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    Gum Removal in Hotels
    Gum removal in hotels is one of the more important tasks set for hotel cleaning crews. This is because the presence of chewing gum pollution in hotels greatly detracts from the comfortable atmosphere of cleanliness and welcome that most hotels strive for. And, because chewing gum is so prevalent in our society, the fact of the matter is that gum removal in hotels will remain something that is very important.Areas that need active gum removal in hotels:Nearly every area of most hotels will require some sort of gum removal, as chewing gum soiling is common in all areas where people go. Indeed, gum is chewed quite often in order to freshen breath and even just to give the chewer something to do. Chewing gum removal in hotels is a very necessary part of a hotel cleaning job simply because people will always be bringing the gum int
    o I begin looking at what’s next?
    2. What is different about me, my message, my business?
    3. How do I capitalize on these differences?
    4. How do I monetize these differences?
    5. How do I stop doing what I’m doing and start doing something else? (This last question frightened me the most.)

    About a week after this experience, I heard Joe Calloway, author of “Becoming a Category of One”. Joe’s compelling argument left me shaken. It also left me with two directives:

    1) Pick a lane
    2) Let go

    My career had been like a drunk driver on a ten lane freeway. I randomly shifted lanes in my topics with little regard for what made me tick or what a client might want. The letting go part inspired me to do something long overdue. I took my four-color brochure and press kit and tore it to shreds. Then I got a hammer and—in a bonding moment with my eight year-old son—smashed my demo video into a zillion pieces. As difficult as it was, that was the easy part. The hard part was what came next: no longer marketing my s

    Banner Stand Exhibits
    Banner Stands are a high impact, inexpensive and attractive medium of advertisement. They are usually found at exhibitions, trade shows, retail stores – just about anywhere the potential customer can be attracted by high wattage graphics.The attractive thing about banner stands is that they are portable, flexible and easy to set up. There are different kinds of banner stands like retractable or rollup, pole, telescopic and others. The technology that enables the high quality of graphics and photos has added to the beauty of banners.While organizing banner stands for exhibitions, there are many choices to deliberate on. For a portable trade show, the choice is between a fully customized exhibition and a portable exhibit.The general opinion is that a portable is much better than a customized banner stand. For one, portabl
    This article is about the benefits, pitfalls and thinking that were involved in a building a new brand. While it’s my story of involving my speaking business, you should think about your own story, your passion, and what fits into your life. CAUTION: Realize this, it’s taken a LONG time, it was hard work, and it was painful at times. If you’re not willing to experience those things then keep doing what you’re doing.

    Have you asked yourself these questions? Are you happy with the answers?

    1. Are you working harder to secure fewer and fewer customers?

    2. Are you finding price to be a MAJOR concern for your buyer?

    3. Are you generating interest from clients but not having a good ratio of inquiries to closings?

    IF you said yes to these questions, you may be ready for the journey of reinvention.

    Two things drove me to reinvent my speaking business:

    1) I longed for a unique message, a brand to differentiate me in a crowded market. It is not new news that there are hundreds or maybe thousands of people who can fill an hour on a conference agenda and who present similar things as you and I. I didn’t want to be a part of that. Perhaps you don’t want to be a carbon copy in your marketplace either.

    2) I wanted to develop a business that would build value, something that was scalable and hopefully sellable IF and when I choose to stop speaking and do something else.

    My story

    Somewhere around the year 2000, I decided I was ready for a change but I didn’t know where to begin. A few years later, I had the good fortune of meeting Bruce Turkel, a branding expert. Bruce owns a branding firm in Miami and he agreed to help me create some new promotional materials which eventually led to creating a whole new brand. Bruce came to hear me speak; I heard his branding presentation. I read his great book Building Brand Value. We bounced some ideas back and forth over several months. Then EUREKA! Bruce had written down my name on a white board in his office. As he looked at it one day, a phrase knocked him over. Right in the middle of my name, Tim Richardson, was the phrase I’M RICH! The fire hydrant opened. Ideas began to flow. I holed myself up in a resort on the ocean for three days. I mapped out ideas, played with speech titles, wrote draft book titles and more. Over a hundred ideas came out of that time and great clarity for the topic.

    That was the easy part (and getting there WASN’T easy). Included in the hard part, was leaving my old speech and beautiful marketing materials behind (more on that below). I started talking about my new focus to prospects and even included bit and pieces in speeches I had already booked. I tried out new material. I did a few speeches for free. After 18 years away, I joined a Toastmasters Club and used it as a place to practice new material. I tried to leverage speaking engagements by offering to speak for civic and community groups. For awhile, I felt like I was moving backwards. Sometimes you have to do that to move forward. I began asking people about their views on richness. As I spoke with people, I heard incredible stories about people who had richness in ways money could never buy. I stared writing an article for a local newspaper in which I profiled people who were rich in the ways that mattered. I pitched my book idea to an agent who loved the concept. I asked my speaker colleagues and clients about it. The feedback was dead on. JUST DO IT!

