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Other Added - Top 3 Strategies to Boost Your Perceived Value
How to Write an Absolutely Irresistible Joint Venture Proposal
Writing a joint venture proposal is really just a fancy way of saying to your potential partner, “Hey, let’s do a deal.”In fact, I’ve had far more success with brief, to-the-point proposals than I ever have with a stereotypical ten-page document packed full of corporate jargon.The truth of the matter is that regardless of who your potential partner may be - whether they’re an ezine publisher, a competing business owner or even if they’re the CEO of a Fortune 500 company – they’re all going to be asking themselves the same question when they receive your proposal:“What’s in this for me?”More specifically, they’ll be wondering exactly how you might be able to benefit them and their company. >2. Ensure your client's success. This path starts by ensuring that the service you provide is actually going to solve your client's problem. To do that, you need to perform a thorough discovery process. As part of your discovery process, you'll determine if this project is ideal for you, and if the problems it presents are ones you can magnificently and happily solve. You'll do your best work on projects you find intriguing, interesting, and just a bit of a challenge to your expertise. If the project will bore you or overwhelm you, I recommend you refer it on to someone else who is better suited to it. Give your clients the best o Make 2007 Your Breakout Year - The One Step That Can Make It Happen Clients who love what you do are the cornerstone of a successful professional service business. Here are three ways to boost the value your clients associate with you and your business.Most sales professionals slash their income because they fail to use one hour a day well! Whether young or old, one year in the business or twenty years, most sales professionals let the income they desire slip through their fingers every year. It is because they refuse to use one hour a day well. What is that hour? It is the hour you spend phoning prospects for appointments. If you are like most sales people, you can probably double your productivity easily with a few steps.Here are seven expensive ways sales professionals slash their income. How many are relevant to you?1. Not having a specific phone time scheduled into your calendar every day. If a regular phone time isn't scheduled, you won't set nearly 1. Deliver unexpected value. Delivering your service with excellence each and every time is the foundation of this method. Excellent service is essential. But you can't stop there if you want to create top-of-mind awareness and become one in a million in the mind of your client. You also need to proactively manage your client's expectations, and to provide unexpected value systematically and regularly. Management of client expectations begins with your very first contact. How you introduce yourself and your business, the messages you provide in your marketing materials and your reputation combine to create a set of expectations in the mind of your client. And that set of expectations is why your client hires you. If you don't live up to those expectations, no matter whether or not they are realistic, your perceived value instantly decreases. Hence, it is incumbent upon you to unearth all expectations held by your client that will ultimately affect her evaluation of your service. Where it's appropriate, you need to help your client revise her expectations of you. This is an on-going process as you interact with your client over time. But you mustn't ever forget to attend to the task of managing client expectations. Adding unexpected value is easy and has a great impact on the positive perception of your business. This can be done in a myriad of ways, depending on what your actual service is just be sure that the unexpected things you do or give your clients are aligned with who you are and what your business is. A couple of ways you might give unexpected value are: -- Giving your home phone number to clients when you're working on a project that requires late hours or weekend work (i.e., making yourself available outside of regular business hours). -- Keeping a file of information you come across in the newspapers, magazines, and on the Internet that is pertinent and valuable to your clients. Regularly sending this information to your prospects and clients even though they may never hire you. -- Going the extra mile with your services regardless of the short-term expense to you. -- Delighting and surprising your clients in a personal, yet professional, manner such as with a Happy Completion-of-Project card or a new business journal. -- Providing extra services either exclusively for your active clients or at a reduced rate for them. 2. Ensure your client's success. This path starts by ensuring that the service you provide is actually going to solve your client's problem. To do that, you need to perform a thorough discovery process. As part of your discovery process, you'll determine if this project is ideal for you, and if the problems it presents are ones you can magnificently and happily solve. You'll do your best work on projects you find intriguing, interesting, and just a bit of a challenge to your expertise. If the project will bore you or overwhelm you, I recommend you refer it on to someone else who is better suited to it. Give your clients the best op Small Business Marketing Tip #1: A Personal Story About Exceeding Expections ith your very first contact. How you introduce yourself and your business, the messages you provide in your marketing materials and your reputation combine to create a set of expectations in the mind of your client.In Florida, home pest control