March 19, 2008
SBA Resources for Small Businesses
Posted by terigrasmussen under Business Formation, Business Operations, Corporate, Women Owned Businesses | Tags: Business.gov, exit strategies, government regulation, government resources, Ohio Business Gateway, SBA Small Business Administration, starting a business |
Joel Labiva has written a useful post over at the Small Business Trends blog, complete with links, about a variety of free tools for business folk available on the Small Business Administration’s website. They include information on:
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Small Business Planner (with information about what it means to be an entreprenuer anyway and including resources to help you write a business plan)
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Starting Your Business (including practical, legal, and financial issues)
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Managing Your Business (conceptual and practical advice about a variety of issues you’re likely to face on a day-to-day basis)
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Exit Strategies (useful information about getting out of the business both when it has been successful and when it has not)
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Other Tools (audio, video, and written materials covering a wide array of issues)
There’s also links to local SBA offices across the country, including Central Ohio, which contain information about local programming, resources, and success stories.
In addition, a related Business.gov website also published by SBA is worth a click. Anita Campbell of Small Business Trends blog wrote about “Ten Ways Business.gov Helps Your Business” several months ago.
I wholeheartedly agree with Anita’s assessment of this website. It has a tremendous amount of well organized information about governmental regulation and resources, as well as general information about a variety of concerns business owners may have. In addition, one thing I thought was especially useful was the available links to state and local governmental regulation and resources. See what there is for Ohio. There’s even a link to the Ohio Business Gateway which does a good job of aggregating information about conducting a business in Ohio in an accessible manner.
As Joel suggests, the SBA website (and the information available there), as well as Business.gov, are much improved from even a few years ago. Check out all that these websites now have to offer.
N.B. - For those of you who think you saw this post before and then it was gone and now it’s back, you’re right. I had a really bad day with the blog yesterday in which I accidentally managed inextricably to delete my biographical information, three draft posts (including a nearly complete one about franchising which is next up), and this post. So basically I had to rewrite this entire post.