Testimonials - ACFN ATM Franchise - The only ATM Franchise in North America

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

ACFN - ATM Franchise Business, Ranked #1 in category “Miscellaneous Financial Services” in 2010


After almost six months of research and enough data entry to make any assistant’s fingers tingle with fright, Entrepreneur Magazine has just released their highly anticipated Franchise 500.

Jan 19, 2010 – After three decades of perfecting their system, Entrepreneur Magazine has become the most trusted name in franchise rankings around the world. Aspiring business owners rely on their objectivity when considering the prospect of buying a piece of the franchise pie.

Entrepreneur Magazine’s Franchise 500 listing for 2010 ranks ACFN, the only ATM franchise business in the US, #1 in category “Miscellaneous Financial Services”.

ACFN the innovative ATM Franchise Business based in Silicon Valley, is North Americas only ATM franchise focused on providing ATM services to hotels and other travel and entertainment based businesses

Although they are only a small portion of the research needed to become a franchise entrepreneur, this ranking prides itself on being both strict and objective.

The leading judgment factors are stability, financial strength, growth rate, and size. Credibility is certainly not an issue.

Companies competing for the top spot face fierce competition from the two franchises that have held the #1 spot interchangeably for the last 15 years, Subway and McDonalds.

Most companies can only hope to be named #1 in their subcategory, usually a fairer competition.

Since debuting on the list in 2008, ACFN has been creeping up the charts over the last two years, finally reaching the ultimate spot in their category. A smaller business, ACFN is an everyman franchise.

With lower startup costs than most of their competitors on the list, they offer entrepreneurship to everyone able bodied enough to work a few hours a week managing machines and fixing the occasional technically difficulty.

Franchisees vary largely in age, race, location, and income, with their most successful machine belonging to a retired California schoolteacher who operates her business with the help of her only daughter.

President and Founder Jeff Kerr shared his elation over this year’s rankings, “Entrepreneur Magazine is the premier publication for business and being recognized by them is significant".

"The ranking has already prompted many calls from qualified prospect inquiring about our business and we expect will result is many new franchisees joining"

"Being included in the Franchise 500 and earning the #1 rank in our category is a great achievement that we continue to work hard to protect and maintain in future years – we are just getting started"  says Kerr

With ambitious and triumphant words from Kerr, ACFN looks to increase their franchisees steadily as they have in the past, targeting an increase in their 1200 locations by four to five hundred this year.

ACFN’s 30k startup fee includes 1 ATM, a 3 day training program, customer service, and product placement assistance.

About American Consumer Financial Network ("ACFN")

ACFN is ranked the 37th Fastest Growing Private Company in Silicon Valley by the Silicon Valley Business Journal for 2009 and the 64th Fastest Growing Private Company on the Inc. Magazine listing of Top 100 Business Products & Services for 2009 and recognized by Entrepreneur Magazine as one of the “Fast 50” franchise companies”.

Video at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GqplU0Ye7Bw

96 N. Third Street Suite 600
San Jose, CA 95112            
888-794-2236
http://www.acfnfranchised.com



ACFN is North America's only ATM franchise and are ranked the 37th Fastest Growing Private Company in Silicon Valley and the 64th Fastest Growing Private Company on the Inc. Magazine listing of Top 100 Business Products & Services for 2009

Monday, January 4, 2010

Former Wall Street Broker chooses new career with ACFN ATM Franchise Business

A casualty of the Wall Street Meltdown, Ron M, a veteran stock broker, discovers a new way to support his family when the company he has worked for goes bust after 27 years.


Jan 04, 2010 – New York –  Former Wall Street brokers and mid-level executives from investment firms are searching for employment. Some are leveraging their business experience and savings to start small businesses or buy into franchises that are still growing through these tough times.

“If you’re looking for a job right now, your prospects are terrible. There are six times as many Americans seeking work as there are job openings, and the average duration of unemployment — the time the average job-seeker has spent looking for work — is more than six months, the highest level since the 1930s”  says New York Times OP-ED Columnist, Paul Krugman in a recent article.