really is a pre-requisite. When I first bought my home it was a few years old. After living here for a few months, I received a call from a pest control company. They explained that they had been servicing the house previously, and would like to continue - I just needed to take over the bill.I fought it...explaining that I saw no pests, so didn't understand why I needed to pay them. The guy wisely explained that the reason I didn't have a pest problem was because they had been treating the house heretofore - and if I would like to continue having a pest free home, I should keep the service going.Good point. Come on out.That was 2 years ago. I never hear anything from them And that set of expectations is why your client hires you. If you don't live up to those expectations, no matter whether or not they are realistic, your perceived value instantly decreases. Hence, it is incumbent upon you to unearth all expectations held by your client that will ultimately affect her evaluation of your service. Where it's appropriate, you need to help your client revise her expectations of you. This is an on-going process as you interact with your client over time. But you mustn't ever forget to attend to the task of managing client expectations. Adding unexpected value is easy and has a great impact on the positive perception of your business. This can be done in a myriad of ways, depending on what your actual service is just be sure that the unexpected things you do or give your clients are aligned with who you are and what your business is. A couple of ways you might give unexpected value are: -- Giving your home phone number to clients when you're working on a project that requires late hours or weekend work (i.e., making yourself available outside of regular business hours). -- Keeping a file of information you come across in the newspapers, magazines, and on the Internet that is pertinent and valuable to your clients. Regularly sending this information to your prospects and clients even though they may never hire you. -- Going the extra mile with your services regardless of the short-term expense to you. -- Delighting and surprising your clients in a personal, yet professional, manner such as with a Happy Completion-of-Project card or a new business journal. -- Providing extra services either exclusively for your active clients or at a reduced rate for them. 2. Ensure your client's success. This path starts by ensuring that the service you provide is actually going to solve your client's problem. To do that, you need to perform a thorough discovery process. As part of your discovery process, you'll determine if this project is ideal for you, and if the problems it presents are ones you can magnificently and happily solve. You'll do your best work on projects you find intriguing, interesting, and just a bit of a challenge to your expertise. If the project will bore you or overwhelm you, I recommend you refer it on to someone else who is better suited to it. Give your clients the best o Interview Tips, How to Get the Job You Want ng process as you interact with your client over time. But you mustn't ever forget to attend to the task of managing client expectations.Enter into a state of relaxed concentration. This is the state from which great basketball players or Olympic skaters operate. You'll need to quiet the negative self chatter in your head through meditation or visualization prior to sitting down in the meeting. You'll focus on the present moment and will be less apt to experience lapses in concentration, nervousness, self-doubt and self-condemnation.Expect to answer the question, "Tell me about yourself." This is a pet question of prepared and even unprepared interviewers. Everything you include should answer the question, "Why should we hire you?" Carefully prepare your answer to include examples of achievements from your work life that closely match the Adding unexpected value is easy and has a great impact on the positive perception of your business. This can be done in a myriad of ways, depending on what your actual service is just be sure that the unexpected things you do or give your clients are aligned with who you are and what your business is. A couple of ways you might give unexpected value are: -- Giving your home phone number to clients when you're working on a project that requires late hours or weekend work (i.e., making yourself available outside of regular business hours). -- Keeping a file of information you come across in the newspapers, magazines, and on the Internet that is pertinent and valuable to your clients. Regularly sending this information to your prospects and clients even though they may never hire you. -- Going the extra mile with your services regardless of the short-term expense to you. -- Delighting and surprising your clients in a personal, yet professional, manner such as with a Happy Completion-of-Project card or a new business journal. -- Providing extra services either exclusively for your active clients or at a reduced rate for them. 2. Ensure your client's success. This path starts by ensuring that the service you provide is actually going to solve your client's problem. To do that, you need to perform a thorough discovery process. As part of your discovery process, you'll determine if this project is ideal for you, and if the problems it presents are ones you can magnificently and happily solve. You'll do your best work on projects you find intriguing, interesting, and just a bit of a challenge to your expertise. If the project will bore you or overwhelm you, I recommend you refer it on to someone else who is better suited to it. Give your clients the best o The Versatility Of Vinyl Banner Printing utside of regular business hours).Printing on vinyl has come along way in recent