    Pitfalls

    As I mentioned, it’s NOT easy. Deep thinking about your business is necessary. It’s not fun. If you’re like me, you want success in a box. You want the great and you want it yesterday. Be forewarned, that the process of reinventing yourself might mean loss of business, clients, and productivity.

    Make no mistake about it, I’ve have lots to learn. My journey of reinvention is still in its infancy. Here are some things that might get you started on your journey:

    1) Get away. Clear your brain. Think. Reflect. Examine. Somewhere in the middle of my reinvention, I went to the Great Smoky Mountain National Park to get some answers. I returned with these questions:

    1. Where and how do I begin looking at what’s next?
    2. What is different about me, my message, my business?
    3. How do I capitalize on these differences?
    4. How do I monetize these differences?
    5. How do I stop doing what I’m doing and start doing something else? (This last question frightened me the most.)

    About a week after this experience, I heard Joe Calloway, author of “Becoming a Category of One”. Joe’s compelling argument left me shaken. It also left me with two directives:

    1) Pick a lane
    2) Let go

    My career had been like a drunk driver on a ten lane freeway. I randomly shifted lanes in my topics with little regard for what made me tick or what a client might want. The letting go part inspired me to do something long overdue. I took my four-color brochure and press kit and tore it to shreds. Then I got a hammer and—in a bonding moment with my eight year-old son—smashed my demo video into a zillion pieces. As difficult as it was, that was the easy part. The hard part was what came next: no longer marketing my s

    Running a Business is Like Gardening
    Having had a busy week, I was only too happy to don my gardening clothes and get outside to do some planting, weeding and pruning last weekend. “It’s interesting”, I thought, “how business refers to a slight improvement as the green shoots of recovery”. I then began to think of other gardening analogies that could be applied to business. OK so now I’m being a bit sad and if I can’t just go outside and enjoy the air, maybe I should stay in more! But hang on, this can be a useful exercise. Think about it. If you “can’t see the wood for the trees” in your business but gardening is easier to relate to, then look at how you tackle your garden and how you could apply the same principles to your business.First of all you need a plan of what you’re going to grow and where (Your business plan – what are you going to do and who is your target
    n fill an hour on a conference agenda and who present similar things as you and I. I didn’t want to be a part of that. Perhaps you don’t want to be a carbon copy in your marketplace either.

    2) I wanted to develop a business that would build value, something that was scalable and hopefully sellable IF and when I choose to stop speaking and do something else.

    My story

    Somewhere around the year 2000, I decided I was ready for a change but I didn’t know where to begin. A few years later, I had the good fortune of meeting Bruce Turkel, a branding expert. Bruce owns a branding firm in Miami and he agreed to help me create some new promotional materials which eventually led to creating a whole new brand. Bruce came to hear me speak; I heard his branding presentation. I read his great book Building Brand Value. We bounced some ideas back and forth over several months. Then EUREKA! Bruce had written down my name on a white board in his office. As he looked at it one day, a phrase knocked him over. Right in the middle of my name, Tim Richardson, was the phrase I’M RICH! The fire hydrant opened. Ideas began to flow. I holed myself up in a resort on the ocean for three days. I mapped out ideas, played with speech titles, wrote draft book titles and more. Over a hundred ideas came out of that time and great clarity for the topic.

    That was the easy part (and getting there WASN’T easy). Included in the hard part, was leaving my old speech and beautiful marketing materials behind (more on that below). I started talking about my new focus to prospects and even included bit and pieces in speeches I had already booked. I tried out new material. I did a few speeches for free. After 18 years away, I joined a Toastmasters Club and used it as a place to practice new material. I tried to leverage speaking engagements by offering to speak for civic and community groups. For awhile, I felt like I was moving backwards. Sometimes you have to do that to move forward. I began asking people about their views on richness. As I spoke with people, I heard incredible stories about people who had richness in ways money could never buy. I stared writing an article for a local newspaper in which I profiled people who were rich in the ways that mattered. I pitched my book idea to an agent who loved the concept. I asked my speaker colleagues and clients about it. The feedback was dead on. JUST DO IT!

    Pitfalls

    As I mentioned, it’s NOT easy. Deep thinking about your business is necessary. It’s not fun. If you’re like me, you want success in a box. You want the great and you want it yesterday. Be forewarned, that the process of reinventing yourself might mean loss of business, clients, and productivity.

