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Beat the Credit Squeeze (silver futures) With Flexible Business Finance

Monday, 03 November 2008
By Ben Needles

  The credit squeeze is a fact of business life and is not just about money but confidence in the market too. There are always winners and losers in every business situation and confidence and business finance can beat the credit crunch.

1. Ensure the bookkeeping and financial accounts of the business are up to date.

Keeping the accounting records up to date is an essential first step to ensuring the business owner knows exactly where the business stands. Reviewing recent financial performance and taking positive action to increase sales and margins where possible and control costs by eliminating waste protects the business from surprises and downturns.

By having available the recent costs, views and action can be taken to reduce those costs and in some circumstances to increase business costs where the profit potential is highest. For example a detailed examination of advertising and promotion costs may indicate some campaigns should be reduced while the money saved invested in better performing areas.

Not all sales produce the same profit for the business. By concentrating efforts on the highest profit margin products
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Last Updated ( Monday, 03 November 2008 )
Read more... [Beat the Credit Squeeze (silver futures) With Flexible Business Finance]
 

(Silver futures trading) Mission Style Architecture in California

Sunday, 02 November 2008
By Mark Bradley143

  The architecture of the California missions is world-renowned, and the style is not simply relegated to California. Other states, including Missouri where P.T. Barnett built his Spanish Mission style Art Deco building, have adopted the style and expanded it into other areas.

Several factors influenced the Spanish mission style. Not only the Spanish architecture of the homeland, but the European Christian missions, California building materials, and native American/Mexican American influences. In California, there was a shortage of skilled labor, but the founding priests still desired to build missions reminiscent of their homeland. No two missions are identical in California, but they were all built on the same concept.

The Spanish mission style became de rigueur in the 1920s and 30s in California, and then spread to the rest of the world, utilizing some of the same materials and design elements to create homes, civic centers and office buildings. Los Angeles is a great example of this style as it was infused into utilitarian public architecture, but also across the nation. Some of the most beautiful homes and buildings in America show influence
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Last Updated ( Sunday, 02 November 2008 )
Read more... [(Silver futures trading) Mission Style Architecture in California]
 
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