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The Benefits of Online IAQ Certification ood ideas—let’s get company t-shirts, let’s do a white paper on that topic, let’s have a webinar for this offering—without connecting them into an overarching program.
This isn’t rocket science. Using my metaphor, given that the goal is to accurately reflect the company, a full-length mirror beats out a mosaic masterpiece any day. Everything works with everything else to convey a cohesive and consistent image.Each year, a number of individuals consider a career in the indoor air quality (IAQ) field. If you are one of those individuals, you may be end up starting a career in an enjoyable and profitable field. As with many other jobs, you will need to undergo training and certification. Unfortunately, there are many individuals who do not always have to time to undergo training. If you are one of those individuals, you may be able to benefit from online IAQ training.Online IAQ training is similar to the training that is offering in most classroom settings. The only difference is that you may see a lack of hands on experience. The good news is that you may be able to save time and money. One of the many reasons w So why don’t CEO marketers go for the full length mirror? I ponder this question every time I come away from a conversation with yet another executive looking for a better solution. The only answers I have come up with are the predictable ones: time and money. With all the demands on their schedules, CEO marketers don’t have the temporal bandwidth to proactively integrate marketing activities and ensure consistency across the bo Unemployment Doldrums: Celebrate Yourself Outside of large corporations with multi-person departments managed by VPs or Chief Marketing Officers, creating a marketing function that demonstrably contributes to company growth can be a real challenge for service firm executives. Of all the overhead functions in an enterprise (that is, of all the functions that don’t contribute a dime to the revenue side of the books), marketing has the highest cost profile. Every single marketing activity costs money, from attending a local association meeting (business cards) to operating a booth at a big trade show (travel, brochures, space rental, booth structure, giveaways, and on and on—oh, and business cards). How can one be sure that the energy and expense will lead to the desired results?We all take time to celebrate when we finally find a good position. But that can take weeks, or months, even a year or two in the highly competitive labor market we now face. That can mean a very long period of stress, uncertainty, and financial pressure.Take care of yourself by making sure that you stop to celebrate any small successes you enjoy along the way. Obtaining an interview, even if no job offer is forthcoming, is something you should be proud of. Taking specific actions such as visiting employers, calling personal contacts, registering with an agency, or attending a job fair can also be steps that warrant a reward.Celebrations don't have to cost money. If you can afford a festive dinner with Between cost and fuzziness of results, it doesn’t surprise me that anyone leading an organization treads warily when it comes to marketing. And it also doesn’t surprise me that in many small to medium service firms, it is the CEO or president who directly oversees marketing. For one thing, anyone on staff who has the skills to manage marketing is better deployed being billable (to help cover some of those marketing costs!). For another, it is crucial to get the messages and positioning right. Marketing presents the face of the company to the outside world, and that face needs to be attractive to target audiences. CEOs know their customers, they know their competitors, and they know how they want to position their companies in the marketplace. Who better than the head of the company to craft the messages and manage the tasks for all those costly marketing activities? Who better? How about a marketing expert? I talk on a weekly basis with CEOs who have been managing marketing in addition to running their businesses and who have realized that it isn’t working. In every case, they are taking a piecemeal approach that costs more money than it should for less than optimal results. Think of marketing as a mirror that reflects the company. The bigger the mirror, the more (and more accurately) it reflects. Ideally, we want a full-length mirror—one single reflection of the entire entity. This is “integrated marketing,” where the entire function is cohesive in appearance and message, from graphic design all the way to multi-faceted events. No matter where or how you encounter a company with integrated marketing, you will get the same reflection. All the CEOs who contact me are using itty bitty mirrors to put together a mosaic for their marketing program. They use this graphic designer, that copy writer, this advertising agency, that public relations consultant. Online marketing jobs are done by different vendors from those working offline projects. All of these little pieces get cobbled together into a fractured whole, and the resulting reflection is confusing and distracting. The image is broken up, distorted, and the appearance of the entity has to be guessed at instead of seen clearly. This is “mosaic marketing,” with key messages seen and heard differently depending on where or how the company is encountered. With mosaic marketing, activities are often reactive and in the moment: today we need a brochure so we go off and do that, tomorrow we need to change the web site and we go find somebody different to do that. The two activities may have very little (if any) overlap other than the company logo. Mosaic marketers jump on good ideas—let’s get company t-shirts, let’s do a white paper on that topic, let’s have a webinar for this offering—without connecting them into an overarching program. This isn’t rocket science. Using my metaphor, given that the goal is to accurately reflect the company, a full-length mirror beats out a mosaic masterpiece any day. Everything works with everything else to convey a cohesive and consistent image. So why don’t CEO marketers go for the full length mirror? I ponder this question every time I come away from a conversation with yet another executive looking for a better solution. The only answers I have come up with are the predictable ones: time and money. With all the demands on their schedules, CEO marketers don’t