BlueCapra

Using Technology To Solve Problems and Create Solutions

  • About Alan Reeves
  • Curiosity & Learning
  • Projects

What would you do to get your business started?

October 8, 2011 by Alan R Leave a Comment

If you are like me, you have read countless stories of start-up businesses.  They bootstrap, they borrow, they get investors.  They start with $10 and a laptop and become professional speakers.  They do this and they do that and sometimes, we don’t even really know who “they” are.

The question still stands, what would you do to get your business started?  Would you fund it yourself (bootstrap)?  Would you go to the bank, family, friends, etc for loans?  Would you pitch the idea to venture capitalists for the money?  What would you do?

For many of us, our business ideas are small.  We may want to open a restaurant, a small specialty store, or something.  If you don’t have a pile of money sitting around, you either go to the bank or get investors.  Since the idea is small, investors are usually not interested.  Since often, this is your first business, banks don’t want to take the risk on a start-up.  What do you do?

Besides borrowing the money from friends and family, here are some ideas to get you thinking:

  • RothIRA contributions can be withdrawn at any time with no penalty or tax liability (Please don’t take my word for it, call the IRA to make sure…)
  • If you cancel your cable tv or satellite your head will not explode, the world will not end, and if you have them, your children will not die from boredom.  You will often save over $50 per month, add more than 10 hours per week to work on your business, and learn that reading can be fun informative (and free if you utilize your local public library)
  • The food that is the best for you is often some of the cheapest.  I have been trying to eat better and part of that is eating more legumes.  Many days, my lunch consists of a small chicken breast, black beans and lentils.  I cook it all in batches and have lunches for several days.  It is cheap, easy, nutritious, and tasty.  Personally, I like to have the lentils and black beans together, otherwise, the whole meal is not as yummy as I like it to be.

These ideas mostly focused on money, but often, time is in shorter supply for many of us.  We rush here and there, taking kids to school, picking them up, transporting them to and from activities.  As a society, we equate activity with productivity and if we are not moving, we get restless and bored.  These activities are all choices, although they often seem like necessities.  What can we do?

Here are a few ideas to get you thinking about time:

  • Your children don’t have to be involved in several activities at one time.  If your child is doing two sports, you are spending a lot of time (and money) getting back and forth to practice, games, etc.  I believe that family time is very important and feel that a limit of one activity a year (yes, a year) is a reasonable limit.  So, if my child wants to play soccer, that is fine, but it is also the only “organized” activity besides church they will participate in that year.  Some people may think that view is harsh.  I am teaching my children to focus their attention and concentrate on what they really enjoy.  Sometimes, we have to get rid of a few good things in our lives to make room for the great things.
  • I started waking up at 5:30a, changing from 6:00a.  May not sound like much, but I can usually get 45 minutes of work or study in before starting my “real” job.  It was a very minor change but it did take time.  I have tried and failed to wake up earlier many times before  until I read about creating habits at Zen Habits (a blog by Leo Babauta).  For a week, I set my alarm at 5:55a.  Next week, it was 5:50a, then 5:45a, etc until 5:30a.  Not as difficult as you would think
  • As I mentioned in the money ideas, getting rid of TV not only saves money, but a lot of time.  If you can’t bear to miss your favorite shows, often times you can watch them for free over the internet when you want (I especially like House, Bones, NCIS, Eureka, and Warehouse 13 to name a few)

Starting a business can be difficult.  It takes money, it takes time, and often, you don’t have much extra of either.  Is it all worthwhile?  What would you do to start a business?  I believe this excerpt from Robert Frost says it all:

Two roads diverged in a wood, and I—
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.

What would you sacrifice to accomplish a goal that would make all the difference?

Are you taking the path less traveled, or just following the crowd?

What would you do to be remarkable?

Filed Under: Small Business Tagged With: bootstrap, business, money, startup

Strive to be the best???

October 5, 2011 by Alan R Leave a Comment

While reading Brand Relevance: Making Competitors Irrelevant by David A. Aaker, I came across this quote

 “You do not merely want to be considered just the best of the best.  You want to be considered the only ones who do what you do” – Jerry Garcia, The Grateful Dead

That started me to wonder, which one am I following?  Am I trying to be the best of the best, or the one who is blazing a new trail for everyone to follow?  Sure, trail blazers will make mistakes…. they will fail…. but when they succeed, it is spectacular, life changing….. world changing.

So, which one are you?

Filed Under: Small Business Tagged With: best, Jerry Garcia, quote, reading, The Grateful Dead

Laser Engraving – Embossing seals

September 30, 2011 by Alan R Leave a Comment

Embossing SealLaser etchers are versatile tools.  Among the many things a laser can create, embossing seals may be some of the most useful.   Often these seals are created using Delrin (or acetal).

Delrin is an engineered thermoplastic with a variety of uses.  Often, it is the material of choice for embossing seals.  The seal designer typically creates the seal digitally in two parts, a positive and negative, but can also consist of only a positive or negative.  Once the design is created, the material is loaded into a laser and the laser burns away the material to create the die.  Delrin is a very good choice for the die material as it is very strong, is highly abrasion resistant, and absorbs little or no water.  It can be worked easily, such as with a laser, and is used in a variety of products.

