If you’re looking for the next big business idea or growth opportunities, we rounded up a few must-read articles with hot markets, new niches and big thoughts for 2013.
Check out Inc’s List of Hot New Niches in 2013. Americans are desperate for a good night’s sleep. 24/7 personal health tracking will go mainstream. Disruptive design will win.
Inc. also ran a feature 10 growth industries to start a business on the cheap. On the list: Healthcare Consulting, Photography, Relaxation Drinks and Elderly Services.
LinkedIn published a feature, 50 Big Ideas For 2013, shared by today’s thought leaders. Here’s a few of our favorites.
Companies have myriad diversity programs, diversity councils and diversity networking events to help women climb the career ladder. And there’s an entire industry built to exhort women on how to get ahead, with books on topics such as how to ask for a raise (not too hard and not too soft, lest one risk making the boss feel defensive).
But perhaps we’re trying to solve the wrong problem. It’s time for smart companies to stop staring past the data and recognize a simple truth. Raising children, taking care of the home, working full-time – and, yes, fighting any vestiges of subtle discrimination – is exhausting.
To make meaningful progress, smart companies will build cultures and career paths that go beyond today’s flexibility approaches: they will enable true “flexibility without shame.” (And don’t say this already exists: if it did, we wouldn’t have 60% of working moms wishing for it.) Read the full article on LinkedIn.
The hospitality industry decrying Airbnb. Taxi companies trying to shut down peer-to-peer car services. Comedian Louis CK selling a $5 video directly to his fans. oDesk’s global online marketplace signing up 2.7 million contractos who have delivered nearly 30 million hours of work in 2012. Financial services companies slowing realizing Square’s goal is to bring merchant transaction costs down to zero.
These aren’t disconnected acts; it’s the unbundling of the corporation back into people and small teams. In 2013 our economic recovery won’t be powered by large organizations and the public sector creating more jobs but rather by small companies and individuals empowered to be entrepreneurs.
Read the full article on LinkedIn.
“Your brand is what people say about you when you’re not in the room”
- Jeff Bezos, Founder of Amazon
Entering 2013 with a tight economy, restructuring, and new ways of doing business, the competition for a position or sale has become intense. Who shines out above everyone else in those situations? Those people who are spending time developing their own personal brand.
Back in 1997, Tom Peters wrote a great piece about working on your own personal brand, which was way before any of the online networks such as LinkedIn and Facebook had even started. Now that we have these tools available, promoting your personal brand has become a whole lot easier. Here’s 10 simple ways to work on your own personal brand.
Digital technology has been promising to boost small businesses for years, but so far the main advancement has been cheaper ads (thanks to Google). Now, though, we’re seeing a constellation of technologies coming together to level the playing field between the biggest and the smallest consumer-facing companies.
First, consider Square. Jack Dorsey’s firm launched as a way for people to accept credit cards on their iPhones, but it has become much more than that: A one-stop, very cheap way for every business to forge deep, lasting relationships with their best customers. Also watch for the rise of delivery services that turn local businesses into Amazon’s worst nightmare like Get It Now, an app that allows residents to order anything from the city and get it delivered immediately, for a small fee. Perhaps the biggest innovation is the Maker movement. Thanks quick-fab prototyping tools (like 3D printers), small-order spec-manufacturing firms, and fundraising operations like Kickstarter, it’s now possible for anyone to think up and manufacture real things right here in America, then sell them directly over the Web, at a great advantage over the incumbent big guys. (Read Wired editor Chris Anderson’s book Makers for more on this phenomenon.)
Read the full article on LinkedIn.