    Make no mistake about it, I’ve have lots to learn. My journey of reinvention is still in its infancy. Here are some things that might get you started on your journey:

    1) Get away. Clear your brain. Think. Reflect. Examine. Somewhere in the middle of my reinvention, I went to the Great Smoky Mountain National Park to get some answers. I returned with these questions:

    1. Where and how do I begin looking at what’s next?
    2. What is different about me, my message, my business?
    3. How do I capitalize on these differences?
    4. How do I monetize these differences?
    5. How do I stop doing what I’m doing and start doing something else? (This last question frightened me the most.)

    About a week after this experience, I heard Joe Calloway, author of “Becoming a Category of One”. Joe’s compelling argument left me shaken. It also left me with two directives:

    1) Pick a lane
    2) Let go

    My career had been like a drunk driver on a ten lane freeway. I randomly shifted lanes in my topics with little regard for what made me tick or what a client might want. The letting go part inspired me to do something long overdue. I took my four-color brochure and press kit and tore it to shreds. Then I got a hammer and—in a bonding moment with my eight year-old son—smashed my demo video into a zillion pieces. As difficult as it was, that was the easy part. The hard part was what came next: no longer marketing my s

    Top 7 Secrets For Small Business Success
    Every great corporation we see today started as a business idea. It must have started as a small business and developed into a large-scale business over time and effort. Having this in mind, success of these small businesses should be taken very seriously in order to have a virile and sustainable economic growth in any nation like ours.For example in Africa, Nigeria has about 35% return on investment, which is the highest in the world today, with this, there is room for small businesses to thrive and survive beyond 5 years of establishment. The government has also seen the importance of small business success that they came up with the idea that banks and financial institutions should set aside a certain percentage of their profit after tax (about 10%)to serve as loans and grants to entrepreneurs even without collateral or interests.i als
    Tim Richardson, was the phrase I’M RICH! The fire hydrant opened. Ideas began to flow. I holed myself up in a resort on the ocean for three days. I mapped out ideas, played with speech titles, wrote draft book titles and more. Over a hundred ideas came out of that time and great clarity for the topic.

    That was the easy part (and getting there WASN’T easy). Included in the hard part, was leaving my old speech and beautiful marketing materials behind (more on that below). I started talking about my new focus to prospects and even included bit and pieces in speeches I had already booked. I tried out new material. I did a few speeches for free. After 18 years away, I joined a Toastmasters Club and used it as a place to practice new material. I tried to leverage speaking engagements by offering to speak for civic and community groups. For awhile, I felt like I was moving backwards. Sometimes you have to do that to move forward. I began asking people about their views on richness. As I spoke with people, I heard incredible stories about people who had richness in ways money could never buy. I stared writing an article for a local newspaper in which I profiled people who were rich in the ways that mattered. I pitched my book idea to an agent who loved the concept. I asked my speaker colleagues and clients about it. The feedback was dead on. JUST DO IT!

    Pitfalls

    As I mentioned, it’s NOT easy. Deep thinking about your business is necessary. It’s not fun. If you’re like me, you want success in a box. You want the great and you want it yesterday. Be forewarned, that the process of reinventing yourself might mean loss of business, clients, and productivity.

    Make no mistake about it, I’ve have lots to learn. My journey of reinvention is still in its infancy. Here are some things that might get you started on your journey:

    1) Get away. Clear your brain. Think. Reflect. Examine. Somewhere in the middle of my reinvention, I went to the Great Smoky Mountain National Park to get some answers. I returned with these questions:

    1. Where and how do I begin looking at what’s next?
    2. What is different about me, my message, my business?
    3. How do I capitalize on these differences?
    4. How do I monetize these differences?
    5. How do I stop doing what I’m doing and start doing something else? (This last question frightened me the most.)

    About a week after this experience, I heard Joe Calloway, author of “Becoming a Category of One”. Joe’s compelling argument left me shaken. It also left me with two directives:

    1) Pick a lane
    2) Let go

    My career had been like a drunk driver on a ten lane freeway. I randomly shifted lanes in my topics with little regard for what made me tick or what a client might want. The letting go part inspired me to do something long overdue. I took my four-color brochure and press kit and tore it to shreds. Then I got a hammer and—in a bonding moment with my eight year-old son—smashed my demo video into a zillion pieces. As difficult as it was, that was the easy part. The hard part was what came next: no longer marketing my s

    Emerging Trends: Handicrafts Industry
    Electronic commerce (e-commerce) is increasingly discussed and written about in today’s knowledge-based economies. Although there are currently no internationally agreed-upon definitions of e-commerce, the OECD (Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development) defines e-commerce transactions as: the sale or purchase of goods or services, whether between businesses, households, individuals, governments, and other public or private organisations, conducted over computer-mediated networks. The goods and services are ordered over those networks, but the payment and the ultimate delivery of the good or service may be conducted on or off-line. The concept of e-commerce extends into communications, promotion, customer service, statistics, and usage patterns. However, often overlooked when examining e-commerce acceptance or failure is the so
    out people who had richness in ways money could never buy. I stared writing an article for a local newspaper in which I profiled people who were rich in the ways that mattered. I pitched my book idea to an agent who loved the concept. I asked my speaker colleagues and clients about it. The feedback was dead on. JUST DO IT!

