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#revenue
thoughtportal · 9 months
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a share of the revenue.
record profits are unpaid wages
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queerism1969 · 1 year
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unbfacts · 3 months
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ambiguousitsblog · 2 years
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Best Places To Boost Your Brand Visibility
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disposkill · 2 years
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Email Marketing Automation Strategy – DispoSkill
What's Email Marketing?
Simply, Email Marketing may be a sort of Digital Marketing, where you collect emails from people during a specific niche.
Then you send emails to those people promoting a service, product, blog, or anything so you’ll increase your revenue & web traffic.
I will cover the subsequent topics:
Email Marketing Overview
Email Marketing System in Deep
Building Email Lists
Important Strategy
Visit: Email Marketing Automation Strategy – AllinTutorial
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alicebrightstar · 9 months
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My Art Fight 2023 Attacks! (Part 2)
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Tumblr account’s: @to-much-a-thing @fairydraws04 @gabriel-grumbletoon @astraltints @cheesecam21 @superchaomusou
Art fight account’s: Polygorobo, Mikaelaverse
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wordpressvip · 11 months
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Brands are still on the NFT train and honestly? It's working pretty well for them. How do you feel about brands using NFTs to build communities?
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howtobeaconartist · 2 years
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What is considered a successful AA con when it comes to profits? Like factory in all expensive of materiel, travel,hotel, table, tickets, etc. How much should we make in profit in order to consider our vendering at a con successful?
Kiriska: It's everyone's favourite answer, "it depends"!
A hobbyist artist who considers cons a side hustle or straight-up "for fun" venture is going to have different goals than someone for whom convention income makes up a significant portion of their income.
Many hobbyists are happy to just break even on their expenses, and there's absolutely nothing wrong with that. But not every hobbyist's goals are the same, and that's fine too. If every single other hobbyist is cool with breaking even and you both consider yourself a hobbyist and want to have a 1k profit goal, who's to say you're wrong?
Similarly, not all professional artists have the same goals either. Some depend heavily on convention income while others have freelance or full-time art jobs. An artist, pro or otherwise, who is just starting to do cons is going to have a different idea of "successful" than someone who's ten years into the circuit.
It can also depend on type of product sold. Artists who sell primarily plush and apparel are going to have higher gross revenue goals simply because their offerings are priced higher on average (because their costs are higher).
You said "after expenses" (or net revenue), but most artists who have a full con schedule don't order stock on a per-con basis, and especially with the supply chain delays of the last few years, many are ordering as much stock as they can afford at a time. That makes profit calculations on a per-con basis a bit trickier, even if you subtract the unit cost of items sold from gross revenue.
I usually suggest first-time convention artists set their financial expectations low and focus on gaining experience, not just with the basic process of signing up, setting up, and selling at cons, but with things like in-person customer engagement, table configuration, and sales trends. The first con has the highest start-up costs, since you'll be investing in lots of supplies and materials you'll reuse later. I don't think break-even is a bad goal for all first-timers, hobbyist or otherwise.
After the first few shows, you'll have a better sense of what works for you personally and specifically, and you can set your own goals for what kind of revenue you want to aim for, and what you personally consider "successful."
If you look at the raw spreadsheet data for past Convention Artist Surveys (here's the link for 2018), you can see reported gross revenues at shows and cross reference them with how artists felt about the con.
You will find both artists that are super happy with a con while making $100 in gross revenue and artists who are disappointed with a con while making $10,000 in gross revenue. Of course, there are often other factors at play for one's overall feelings about a con, but yeah. It depends!
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dreaminginthedeepsouth · 11 months
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[Political cartoons 2020]  :: Los Angeles Sentinel :: David Brown
* * * * *
Here is my principle: Taxes shall be levied according to ability to pay. That is the only American principle.
