Author Archive for Terry Taylor

NEW! Free Lunch and Learn Series

We have received a ton of requests for more networking events and the opportunity to learn more about what services are available from city agencies.

So we created the ‘Lunch and Learn’ series. Every second Wednesday of the month, you’ll have the opportunity to network with other businesses and learn valuable information for your business.

Here’s how it works: Every second Wednesday of the month, we’ll meet at either Madison’s or Grand Central Bowl from 11:45 – 1:00. You’ll get a chance to introduce you and your business to the group, and then we’ll have a couple speakers talk about issues which impact your business.

This is a free event – you simply buy your lunch.

Every month a different speaker will discuss tips and strategies to make your business more successful.

Our first Lunch and Learn will be on Wednesday, April 14th starting at 11:45 at Grand Central – SE Morrison and 8th Ave. We’ll have people from PDC there to discuss storefront grant money and other business improvement funding opportunities and how you can get your share.

We’ll also have a financial planner who will give case studies of CEIC companies’ strategic financial plans. You’ll learn how you too can implement these strategies in your business.

Come network with other businesses, get some new contacts and learn a few things along the way – look for details each month.

CEID Under Siege – Get all the details at our Quarterly Meeting

Construction is everywhere. Want to know more about the timelines, the projects and get your opinions heard? Attend the upcoming Quarterly Meeting at Madison’s on April 1st.

To learn more and to register for this event, sponsored by Bolliger and Sons, click here: Quarterly flyer April 2010.

Hurry, space is limited, and seeing that this is one hot topic for all businesses in the district, it is sure to fill up quickly!

Member Spotlight – Portland Screen Printing

Portland Screen Printing has an extensive line of products available to help you promote your company or message. Some examples of their most popular items include pens, calendars, T-shirts, caps, coffee mugs, calculators, key chains, desk accessories and bumper stickers.

Popular uses of promotional products are business gifts, employee morale, awareness programs, corporate communications, and of course at trade shows to generate booth traffic.

Promotional products are powerful weapons in your marketing arsenal. Some of the proven uses for ad specialty items include: Attract new customers, Increase repeat business , Inspire customer loyalty, Establish name recognition, Reactivate old accounts, Create a good reputation, Get attention.

Numerous case studies document the effectiveness of promotional products. One fast-food restaurant’s investment of $181 in promotional products resulted in more than $1200 increase in food sales. One study found that promotional products increase the response to direct mail up to 75%.

Portland Screen Printing solves marketing problems and create new marketing opportunities for your business! To learn more how they can help your business, contact Bob Kincaid, Account Manager at 503-232-8578.

If you would like to see your business spotlighted here, send an email to terry@ceic.cc

Wealth Management Business Strategies

Successful business owners are very busy people. First, they must develop and regularly adjust their economic equation to ensure a consistent profit. Second, they must effectively execute on that equation, managing everything from staff and product development to marketing and customer service. Third, they must steward their business’s overall wealth and resource base for the benefit of multiple constituencies, including family members, employees, vendors, and customers.

Since it’s not directly related to real-time business performance or making a profit, focusing on long-term wealth management may seem abstract, unimportant, or unnecessary.

But since wealth management decisions directly affecting a business’s long-term prosperity are already part of every business owner’s ongoing workload, consulting with wealth management experts to consciously craft a comprehensive long-term plan has many advantages.

Such a plan takes into account: (a) personal and family financial planning, including investments, taxes, insurance, and retirement and estate planning; (b) business financial planning, which similarly considers taxes, cash flow, insurance, and more; (c) issues specific to business owners, such as employee retirement plans and owner-occupied building challenges; and (d) advanced planning perspectives, such as wealth enhancement, wealth conservation, asset protection, and charitable giving.

If you own a successful business, consulting with a trusted wealth management firm will free you up to do what you do best while the firm does what it does best. Look for a firm with a systematic, comprehensive, and consultative approach, as well as one with ongoing access to specialized legal, tax, and insurance expertise.

To read the full article on which this article summary is based, please click here.

To find out more about CFG Wealth Management and the services it offers to business owners, please click here

Morrison Bridge Water Ave. ramp reopens

A year-long project to construct a path for bicyclists and pedestrians across the Morrison Bridge is near completion. An eastbound offramp from the bridge to SE Water Ave. will reopen to motor vehicles. The realigned offramp creates a new intersection at Water Ave. between SE Yamhill St. and SE Belmont St. The old offramp required drivers to merge into an offramp from northbound Interstate 5.

The contractor will continue to work on the new shared, 15-foot wide path on the south side of the bridge. The work will require numerous test bridge lifts during off-peak hours while the lift span is rebalanced. The remaining portion from SW Alder and SW 2nd Ave. to the bridge will open late this month.

The new path replaces a sidewalk that was five feet wide, with narrower pinch points. The project includes the following elements:

· Path: On the lift span the path surface is panels of fiber reinforced polymer, at the same level as traffic. In other sections the path is on a raised concrete curb.

· Railing: On the lift span the shared path is separated from the roadway by a two-foot tall concrete parapet wall topped with a one-foot metal pedestrian rail.

