CEO Ray Irani, for example, received $400,000 worth of financial planning, part of a $30 million pay package in 2008. To put it another way, that $400,000 in financial planning is more than the total annual household income of the vast majority of Americans. Occidental spokesman Richard Kline said the comprehensive financial planning helps Irani to "keep his complete attention on the company's business." The median value of perks — which is the midpoint at which half of the executives received more and half less — was $170,501 in 2008, up from $159,586 the year before. Only three CEOs in the AP survey received no perks in 2008. And perks made up a bigger percentage of total compensation, rising to 2.25 percent in 2008, up slightly from 1.95 percent, the AP's analysis found. The biggest earner of perks in 2008 was Johnson & Johnson CEO William Weldon. His perks package was worth $3.9 million, about 16 percent of his $23 million in overall compensation. Included in his perks package was a $3.6 million payment to a retirement plan, about $154,000 in personal flights on the company jet and about $26,000 for a car and driver. Only one CEO saw his entire compensation paid in perks in 2008: Richard Fairbank of Capital One Financial Corp. ($68,344). He received a car allowance, insurance, health care and home security. Some companies went beyond that. Cablevision Systems Corp. offered top executives free cable TV, free high-speed Internet service and use of the company travel department to book personal travel. Defense company Halliburton Co., meanwhile, has two separate programs to match charitable donations and yet another that boosts political giving. Fort Worth, Texas-based XTO Energy gave $3.4 million to Baylor University to help build a new sports complex. It was the second installment of a total $6.8 million pledge made in 2007 to supplement now retired CEO Bob Simpson's own $3.2 million donation to his alma mater. XTO's generosity extended to an unnamed school that Simpson's children attend. It got a $775,000 donation in 2008, the fourth installment of a $3.1 million gift. A company spokesman did not return a call for comment. On the other hand, some companies are increasingly using so-called perk allowances, basically cash that executives can dip into at their liking for the perks they want. For example, Tyco International CEO Edward Breen was given a $70,000 cash perk in 2008 while Reynolds American Inc. CEO Susan Ivey got $29,000 in cash to replace an old executive perks program. While plenty of companies were still willing to dole out generous perks, compensation advisers say there has been a slight pullback in certain benefits that seem to incite the most public outrage. Ira Kay, director of compensation consulting for Watson Wyatt, called perks a major "irritant" to shareholders. Some companies are changing their perks policies. Verizon Communications Inc. will no longer offer free jet travel to CEOs once they have retired, starting with its current chief executive. Past CEOs can still fly for free. "Companies are looking for stuff that isn't central to their pay programs," said David Swinford, chief executive of the compensation consulting firm Pearl Meyer & Partners. "Optics are very critical right now."  more

Resolved Question: Isn't this proof that Obama is a very bad President, probably the worst in American history?

A CRISIS OBAMA WON'T WASTE By DICK MORRIS Published on TheHill.com on April 7, 2009 This economic crisis is too useful for Obama to want it to end. When Rahm Emanuel -- and later Hillary Clinton -- spoke of never letting a good crisis "go to waste," many people were shocked. But now Obama seems to embody the corollary: that the crisis should continue until he has thoroughly milked it to reshape American politics, society and the economy. Like Faust, he seems to wish that this "given moment" will "endure forever." Unlike Faust, however, he will not lose his "life and soul" to such a wish. He'll sacrifice ours instead. First came the "stimulus package." With only about $185 billion of its $800 billion in spending to be spent in 2009, Obama clearly never intended the spending to be about stimulus but wanted the need for a stimulus to trigger the spending he wanted anyway. Then came the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) funding, often forced down banks' throats. Now comes word that even as banks want to return the money, the Treasury is making them keep it. One source at a TARP bank reports that Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner is insisting that banks go through their "stress test" before refunding the TARP money. As Stuart Varney speculates, in The Wall Street Journal, Obama wants the banks to keep the money so he can enforce his regulations on them. Now comes Geithner's plea for extra regulatory powers and Obama's concession to global economic regulation at the G-20 summit. Both moves are game-changers for any major American business. Geithner wants the power to take over any business -- presumably in any field -- whose failure would imperil the national economy. Today it's banks, brokerage houses, car companies and insurance firms. Tomorrow? Who knows? And Obama agreed to agree on international "high standards" for the regulation of all "systemically important" companies to be promulgated by the new global Financial Stability Board (FSB). The United States, occupying one of 20 chairs on the FSB board (21 if we count the EU), will come to a consensus with other central bankers from the G-20 nations on what these regulations should say. Then the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Federal Reserve and the other regulatory arms of the U.S. government will impose them on our economy. (Some have objected that Congress needs to be consulted, but as long as the agreements are "voluntary" and the U.S. agencies are merely "asked" to impose the regulations, no further grant of congressional authority is needed. But, of course, there will be nothing voluntary about the administration's demand that the agencies implement the coming FSB directives, no matter how intrusive they may be.) And, finally, there is Obama's delegation of a total overhaul of the tax code to a commission headed by Paul Volcker with a mandate to report back in December of this year. So with the tax code totally changing, Europe about to formulate regulations for our economy, the U.S. government empowered to take over any large company, the deficit and spending reaching unbelievable levels and the feds insisting on continued control of banks, what businessman in his right mind is going to invest in anything? How could even the most foolish optimist pull the trigger on a business investment without knowing the tax consequences, the regulatory framework and the policy of the banks on lending? But Obama knows all this. He knows that his steps will delay economic recovery. But he wants these changes, not as means to an end, but as the end itself. And he is determined to get them passed and set in stone while the rubric of "crisis" justifies his doing so. He is not unlike a leader who takes his country into war, knowing that by "wagging the dog" he can reinforce his power. But ultimately, does Obama care if he is reelected? Doesn't he know that he needs a good economy to extend his mandate to eight years? Yes, of course he does. But he probably figures that he can turn the economy around as Election Day 2012 draws nearer and reap all the credit then. In the meantime, no good crisis should ever go to waste. IT IS GOING TO BE A MIRACLE IF THE COUNTRY SURVIVES THIS GUY.  more

Resolved Question: Vote on which College business Major is the best for an Future Entrepreneur?

