Small Business School
Redefining television's business model
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Overview Transcript Case Study Video
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1313: "Minding your 1's and 0's" goes inside computers and inside our culture to think about values and value.
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RuthEllen Miller, CEO, NoUVIR, Inc. Small Business School Small Business School Small Business School
1312: "Lighting is big business" is a family business to preserve precious objects, especially great works of art.
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Bob Simpson, XTO Energy, Fort Worth, Texas Small Business School Small Business School Small Business School
1311: "Smaller Can Be Smarter, then Faster - Better" and grow very large. Drill inside XTO Energy's success.
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Andy Murstein, Medallion Financial, NYC Small Business School Small Business School Small Business School
1310: A billion dollars a year amounts to "Big Bucks for Small Business" -- much of it to women and minorities.
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1309: "Thank God for America," freedom and capitalism. They came with nothing and now have everything.
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Pam McNair-Wingate, founder of Gadabout SalonSpas Small Business School Small Business School Small Business School
1308: Every person wants to be in a "Safe Place to Work" where their talents shine.
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Toby Maichi, Malichi International, Indianapolis Small Business School Small Business School Small Business School
1307: To be effective, we all need time to "Get out of the office" and work for the common good.
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1306: Big business es homogenize, small business diversifies. The best of us are truly "Building Beauty"
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1305: Truthfulness, integrity, humility, openness... "The Top is the Bottom" to become a leaders' leader.
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1304: If you say, "I'm unemployable," you probably are. You just may need to "Hire Your own Boss."
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For literally hundres of thousands of baby boomers who are cashing out of their businesses, it is getting so it is not about money anymore. Small Business School Small Business School Small Business School
1303: Go to your own private airport for "No Hassle Travel" and forget about crowds and parking problems.
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1302: Takin' Care of Business is when everyone has bottomline accountability to "Keep track of their Numbers."
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Dr. Gunars Valkirs is leading the diagnostic revolution that is making healthcare faster, cheaper and better through earlier detection and proper analysis in the emergency rooms and EMT vehicles. Small Business School Small Business School Small Business School
1301: The complexities involved in "Saving Healthcare" can be reduced to four steps. Really. Check it out.
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Stories about the soul of every economy
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Television for people who care
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On the Air: Join us first by watching the show every week on your PBS-member station. Airing: Listings for just one of these episodes.
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Without A Break Since 1994
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There are thirteen episodes per season and, of course, four seasons per year.

This is the 1300 Season: It began April 2006 and went through June 2006. Each season is numbered for groups like the TV Guide. This is, however, our 47th season of productions about small business.


Here's access to other seasons:
1400 Season: July through September 2006
1200 Season: January 2006 through March 2006
1100 Season: October through December 2005
1000 Season: July through September 2005


Other ways to find an episode of the show: You can search by business name or owner's name, by business sector, by subject matter or topic, or by Diversity, Family, nation, State, or Women!

See several years of episodes by clicking on view prior episode just below the header and the words, "Welcome to Small Business School."

Specials: From the best points of many episodes we explore key small business issues.
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Television to make a difference
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Key pages: Each episode has its own home page, an overview with links to that business, the complete transcript, a case study guide prepared for business schools, and streaming video. Today, these case study guides are part of the curriculum of almost every business school in the USA and the best around the world.
Perspective: We live in the present; we reflect on the past; we project the future; and we struggle to know what is important and good within life.
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Everyone helps to select a business to be on the show
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A discussion about a working business model for the future, by Bruce Camber, Executive Producer

First, we turn to the PBS-station manager and get permission to do an episode of the show in their neighborhood. Next we contact every local Chamber of Commerce within reach of the station's signal. Usually there are 40 to 70 local chambers. We invite each to nominate four or five businesses that have the qualities outlined within our selection process. Usually there are over 200 businesses nominated. We invite their local small business advocates (Economic Development, Better Business Bureau, the mayors, the Governor, Workforce Initiative, people among the SBA-SBDC-SCORE, the business press, business professors, CPAs, and others) to vote. These are the people who know the hearts and minds of these business owners. They vote and we emerge with a list of the top ten. We then re-engage the station manager, the CPAs of each company, and each of their national trade associations make the final selection. Nobody can pay or has ever paid to be on this show.

We are looking for the finest roles models for each of us, our industries, and our children.

Today, everybody is a producer: We believe that part of television that lifts up exploitation as an art form (glamorizing violence and corruptive behaviors) can and should be replaced with the vibrant heart of creativity, value-laden work, and hope for the future. We have invited our loyal stations and our legacy sponsors of the show to take over SmallBusinessSchool for the future. We also invite all the Chambers and National Trade Associations to join them. By working together the productions can be increased from our 26 per year to 100, then to 1000, 2000 and eventually as many as 4000 per year where 3948 are local episodes. Fifty-two of those episodes are selected for the national and global feeds of the show

There are 210 Designated Market Areas in the USA. I believe there should be at least local 10 episodes per year within each DMA. In several of the most heavily populated DMAs there should be as many as 26 new episodes per year.

Also, the show is broadcast in over 100 other countries via the Voice of America. We wll work with every station and every country to produce local episodes and to be part of the new management of SmallBusinessSchool.

One clear hope to cure the madness within the world is to lift up the best role models that we can find, knowing, of course, that we all have clay feet. None of us are perfect. Yet, inspiration to create is better than incitement to exploit. -BEC

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