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A recent study claims that coconut water contains antioxidant benefits that prove better than soda and sports drink with added vitamins and sugar.

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Tuesday, September 21, 2010

15 Tips For Raising A Young Mogul

The secrets (and perils) of nurturing a future Master of the Universe.


Sixth-grader Gabrielle McBay discovered she liked making sugar cookies from scratch at summer camp in Desoto, Texas. The following school year she filled Valentine's Day orders for her classmates.
"At first I just charged $1 or something, because my mom stopped buying the groceries for me," recalls McBay, now a freshman at Texas Christian University and a seasoned entrepreneur. Crumbs by Gabrielle now churns out eight varieties of cookies, including chocolate-chip and oatmeal-raisin. Renting space at a nearby cake bakery, McBay has pulled in a modest $8,000 in sales thus far, including a chunk from her school's foodservice provider. But she has far bigger plans: a chain of "cookie lounges" that are a combination of a bakery and a coffee house.
McBay is a late bloomer next to Paris Morris. Three years ago, at age 9, Paris Morris told her parents that she wanted to write a book for kids like her who were welcoming new twins into the household. Her father, David Morris, founder of New Year Publishing in Danville, Calif., was happy to oblige. He helped her publish three books, under the My Friend Paris rubric, all aimed at siblings of twins. Today young Paris hawks licensed apparel (made by Queensboro Shirt Co. in Wilmington, N.C.) through a handful of stores and, soon, at her own website--all while trying to fit middle school into her life, too.
Every parent wants to believe her child is gifted. For sprouts with truly serious potential, the pangs to blaze a trail (and maybe make a few bucks) can come on early and strong. For moms and dads, the blessing can be a tricky challenge.
"You can help with the books, and you can drive them to meet with clients," says Donna Fenn, author of Upstarts! How GenY Entrepreneurs Are Rocking the World of Business and 8 Ways You Can Profit From Their Success. "But the minute it stops being fun [for them], forget it."
Lindsay Phillips was fortunate to have supportive parents when she made ceramic flip-flops as an art project at age 16--and then began dreaming about making a business out of funky footwear. "They always told me that quitters never win and winners never quit, and they really believed in my idea," said Phillips, now 23 and an owner of Lindsay Phillips, maker of SwitchFlops, sandals with easily reconfigurable straps. The Cedar Knolls, N.J.-based company employs 35 people and is on track to pull in $30 million in revenues this year.
Rule No. 1 when mentoring a young mogul: Don't get overly involved. "It's really their project," says Larry Johnson, head of Johnson Training Group, a management consultancy. His daughter, Meagan, raised and sold rabbits as a young girl; now she's his business partner. "Your role is that of an advisor or mentor or coach, but it's not your role to do [the job]," adds Johnson. "And that's a big temptation."
Trigger their imaginations. "Expose them to possibilities through travel, talking about the environment, talking about the news and things that impact the world, and opportunities that may exist for business from all of that," says Bruce Bachenheimer, director of entrepreneurship at Pace University. Drawing their attention to a few magazine profiles of interesting entrepreneurs wouldn't hurt, either.
Run with it. This advice comes courtesy of Phyllis Cheung, founder of MyWeddingConcierge.com. Cheung's 5-year-old daughter, Olivia, recently asked her mother "if 'they make Frostingcicles'"--that is, Popsicle-shaped frozen treats made with frosting instead of flavored ice. "She said we could call it 'Frosting on a Stick.' The next day we made prototypes." When Olivia asked her dad, Philip, who creates mobile applications for his wife's company, if there might be an app that makes images that kids color, then erase and re-color, he wrote one. "So she understands if you ask about something, it really might be possible," says Mom.
Send them to boot camp. Kids go to summer camp for everything from music to athletics. Why not for entrepreneurship? A growing number of colleges, business-development groups and other organizations sponsor immersion camps for teenagers. Presentation skills, team building and innovation are common subject areas. Often there are simulations. Many camps culminate in business-plan contests or other competitions with prizes such as scholarships. At the summer Teen Entrepreneur Boot Camp in New York City, teens have learned to open temporary retail businesses that they create, design, market and operate, including a real espresso bar open to the public.
Charge interest. Say your daughter wants to start a candy bar retailer out of her school locker and she needs a down stroke of a few hundred dollars to buy inventory. Make sure she understands that capital comes at a cost, and that she has to pay back the benefactor who put her in business. "You're doing your child entrepreneur a disservice if you don't teach them the difference between revenue and profit," says Fenn. The same goes for any labor you contribute.
Stress savings. One caveat to the previous slide: When and if the profits start rolling in, don't be afraid to put the brakes on. Alex Rampel's parents were CPAs, so this was Lesson No. 1 for him. "I never had an allowance," says Alex Rampel, chief executive of TrialPay, who started selling his own software at age 10. Mom and Dad suggested that he invest most of his proceeds in certificates of deposit. "That incorporated a strong notion of fiscal responsibility in me," said the 29-year-old Rampel. "That's something most startups could use a lot more of."
Identify a mentor. Hockey prodigies have Sidney Crosby; budding vocalists have Beyoncé. Young moguls need mentors too. There are numerous mentoring and networking groups to choose from including Junior AchievementFuture Business Leaders Of America and the National Mentoring Partnership. For more resources, check out the U.S. Small Business Administration's teen business site.
Put it all in context. It's never too early to teach children the importance of entrepreneurship to the world at large. "Show them that they can make a buck but also make the world a better place," says Brad Hancock, director of the Neely Entrepreneurship Center at Texas Christian University. Steer them, for instance, toward Kiva.org, where they can lend some of their profits to other striving entrepreneurs in developing countries.
by Dale Buss and Melanie Lindner-forbes



