Review Of Business Opportunities At The Franchise Exhibition



The venue for the franchise exhibition was the GMEX. It has a lovely location, situated in the heart of Manchester and surrounded by beautiful buildings both old and new. There are lovely restaurants, bars and cafes all within easy walking distance.

The exhibitor list at the franchise exhibition in Manchester was wide and varied with businesses opportunities available starting from as little as 5000 pounds all the way up to 100,000.

Most of the exhibitors used standard shell schemes and stuck their posters on the wall ready to greet potential franchisees. A few had spent a small fortune, with bespoke stands, purpose built for the exhibition that really stood out from the crowd.

The attendee list of franchisors had all the usual suspects including Cash Generators, My Home, Punch Taverns, Chips Away and of course CityLocal.

There were a couple of really interesting franchises that captured my attention. One offered a beauty treatment that promised a tighter belly after a few treatments. They were doing free treatments to anybody daring enough to lie on their bed and expose their belly in front of the public.

There was another unusual franchise which stood out in my mind. It was a tiny van, emblazoned with logos and specially built to provide sandwiches & coffee to business parks. I can imagine people queuing to buy lunch from this well designed business on wheels.

The exhibition was really busy on Friday until around 2:30pm. Then the crowds slowly started dispersing and the exhibition closed at 5:00pm. Fran Info the organizers laid on free drinks and snacks for the exhibitors after the venue closed and this was our chance to talk to the other franchisors.

I find that on Friday you meet a lot of serious punters whilst on Saturday you get a lot of “tyre kickers” attending. People have to take time out from their normal work routine to attend on Friday and are therefore more serious about starting a business, whilst on Saturdays you get some people attending that have no intention of ever buying a franchise.

Later that night, we ended up in a beautiful Italian restaurant just across the road after a busy Friday. Gio (5/7 Mosley Street – Tel: 0161 228 2030) has to be the best Italian restaurant in the UK. The food was excellent, the service exceptional and the bill for all 6 of us including drinks came to 120 pounds. It is well worth driving to Manchester just to eat in this fabulous restaurant.

On Saturday the exhibition did not start until 10:00am so we had time to check out of the hotel, dump our luggage into the car and have breakfast at McDonalds.

Saturday was a lot busier than Friday but fortunately for us the exhibitions finished at 4:00pm. No sooner had the last attendee left then everybody started dismantling their stands and within an hour most of the exhibitors had finished and were heading home.

We were in our car and reached Leicester at 8:00pm just in time for some lovely home made cooking courtesy of Zak’s lovely new wife Auzma.

All in all, the exhibition was well worth attending, although not as busy as Birmingham. Our next exhibition is in Doncaster and we hope to see you there.

 

How To Tell Legitimate Home Business Opportunities From Scams

Are you looking for legitimate home business opportunities, but can’t figure out how to determine them from the scams? There are some important things that you need to do to be able to decide which are scams and which are legitimate.

Here are the most important things that you need to do.

One: It is always a good idea to research each business opportunity thoroughly. To help you find information about that opportunity use any major search engine.

Look at all of the information that can be found carefully to be sure what it is saying. Don’t just read a few things and assume that an opportunity is legitimate.

Two: It is always a good idea to contact the people behind the business opportunity. If they answer your inquiries in a short period of time, then they are usually legitimate.

Always contact them more than once to be sure that you will get an answer each time. Use email, the phone and a contact form to contact them. The more ways you use the more you will be able to tell about the opportunity when they do answer you.

Three: When people discover scams on the internet they will usually visit home business forums to let others know about it. Go to as many home business forums as you can and read everything about each opportunity you are interested in.

If you can’t find information about a particular business opportunity, then you want to post a question about it. If someone in the forum knows about it, they will be more than happy to answer your questions.

Four: Always check with the BBB to be sure that there are not any complaints against a business. You may want to move on and find another opportunity to start your home business with if there are complaints.

Five: Read review articles and blogs because there are many reviews being done for a lot of different opportunities. Reviews will give you a more accurate picture of a particular opportunity.

Just be sure that you read more than one review. This is the best way to get an accurate picture of any business opportunity.

These are the best ways to use to learn if home business opportunities are legitimate or a scam. Don’t start with any opportunity without first doing these things or you could find that you have joined a scam business.

 

Selling Blood is Big Business



RED GOLD! As the nickname implies, this is one highly valued substance. It is a precious fluid, a crucial natural resource that has been compared not only to gold but also to oil and coal. However, red gold is not mined from veins in the rocks with drills and dynamite. It is mined from the veins of people by much subtler means.

Please, my little girl needs blood, implores a billboard that looms over a busy avenue in New York City. Other advertisements urge: If you’re a donor, you’re the type this world can’t live without. Your blood counts. Lend an arm.

People who want to help others evidently do get the message. They line up in droves, worldwide. No doubt most of them, as well as the people collecting the blood and the people transfusing the blood, sincerely want to help the afflicted and believe that they are doing so.

