Tuesday, October 26, 2010

HOW TO: Connect with Other Entrepreneurs Online




This post originally appeared on the American Express OPEN Forum, where Mashable regularly contributes articles about leveraging social media and technology in small business.
There’s no substitute for experience. Many successful entrepreneurs learned how to run a business as they built one, and they had the educational benefit of being able to make mistakes and learn from them as they went along.
But if there’s something close to a substitute for experience, it’s probably somebody else’s experience — which makes other small business owners the perfect people to ask for advice about your own business decisions.
These nine websites will help you track down the appropriate entrepreneurs. If you’ve found success on similar sites, let us know about them in the comments below.

1. OnStartups


OnStartups
Created by the same folks who run the popular programming Q&A site StackOverflow, this site is a perfect place to crowdsource all of your small business questions. After you post a question (let’s say, “How do daily deal or coupon websites handle marketing?”), anyone can post an answer. You and other users can vote the different responses up or down so that the best answer floats to the top — at which point, if you decide to, you can mark one response as the “accepted answer.”
The site is managed almost entirely by the crowd (none of whose members need to register to participate). Anyone in the community can edit posts and frequent users are allowed to vote irrelevant questions off the site.

2. Focus


Focus
Focus differs from other Q&A sites by maintaining a core group of experts who answer many of the questions on the site in exchange for the opportunity to promote themselves. This feature makes it more likely that you’ll receive prompt and useful responses.
Topics are divided into IT, marketing, sales, finance, customer service, operations and human resources sections, which makes it easy to search for the latest discussions on your interest area.

3. MicroMentor


MicroMentor
Q&A has its value, but a deeper one-on-one relationship with a seasoned businessperson can be a greater asset to your business. MicroMentor helps you find a mentor online. Simply fill out a profile about yourself and your goals, and then search the mentor profiles that match your needs. If your selected mentor agrees that they’re a good fit, you can exchange contact information and start learning from each other.
The site is run by Mercy Corps, which intends to help “small businesses grow faster, generate more revenue, and employ more people.” More than 1,000 matches have been made to date.

4. Entrepreneur Connect


Entrepreneur_Connect
Entrepreneur Media, the parent company of Entrepreneur Magazine, hosts this online network of entrepreneurs. The site’s broadly defined “groups” where you can post questions, makes it useful for asking for advice. The replies are less frequent than on some of the other sites, but they tend to be of high quality. You also have the option to create your own private group.
The directory of other entrepreneurs, browsable by industry and name, is also helpful for locating someone who might be helpful regarding a specific issue.

5. PartnerUp


PartnerUp
If you have a question that can be expressed in fewer than 140 characters, the PartnerUp community will likely have an answer. You can also search for contacts with different skills in different industries or “PartnerUp” with people who have made comments you appreciated so that you can stay in touch. Like OnStartups, questions and answers can be voted up or down so that the best ones — at least theoretically — remain on top.
Thankfully responses aren’t restricted with a character limit.

6. EFactor


Efactor
The authors of business networking book The N Factor venture up the alphabet a little bit to bring you the EFactor. This social network for entrepreneurs can help you answer your questions in a handful of different ways.
First there’s a Q&A feature that shares your questions with other entrepreneurs on the site. There’s also a traditional forum where you’re likely to find a thread that answers your question and where you’re welcome to start a new one if you don’t. And finally, there’s an option to search for a mentor by their expertise and the assistance you’re seeking.

7. MeetTheBoss TV


MeetTheBoss
This site gives you the opportunity for personal access to the world’s most innovative and influential business leaders. Although the rest of us probably won’t be able to get our questions for business leaders answered directly, there’s likely a video on MeetTheBoss TV that is relevant to your issue. They’re all targeted specifically for entrepreneurs and intended to expand a skill set. You’ll need to use the search bar to find a video that answers your specific question, but the quality of the advice more than compensates for this slight effort.

8. SCORE.org


SCORE.org
A resource partner with the U.S. Small Business Administration, SCORE gives free advice to entrepreneurs. The organization has 370 office locations offline and about 1,200 “counselors” offline. By typing in a couple of keywords about what business issue you’d like to discuss, you can browse a list of these counselors — mostly other small business owners — and e-mail them directly for advice.
If you prefer a face-to-face conversation, there’s also an option to search for a mentor by your zip code.

9. LinkedIn Answers


LinkedIn_Answers
What sets LinkedIn Answers apart from the others on this list is that people have a couple of strong motives to help you. First, people are always looking for ways to stay in touch with members of their professional networks. Answering your question is a perfect opportunity to refresh a connection. Second, people who give the best answers to questions are featured as “experts” on the Answers homepage and in each category of questions.
LinkedIn’s giant network of professionals is another advantage. You can allow this entire network to search and answer your questions, or if you prefer, select individuals from your network who you want to answer your question. There are also advanced search options that allow you to browse the database of previously asked questions.

