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    How To Get A Job Fast
    In today's unpredictable economy, the idea of job security with any company would seem to be a thing of the past. Large company layoffs, golden handshakes, mergers, leveraged buyouts, company acquisitions and similar business moves have left people of all ages out of a job they need to live. While there may be some compensation upon being let go from the firm you work for, this money won't last forever. Or, if eligible for unemployment benefits, this also has a finite period of time attached to the check. Sooner or later, job hunting will be necessary. But it's not only individuals who have been turned out of jobs that this booklet can help. How happy are you in the business you're in? Do you long to do something else with your career? If so, you're not alone. You have plenty of company in wanting to change one's goals and focus in life. Perhaps you've just turned 40 and realize that you're into the second half of a working career you've never really liked. Studies have shown that work
    obably do this yourself and save some money." When a consultant puts my best business interests over their own fees, my trust in them goes up exponentially. True, the consultant may have a short-term fee hit because they didn't sell a job, but the long-term potential for win-win between the client and consultant was more attainable and far more lucrative.

    Saying "I don't know" is OK at times - Being a consultant doesn't mean that the omniscience fairy came to you one night, waved her magic wand, and deemed you the all-knowledgeable one. Sometimes issues will come up that the consultant can't answer. Some of the ugliest situations I've seen were when the consultant tried to fake his way through a topic he had no business addressing. A simple "I don't know" would have been far better than throwing up a smoke screen and hoping no one asks questions.

    Having said this, there are two caveats to note: first, whenever a consultant says "I don't know" they need to follow it up with "but I'll find out and give you an answer by x date." Second, a consultant only gets a few "I don't knows" before they're labeled as an incompetent doofus who doesn't know their subject matter. Having a strong understanding of the subject matter the consultant professes to be expert in is mandatory; having a shaky understanding will get you voted off the island in the first round.

    True effectiveness as a consultant means the consultant listens to the client, understands their pain, presents practical solutions in a concise manner, and demonstrates the utmost in honesty and integrity. Keep these things in focus, and you'll earn and keep

    LOGOs Can Make or Break Your Brand
    I once had a designer that took her work very seriously. Before she did any designs, she would interview you; take a look at your product offerings and your personality. It seemed like this was crazy at first but the result was a logo that fit with the company and it's philosophy. She actually went beyond just the interview, she designed meaningful symbols. Each symbol she chose had a story behind it. When you received your design, she also had a booklet with an explanation of how the design was developed and what each part of the symbol meant. Although you do not find many people who do this, it does make sense to have your logo fit with your company's philosophy. A company that produces toys should try and add some measure of fun into their logo but a company in the aerospace industry will likely want to have something that shows planets. I came across an excellent logo for Orcon Corporation (in the aerospace field); their logo was an orbit with their name. You can see this logo at www.orcon.com. My logo also depicts what I do (www
    In my career I have been fortunate enough to work for two of the best companies on earth: Accenture and Microsoft. In my eleven years at Accenture I got a tremendous education on systems development, project management, strategic planning, and client service. In my nine years at Microsoft, I took most of what I learned at Accenture and learned how to apply it in a very practical and effective manner. Both experiences were key to my growth as a professional.

    When I left Accenture to go to Microsoft, I found myself moving from the consultant's side of the desk to the client's side of the desk. At Microsoft I had the opportunity to work with a large number of consulting firms in my various jobs managing IT projects, heading up Corporate Procurement, and managing Corporate Planning & Budgeting. In working with many of these firms, I had ample opportunity to reflect on my own career as a consultant and think about how much better a consultant I would have been had I viewed things more from the client's perspective. It is this client-based, or pragmatic consulting that dramatically increases a consultant's effectiveness and builds long-term win-win relationships with clients.

    The "Ah-ha's"

    In moving from the consultant to the client role, I was able to clearly articulate some principles, or "Ah-has," that many consultants either don't understand or don't practice on a regular basis, as follows:

    Consulting is more about listening than speaking - Being an active listener and asking a lot of questions of the client is crucial to getting a deep understanding of the client's issues and hot buttons. Too frequently I've seen consultants rush in with their perspectives on theories or problems without truly taking the time to listen to what is important to the client. Sometimes things worked out OK, but there were times where the consultant's perceived understanding of the problem didn't represent the client's true problems. The end result was is a ticked-off client who viewed the consultant as a pompous jerk.

