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On Creativity
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Valentines seems to come and go so quickly. Once February starts, I’m only thinking of what candy to buy and cards to make for my children’s classmates. I thought it would be fun to do more as a family this Valentines, counting down the days and turning it into a holiday of service. We’re going [...]

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I recently wrote a post for Momformation all about a Snowman that “shreds” and I thought it might be fun extend the paper shredding to create a couple winter animals. We’re recycling our shredded paper, straight from our electronic shredder. I could even see a few old bills in pile! But it does make for [...]

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Q: Being creative comes easy to me. Should I try your patch anyway just to see what happens?

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I’m taking the next few Fridays to spotlight my amazing contributors. Next up on the list is Maria of Two Peas and Their Pod who contributes once a month to our Recipes page. I want to be Maria! Fabulous remodeled kitchen, darling new baby, and always making yummy meals, snacks, and cookies! Oh, her cookies! She’s [...]

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An Excerpt from the 25th Anniversary Edition of Living in the Light by Shakti Gawain. More...

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As a creative business owner you likely want to spend the majority of your time doing what you love most—being creative! And there is nothing creative about some of those pesky business details like financials, marketing, or time.Creating systems that you enjoy will help the pieces of your business that encourage growth that much easier. If you are like me the thought of excel sheets, cash legers, or press releases is such a turn off you simply don’t use them. Below I have outlined four areas to try new systems including ideas that have been fun and useful for my business.MoneyAreas of your financials to consider organizing are profit in/profit out, your annual projection, and where you can grow your business. There are more, but this is a good starting place. I use the following tools for keeping my money on track:Outright: This is an online accounting program/website that when signed into can look at your accounts and give you an up to date record of your profit and loss for the year. It’s quite handy considering you don’t have to do anything but sign in!Projection Sheet: You can find these all over. I use one that calculates my fixed and expected costs for the year, my profit centers, and my proposed growth. Then I can see how much money I can put back into my business for growth.A Monthly Envelope: Every month I take a blank envelope and write the month at the top. I write out my fixed expenses for the whole month. Then with every sale I record a + amount and every expense I write a – amount and place the receipt in the envelope. Each month the goal is to be out of the negative as soon as possible.A Large Filing Cabinet: I keep record of everything! I file away receipts organized by type so that I can call on my records when needed and be prepared January 1st for tax season.MarketingMarketing is rather daunting and its power doesn’t make it easy to approach. Try these tips for organizing your marketing for your entire year if you wanted:Seasonal Calendar: Write out the marketing or promotions you want to utilize based on the seasons and major holidays.Marketing Model: There are many, many ways to market your business. My personal favorites are the kinds that create connection to your business. I model out my marketing based on as many points of connection I can make. For example current or previous customers, referrals, local press about the business, press about me, joint ventures, seasonal promotions, new development promotion, and national press. Then I fill in each with different ideas.Product DevelopmentI use similar systems for product development as I do for marketing. I consider the following when writing or planning our product for the year:Customer RequestsPopular ProductsSeasonal NeedsHoliday NeedsAnother fun way to look at product scope is to visually create your dream line. Using sketches, photos, and words make your product vision board. You can lay everything out and then compile it within your seasonal calendar. This way you know when to market what, months in advance.Time ManagementTime is of the essence and yet so fleeting too. Time management is very useful as it creates focus, awareness, and quality work. To keep my time in a no-stress zone I use these tools:iCal: This little tool allows me to manage out my year and in different colors! Knowing my products and marketing for the year I can break down tasks that need to be accomplished first. I start my week with an understanding of what I am tackling already. Then I batch my work into smallish time (90 minutes) to allow for flow.Stickies: I am a daydreamer, so if I don’t write down the distracting thoughts I can’t move on. Stickies is a desktop program and I let it collect my randomness until I am ready to tackle it, or file it away.Creative Time: I made this up, but my creative time is the time in my day I know I am my most creatively charged. This happens to be from when I wake up until about 10 AM. Knowing this I try and do my most challenging or useful work in that time. No emails and no phone calls. Just me, and my thoughts.My Project Book (My #1 Favorite System) My project book is my favorite tool. It’s a binder that is organized into goals, marketing, brand, product, press, joint ventures, events, and notes. Since I am a daydreaming I need something to capture my long-term imagination for my business. Ideas, contacts, upcoming thoughts, even five or ten year goals get filed away. Whether they are active projects or not they keep me moving forward while growing my business.To put a system in place may take some time, and not all are going to be a great fit! Find that one sweet system that gives the rest of your creative business clarity.Andrea Mansfield is the owner of Brand & Bloom where she guides creative women using clarity about their purpose and passion for a successful business.Main image courtesy of gadl

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Have you heard of Stitch?  Stitch is an online tool that is built for small business owners and artisans to manage inventory, contacts, orders, expenses, and more.We met the folks who built Stitch this past year at the Conference of Creative Entrepreneurs in San Francisco and in addition to an impressive online tool, they might just be the nicest people around!Here are just a few reasons why you should consider using Stitch for your business:Inventory Management:  Build and manage your entire product catalog and inventory with a few simple clicks.Order Fulfillment & Invoices: Stitch is more than just invoices, they help with the whole order fulfillment process too.All Your Contacts In One Place: Keep all your contacts, people, and addresses in one place and find them easily.Powerful Reports & Analytics: Know what is selling, what isn't and make smarter decisions for your business.These features can help make managing your business a heck of a lot easier.  And, Stitch will even help you migrate and import your contact and product data for free to help get you up and running quickly.If you want to amp up your inventory management, make sure you give Stitch a try.  And, the folks at Stitch have been nice enough to extend the free trial period from 30 to 45 days for all Meylah readers so be sure to use the promotional code ‘MEYLAH’ when signing up.To learn more, be sure and check out Stitch’s Tour and tell us about your experience using Stitch…we’d love to know what you think!

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There's been a lot of talk about taxes this time of year...and, rightfully so.  It's the time to start getting organized to help your business get on track for the year ahead.Here are 3 quick and easy financial tips for all small business owners to implement this year:1. Keep Your Receipts All In One PlaceGet your business finances in order for the year ahead by creating a place to store your paperwork.  This can be a binder, a drawer, a folder or just about anything else you can think of to collect and save all of your receipts and financial paperwork for the upcoming year.2. Manage Your Bookkeeping Year-RoundWhen tax time comes, make sure you aren't scrambling to get your numbers straight by keeping track of your books year-round.  Alleviate the stress by managing your bookkeeping on a regular basis (monthly or quarterly) so you can easily share the required information with the IRS when tax time hits.3. Attend A Tax WorkshopAttend a free tax workshop held by your state's department of revenue locally or online.  For example, here in Seattle the Washington State Department of Revenue has regular workshops where anyone can signup and learn the basics of taxes and the state's tax laws.  As a small business owner, these workshops are a great tool to help you understand your responsibilities for tax reporting.What other tips do you have for managing your finances for your small business?Main image courtesy of 401K

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We’re more than half-way through January. I have almost worked through the last of the snowman sugar cookies stashed in my freezer which means a couple of things: The holidaze have come and gone I’m most likely looking fat-tastic (that is not actually a good thing) It’s time to start my New Year’s Resolutions Wait, [...]

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While browsing the writing section at Barnes and Noble recently, I spotted The Write-Brain Workbook by our own Bonnie Neubauer (remember the Punny Costumes contest?). I suddenly remembered that Bonnie and I had discussed . . . More...

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