Posts Tagged ‘Company’
Perimeter trade show booths for your company
Perimeter trade show booths are linear booths with one side (front side) exposed to the aisle. They are lined up next to one another in a straight line against a wall in the expo hall. In some instances, depending on layout of the floor plan, a perimeter booth could also be a booth that has its back to empty unused space in the expo hall. If you are in a perimeter booth, you will have at least one other exhibiting company next to your booth. Perimeter booths as trade show displays have an 8-foot-high by 10-foot-wide draped back wall and a 3-foot-high by 8-foot-wide draped side divider on each side of the booth. If you would like to have a 12-foot high draped back wall, additional fees may apply. Drape colors will vary from show to show.
Use of Space in a Perimeter Booth for your trade show exhibits is more like this. Regardless of the number of perimeter booths you are utilizing, the following restrictions apply to each individual booth. The maximum height of the back 4 feet of the booth is 12 feet high. The maximum height of the front 4 feet of the booth is 4 feet high. All booth materials and displays must be contained within the lines of the booth. Hanging signs, graphics, canopies and other materials from the ceiling is not allowed for this booth type. If you are utilizing three or more perimeter booths in a row (total of 30 feet wide or more), the 4-foot-high limitation does not apply to the middle booth(s).
Printing Technology Business
Regardless of the printing method, the stock used, or the size and style, some elements of business card printing remain constant. An effective business card must contain accurate and complete contact information. This includes name, address, telephone number, and email if appropriate. An effective card also uses some element that makes it stand out among other cards. This can be color, or it can be raised or embossed printing. It might mean a distinctive logo or some eye catching artwork. You are trying to make the card stand out among thousands of other cards, and must take the extra steps to insure that this happens. The printing options available have made it fairly easy to find a way to make your card stand out from the crowd.

Always print business cards at par with the most high-profile companies through online printing companies. They can provide you with print quality that rivals even the most expensive ones. Technology have significantly changed the way business card are printed so you can enjoy them better and have them sooner too.
It may take quite some time to know if you have been better off with a new business card printer or with the old one. Then again, you may find out sooner, depending on how one delivers the prints you need, is it the convenience, the quality, the short turnaround times ? While it may be limiting to measure a printing company’s worth based on a business card (after all, business cards are just one of the many print products out there) it would serve you well if you regularly need business cards printed out.
Printeca is a well established Business Card printing company, offering a full range of low priced printing services, in addition to business cards, micro cards and message cards.
SBA chief says administration is asking Congress to extend loan guarantees
Small Business Administration (SBA) Administrator Karen Mills was in San Antonio Monday to discuss ways both the agency and the Obama administration are working on to further encourage lending to small businesses.
Mills spoke at the annual International Franchise Association convention.
These efforts, Mills says, include asking Congress for additional funding for its loan programs.
In February of 2009, the SBA received $730 million in federal stimulus funding as part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. However, this wasn’t enough to meet the loan demand and in December, the SBA received an additional $125 million from Congress.
“We immediately were able to get that out as well. (But) it will run out at the end of this month,” Mills says, adding that the president has asked Congress for another extension in funding.
SBA spokesman Jonathan Swain says the president called for extending the recovery act provisions for the SBA’s 7a and 504 Certified Development Company loan programs through Sept. 30, 2010. The House passed legislation that would do so and it included $323 million to fund the extension. The U.S. Senate has not yet acted on the proposal.
“We are continuing to discuss it with the Senate and are hopeful we will see the extension move forward soon,” Swain says.
If granted, Mills says, the additional funds will be used to increase the loan limit for its 7(a) and 504 loan programs from $2 million to $5 million. Mills says about 10 percent or 12 percent of the loans made with recovery funds have gone to franchisees. Many of these franchisees, she says, have expressed the need for larger loan limits in order to purchase buildings or to make acquisitions.
“So, we’ve proposed to Congress that we increase these loans,” she says.
Other things the SBA is looking to do is extend the 90 percent guarantee on its 7(a) loan program.
The Recovery Act, among other things, temporarily raised the guarantee on the 7(a) loan program up to 90 percent through the end of the calendar year 2009, or until funds set aside for the program were exhausted.
Prior to the enactment of the law, the guarantee on the 7(a) loan program was between 75 percent and 85 percent.
The act also temporarily eliminated fees for borrowers on the 7(a) loans as well as fees for both borrowers and lenders on the 504 loans through the end of the year or until funding for the enhanced programs are exhausted.
The 504 CDC loans are principally used for land, new building construction, acquisition and rehab of existing buildings, long-term machinery and equipment purchases, and debt refinancing.
Interestingly, Mills says, the agency is also seeking to use its 504 loan program to refinance owner-occupied commercial real estate mortgages.
Mills says that in this present economic environment, in an effort to get commercial mortgages off their books, some banks may be unwilling to renew commercial real estate mortgages even if the owners have never missed a payment.
Using the 504 loan program in this capacity temporarily, she says, could benefit these business owners.
Mills says the agency has been meeting with small and large banks as well as small businesses and community leaders around the country to develop the measures that it is seeking from Congress. And, she says she believes these measures are ones that will be easy to implement.
“We can do those things quickly within the programmatic structure that we already have (in place) at very cost-effective rates,” she says.