· SW Alder St. Connection: A sidewalk and bicycle lane were added to the bridge onramp from SW Alder St. from SW 2nd Ave. to the top of the Naito onramp. When completed, pedestrians will be able to use the sidewalk in both directions. The bicycle lane is intended for eastbound riders (westbound bicyclists will need to use the Naito ramp). A crosswalk and mid-block curb extension will help pedestrians cross Little Alder St. at the base of the SW Alder St. ramp.

· SW Naito Ramp Crosswalk: A crosswalk and signage will be added at the top of the Naito ramp to the bridge, to help pedestrians and cyclists crossing between the path and the SW Alder St. ramp.

· Traffic Lanes: Six traffic lanes will continue to cross the bridge after the project is completed. The lanes have been narrowed from 13 to 11 feet. One of three lanes on the SW Alder St. ramp was removed and replaced by a bike lane and new sidewalk.

Prior to the project, the Morrison Bridge had the lowest use of the five downtown bridges open to bicyclists.

The $1.9 million project included funds from the Federal Highway Administration and Multnomah County. The City of Portland contributed funds to the project’s design, along with the county and federal government.

Multnomah County maintains the Morrison Bridge, five other Willamette River bridges and 300 miles of roads. For more information, visit www.multco.us/bridge.

Michael Pullen
Multnomah County Public Affairs Office
W: 503-988-6804 C: 503-209-4111
mike.j.pullen@co.multnomah.or.us

Community Policing Action Committee Minutes

Every third Thursday of the month from 7:30AM – 8:30AM, you can meet the police officers, District Attorney, Office of Neighborhood Improvement representative and voice your concerns at the Community Policing Action Committee (CPAC).

This meeting is open to anyone concerned with police and neighborhood issues in the district. The meetings are held at 1515 SE Water Ave – third floor conference room.

As a courtesy to those who would like to know what was discussed at the meeting but are unable to attend, we will post the minutes of each meeting.

Here are Feb 18 CPAC Meetings Minutes The next meeting will be on Thursday, March 18th.

Problem solving and Liquor Establishment workshop

If you’re concerned about liquor establishment in the area and what to do if problems arise, attend the Office Of Neighborhood Improvement workshop.

ONI Crime Prevention is having a training on Problem Solving and Liquor Establishments on Wednesday, March 31st from 6:30-8:00pm in the community room at the PPB Traffic Division at 4735 E Burnside. RSVP by 3/26 to Kelly Ball at 503-823-9666.

For more information contact:
Havilah Ferschweiler
Southeast Portland Crime Prevention Coordinator
Office of Neighborhood Involvement
3534 SE Main Street
Portland OR 97214
503-823-0540
hferschweiler@ci.portland.or.us

Third Thursday Networking Event

Every third Thursday of the month, we’ll be having a no-host networking event at Blitz Ladd – 2239 SE 11th Ave from 5:30 to whenever.

Stop by after work for a beverage and appetizer and the opportunity to win prizes. This free event is a relaxing, fun and easy way to get to know other businesses.

This month’s fun contest is based on March Madness. Do you know your mascots? Come show us and win Blazer tickets or Portland Spirit tickets!

Space still wanted by a variety of people and groups

Every week the CEIC receives numerous requests from people looking for temporary space. Some need space for a couple weeks, some for a month, some longer.

Each of these people/groups have small budgets, however if you have vacant space which isn’t collecting any dues, this might be a way to get some funds while helping out an upstart company or artist.

To learn more about what is being requested and if your space might be a good fit, send an email to terry@ceic.cc.

CEIC Member Spotlight – URS Electronics

URS Electronics is a wholesale distributor of Electronic Components that has been in business since 1935. They have been located in the CEID (NE 7th & Couch) since 1969 stocking a wide range of electro-mechanical components.

While they originally sold vacuum receiving tubes, today they carry nearly $1Million of inventory in CCTV Video equipment, Terminal Blocks, Wire & Cable, LAN/Premise Wiring products and assorted “hard to find” electronic components.

URS’s primary customer base consists of OEM, Commercial/Industrial, and Local Government. They support the OEM market with value added services (Kitting, Scheduling/KANBAN, Various Assemblies); the Commercial/Industrial/MRO market by supplying a broad range of products in a timely manner; and finally URS has several State/City contracts that allows agencies to avoid the lengthy bid process with competitively priced government contracts.

The recently remodeled front counter area allows end users to stop by and actually “touch & feel” the product prior to purchase. While most of their business is with commercial accounts, they do accept most major credit cards. Either way, they promise fast, knowledgeable, and friendly service.

The average tenure for our 16 employee’s is over 20 years with their current president (Mark Twietmeyer) being a native Oregonian and second generation business owner. He literally grew up in the business, starting with sweeping the floors to eventually reaching the corner office. But as any small business owner knows; you may have the corner office, but you also still know how to run a broom.

For any of your electronic component requirements, call them at 503.233.5341, email us at sales@ursele.com, or visit their front counter at 123 NE 7th & Couch.

If you’d like to be spotlighted as the next CEIC Member, please send and email to terry@ceic.cc