Coke vs. Pepsi: Beverage giants offer water footprint insights


In conjunction with last week’s worldwide push to champion sustainable water consumption practices, PepsiCo and the Coca-Cola Company have published extensive reports that detail their specific business practices around championing clean water.
The PepsiCo one, entitled “Water Stewardship: Good for Business. Good for Society,” amplifies the water stewardship goals that the company outlined in April 2010 when it released its broader update on its corporate sustainability efforts. At that time, it set out a goal to improve water efficiency for each unit of production by 20 percent by 2015. So far, it has managed a 15 percent efficiency gain against its 2006 baseline. Last year, that efficiency improvement amount to a savings of more than 12 billion liters of water.
Another big theme for PepsiCo is “water balance,” that is, the idea that it can use technology and new business practices to give back more water to the earth and particular regions than is actually used in its operations. This year PepsiCo (and Coca-Cola, too, as you’ll read in a minute) started working with the Nature Conservancy on initiatives focused on water balance.
So, for example, the water filtration and purification system that the company is using in Casa Grande, Ariz., is recycling and reusing approximately 80 percent of the process water used in production. In the United Kingdom, the company is working in way to capture the water in the potatoes that go into making its “crisps” (American translation = potato chips). Turns out there is a lot of water in raw spuds. This practice has helped the facility reduce water usage by 42 percent so far. There are a number of other examples in the report, notably ones that are related to agricultural practices.
The report published by Coca-Cola and the Nature Conservancy, “Product Water Footprint Assessments: Practical Application in Corporate Water Stewardship,” drills down more deeply into three specific examples of how Coca-Cola is working on this problem. The company defines a product water footprint as “the total volume of freshwater consumed, directly and indirectly, to produce a product.”
To put a finer point on it, Coca-Cola notes that there is a big difference between water footprinting and carbon footprinting. Here’s what it says in the report:
“With carbon footprints, one can compare similar products (if the same boundaries and methodology are used) knowing that lower carbon (or zero carbon) is better. On the other hand, water footprints help identify where water is used in the production of a production and what type of water is used. Water is local and thus water footprint numbers must be considered in the context of the local watershed.”
The focus of the Coca-Cola report is on water footprint assessments of the following:
  • Coca-Cola sold in a 0.5 liter PET bottle, specifically one produced by Coca-Cola Enterprises in the Netherlands
  • Beet sugar supplied to Coca-Cola in Europe
  • Minute Maid and Simply Orange products sold into the North American market
Those assessments are provided for three different types of water uses:
  • Green water uses, which pertains to the use of rainwater trapped in the soil
  • Blue water uses, referring to surface and ground water
  • Grey water, which is defined as the volume of water that is needed to 
    • assimilate pollutants
    The assessments break down all three of the scenarios described above for these different types of uses. The footprints differ depending on where products are sourced. So, for example, the Coca-Cola Simply Orange product, when sourced in Florida, has the following footprint per liter: 386 liters for green water, 154 liters for blue water, 100 liters in grey water. If you source the oranges from both Florida and Brazil, those numbers change: the greenwater footprint is 407 liters per liter of product, the blue water footprint is 127 liters, and the grey water footprint is 117 liters.
    Here’s the common theme in both these reports: The biggest piece of water footprints is related to the way different ingredients are grown in the field rather than the impact of factory processes. Here’s a comment from Denise Knight, the director of water and sustainable agriculture for Coca-Cola:
    “We see significant opportunity to engage more directly with our agricultural suppliers to advance sustainable water use for the cultivation of ingredients in our supply chain. Our initial efforts will focus on the sustainable sourcing of sugarcane, oranges and corn.”
    More evidence that water conservation technology in the field is a smart corporate sustainability investment.

