Tradespeople and blogging aren’t often mentioned in the same breath, but there’s a strong case to be made for tradies jumping into the content marketing game as a way to strengthen their client base.
We’ve heard from business workshops, business coaches, marketing experts, academics and even other business owners on how important research is in business. But at a certain point does too much research become procrastination?
When Alex Hunt and Caitlin Jostlear decided to turn their passion for skateboards into a business, they did what many avoid doing by holding onto their full-time jobs.
Over the last 12 months, property prices across Australia have dropped by more than 10 percent, causing Australia’s property market bubble to begin deflating at the fastest rate in 10 years.
While the trades and construction industry has been a primarily male-dominated one for a long time, things are slowly beginning to change. So here’s some motivation and inspiration for all the hard-working women in hi-vis out there.
It happens to everyone; you start a solid business and initially growth is solid. But after that first rush things begin to slow down. How you react to a slow down in business growth may determine your long term viability.
So you want to offer your workers the chance to operate remotely but you’re unsure if you can trust them to do the right thing? The answer is a combination of tech and good management practices.
Taking on a personal assistant was once reserved for the higher echelons of management personnel. But with the dawn of the ‘always on’ work paradigm and modern information tech, the virtual assistant has become an affordable solution to a host of logistical problems.
Building a business is the kind of journey that teaches founders important lessons along the way. Many of these lessons they’d prefer not to have learned the hard way. Here are a few examples to help you get started the right way.