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Do you have permission to Play Music On Your Site?

March 28, 2011 by Raul Colon

Beware of  the Music you use on your site you just may be breaking the law and copyright infringements. There are laws that you need to learn about if you are posting music on your website, an on-line slideshow, or even YouTube video. These laws protect the rights of music artists ,their work, and how the consumer uses or shares their product.

A question arose from one of our clients trying to find music that was protected under creative commons. A slideshow of one of their events made by a third party contained music that was violating copyright laws.

How could we help the client understand that the music they are using is violating a law and still help them create a slideshow for the website?

I asked for help from Jose “Pepe” Pesante (@joeprog) radio host of  http://frecuenciasalternas.com and editor-in-chief of  http://vorticeonline.com for assistance with finding a site under creative commons related to the music industry. Thanks to his expertise, he was able to provided me two sites; one called SoundCloud and the other Bandcamp. Both offer CC licensing and options for purchase, free download or streaming only.

I would recommend SoundCloud over Bandcamp because it is very obvious that it is for sharing. SoundCloud 101 is a simple guide that has a section for music artists and those looking for music, regarding the terms of their site.  It also provides details of how one shares music under the creative commons license. There are samples you can listen to on the main page.

You can sign up for both sites as an artist or group promoting your music as long as you are complying with U.S. copyright laws and the websites’ Terms of Use.

Here are the links to some of the sites that I found useful that talk about copyright law for music along with links to SoundCloud and BandCamp.

http://mpa.org/copyright_resource_center/copying

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_copyright_law

http://soundcloud.com/

http://bandcamp.com/


photo credit by bwhistler

Filed Under: Uncategorized, Web & Blog Design Tagged With: Content, Resources, Sharing Music, Small Business, Social Monitoring, Web & Blog Design

Friendly Tool To Monitor the Web

February 9, 2011 by Raul Colon

This morning visiting @BeckyMcCray’s Small Business Survival blog I found this very useful post An easy tool to monitor the web. I went ahead an tried the tool and searching for keywords online could not be easier with a great dashboard. So I invite you to read An easy tool to monitor the web.

Then also take Addict-o-Matic for a test drive and let me know what you think!

Filed Under: Blog, Uncategorized Tagged With: Small Business, Social Media

Starting a Business in Seven Steps by @raffel

January 26, 2011 by Raul Colon

Content and post from jimraffel.com

There are many details involved in starting a business. Here, I’ve boiled it down to the seven that I have found to be most important to continuing business success.

1. Open a checking account. The moment you make the decision to go in business for yourself, open a new checking account. Decide how much you are willing to invest (lose) giving this business idea a shot. Fund the account with that amount. By the way, your accountant is going to love you because you will not be commingling personal and business funds. Also, until you setup an accounting system you have a basic way to keep track of expenses and income.

2. Decide upon legal structure. There is no right answer for this step. I’ve been a sole proprietor, a member of an LLC and probably will have S and C corps before my career is over. This is the time to call on the professionals in your circle. Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of each with your accountant and attorney. Then, you can make an informed choice; a choice, by the way, that is not etched in stone.

3. Decide on an accounting system. If I was doing it over again I’d probably use something like FreshBooks.com and OutRight.com. Again you’ll want to consult with your professional support to decide on issues like; calendar year versus fiscal year; cash basis versus accrual accounting methods and other details that matter but can be worked out quickly with professional assistance.

4. Sell something. I’d actually be totally okay with this being your step number 1. There is really nothing wrong with selling first. I’ve read enough business success stories to know that getting out there and selling is the key to success. In the early days, when the founder of Sam Adams brewery wasn’t quite sure what he should be doing, he took a six pack of beer and walked into six pubs and let the bartender try the beer. It always resulted in increased distribution.

5. Spend about 10 seconds putting together basic marketing materials. I am talking about the very basics like a web-site and some business cards. It might take more than 10 seconds but honestly if you spend more than a day on this at this point in your business’ life, I think you are making a mistake. Later, when business is booming, you can hire a designer to clean up and improve upon what you’ve started.

6. Sell something else. The life blood of any business is revenue. Unless you’ve had past business successes and lots of capital (venture or otherwise) behind you, selling will be your #1 job. Early on, you will very likely sell the wrong things at the wrong prices. It’s okay as long as you protect the downside and don’t let any one transaction put you in a position that could put you out of business.

