beehive search
 
shopping cart
     
Home >> Blogs
Beeblog
Subscribe
Include comments
Tag Cloud
"setting the table" A. Fine Shirt Alabama Chanin Alabama community americas mart announcing Beehive Co-op Cincinnati art festivals artisinal garments artists be persistent when it comes to pr Beau Beaux Inc. BeeBlog Beehive beehive coop Beehive Co-op beehive co-op atlanta Beehive Co-op in Real Simple Beehive Co-op New York Beehive on Wheels Beehivers beehiveshop.com being a mother and entrepreneur books books on CD boutiques brand development branding Burt's Bees business business issues Buyer's Market of Craft buying locally Charitable collaboration community compost computer recycling computer refurbishing consignment consignment agreements consignment with boutiques copycat designs copyright copyright forms costs craft Craft Fairs craft festivals craft show craft show guide entrepreneurship iram-inal designs marketing organization small business planning sustainable business time management trade show components trade show materials wholesale wholesale market wholesale show
 
Recent Posts
How do you plan for the unknown?
  Comments: 0
  Rating: 0 / 0
10 Top Trends for Fall 2009
  Comments: 0
  Rating: 4 / 2
Managing Business & Life
  Comments: 0
  Rating: 5 / 1
10 Practical Tips to Please your Retailers!
  Comments: 0
  Rating: 0 / 0
Small Business and Credit Cards - A Cautionary Tale
  Comments: 0
  Rating: 2.8 / 5
Spoonflower... a great new resource!
  Comments: 0
  Rating: 0 / 0
Feeling Fall
  Comments: 0
  Rating: 0 / 0
Resourceful Entreprenuership
  Comments: 0
  Rating: 0 / 0
Website Commerce - To Sell, or Not to Sell?
  Comments: 0
  Rating: 5 / 1
Thinking Outside of Outside
  Comments: 2
  Rating: 0 / 0
 
Recent Comments
Thinking Outside of Outside (2)
Freshie wrote: I like the idea of merchandising your products in ... [More]
Thinking Outside of Outside (2)
Petra Geiger wrote: I think one of the benefits of being in a collabor... [More]
Choosing Where to Sell Your Wares (2)
Heather Swanepoel wrote: I have to say, your blog posting woke me up early ... [More]
Holiday Gift Guide Media Event (1)
Kristina Hjelsand wrote: Yay!!! :-)... [More]
Choosing Where to Sell Your Wares (2)
SEO wrote: The topic which you chosen for discussion is reall... [More]
Entreprenuer's E-tailing Part 2 (1)
srdha wrote: i gust want to say some thing "great job"

U... [More]
Now, I can sleep at night... (1)
Christy wrote: I will have to say, I have been using Carbonite fo... [More]
...Goddess of Perseverance (1)
Petra Geiger wrote: I think that's the first requirement of being a su... [More]
It's A Great Time to be Self Employed (2)
Space/Lift wrote: I couldn't agree more! I'm so glad that I have the... [More]
It's A Great Time to be Self Employed (2)
Freshie Beth wrote: Here here! We as business owners are responsible ... [More]
 
Archive
2010
 
2009
 September (1)
 August (6)
 July (5)
 June (7)
 May (9)
 April (8)
 March (10)
 February (9)
 January (9)
 
 
Authors
Amy McClure (8)
Erica Jong (3)
Heather Swanepoel (17)
Karen Meyers (9)
Kristina Hjelsand (9)
Lynn Tennille (8)
Malene Davis - iram-inal designs (15)
Meg King (2)
Merideth Sorrentino (3)
Petra Geiger (32)
Viviana Campbell (4)
Viviana Campbell and Merideth Sorrentino (1)
 
Categories
Designer Connection (12)
Entrepreneurship (46)
entrepreuership (7)
Fabulous Find! (1)
Peer-to-Peer (54)
Sustainable living (14)
 
Blog Roll
No Blog Rolls Available
 
Summer Reading List for the Entrepreneur
By Heather Swanepoel
6/22/2009 9:11:00 AM  
While on a stroll through my local bookstore I came across a table with books and books and books on it that were either required or recommended for students to read over the summer.  This got me thinking that my usual schedule doesn't have a chance in summer that it is the perfect time to make room for my own reading list.

