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    Industrial Thread Sealants – High Temperature Sealants and Others
    In order to rectify the situation of leakage in a liquid system, the threaded points are sealed with a thread sealant. Most machinery has threaded points in it—the larger the machine, the more threaded joints there will be, especially if piping is involved.Industrial thread sealants come in a wide variety of products that can be applied to reduce the weakness of thread joints, either in liquid or a tape form. The liquid form of industrial thread sealants is often a very thick and gooey substance that is applied to one side of the threaded joint before it is put together. The tape variety of industrial thread sealant is applied as a tape and is often made of Teflon.The industrial thread sealants have quite the job to do and depending on the machinery that they are used in can include being impact resistant, heat resistant, water or liquid resistant, corrosion resistant, rust resistant, pressure resistant and chemical resistant.Think of machines and what they are used for—everything. In most machines, there are threads that add parts to the machine, threads that connect pipes to each other to cover distance and more. Every threaded part in a machine has to be sealed to prevent damage, leakage, corrosion and wear.In a machine system that passes liquids, regardless of their chemical make up, whether its water or highly corrosive chemicals, you don’t want leaks to happen at threaded joints for a variety of reasons. Primarily, damage and injury can occur from leakages as well as considerable loss of product and functionality of the machine.In a system that uses gas, such as compressed air or steam to work the machinery, an un-sealed thread could result in loss of functionality of the machine. Many machines require high pressure gas build-up to function and a kink or leak in the system could cause complete malfunction or loss of productivity.In a dry product moving system, threaded joints that are not sealed properly can leak as well. Not to mention that the dry material, such as fine particle dust, can get into the joint and cause rust, corrosion and damage which can result in the requiring of both ends of the threaded joint to be replaced. If you are dealing with a large machine, replacing two parts can be quite expensive, where as industrial thread sealants are actually quite inexpensive in comparison.In most cases, the industrial thread sealant only needs to be applied once—when the two threaded joints are put together. The thread sealant will continue to do its job for years on end, depending on the system.
    ke the most effective decisions, and you will ultimately end-up with more leads, sales, and customers.

    It is important to remember that Web-visitors are human beings who learn and relate through the primary sense of hearing.

    The Web Audience Summary

    - We live in a fast paced world where everyone is busy multitasking their way through their workday.

    - Perpetually distracted Web-visitors are easily drawn away from sites that do not immediately deliver the information they are looking for.

    - If Web-visitors can't find the information they need, if they don't understand that information, and if they can't retain that information, your website, and by extension your company, is useless to them.

    - By recasting Web-visitors as an audience you can organize and present material in ways that are useful, understandable, and memorable.

    - The principles and practices required to create a compelling presentation may very well conflict with some search engine optimization maxims and even current Web design trends.

    - Websites are compromises of content, presentation, and technology. By treating your visitors as an audience that needs to be informed, enlightened, and entertained, you will be able to make the most effective decisions, and you will ultimately end-up with more leads, sales, and customers.

    The Web Message

    We have all heard the expression 'content is king', but as marketers we must turn that old saying around slightly to read, 'message is king.'

    Any one who has ever run a sales organization knows how frustrating it can be to keep sales people on-message without turning them into automatons. Even if you can get them to lug all their samples into each and every customer's office, and even if they actually present all the samples, customers have this nasty habit of asking questions, disrupting the flow of well-planned flip chart and Power Point presentations.

    Having sales people on the road is an expensive method of delivering a sale's or marketing message, without any guarantee that, that message is being delivered properly or with any consistency throughout the organization. And if you're relying on independent sales reps, while let's not even go there.

    The answer of course in this new-age Web-business environment is the Internet and your website. It allows you t

