Friday 5 December 2008

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Back British Business campaign, the companies that get left behind. Backing British companies has been

left behind and times have gotten worse. Companies who can can’t afford search engine optimisation

or even a website. Nov 6th 2008 (PRWEB) -- SOME of Britain’s leading business people started out

small and became giants, four of Britons top entrepreneurs tell how they would ride out the economic

storm and they hail the Backing British Businesses campaign to give small businesses a hand through the downturn.

A news release, like a news story, keeps sentences and paragraphs short, about three or four lines per paragraph.

The first couple of paragraphs should answer the who, what, when, where, why and how questions.

The news media may take information from a news release to craft news or feature article or may use information

in the release word-for-word. KAVITA, 38, runs healthcare and IT firm Oberoi Consulting,

which she started from scratch in 2001, and now has a fortune of £10million. She said:

“The current crisis is forcing more small businesses, the cornerstone of the British economy, into bankruptcy every day.

“Cash flow is critical, changes in corporation tax and reverting back to business rate relief is an absolute must.

Having bills settled quickly by public bodies would be welcomed by all.

The bank bail-outs have done nothing to free up cash — quite the opposite.

Banks are either not lending at all to small firms or charging exorbitant rates to lend taxpayers’ money.

“We need immediate and fair support from government. Seo Go

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