This list includes:
Good to Great by Jim Collins
The EMyth by Michael Gerber
Guerrilla Marketing for Free by Jay Conrad Levinson

As well as getting back into reading Inc Magazine & looking at their website more often than not.

I wish I could take credit for finding these books, but I didn't find them on my own.  I've had help creating this list from business counselors & successful business people.  The funny thing is that when I ask the question "what should I be reading?" they all give me the same answer... the ones listed above.

There are no book reports due, but self accountability is a must.

Currently rated 0 by 0 people

Tags: small business advice, small business books, recommended business reading
Categories: Peer-to-Peer
Bookmark and Share Subscribe:  Email  | RSS  
You're Hired!
By Amy McClure
11/10/2008 5:32:00 PM  
Expression. I’ve been thinking about that a lot since my last entry. Expression of what, you may ask? Of me, I guess…or respectively, of YOURSELF. I think it started out that way at least. I long to create something that expresses (or just releases) all those whirls and swirls of images and ideas I have in the midst of my day, while I’m are doing something else, typically. What keeps me from working is typically the things I have to do to keep the business, or life in general, running smoothly. I find that for most entrepreneurs, finding time to be creative is the hardest part of running a business, despite how hard we try to ignore our bookkeeping. Some oversimplified questions I like to ask myself are:
What would you do with an entire day/afternoon “off “ ? (That’s a funny concept, isn’t it?)
What is most restful to you today?
Have you noticed any kind of pattern/correlation over the past few weeks…?
What would you like to know more about? A new skill you’d like to learn?


They are simple and pretty nonspecific for a reason…b/c if I can slow down, even for a moment, or a couple of hours one morning, I don’t have to make it more difficult than it already is. I have the opportunity to look outside my day, week, month and think about and dream about the things I want to be different or the things I want to grow in the business and my life. To fuel myself with some kind of newness...Or opportunity for newness to be invited into my sphere.

For some, and myself, I have had to realize my need for help and GET SOME….even if it’s just 5 hours a week. Think of stay at home moms, college students, or even sharing an assistant among several designers to provide them with more hours per week.  The E-Myth Revisited, by Gerber should help you with thinking (i.e. convincing you) through this a little more.

Recently, I did hire a girl to work with/for me. Granted, I agonized over hiring help since we moved to the Bean in April and I came up with every excuse imaginable. Seriously…I have trust issues, but that’s a whole other blog entry. Interviewing and hiring someone to come in and look at the unkempt underbelly of my little business has to have been a hundred times more of a pit in my stomach than any interview I have ever been on myself. And now that she’s here, I am kicking myself for not doing it sooner. Totally. Since then, the amount of time I’ve had to concentrate on the things I have dreamed of doing is astounding. The ability to get things done beyond immediate tasks like production/shipping/emailing takes me back to days long forgotten…to the hopes I had 2 years ago that my day could be filled with moments of free time, design epiphanies and the magazine spreads detailing them, not to mention the latest celebrity caught in one of my pieces or the fact that I can enjoy my work again…I should dare dream...*sigh*.

So now that we’ve accepted our need for help, acquired said help, we dream. That’s what we do as entrepreneurs, right? We dream bigger than our day to day. We love the essence of what we’re doing, but let’s be practical: We also long for our efforts to reap respect, money and maybe garner a little praise along the way…oh and I’ll say it, a little jealousy from others too. No harm in that, right? Certainly we can cheer on our fellow designers in much the same way we do as bridesmaids when our friends make it to the altar. But we still want to be the bride for once…

Often times, what fuels new designs and creations are typically from things completely unrelated to my medium. Experiencing and learning new things shows me so much about myself and my processes. So, what would you learn if you had time? Right now, I would learn how to weld. Have you noticed a pattern/correlation of things over the past few weeks? Well, yes I have, in fact. A literal pattern this time…And I would study the historical use of the quatrefoil. (yes, seriously). I’m totally weird like that.  I’m not sure how or if I would use those skills in my work, but maybe I could? I went to the MFA here with my studio mate the other night and saw the most amazing art nouveau exhibit…Totally inspiring and easily relatable to my work. And now, I have the time to flesh out my expression of it rather than spend my time in production. Woohoo!