    A consultant needs to resist the urge to present solutions before the client has a chance to fully explain the problems. It could be that the consultant understands the problem very well, but to develop a connection with the client, you need to let the client articulate their issues and concerns. That connect time with the client is important to building the trust and credibility that both the consultant and client need to work effectively together.

    True credibility is achieved fastest by demonstrating a thoughtful understanding of the client's problem - A consultant may have a strong understanding of industry or functional issues that other companies face, but that doesn't mean that those problems apply to the client. When a consultant assumes that problems other companies face apply at the client, they take a definite risk in establishing credibility with the client. Even worse is when the client explains their problem and the consultant either doesn't acknowledge the problem or doesn't get it after repeated explanations. The longer it takes for a consultant to grasp the client's problems, the shakier their credibility becomes.

    A consultant needs to put themselves in the client's shoes, understand the client's problem from their perspective, and not make generation assumptions about the complexity or urgency of the problem. Show an "I feel your pain" perspective of the client's problem and you'll quickly get over the credibility hump and get the client to where they want to listen to you.

    "Concise" is more important than "more" - I personally fell victim to this as a younger consultant. Many of my presentations were measured in part by how many slides and how much information I could cram into a presentation. It was commonplace for me to create 100+ slide PowerPoint presentations which would take several hours to go through. When I joined Microsoft, I was thoroughly thrashed the first time I created a pass-the-weight-test presentation. I learned quickly to focus on concise, tight, treat-every-word-like-you're-spending-a-dollar presentations.

    A consultant needs to shelve the urge to cram as many pretty slides into a presentation as they can. The client doesn't necessarily need to see all of the gory details. I've learned to focus many of my presentations into a core deck and an appendix. The core deck focuses on three core components: a concise articulation of the problem, the proposed solution to the problem, and how the solution will be implemented. The appendix contains other supporting pieces of information that the consultant only reviews with the client if necessary. I've been able to get my point across to my client in a very crisp, concise manner and was able to deep-dive on questions as necessary. True, you may only need a small portion of your appendix and much of your hard work may never see the light of day, but if you're solving the client's problem, who cares?

    The client generally knows the theory, what they may not know is how to practically apply it - I've been through one-too-many presentations as a client where a consulting firm brings in their industry expert to talk about the problems that face my industry. After they go on for about fifteen minutes telling me theory I already know, I would ask, "So how did you fix it?" More often than not, the industry expert only knew vague details about how someone else dealt with the problem, if the problem was dealt with at all. Knowing the theory only gets you through the first mile in a 26-mile marathon; knowing how to apply the theory in a very practical and effective manner gets you through the rest of the race.

    Clients want to hear about how their problems can be solved in a practical, straightforward, effective manner, not about lofty theory. If your theories don't solve problems, save them for late-night philosophical discussions over a favorite beverage.

    Relationships are more important than short-term fee goals - True, consultants are in business to generate fees and make money. There's nothing wrong with a profit motive and a goal to make money. Where it does become a problem, though, is when short-term fee goals cause a consultant to do something that is not in the client's best interest. Those consultants that seemed to always have one hand in my pocket weren't the consultants that survived in the long term.

    The consultants I respected the most are those who told me things like "I really don't think you need me on this," or "You could probably do this yourself and save some money." When a consultant puts my best business interests over their own fees, my trust in them goes up exponentially. True, the consultant may have a short-term fee hit because they didn't sell a job, but the long-term potential for win-win between the client and consultant was more attainable and far more lucrative.

    Saying "I don't know" is OK at times - Being a consultant doesn't mean that the omniscience fairy came to you one night, waved her magic wand, and deemed you the all-knowledgeable one. Sometimes issues will come up that the consultant can't answer. Some of the ugliest situations I've seen were when the consultant tried to fake his way through a topic he had no business addressing. A simple "I don't know" would have been far better than throwing up a smoke screen and hoping no one asks questions.