7. Decide what you should be selling. Now that you have sold a few things, decide if what you are selling is actually what you should be selling. I realize this may sound silly on the surface, but I learned early on what I could sell profitably and what I could not. Whatever your business is, you need to analyze your products and services mix often. Products that are profitable and awesome for your business today could be putting you in the red a year from now.

Once you have an ongoing concern, make sure to look at your books a minimum of once a month. I’m not talking about a glance at the financials. I’m talking about a solid hour or two of uninterrupted time figuring out what is working and what is not. Once a year, I look at all our monthly expenses and commit to cutting them by 20% no matter what. It’s never been difficult to do so.

Obviously, every startup will be different but I suspect the steps that work for you will be approximately the same. Did I miss any important ones?

Photo Credit

Learn More About the Author

Jim Raffel is the CEO at ColorMetrix Technologies, LLC a company he co-founded in 1996. Jim earned a B.S. degree in Printing Management at Rochester Institute of Technology in 1986. After graduation Jim worked as a quality control manager assisting in the start-up of two 8/9 unit web presses. Jim then engaged in two years of independent consulting while developing an early version of the ColorMetrix software. The consulting assignments were diverse and took Jim to places as far away as New Zealand. Next, came a position as a special projects manager with a large web printer. Jim worked on and managed projects related to quality and productivity enhancement through the use of technology. One project alone added over two million dollars to the company bottom line. During this same period Jim earned an MBA from Keller Graduate School of Management in 1994.  In addition to managing the day-t0-day operations of ColorMetrix Technologies, LLC, Jim writes daily at JimRaffel.com with his unique inspirational storying telling public speaker and small business CEO perspective.

Follow him on twitter @jimraffel

Filed Under: Small Business, Uncategorized Tagged With: Community Building, Marketing, Small Business, Tips

What's On Your Menu? #KTT

January 12, 2011 by Raul Colon

this is what was on the menu for the last episode.... it isn't legible on camera, so a lot of it is inside jokes of the crews

I had the opportunity yesterday to participate along @chrisbrogan and @joesorge on their weekly show Kitchen Table talks on thepulsenetwork.com. If you run a small business it might not be a bad idea to tune in at 2pm Est. every tuesday.

[blackbirdpie url=”http://twitter.com/#!/chrisbrogan/status/24908195327643648″]

The menu referring to the list of services or products you provide your clients. With my business I have been tailoring and tweaking my services to what my customer’s needs are. A few days ago I went ahead and launched my website with a New Logo try to give it a fresh look. I am currently working on what I need to offer my clients and migrating my website I did bring some service descriptions I want to edit others that I deleted.

Overall I have to admit I created services and then went after the clients I guess I had to look for the clients and find what pain or burden I could take off their hands before I structured my products.

I think @webby2001 really nailed it in the head when he clarified the question @chrisbrogan had asked me with the following tweet.

[blackbirdpie url=”http://twitter.com/#!/webby2001/status/24909853902249985″]

This really helped me understand how I need to tweak my menu.

Do you think of your clients problems and pain points when creating a menu?

I really want to thank @chrisbrogan and @joesorge for giving me the opportunity to interact with them.

Filed Under: Blog, News and Press, Small Business, Uncategorized Tagged With: Chris Brogan, Small Business, Social Media

Week 2: The Paperwork Begins

April 6, 2009 by Raul Colon

  • Do you have a crosscut Shredder? Stay away from the strip shredders they are more for convenience than security.
  • Get a mid-range crosscut shredder (about $150- $300)
  • Everything paper goes through the shredder: anything with addresses, credit card info, schedules, phone numbers, and travel itineraries.
  • “Why?” Well, criminals and people with malicious intent like to “dumpster dive” for those juicy credit card numbers and passwords. It gets the “diver” maybe USD$15, and you get to spend 10 years cleaning up your financial reputation. (You just knew there was more paperwork.)

← Week 1 — Week 3 →

 

Main Article 7 Week Plan to Safeguard Your Small Business Assets

 

Filed Under: 7 Week Plan to Safeguard Small Business Assets, Uncategorized Tagged With: IT Security, Planning, Small Business

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