But after blood is donated and before it is transfused, it passes through more hands and undergoes more procedures than most of us realize. Like gold, blood inspires greed. It may be sold at a profit and then resold at a larger profit. Some people fight over the rights to collect blood, they sell it at exorbitant prices, they make fortunes from it, and they even smuggle it from one country to another. The world over, selling blood is big business.

In the United States, donors were once paid outright for their blood. But in 1971 British author Richard Titmuss charged that by thus luring the poor and sick to donate blood for the sake of a few dollars, the American system was unsafe. He also argued that it was immoral for people to profit from giving their blood to help others. His attack prompted an end to the paying of whole-blood donors in the United States (although the system still thrives in some lands). Yet, that did not make the blood market any less profitable. Why?

How Blood Remained Profitable

In the 1940’s, scientists began to separate blood into its components. The process, now called fractionation, makes blood an even more lucrative business. How? Well, consider: When dismantled and its parts sold, a late-model car may be worth up to five times its value when intact. Similarly, blood is worth much more when it is divided up and its components are sold separately.

Plasma, which makes up about half of the blood’s total volume, is an especially profitable blood component. Since plasma has none of the cellular blood parts—red cells, white cells, and platelets—it can be dried and stored. Furthermore, a donor is allowed to give whole blood only five times a year, but he can give plasma up to twice a week by undergoing plasmapheresis. In this process, whole blood is extracted, the plasma separated, and then the cellular components are reinfused into the donor.

The United States still allows donors to be paid for their plasma. Moreover, that country permits donors to give about four times more plasma annually than the World Health Organization recommends! Little wonder, then, that the United States collects over 60 percent of the world’s plasma supply. All that plasma in itself is worth about $450 million, but it fetches much more on the market because plasma too can be separated into various ingredients. Worldwide, plasma is the basis for a $2,000,000,000-a-year industry!

Japan, according to the newspaper Mainichi Shimbun, consumes about a third of the world’s plasma. That country imports 96 percent of this blood component, most of it from the United States. Critics within Japan have called that country the vampire of the world, and the Japanese Health and Welfare Ministry has tried to clamp down on the trade, saying that it is unreasonable to profit from blood. In fact, the Ministry charges that medical institutions in Japan make some $200,000,000 in profits each year from just one plasma component, albumin.

The Federal Republic of Germany consumes more blood products than the rest of Europe combined, more per person than any country in the world. The book Zum Beispiel Blut (For Instance, Blood) says of blood products: Over half is imported, mainly from the U.S.A., but also from the Third World. In any case from the poor, who want to improve their income by donating plasma. Some of these poor people sell so much of their blood that they die from blood loss.

Many commercial plasma-centers are strategically located in low-income areas or along the borders of poorer countries. They draw the impoverished and the derelicts, who are all too willing to trade plasma for money and have ample reason to give more than they should or to conceal any illnesses they might harbor. Such plasma traffic has arisen in 25 countries around the world. As soon as it is stopped in one country, it springs up in another. Bribery of officials as well as smuggling is not uncommon.

Profit in the Nonprofit Realm

But nonprofit blood banks have also come under harsh criticism lately. In 1986 reporter Andrea Rock charged in Money magazine that a unit of blood costs the blood banks $57.50 to collect from donors, that it costs the hospitals $88.00 to buy it from the blood banks, and that it costs patients from $375 to $600 to receive it in a transfusion.

Has the situation changed since then? In September 1989 reporter Gilbert M. Gaul of The Philadelphia Inquirer wrote a series of newspaper articles on the U.S. blood-banking system. After a yearlong investigation, he reported that some blood banks beg people to donate blood and then turn around and sell as much as half of that blood to other blood centers, at a considerable profit. Gaul estimated that blood banks trade about a million pints [half a million liters] of blood every year in this way, in a shadowy $50,000,000-a-year market that functions somewhat like a stock exchange.

A key difference, though: This blood exchange is not monitored by the government. No one can measure the exact extent of it, let alone regulate its prices. And many blood donors know nothing about it. People are being fooled, one retired blood banker told The Philadelphia Inquirer. Nobody is telling them that their blood is going to us. They would be furious if they knew about it. A Red Cross official put it succinctly: Blood bankers have for years fooled the American public.

In the United States alone, blood banks collect some 13.5 million pints [6.5 million L] of blood every year, and they sell over 30 million units of blood products for about a thousand million dollars. This is a tremendous amount of money. Blood banks don’t use the term profit. They prefer the phrase excesses over expenses. The Red Cross, for instance, made $300 million in excesses over expenses from 1980 to 1987.

The blood banks protest that they are nonprofit organizations. They claim that unlike big corporations on Wall Street, their money does not go to stockholders. But if the Red Cross did have shareholders, it would be ranked among the most profitable corporations in the United States, such as General Motors. And blood-bank officials do have handsome salaries. Of officials in 62 blood banks surveyed by The Philadelphia Inquirer, 25 percent made over $100,000 a year. Some made more than twice that much.

Blood bankers also claim that they do not sell the blood they collect—they only charge processing fees. One blood banker retorts to that claim: It drives me crazy when the Red Cross says it doesn’t sell blood. That’s like the supermarket saying they’re only charging you for the carton, not the milk.