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Books Tarizon: Civil War
 Tarizon: The Liberator
 Act Normal, A Stan Turner Mystery Book 8
 Cactus Island, At Stan Turner Mystery Book 7
 Black Monday, A Stan Turner Mystery Vol 6
 Deadly Distractions, A Stan Turner Mystery Vol V
 Plastic Gods, A Rich Coleman Novel
 Ca$h Call, A Stan Turner Mystery
 Twice Tempted
 Trouble In Trinidad, A Tale of Love, Politics and Betrayal

Short Stories The Speech I Never Gave
 My First Literary Agent
 The Criminal Justice System
 Welcome to Tarizon
 Tarizon: Swarm 6222
 Faith Restored
 Hope and Strength
 A Million Fish
 River Of Peril
 Shooting the Bear

Articles Tarizon' advances bold science-fiction traditions
 The Hero's Crossroads by Todd Mercer
 Plano Profile Magazine Interviews William Manchee
 Hot Crime Trends
 Bitbooks, Digital Fiction Links
 Book signings will feature author of the Stan Turner mystery series
 Move Over Grisham
 Dallas Author's Trip to 'Trinidad' spells 'Trouble'
 Attitude
 MyShelf.com Author of the Month

Poetry For Love Only
 The Banker
 Oh, Ahmad!
 Wishing Astray
 The Prophecy
 Joshua
 A Lawyer's Lament
 Death Pact, The Poem
 Thirty-Five
 Beware of Your Banker
 More poetry... News 5th Stan Turner Mystery Released
 CA$H CALL, Release August 31 2002
 Second Chair Goes into Second Printing
 Audio Versions of Trouble In Trinidad Released.
 Death Pact Popular in Australia
 South Dakota Signing Marks 48th State Appearance
 Undaunted Goes Into Third Printing