    Brochure Printing Tips and Design
    Advertising is already a part of business success. Without this process you cannot truly achieve your desired goal for your business success. If you want great savings from your printing and advertising project make use of brochures. These materials can help you save a lot of money and time compared to conventional medium used like television and radio.In every business undertaking, businesses need exposure to possible markets and this can be achieved through advertising. Brochure printing campaign can enable you to advertise everywhere with little less expense of the company. Compared to any promotional materials they can also be effective form of advertising aimed in the market.In deciding what to do with your brochures you need to think of factors that will truly help in making your campaign a success. The following are some brochure printing tips that will help to make the best out of your marketing campaign.1.Know what your objective is – what do you want your client’s to know about your business. Knowing what is your main goal and objective will help you easily conceptualize ideas and designs that will perfectly match with your campaign.2.Who are your target audience – at times it may be daunting and frustrating when we get lower response from what we are expecting. Things happen like this probably because you were not able to totally distribute your materials to the right person. Let say you are into tourism and promoting the tourist spot of your place, your target audience must be foreigners or people new to your place. Never hand out a material to person that never gives interest or attention to what you are distributing.3.Who will be the printer to handle your brochure printing needs – With the numerous printers around it is easy to render printing jobs. However, they may not be capable of providing what you are in need of so the best thing to do is seek through the internet and locate for a reliable online printer. This printer may give you ideas and better perception about your brochure printing projects.4.What sizes will you use – brochures have different specifications. You only need to choose for the right size that will match with the strategy you are about to use. Through the printer you had chosen they will provide you with sizes for you to choose from. These sizes will be very much ideal if you prefer to have your brochures distributed by mail or by the hand.5.Designs, colors and inks – the appearance of your printed output varies that much. This is because the good the designs you use
    "No matter how elegantly a dog barks, he can never tell you his father was poor but honest." - Bertrand Russell

    The Vervet monkeys of East Africa have 3 distinct vocal alarms to warn of leopards, eagles, and snakes. The warning for leopards causes the monkeys to run for the trees; the warning for eagles tells them to search the sky and look for shelter; while the snake warning causes the group to standup on two legs and scrutinize the grass for predators.

    But as sophisticated a verbal warning system as this may appear to be, these creatures do not have the capability to communicate complex information like, 'checkout the bush at two o'clock, there's two leopards hiding in wait.'

    The Evolution of Web-Man

    They say the thing that separates man from other animals is our ability to speak - that, and our posable thumbs. So the first thing we learn to do is stick our thumbs in our mouths, crippling our ability to speak intelligibly, not to mention creating huge orthodontist's bills. We have this incredible ability to take a good thing and screw it up. Take the Web for example.

    As marketing professionals we have this astonishing ability to communicate with infinite variation, nuance and meaning using the multimedia Web-environment; a communication platform that is begging to be exploited to its maximum potential.

    Our thinking of what constitutes a website has been corrupted by a cadre of unimaginative 'techno-geeks' and trendy design-gurus who may know graphic design, database development, and even every Internet Explorer bug-fix and work-around, but what they don't know is how to deliver a marketing message on a website.

    What these new-age 'techno-nistas' don't get is that our job as marketers is to communicate. Sophisticated communication is a uniquely human activity requiring some understanding of how an audience perceives, comprehends and retains information.

    "If sound is the delicate touch of a practiced lover, then sight is the desperate groping of an inexperienced adolescent in the backseat of his father's Chevy."

    These twenty-six words convey a wealth of experience and a flood of understanding. They paint a picture in seconds that would take a gifted artist considerable time, talent, and style to recreate visually.

    But despite the published research on how we learn, how we comprehend, and how we remember, all of which points to the power and influence of verbal communication, we still rely for the most part on visual methods to deliver our messages.

    "A picture is worth a thousand words." - Fred Barnard, Tram Advertising Salesman, 1920

    We have all been told from early on that 'a picture is worth a thousand words.' How many times have you quoted this famous saying? According to Jack Trout, in his book 'The New Positioning,' what Confucius actually said was, "a picture is worth a thousand pieces of gold." Not the same thing at all is it? There is actually no evidence that Confucius made either remark.

    The documented origin of the famous expression has been traced back to a guy named Fred Barnard who sold tram advertising in the 1920s. Originally he claimed it was an old Japanese proverb, but later changed his story and issued Chinese lettering with a translation in his ads. Who knows what the truth is, maybe old Fred invented the expression himself, but most people still believe it.

    As marketers we have come under the spell of a dominant visual hegemony that ignores our natural oral learning process, causing us to create websites that fail to deliver meaningful, memorable, marketing messages.

    The Suya of the Brazilian Matto Grosso believe the act of hearing is the sign of a 'fully socialized individual.' For the Suya the term 'to hear' also means 'to understand.' The expression 'it is in my ear' means that something has been learned, even something visual like a weaving pattern. To the Suya, the visual is an anti-social sense cultivated by witches.

