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Small Business |
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| OpenOffice.org 2 User Guide | OpenOffice.org | |
| Getting Started With OpenOffice.org 2 | OpenOffice.org | |
| Quicken 98 6-in-1 | Stephen O\'Brien | |
| Introduction To QuickBooks Accounting System | Steve Pightling | |
| Lotus Notes and Domino Server 4.6 | Randall A. Tamura | |
| Introduction to Microsoft Outlook | University of Kansas | |
| Introduction to Microsoft Access | Univessity of Kansas | |
| FrontPage 2000 Tutorial | Florida Gulf Coast University | |
| Microsoft Access 2002 Tutorial | American University of Beirut | |
| Microsoft Access 2000 Tutorial | Florida Gulf Coast University | |
| Non-Book Resources |
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A small business may be defined as a business with a small number of employees. The legal definition of "small" often varies by country and industry, but is generally under 100 employees in the United States while under 50 employees in the European Union (In contrast, the American definition of mid-sized business by the number of employees is generally under 500 while 250 is for that of European Union). These businesses are normally privately owned corporations, partnerships, or sole proprietorships. However, other methods are also used to clasify small companies, such us annual sales (turnover), assets value or net profit (balance sheet), alone or in a mixed definition. This criteria is followed by the European Union, for instance (headcount, turnover and balance sheet totals). Small businesses are common in many countries, depending on the economic system in operation. Typical examples include: small shops, hairdressers, tradesmen, solicitors, lawyers, accountants, restaurants, guest houses, photographers, small-scale manufacturing etc. Small businesses are usually independent. The smallest businesses, often located in private homes, are called microbusinesses (term used by international organizations such as the World Bank and the International Finance Corporation) or SoHos. The term "mom and pop business" is a common colloquial expression for a single-family operated business with few (or no) employees other than the owners. When judged by the number of employees, the American and the European definitions are the same: under 10 employees. |