Call For Applications
Deadline: December 15, 2011
The DC Fashion Incubator project is currently seeking designers who are interested in being located in our Phase One location at 760 N Street NW near the Convention Center.
Opportunities are available for 4 designers. 24/7 access to the studio, access to industrial sewing equipment, 2 hours per month of one-to-one business consulting, discounted technical design classes like sewing, pattern-making, product development, production and manufacturing through “Fashionably Business” and free business courses.
Applications can be downloaded here:
http://www.dcfashionincubator.org/storage/documents/2012_DCFIapplication.pdf
Please contact wendy.raynor@dcfashionincubator.org with any questions.
About DCFI
The DC Fashion Incubator (DCFI - www.dcfashionincubator.org) is based on the successful model found in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. DCFI provides resources, infrastructure and programming that nurtures the District’s budding fashion industry so that it can reach its full potential. The DC Fashion Incubator serves as the foundation of business support for the fashion industry in the District and a model that can be implemented throughout the US.
The primary objective of DCFI is to serve as the cornerstone of small business development and support for the fashion industry in Washington, DC by helping fashion entrepreneurs:
Develop the appropriate industry skills to become successful artisans;
Facilitate and support the launching and growth of their small businesses by providing access to shared work-space and operational resources;
Enhance their skill set by providing local training and professional development opportunities; and
Benefit from cross-fertilization and networking opportunities with other entrepreneurs and professional service providers
DCFI will be moving into it’s permanent location, 1231-25 Good Hope Road SE in the Anacostia neighborhood of Washington, D.C., in July 2012. The facility is 16,000 square feet, on 2 levels and will allow DCFI to offer both a traditional incubator and a large job training and education facility.
The incubator and training facility offers affordable rental space, co-op retail space, shared studio facilities and equipment, a knowledge center, shared administrative services and access to professional development workshops and fashion business counselors. The goal is to help resident designers and other business members reduce their initial overhead costs and capital investment requirements, to give them opportunities to build stronger businesses in the start-up phase.
(Source: beautifullytwistedmind)
Gary V. says Airbnb will completely disrupt the $127 billion hospitality industry. Get ready, hoteliers!