What is the best major for an undergraduate student who wants to become an entrepreneur? I am a freshman undergraduate student and am not exactly sure what I should major in. I am thinking about majoring in International business or economics, it is a goal of mine to one day own my own business. So, what major can set me up for a career in the corporate world and my goal of being an entrepreneur: economics, management, entrepreneurship, or some other International Business? I already plan on majoring in International Business but I want to know what should I double major in with International Business? The business I would like to start will be called UBG Services International. stands for United Bass Group Services International. I want it to be a Management(Management, strategic Management, and Operations Management), and IT Consulting Firm. I want the UBG brand to be a Parent Company or Conglomerate of two other companies such as UBG Publications(which produces three diffrent magazines which I will not name or describe over the internet) and UBG Professional Networking Services which will be a Website which will be a web based networking service providing a variety of ways for Professionals, Business Men and Women and Entrepreneurs to interact through Email, Instand Messaging services and We  more

Resolved Question: Vote on which College Major is better?

What is the best major for an undergraduate student who wants to become an entrepreneur? I am a freshman undergraduate student and am not exactly sure what I should major in. I am thinking about majoring in International business or economics, it is a goal of mine to one day own my own business. So, what major can set me up for a career in the corporate world and my goal of being an entrepreneur: economics, management, entrepreneurship, or some other International Business? I already plan on majoring in International Business but I want to know what should I double major in with International Business? The business I would like to start will be called UBG Services International. stands for United Bass Group Services International. I want it to be a Management(Management, strategic Management, and Operations Management), and IT Consulting Firm. I want the UBG brand to be a Parent Company or Conglomerate of two other companies such as UBG Publications(which produces three diffrent magazines which I will not name or describe over the internet) and UBG Professional Networking Services which will be a Website which will be a web based networking service providing a variety of ways for Professionals, Business Men and Women and Entrepreneurs to interact through Email, Instand Messaging services and WebCam Interaction while sharing information securely from business to business, executive to executive, and professional to professional confidentially or publicly and also marketing. Any suggestions on which would better support my dreams?  more

Resolved Question: What should I double major in with Film?

Should I double major in Film and International Business or Film and Entrepreneurship? I have always wanted to be a screenplay writer/Director/Producer... however since I have graduated High School I have wanted to start a Management,Operations,Strategic, and IT consulting Firm also specializing in Information Systems Development... I know these things have nothing to do with eachother but I understand the chances of making it in the Entertainment Industry is very slim... The business world is the same however I am determined and the International Business Major will provide me education for careers... Which should I choose?  more

Resolved Question: What should I do? Please somebody answer me...?

What should I do? Please somebody answer me...?? T.I FEATURING JUSTIN TIMBERLAKE "DEAD AND GONE" (youtube it) keeps playing in my head. Yesterday I stayed up for a whole 24 hours. I woke up at 7am and didnt go to sleep until 7am the next day.... I feel like Im stressing but Im not sure because I feel happy... Im struggling right now.... I have to register for community college tomorrow.... I need to take the GED test on the 27th and Im kind of scared to take it.... I want to do so much with myself but I feel like a failure... I didnt finish high school because I had a child with my girlfriend... I was only 15 credits away from graduating... I didnt finish military training when I went to basic training because I got hurt and a medical discharge and I feel like I never finish anything. Ive quit two jobs.... I need money now and nobody is hiring.... I want to go to Temple University and go to school for International Business and Manangement Information Systems... I also want to get back in shape and get my six pack again... I feel like I cant do either of these goals fast enough and Ive been waiting for almost two years to jsut get this far. I finally got financial aide and about to register and I just feel like Im losing a grip on my life. I want to be a successful Founder,President, and CEO of my own Management and Information Technology Consulting Firm and Professional Networking Service and Website but I feel very tide down. Its 2:37 right now and I just hope somebody can give me kind words of advice or some type of motivational words from the heart.... I think Im on the road to staying up another 24 hours.....  more

Resolved Question: What should I do? Please somebody answer me...?

What should I do? Please somebody answer me...?? T.I FEATURING JUSTIN TIMBERLAKE "DEAD AND GONE" (youtube it) keeps playing in my head. Yesterday I stayed up for a whole 24 hours. I woke up at 7am and didnt go to sleep until 7am the next day.... I feel like Im stressing but Im not sure because I feel happy... Im struggling right now.... I have to register for community college tomorrow.... I need to take the GED test on the 27th and Im kind of scared to take it.... I want to do so much with myself but I feel like a failure... I didnt finish high school because I had a child with my girlfriend... I was only 15 credits away from graduating... I didnt finish military training when I went to basic training because I got hurt and a medical discharge and I feel like I never finish anything. Ive quit two jobs.... I need money now and nobody is hiring.... I want to go to Temple University and go to school for International Business and Manangement Information Systems... I also want to get back in shape and get my six pack again... I feel like I cant do either of these goals fast enough and Ive been waiting for almost two years to jsut get this far. I finally got financial aide and about to register and I just feel like Im losing a grip on my life. I want to be a successful Founder,President, and CEO of my own Management and Information Technology Consulting Firm and Professional Networking Service and Website but I feel very tide down. Its 2:37 right now and I just hope somebody can give me kind words of advice or some type of motivational words from the heart.... I think Im on the road to staying up another 24 hours.....  more

Resolved Question: What should I do? Please somebody answer me...?

