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    5 Businesses that Need Immediate Attention in 2007
    If you are in one of the following businesses you must read this article as the competition in your industry is getting fierce: you will lose the competitive edge; see a decrease in profits; and work harder to make just as much money in 2007. 1. Banks 2. Accountants 3. Dentists 4. Chiropractors 5. Fitness Industry This is your warning and a wake call that cannot be ignored any longer. You can’t keep doing business the same way or your profit margins will continue to decline.What Is The Most Effective Yet Most Overlooked Marketing Strategy in Your Respective Industries?If you do not know the answer to this question and you are in one of these industries, your business is heading for serious trouble with
    only if there is a payoff. The reader has gained a fresh insight, learnt something new, had their interest piqued by the slant of the articles, or discovered a new way to do something.

    Because print is such an ‘old’ way of getting a message across readers (and editors) understand what the dynamics of the game between them really are. Editors know what the readers need and readers have a right to expect this implied content-delivery contract between themselves and the publications they read.

    The web is new. Because it’s new it tends to blind those who run websites to the dynamics between visitors and the website they visit.

    What visitors really need is the payoff. They need access to sound, lively, informative copy that makes them feel that their invested time has given them something back. They want a website that’s pleasing to the eye, reflective of the image they have of themselves and their lifestyle values and easy to navigate.

    Give them that and…well, you’re onto the path to Nirvana, because what you’re then doing is what study after study

    Making Money from Scratch
    Money is hard to come by these days but if you have the will to really make it through then it is still very possible to make money and to make even more as each day goes by. The problem lies if you do not know where to start much more if your problem is the fact that you do not have money to begin with. How can you put up a business or invest in something when you do not have capital to begin with? Money can be found.You just have to be strong in your resolve that once you get hold of that money you will promise to work on making more.There are willing benefactors all aorund us. These are people with money who are laways on the look out to fidning individuals deserving of their financial an emotional support. Some of these benefactors can be we
    When it comes to getting mileage out of a sentence few things beat a clich? and it gets even better when the clich? also comes from an old saying.

    Now we all know that “There’s more than one way to skin a cat” but apply that to the net and it begins to get a little blurry. What exactly do you mean? How would you apply it? And will there be any virtual cats involved? Are just three questions which immediately spring to mind and if they do then the mind in question is not engaged in what it should really be doing which is deciphering the multi-layered, time-honoured, lingo-coded message you imparted when you first used the phrase.

    It’s very much the same when having a web site (or a magazine, or a newspaper, or a company brochure). Far too often online content communication is fudged, overloaded with clich?s, burdened with supporting words which do nothing to enhance the content of your site or the perceived quality of your products and services.

    Here are some easy examples: “An unforgettable destination for your holiday” (from a travel website), “Our products are designed by experts” from a leisure shoe manufacturer or, my favourite from the opening line on the homepage of a large fashion site “There are a lovely selection of gifts up for grabs from XXX's charming shops in Warwick and Stratford-upon-Avon and avaliable online.”

    The reasons these don’t work is simple: surfing experience. The easiest mistake everyone makes on the net is to forget that online while visitors may be looking for a product that does not mean that they have decided that online purchases have stopped reflecting upon themselves as consumers.

    Walk into any High Street shop and what do you see? Artful displays and subliminal messages everywhere: Buy this vase and your living room will look cool. Purchase this holiday and you’re going to have the most relaxing experience of your life. Buy this pair of jeans and you will become irresistible to every member of the opposite sex. Shoppers don’t just buy goods because goods, these days, are commodities. One pair of jeans is just as good as another. One vase is similar to a million others. One packaged holiday destination is much like another.

    What makes shoppers shop and more importantly what keeps them coming back is differentiation. The fact that shops work so hard to create an ambience that projects a particular image. Cool, aspirational, trustworthy, trendy, cutting-edge…whatever. The point is that the moment you have successfully differentiated yourself from your competitors you have won two things: 1. Loyal customers and 2. The right to charge a little bit more.

    It’s no different online. Those who come with the express aim to buy your product or service could not really care less if you sold it from a void directly connected to the sub-molecular dimension hidden inside the event horizon of a black hole. They want it. They will buy it! (Which is how Ticketmaster [www.ticketmaster.com] works so well with a basic site and simple design). The rest of your online population however needs to be convinced, pampered, impressed before they decide to whip out their credit card and click on what you’re selling.