    - Classen, C., 1993, 'Worlds of Sense: exploring the senses in history and across cultures', London: Routledge

    The Five Elements of Effective Communication

    To understand how to effectively deliver our marketing messages over the Web we first must understand the five basic elements of communication:

    1. The Environment

    2. The Audience

    3. The Message

    4. The Messenger, and

    5. The Process.

    The Web Environment

    In the early days of the Web, marketers were frustrated because many didn't get the fundamental difference between traditional print media and the new digital webmedia. Those that did 'get it' were even more frustrated because the environment wasn't advanced enough to enable practical use of growing multimedia techniques. Today the Web has advanced to the point were full-function multimedia can be presented and enjoyed by the vast majority of Web users.

    But even with these advancements the Web creates some unique obstacles to effective communication:

    - The Web is a sterile barren environment devoid of human connection,

    - Computer monitors are hard on the eyes,

    - Limited screen real estate puts a premium on abbreviated information, and

    - Technological incompatibilities and differences between browsers and computer platforms vary the user experience among audiences.

    In addition to these inherent environmental challenges, the world of search engine optimization has created a whole new Web-orthodoxy of 'does-and-don'ts' designed to attract search engine indexing, hopefully leading to greater site traffic, but at the same time, diluting the marketing message and disrupting critical communication. All of which, creates audience frustration, curtailing the time spent on website visits due to a failure to deliver the promised recognizable content.

    The very hyperlinked nature of the Web and the oft-touted promotion of linking to anything and everything remotely relevant flies in the face of human nature, that craves an organized linear narrative presentation of content that maximizes comprehension and retention.

    The Web Environment Summary

    - The Web environment has advanced to the point where multimedia can be delivered and enjoyed by the vast majority of Web users.

    - The Web is a sterile, barren environment creating a communication gap that must be bridged by human contact in the form of oral communication.

    - Computer screens, the interface between you and your audience, make reading difficult and their limited screen sizes exacerbate the difficulty.

    - As marketers we have come under the spell of a dominant visual hegemony that ignores our natural oral learning process, causing us to create websites that fail to deliver meaningful, memorable, marketing messages.

    - Over 70% of website visitors skip, scan, and skim text looking for headlines, subheads, captions, and bulleted points diluting sophisticated concepts and complex ideas, leading to misunderstandings, confusion and customer dissatisfaction.

    - Cross-browser differences and technological incompatibilities create un-uniform presentations and frustrating user experiences.

    - The very hyperlinked nature of the Web with all its advantages actually disrupts comprehension and retention by distracting the audience from what they crave, an organized linear narrative.

    The Web Audience

    We live in a fast paced world where everyone is busy multitasking their way through their workday: talking on cell phones, writing email proposals, text messaging colleagues, and searching the Web for vital business intelligence.

    It is not surprising that distracted Web-visitors are easily drawn away from sites that do not immediately deliver the information they are looking for. And it is no surprise that people are frustrated by having to sift their way through a maze of search engine friendly hyperlinks and incomprehensible advertising copy. If you're lucky, this approach may lead to some additional search engine traffic, but burying your critical content in a mountain of keywords, jargon, and specifications does nothing to engage, enlighten and evangelize your audience.

    Website visitors may, or may not be clients or even prospects, but what they are, are an audience, an audience searching for information. If they can't find that information, if they don't understand that information, and if they can't retain that information; your website, and by extension your company, is useless to them. By recasting Web-visitors as an audience you can organize and present material in ways that are useful, understandable, and memorable.

    The principles and practices required to create a compelling presentation may very well conflict with some search engine optimization maxims and even current Web design trends, but you have to ask yourself, "what is my prime directive?" Do you want tons of traffic that opts out of your site as quickly as possible, instantly forgetting who you are and what you do; or do you want visitors who will stay on your site, learn about you and your products, and ultimately convince themselves that your company is the one with the right solution that fulfills their needs.

    Websites are by their very nature compromises of content, presentation, and technology. By treating your visitors as an audience that needs to be informed, enlightened, and entertained, you will be able to make the most effective decisions, and you will ultimately end-up with more leads, sales, and customers.

    It is important to remember that Web-visitors are human beings who learn and relate through the primary sense of hearing.

    The Web Audience Summary

    - We live in a fast paced world where everyone is busy multitasking their way through their workday.

    - Perpetually distracted Web-visitors are easily drawn away from sites that do not immediately deliver the information they are looking for.

    - If Web-visitors can't find the information they need, if they don't understand that information, and if they can't retain that information, your website, and by extension your company, is useless to them.