T.I FEATURING JUSTIN TIMBERLAKE "DEAD AND GONE" (youtube it) keeps playing in my head. Yesterday I stayed up for a whole 24 hours. I woke up at 7am and didnt go to sleep until 7am the next day.... I feel like Im stressing but Im not sure because I feel happy... Im struggling right now.... I have to register for community college tomorrow.... I need to take the GED test on the 27th and Im kind of scared to take it.... I want to do so much with myself but I feel like a failure... I didnt finish high school because I had a child with my girlfriend... I was only 15 credits away from graduating... I didnt finish military training when I went to basic training because I got hurt and a medical discharge and I feel like I never finish anything. Ive quit two jobs.... I need money now and nobody is hiring.... I want to go to Temple University and go to school for International Business and Manangement Information Systems... I also want to get back in shape and get my six pack again... I feel like I cant do either of these goals fast enough and Ive been waiting for almost two years to jsut get this far. I finally got financial aide and about to register and I just feel like Im losing a grip on my life. I want to be a successful Founder,President, and CEO of my own Management and Information Technology Consulting Firm and Professional Networking Service and Website but I feel very tide down. Its 2:37 right now and I just hope somebody can give me kind words of advice or some type of motivational words from the heart.... I think Im on the road to staying up another 24 hours.....  more

Resolved Question: Becoming a business Tycoon?

what should my second major be? Im already planning on majoring in International Business... I want to start an MIS/IT, Management, Operations Management, Strategic Management Consulting Firm... I want to change the Group into a sort of MOTHER COMPANY or Conglomerate Enterprise and venture into starting a Publications Company that publishes three magazines dealing with Business and Entrepreneurship, Humanitarianism and Global Health, and Luxury and High end electronics....and a Business Hotel/Resort Chain.........I probably dont have enough years in my life time to complete all of that but I at least want the plans to do so. I was thinking that MIS or IT would be great to get into. Any suggestions?  more

Resolved Question: The difference between MIS and IT... (Ill put more detail in my question in the details section thanks)!?

Ok so I want to dual major in International Business and MIS or IT... I plan on starting a Management/Strategic Management/Operations Management Consulting Firm that also specialises in MIS and IT. I would like to have skill in MIS or IT. However I dont know the difference. I have heard that MIS uses IT but which would give me the most knowledge in general? Can MIS be turned into a business in itself? By business I mean can MIS be turned into a company which Contracts MIS directors to other companies or if not contracted...hired by businesses to help the progression of a business as if a consultant would while being an employee of the Firm? Sorry i my question runs on and on...  more

Resolved Question: The difference between MIS and IT... (Ill put more detail in my question in the details section thanks)!?

Ok so I want to dual major in International Business and MIS or IT... I plan on starting a Management/Strategic Management/Operations Management Consulting Firm that also specialises in MIS and IT. I would like to have skill in MIS or IT. However I dont know the difference. I have he sorry zelmo.... heres the rest I have heard that MIS uses IT but which would give me the most knowledge in general? Can MIS be turned into a business in itself? By business I mean can MIS be turned into a company which Contracts MIS directors to other companies or if not contracted...hired by businesses to help the progression of a business as if a consultant would while being an employee of the Firm? Sorry i my question runs on and on...  more

Resolved Question: The difference between MIS and IT... (Ill put more detail in my question in the details section thanks)!?

Ok so I want to dual major in International Business and MIS or IT... I plan on starting a Management/Strategic Management/Operations Management Consulting Firm that also specialises in MIS and IT. I would like to have skill in MIS or IT. However I dont know the difference. I have heard that MIS uses IT but which would give me the most knowledge in general? Can MIS be turned into a business in itself? By business I mean can MIS be turned into a company which Contracts MIS directors to other companies or if not contracted...hired by businesses to help the progression of a business as if a consultant would while being an employee of the Firm? Sorry i my question runs on and on... crowkit.... i already know what each is... I NEED DETAILS.. NOT THE OBVIOUS... IM NOT AN IDIOT.... OR DOES THAT MAKE YOU ONE?  more

Resolved Question: The difference between MIS and IT... (Ill put more detail in my question in the details section thanks)!?

Ok so I want to dual major in International Business and MIS or IT... I plan on starting a Management/Strategic Management/Operations Management Consulting Firm that also specialises in MIS and IT. I would like to have skill in MIS or IT. However I dont know the difference. I have heard that MIS uses IT but which would give me the most knowledge in general? Can MIS be turned into a business in itself? By business I mean can MIS be turned into a company which Contracts MIS directors to other companies or if not contracted...hired by businesses to help the progression of a business as if a consultant would while being an employee of the Firm? Sorry i my question runs on and on...  more

Resolved Question: Can Someone please answer my question?! Please!?!?!? No one is answering.This is the second time I posted this?

College Undergraduate Double Major Help!? My goal is to become an Entrepreneur. However I would like something to fall back on which is in the field of business or Law. So I plan on Double Majoring in International Business with a concentration of Management and Business Administration then going to Law School. Would it be better to Double major in Business Management with a concentration of Entrepreneurial Studies and International Business? If I plan on eventually opening my own Management/Strategic Management/Operations Management/ Information Technology and Law Consulting Firm and expanding multi-nationally? Regardless of the Double Major I plan on going to Law School. At either Temple University or Loyola Marymount University. Please give me Advice. The reason for wanting to go to law school is because law has always been a dream of mines. Mainly to be a Corporate Lawyer or plaintiff's lawyer, yet in still I would much rather be involved in leadership in a business Consulting others how t  more

Resolved Question: College Undergraduate Double Major Help?

