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    2,116 results found

    1. 5 Ways To Make Your Small Business Sale-Ready
      Selling your business can change your life. Moving onto your next challenge, safe in the knowledge that your clients and team are looked after, is an exciting prospect that has likely crossed the minds of many small business owners. Five ways to make your small business sale-readygettyWhen you’re ready to do it, you’ll
    2. 6 Ways To Rebuild Your Small Business After COVID-19
      The COVID-19 outbreak has wreaked financial havoc around the globe, leaving many small-business owners struggling in its wake. According to the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB), as of March 30—still early in the crisis—92% of small businesses said they had suffered negative effects as a result of the
    3. Keep Your Business Safe by Teaching Employees to Spot Fraud
      While businesses are concerned with financial fraud, there may be an overall lack of understanding about common ways fraud happens and how to mitigate risk exposure. Teaching your employees to spot and prevent financial fraud should not be ignored. To help you take a more proactive approach to managing financial fraud
    4. Will Inflation Derail Your Retirement Plan?
      In 20-plus years, I’ve seen several situations where external factors and individual choices have threatened to derail clients' financial plans.
    5. 5 Keys To Retaining Millennial Employees, The ‘Job-Hopper’ Generation
      Millennials (born 1980-2000) can get a bad wrap for being unloyal. In fact, half of Millennials are actively seeking a new job, or are ready to make a change. This characteristic has historically given off the perception that they aren’t committed to their work. It’s quite the contrary. First of all, their job hopping
    6. The Secret To Business Survival In Today’s Tough Market
      By Brenda StoltzLearn key business strategies that could mean the difference between thriving or failing during these uncertain times.gettyAs we were ringing in 2020, it’s safe to say that almost no one could have imagined the novel year that was virtually at our doorsteps. Like a monsoon, Covid-19 arrived, and with it
    7. How do I set up a recurring payment in Online Bill Pay?

      From a Web Browser

      • Log in to your Digital Banking account.
      • Open Online Bill Pay.
      • Locate the payee on your list.
      • Under the Options list, select the Automatic Payment tab.
      • Next, select the account you would like to pay from, the amount and the frequency.
      • If you are sending the payment via check, you may Add a Memo (located under Amount).
      • Under Frequency, you may select start and end dates for the payment, or choose No End Date to continue to make payments until you turn them off.
      • Email notifications are also available for when the payment is scheduled, when the payment has been sent or before the last payment is sent. 
      • When you are satisfied with your payment information, click Save.

      In the list of payments, you can easily see items that are set up with recurring payments. They are identified by the rotating arrow icon.

      • Use the Edit button to edit a recurring payment, or you can change the entire payment rule.
      • Click Add to make additional payments to a payee.

      On the Mobile App
      Recurring payments can be viewed and cancelled in the mobile app, but can only be setup and maintained from a web browser.

      • To view or cancel a recurring payment in the mobile app, tap Payment Center and then select Bill Pay.
      • Tap Schedule.
      • If you wish to cancel, tap the scheduled payment and tap Cancel payment.
      • Tap Yes to confirm.
    8. How do I use Zelle®?

      You can send, request or receive money with Zelle®.

      To get started, log in to Old National’s Online or Mobile Banking, navigate to Send Money With Zelle® in the Mobile App Payment Center or the Move Money tab in Online Banking. Accept terms and conditions, enter your email address or U.S. mobile phone number, receive a one-time verification code, enter it and you're ready to start sending and receiving with Zelle®.

      To send money using Zelle®, simply add a trusted recipient's email address or U.S. mobile phone number, enter the amount you'd like to send and an optional note, review, then hit Send. In most cases, the money is available to your recipient in minutes.1

      To request money using Zelle®, choose Request, select the individual from whom you'd like to request money, enter the amount you'd like to request, include an optional note, review and hit Request.2

      To receive money, just share your enrolled email address or U.S. mobile phone number with a friend and ask them to send you money with Zelle®.

      1 Transactions typically occur in minutes when the recipient’s email address or U.S. mobile number is already enrolled with Zelle®.
      2 In order to send payment requests or split payment requests to a U.S. mobile number, the mobile number must already be enrolled with Zelle®.

    9. 3 reasons for inflation that have nothing to do with higher wages
      Stronger pay growth has contributed to higher inflation, but other factors have played much larger roles. Shipping costs, focus on profitability, and shortages have fueled price hikes throughout 2021. Here are three factors driving inflation higher that have no link to higher wages. See more stories on Insider's busine
    10. 3 ways you can turn the tide of the 'Great Resignation'
      The Great Resignation is changing. In fact, the more it's analyzed, the worse it gets. Piling on the stat from August that 51% of all employees were