Tag Archives: Business Advice

The Solo Wedding

What’s the first thing you need for a wedding… a bride and groom, right?  Not if you’re Japanese company Cerca Travel who have started organising solo weddings for women who want the experience but not the commitment.

The companies Solo Wedding is a two-day excursion where clients spend the night in a hotel as they go in for dress fittings, bouquet design, hair and make-up and even a full photo shoot.  Each of these services is handled by a professional in the industry and done with the same level of quality and attention to detail as a real wedding ceremony.

When she’s ready, the ‘bride’ is taken to a beautiful location for a commemorative photo shoot.  There’s even the option to have a decorative man between the ages of 20 and 70 to pose alongside you.

I don’t know what to make of this and have no idea whether British women might buy into this kind of service – but stranger things have worked!

Quote Of The Day

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Diogenes

Alternative Quote Of The Day

“I never know what to get my father for his birthday. I gave him a hundred dollars and said, ‘Buy yourself something that will make your life easier. ‘So he went out and bought a present for my mother.”

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Genetic Dating…

We’ve covered myriad dating concepts over the past couple of years and I suppose it was only a matter of time before someone turned to science.

Singled out is a San Diego-based company that has devised an algorithm that matches single people based partly on DNA compatibility and partly on the results from a psychological questionnaire.  The company claim they can determine chemistry between two people based on their genes.  Singled out works with Instant Chemistry, a Toronto-based lab services company that administers the DNA testing and determines the basic genetic profiles of members.

Subscriptions cost $149 for three months and £199 for six months, but the company have wider plans. They are investigating the possibility of companies using genetic profiling for everything from putting together work teams to creating the office seating chart.

I’ve no idea how successful this is likely to be for the end user, but it’s an angle. And in a crowded market that’s what you need.  There’s certainly a lot of interest in DNA and genetic profiling so any service that uses them should certainly get attention.

Who will be the first to bring it to the UK?

Today’s National Day

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NATIONAL BLACK CAT DAY!

PUBLISHERS NOTICE

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Text Book Arbitrage

At its most basic, arbitrage means little more than buying at one price in one market and then selling at a higher price in another. Sometimes that shift in market can be geographic, and at others – as is the case here – it can be a shift over time.

I just read an article about a guy called Bob Peterson in the United States who figured out that the market for college textbooks was unlikely to be stable. He did an analysis of online selling prices and found, sure enough, that prices swung widely through the year in line with the academic calendar. Prices were at their lowest in the summer and then went through the roof once the college year started. This was a discovery that enabled him to double his money each term by buying in summer.

Two things to take from this I think:

1.  Why not copy this simple arbitrage system in the UK?

2.  What other products display a similar demand cycle?

Maybe there’s a clue in the very last word I just typed!

Quote Of The Day

“The big secret in life is that there is no big secret. Whatever your goal is, you can get there if you’re willing to work.”

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Oprah Winfrey

Alternative Quote Of The Day

“A computer once beat me at chess, but it was no match for me at kickboxing.”

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Emo Philips


It’s Been A Good Month For…

Publishers, with the news that Bloomsbury has reported that — thanks to lockdown and people have more time to read — it has had its best half-year profits since 2008. Earnings rose by 60% to £4m between February and August as book sales soared.

Kim Kardashian, who won $6.1m from her bodyguard and his company after she accused him of failing to protect her during and armed robbery in Paris where part of her extensive jewellery collection was stolen.

IT’S BEEN A BAD MONTH FOR …

James Dyson, who lost $11m on selling his property in Singapore. The arch Brexiteer announced his company’s headquarter’s move to the city shortly after Brexit. It is said to be Singapore’s largest apartment.

Gareth Gates, the pop singer, who reported that he trades currencies and once lost £250,000 investing with a shady “expert”

Today’s National Day

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NATIONAL HAPPY HOUR DAY!

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Outfoxing Pension Pilferers

Pension savers could be paying tens of thousands of pounds in unnecessary charges over the course of a lifetime. Life insurers, who have traditionally dominated the market for private pension plans, charge over the odds. A 38-year-old saver with a £100,000 pension plan today and investing £10,000 a year for the next 30 years could lose almost £100,000 owing to excess charges.

The data is based on the charges levied by pension providers for access to the same funds. Traditional life insurers fare very badly in such comparisons as they tend to have percentage-based administration fees, and as the savers’ funds appreciate, these become very costly. Flat fees, by contrast, are often much more affordable.

Broadly, criticism of the life insurers that account for a large part of the pension-fund market is accurate. Percentage-based fees do penalise savers with larger funds and several insurers charge uncompetitive percentages.

Quote Of The Day

“The only place where success comes before work is in the dictionary.”

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Vidal Sassoon

Alternative Quote Of The Day

“This used to be a government of checks and balances. Now it’s all checks and no balances.”

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Gracie Allen


Money Statistics

$45 — the price of a single ounce of the world’s most precious brand of prime beefsteak: Japanese Ozaki.

One million — the number of shares Apple boss Tim Cook could receive in the business by 2025 if the tech titan continues to perform strongly. It would be his second stock grant, mirroring the one million shares he received on taking over from Apple co-founder Steve Jobs in 2011. The award is worth between $76m and $114m depending on Apple’s share price performance.

