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Dec 13, 2010

Business Account Charges by RBS Bank

Thcharges for the day to day running of your account are detailed These charges together form your ‘service charge’. The charging periods for transactions forming part of your service charge generally end when your statement is produced. The charges are then applied 14 days later.

Business Current Account –Standard Tariff
You will pay a fixed amount for each transaction that you carry out on your Business Current Account. For details of charges on your Business Current Account see ‘Standard Tariff’

Business Plus Account
If you bank online or over the telephone you may prefer the Business Plus Account which includes free automated transactions. For details of charges on your Business Plus Account see ‘Business Plus Tariff’ on

Business Plus is only available to business customers with an annual turnover of less than £250,000 and less than £25,000 total borrowing.
Foundation Account –Standard Tariff
If you’re starting your first business and have no trading history, or if you have a poor credit history, our Foundation Account could be just what your business needs. It provides straightforward, transaction-based business banking, giving you and your business time to establish a credit and trading record. For details of charges on the Foundation Account see ‘Standard Tariff’

Royalties Business Account
You will pay a fixed monthly fee from only £25 covering you for every day transactions. In addition, there are plenty of extra benefits to help your business, for example, you can take advantage of discounted RBS Small Business Loan rates and annual card fees. For details of charges on the Royalties Business Account see ‘Royalties Business Account’
Treasurers Account Tariff
A simple way to manage your organisation’s finances. There are no transaction charges on frequently used services.

Start-ups
If you are starting a new business, we give you two years’ free banking.
Free banking means that the charges for the day to day running of your account (known in this leaflet as your “service charge”) will not apply during the free banking period. At the end of the free banking period, you will automatically move to the Standard Tariff detailed on pages 5 and 6. Charges for “Additional Services” and “Unarranged Borrowing” detailed in this leaflet are not part of the free banking offer. Free banking applies to businesses that started trading within the past twelve months with projected or existing annual turnover not exceeding £1 million.

"Financial calculator for Pocket PC”

Pocket 10B Plus Business Calculator is specifically designed for performing financial calculations and is based on the popular HP-10B/II.
Key features of the program include:
  • Functions, thinks, and behaves like the HP-10B/HP-10BII
  • Algebraic data entry
  • Labeled output
  • Automatic constants
  • Interest conversion
  • Business percentages
  • Time value of money
  • Cash flows analysis
  • Amortization
  • One and two variable statistics
  • Three key memory

Emulate the popular financial calculator, HP-10B on your Pocket PC...

Business Communication

Business Communication:communication used to promote a product, service, or organization; relay information within the business; or deal with legal and similar issues. It is also a means of relaying between a supply chain, for example the consumer and manufacturer.
Business Communication is known simply as "Communications." It encompasses a variety of topics, including Marketing, Branding, Customer relations, Consumer behaviour, Advertising, Public relations, Corporate communication, Community engagement, Research & Measurement, Reputation management, Interpersonal communication, Employee engagement, Online communication, and Event management. It is closely related to the fields of professional communication and technical communication.

No business like this snow business

Suddenly, there's a lot of weather about. Winter has arrived, and, with it, those confusing months when it's hard to tell what the climate is up to from day to day. Some rely on the Met Office; others swear by seaweed, and many of us more experienced hands have discovered you can tell quite a bit by peeling back the curtains and looking through a window.
But that tells you only what the weather is doing in your own back yard. Obtaining a comprehensive national picture is more difficult. You can always phone friends, or, if you don't have any, scan webcams in far-flung parts. But, for a really reliable indicator of the national weather picture, you need to turn to the press. Since most national papers are produced in London, by staff living within commuting distance of the capital, the way they calibrate their snow coverage is a far more accurate way of detecting the nation's weather.

Dec 12, 2010

Business Ethics

Business ethics can be both a normative and a descriptive discipline. As a corporate practice and a career specialization, the field is primarily normative. In academia descriptive approaches are also taken. The range and quantity of business ethical issues reflects the degree to which business is perceived to be at odds with non-economic social values. Historically, interest in business ethics accelerated dramatically during the 1980s and 1990s, both within major corporations and within academia. For example, today most major corporate websites lay emphasis on commitment to promoting non-economic social values under a variety of headings such as ethics codes and social responsibility charters. In some cases, corporations have redefined their core values in the light of business ethical considerations, for example, BP's "beyond petroleum" environmental tilt.

Business Ethics

Business ethics (also known as corporate ethics) is a form of applied ethics or professional ethics that examines ethical principles and moral or ethical problems that arise in a business environment. It applies to all aspects of business conduct and is relevant to the conduct of individuals and business organizations as a whole. Applied ethics is a field of ethics that deals with ethical questions in many fields such as medical, technical, legal and business ethics.

Business Ethics

Business Ethics is an online magazine with a strong heritage in the fields of ethics, governance, corporate responsibility and socially responsible investing.
Now available only on the web, Business Ethics was launched in 1987 and published for 20 years as a quarterly print magazine. The mission of Business Ethics – now, as then – is “to promote ethical business practices, to serve that growing community of professionals and individuals striving to work and invest in responsible ways.”
We seek to do that by offering our readers information, opinion and cutting-edge analysis about business and the intersection of business and society.
A lot has changed in the more than two decades since Business Ethics was founded. Ethics and governance have emerged as front-page news and lead agenda items in corporate board rooms and the halls of Congress. Good corporate citizenship is now studied, advocated and sometimes practiced. Sustainability has become a goal for well-meaning small businesses as well as many of the Fortune 500.
Whether that represents real progress is open to debate. The continuing fallout from the recent economic and financial crises is a constant reminder that many systems are not working. There’s plenty to discuss. Business Ethics aims to serve as a guide.

Dec 9, 2010

Business: How to get Business started with Facebook

Are you a new business wondering how to build a presence on the web in less than 24 hours, at no cost and without having to be a technical guru? In this article you will discover 7 tips for getting started with a Facebook Page for your business to help you start building your brand online.