Category Archives: Business

Applebee’s Starting New Non-Profit Fundraising Effort

altArea Applebee’s restaurants are starting a new community outreach fundraising program for non-profits.

The Flapjack Fundraisers allows non-profits to host flapjack breakfasts at their local Applebee’s facilities to raise funds for their cause.

To help out, Applebee’s has launched a new website, www.AGGrestaurants.com. Using the site, groups can set up a fundraiser, print tickets, flyers and other materials to help promote their event.

“We know in these tough economic times that many non-profits are struggling to raise money for their cause, so we wanted to offer the charities in our communities an easy way to help meet their needs,” said Michael Olander, President and CEO of Apple Gold Group.

“In conjunction with launching the Flapjack Fundraising program, we are introducing our new website to help make these fundraisers run smoothly and effortlessly for both the charity and the individual restaurant.”

Once the charity registers a date for its Flapjack Fundraiser, the local Applebee’s restaurant will supply the non-profit organization with tickets to sell, marketing materials to help promote the event and complimentary kitchen staff for the morning of the event.

The Flapjack Fundraisers have been tested in several restaurants throughout the franchise, raising nearly $90,000 in just five months.

The event is sponsored by Apple Gold, Inc., which currently operates 72 restaurants in North Carolina, Arkansas and Oklahoma.

To register for a Flapjack Fundraiser, go to www.AGGrestaurants.com.

Hilti Earns Top Honors

For the fifth-straight year, Tulsa-based Hilti Inc. was named one of the best manufacturing companies to sell for in an annual magazine poll.

Hilti placed eighth in Selling Power magazine’s "50 Best Companies to Sell For" issue, which compares and evaluates the largest U.S. sales forces.

Selling Power’s annual rankings are based on scores in three key categories: compensation, training and career mobility. For compensation, the team looked at average starting salaries, incentive pay plans, availability of company cars and other benefit packages, such as health and wellness. In the training area, the time companies invest in both initial selling-skills training and product-knowledge training programs were examined. For career mobility, Selling Power looked at performance review frequency, sales force turnover and the number of salespeople promoted each year.

Hilti earned outstanding scores in every category, including tying for first place among manufacturers in the career mobility category. As the Selling Power editors note, “anyone entering the sales field should begin their efforts by taking a good look” at companies such as Hilti and others on the rankings list.

Hilti is a world-leading manufacturer and supplier of quality, innovative and specialized tools and fastening systems for the professional user. The company focuses on powder actuated fastening, drilling and demolition, diamond coring and cutting, measuring, firestopping, screw fastening, adhesive and mechanical anchoring, and strut and hanger systems. 

Real Time Rehab Wins Entrepreneur Award

Jeremy Green with Real Time Rehab won the grand prize in the Mayor’s Entrepreneurial Spirit Award competition.

He received a $30,000 check from SpiritBank and free space in the Tulsa Collaboratorium from Kandar Properties as the winner. The announcement was made by Mayor Kath Taylor and SpiritBank President Ted Cundiff.

Real Time Rehab provides physical therapists and clinicians with personalized rehabilitation programs for their patients. The programs are burned onto DVDs, providing patients with clear, step-by-step demonstrations of the exercises they need to perform to ensure a speedy and complete recovery.

 Part-Time Pros, who connects degreed, experienced professionals with part-time and contract employment took  2nd place and Cog Togs Inc., came in 3rd place with a social site that lets kids trade personalized beads with their friends then connect online to a social. Part-Time Pros received a check of $5,000 and Cog Togs Inc. received a check of $2,500, both provided by Spirit Bank.

“In the Spirit Award’s third year we are continuing to see entrepreneurs bring their best ideas forward,” Mayor Kathy Taylor said. “Our winners from the past two years have exemplified entrepreneurial spirit, and we are excited for the 2009 winners to build and expand their businesses in Tulsa.”

In its third year, the Mayor’s Entrepreneurial Spirit Award is designed to promote small business growth in Tulsa by providing networking and other business opportunities to area small businesses.

 “Over the past few years, we have had the opportunity to watch many of the entrepreneurs that have participated in this competition grow, expand, receive national recognition for their ideas and, most importantly, make an impact on our community,” stated Albert C. “Kell” Kelly, CEO of SpiritBank. “It is through this passion and spirit that other businesses will be inspired, which will in turn strengthen our economy and encourage small business growth in our city.”