£7m — the price of a James Bond-like speedboat that can dive underwater. It is being developed for the British special forces.The Victa submersible is to undergo sea trials in early 2021.

£25.3m — how much the worlds’ youngest top birdwatcher (she has spotted half of the world’s 10,738 species), Mya-Rose Craig, 18, has sold the rights to her memoir for, following an auction involving 14 publishers.

€134,000 — the price for a tiny 6.51sm apartment at the top of a block of flats in Paris’ sought-after fourth arrondissement.

$383m — the amount Presidential candidate Joe Biden raised in September, breaking the $364.5m monthly record he set in August. It October his campaign said it had a $432m war chest at its disposal.

€500m — the value of benefit Italy receives from immigrants. In 2018, they paid €26.6bn in taxes, and received €26.1bn in state benefits.

£1.2bn — the annual earnings US rapper Dr Dre takes from his company.

$5.7bn — how much the eight films (plus spin offs) the petrol-fulled Fast & Furious franchise has made. There are plans for three more films before the old car is disassembled.

£1.2trn — the total value of assets so far that financial services firms operating in Britain have moved to the EU ahead of the end of the transition period on the 31st of December. That’s up from £1trn at the end of 2019.

Today’s National Day

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NATIONAL SUNDAE DAY!

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Portraits From Ashes

What do you do with the ashes when a loved one or favourite pet dies? Well some people keep them in an urn, others scatter them in a place of significance, but a Missouri painter offers a different solution. Adam Brown offers clients one-of-a kind artwork made from the remains of their relatives or pets. 

He produces the art using cremated remnants sent in by relatives and mixing them with paint pigment to create a “lasting memory” composition. “Having ashes in an urn on a mantle somewhere is a good way to constantly remind yourself that person died, but when you use them in an artwork it’s a good way to remember someone lived, “Brown says. 

I don’t know anything about the process, but this seems like a nice way to use the remains to create a lasting memorial. If you’re an artist, perhaps this is an opportunity to investigate further.

Quote Of The Day

“If you don’t have a competitive advantage, don’t compete.”

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Jack Welch

Alternative Quote Of The Day

“I was on a date with this really hot model. Well, it wasn’t really a date date. We just ate dinner and saw a movie…then the plane landed.”  

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Dave Attell


Trapping A Customer 

One of the hassles of travelling is packing and transporting everything you need for the trip. For business travellers, this is even more of a problem. They travel more frequently and often find themselves hauling their luggage backwards and forwards to the same destination. The Grand Hyatt hotel in Melbourne, Australia decided to do something about it, and gave themselves a competitive advantage at the same time. 

The Grand Hyatt now offers storage facilities for regular travellers complete with full laundry facilities. The hotel effectively becomes a home from home and once you have your stuff there well, where else are you going to stay next time you’re in Melbourne?

There are obviously advantages for the guest, but also advantages for the hotel. So is this an idea you could adopt or adapt? Is there some way you could ethically ‘trap’ your customers? Perhaps there’s something you could ‘store’ for them, meaning they will have to return. This will mean different things to different businesses, but something to think about.

Today’s National Day

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NATIONAL MEN MAKE DINNER DAY!

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Positive Downsizing

Home brewing equipment can take up a lot of space. Not much good when you live in a tiny flat or apartment.  It was this fact that led New York based, The Brooklyn Brewery Shop to develop a range of miniature brewing kits which fit the needs of it’s main apartment-based client base.

I’m not suggesting you copy the idea but rather, that you consider the thinking behind it. Is there some way you could provide a smaller version of your product (or even someone else’s product), which would open it up to a whole new market of space-challenged consumers? 

It’s this sort of thinking that probably led to the development of Endless Pools, in which you swim against a current and don’t actually travel anywhere.  There have to be scores of other products which would benefit from a bit of positive downsizing.

Quote Of The Day

“Positive thinking will let you do everything better than negative thinking will.”

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Zig Ziglar

Alternative Quote Of The Day

“People always say: You’re a comedian, tell us a joke. They don’t say: You’re an MP, tell us a lie.”

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Bob Monkhouse


Jeans Rental

I love the idea of rental businesses for a very simple reason people pay you to use something, but you get to keep it. It’s like selling the same thing over and over again but only having to buy it once. How far can you go with the rental model? Well how about renting jeans?

I just heard about a company in The Netherlands, Mud Jeans, which for around 6 Euro a month will rent you a pair of high end jeans for a year. At the end of the rental period the customer can then either return the jeans, buy them outright or replace them with a new pair.

To be perfectly honest, I’m not sure why you’d want to do this, but I’m the sort of person who thinks you should be able to buy a decent pair of jeans outright for less than £50. The market isn’t for old folk like me, that’s for sure.

I’m telling you about this because it opens up all sorts of possibilities. If you can make money renting like jeans, what other seemingly ‘un-rentable’ products could form the basis of a business?

Today’s National Day

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NATIONAL SAXOPHONE DAY!

PUBLISHERS NOTICE

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