The story of former stock broker Ron M is familiar, after 27 years as a broker on Wall Street at the same firm, building a life for his wife and children, he lost his job when the firm closed shop as a result of the financial meltdown on Wall Street.

Ron realized that there was little chance of finding a similar position, so he took to the internet applying himself to search for a home based businesses that included a low investment, a lucrative return, requiring little time and with operational simplicity.

His research led him to an innovative Silicon Valley based company called ACFN and the ATM Franchise business.

American Consumer Financial Network has a successful track record of equipping entrepreneurs from all walks of life with the training and materials they need to start their own ATM franchise.

With his expertise in the financial services sector which included understanding research and due diligence on companies, Ron set out to thoroughly investigate this potential investment and change in lifestyle.

He acquired an ATM Franchise in the New York City Borough where he lives.

Jeff Kerr, President of ACFN says  “Our three day training session provided Ron  with a wealth of information. It gave him the full gamut of tools for success and prepared him to start his business in new York right away".

"Ron is an example, one of many who’ve discovered how simple it is to own your own business working with ACFN’s experienced team of professionals.” adds Kerr.

In a highly competitive market like NYC, Ron believes his success will come from identifying key locations and ACFN finds their franchisees great locations for placement.

About American Consumer Financial Network ("ACFN")

ACFN is ranked the 37th Fastest Growing Private Company in Silicon Valley by the Silicon Valley Business Journal for 2009 and the 64th Fastest Growing Private Company on the Inc. Magazine listing of Top 100 Business Products & Services for 2009 and recognized by Entrepreneur Magazine as one of the “Fast 50” franchise companies”.

Video at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GqplU0Ye7Bw

ACFN is North America's only ATM franchise focused on providing ATM services to hotels and other travel and entertainment based businesses. With over a decade of experience in ATM business services and more than 135 Franchisees with 1,200 locations in North America.

96 N. Third Street Suite 600
San Jose, CA 95112            
888-794-2236
http://www.acfnfranchised.com


ACFN is North America's only ATM franchise and are ranked the 37th Fastest Growing Private Company in Silicon Valley and the 64th Fastest Growing Private Company on the Inc. Magazine listing of Top 100 Business Products & Services for 2009

http://www.prlog.org/10449387-former-wall-street-broker-chooses-new-career-with-acfn-atm-franchise-business.html