have the temporal bandwidth to proactively integrate marketing activities and ensure consistency across the boa What the Boston Red Sox taught me about Resiliency ily when it comes to marketing. And it also doesn’t surprise me that in many small to medium service firms, it is the CEO or president who directly oversees marketing. For one thing, anyone on staff who has the skills to manage marketing is better deployed being billable (to help cover some of those marketing costs!). For another, it is crucial to get the messages and positioning right. Marketing presents the face of the company to the outside world, and that face needs to be attractive to target audiences. CEOs know their customers, they know their competitors, and they know how they want to position their companies in the marketplace. Who better than the head of the company to craft the messages and manage the tasks for all those costly marketing activities?Hello Valued reader,You just have to ‘tap your caps’ to them.No matter if you are a baseball fan or not; even if you love the team or can’t stand them… you have to marvel at how they did it.My name is David Pynn; I’m the guy that helps people grow their businesses.Amongst my coaching clients, conference calls and other obligations in October, I had to take some time and see them do it.What you ask?I had to see the self-proclaimed ‘idiots’ make baseball history.For those reader’s not familiar with this story, let me fill you in.The Boston Red Sox are a Major League Baseball team in North America. They have not won their Leagues Championship series (The World Ser Who better? How about a marketing expert? I talk on a weekly basis with CEOs who have been managing marketing in addition to running their businesses and who have realized that it isn’t working. In every case, they are taking a piecemeal approach that costs more money than it should for less than optimal results. Think of marketing as a mirror that reflects the company. The bigger the mirror, the more (and more accurately) it reflects. Ideally, we want a full-length mirror—one single reflection of the entire entity. This is “integrated marketing,” where the entire function is cohesive in appearance and message, from graphic design all the way to multi-faceted events. No matter where or how you encounter a company with integrated marketing, you will get the same reflection. All the CEOs who contact me are using itty bitty mirrors to put together a mosaic for their marketing program. They use this graphic designer, that copy writer, this advertising agency, that public relations consultant. Online marketing jobs are done by different vendors from those working offline projects. All of these little pieces get cobbled together into a fractured whole, and the resulting reflection is confusing and distracting. The image is broken up, distorted, and the appearance of the entity has to be guessed at instead of seen clearly. This is “mosaic marketing,” with key messages seen and heard differently depending on where or how the company is encountered. With mosaic marketing, activities are often reactive and in the moment: today we need a brochure so we go off and do that, tomorrow we need to change the web site and we go find somebody different to do that. The two activities may have very little (if any) overlap other than the company logo. Mosaic marketers jump on good ideas—let’s get company t-shirts, let’s do a white paper on that topic, let’s have a webinar for this offering—without connecting them into an overarching program. This isn’t rocket science. Using my metaphor, given that the goal is to accurately reflect the company, a full-length mirror beats out a mosaic masterpiece any day. Everything works with everything else to convey a cohesive and consistent image. So why don’t CEO marketers go for the full length mirror? I ponder this question every time I come away from a conversation with yet another executive looking for a better solution. The only answers I have come up with are the predictable ones: time and money. With all the demands on their schedules, CEO marketers don’t have the temporal bandwidth to proactively integrate marketing activities and ensure consistency across the bo Who are the Key Account Customers in European Landscaping ve been managing marketing in addition to running their businesses and who have realized that it isn’t working. In every case, they are taking a piecemeal approach that costs more money than it should for less than optimal results.Overall Discussion About the Major Customers and Their Conditions in EuropeThe Major Customer Groups There are two main groups of customers. The Landscape Contractors and the Public Ground Maintenance organizations. Within these two major customer-groups there are different sub-categories.The Contractors are increasing rapidly in all Europe. They are also working actively together to form a stronger unity when it comes to definitions, contracts, maintenance-methods, lobbying etc. They are most often family-businesses with less than 50 employees. In Europe there are more than 50000 companies with some 300.000 employees. Not all are working with green maintenance, but as the new green constructional work Think of marketing as a mirror that reflects the company. The bigger the mirror, the more (and more accurately) it reflects. Ideally, we want a full-length mirror—one single reflection of the entire entity. This is “integrated marketing,” where the entire function is cohesive in appearance and message, from graphic design all the way to multi-faceted events. No matter where or how you encounter a company with integrated marketing, you will get the same reflection. All the CEOs who contact me are using itty bitty mirrors to put together a mosaic for their marketing program. They use this graphic designer, that copy writer, this advertising agency, that public relations consultant. Online marketing jobs are done by different vendors from those working offline projects. All of these little pieces get cobbled together into a fractured whole, and the resulting reflection is confusing and distracting. The image is broken up, distorted, and the appearance of the entity has to be guessed at instead of seen clearly. This is “mosaic marketing,” with key messages seen and heard differently depending on where or how the company is encountered. With mosaic marketing, activities are often reactive and in the moment: today we need a brochure so we go off and do that, tomorrow we need to change the web site and we