My goal is to become an Entrepreneur. However I would like something to fall back on which is in the field of business or Law. So I plan on Double Majoring in International Business with a concentration of Management and Business Administration then going to Law School. Would it be better to Double major in Business Management with a concentration of Entrepreneurial Studies and International Business? If I plan on eventually opening my own Management/Strategic Management/Operations Management/ Information Technology and Law Consulting Firm?  more

Resolved Question: I need help with my business degree!!!!!???? please!! help!! fast!!!!?

I need help with my business degree!!!!!???? please!! help!! fast!!!!? Is it possible to double major in Business Administration and Business Management and then get a Master's in International Business? Or would I have to get an undergraduate degree in International Business by double majoring in International business and Business Administration or Management? I plan on being a Management Consultant/Operations Consultant until I can open my own Consulting Firm and Magazine Publishing Co.  more

Resolved Question: I need help with my business degree!!!!!???? please!! help!! fast!!!!?

Is it possible to double major in Business Administration and Business Management and then get a Master's in International Business? Or would I have to get an undergraduate degree in International Business by double majoring in International business and Business Administration or Management? I plan on being a Management Consultant/Operations Consultant until I can open my own Consulting Firm and Magazine Publishing Co.  more

Voting Question: How would one get started in developing a Conglomerate Enterprise?

First off I would like to work at a Strategy/Management Consulting Firm before I begin my Entrepreneurial Endeavors, then I would like to open my own Strategy/Consulting Firm and hopefully open offices Internationally. Then I would like to Open a Magazine Publishing Co. under the same Brand as my Consulting Firm. The Publishing Co. will produce two key magazines which focus on International Business and Entrepreneurship as well as updates on new Office Supply materials and utilities. The second magazine produced would be geared towards International Humanitarianism and will be geared towards the like. I also would like to enter the Real Estate business in developing countries like South Africa West under the Company Brand obviously. Is a Double Major in International Business and Business Administration/Entrepreneurship enough to get started granted the much more education needed after I begin to enter diffrent Industry sectors?  more

Resolved Question: I want to be a Management consultant at a management Consulting Firm and then go on to my own company?

I want to be a Management consultant at a management Consulting Firm and then go on to my own company? I would like to double major in Business Administration, and International Business and then get a job as a Management Consultant. I would also like to one day open my own Strategy/Management Consulting Firm and then spread Internationally. Does it really matter what four year college I attend? How much can I expect to make in this job? And please dont come at me with the "it shouldnt matter what you make" line because that just isnt how the world goes round ok... Be realistic. I care about what kind of life I'm going to live financially so I can care less about your feelings on how much you should love your career even if you dont make alot of money. Id rather not live in a one bedroom apartment... Thanks in advance for any information on this job. Hey can someone also provide me with a website that shows this career in detail....? Thanks...  more

Resolved Question: consulting firms generally pay better than IB for MBA graduates?

I realize that for most top MBA programs ,even before the current credit crisis, the mean first year salary of those MBA graduates who work in consulting business is overall much higher than the mean first year salary of those MBA graduates who work Investment banking business. Why is that? Is that rule also generally applied in the long run for people who worked in those businesses after 5 or more years? For an international MBA student with decent but not eloquent English, is it possible to have a promising career development in consulting business if he has a strong finance or accounting background? please don't click on any link below "endorsed by Tom Boswell of Happy Days!" I'm sick of seeing these silly spam messages all over the place!  more

Resolved Question: Quick question about a unique resume point?

Hi, I'm applying for a consulting firm who does international trade and they deal with a lot of Chinese business. my father works in China for the National Development and Reformation Commission and he is well connected and able to provide some inside networking from time to time. (75% of business deals are done through networking in China). Question is, can I add that to my resume? it seems like a unique selling point and a great asset for a business who need more leads and clients. many thanks how should I word this professionally. thanks  more

Resolved Question: Spanish speakers can you translate this to Spanish for me?

I run a research and consulting company finding decision-making information for business professionals using a wide variety of online and offline information sources. I have been doing research online for 3 years, using several databases, most of which are not available on the free web. I also own and operate an international trade consulting and global logistics firm. I have a Bachelor's degree in International Business. I am a member of the Association of Independent Information Professionals (AIIP).  more

Voting Question: Taking a loan: what to bring to the meeting with the bank?

My friends and I just graduated from college. He has an international business degree, I have a PR degree. We've decided to try and start our own consulting firm for transatlantic relationships as we both have spent a lot of time in both Europe and the US. We have a meeting with the bank who might be financing our "experiment." My question is, what do I bring to the bank? All I have is a date and the name of a rep I'm meeting with. What do they like to see? Research findings? Business plans? And in what format? (Both my partner and I are surprised we didn't learn this in college.)  more

Resolved Question: Why is a new tax needed for global warming?