    Having said this, there are two caveats to note: first, whenever a consultant says "I don't know" they need to follow it up with "but I'll find out and give you an answer by x date." Second, a consultant only gets a few "I don't knows" before they're labeled as an incompetent doofus who doesn't know their subject matter. Having a strong understanding of the subject matter the consultant professes to be expert in is mandatory; having a shaky understanding will get you voted off the island in the first round.

    True effectiveness as a consultant means the consultant listens to the client, understands their pain, presents practical solutions in a concise manner, and demonstrates the utmost in honesty and integrity. Keep these things in focus, and you'll earn and keep t

    History of Vending Machine
    What is a vending machine? The definition of vending quoted from Dictionary.com: To sell by means of a vending machine. While definition of vending machine quoted from Wikipedia is:A vending machine is a machine that dispenses merchandise when a customer deposits money, validated by a currency detector, sufficient to purchase the desired item (as opposed to a shop, where the presence of personnel is required for every purchase). Usually, the machine may consist of a big rectangular-shaped box, standing up, that has a place to insert coins or bills into the machine. Merchandise to sell is placed in the vending machine and when a customer inserts adequate money and select the item he or she wants, the vending machine will automatically release the item through a special hole that is found at the lower part of the machine.Do you know the history of vending machine? Vending machine has a long history and let's learn about it: 215 BC, the ancient Greeks invented an urn
    tly I've seen consultants rush in with their perspectives on theories or problems without truly taking the time to listen to what is important to the client. Sometimes things worked out OK, but there were times where the consultant's perceived understanding of the problem didn't represent the client's true problems. The end result was is a ticked-off client who viewed the consultant as a pompous jerk.

    A consultant needs to resist the urge to present solutions before the client has a chance to fully explain the problems. It could be that the consultant understands the problem very well, but to develop a connection with the client, you need to let the client articulate their issues and concerns. That connect time with the client is important to building the trust and credibility that both the consultant and client need to work effectively together.

    True credibility is achieved fastest by demonstrating a thoughtful understanding of the client's problem - A consultant may have a strong understanding of industry or functional issues that other companies face, but that doesn't mean that those problems apply to the client. When a consultant assumes that problems other companies face apply at the client, they take a definite risk in establishing credibility with the client. Even worse is when the client explains their problem and the consultant either doesn't acknowledge the problem or doesn't get it after repeated explanations. The longer it takes for a consultant to grasp the client's problems, the shakier their credibility becomes.

    A consultant needs to put themselves in the client's shoes, understand the client's problem from their perspective, and not make generation assumptions about the complexity or urgency of the problem. Show an "I feel your pain" perspective of the client's problem and you'll quickly get over the credibility hump and get the client to where they want to listen to you.

    "Concise" is more important than "more" - I personally fell victim to this as a younger consultant. Many of my presentations were measured in part by how many slides and how much information I could cram into a presentation. It was commonplace for me to create 100+ slide PowerPoint presentations which would take several hours to go through. When I joined Microsoft, I was thoroughly thrashed the first time I created a pass-the-weight-test presentation. I learned quickly to focus on concise, tight, treat-every-word-like-you're-spending-a-dollar presentations.

    A consultant needs to shelve the urge to cram as many pretty slides into a presentation as they can. The client doesn't necessarily need to see all of the gory details. I've learned to focus many of my presentations into a core deck and an appendix. The core deck focuses on three core components: a concise articulation of the problem, the proposed solution to the problem, and how the solution will be implemented. The appendix contains other supporting pieces of information that the consultant only reviews with the client if necessary. I've been able to get my point across to my client in a very crisp, concise manner and was able to deep-dive on questions as necessary. True, you may only need a small portion of your appendix and much of your hard work may never see the light of day, but if you're solving the client's problem, who cares?