    - By recasting Web-visitors as an audience you can organize and present material in ways that are useful, understandable, and memorable.

    - The principles and practices required to create a compelling presentation may very well conflict with some search engine optimization maxims and even current Web design trends.

    - Websites are compromises of content, presentation, and technology. By treating your visitors as an audience that needs to be informed, enlightened, and entertained, you will be able to make the most effective decisions, and you will ultimately end-up with more leads, sales, and customers.

    The Web Message

    We have all heard the expression 'content is king', but as marketers we must turn that old saying around slightly to read, 'message is king.'

    Any one who has ever run a sales organization knows how frustrating it can be to keep sales people on-message without turning them into automatons. Even if you can get them to lug all their samples into each and every customer's office, and even if they actually present all the samples, customers have this nasty habit of asking questions, disrupting the flow of well-planned flip chart and Power Point presentations.

    Having sales people on the road is an expensive method of delivering a sale's or marketing message, without any guarantee that, that message is being delivered properly or with any consistency throughout the organization. And if you're relying on independent sales reps, while let's not even go there.

    The answer of course in this new-age Web-business environment is the Internet and your website. It allows you to

    Coordinate Your Promotional Items For Lasting Impact
    One of the most effective ways to employ promotional items is as part of a coordinated marketing campaign. Choosing a set of coordinating promotional gifts for prospective customers, employees or loyal, continuing clients is a great way to build business relationships that keep growing. Here are five steps to building a coordinated promotional giving campaign that will pay off in increased sales and good will.Plan your campaign in advance. Start by deciding the purpose of your marketing campaign. Some specific purposes that lend themselves to promotional items include- introducing a new product or business - building a continuing relationship with a new customer - increasing good will with loyal customers - wooing customers away from competitors - offering incentives to your employees - publicizing and solidifying your name brand awarenessChoose gifts that make sense for your business. The promotional items that you choose should be easily identifiable with your business and company, and targeted at your specific market. Do you supply products for gyms and health clubs? Then your campaign for building relationships with new customers might include promotional items like water bottles, imprinted towels and kit bags with your company’s logo on them.Create the campaign, then choose the promotional items to match. Are you planning a grand opening for your new business? Try a tactic used by many businesses to bring customers in for special events. Send out a mass mailing to prospective customers that includes part of a promotional duo and invite them to come in to redeem the rest of the gift. One idea might be to send out uninflated balloons in different colors along with a flyer inviting the recipient to bring the balloon in to be inflated and redeem a color-coded free gift to match the balloon.Work with a professional promotions planner or supplier. One way to make sure that your promotional campaign is effective is to work with a professional who has experience. This is especially helpful if you’ve never planned a promotion before. A professional promotions supplier can offer suggestions and ideas that will wow your prospective customers.Plan the major events that will trigger promotional giving. Creating a coordinated promotional gifts campaign can cement budding business relationships. There are certain points in your business relationship where giving a gift makes sense – introducing your company, a thank you gift for the first order, a special thank you when they exceed a predete
    comprehend, and how we remember, all of which points to the power and influence of verbal communication, we still rely for the most part on visual methods to deliver our messages.

    "A picture is worth a thousand words." - Fred Barnard, Tram Advertising Salesman, 1920

    We have all been told from early on that 'a picture is worth a thousand words.' How many times have you quoted this famous saying? According to Jack Trout, in his book 'The New Positioning,' what Confucius actually said was, "a picture is worth a thousand pieces of gold." Not the same thing at all is it? There is actually no evidence that Confucius made either remark.

    The documented origin of the famous expression has been traced back to a guy named Fred Barnard who sold tram advertising in the 1920s. Originally he claimed it was an old Japanese proverb, but later changed his story and issued Chinese lettering with a translation in his ads. Who knows what the truth is, maybe old Fred invented the expression himself, but most people still believe it.

    As marketers we have come under the spell of a dominant visual hegemony that ignores our natural oral learning process, causing us to create websites that fail to deliver meaningful, memorable, marketing messages.

    The Suya of the Brazilian Matto Grosso believe the act of hearing is the sign of a 'fully socialized individual.' For the Suya the term 'to hear' also means 'to understand.' The expression 'it is in my ear' means that something has been learned, even something visual like a weaving pattern. To the Suya, the visual is an anti-social sense cultivated by witches.