http://www.businessandmedia.org/articles/2007/20071113133308.aspx One analysis of that bill by CRA International, an international business consulting firm, predicts the Lieberman-Warner bill could cost $4 trillion to $6 trillion over the next 40 years, according to an editorial in the November 11 Washington Times. If that bill were passed and made law, the tax would cost every man, woman and child – more than 303 million Americans – $494 a year, a significant burden on the U.S. economy. “There is no effective way to meaningfully reduce emissions without negatively impacting a large part of an economy,” Greenspan wrote. “Net, it is a tax. If the cap is low enough to make a meaningful inroad into CO2 emissions, permits will become expensive and large numbers of companies will experience cost increases that make them less competitive. Jobs will be lost and real incomes of workers constrained.” Why aren't politicians looking at prioritization within the existing federal budget? Superchic - Interesting rationalization, but do you know how much of the federal budget is allocated to prior comittments such as social security? I'd want to see hard numbers before making such an assumption. JOHNNIE B - That's the beauty of the strategy, people think they have to deny global warming to oppose taxes. Global warming is real, so the people against the tax get swept away. The two are completely separate. Don't undermine your credibility or waste energy opposing all of science. On the tax issue however, there's no evidence that it will address the problem. Fight that with all your energy. rwcrufler - Yes, we need far more accountability in government. Simple math can show that this tax will be ineffective against the problem (higher population in 2050 times higher per capita emission rate thanks to developing nations). Implementing it before developing nations are on board will be a deadly error on a global scale. zeltar - "First, you need to understand that taxes are a way for Governments to affect desired behaviors." No, the price of gas rising from $0.50/gallon to $4.00 has not affected consumption. There is no reason to believe that a tax will have any greater influence on behavior. "Governments need X dollars to operate." Surely the U.S. government has reached 100X by now. There's no evidence that it's efficient. Does it ever shrink, or reorganize to better meet needs? There isn't a single program that could be scaled back to help pay for saving humankind? That premise is preposterous. "They are not trying to get a surplus." That may be true; apparently they're trying to pass some of this on directly to the coal industry and corporate agriculture. Mark Anthony - Too true.  more

Resolved Question: Big brother or the "Sign of the times." Your thoughts?

By DAVID B. CARUSO, Associated Press Writer Wed Mar 26, 3:55 PM ET NEW YORK - Some workers are doing it at Dunkin' Donuts, Hilton hotels, even at Marine Corps bases. Employees at a growing number of businesses around the nation are starting and ending their days by pressing a hand or finger to a scanner that logs the precise time of their arrival and departure — information that is automatically reflected in payroll records. Manufacturers say these biometric scanners improve efficiency and streamline payroll operations. Employers big and small buy them with the dual goals of curtailing fraud and automating outdated record keeping systems that rely on paper time sheets. The new systems, however, have raised complaints from some workers who see the efforts to track their movements as excessive or even creepy. "They don't even have to hire someone to harass you anymore. The machine can do it for them," said Ed Ott, executive director of the New York City Central Labor Council of the AFL-CIO. "The palm print thing really grabs people as a step too far." The International Biometric Group, a consulting firm, estimated that $635 million worth of these high-tech devices were sold last year. Protests over using palm scanners to log employee time have been especially loud in New York City, where officials are spending $410 million to install an automated attendance tracking system that may eventually be used by 160,000 city workers. Scores of civil servants who are members of Local 375 of the Civil Service Technical Guild rallied Tuesday against a plan to add the city medical examiner's office to the list of 17 city agencies which already have the scanners in place. The scanners have rankled draftsmen, planners and architects in the city's Parks Department, which began using them last year. "Psychologically, I think it has had a huge impact on the work force here because it is demeaning and because it's a system based on mistrust," said Ricardo Hinkle, a landscape architect who designs city parks. I work in a hospital in Radiology and I clock in and out via my I.D. badge.  more

Resolved Question: Should your company be working for the FBI & Homeland Security and spying on you?

Today, more than 23,000 representatives of private industry are working quietly with the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security. The members of this rapidly growing group, called InfraGard, receive secret warnings of terrorist threats before the public does—and, at least on one occasion, before elected officials. In return, they provide information to the government, which alarms the ACLU. But there may be more to it than that. One business executive, who showed me his InfraGard card, told me they have permission to “shoot to kill” in the event of martial law. InfraGard is “a child of the FBI,” says Michael Hershman, the chairman of the advisory board of the InfraGard National Members Alliance and CEO of the Fairfax Group, an international consulting firm.  more

Resolved Question: What are you thoughts about the FBI "deputizing businesses?"?

FBI deputizes business By Matthew Rothschild Feb. 7- Today, more than 23,000 representatives of private industry are working quietly with the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security. The members of this rapidly growing group, called InfraGard, receive secret warnings of terrorist threats before the public does-and, at least on one occasion, before elected officials. In return, they provide information to the government, which alarms the ACLU. But there may be more to it than that. One business executive, who showed me his InfraGard card, told me they have permission to "shoot to kill" in the event of martial law. InfraGard is "a child of the FBI," says Michael Hershman, the chairman of the advisory board of the InfraGard National Members Alliance and CEO of the Fairfax Group, an international consulting firm. InfraGard started in Cleveland back in 1996, when the private sector there cooperated with the FBI to investigate cyber threats. "Then the FBI cloned it," says Phyllis Schneck, chairman of the board of directors of the InfraGard National Members Alliance, and the prime mover behind the growth of InfraGard over the last several years. InfraGard itself is still an FBI operation, with FBI agents in each state overseeing the local InfraGard chapters. (There are now eighty-six of them.) The alliance is a nonprofit organization of private sector InfraGard members. "We are the owners, operators, and experts of our critical infrastructure, from the CEO of a large company in agriculture or high finance to the guy who turns the valve at the water utility," says Schneck, who by day is the vice president of research integration at Secure Computing. "At its most basic level, InfraGard is a partnership between the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the private sector," the InfraGard website states. "InfraGard chapters are geographically linked with FBI Field Office territories." "There is evidence that InfraGard may be closer to a corporate TIPS program, turning private-sector corporations-some of which may be in a position to observe the activities of millions of individual customers-into surrogate eyes and ears for the FBI," the ACLU warned in its August 2004 report The Surveillance-Industrial Complex: How the American Government Is Conscripting Businesses and Individuals in the Construction of a Surveillance Society. InfraGard is not readily accessible to the general public. Its communications with the FBI and Homeland Security are beyond the reach of the Freedom of Information Act under the "trade secrets" exemption, its website says. And any conversation with the public or the media is supposed to be carefully rehearsed.  more