years. Here are a few tips and tricks to help streamline your next project.Some times I sit and wonder why anyone would purchase a Vinyl Banner given its harmful nature and then it dawns on me, “Vinyl” is inexpensive and lasts a lifetime. That’s right, vinyl will out last you and me.One of the major drawbacks of using vinyl is its ecological incompatibility with our environment. Vinyl is built to last and is a non-biodegradable product that won’t decompose like most organic paper products do when disposed of.Vinyl is a bi-product of petroleum and is man made. There are many different types of vinyl banner materials to work with we like to work with a 12 o -- Keeping a file of information you come across in the newspapers, magazines, and on the Internet that is pertinent and valuable to your clients. Regularly sending this information to your prospects and clients even though they may never hire you. -- Going the extra mile with your services regardless of the short-term expense to you. -- Delighting and surprising your clients in a personal, yet professional, manner such as with a Happy Completion-of-Project card or a new business journal. -- Providing extra services either exclusively for your active clients or at a reduced rate for them. 2. Ensure your client's success. This path starts by ensuring that the service you provide is actually going to solve your client's problem. To do that, you need to perform a thorough discovery process. As part of your discovery process, you'll determine if this project is ideal for you, and if the problems it presents are ones you can magnificently and happily solve. You'll do your best work on projects you find intriguing, interesting, and just a bit of a challenge to your expertise. If the project will bore you or overwhelm you, I recommend you refer it on to someone else who is better suited to it. Give your clients the best o Asset Management >2. Ensure your client's success. Asset management is the method that a company uses to track fixed assets like factory equipment, desks and chairs, computers, even buildings. Although the exact details of the task varies widely from company to company, asset management often includes tracking the physical location of assets, managing demand for scarce resources, and accounting tasks such as amortization.The most common usage of the phrase asset management is in terms of the financial services industry. Here it is used to describe the management of assets invested on behalf of a range of sectors including: collective investment schemes, pension funds and so-called private banking or wealth management (typically for wealthy individuals).To as This path starts by ensuring that the service you provide is actually going to solve your client's problem. To do that, you need to perform a thorough discovery process. As part of your discovery process, you'll determine if this project is ideal for you, and if the problems it presents are ones you can magnificently and happily solve. You'll do your best work on projects you find intriguing, interesting, and just a bit of a challenge to your expertise. If the project will bore you or overwhelm you, I recommend you refer it on to someone else who is better suited to it. Give your clients the best opportunity to be successful by ensuring they have the right person for the job, even when that isn't you. Your client will respect you for this, be surprised by it, and hire you when a more appropriate project arises. Once you accept a project, proactively reduce the risk your client faces. Your client is expected to provide a solution that meets certain criteria in the areas of schedule, cost, and quality. Be sure you fully understand what those criteria are. Every project needs to rank schedule, cost, and quality in order of importance to the project. The primary criteria could be any of these three. If you have agreed to provide a solution for a fixed fee, manage the scope of the project and your expenses so that you don't exceed the project fee. If you have agreed to a target delivery date, manage the scope of the project and the resources allocated to the project to ensure the date is met. And, if you have agreed to a standard of quality, manage the schedule and resources to ensure the standard is met. You can only hold one primary criterion at a time the other two are movable. Of course, the ideal is to meet all three criteria. Help your client's projects come in on time, in budget, and with exceptional quality. Don't just provide your service provide your expertise and your wisdom. Help your clients find an easier, safer, less expensive or quicker way to accomplish their objectives. 3. Toot your own horn. If your client doesn't know all that you're providing her or her project, how can she possibly fully appreciate you? Clients are busy people and they frequently don't see everything you provide. So it's up to you to make sure that they know what you're doing. But first you need to know what it is that you deliver for your clients. You aren't just providing technical writing, graphic design, editing or whatever. You are providing solutions, new perspectives, structures, planning, alternatives, strategies, resources, energy, processes, procedures, and more. Once you know what you provide, find several ways to communicate it to your clients. For example, you can add a hand-written and personalized note on your invoice to the effect of "Terry I really enjoyed the opportunity to brainstorm options to ABC process with you. Looking forward to our continued great relationship." Or set up several different email signatures, each one focused on an intangible you provide. If you don't toot your own horn, nobody else will! Copyright 2004, Rose Hill, Inc
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