    The client generally knows the theory, what they may not know is how to practically apply it - I've been through one-too-many presentations as a client where a consulting firm brings in their industry expert to talk about the problems that face my industry. After they go on for about fifteen minutes telling me theory I already know, I would ask, "So how did you fix it?" More often than not, the industry expert only knew vague details about how someone else dealt with the problem, if the problem was dealt with at all. Knowing the theory only gets you through the first mile in a 26-mile marathon; knowing how to apply the theory in a very practical and effective manner gets you through the rest of the race.

    Clients want to hear about how their problems can be solved in a practical, straightforward, effective manner, not about lofty theory. If your theories don't solve problems, save them for late-night philosophical discussions over a favorite beverage.

    Relationships are more important than short-term fee goals - True, consultants are in business to generate fees and make money. There's nothing wrong with a profit motive and a goal to make money. Where it does become a problem, though, is when short-term fee goals cause a consultant to do something that is not in the client's best interest. Those consultants that seemed to always have one hand in my pocket weren't the consultants that survived in the long term.

    The consultants I respected the most are those who told me things like "I really don't think you need me on this," or "You could probably do this yourself and save some money." When a consultant puts my best business interests over their own fees, my trust in them goes up exponentially. True, the consultant may have a short-term fee hit because they didn't sell a job, but the long-term potential for win-win between the client and consultant was more attainable and far more lucrative.

    Saying "I don't know" is OK at times - Being a consultant doesn't mean that the omniscience fairy came to you one night, waved her magic wand, and deemed you the all-knowledgeable one. Sometimes issues will come up that the consultant can't answer. Some of the ugliest situations I've seen were when the consultant tried to fake his way through a topic he had no business addressing. A simple "I don't know" would have been far better than throwing up a smoke screen and hoping no one asks questions.

    Having said this, there are two caveats to note: first, whenever a consultant says "I don't know" they need to follow it up with "but I'll find out and give you an answer by x date." Second, a consultant only gets a few "I don't knows" before they're labeled as an incompetent doofus who doesn't know their subject matter. Having a strong understanding of the subject matter the consultant professes to be expert in is mandatory; having a shaky understanding will get you voted off the island in the first round.

    True effectiveness as a consultant means the consultant listens to the client, understands their pain, presents practical solutions in a concise manner, and demonstrates the utmost in honesty and integrity. Keep these things in focus, and you'll earn and keep

    Business Branding - How Character Affects Customers and Your Business Image
    The public buys far more than just your products, services and so-called image promotions. Whenever they interact with anyone or anything associated with your business, they are automatically branded emotionally, good or bad, by the totality of your business character.Whether you are a small business or a large operation, it is immaterial. If that brand is found lacking at any time in the customer-relation scenario, their return to you as a future-paying customer will be highly unlikely, not to mention all of their word-of-mouth associations. If that doesn't get your attention, then you and your business are in trouble already.Brand marketing and brand character are certainly familiar busness terms, but they are business-school jargon, nonetheless. All of those buzz words may sound great at board-rooom presentations and seminars, but often mean something else to customers.While the highly-paid marketing gurus tell you to concentrate on presenting your product or service imagery, they fail to warn you that it is y
    nt's problem from their perspective, and not make generation assumptions about the complexity or urgency of the problem. Show an "I feel your pain" perspective of the client's problem and you'll quickly get over the credibility hump and get the client to where they want to listen to you.

    "Concise" is more important than "more" - I personally fell victim to this as a younger consultant. Many of my presentations were measured in part by how many slides and how much information I could cram into a presentation. It was commonplace for me to create 100+ slide PowerPoint presentations which would take several hours to go through. When I joined Microsoft, I was thoroughly thrashed the first time I created a pass-the-weight-test presentation. I learned quickly to focus on concise, tight, treat-every-word-like-you're-spending-a-dollar presentations.

    A consultant needs to shelve the urge to cram as many pretty slides into a presentation as they can. The client doesn't necessarily need to see all of the gory details. I've learned to focus many of my presentations into a core deck and an appendix. The core deck focuses on three core components: a concise articulation of the problem, the proposed solution to the problem, and how the solution will be implemented. The appendix contains other supporting pieces of information that the consultant only reviews with the client if necessary. I've been able to get my point across to my client in a very crisp, concise manner and was able to deep-dive on questions as necessary. True, you may only need a small portion of your appendix and much of your hard work may never see the light of day, but if you're solving the client's problem, who cares?