Resolved Question: Why is Infragard infiltrating private business with preparations for Martial Law? Orders Shoot to Kill?

http://www.progressive.org/mag_rothschild0308 More than 23,000 representatives of private industry are working quietly with the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security. The members of this rapidly growing group, called InfraGard, receive secret warnings of terrorist threats before the public does—and, at least on one occasion, before elected officials. In return, they provide information to the government, which alarms the ACLU. But there may be more to it than that. One business executive, who showed me his InfraGard card, told me they have permission to “shoot to kill” in the event of martial law. InfraGard is “a child of the FBI,” says Michael Hershman, the chairman of the advisory board of the InfraGard National Members Alliance and CEO of the Fairfax Group, an international consulting firm. To join, each person must be sponsored by “an existing InfraGard member, chapter, or partner organization.” The FBI then vets the applicant. On the application form, prospective members are asked which aspect of the critical infrastructure their organization deals with. These include: agriculture, banking and finance, the chemical industry, defense, energy, food, information and telecommunications, law enforcement, public health, and transportation. "They said when—not if—martial law is declared, it was our responsibility to protect our portion of the infrastructure, and if we had to use deadly force to protect it, we couldn’t be prosecuted,” Is this going to be the Blackwater for US citizens? whip: Will you say that when you have been deemed a terrorist as defined by the Patriot Act which says that anybody can be deemed a terrorist? rickinno: "InfraGard is a perfectly open and legitmate organization, membership in which confers NO law enforcement powers on its members." Yeah I feel a lot safer knowing that exMcDonalds employees with twitchy fingers will be toting around 9mm's in my place of employment. My friends if you are interested in this story change the link above to..... http://www.progressive.org/mag_rothschild.....take the periods off the end of the link and replace them with 0308. Something funny is going on here I quess Yahoo is being infiltrated too. Spell out the full name rothschild too. rothschild0308  more

Resolved Question: Working in the US, entry level finance jobs?

Hi,im expecting to graduate my master of financial analysis in June 2008 from an Australian university.I also have a bachelor of business majoring in international business marketing. internships. I am fluent in both Japanese and English and am turning 22 this year. I do not have any finance related working expriences or interships. However, I really do want to find an entry level job in the US. As long as it is a finance job and a position in the bank/consulting firm, I am happy with it. Does anyone know the chances of gettting sponsored by a US firm for fresh graduates? THANKS!  more

Voting Question: Changing Careers - Advice on moving from Business Development to IT?

I am a 25 yr old female interested in getting a job as an IT professional- either working with networks, systems architecture, web applications, information architecture, and systems analysis/organization. I need advice on: 1. What are the best resources to help me get into this field? 2. Education- What are the key beginner classes/training that I should sign up for? 3. With background in business, what types of jobs should I be looking for to get my foot in the door? 4. Company recommendations? Background: Have worked in Business Development and Account Management in both a medium size corporate research and consulting firm as well as a small nfp trade association. Graduate with a BS in Business & International Relations from a tier one school. Have working knowledge of database administration, html, and general computer and web related technologies.  more

Resolved Question: Why does bush want to stay in Iraq if the majority of the people don't?

