Posts Tagged ‘Math’

Can you make money through SURVEYS?

Many companies use surveys to test many new products and the viability of them on the market place through surveys. Today with the Internet, incentives of making money from home by doing these surveys have become very popular, but can you truly make money with this program?

Can you truly make money with surveys? My answer is yes you can, but only if you are into making less than a $1 an hour. Companies use surveys to figure out if a new product might be viable for sale to the public. These surveys are offered to you usually found in your spam box. For an average cost of around $20 to $30 dollars you can join a program and begin filling out surveys for cash.

The average survey will take from 10 minutes clear up to 45 minutes to complete. This could be an awful long time to earn a few dollars. Doing the math between the amount of time spent and the money earned is a very simple equation. If you were to complete 6 surveys at 30 minutes apiece at $3 dollars (average) each, that would break down to: 3 hours for $18 dollars. The average hourly would be $6 an hour, less than minimum wage.

Can you make money with surveys? Yes, but you would need to be in front of your PC most of each day missing out on the quality part of working from home which is supposed to be less work and more money. I myself never considered the thought of trading so much of my  time for money. Working from home is however rewarding and can be achieved through time and patience and the right business opportunity.

These ETFs can trash your portfolio

Leveraged ETFs have been all the rage among investors hoping to multiply their gains. What many people may not realize is how the math can trick them.
By Donald Luskin, SmartMoney

How to Create a Million Jobs

If members of Congress wanted to create a million jobs, all they would have to do is repeal in its entirety the legislation that is known as Sarbanes Oxley. It is the most destructive legislation that has ever been written, causing hundreds of millions if not billions of dollars in waste and problems. It has virtually destroyed the IPO market for midsize companies and caused thousands of public companies to de-list. I know personally of at least 10 companies that have chosen, because of Sarbanes Oxley, to go public on foreign stock exchanges rather than listing in the U.S.

The problem with the legislation is the massive cost of compliance and the stilted way that companies need to operate in order to comply with it. All this is waste. The law was put in place in response to the accounting and financial fraud that came to light in the early part of the decade at several companies, most notably Enron. What is little understood today is that people at Enron and elsewhere were successfully prosecuted under the then-current security laws were. The rules in place dealt with the problems effectively. Piling on a huge regulatory burden was totally unnecessary.

We live in a global economy and having companies in the U.S. carrying the added burden of high compliance costs and the inefficiency that entails only makes U.S. businesses less competitive. Companies backed by venture capital have created massive numbers of jobs in the U.S. but because the law has made it harder for them to go public (or to stay public), the amount of VC money has dried up. Newly-formed companies have been denied the IPO exit that all investors want, and the math is quite simple: No exit equals no more investment.

If you want to start a company and some day take it public, contact your Congressional representatives and ask them to repeal Sarbanes Oxley. It was and is a horrible burden on everyone.
By blog.inc.com

How to Create a Million Jobs

If members of Congress wanted to create a million jobs, all they would have to do is repeal in its entirety the legislation that is known as Sarbanes Oxley. It is the most destructive legislation that has ever been written, causing hundreds of millions if not billions of dollars in waste and problems. It has virtually destroyed the IPO market for midsize companies and caused thousands of public companies to de-list. I know personally of at least 10 companies that have chosen, because of Sarbanes Oxley, to go public on foreign stock exchanges rather than listing in the U.S.

The problem with the legislation is the massive cost of compliance and the stilted way that companies need to operate in order to comply with it. All this is waste. The law was put in place in response to the accounting and financial fraud that came to light in the early part of the decade at several companies, most notably Enron. What is little understood today is that people at Enron and elsewhere were successfully prosecuted under the then-current security laws were. The rules in place dealt with the problems effectively. Piling on a huge regulatory burden was totally unnecessary.

We live in a global economy and having companies in the U.S. carrying the added burden of high compliance costs and the inefficiency that entails only makes U.S. businesses less competitive. Companies backed by venture capital have created massive numbers of jobs in the U.S. but because the law has made it harder for them to go public (or to stay public), the amount of VC money has dried up. Newly-formed companies have been denied the IPO exit that all investors want, and the math is quite simple: No exit equals no more investment.

If you want to start a company and some day take it public, contact your Congressional representatives and ask them to repeal Sarbanes Oxley. It was and is a horrible burden on everyone.
By blog.inc.com

How to Create a Million Jobs

If members of Congress wanted to create a million jobs, all they would have to do is repeal in its entirety the legislation that is known as Sarbanes Oxley. It is the most destructive legislation that has ever been written, causing hundreds of millions if not billions of dollars in waste and problems. It has virtually destroyed the IPO market for midsize companies and caused thousands of public companies to de-list. I know personally of at least 10 companies that have chosen, because of Sarbanes Oxley, to go public on foreign stock exchanges rather than listing in the U.S.

The problem with the legislation is the massive cost of compliance and the stilted way that companies need to operate in order to comply with it. All this is waste. The law was put in place in response to the accounting and financial fraud that came to light in the early part of the decade at several companies, most notably Enron. What is little understood today is that people at Enron and elsewhere were successfully prosecuted under the then-current security laws were. The rules in place dealt with the problems effectively. Piling on a huge regulatory burden was totally unnecessary.

We live in a global economy and having companies in the U.S. carrying the added burden of high compliance costs and the inefficiency that entails only makes U.S. businesses less competitive. Companies backed by venture capital have created massive numbers of jobs in the U.S. but because the law has made it harder for them to go public (or to stay public), the amount of VC money has dried up. Newly-formed companies have been denied the IPO exit that all investors want, and the math is quite simple: No exit equals no more investment.

If you want to start a company and some day take it public, contact your Congressional representatives and ask them to repeal Sarbanes Oxley. It was and is a horrible burden on everyone.
By blog.inc.com

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