    Pitfalls

    As I mentioned, it’s NOT easy. Deep thinking about your business is necessary. It’s not fun. If you’re like me, you want success in a box. You want the great and you want it yesterday. Be forewarned, that the process of reinventing yourself might mean loss of business, clients, and productivity.

    Make no mistake about it, I’ve have lots to learn. My journey of reinvention is still in its infancy. Here are some things that might get you started on your journey:

    1) Get away. Clear your brain. Think. Reflect. Examine. Somewhere in the middle of my reinvention, I went to the Great Smoky Mountain National Park to get some answers. I returned with these questions:

    1. Where and how do I begin looking at what’s next?
    2. What is different about me, my message, my business?
    3. How do I capitalize on these differences?
    4. How do I monetize these differences?
    5. How do I stop doing what I’m doing and start doing something else? (This last question frightened me the most.)

    About a week after this experience, I heard Joe Calloway, author of “Becoming a Category of One”. Joe’s compelling argument left me shaken. It also left me with two directives:

    1) Pick a lane
    2) Let go

    My career had been like a drunk driver on a ten lane freeway. I randomly shifted lanes in my topics with little regard for what made me tick or what a client might want. The letting go part inspired me to do something long overdue. I took my four-color brochure and press kit and tore it to shreds. Then I got a hammer and—in a bonding moment with my eight year-old son—smashed my demo video into a zillion pieces. As difficult as it was, that was the easy part. The hard part was what came next: no longer marketing my s

    Introduction To Online Printing Within Los Angeles
    Hunting for the best printer online can be a daunting task, but always rewarding. There are additional aspects pertaining in an online printer, from rate quotes to flexible payment options. You need to get familiarized with them to make sure you get the best deal possible. On a printing site situated in Los Angeles, there is surely great competition around but having to choose the best option is still the most rewarding experience.There are numerous LA printing services out there, but there can always be a few which can cater to your needs. When you really want to get the most convenient methods of online printing, they can offer better services due to competition. This is good advantage point for a typical customer, getting quality with the most cost effective deals available. From specifications to quality service, they have it all
    o I begin looking at what’s next?
    2. What is different about me, my message, my business?
    3. How do I capitalize on these differences?
    4. How do I monetize these differences?
    5. How do I stop doing what I’m doing and start doing something else? (This last question frightened me the most.)

    About a week after this experience, I heard Joe Calloway, author of “Becoming a Category of One”. Joe’s compelling argument left me shaken. It also left me with two directives:

    1) Pick a lane
    2) Let go

    My career had been like a drunk driver on a ten lane freeway. I randomly shifted lanes in my topics with little regard for what made me tick or what a client might want. The letting go part inspired me to do something long overdue. I took my four-color brochure and press kit and tore it to shreds. Then I got a hammer and—in a bonding moment with my eight year-old son—smashed my demo video into a zillion pieces. As difficult as it was, that was the easy part. The hard part was what came next: no longer marketing my signature speech, watching business take a down turn, and trying to come up with something different. (Did I tell you, this is hard work?).

    1) Trash your presentation. It might be your signature story, your stunning visuals, or your get-'em-all-emotionally-worked-up close. It’s very difficult to discover something new when you’re busy doing the old. Challenge every word. Your past success could be your biggest enemy to new discoveries.

    2) Get help. Often we’re so close to our own businesses, that we can’t see the opportunity. I was very fortunate to meet and become great friends with Bruce (we have even spoken together a few times). His insight and what he saw in me and my presentation was a turning point for my reinvention. I may have spoken another twenty years and never seen what was right in front of me all along.

    3) Don’t rush it. Quality takes time.

    4) Don’t be a copycat. Develop your own ideas. Combine two ideas to come up with some new. Be original.

    5) Do something. The unknown is risky. Doing nothing is more risky. You know what happens with that. Of course, the bigger the risk, the bigger the payoff. Take that to the bank. Literally.

    It might not be in your name as it was in mine. It might be in your background, a personality trait, a life experience, advice your mother gave you, or something a stranger said to you. Who knows, it might be in the fortune cookie you get next week. I believe it’s there someone and you’ll find it …but only if you look.

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