    - Classen, C., 1993, 'Worlds of Sense: exploring the senses in history and across cultures', London: Routledge

    The Five Elements of Effective Communication

    To understand how to effectively deliver our marketing messages over the Web we first must understand the five basic elements of communication:

    1. The Environment

    2. The Audience

    3. The Message

    4. The Messenger, and

    5. The Process.

    The Web Environment

    In the early days of the Web, marketers were frustrated because many didn't get the fundamental difference between traditional print media and the new digital webmedia. Those that did 'get it' were even more frustrated because the environment wasn't advanced enough to enable practical use of growing multimedia techniques. Today the Web has advanced to the point were full-function multimedia can be presented and enjoyed by the vast majority of Web users.

    But even with these advancements the Web creates some unique obstacles to effective communication:

    - The Web is a sterile barren environment devoid of human connection,

    - Computer monitors are hard on the eyes,

    - Limited screen real estate puts a premium on abbreviated information, and

    - Technological incompatibilities and differences between browsers and computer platforms vary the user experience among audiences.

    In addition to these inherent environmental challenges, the world of search engine optimization has created a whole new Web-orthodoxy of 'does-and-don'ts' designed to attract search engine indexing, hopefully leading to greater site traffic, but at the same time, diluting the marketing message and disrupting critical communication. All of which, creates audience frustration, curtailing the time spent on website visits due to a failure to deliver the promised recognizable content.

    The very hyperlinked nature of the Web and the oft-touted promotion of linking to anything and everything remotely relevant flies in the face of human nature, that craves an organized linear narrative presentation of content that maximizes comprehension and retention.

    The Web Environment Summary

    - The Web environment has advanced to the point where multimedia can be delivered and enjoyed by the vast majority of Web users.

    - The Web is a sterile, barren environment creating a communication gap that must be bridged by human contact in the form of oral communication.

    - Computer screens, the interface between you and your audience, make reading difficult and their limited screen sizes exacerbate the difficulty.

    - As marketers we have come under the spell of a dominant visual hegemony that ignores our natural oral learning process, causing us to create websites that fail to deliver meaningful, memorable, marketing messages.

    - Over 70% of website visitors skip, scan, and skim text looking for headlines, subheads, captions, and bulleted points diluting sophisticated concepts and complex ideas, leading to misunderstandings, confusion and customer dissatisfaction.

    - Cross-browser differences and technological incompatibilities create un-uniform presentations and frustrating user experiences.

    - The very hyperlinked nature of the Web with all its advantages actually disrupts comprehension and retention by distracting the audience from what they crave, an organized linear narrative.

    The Web Audience

    We live in a fast paced world where everyone is busy multitasking their way through their workday: talking on cell phones, writing email proposals, text messaging colleagues, and searching the Web for vital business intelligence.

    It is not surprising that distracted Web-visitors are easily drawn away from sites that do not immediately deliver the information they are looking for. And it is no surprise that people are frustrated by having to sift their way through a maze of search engine friendly hyperlinks and incomprehensible advertising copy. If you're lucky, this approach may lead to some additional search engine traffic, but burying your critical content in a mountain of keywords, jargon, and specifications does nothing to engage, enlighten and evangelize your audience.

    Website visitors may, or may not be clients or even prospects, but what they are, are an audience, an audience searching for information. If they can't find that information, if they don't understand that information, and if they can't retain that information; your website, and by extension your company, is useless to them. By recasting Web-visitors as an audience you can organize and present material in ways that are useful, understandable, and memorable.

    The principles and practices required to create a compelling presentation may very well conflict with some search engine optimization maxims and even current Web design trends, but you have to ask yourself, "what is my prime directive?" Do you want tons of traffic that opts out of your site as quickly as possible, instantly forgetting who you are and what you do; or do you want visitors who will stay on your site, learn about you and your products, and ultimately convince themselves that your company is the one with the right solution that fulfills their needs.

    Websites are by their very nature compromises of content, presentation, and technology. By treating your visitors as an audience that needs to be informed, enlightened, and entertained, you will be able to make the most effective decisions, and you will ultimately end-up with more leads, sales, and customers.

    It is important to remember that Web-visitors are human beings who learn and relate through the primary sense of hearing.

    The Web Audience Summary

    - We live in a fast paced world where everyone is busy multitasking their way through their workday.

    - Perpetually distracted Web-visitors are easily drawn away from sites that do not immediately deliver the information they are looking for.