Living in one of the world's most educational cities, I have access to pretty much any type of adult edu class I would like to take...there are even artist 'Skill Share' nights around town, of which I am preparing to partake. I know not everyone has that opportunity, so I invite you to post links for your city's adult education programs/online programs you've found helpful/your own skills you'd like to share in the comments section below!

In Boston, we have (to name a few):
Stonybrook Fine Arts
BCAE
CCAE
Brookline Center
MASSART
SMFA





Currently rated 0 by 0 people

Tags: expression, entrepreneur, books, creativity, education, skill share,
Categories: Entrepreneurship
Bookmark and Share Subscribe:  Email  | RSS  
My Secret Weapon on How to Stay Focused and Just Do My Work
By Karen Meyers
10/10/2008 8:24:00 AM  

                                      

When you are a small business owner, there is always so much to do.  There are a million distractions. E-mail is great, how I love e-mail and how I hate e-mail.  Every day I run up and down my stairs from my sewing room to the computer countless times to check in on the computer.  Have I sold anything on-line? Does someone need a shift covered at Beehive? And then there are the phone calls, and the paperwork and the shipping and the buying of supplies and the networking and all the other things to do (oh, like blogging) that sometimes I have to squeeze in time for the most important thing.  Making my product.

 I’m always looking forward to that uninterrupted time when I can get down in my sewing room and really be productive but many times when I finally get down there and attempt to get started, I struggle to stay focused.  My brain is so full of to do lists and ideas and unresolved problems that I just can’t switch gears.  Then before you know it I’m checking my e-mail again and the kids are home from school  so its homework time or  time to cook dinner.

  I’ve come up with a way to help me stay focused and to keep me in my sewing room when my brain is running wild.

 Books on CD.

 I have found that when I am listening to a really great book on CD, I stay put in my sewing room engrossed in what I am listening to, sewing away and just waiting to find out what will happen.  Of course there are times when I need just quiet or some music to let the creative juices flow, but the truth is, there are also many times when the making is just the rhythmic repetition of sewing the same thing over and over. Listening to the story stops my brain from obsessing over the many distractions that are present everyday.

 My favorites are travel journals.  Anything by Bill Bryson is great, but my favorite was “ In a Sunburned Country”.  I learned so much about Australia while my machine hummed away.  And his “The Lost Continent: Travels in Small Town America” made me laugh out loud and I listened to it twice back to back. The travel journals are good because if you miss a little bit, you are not missing out on plot and can just tune in and out and still enjoy a story being read to you. There was “A Year In Provence” by Peter Mayle that I also loved. I was thinking; sew faster, sew more, I want to go to Provence too.

 I have also caught up on a lot of Classics this way.  I LOVE listening to anything by Charles Dickens on CD.  I knew the story of “A Tale of Two Cities” from high school literature, but having someone read it to me with a British accent while I sew is just divine. I even let my phone go to voice mail (averting another distraction) when I have fabulous writing being read to me.  Try “20,000 Leagues Under the Sea” for a really entertaining story.  I had never read this before and this one kept me sewing for a whole 12 CD’s. 

 By far the most moving and powerful book I listened to this year was “Native Son” by Richard Wright.  I can’t believe this book was written in the 40’s because it is so relevant. I couldn’t stop listening, I had to know what happened.  Dinner was definitely late during the week  I was listening to that book, but it was also a really productive week.

Would I take the time to read these classics now?  No.  I should, but the truth is that I won’t.  I can barely make it through a Newsweek article at the end of a busy day, much less a classic.

So that is my secret weapon, books. My librarian mother would be very proud. Check out your local library, most have a pretty good selection of books on CD in this day and age. It definitely helps me avert distraction and maybe it will you too.

 

Gotta check my e-mail now.

  


Currently rated 0 by 0 people

Tags: small business, sewing, books, books on CD, focus, e-mail
Categories: Peer-to-Peer
Bookmark and Share Subscribe:  Email  | RSS  
 
 


retail locations




Powered by ShopVisibleEcommerce Solution