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You are here: Home > Home Based Business > Network Marketing > Long Distance Availability – Raising Retention by Staying in Touch, Part 2 |
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Atricle Dump - Long Distance Availability – Raising Retention by Staying in Touch, Part 2
How to Use a Resume Objective to Help Your Job Application s also have areas that allow readers to comment, which can be a great way to get your team not only responding to your posts, but to each other’s comments as well. As a side note, blogs are also great marketing tools – they let prospects see the real person behind the sales pages they visit, which makes them more likely to trust you and your opportunity.A resume objective statement, while an optional section of your resume, can be a powerful tool for job seekers if it used to its full potential. Strong objectives indicate how you will be of value to the company in one clear and concise statement. It tells potential employers your purpose or goal by applying to their company, and indicates the direction you want your career to go.The decision to include an objective is not one to be taken lightly, since a weak or ineffectual objective will detract from the entire resume. In fact, many recruiters feel it is better to exclude an objective entirely than to inclu Two of the most popular Up Close And Personal Email Marketing Clicks! In Part 1 of this article, we looked at why staying in touch with your team is so critical for network marketing success, why traditional methods of staying in touch with international teams – telephoning or arranging meetings – are no longer enough. We also investigated two of the simplest tools for keeping in contact online – e-mail and instant messaging. Both methods are good for talking to team members one-to-one, or where you want to send one message out to all of your team members.Thanks to a new software release email marketing campaigns now have the ability to carry personalization directly from email right through to web sites.While it has long been common practice to incorporate personalization into email messages, up until now, that little personal touch had been lost as soon as the reader clicked through to a web page.Given the lightening pace of change on the internet the 'work smart' ethic becomes even more critical online. Most internet marketers would agree the futility of driving traffic to a site only to lose most of it through bland impersonal sales copy. If you’d like the communication to go both ways, which allows your team members to work with each other and leverage each other’s skills and experiences, though, neither will take you very far. There are free tools you can use to do this, but they’re a little more complex than those we mentioned in Part 1. They include blogging, forums and online conference/chat rooms, and we’ll explore each in detail in this article. BLOGGING A “blog” (short for “web log”) is really just an online journal. Anything you’ve found helpful building your business – tips, ideas, articles, resources – or revelations and personal successes you’ve had that could either educate or inspire your team – can be written about (or ‘posted’) in your blog. As you keep a blog over time, it becomes a record of how your business has grown. As new members join your team, you can point them to your blog, letting them see how you’ve got to where you are now, and subconsciously reassuring them that if you’ve been able to do it, so can they. Most blogs also have areas that allow readers to comment, which can be a great way to get your team not only responding to your posts, but to each other’s comments as well. As a side note, blogs are also great marketing tools – they let prospects see the real person behind the sales pages they visit, which makes them more likely to trust you and your opportunity. Two of the most popular Debit Card Fraud - Don't Be A PIN Head talking to team members one-to-one, or where you want to send one message out to all of your team members.Whether you’re doing some online shopping, shelling out five bucks for a cappuccino, or just picking up milk at the neighborhood grocery store, you can never be too safe when it comes to protecting yourself from debit card fraud. After all, if you’re like me – and throngs of other plastic-addicted Americans – you’ve probably traded that clumsy, dirty cash for those distinctively divine debit cards. A quick swipe here, a quick swipe there – nothing’s simpler.But let’s be honest. You’re probably at least a little worried about debit and credit card fraud. And if you aren’t, you should be. Keeping your eyes and ears If you’d like the communication to go both ways, which allows your team members to work with each other and leverage each other’s skills and experiences, though, neither will take you very far. There are free tools you can use to do this, but they’re a little more complex than those we mentioned in Part 1. They include blogging, forums and online conference/chat rooms, and we’ll explore each in detail in this article. BLOGGING A “blog” (short for “web log”) is really just an online journal. Anything you’ve found helpful building your business – tips, ideas, articles, resources – or revelations and personal successes you’ve had that could either educate or inspire your team – can be written about (or ‘posted’) in your blog. As you keep a blog over time, it becomes a record of how your business has grown. As new members join your team, you can point them to your blog, letting them see how you’ve got to where you are now, and subconsciously reassuring them that if you’ve been able to do it, so can they. Most blogs also have areas that allow readers to comment, which can be a great way to get your team not only responding to your posts, but to each other’s comments as well. As a side note, blogs are also great marketing tools – they let