    This is where design and content come in. The website you run doesn’t just have to be unique (you could colour it all brown and it’ll do that trick), it has to subliminally sell your service or product as well as you do. It has to engender trust and win sales. And to do that it has to stop the eye and engage the mind.

    Which neatly brings us to the examples I used earlier and the waste of just putting clich?d copy on a website. Every holiday we take is intended to be an unforgettable destination even if it’s to Costa Del Sol. I don’t know of anyone who starts planning their holiday with the express intention of making it a forgettable destination. I personally should hope that the leisure shoes I buy have not been designed by some guy who works at McDonald’s and spelling mistake apart (why or why didn’t they run a spell-check first?) the last of the examples does not even tell me what the website does, what the gifts are or why I should stay there more than a nanosecond.

    Newspaper and magazine editors who have to work hard to retain their readers know that content readers read works only if there is a payoff. The reader has gained a fresh insight, learnt something new, had their interest piqued by the slant of the articles, or discovered a new way to do something.

    Because print is such an ‘old’ way of getting a message across readers (and editors) understand what the dynamics of the game between them really are. Editors know what the readers need and readers have a right to expect this implied content-delivery contract between themselves and the publications they read.

    The web is new. Because it’s new it tends to blind those who run websites to the dynamics between visitors and the website they visit.

    What visitors really need is the payoff. They need access to sound, lively, informative copy that makes them feel that their invested time has given them something back. They want a website that’s pleasing to the eye, reflective of the image they have of themselves and their lifestyle values and easy to navigate.

    Give them that and…well, you’re onto the path to Nirvana, because what you’re then doing is what study after study

    What Makes a Good Logo?
    One of the most important marketing tools is an effective logo. It provides an easily recognizable identity for your business or organization. It not only communicates who you are but what you are. Therefore, every business or organization contemplating adopting a logo should know the criteria that make for an effective logo.The first characteristic of an effective logo is that it has immediate impact. Your logo should catch the viewer's eye and hold the viewer's attention. Consider the logo of Apple Computers; the graphic apple with a stylized bite taken out of it has immediate product and corporate identification with consumers. An effective logo "grabs" attention.In addition to impact, a good logo must be good to look at. An effective logo sh
    products are designed by experts” from a leisure shoe manufacturer or, my favourite from the opening line on the homepage of a large fashion site “There are a lovely selection of gifts up for grabs from XXX's charming shops in Warwick and Stratford-upon-Avon and avaliable online.”

    The reasons these don’t work is simple: surfing experience. The easiest mistake everyone makes on the net is to forget that online while visitors may be looking for a product that does not mean that they have decided that online purchases have stopped reflecting upon themselves as consumers.

    Walk into any High Street shop and what do you see? Artful displays and subliminal messages everywhere: Buy this vase and your living room will look cool. Purchase this holiday and you’re going to have the most relaxing experience of your life. Buy this pair of jeans and you will become irresistible to every member of the opposite sex. Shoppers don’t just buy goods because goods, these days, are commodities. One pair of jeans is just as good as another. One vase is similar to a million others. One packaged holiday destination is much like another.

    What makes shoppers shop and more importantly what keeps them coming back is differentiation. The fact that shops work so hard to create an ambience that projects a particular image. Cool, aspirational, trustworthy, trendy, cutting-edge…whatever. The point is that the moment you have successfully differentiated yourself from your competitors you have won two things: 1. Loyal customers and 2. The right to charge a little bit more.

    It’s no different online. Those who come with the express aim to buy your product or service could not really care less if you sold it from a void directly connected to the sub-molecular dimension hidden inside the event horizon of a black hole. They want it. They will buy it! (Which is how Ticketmaster [www.ticketmaster.com] works so well with a basic site and simple design). The rest of your online population however needs to be convinced, pampered, impressed before they decide to whip out their credit card and click on what you’re selling.

    This is where design and content come in. The website you run doesn’t just have to be unique (you could colour it all brown and it’ll do that trick), it has to subliminally sell your service or product as well as you do. It has to engender trust and win sales. And to do that it has to stop the eye and engage the mind.