-Franklin D. Roosevelt
LETTERS FROM AN AMERICAN
May 23, 2023
HEATHER COX RICHARDSON
Both President Joe Biden and House speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) have stated publicly that the U.S. will not default. They are negotiating over the budget. For my part, I’ve started to wonder if the whole debt ceiling crisis isn’t about Republicans’ determination to cut taxes for the wealthy at all costs. When Ronald Reagan called for tax cuts in 1980, he argued that tax cuts would concentrate money in private hands, enabling investors flush with cash to build the economy. That growth would keep tax revenues stable even with the lower rates. That was the argument, but it never came to pass. In fact, a 2022 study by political economists David Hope and Julian Limberg shows that “tax cuts for the rich…do not have any significant effect on economic growth or unemployment,” but they do “lead to higher income inequality in both the short- and medium-term.” Indeed, Estelle Sommeiller and Mark Price of the Economic Policy Institute, an independent, nonprofit think tank, noted in 2018 that 1% of all families in the U.S. take home 21% of all the income in the U.S., making 26.3 times more than the bottom 99%, whose average income is slightly more than $50,000 a year. On average in the U.S., someone would need an annual income of slightly more than $420,000 to be a member of that top 1%. In 2020, annual wages for the top 1% grew by 7.3% while those in the bottom 90% grew just 1.7%. A 2020 study by Carter C. Price and Kathryn A. Edwards of the RAND Corporation showed that the changing economic distribution systems of the past forty years have moved a staggering $50 trillion upward, out of the hands of the bottom 90% of Americans. (The national debt is currently about $31.5 trillion.) Nonetheless, today’s Republicans continue to insist that cutting taxes promotes growth. Today, Representative Bob Good (R-VA) talked over journalist Katy Tur to defend his support for extending the Trump tax cuts, which are due to expire in 2025 and which the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimates will add $3.5 trillion to the debt. Good insisted that tax cuts are “incentivizing the right things.” Leaving the White House today, McCarthy told reporters that he would not entertain rolling back the 2017 Trump tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations. “[T]he problem is not revenue,” he insisted. “The problem is spending.” But the Trump tax cuts and Trump's increased spending even before the pandemic ultimately added $7.8 trillion to the national debt, about $23,500 for every person in the country. The increase in the annual deficit under Trump was the third-biggest increase of any administration, relative to the size of the economy. He was beaten out only by George W. Bush and Abraham Lincoln. Bush, of course, led the U.S. into two foreign conflicts that were financed almost entirely through debt (in the past, the U.S. paid for war through taxes and war bonds), after Congress cut taxes by about 8% for the wealthiest Americans. Lincoln fought the Civil War. “It’s not that Americans are taxed too little, it’s that Washington spends too much,” Russ Vought, Trump’s acting budget director, wrote in 2019. He was defending Trump’s 5% budget cuts to nondefense discretionary spending. President Biden’s 2024 budget proposes to reduce the federal deficit by $3 trillion over the next decade by raising taxes on those who make more than $400,000 a year. His budget would effectively repeal the Trump tax cuts for the wealthy, restoring the top tax rate to 39.6% rather than the 37% the 2017 cuts established. It would also raise corporate taxes from 21%, to which the 2017 tax cuts dropped them, to 28%, lower than the high of 35% before the Trump tax cuts. Biden’s budget also calls for taxing capital gains at about the same rate as income for those making more than $1 million, and it calls for a new tax on unrealized capital gains. It also seeks to close loopholes that enable high earners to avoid taxes. Funding for the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) that was passed in the Inflation Reduction Act will enable the IRS to go after tax cheats who make more than $400,000 a year, netting an estimated $204 billion through 2031. But the Republicans say they will not agree to any tax hikes of any sort, and the right-wing extremists in the Freedom Caucus have said they would not agree to anything but the bill McCarthy muscled through the House by promising it would never become law. That bill, called Limit, Save, Grow, would cut discretionary government programs by at least 18%—more if Social Security, Medicare, and veterans’ benefits aren’t included. “My conservative colleagues for the most part support Limit, Save, Grow, and they don’t feel like we should negotiate with our hostage,” said right-wing Representative Matt Gaetz (R-FL). As Catherine Rampell of the Washington Post pointed out last week, the bill also forces Congress to approve every “major” regulation proposed by a government agency, with the recognition that Congress is unlikely to agree to any such regulation, thus unraveling the federal