    The client generally knows the theory, what they may not know is how to practically apply it - I've been through one-too-many presentations as a client where a consulting firm brings in their industry expert to talk about the problems that face my industry. After they go on for about fifteen minutes telling me theory I already know, I would ask, "So how did you fix it?" More often than not, the industry expert only knew vague details about how someone else dealt with the problem, if the problem was dealt with at all. Knowing the theory only gets you through the first mile in a 26-mile marathon; knowing how to apply the theory in a very practical and effective manner gets you through the rest of the race.

    Clients want to hear about how their problems can be solved in a practical, straightforward, effective manner, not about lofty theory. If your theories don't solve problems, save them for late-night philosophical discussions over a favorite beverage.

    Relationships are more important than short-term fee goals - True, consultants are in business to generate fees and make money. There's nothing wrong with a profit motive and a goal to make money. Where it does become a problem, though, is when short-term fee goals cause a consultant to do something that is not in the client's best interest. Those consultants that seemed to always have one hand in my pocket weren't the consultants that survived in the long term.

    The consultants I respected the most are those who told me things like "I really don't think you need me on this," or "You could probably do this yourself and save some money." When a consultant puts my best business interests over their own fees, my trust in them goes up exponentially. True, the consultant may have a short-term fee hit because they didn't sell a job, but the long-term potential for win-win between the client and consultant was more attainable and far more lucrative.

    Saying "I don't know" is OK at times - Being a consultant doesn't mean that the omniscience fairy came to you one night, waved her magic wand, and deemed you the all-knowledgeable one. Sometimes issues will come up that the consultant can't answer. Some of the ugliest situations I've seen were when the consultant tried to fake his way through a topic he had no business addressing. A simple "I don't know" would have been far better than throwing up a smoke screen and hoping no one asks questions.

    Having said this, there are two caveats to note: first, whenever a consultant says "I don't know" they need to follow it up with "but I'll find out and give you an answer by x date." Second, a consultant only gets a few "I don't knows" before they're labeled as an incompetent doofus who doesn't know their subject matter. Having a strong understanding of the subject matter the consultant professes to be expert in is mandatory; having a shaky understanding will get you voted off the island in the first round.

    True effectiveness as a consultant means the consultant listens to the client, understands their pain, presents practical solutions in a concise manner, and demonstrates the utmost in honesty and integrity. Keep these things in focus, and you'll earn and keep

    Beating Job Search Burn Out!
    Are you ready to get hired NOW? Is it finally time to put those job hunting blues behind you? Start with these seven ideas for reinvigorating your search. You CAN beat job search burn out!1. Diagnose the situation as if you were looking in from the outside. Are you effectively using the tools and resources that are at your fingertips? Are you headed in the right direction? Are you moving swiftly enough or are you dragging your feet?2. Jot down the “yeah, but’s” then knock them out one at a time: I’m too old, I’m too young, I didn’t go to college, I went to the wrong college, my skills are outdated, there’s a hiring freeze. We all have them and they hold us back from achieving our goals and dreams.3. Get outside of your head. Journal about what is working and is not working in your job search. Writing can help you exorcise the twin demons of doubt and fear and force the inner critic out in the open where you can more easily deal with it.4. Sit down with trusted friends and find out what they like best abo
    of day, but if you're solving the client's problem, who cares?

    The client generally knows the theory, what they may not know is how to practically apply it - I've been through one-too-many presentations as a client where a consulting firm brings in their industry expert to talk about the problems that face my industry. After they go on for about fifteen minutes telling me theory I already know, I would ask, "So how did you fix it?" More often than not, the industry expert only knew vague details about how someone else dealt with the problem, if the problem was dealt with at all. Knowing the theory only gets you through the first mile in a 26-mile marathon; knowing how to apply the theory in a very practical and effective manner gets you through the rest of the race.