    Which neatly brings us to the examples I used earlier and the waste of just putting clich?d copy on a website. Every holiday we take is intended to be an unforgettable destination even if it’s to Costa Del Sol. I don’t know of anyone who starts planning their holiday with the express intention of making it a forgettable destination. I personally should hope that the leisure shoes I buy have not been designed by some guy who works at McDonald’s and spelling mistake apart (why or why didn’t they run a spell-check first?) the last of the examples does not even tell me what the website does, what the gifts are or why I should stay there more than a nanosecond.

    Newspaper and magazine editors who have to work hard to retain their readers know that content readers read works only if there is a payoff. The reader has gained a fresh insight, learnt something new, had their interest piqued by the slant of the articles, or discovered a new way to do something.

    Because print is such an ‘old’ way of getting a message across readers (and editors) understand what the dynamics of the game between them really are. Editors know what the readers need and readers have a right to expect this implied content-delivery contract between themselves and the publications they read.

    The web is new. Because it’s new it tends to blind those who run websites to the dynamics between visitors and the website they visit.

    What visitors really need is the payoff. They need access to sound, lively, informative copy that makes them feel that their invested time has given them something back. They want a website that’s pleasing to the eye, reflective of the image they have of themselves and their lifestyle values and easy to navigate.

    Give them that and…well, you’re onto the path to Nirvana, because what you’re then doing is what study after study

    Organizational Change and How Goal Setting Can Help
    Many change programs seem to meander along with no clear purpose or direction. These are the programs that usually fail. In the end, vast resources are consumed and people are left burned out and confused. Your desire to move your organization towards a new way of working will remain just a wish unless you set specific objectives and create a plan for achieving those objectives.The key to setting your program off on the right track is to work with your key stakeholders to flesh out unambiguous and measurable objectives. Do this before you do anything else!Why Set Goals?How does goal setting help your program succeed? To begin with, the two-way dialogue involved in setting goals helps to get all stakeholders
    . One packaged holiday destination is much like another.

    What makes shoppers shop and more importantly what keeps them coming back is differentiation. The fact that shops work so hard to create an ambience that projects a particular image. Cool, aspirational, trustworthy, trendy, cutting-edge…whatever. The point is that the moment you have successfully differentiated yourself from your competitors you have won two things: 1. Loyal customers and 2. The right to charge a little bit more.

    It’s no different online. Those who come with the express aim to buy your product or service could not really care less if you sold it from a void directly connected to the sub-molecular dimension hidden inside the event horizon of a black hole. They want it. They will buy it! (Which is how Ticketmaster [www.ticketmaster.com] works so well with a basic site and simple design). The rest of your online population however needs to be convinced, pampered, impressed before they decide to whip out their credit card and click on what you’re selling.

    This is where design and content come in. The website you run doesn’t just have to be unique (you could colour it all brown and it’ll do that trick), it has to subliminally sell your service or product as well as you do. It has to engender trust and win sales. And to do that it has to stop the eye and engage the mind.

    Which neatly brings us to the examples I used earlier and the waste of just putting clich?d copy on a website. Every holiday we take is intended to be an unforgettable destination even if it’s to Costa Del Sol. I don’t know of anyone who starts planning their holiday with the express intention of making it a forgettable destination. I personally should hope that the leisure shoes I buy have not been designed by some guy who works at McDonald’s and spelling mistake apart (why or why didn’t they run a spell-check first?) the last of the examples does not even tell me what the website does, what the gifts are or why I should stay there more than a nanosecond.

    Newspaper and magazine editors who have to work hard to retain their readers know that content readers read works only if there is a payoff. The reader has gained a fresh insight, learnt something new, had their interest piqued by the slant of the articles, or discovered a new way to do something.

    Because print is such an ‘old’ way of getting a message across readers (and editors) understand what the dynamics of the game between them really are. Editors know what the readers need and readers have a right to expect this implied content-delivery contract between themselves and the publications they read.

    The web is new. Because it’s new it tends to blind those who run websites to the dynamics between visitors and the website they visit.

    What visitors really need is the payoff. They need access to sound, lively, informative copy that makes them feel that their invested time has given them something back. They want a website that’s pleasing to the eye, reflective of the image they have of themselves and their lifestyle values and easy to navigate.

