Tim Berry

Interviews with Tim Berry RSS Feed

Tim Berry and Jim Blasingame talk about some of the issues that are involved in successful business development, including some tips and examples of start-up opportunities on the small business radio program, The small Business Advocate Show.
What does it take to successfully hand over the small business you founded to one of your children? Tim Berry has done this and he talks with Jim about how to do it. They also talk about small business development in Mexico, as well as what Tim has learned as a business plan judge.
Stop the presses: Tim Berry has a new method for business planning. Tim Berry joins Jim Blasingame to talk about his new approach, which is what he calls "plan as you go" business planning on the small business radio program, The Small Business Advocate Show.
How would you like to create your business plan as you run your small business? Tim Berry talks with Jim Blasingame about what he calls, plan as you go" on the small business radio program, The Small Business Advocate Show.
When you want to do a business plan, where do you start? Tim Berry talks with Jim Blasingame about this and explains why and how you can start wherever you want on The Small Business Advocate Show.
How does a family business make the transition from the founder to the next leader? Tim talks with Jim about how he accomplished this critical step in the life of a family business, how his decision is working out, and why he thinks it's going to be a success.
Tim has been judging several business planning competitions and he joins Jim to talk about the ones that won, the ones that didn't, what was the difference, and what can we learn from this.
Tim joins Jim with his Top 10 List of business planning essentials, and believe it or not, they get through all ten. Don't miss this one!
What's important, the plan or the planning? Tim talks with Jim about why the plan isn't as important as the planning.
Joining Jim during his 9th anniversary week, Tim offers a few of the biggest mistakes small business owners make that could put their ventures in jeopardy.