prospects see the real person behind the sales pages they visit, which makes them more likely to trust you and your opportunity. Two of the most popular Computer Forensics Consulting than those we mentioned in Part 1. They include blogging, forums and online conference/chat rooms, and we’ll explore each in detail in this article.Computer forensics consulting is an emerging and fast-growing field in which consulting services are offered to governmental agencies, military, corporations, small companies, and businesses. Computer forensic specialists offer their services in an independent capacity. This means they are not on the regular staff of any agency or institution.Computer forensic specialists can be hired as consultants or freelancers for regular work in small businesses and institutions that cannot appoint regular computer forensic experts. They may even be retained for a particular assignment for unusual data recovery situations. BLOGGING A “blog” (short for “web log”) is really just an online journal. Anything you’ve found helpful building your business – tips, ideas, articles, resources – or revelations and personal successes you’ve had that could either educate or inspire your team – can be written about (or ‘posted’) in your blog. As you keep a blog over time, it becomes a record of how your business has grown. As new members join your team, you can point them to your blog, letting them see how you’ve got to where you are now, and subconsciously reassuring them that if you’ve been able to do it, so can they. Most blogs also have areas that allow readers to comment, which can be a great way to get your team not only responding to your posts, but to each other’s comments as well. As a side note, blogs are also great marketing tools – they let prospects see the real person behind the sales pages they visit, which makes them more likely to trust you and your opportunity. Two of the most popular Business Planning: Why People Avoid Doing One and What WILL Happen When You Do One either educate or inspire your team – can be written about (or ‘posted’) in your blog. As you keep a blog over time, it becomes a record of how your business has grown. As new members join your team, you can point them to your blog, letting them see how you’ve got to where you are now, and subconsciously reassuring them that if you’ve been able to do it, so can they.Too busy, no time, got to get out there and DO IT.Have to go fight a fireDon't have enough business, got to go out there and generate some. The excuses run on and on. In reality, setting down long enough to plan and discover the gotcha's will prevent fire fighting and free up a lot of time, making your job easier, and even will allow for additional planning which will make it even easier yet.Let me give you an example from an engineer's perspective. As an engineer in a previous career, before moving into executive coaching and business coaching, I discovered some interesting t Most blogs also have areas that allow readers to comment, which can be a great way to get your team not only responding to your posts, but to each other’s comments as well. As a side note, blogs are also great marketing tools – they let prospects see the real person behind the sales pages they visit, which makes them more likely to trust you and your opportunity. Two of the most popular Photoblogs: the Dark Side of the Blogosphere? s also have areas that allow readers to comment, which can be a great way to get your team not only responding to your posts, but to each other’s comments as well. As a side note, blogs are also great marketing tools – they let prospects see the real person behind the sales pages they visit, which makes them more likely to trust you and your opportunity.Before typing the rest of this, let me say that I am a photoblogger.Photoblogs seem to be in a world of their own today, photoblogs are not supported by as many directories, publishing programs, or revenue schemes in the bloggging world compared to written blogs.The biggest things we have are photoblogs.org, Photo Friday and WeeklyShot, and a few others like VFXY. While Bloggers have BlogBurst, numerous directories, extensive revenue oppurtunities and a larger audience as only a limited number of people take a really active interest in photography, especially the newer version of photography that has been Two of the most popular free blogging sites are LiveJournal.com and Blogger.com (for an example of a Blogger blog, see the resource box). To set up your own, simply go to either site, create a free account, and then follow the instructions on the site to post. Don’t forget to tell your team the URL for your new blog, and then ensure you keep it updated at least once or twice a week. FORUMS Forums are simply online discussion boards. They provide a space where people can meet and talk (outside of real-time) about different topics. They have the same advantages as e-mail, but they provide ongoing records of each contribution to a conversation (or post), instead of just having single messages going out to people’s inboxes. There are many forums dedicated to network marketing, and it may help to visit some of these to get an idea of how useful they can be for keeping team members in touch with each other, and allowing them to share knowledge, experience and skills. Setting up forums looks far more difficult than it actually is. I set up a set of very complicate-looking forums for my team in the space of a couple of hours (starting with no knowledge at all), using the step by step instructions available at forumforfree.com. Be aware that if you set this kind of forum up, you’ll need to be able to explain how to take part to your less computer-aware team members – so be prepared to spend some time becoming familiar with it all yourself. ONLINE CONFERENCES / CHAT ROOMS Online conferences or chats are the neare
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