    Give them that and…well, you’re onto the path to Nirvana, because what you’re then doing is what study after study

    The Freelancers Field Guide to Contract Work
    **** What is Outsourcing? ****Outsourcing is a great way to earn extra money or even a full time living. When a company outsources its work this means they are looking for people outside the company (you) to complete jobs for them on a contract or short term basis. Most freelance work can be found on freelance marketplaces across the internet. For a list of freelance websites search Google, or some of the freelance directories available.**** Getting Started ****The first thing that you should do is compile your past work history into a portfolio. Many freelance websites allow you to post your work online. The other option is to open a free hosting account and place your work into an online demonstration of your ability
    ntent come in. The website you run doesn’t just have to be unique (you could colour it all brown and it’ll do that trick), it has to subliminally sell your service or product as well as you do. It has to engender trust and win sales. And to do that it has to stop the eye and engage the mind.

    Which neatly brings us to the examples I used earlier and the waste of just putting clich?d copy on a website. Every holiday we take is intended to be an unforgettable destination even if it’s to Costa Del Sol. I don’t know of anyone who starts planning their holiday with the express intention of making it a forgettable destination. I personally should hope that the leisure shoes I buy have not been designed by some guy who works at McDonald’s and spelling mistake apart (why or why didn’t they run a spell-check first?) the last of the examples does not even tell me what the website does, what the gifts are or why I should stay there more than a nanosecond.

    Newspaper and magazine editors who have to work hard to retain their readers know that content readers read works only if there is a payoff. The reader has gained a fresh insight, learnt something new, had their interest piqued by the slant of the articles, or discovered a new way to do something.

    Because print is such an ‘old’ way of getting a message across readers (and editors) understand what the dynamics of the game between them really are. Editors know what the readers need and readers have a right to expect this implied content-delivery contract between themselves and the publications they read.

    The web is new. Because it’s new it tends to blind those who run websites to the dynamics between visitors and the website they visit.

    What visitors really need is the payoff. They need access to sound, lively, informative copy that makes them feel that their invested time has given them something back. They want a website that’s pleasing to the eye, reflective of the image they have of themselves and their lifestyle values and easy to navigate.

    Give them that and…well, you’re onto the path to Nirvana, because what you’re then doing is what study after study

    The Collaborative Humanistic Workplace
    Over the next few years, Gen Yers will enter the workforce in ever-increasing numbers. Gen Yers entrepreneurial spirit makes them self-reliant yet camaraderie oriented attuned a community environment. The influx of Yers will usher in a variety of new learning and performance expectations as well as challenges that will affect how a company manages its employees. For the first time in modern history, the workforce will encompass four separate generations working side by side. The Silent Generation (born 1933-1945), Baby Boomers (born 1946-1964), Generation Xers (born 1965-1976), and Generation Yers (born 1977-1998).Traditional management styles has been hierarchical top down. The Yers will push companies to morph not bottom up but into a new style of co
    only if there is a payoff. The reader has gained a fresh insight, learnt something new, had their interest piqued by the slant of the articles, or discovered a new way to do something.

    Because print is such an ‘old’ way of getting a message across readers (and editors) understand what the dynamics of the game between them really are. Editors know what the readers need and readers have a right to expect this implied content-delivery contract between themselves and the publications they read.

    The web is new. Because it’s new it tends to blind those who run websites to the dynamics between visitors and the website they visit.

    What visitors really need is the payoff. They need access to sound, lively, informative copy that makes them feel that their invested time has given them something back. They want a website that’s pleasing to the eye, reflective of the image they have of themselves and their lifestyle values and easy to navigate.

    Give them that and…well, you’re onto the path to Nirvana, because what you’re then doing is what study after study tells us is nearly impossible to do online: you are creating loyal, repeat custom that keeps coming back drawn by more than just the price tag.

    Skinning cats thankfully fell out of fashion some time ago and while there may be a myriad ways to present information: print, web, emailshot, company brochure, snail mail, leaflets, flyers, carrier pigeons and old-fashioned bricks (with paper and string attached) the fundamentals will always be the same: the reader (or online visitor) have to feel that they got something back. That you gave it to them and that they now trust you and you’re cool. If the payoff is not there, then no amount of ‘skinning’ is going to create a website that really works the way it’s supposed to.

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