JPM - Creative Chaos - Fun, Fast and Furious
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Setting up a virtual business

Setting up a virtual business is no easy task. The cost of doing so may be little, but there is a lot of effort to it. This is exactly how I plan to operate AVCION Capital - as a virtual business. And for that, all the information, files, documents - soft IP will have to be protected. If I were a consultant - this is of more importance than anything, as that is my leverage tool. Here are a few things I've learnt along the way, and I thought I'd share them with you...

Keep ALL files in one single location & backup regularly - If you work on two different computers, you will most likely have two copies of a document. Avoid this, either by syncing or using only one computer - and backing up to the cloud, or some secure location (frequently). By using only one computer, you only have to worry about backing up. By using two or more, you need to worry about syncing all files. My solution to this is DropBox (they have apps to install on Windows/Mac as well as a web-based interface, in case you cant install - use the DropBox Portable).

Keep Your Business & Personal Files Separate - If you're running a virtual operation, you need to keep your files in separate folders. You dont want to accidentally provide access to your business files only to share the wrong personal diary! It's healthy.

Email - I could write a entire book on Gmail and the use of email. It serves as a record, database, knowledge, blogging platform, chat, collaboration. No other software has such great features (yet). Add to this the integration with Google Calendar, Google Docs, Google Tasks and Google Chat - and you have a killer communication platform. Go for Google Apps for Domains - this way, you can user your own domain / website to manage your entire virtual enterprise.

Use Tag/Label, Filter, Shortcuts in Gmail - a big time saver for organizing your emails, enabling them to be searched faster, tracking conversations threads.

Blog - I've learnt one important thing from blogging and that is expression of thought. Depending on the field of your specialization, I can only suggest having a blog. I use Posterous for lifestreaming (faster blogging). I use WordPress to create a private membership site - that publishes everything regarding my operations, track record, newsletter, updates, alerts etc to my members/clients/partners. You can have a mix of both.

Aggregate - I gather information, bookmark and research stuff using Google Reader (by subscribing to an interesting site's rss - you create a database aka archive that can be searched later on). I use a private site on Posterous to gather information using their bookmarklet. I also use Gmail+toread.cc again to keep a copy of any full webpage that I want to visit or read about later (this again, is being replace by Posterous). In the past I used to send copies of pdf,zips,docs, etc to Gmail - using it as a backup option, now DropBox takes this care of this - I just wish DropBox had an email to feature (like Drop.io)

Share - I distribute information/links on Twitter now. If I see something interesting, a bookmarklet - allows me to share the site as a shortened URL with a short comment. The short message gets distributed to those who follow me (targetted broadcasting i.e. narrowcasting), whilst also appearing on a public domain (twitter site) - means if anyone is searching for something - they can also see what i've shared. 

Bookmarks - I no longer use delicious, instead, bookmarks I like to revisit are stored locally, and synced using xmarks.com (addon for mac & pc). But since sites can go down in the future, I like to keep a copy of the text with me. Gmail+toread.cc / Posterous serves the purpose.

Network - with all the social media hype going on - I only found LinkedIn useful. I found it useful, because I know that people who at least update their profile - are serious about some kind of professional relationship. You can meet an interesting set of people. I just wish LinkedIn had a built in CRM feature (with Gmail Integration). Read Never Eat Alone. Dump Facebook.

Measure - Always measure whatever you do. There's a saying by famous Management Guru Peter Drucker - if you can't measure it, you can't manage it.

Accounting - which is based on the above point. Gotta keep those books uptodate - use Xero.com - a New Zealand based group, offering web-based accounting. Good enough for now. (I needn't say this, but get a good accountant! Luckily, I work with some great guys in my bank - who are willing to help me keep the books!)

This is just the "start"... let me know what you'd like me to cover.

Filed under  //   accounts   avcion   blogging   bookmarks   business   cloud   email   gmail   lean   less   lessons   network   process   share   startup   virtual  

Comments [2]

Kill spam, junk email and information overload - with one stone!

Here's a whacky thought.

Force email providers, to charge for every single email SENT!

Look at it this way, before email, there was mail / letter / post / telegraph / telex / fax - you had to spend to send. There was a cost attached. I'm sure that you counted your every word, to make it concise (if not MECE - Mutually Exclusive Completely Exhaustive) before paying up.

Perhaps if we were charged for each email we sent, we'd send fewer emails - be more careful in communicating things properly. Thinking twice or thrice before hitting the send button.

Perhaps we could eliminate SPAM, JUNK, Information overload, and consequently save TIME.

Don't think its a workable model? Well, ask telecom operators - they're still charging you to make a call right? Just imagine, if all phone calls were free (you'd have a whole lot of new junk calls from spammers and marketers to deal with!

Filed under  //   cost   email   solution  

Comments [1]

Unifying Cloud and Web 2.0

A while back, I tried to figure out Posterous' autoposting feature. There wasn't really much to figure out... it was "Dead Simple". However, I'd like to elaborate how I've set things up, to share information/knowledge/wisdom/stuff.

I recently registered jpm.cc as my blogging hub. Now, I also like Facebook, Delicious, Flickr, Twitter, YouTube, GoogleReader - for social sharing and Posterous is a funny little thing that makes blogging fun again. It integrates quite well with the above (ok, not delicious). So I'm short of time, and I really want to continue sharing, creating, evolving knowledge...

I've also implemented a lifestream at jpm.cc/river incase you're interested in what's happening with my cloud/digital living...

I hate having to load up my wordpress dashboard, just to make a post. I'd rather email. Dead Simple huh! In comes Posterous. But I like to host the information on my blog (ok, images and media are something else)... and Posterous' autopost feature makes this easy.

You have a choice of posting options, just by changing the email id... blog@posterous... posterous@posterous... post@posterous... twitter@posterous... etc. to autopost to certain sites.

Basically, I wanted to use Posterous to handle images, html etc - thus avoiding the need to load up WordPress. I also wanted updates/links to the latest posts via Twitter, Flickr, Facebook - all taken care of. Dead Simple.

(So, if this appears on my blog jpm.cc - I know something is wrong. I tried blog@posterous... to post directly, that didn't work. So I'm testing this with posterous@posterous... which is supposed to post only to Posterous!)


Filed under  //   autopost   cloud   email   flickr   posterous   twitter   wordpress  

Comments [0]