    Clients want to hear about how their problems can be solved in a practical, straightforward, effective manner, not about lofty theory. If your theories don't solve problems, save them for late-night philosophical discussions over a favorite beverage.

    Relationships are more important than short-term fee goals - True, consultants are in business to generate fees and make money. There's nothing wrong with a profit motive and a goal to make money. Where it does become a problem, though, is when short-term fee goals cause a consultant to do something that is not in the client's best interest. Those consultants that seemed to always have one hand in my pocket weren't the consultants that survived in the long term.

    The consultants I respected the most are those who told me things like "I really don't think you need me on this," or "You could probably do this yourself and save some money." When a consultant puts my best business interests over their own fees, my trust in them goes up exponentially. True, the consultant may have a short-term fee hit because they didn't sell a job, but the long-term potential for win-win between the client and consultant was more attainable and far more lucrative.

    Saying "I don't know" is OK at times - Being a consultant doesn't mean that the omniscience fairy came to you one night, waved her magic wand, and deemed you the all-knowledgeable one. Sometimes issues will come up that the consultant can't answer. Some of the ugliest situations I've seen were when the consultant tried to fake his way through a topic he had no business addressing. A simple "I don't know" would have been far better than throwing up a smoke screen and hoping no one asks questions.

    Having said this, there are two caveats to note: first, whenever a consultant says "I don't know" they need to follow it up with "but I'll find out and give you an answer by x date." Second, a consultant only gets a few "I don't knows" before they're labeled as an incompetent doofus who doesn't know their subject matter. Having a strong understanding of the subject matter the consultant professes to be expert in is mandatory; having a shaky understanding will get you voted off the island in the first round.

    True effectiveness as a consultant means the consultant listens to the client, understands their pain, presents practical solutions in a concise manner, and demonstrates the utmost in honesty and integrity. Keep these things in focus, and you'll earn and keep

    If You Ignore The Internet For Your Business You Are Setting Yourself Up For Failure
    When adhering to a few easy marketing moves, a business owner can enjoy a variety of profitable results as a consequence of their effective strategies. It is every business owners dream to reach goals and milestones throughout the existence of their company. Being able to entice a wide range of consumers is one of the main desires of anyone who owns a business. Once the demand for a particular service or product has increased, a business owner can choose to also increase the cost to access these items. Building a healthy, beneficial relationship with their customers is another desired achievement for any business owner.Small Business MarketingFor many, the marketing of a small business is sometimes an elusive concept to grasp. It is more than embracing just an idea. Too many business owners fall into the trap of focusing only on the ideas of marketing and ignore the important process of actually marketing their company. To effectively succeed in the business world, careful planning and organization is needed. You cannot
    obably do this yourself and save some money." When a consultant puts my best business interests over their own fees, my trust in them goes up exponentially. True, the consultant may have a short-term fee hit because they didn't sell a job, but the long-term potential for win-win between the client and consultant was more attainable and far more lucrative.

    Saying "I don't know" is OK at times - Being a consultant doesn't mean that the omniscience fairy came to you one night, waved her magic wand, and deemed you the all-knowledgeable one. Sometimes issues will come up that the consultant can't answer. Some of the ugliest situations I've seen were when the consultant tried to fake his way through a topic he had no business addressing. A simple "I don't know" would have been far better than throwing up a smoke screen and hoping no one asks questions.

    Having said this, there are two caveats to note: first, whenever a consultant says "I don't know" they need to follow it up with "but I'll find out and give you an answer by x date." Second, a consultant only gets a few "I don't knows" before they're labeled as an incompetent doofus who doesn't know their subject matter. Having a strong understanding of the subject matter the consultant professes to be expert in is mandatory; having a shaky understanding will get you voted off the island in the first round.

    True effectiveness as a consultant means the consultant listens to the client, understands their pain, presents practical solutions in a concise manner, and demonstrates the utmost in honesty and integrity. Keep these things in focus, and you'll earn and keep the best clients. You will establish yourself as a pragmatic consultant who sees things from the only perspective that matters -- that of the client.

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