Personal Finance For Dummies

 Best-selling author Eric Tyson says now is the perfect time to teach your kids some valuable financial lessions, especially in today’s climate.

With job layoffs, frozen pay raises and other economic impacts, Tyson said there’s no reason for parents to feel guilty because they can’t buy that video game their kid is screaming about or decide between karate and basketball.

Kids are surprisingly aware of what’s going on in the world,” says Tyson, author of Personal Finance For Dummies®, 6th Edition

“And if they don’t know that times are a little bit tough and that Mom and Dad are having to watch their spending, it’s time to tell them. Sheltering kids from financial realities does them no favors.”

Tyson says a good grasp of personal finance is one of the most valuable life skills a person can have. And while previous generations may have been raised with the constant admonishment that “money doesn’t grow on trees,” too many of today’s parents neglect that lesson. It’s time to change that—and the severe recession provides a great incentive for doing so.

“In many ways, a long-term financial slowdown can be a blessing in disguise,” admits Tyson. “It forces more families to make a budget and stick to it. It forces them to be conscious about how they handle money. That’s good for kids. It shows them how the world is supposed to work.”

Among the key points in the new book:

1. Tell them the truth. Kids are perceptive. If parents act anxious and on edge, kids will notice. Tell them what’s going on in the family’s financial world.

2. Explain to them how much things cost. Some parents are surprised to find out that their kids don’t have a very good grasp on what things cost.

3. Realize that kids learn what they live. It may sound like common sense, but parents are their kids’ most influential teachers. When parents ring up a barge-load of credit card debt, take out exorbitant mortgages or car loans, and fail to save anything, that’s what kids come to see as normal.

4. Deprogram them. Kids are constantly bombarded with information about what things cost, whether it’s the fancy sports car they like or the wardrobe of their favorite athlete or actor, not to mention the 40,000 commercials that the American Academy of Pediatrics estimates the average American child sees each year. What they aren’t bombarded with is knowledge concerning how to manage money effectively.

5. An allowance is a great teaching tool. A well-implemented allowance program can mimic many money matters that adults face every day throughout their lives. From recognizing the need to earn the green stuff to learning how to responsibly and intelligently spend, save, and invest their allowances, children can gain a solid financial footing from a young age.

6. Start them saving and investing early. It’s never too early to start saving, and the sooner parents instill the importance of saving money into their kids, the better.

7. Reduce their exposure to ads. The primary path to reduced exposure to ads is to cut down on TV time. But when an ad does sneak under the radar and set the kids to begging, address it. Explain to kids that there’s never a good time for frivolous impulse spending—but it’s especially harmful when money is tight.

8. Find entertaining ways to teach good money habits. For younger kids, Tyson recommends age-appropriate books or board games like Monopoly or Life.

9. Teach them how to shop wisely. Family shopping trips, whether for groceries or something else, are likely to be a kid’s kids’ first encounter with spending. They’ll see parents make decisions based on what the family needs and observe how they pay.

10. Introduce the right and wrong ways to use credit and debit cards. Those plastic cards in your wallet offer a convenient way to conduct purchases in stores, by phone, and over the Internet. Unfortunately, credit cards offer temptation for overspending and carrying debt from month to month.

11. Encourage older kids to get a job. An allowance doesn’t have to be the only way for your kids to earn money. Your child’s initial exposure to the work-for-pay world can start with something as simple as a lemonade stand.

Besides the learning opportunities it presents, there’s another positive to the recession, says Tyson. It forces families to be more thoughtful about how they spend their time—and this often leads to the stunning realization that money really doesn’t buy happiness.

“Often, all those unnecessary things we buy for ourselves and our kids are simply distractions from the people we love,” he says. “They send the message that it’s necessary to spend a lot of money in order to have a good time. It’s not, of course. The best things in life—friends, family, quiet evenings at home just being together—really are free. Sometimes it’s good to be reminded of that.”

About the author: Eric Tyson, MBA, is one of the nation’s best-selling personal finance book authors and has penned five national bestsellers (he is also the only author to have four of his books simultaneously on BusinessWeek’s business book bestseller list). His Personal Finance For Dummies (Wiley) won the Benjamin Franklin Award for the Best Business Book of the Year

Tulsa Hosting Entrepreneurs’ Week

Mayor Kathy Taylor, entrepreneurs, business leaders and educators will be hosting events throughout the week of November 16-20 for entrepreneurs, small business owners and anyone interested or supporters of entrepreneurialism.