Benefits of Coconut Water Prove Better than Soda and Sports Drink


A recent study claims that coconut water contains antioxidant benefits that prove better than soda and sports drink with added vitamins and sugar.
Coconut water, the clear liquid found inside the coconut, has five key electrolytes including potassium at levels 15 times higher than sports drinks. This has been used for years in tropical regions like Central America, Asia, Trinidad and Tobago as a perfect replacement for sports drinks that are on the market today. It has also reported that celebrities like Demi Moore and Madonna were spotted drinking it for its health benefits.
In addition, it is high in antioxidants which help body scavenge dangerous free radicals that can degenerate cells. Antioxidants are also known to help prevent cancer, ward off neurological diseases such as Alzheimer’s and degenerative diseases such as premature aging, sagging skin, wrinkling, and bone problems, just to name a few.
This liquid has been dubbed by UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization officer as “fluid of life” some ten years ago. Now, popularity of coconut water is growing fast as people learn about the health and beauty benefits of this island fruit.

Wine in Britain: Scots drink red, Cornish drink white


A love of good wine may be universal, but it would appear different parts of Britain have dramatically different tastes when it comes to choosing their favourite bottle.

Malbec and other high-alcohol reds sell particularly well in Scotland, the sales figures from Morrisons suggest
Malbec and other high-alcohol reds sell particularly well in Scotland, the sales figures from Morrisons suggest Photo: PEARTREE
A study of the tens of thousands of bottles that Morrisons supermarkets sells every day has revealed that Britain's taste for wine has as many regional differences as their accents.
While the bestselling wines in Scotland are heavy reds such as Malbec, Cabernet Sauvignon and Chateauneuf du Pape, its stores in the South West sell more Pinot Grigio, a light Italian white, than anything else.
Londoners and those in the South East favour slightly lighter reds, including Merlot and the Pinot Noir grape used in red Burgundies. Up in the North West, the distinctive white grape Chardonnay – used in everything from unsubtle new world wines to elegant white Burgundies – along with Malbec are the best selling varieties.
Allan Cheesman, a wine consultant who used to head up Sainsbury's wine department, said: "There always used to be huge differences in the stores. Scotland like high alcohol drinks, along with Ireland and the Scandinavian countries. They also have a sweeter tooth. There used to be this very strong, sweet sherry called Walnut Brown, which would fly off the shelves in Scotland but sit gathering dust in the south.
"I've always thought it was to do with the weather. It's cold and dark up there for much of the year, so you need a strong red to keep you going."
Cabernet Sauvignon, especially from the new world, can sometimes have as much as 16 per cent alcohol in them.
Pinot Grigio, a grape which tends to make an acidic white wine, rarely contains more than 12.5 per cent alcohol.
Its success in the south west is also weather-related, experts believe, with much of the region's wine sold in the summer months to holidaymakers looking for a lighter style.
While the regional varieties continue to tax supermarket buyers who supply wine for national chains, Mr Cheesman pointed out a revolution had occurred since the early 1980s.
"Back then, we used to say you could draw a line from the Wash down to the River Axe and no wine would ever be sold north of that. At least now different parts of the country are enjoying a wide range of different wines."
By Harry Wallop, Consumer Affairs Editor

Vietnam still searching for Miss Earth 2010 contestant

VietNamNet Bridge – Though Miss Earth 2010 will be held in Vietnam for the first time this November, Vietnam has not yet selected its representative.




Top five of Miss Vietnam World 2010 pageant.






The organizing board of Miss Earth 2010 announced events and activities of Miss Earth in Vietnam at a press conference in HCM City on August 25. At the meeting, the local media paid special attention to the host country’s contestant. The organizing board said that the Vietnamese contestant will be selected from the top 15 beauties of Miss Vietnam World 2010 pageant.

“We are considering choosing a deserving representative for Miss Earth pageant. She may be Miss Vietnam World 2010, the first or second runner-up or one in the top 15 of this contest. She must be beautiful, talented, has good knowledge of environment and has a passion for environmental activities,” said organizer Nguyen Cong Khe.

Miss Earth 2010 will take place in one month, with activities covering HCM City, Phan Thiet, Hoi An and Nha Trang. Contestants from 90 countries will be in HCM City as of November 4. They will attend a press conference in the city and some environmental activities, compete in the Miss Party and Gala Dinner.

They will move to Phan Thiet to join environmental activities and a festival to advertise Vietnam’s sports from November 15-17. In Hoi An, they will compete in Miss Ao Dai, attend the Earth Hour and the Lantern Festival, to call for fuel saving and natural resource protection.

Contestants will go to Nha Trang to prepare for the finale night and will meet with residents to talk about environmental protection and join various environmental activities.

Miss Earth 2010 pageant will celebrate its 10th anniversary in Vietnam. Vietnam will host several Miss Earth pageants over the next ten years. It is sponsored by the Philippines’ Carousel Productions group, which is closely connected with raising people’s awareness of environmental protection.

PV

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