Saturday, January 2, 2010

Some Small Businesses That Grew in 2009


Air Tractor, which manufactures crop dusters and other agricultural aircraft in rural Olney, Tex., has been able to duck much of the current economic turbulence because it sells its specialized planes around the globe.
While selling in foreign markets has risks, small businesses like Air Tractor have been able to establish footholds abroad by relying on the Export-Import Bank of the United States to ensure they are paid for the goods and services they sell outside the United States.
“Without the Ex-Im Bank’s guarantee, there would be a significant difference in the deals we can make,” said David A. Ickert, the company’s vice president for finance. “We have been surviving and thriving because of exports.”
Air Tractor has been exporting its planes for agricultural seeding, fertilizing and spraying since 1995, when it sold its first two aircraft in Spain. Since then, overseas sales have been a boon to a company that employs 200 people in a town with 3,400 residents.
The company has tapped into the little-known services that the federal government provides to American exporters by compiling research and information about markets in foreign countries and by helping companies with financing. The Export-Import Bank, which is the official American export credit agency, guarantees loans and provides insurance and direct loans. The Commerce Department and all 50 states also offer help.
The bank, which has seven regional offices to help small businesses export their goods and services, authorized $4.36 billion in 2,540 transactions to support small business exports in fiscal year 2009. And the bank, which turned 75 this year, is ready to do more, said Diane Farrell, a member of the bank’s board.
“We have the capacity to do direct lending, and in these changing times, we will be looking to do more of it,” she said.
Congress is urging the federal government to take a larger role in helping small businesses with exports. The Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship this month approved legislation to bolster small business trade opportunities, and asked the Small Business Administration to appoint an official to focus on international trade programs. Federal lawmakers have also asked Ronald Kirk, the United States trade representative, to appoint a top-level official to open overseas markets to more American small businesses.
Less than 1 percent of the nation’s nearly 26 million small businesses are exporters, said Mary L. Landrieu, the Louisiana Democrat who heads the Senate small business committee. Those 240,000 businesses, she said, account for only 29 percent of the United States’ export volume, a number that that has decreased in the last 10 years, according to a letter Senator Landrieu and the committee’s ranking Republican, Senator Olympia J. Snowe of Maine, wrote to Mr. Kirk this year.
Even so, some small businesses said that in the current economic slump — federal statistics show overall exports by the United States fell 11.2 percent from October 2008 to October 2009 — their sales abroad remained strong and that they had been able to add jobs. Mr. Ickert of Air Tractor said the company had hired 30 people in the last year.
Engineered Systems and Equipment, a manufacturer of animal feed processing equipment in Caney, Kan., has more than doubled its work force recently, said its owner, Josef W. Barbi. He said the 26-year-old company now had 50 employees, an increase from the 20 in the last 18 months. “We are one of the few companies in our area who are still hiring,” Mr. Barbi said. Caney is in an economically depressed part of southeastern Kansas.
Last year, the Export-Import Bank insured a $500,000 deal for Engineered Systems to sell specialized pellet systems to a Honduran company, Proteina, which makes animal feed.
That was one of about $7 million in export deals in the last couple of years that Engineered Systems has made in Latin America. Backing from the Export-Import Bank has been crucial, he said, allowing his company to compete with European rivals.
While American exporters like Air Tractor are small enterprises, the business they do abroad can be large. Another Export-Import Bank client, Weldy-Lamont Associates, an engineering firm in Mount Prospect, Ill., relied on the bank’s financial support to win a $350 million rural electrification contract from the government of Ghana, said Patrick Hennelly, the company’s president.
The firm, with only 13 employees, used to design projects like paper mills in the Midwest, but has branched out to win contracts in Thailand, China and Yemen, Mr. Hennelly said.
Aided by an Export-Import Bank loan, Weldy-Lamont has taken a five-year electrification project in Ghana where, Mr. Hennelly said, “we’re putting in the wooden poles and stringing the wires to electrify villages across the whole country.”
The international projects are particularly timely, he said, because “the current economic crisis has stopped a couple of U.S. projects,” for his firm including coal and natural gas plants, from going forward.
Foreign projects can also lead to increased business orders inside the United States, said Kusum Kavia, co-owner and vice president of Combustion Associates, of Corona, Calif. Backed by Export-Import Bank insurance, her company won a multimillion-dollar contract to provide electric power generation systems to Benin. Ghana and Benin are in West Africa.
Parts for Benin’s 80-megawatt power plant power, Ms. Kavia said, come from suppliers in various regions of the United States. The gear boxes, for example, are made in Texas and the gear switchers in Pennsylvania. The generators are made in Ohio.
The portion of the Export-Import Bank’s financing for small business has increased in recent years, with prodding from Congress. In 2002, federal lawmakers told the bank to double small-business financing, from 10 to 20 percent, of the bank’s overall authorizations. The bank has met the goal every year since 2006.
Still, some lawmakers have said that the bank has cumbersome regulations and has not done enough to help small American businesses compete with heavily subsidized foreign competitors.
A 2006 report by the Government Accountability Office criticized the bank’s data and systems for tracking financing for small businesses. The bank has introduced Ex-Im Online, an automated transaction processing system to help small businesses and financial institutions speed through its paperwork. The same site, www.exim.gov, also has a small business portal for first-time applicants.
Small businesses can increase their chances of cracking the export market by doing their homework first, said Alan D. Andrews, vice president of PNC Bank’s global trade and equipment finance group, which works with the Export-Import Bank. That includes checking online state resources, too; each has an export assistance center, he said.
Companies can also turn to the United States Commercial Service (part of the Commerce Department’s International Trade Administration), which has market research and information about legal and other issues for each country. Its site is www.export.gov.


By ELIZABETH OLSON New York Times


ACFN is North America's only ATM franchise and are ranked the 37th Fastest Growing Private Company in Silicon Valley and the 64th Fastest Growing Private Company on the Inc. Magazine listing of Top 100 Business Products & Services for 2009