go find somebody different to do that. The two activities may have very little (if any) overlap other than the company logo. Mosaic marketers jump on good ideas—let’s get company t-shirts, let’s do a white paper on that topic, let’s have a webinar for this offering—without connecting them into an overarching program. This isn’t rocket science. Using my metaphor, given that the goal is to accurately reflect the company, a full-length mirror beats out a mosaic masterpiece any day. Everything works with everything else to convey a cohesive and consistent image. So why don’t CEO marketers go for the full length mirror? I ponder this question every time I come away from a conversation with yet another executive looking for a better solution. The only answers I have come up with are the predictable ones: time and money. With all the demands on their schedules, CEO marketers don’t have the temporal bandwidth to proactively integrate marketing activities and ensure consistency across the bo Moving From Sales To Marketing copy writer, this advertising agency, that public relations consultant. Online marketing jobs are done by different vendors from those working offline projects. All of these little pieces get cobbled together into a fractured whole, and the resulting reflection is confusing and distracting. The image is broken up, distorted, and the appearance of the entity has to be guessed at instead of seen clearly. This is “mosaic marketing,” with key messages seen and heard differently depending on where or how the company is encountered.When Should Marketing Take a Front Seat?At some point in a company's growth, there comes a time when it decides whether the product or service it offers has exponential growth opportunities. If these opportunities exist, then a strategy must be formed to take the company to its full potential. Often this involves a shift from a sales-driven focus to a marketing driven status.All change in the corporate world is stressful, even if it is positive change. Nevertheless, the move from sales to marketing is one of the most stressful. Why? Because it entails leaving "what brought us here" and embracing a future with which we are somewhat inexperienced. The entrepreneurial spirit that spurred t With mosaic marketing, activities are often reactive and in the moment: today we need a brochure so we go off and do that, tomorrow we need to change the web site and we go find somebody different to do that. The two activities may have very little (if any) overlap other than the company logo. Mosaic marketers jump on good ideas—let’s get company t-shirts, let’s do a white paper on that topic, let’s have a webinar for this offering—without connecting them into an overarching program. This isn’t rocket science. Using my metaphor, given that the goal is to accurately reflect the company, a full-length mirror beats out a mosaic masterpiece any day. Everything works with everything else to convey a cohesive and consistent image. So why don’t CEO marketers go for the full length mirror? I ponder this question every time I come away from a conversation with yet another executive looking for a better solution. The only answers I have come up with are the predictable ones: time and money. With all the demands on their schedules, CEO marketers don’t have the temporal bandwidth to proactively integrate marketing activities and ensure consistency across the bo you can earn $0.25/hr just by using SlashMySearch.com as your primary search engine. ood ideas—let’s get company t-shirts, let’s do a white paper on that topic, let’s have a webinar for this offering—without connecting them into an overarching program.
This isn’t rocket science. Using my metaphor, given that the goal is to accurately reflect the company, a full-length mirror beats out a mosaic masterpiece any day. Everything works with everything else to convey a cohesive and consistent image.you can earn $0.25/hr just by using SlashMySearch.com as your primary search engine.Earn money by setting SlashMySearch.com as your homepage. Earn even more money by using SlashMySearch.com as your primary search engine, the more you search the more you make, its that simpleinternational members are welcome . you can earn $0.25/hr up to $180/monthmin payment is $50 pay via e-gold paypalhttp://www.slashmysearch.com/earn/signup.html?id=493 [url=http://www.slashmysearch.com/earn/signup.html?id=493][IMG]http://i170.photobucket.com/albums/u250/dxdx33/untitled.jpg[/IMG][/url]another great programmyour new chance for getting paid for what you are already doing So why don’t CEO marketers go for the full length mirror? I ponder this question every time I come away from a conversation with yet another executive looking for a better solution. The only answers I have come up with are the predictable ones: time and money. With all the demands on their schedules, CEO marketers don’t have the temporal bandwidth to proactively integrate marketing activities and ensure consistency across the board. And somehow they think that taking the mosaic approach is more cost-effective—though I am at a loss to understand why they think that hiring different providers for different services and trying to manage all of them successfully is cost-effective. Just the opportunity cost of having the CEO’s time taken up with this stuff should be enough to stop the madness. There so many activities that only they can do; what are they giving up by keeping marketing, with all the tasks and activities that need to be managed, on their plate? This kind of inefficient approach isn’t limited to CEOs; mosaic marketing is pursued by solopreneurs too. The same lack of efficiency and integration applies there as well, if not more so. With a one-person service firm, where company success relies entirely on the owner, why would that owner use so much of their time and energy on managing the marketing? The way for a CEO (or solopreneur) to go from mosaic to full-length for their marketing mirror is simple: Take on a service provider to be the company’s marketing partner. Find a firm that can talk strategy, and then go out and make the right things happen. Hold this partner accountable for integrating the entire marketing effort, for producing measurable results, and for keeping costs optimized. Do this, and your market will be able to see you much more clearly. Marketing will be better able to support sales, and you will be able to get on to other things that need your attention.
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