Becky started Small Biz Survival in 2006 to share rural business and community building stories and ideas with other small town business people. She and her husband have a small cattle ranch and are lifelong entrepreneurs. Becky is an international speaker on small business and rural topics.
Other small biz blogs, particularly yours now, are my main sources for information. You have a wealth of articles and links on most conceivable topics.
From the links on small biz blogs, I will often search for a recommended book to get more in-depth information than a blog post can provide.
If the answer fails me from that point, I will do a Tweetdeck keyword search and go through the links I can find that way. I find this kind of search much more efficient than a Google search on the same keywords.
I recommend finding the closest Chapter of SCORE (www.SCORE.org). This SBA funded organization provides FREE consulting to any small business with questions on forming a business, growing a business, or solving a business problem. The counselors are, for the most part, retired business executives who are volunteering their time to “give back” to their community. If there’s no Chapter near you, SCORE does email counseling as well.
I have been trying to better manage my RSS subscriptions in Google Reader to be able to have a wealth of small biz information, without the clutter of a standard web search. Some of my favorite blogs lately, in addition to yours, are:
– BizBox (Slate) – OnStartups – Small Business CEO – Small Business Trends – Startup Lessons Learned – The Entrepreneurial Mind – The Inspired Protagonist – The Science of Work – Toilet Paper Entrepreneur
I agree with Bobbie on Twitter searches. I have also found LinkedIn Q&A to be very good.
Becky – first off, let me just say I’m happy I stumbled upon your blog the other day.
In terms of small business info, in addition to blogs and mags, I go old school for this stuff. I tend to contact my offline network of small businesses. I’m lucky in that my position is conducive to knowing a lot of small businesses, but I think everyone knows at least a handful of entrepreneurs, and they can be excellent sources of info.
Interesting! Now I’m not surprised about y’all using blogs, but y’all did surprise me with the breadth of other ways you find useful. Thanks for your insights.
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Howdy!
Glad you dropped in to the rural and small town business blog, established in 2006.
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Becky,
Other small biz blogs, particularly yours now, are my main sources for information. You have a wealth of articles and links on most conceivable topics.
From the links on small biz blogs, I will often search for a recommended book to get more in-depth information than a blog post can provide.
If the answer fails me from that point, I will do a Tweetdeck keyword search and go through the links I can find that way. I find this kind of search much more efficient than a Google search on the same keywords.
I recommend finding the closest Chapter of SCORE (www.SCORE.org). This SBA funded organization provides FREE consulting to any small business with questions on forming a business, growing a business, or solving a business problem. The counselors are, for the most part, retired business executives who are volunteering their time to “give back” to their community. If there’s no Chapter near you, SCORE does email counseling as well.
I have been trying to better manage my RSS subscriptions in Google Reader to be able to have a wealth of small biz information, without the clutter of a standard web search. Some of my favorite blogs lately, in addition to yours, are:
– BizBox (Slate)
– OnStartups
– Small Business CEO
– Small Business Trends
– Startup Lessons Learned
– The Entrepreneurial Mind
– The Inspired Protagonist
– The Science of Work
– Toilet Paper Entrepreneur
I agree with Bobbie on Twitter searches. I have also found LinkedIn Q&A to be very good.
Becky – first off, let me just say I’m happy I stumbled upon your blog the other day.
In terms of small business info, in addition to blogs and mags, I go old school for this stuff. I tend to contact my offline network of small businesses. I’m lucky in that my position is conducive to knowing a lot of small businesses, but I think everyone knows at least a handful of entrepreneurs, and they can be excellent sources of info.
Interesting! Now I’m not surprised about y’all using blogs, but y’all did surprise me with the breadth of other ways you find useful. Thanks for your insights.