Events Radio Interview Set
Manchee Signing at Barnes & Noble Saturday
Manchee to Sign at Barnes & Noble Ft. Worth
Manchee to Appear at Barnes & Noble
Manchee to Sign at Preston Royal Barnes & Noble
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| Category: |
Business/Investing |
Publisher: |
Top Publications, Ltd.
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ISBN-10: |
1929976240 |
Type: |
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| Pages: |
160 |
Copyright: |
Aug 1 2003 |
ISBN-13: |
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Non-Fiction |
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William Manchee's first non-fiction work is for small business owners. It's a How-Not-To-Do-It-Book designed to help small business owners indentify and avoid the many pitfalls in running a small business.
Written as a collection of short stories illustrating various business situations, Yes, We're Open is a comprehensive guide to defending small businesses in trouble. It first identifies common causes of small business failure, then suggest ways to return the business to profitability, and finally gives guidance on how to protect the business while it is struggling to survive.
Excerpt
Owning a successful small business is everyone’s dream at one time or another. For only the business owner is truly free. If you work for someone else, your life and destiny are in their hands. With little, if any, notice they can lay you off, making years of hard work meaningless. Or they can promise you the stars and then pass you by like a beggar on the street. But if you work for yourself, you are truly free—free to carve your own destiny and to go as far as your talents and ambition will take you.
Over the years I have presided over the births and deaths of hundreds of small businesses. As an attorney, I have watched many of them grow, mature, and thrive, but I have seen many more stumble, fall, and die.
It is painful to see an entrepreneur, once so full of hope and excitement, suddenly desperate and defeated. I am saddened when I drive down the street and see an empty storefront, as I know someone has suffered an immeasurable loss, and endured extraordinary grief and pain trying to save their piece of the American dream.
There are few experiences in life as painful and brutal as the failure of a small business. For a small business conceived and nurtured by its owner is like a living, breathing child. Its loss is no less traumatic than losing a loved one. After all, a business owner spends most of his waking hours at work. He will invariably become very attached to it, particularly if it is the business he loves and the one he has always wanted to pursue.
Inevitably the business becomes an extension of the owner himself. When it is ailing, he is ailing as well from stress and worry over whatever problems the business is facing. When the business is thriving, he will be happy, confident, and enjoying life to the fullest. If the business fails, the owner will feel like a failure and suffer deep emotional scars that will greatly impact his personal life for years to come.
With business failure often comes marital strife and divorce. I don’t claim to be a psychologist, but every day I see husbands and wives torn apart because one blames the other for a business failure. Or, if they don’t blame each other, they are often so tired and battered from battling with creditors that they give up on the marriage. The sight of each other only brings back bad memories. So too often the unhappy couple opts for divorce. If the marriage does survive, it will never be the same.
Having watched my small business clients closely over the years and having operated my own law practice, I have come to some conclusions about why some businesses succeed while others fail. The sad fact is that many of the businesses I have seen fail could have been successful. The good news is that it’s not too late for those still in business, if they will wake up and take control of their destiny.
Don’t get me wrong. This book doesn’t contain any magical formula for success. Turning a business around requires hard work, discipline, and sacrifice. But what I hope this book will do is give the reader insight into why so many small businesses fail, and provide solutions and strategies that can help turn around an ailing business.
This book is intentionally written in a simple, informal style for the average business owner rather than for college graduates or MBAs. I’ve found that the cause of business failure isn’t just a lack of education, experience, or business training, but just as often a lack of common sense. Often small business owners, or "SBO"s as I will call them from now on, do things they know are stupid and reckless. Why? Because entrepreneurs by definition are risk-takers. They like to experiment and do brash things that may only have a slim chance of success. They are the eternal optimist and often have unrealistic expectations.
Obviously there are a lot of different kinds of small businesses, but for the purpose of this book that doesn’t matter. I don’t intend to dissect the workings of any particular type of business. I have found that most people who go into a business know the basics of that particular business. They have either worked for someone else in that field or have been trained somehow to perform their trade. What they usually are lacking is basic business training, education, or experience.
The knowledge I have learned over the years has come primarily from trial and error, rather than from a textbook. Sometimes I’ve learned from my own mistakes, but more often it has been from the mistakes of my clients. Unfortunately, my clients usually come to me after they are in trouble rather than consulting with me in the beginning, and possibly avoiding the problems that now confront them.
Although my major at UCLA back in the late 60s was political science, fortunately, I did minor in economics. The business courses I took were helpful to me when I started in law practice in 1976. More importantly, however, was the training I received at Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. While I was in law school I had to support my wife and four children, so I worked full time selling life insurance. This wasn’t a glamorous job, but I did learn much about financial and business planning—something that had scarcely been mentioned in high school or college.
This book is not intended to be a manual or reference book. It is my hope that it will be interesting, entertaining, and informative. I fear too many self-help books get stuck on a shelf and never read cover-to-cover because they are too much like a textbook. This book is about adversity and how to overcome it. Its full of practical advice and ideas on how to deal with just about every adversity an SBO might face.
Yes, We’re Open is full of real life events that should be of interest to any SBO. Obviously, the names and locations have been changed and the facts altered enough such that no confidences will be breached. Hopefully, you will be able to identify with the characters in these stories and understand the problems they face. If you are a SBO, you will no doubt be facing similar problems and can learn from the mistakes made by the SBOs in these stories.
As needed, I will provide legal and business advice but it will not be technical or hard to understand. It is not my intention to burden you with the complexities of the law, but simply to give you ideas and alternatives that will provide direction and avenues to take toward solving the problems faced by SBOs.
I consider every business failure a tragedy and, when it is one of my clients who goes down, it is even more troubling. I often lie awake at night wondering if there was something else I could have done to save a client’s business and spare him and his family the dire consequences of a business failure. My only hope is that this book will help other SBOs save their small businesses so they can live truly free and remain in control of their destiny.
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Professional Reviews
Amanda Kilgore
Amanda Killgore, on the web, July 22, 2003,
Nonfiction Advice
This short and to the point book is addressed to the rising group of entrepeneurs in America. With no excess verbage, topics from law to insurance to forms of business are concisely explained in easy to understand language. ............. **** However, this is a book that will not only be a handy resource for the fledgling businessman or woman, but for consumers in general, especially in its useful advice in credit matters. Much of the topics might be common sense, but there is precious little of that, so instruction in it is always of use. ****
Sherry Russell - Books on Line
The book is written in a fun style tackling the complicity of the American dream of owning your own business. The author does a fine job of uncovering all the sour lemons along the path of building a strong foundation while explaining available opportunities and strategies the SBO (small business owner) has within his/her reach to add sweetness to those lemons for a nice successful venture.
The book is organized into four parts. The first part deals with the reasons behind small business failures. The author energetically covers obstacles from starting a venture on a shoestring to the problems of dealing with theft. The second segment tackles the obstacles blocking achievement. One of the relevant topics spotlights IRS and taxes. The third section illuminates ways for rounding the corner of prosperity in your business by hiring the correct people, taking control of your own attitudes and interestingly covers depression issues. The final portion is the sharing of case studies. In reading the case studies, an SBO will have an opportunity to see a part of him/herself while being assured they are not alone in their struggles and victories in mastering small business.
The book is packed with absorbing insights, the actual case stories, a glossary of terms, and some hilariously effective poems.
In the poem The Banker, a sampler of the author’s delicious wit:
"If you borrow money
You should be aware
Of the truth about some bankers
Lest you fall into their snare
Interest is their magic wand
That brings them mighty riches
Keep a careful eye on it
Or you’ll lose your frickin’ britches"
The author dissects the honeycombed mechanics of small business and shows the SBO how to become revitalized by any struggles through the knowledge there is help and there are ways to keep your dream alive and in the black. For the reader, the book acts as an unseen advisor to their everyday situations. The author writes about each subject with intense clarity, focus and wit.
The poems alone are worth the price of the book! Great book for every small business owner or person who is thinking about a business venture.
Authors7@yahoo.com
Denise Clark, Denise's Pieces
Reviewed by Denise M. Clark - July 2003, Denise’s Pieces Author Site & Book Reviews http://www.denisemclark.com
Yes, We’re Open… is precisely what small business owners today need. Actually, it should be required reading. Filled with practical advice on how to avoid common mistakes made by many new small business owners, including but not limited to, lack of knowledge, no planning or goals, poor marketing plans and lack of proper budgeting.
Author Manchee shares his experience, knowledge and vast expertise in finance and organization to provide a highly informative and easily read book on the how’s and how-not-to’s of starting, running and growing a small business. A great deal of information is covered in a compact form, from how to deal with creditors and lenders to theft and embezzlement.
Learn how to compete with chains and other franchise owners, and how to deal with and take care of employees to everyone’s mutual benefit. Manchee also covers topics such as bankruptcy, taxes and the IRS - and all the while makes the reader feel as if they’re sitting down with a good friend who’s offering supportive and expert advice.
Yes, We’re Open… is Mr. Manchee’s first work of non-fiction, though he has published seven novels prior to this work. His writing skills and presentation certainly shine in this extremely well written book that no entrepreneur should be without.
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Reader
Reviews for "Yes, We're Open, Defending the Small Business Under Siege"
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| Reviewed by franwilliams |
5/12/2003 |
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Right On!
Your not just good at mysteries Mr. Manchee.
Add this book to your reading list before starting a business. Your shortcomings may be a great laugh for a sigh of relief after the fact but while your in it knee deep you will wish you had read and studied all info you could get your hands on.
Thanks for sharing this book!
fw
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