Congress Must Cut Off Bush Family War Profits by Evelyn Pringle Global Research, April 10, 2007 Countercurrents.org - 2007-04-11 Email this article to a friend Print this article On Monday, April 9, 2007, the Boston Herald reported that the US military had announced the Easter weekend deaths of 10 more American soldiers, including six killed on Sunday. The Associated Press reports that, since the war began in March 2003, over 3,000 members of the US military have been killed in Iraq, as of April 8, 2007. The military reported the deaths of four more US soldiers on Tuesday. Its nearly impossible to estimate the number of deaths of civilians in Iraq, but the Herald reports that at least 47 people were killed or found dead in violence on Easter Sunday, including 17 execution victims dumped in the capital. News releases out of Iraq also report that a woman wearing a black veil and strapped with explosives blew herself up outside a police station in Iraq on Tuesday, killing 16 people. According to the January 14, 2007 LA Times, Steven Kosiak, director of budget studies at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments in Washington, says that, starting with the anti-terrorism appropriation a week after the 9/11 attacks, he estimates the US has spent $400 billion fighting terrorism through fiscal 2006, which ended on September 30, 2006. In January 2007, Marine Corps spokeswoman, Lt Col Roseann Lynch, told Reuters that the war in Iraq is costing about $4.5 billion a month for military “operating costs,” which did not include new weapons or equipment. Since this war on terror was declared following 9/11, the pay levels for the CEOs of the top 34 defense contractors have doubled. The average compensation rose from $3.6 million during the period of 1998-2001, to $7.2 million during the period of 2002-2005, according to an August 2006, report entitled, "Executive Excess 2006," by the Washington-based, Institute for Policy Studies, and the Boston-based, United for a Fair Economy. This study found that since 9/11, the 34 defense CEOs have pocketed a combined total of $984 million, or enough, the report says, to cover the wages for more than a million Iraqis for a year. In 2005, the average total compensation for the CEOs of large US corporations was only 6% above 2001 figures, while defense CEOs pay was 108% higher. But the last name of one family, which is literally amassing a fortune over the backs of our dead heroes, matches that of the man holding the purse strings in the White House. On December 11, 2003, the Financial Times reported that three people had told the Times that they had seen letters written by Neil Bush that recommended business ventures in the Middle East, promoted by New Bridges Strategies, a firm set up by President Bush’s former campaign manager, who quit his Bush appointed government job as the head of FEMA, three weeks before the war in Iraq began. Neil Bush was paid an annual fee to "help companies secure contracts in Iraq," the Times said. But Neil Bush is by no means the only Bush profiting from the war on terror. The first President Bush is so entangled with entities that have profited greatly that it's difficult to even know where to begin. Bush joined the Carlyle Group in 1993, and became a member of the firm's Asian Advisory Board. The Carlyle Group was best known for buying defense companies and doubling or tripling their value and was already heavily supported by defense contracts. But in 2002, the firm received $677 million in government contracts, and by 2003, its contracts were worth $2.1 billion. Prior to 9/11, some Carlyle companies were not doing so well. For instance, the future of Vought Aircraft looked dismal when the company laid off 20% of its employees. But business was booming shortly after the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq began, and the company received over $1 billion in defense contracts. The Bush family's connections to the Osama bin Laden's family seem almost surreal. On September 28, 2001, two weeks after 9/11, the Wall Street Journal reported that, "George H.W. Bush, the father of President Bush, works for the bin Laden family business in Saudi Arabia through the Carlyle Group, an international consulting firm." As a representative of Carlyle, one of the investors that Bush brought to Carlyle was the Bin Laden Group, a construction company owned by Osama's family. The bin Ladens have been called the Rockefellers of the Middle East, and the father, Mohammed, has reportedly amassed a $5 billion empire. According the Journal, Bush convinced Shafiq bin Laden to invest $2 million with Carlyle. The Journal found that Bush had met with the bin Ladens at least twice between 1998 and 2000. On September 27, 2001, the Journal reported that it had confirmed that a meeting took place between Bush Senior and the bin Laden family through Senior's Chief of Staff, Jean Becker, but only after the reporter showed her a thank you note that was written and sent by Bush to the bin Ladens after the meeting. The current President’s little publicized affiliation with the bin Laden family goes back to his days with Arbusto oil when Salem bin Laden funneled money through James Bath to bail out that particular failed company. Probably the most eerie report about this strange group of bedfellows is that on 9/11, the day that served as a kick-off for the highly profitable war on terror, Shafiq bin Laden attended a meeting in the office of the Carlyle Group, and stood watching TV with other members of the firm as the WTC collapsed. The fact that so many Saudis, including many bin Ladens, were allowed to fly out of the country right after 9/11, while Americans were still grounded, has always seemed a bit strange to most people also, especially when nobody in the Bush administration was able to explain who gave permission for the flights. About a month after 9/11, in October 2001, the Carlyle Group severed its ties with the Bin Laden Group, but the Bush family did not. In January 2002, Neil Bush took a trip to Saudi Arabia that was sponsored by the Bin Laden Construction Company and Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, the same Prince who offered New York Mayor, Rudy Giuliani $10 million to help the 9/11 victims, a gesture that Rudy refused. In the fall of 2003, Bush Senior finally resigned from the Carlyle Group as the accusations of family war profiteering grew louder. However, according to the Washington Post, he still retained stock in the firm and gave speeches on its behalf for a fee of $500,000. Carlyle companies have also scored big in the Homeland Security bonanza. Federal Data Systems and US Investigations Services hold multi-billion- dollar contracts to provide background checks for airlines, the Pentagon, the CIA and the Department of Homeland Security. US Investigations used to be a federal agency, until it was privatized in 1996 and taken over by Carlyle. Marvin and Jeb Bush are also highly successful members of the family war profiteering team. Marvin is a co-founder and partner in Winston Partners, a private investment firm, and Jeb is an investor in the Winston Capital Fund, which is managed by Marvin. Winston Partners is part of the Chatterjee Group, which owned 5.5 million shares in a company called Sybase in 2001, a firm that had contracts worth $2.9 million with the Navy, $1.8 million with the Army and $5.3 million with the Department of Defense. All totaled, the federal procurement database listed the firm's contracts that year as $14,754,000. And, Sybase was not the only company delivering war profits to Marvin and Jeb. The portfolio of Winston Partners also included the Amsec Corp, which, in 2001, was awarded $37,722,000 in Navy contracts. Marvin's business partner, Scott Andrews, sat on the board of directors at AMSEC, and the company's CEO was Michael Braham, who formerly worked for Paul Bremer, the leader of the Coalition Provisional Authority responsible for handing out contracts Iraq. This is the same Paul Bremer who used Iraqi money from the Development Fund for Iraq to award 5 no-bid contracts to Dick Cheney’s cash cow, Halliburton, worth $222 million, $325 million, $180 million, and $194 million combined for the last two, according to a July 28, 2004, report by the CPA Inspector General Stuart Bowen, entitled, "Comptroller Cash Management Controls over the Development Fund for Iraq." As it turns out, Halliburton received 60% of all contracts paid for with Iraqi money. In a January 2005 report, Inspector Bowen concluded that occupation authorities accounted poorly for $8.8 billion in Iraqi funds, and said, "The CPA did not implement adequate financial controls.” The President's uncle, William (Bucky) Bush, is the most visible war profiteer on the team. He sat on the board of a major military contractor called Engineered Support Systems. Six months before the war in Iraq began, on September 16, 2002, CNN/Money Magazine called ESS one of "seven defense stocks that fund managers like," and one fund manager said ESS was one of two companies that "would gain the most from a war from Iraq." As a director, Uncle William received a monthly fee and held stock options. In January 2003, before the Iraq war began, he owned 33,750 shares of stock, but a year later, in January 2004, he owned 56,251. The fact that Uncle William had an inside line to the White House can hardly be disputed. On March 25, 2003, Bush asked Congress for funding, "to cover military operations, relief and reconstruction activities in Iraq, and ongoing operations in the global war on terrorism," and the very next day, ESS announced a large order from the Army for its Chemical Biological Protected Shelter systems. Uncle William has become a very rich man since his nephew took office. In January 2005, SEC filings show that he made about $450,000 by selling ESS stock. But he did even better the next year. According to the Excess Report, through a series of defense contracts, ESS earnings reached record levels and set the stage for the sale of the firm to another defense contractor, DRS Technologies, in January 2006, and among the beneficiaries of the deal was Uncle William, who cleared $2.7 million in cash and stock off the sale. Its time for Congress to stop the direct deposits of tax dollars into the Bush bank accounts. Lawmakers need to notify the White House that all funding for Iraq is done, other than what is needed for the immediate removal of our troops from this disgusting war profiteering scheme.  more