Events highlighted during the week include the Global Entrepreneurship Week Kick-Off Event on November 16 at ONEOK Field, 11:30 a.m., The Mayor’s Entrepreneurial Spirit Award on November 17 at the TCC Center 4 Creativity, 5:30 p.m. and the Tulsey Awards on November 19 at Cain’s Ballroom, 7 p.m.

The Mayor’s Entrepreneurial Spirit Award is a business model competition that gives entrepreneurs the opportunity of submitting their business plan and entering into seven months of coaching and judging. Over eighty entrepreneurs submitted their business plans in April and now it’s down to seven, with the top three being announced the evening of the ceremony. The top three entrepreneurs will receive checks from SpiritBank- first place receiving $30,000, second place with $5,000 and third place with $2,500. More information about the Mayor’s Entrepreneurial Spirit Award can be found at www.tulsaspiritaward.com.

The Tulsey Awards Celebration will serve as the culmination for Tulsa Global Entrepreneurship Week. With a strictly online nomination and voting process, the Tulseys are publicly driven awards consisting of eleven categories: Civic, Emerging, Entertainment, Franchise, Green, Interactive, Restaurateur, Legend, Serial, Young and the coveted Entrepreneur of the Year. The winners of each category will be announced the evening of Nov.19. Voting can still be made at www.thetulseys.com until Tuesday, Nov. 10.

The complete list of Tulsa Global Entrepreneurship Week events are below and can also be found at www.tulsagew.com.

Monday, November 16, 2009
    
Global Entrepreneurship Week Kick-Off Event with Mayor Kathy Taylor
Presented by Tulsa Community College and the University of Tulsa
ONEOK Field
11:30 a.m. – 1 p.m.
RSVP to Michelle Allen by Nov 14th.
communicationdept@cityoftulsa.org

Tuesday, November 17, 2009
   
Tulsa Metro Chamber – Roundtable Connection Networking Event
Presented by Tulsa Metro Chamber
Renaissance Hotel (6808 S 107th E Ave)
7:30 a.m. – 10 a.m.
RSVP to Elaine Walsh by November 14th.
elainewalsh@tulsachamber.com

VizThink Tulsa – Visualizing the Steps to Starting Up Your Start-Up
Presented by Sean Griffin, Entrepreneur & Visual Thinker
SpiritBank Community
Room, 1800 S. Baltimore
11:30 a.m. – 1 p.m.
Free of Charge, Lunch Provided
RSVP to Lou Ann Lissonnet by Nov. 14th.  (louann@atmos.tv)

Mayor’s Entrepreneurial Spirit Award Ceremony
Sponsored by SpiritBank
Tulsa Community College Center for Creativity
Downtown Tulsa
5:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.
RSVP to Michelle Allen
communicationdept@cityoftulsa.org
www.tulsaspiritaward.com

Wednesday, November 18, 2008
   
Entrepreneurial and Small Business Coaching
Tulsa Collaboratorium
111 W. 5th Street. 10th Floor
4:30 – 6:00pm
RSVP to Lou Ann Lissonnet by Nov. 13
louann@atmos.tv
www.tulsacollab.com

Collaboratorium Open House and Entrepreneurial Celebration
Tulsa Collaboratorium
111 W. 5th Street. 10th Floor
6:00 – 8:00 p.m.
RSVP to Lou Ann Lissonnet by Nov. 13
louann@atmos.tv

Thursday, November 19, 2009

The Tulsey Awards
Cain’s Ballroom
423 N Main St
7 – 10 p.m.
For more information, contact Michelle Allen
communicationdept@cityoftulsa.org
www.thetulseys.com

Friday, November 20, 2009
   
Dr. Kevin Fleming speaks on "Transformational Leadership in a Family Business Culture"
Allen Chapman Activity Center, University of Tulsa
800 South Tucker Drive
Tulsa, OK
11:30am – 1pm
View Campus Map
FOBI Members: free.
Non-FOBI members: $20.00, includes lunch.
For reservations, contact Claire Cornell at 918.631.2684
claire-cornell@utulsa.edu