More Business Resources from Mashable:


Social Media Marketing 101: In-House Team, Agency or Consultant?
6 Tips on Starting a Digital Business from the Founder of Pandora
5 Tips for Startup Success From a Co-Founder of HootSuite
Growing Your Business: 5 Tips From the Founder of Foursquare
5 Popular Startups and How They Got Funding
Image courtesy of FlickrTravelin’ Librarian
For more Business coverage:

New Gmail Labs Feature Saves You Precious Seconds




Gmail has just added a new “Labs” feature that should save you some time if you’re the type of person that tends to plow through your e-mail inbox in bunches.
As the name implies, the new “Auto-advance” option (that can be enabled under “Settings” > “Labs”) lets you automatically move to the previous or next conversation after Archiving, Deleting or Muting an individual e-mail message.
While that might sound like expected behavior, up until today, Gmail simply took you back to your inbox after taking any of those actions, meaning you essentially needed to scroll back down to wherever you were in your attempt at e-mail triage.
Thus, you can see how “Auto-advance” might save you some time – and probably not an insignificant amount of time if you get a lot of e-mail and aim to keep your inbox clean through the use of archiving, deleting and muting.
Have your own Gmail productivity tips? Let us know in the comments.

For more Tech coverage:

War between web browsers

Which browser will win the browser war? Every month we see the browser share of Chrome, Firefox and Internet Explorer go up and down to give us some sign of who will emerge the winner.
I started a discussion on our Devils’ Workshop Facebook page about which browser was the favorite and why it was a favorite?
Chrome win browser wars Why Google Chrome will win the browser wars?
Credit: Mozillazine

Some interesting observations

  • Well the sample size is a little small to be called a poll but about 13 responses were in favor of Firefox, 6 for Chrome and only 3 for Internet Explorer. There were other opinions which even found favor with Opera and other browsers.
  • At first glance it looks like Firefox wins hands down but 4 opinions which were favorable to Firefox also said they really liked using Chrome.
  • Majority of the people who voted for Firefox seems to like the browser for its amazing add-ons.
  • Almost no one had anything negative to say about their experience using Chrome.
Going by the response, one can assume that Firefox is leading the pack by a big margin. But I feel differently about which one will end up winning the browser wars.

Why Chrome will end up winner?

Everything about using the Chrome browser comes down to one word and that word is ‘Simplicity‘. Lets be honest the world is not full of techies and majority of the people who use browsers are not geeks.

Installation

Installing newer versions of Internet Explorer or Firefox seems like rocket science when compared to installing Chrome. Most people use Gmail, Orkut and other Google related services which actively prompts people to download Chrome. This actually works great because Chrome installation is awesomely easy.

Speed

Chrome browser came to the market as the fastest browser around. It even boasted about it’s speed with its strange experiments. Jokes apart people felt Chrome won’t stay fast once they supported extensions. That has not happened and even now Chrome is known for being lightning fast as a browser.

User-Interface

Chrome has a spartan User Interface. The search bar is the same as the address bar. The tabs are nicely up right at the top, the settings and options are hidden and access through just a couple of not so interfering icons. Chrome keeps the user’s focus on the web-page rather than other features it might or might not have.

Add-on and extensions

When Firefox updates its Add-ons or when you update even its version it needs you to restart the browser. Get and extension on Chrome and start using it without any interruption. Such interruption free features make Chrome a browser to beat.
I know a lot of you might not agree with me and might argue that Firefox simply has more options. The problem with Firefox is not the options which makes it a browser of choice even for me. The problem is it has not been able to make it simple.
So do you think Chrome will win the browser war? Do drop in your comments and views.

How to read Wikipedia articles in simple English?

I often read Wikipedia for finding some interesting facts. Most times it is to get some basic background about certain things. Most articles will include a lot of information like the correct way to pronounce certain words.

It also has links to a particular query’s ambiguous meanings. This can be a little too much for children or for people who do not know English as their first language.

Wikipedia simple english How to read Wikipedia articles in simple English?

Getting Wikipedia articles in simple English

  • Let’s say I am reading an article about India on Wikipedia. The URL will be http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/India .
  • To get the same article in simple English just replace “en” with “simple”.
  • So the URL will be http://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/India.

This gives the same content in simplified English which does remove a lot of information which people might not really be interested in. Special thanks to Mani Karthik for this tip.

I do not think most people will find Wikipedia articles are too difficult to understand. But this is really useful if you are learning English or for students who might find the language of a particular article too difficult.

Do you think Wikipedia needs more such filters? Do drop in your comments?

Links: Wikipedia | Simple English

-- This Post How to read Wikipedia articles in simple English? is Published on Devils Workshop .