The Dos
Dress with respect. Be clean and presentable each and every day. Follow the office dress code at a minimum—and don’t be the guy who constantly toes the line. Of course it’s fine to dress a cut above everyone else, but just a cut. Dressing up far beyond the standard sported by…
Thinking about starting your own company or managing one? These are great tips to keep in mind to ensure you are running things smooth. Click here for the rest.
A big shout out to:modernconnoisseurtt
Everyone is going after Netflix’s jugular
Shout out to:agwww
An infographic depicting the percentage share of formal firms that are owned by women in Africa. Data from the World Bank.
The start of another school year is upon us. As such, nearly 100,000 aspiring MBA’s will be matriculating in the next few weeks to begin a two year program that leads to that golden business passport – an MBA.
A little over 20 years ago, I entered the hallowed halls of the Wharton School to begin my MBA. With now 21 years’ experience post-MBA, I thought that I would share five of the lessons that I learned at business school that proved to be most valuable in the business world.
Next time, I will share some of the business and leadership fundamentals that are equally important in the “real” world, but that are rarely learned at business school.
1. Finance and Accounting – It’s All About Cash
Cash flow is what matters. This is the fundamental of finance and accounting which constantly gets forgotten or obscured in the day to day business. At the end of the day, accounting done right is just a way to keep track of whether you have more money in your bank account at the end of the day today than you had at the end of the day yesterday.
Yes, growth needs to be funded and so projects and business lines can often consume cash for months or even years. But, that has to end, and the project or business line needs to start generating cash.
The Enrons, MCI’s, Adelphia’s, Lehman Brothers et al in the world were all quite foreseeable if you looked to see whether they were truly spinning off cash, instead of growing more debt. None of them really were creating cash flow, even if their accounting statements said so.
2. Marketing – It’s All About What the Customer Values
Marketing is all about taking off the blinders that your love of your product and / or service has created. Instead, you need to look at the world through the lens of the customer. What is the value of your product and service to the customer?
Yes, your product and service may be the best. And I mean the BEST. Further, it may be a product or service that the customer should need and SHOULD truly value. But, if the customer does not value it, you have lost. It is quite simple.
Looking at the world through the customer’s eyes has stuck with me ever since my then-rookie marketing professor, Pete Fader, gave us a pricing case in the first few months of school.
I don’t remember the exact details, only the magnitude. We were required to price a spare part used in the oil-drilling industry. Using all the data, the class came up with a variable cost of a few hundred dollars which most of us then doubled to price at about $500 for a healthy 50 – 60% margin. As Professor Fader worked through the problem from the perspective of the customer, we all quickly realized that this unique part had a value to the customer in the range of $10,000 with the actual price being somewhere near $4,000.
In this case, the value to the customer was far higher than our internally-focused radar would suggest!
3. Strategic Planning - It’s All About Being in the Right Market
This one is easy to say, devilishly tricky to do in practice. The fundamental of strategic planning is to be in the right market. That is, to be in a good industry or market niche with growth and healthy profit opportunities. A good market makes your life a whole lot easier and more profitable. As Warren Buffett said so well:
When a management with a reputation for brilliance tackles a business with a reputation for bad economics, it is the reputation of the business that remains intact.
As an example of what not to do, twenty years ago, we had a few fellow grads go into the airline industry. Guess what? Within a few years all had left. As a business to make money and grow and personally advance, the airline industry stunk back then. And it still stinks today.
4. Leadership – It’s All About Having the Best Team
As you advance in your career, your capabilities and individual brilliance will only take you so far. Vastly more important will be your ability to lead and unite a diverse team and drive them to success. As Satchel Paige said:
None of us is as smart as all of us.
The teamwork, team activities and team building that you will do in business school should resonate. The best answers and the deepest insights come when working with a good and diverse team that includes committed people with a wide background (finance, HR, management, marketing, sales, even the customer) unafraid to share their views and be heard. Alas, many corporations have forgotten this simple premise. Their top management group is either a team of clones or too cowered by an over-bearing CEO to ever share their true views. The net result is often groupthink and abysmal corporate failures.
5. International Business – It’s All About Understanding the Other Person’s Culture
“The world is flat.” “The end of history.” “English is the global language.”
Maybe. But, doing business internationally remains all about understanding your Chinese supplier or your Brazilian consumer or your German joint venture partner. I think that the comedian Dave Barry summarizes well the blinders and distorted view of many Americans in our increasingly international world.
Americans who travel abroad for the first time are often shocked to discover that, despite all the progress that has been made in the last 30 years, many foreign people still speak in foreign languages.
So, look around your class and get to know the increasing number of international students. Besides the advantage of networking, your new friends will challenge you to think more broadly and see the world through their eyes.
Conclusion
Year after year, consultants and thought leaders bring about “new” management ideas or leadership philosophies. Alas, they are often just window dressing or enhancements to ideas that have been around for years. The true business fundamentals that drive business to success, such as I learned at business school and (shameless plug) write about in my book, Build a Better B2B Business, are unchanging. Study them, learn them, keep them top of mind, and act on them and your business and personal success will be significantly enhanced.
shout out to:the-goods

Apple to Open Hong Kong Store
Apple is planning to open its first store in Hong Kong this quarter, according to Carolyn Wu, an Apple spokesperson based in Bejing.
“Twitter Terrorists” Could Get 30 Years in Prison
Two people who allegedly spread false reports of gunmen attacking schools and kidnapping children now face 30 years in prison for charges under terrorism laws in Mexico.
Merchants Complain of Google Maps Errors
A flaw in Google Maps’s reporting system falsely labels operational businesses as “permanently closed.”
Facebook Flaw Lets You Hijack Page from Original Owner [REPORT]
A Facebook security flaw — or, perhaps, a misunderstanding — lets Page administrators boot original Page creators from admin status, effectively enabling new admins to hijack Pages
Sony Tablet S Now Available for Pre-Order
Sony’s Tablet S is now available for pre-order in 16 GB ($499) and 32 GB ($599) versions.
Further News
Deceptive reviews on the Web can be very hard even for experts to identify as fake. A team of researchers at Cornell University has been developing sophisticated automated methods to detect them, based on analysis of the text. Here are some of the features that their algorithm looks for, using this example of a fake hotel review.

Shout out to:agwww:
Anonymous blog from an agency designer trying to transition to a startup.
(via pieratt)