government. Senator Rick Scott (R-FL), who before the 2022 election called for sunsetting all laws every five years, forcing Congress to repass all discretionary spending, today fell back on the idea that Democrats calling for addressing the deficit through taxation are socialists. Poking fun at the recent travel advisories by LGBTQ, immigrant, and Black rights organizations warning against visiting Florida, he issued a “formal travel advisory” for “socialists” “in direct response to the Biden Administration attempts to erase capitalism and the system that has brought prosperity to Florida and the entire United States.” And yet it was the Republican Party that originally established the pattern of turning to increasing revenue to enable the government to meet its financial obligations, a pattern members of both parties relied on until 1981. Faced in 1861 with funding the Civil War, members of the Republican Party invented the U.S. income tax and graduated it to make sure that “the burdens will be more equalized on all classes of the community, more especially on those who are able to bear them,” as Senator William Pitt Fessenden (R-ME) put it. Justin Smith Morrill (R-VT) agreed. “The weight [of] taxation must be distributed equally,” he said, “Not upon each man an equal amount, but a tax proportionate to his ability to pay.” The government had a right to “demand” 99 percent of a man’s property for an urgent necessity, Morrill said. When the public required it, “the property of the people…belongs to the Government.” Far from objecting to taxes, Americans asked their congressmen to raise them, out of concern about the growing national debt. In 1864, Senator John P. Hale (R-NH) said: “The condition of the country is singular…I venture to say it is an anomaly in the history of the world. What do the people of the United States ask of this Congress? To take off taxes? No, sir, they ask you to put them on. The universal cry of this people is to be taxed.” Those taxes helped to pay for the war and, after it, to repay the debt. And in 1866, when Confederate-sympathizing Democrats tried to undermine support for the government by changing the terms of that debt to make it less valuable, Republicans wrote into the Constitution that “the validity of the public debt of the United States, authorized by law, including debts incurred for payment of pensions and bounties for services in suppressing insurrection or rebellion, shall not be questioned.”
LETTERS FROM AN AMERICAN
HEATHER COX RICHARDSON
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the365ceo · 17 days
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For more business insights and advice on leading, innovating, and executing like a top-tier global CEO, please visit us online at www.the365ceo.com.
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commsaquitilabs · 23 days
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Transforming Quote-to-Cash Process for Businesses using BRIM
Acuiti Labs provides guidance to businesses on harnessing the power of SAP solutions for transforming business processes, particularly in the realms of billing, subscription, and usage-based operational models.
https://www.acuitilabs.com/
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informationatlas · 4 months
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The tradition of the Christmas tree originated in eastern Europe more than 500 years ago. Today, it has become a thriving industry, employing nearly 100,000 people and generating almost $2 billion in revenue annually. Approximately 25-30 million natural Christmas trees are harvested each year, with about 30 percent coming from the Pacific Northwest. Sales of real Christmas trees have increased by nearly 20 percent since 2020, and artificial trees are also popular.
While artificial trees have faced criticism for the chemicals used in their production and their environmental impact, live trees also have their drawbacks.
via The Toxic Truth About Your Christmas Tree
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queerism1969 · 1 year
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wutbju · 2 months
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Those drapes. Those lamps!?
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nando161mando · 7 months
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Musk proposes to charge everyone for Twitter. Funny how the very people he allows troll on here with impunity are now the bane of his life. He complains that he's losing advertising revenue over bots. Nothing to do with allowing hate go unchallenged of course
Oh the irony 🤡🙈
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skywalkerab · 5 months
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This white paper looks at low-cost ways to increase revenue by expanding your adventure. See examples that demonstrate how this business approach operates and how it improves customer satisfaction.
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👉 bit.ly/3A84QE9
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#zipline #freefall #whitepaper #revenue #skywab
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