Resolved Question: Do CEOS really work hard enough to justify these gaps?

As executive pay has surged in most American companies, attention has focused on the growing gap between the earnings of top executives and the average wage of workers in cubicles or on the shop floor. Little noticed, though, is how much the gap has also widened between the summit and the next few echelons down. “It’s executive pay chasing executive pay,” said Mark Van Clieaf, managing director of MVC Associates International, a consulting firm that develops compensation plans. “But nobody looked at the issue of internal pay equity, so the disparity just kept getting bigger.” http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/25/business/25execs.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin These aren't the people on the floor, this is talking about the people one or two steps below.  more

Resolved Question: I'm about to turn 35, and I've been thinking about getting my nose pierced.?

I'm a fairly attractive, down-to-earth, overweight, African-American woman about to turn 35, and I've been thinking about getting my nose pierced with a small diamond or gold stud. I work at a architectural/engineering consulting firm where the attire is pretty much "business casual" (meaning, fairly business-like with clients-- but not Goldman-Sachs conservative, and pretty damn casual if just in the office on a day where there won't be any client meetings-- jeans and t-shirt are acceptable, though most people wear khaki's and nice sweaters or button-up shirts). Should I do it? Are piercings passé? Am I too old? Will I stunt my career growth (I am actually thinking about pursuing jobs in international development in the future)? Will I impede opportunities to find a husband? Please help!! :)  more

Resolved Question: business Partners?

In the past two years, I moved to latin America to open an office. It is a s coporation in Colombia and everything is legal. The long term goal is to be a consulting firm in order to get American investors to invest in Colombia while the short term goal is to do outsourcing work. Americans are investing heavily in this country and its a perfect opportunity to be there. At the moment we can handle translations, Paralegal, Bookeeping, Webpages, Graphics , Ilustration, and drafting since we have a great team of hard working employees that already know the American system since I have been training them. We are now over the planning and structural stages and are ready to tackle outsourcing projects and international connections. We need a partner that will help us find clientele and bring work. If interested let me know or let me know where to find te partners. I intend to run the operations in Colombia and partner runs operation in USA.  more

Resolved Question: What studies/internships do I have to do to be an NBA general manager/team president?

I'm studying towards getting a Msc in International Management, delivered by 3 leading universities in Europe, from the UK (City University, Cass Business School in London), France (ESCP-EAP in Paris) and Spain (Carlos III in Madrid). This programme has been ranked as high as 3rd in Europe by The Financial Times. The ranking was done is early september 2006. Needless to say, I'm a fanatic NBA/basket-ball supporter, playing myself in my university first team. I've had several internship experiences, with consulting, law and diamond-industry firms.  more

Resolved Question: What is the best programming language to learn if you would like to get into a big 4 consulting firm i.e...PwC

I am currently a college student in my freshman year and have a ton of time on my hands. I would like to apply for a consulting internship with a big four consulting firm such a PwC, KMPG...etc. after my softmore year and i have been told that the chances are slim getting after my softmore year, and that if i don't learn to program the chances will be none...so i am going to learn to program, and i need to know what is the most important language to know for big four consulting firms...preferably a list in preferencial order. Please however do not respond with a list of your favorite languages. I don't want to learn the poplular programming languages, but rather the ones that a big for consulting firm would expect you to know. I am currently and Industrial Engineer major w/ a minor in business admin. Future plans...international MBA...and then a job in one of the big four consulting firms. i didn't think i would have to clarify myself but i was referring to programming languages.  more

Resolved Question: We are a small US consulting firm. Do we need to partner with a chinese company to do business in China?

Our firm -- Project Success, Inc. -- has been approached by a Chinese real estate company to provide project management training to their organization. We have sold and delivered international projects before, but never in China. If we decide to accept this assignment, what must we do to in order to do business in China?  more

Resolved Question: Venture Capital?

I run a consulting firm specializing in helping large US and International contractors and construction owners in the construction industry in the areas of pre-construction and project management. The business is generating income but I want to expand the model and develop a utility management tool (software) that reflects my business philosophy and approach. In order to do this I need financing, but I don't want to take a loan, I prefer equity based financing. Any ideas where to start and how to approach this?  more

Resolved Question: I provide data and consulting services about China pharmaceutical market. How to let potential customers know?

How to find who are interested in the service, and how to promote and advertise? (simple but effective ways are better) These customers may be: product manager, international business director, pharmaceutical companies, market research firms, etc. What are the others who may also be intersted in this service? The service include providing data, information, analysis and strategies about China healthcare market/industry and pharmaceutical marketing. www.pharmsino.com (under construction) Thank you very much for your answer  more
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