There are many jobs and careers that require embossed seals; Notary Public, Architect, Professional Engineer, etc.  These roles are usually tied to state or federal licensing or certification.  To ensure the documents created by these professional are authentic, an embossing seal is typically used.  These seals usually consist of a positive and negative die that, when used together, result in a nice raised pattern or seal in the paper or other material.  When used, the seals provide physical proof, along with the signature of the professional, that the particular document was reviewed, created, or endorsed by a licensed, certified, or registered professional.

Notary Seal - Alabama - Acorn Sales

Notary Seal - Alabama - Acorn Sales

Seals differ in the information they convey.  Some seals convey information about the professional such as license numbers, the state where the license is valid, the licensees name, etc and varies from state to state and the purpose of the seal.  There are variations in the seals even from the same state, but there are guidelines for the minimum information on the seal.  For example, this notary seal for Alabama lists the state, the name of the licensee, registration number, and when the license expires.

Embossing seals have many other uses as well.  You may see an embossed sticker on an award or on a corporate document.  You may receive a hand made card with a design embossed on the paper to give it that unique touch.  You may decide to have a custom seal created just for your business, to add that little special touch that will set you apart from your competition.

What ideas could you come up with for an embossing seal?

How could an embossing seal add to the professional image of your company?

 

Filed Under: Laser etching Tagged With: acetal, delrin, laser, license, notary, seal

Inciting incident

September 27, 2011 by Alan R Leave a Comment

According to the book, A Million Miles in a Thousand Years by Donald Miller, an inciting incident is “…the doorway through which they [the character] can’t return…”  Something happens and we are never the same.  There may be many in our lives, but an inciting incident is what gets you moving, in good ways or bad ways, and you know things are different….. lifechanging.

My inciting incident occurred on Monday, 9/28/11 at 3:40p CST

Filed Under: General Tagged With: A Million Miles in a Thousand Years, Donald Miller, inciting incident

What’s your story?

September 26, 2011 by Alan R 1 Comment

Pile of books

(photo by Felixco, Inc.)

We all have a story.  When someone ask you “what’s your story”, what do they mean?  Your story is not only about your past, but your present and future.  I recently started reading A Million Miles in a Thousand Years by Donald Miller (a book suggestion from Kevin Miller at Free Agent Academy among others) and the main point of the book is story.  What is your story?  If you are a parent, what part are your children playing in their stories?  The quote that started me thinking was on page 51; “She’s not a bad girl,” my friend said.  “She was just choosing the best story available to her.”

We often hear horror stories of teenagers and their behavior.  They rebel, they don’t listen, and they do all manner of other bad stuff.  Some get into drugs, some get into the wrong crowd, some just experiment with strange behaviors and clothing.  As a society, how do we view those young people?  Strange? Trouble makers? Bad?  What are we teaching them with those labels?  What roles are we placing them in?

If you hear encouragements that you are special,you are great, and you can do anything, for long enough you start to believe it.  What would you believe if you heard that you are strange, a trouble maker, or just bad?  For the teenager trying to find his or her place in the world, the only story they hear is negative.  They choose the best story available to them, but that story is negative.  What can we do as parents and society in general to make that story positive?

Justin Lukasavige at CoachRadio.tv is a coach.  More importantly, he is a storywriter.  He helps people write a better story for themselves and their businesses.  How much better would your life be if you had someone to help you write your story?  Famous people often employ ghostwriters to make their life stories or book ideas more appealing.  Instead of using a ghostwriter at the end of the story when we share it, what if we get help while we are writing our story?  Even if we don’t get help writing our story, how much better would it be if we actually paid attention to the story we are living?

At then end of your life, are you going to look back and be happy with the story you lived?

When your kids are grown, are you going to be proud of the story you helped them write for their lives?

What is your story?

Filed Under: General Tagged With: A Million Miles in a Thousand Years, Donald Miller, Free Agent Academy, Justin Lukasavige, Kevin Miller, Story

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 44
  • 45
  • 46
  • 47
  • 48
  • 49
  • Next Page »

Find what you are looking for

Books I've Read

48 Days to the Work You Love
Being Wrong: Adventures in the Margin of Error
How Doctors Think
The Art of Possibility: Transforming Professional and Personal Life
Dirty Rotten Strategies: How We Trick Ourselves and Others into Solving the Wrong Problems Precisely
Brainstorm: Harnessing the Power of Productive Obsessions
The Creative Habit: Learn It and Use It for Life
A Book of Five Rings: The Classic Guide to Strategy
Wild at Heart: Discovering the Secret of a Man's Soul
Reality Check: The Irreverent Guide to Outsmarting, Outmanaging, and Outmarketing Your Competition
Startup Guide to Guerrilla Marketing: A Simple Battle Plan For Boosting Profits
Vagabonding: An Uncommon Guide to the Art of Long-Term World Travel
Seeking Wisdom: From Darwin To Munger
Multiple Streams of Internet Income: How Ordinary People Make Extraordinary Money Online
Thomas Paine: Enlightenment, Revolution, and the Birth of Modern Nations
The War of Art: Break Through the Blocks & Win Your Inner Creative Battles
The 4-Hour Workweek: Escape 9-5, Live Anywhere, and Join the New Rich
Where Good Ideas Come From: The Natural History of Innovation
Moonwalking with Einstein: The Art and Science of Remembering Everything
Build Your Own Wicked Wordpress Themes


Alan Reeves's favorite books »

Copyright © 2026  ·  BlueCapra.com  ·  Built on the Genesis Framework and Centric child theme   ·  Affiliate Disclosure

Copyright © 2026 · Centric Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in