    - If Web-visitors can't find the information they need, if they don't understand that information, and if they can't retain that information, your website, and by extension your company, is useless to them.

    - By recasting Web-visitors as an audience you can organize and present material in ways that are useful, understandable, and memorable.

    - The principles and practices required to create a compelling presentation may very well conflict with some search engine optimization maxims and even current Web design trends.

    - Websites are compromises of content, presentation, and technology. By treating your visitors as an audience that needs to be informed, enlightened, and entertained, you will be able to make the most effective decisions, and you will ultimately end-up with more leads, sales, and customers.

    The Web Message

    We have all heard the expression 'content is king', but as marketers we must turn that old saying around slightly to read, 'message is king.'

    Any one who has ever run a sales organization knows how frustrating it can be to keep sales people on-message without turning them into automatons. Even if you can get them to lug all their samples into each and every customer's office, and even if they actually present all the samples, customers have this nasty habit of asking questions, disrupting the flow of well-planned flip chart and Power Point presentations.

    Having sales people on the road is an expensive method of delivering a sale's or marketing message, without any guarantee that, that message is being delivered properly or with any consistency throughout the organization. And if you're relying on independent sales reps, while let's not even go there.

    The answer of course in this new-age Web-business environment is the Internet and your website. It allows you t

    Pitching to Employees
    The senior flight attendant on the WestJet flight was starting the routine safety talk: the bit about flotation vests and emergency exits that we ignore at the beginning of every flight.“If we could have your attention, please, we would appreciate it - in fact we’d be downright shocked,” she said. The passengers and the rest of the crew laughed along with her and then, having captured our attention, she went on with her instructions.That event, on my second flight with the airline, may have been the point when I became a fan of this upstart, discount carrier. The flight attendant’s small joke was just one of many good-spirited remarks I heard from station staff and cabin crews.Guess what? I like travelling with people who enjoy their work. And that point is made, too, by Lance Secretan in an IndustryWeek article (May 15, 2000) that argues employees should be treated as well as customers.Using Southwest Airlines as his example (and WestJet modeled itself on Southwest), Secretan says management needs to put the same commitment and resources into internal marketing to employees that it puts into external marketing to customers.That’s not an unreasonable idea, considering that companies sometimes have to fight harder to get and keep good employees than to get and keep customers. Put another way, can you serve customers well if you don’t have good employees? And, don’t forget the maxim that employees treat customers like they’re treated by management.So, if we were going to build an internal marketing program for employees, where would we start? What would we do? How would we do it?Well, we’d probably start in much the same way that we start with external customers: by finding out what they wanted. By identifying the benefits that they consider most important, and communicating about those benefits.As we articulate our reasons for internal marketing (setting objectives), as we figure out the goals of employees, and identify the best medium, we’re setting out a communication strategy.Once we have a strategy we can go on to the tactics, which outline how we will implement the strategy: what will we discuss, how often we’ll discuss it, and what presentation style we’ll use.What we’ll discuss refers to our subject matter; how often refers to the number of times in a specified time period that we will communicate the subject matter, and presentation style refers to the tone we’ll take in sending our messages.Once both the strategy and tactics are in place, we act. We implement the plan.
    le practical use of growing multimedia techniques. Today the Web has advanced to the point were full-function multimedia can be presented and enjoyed by the vast majority of Web users.

    But even with these advancements the Web creates some unique obstacles to effective communication:

    - The Web is a sterile barren environment devoid of human connection,

    - Computer monitors are hard on the eyes,

    - Limited screen real estate puts a premium on abbreviated information, and

    - Technological incompatibilities and differences between browsers and computer platforms vary the user experience among audiences.

    In addition to these inherent environmental challenges, the world of search engine optimization has created a whole new Web-orthodoxy of 'does-and-don'ts' designed to attract search engine indexing, hopefully leading to greater site traffic, but at the same time, diluting the marketing message and disrupting critical communication. All of which, creates audience frustration, curtailing the time spent on website visits due to a failure to deliver the promised recognizable content.

    The very hyperlinked nature of the Web and the oft-touted promotion of linking to anything and everything remotely relevant flies in the face of human nature, that craves an organized linear narrative presentation of content that maximizes comprehension and retention.

    The Web Environment Summary

    - The Web environment has advanced to the point where multimedia can be delivered and enjoyed by the vast majority of Web users.

    - The Web is a sterile, barren environment creating a communication gap that must be bridged by human contact in the form of oral communication.

    - Computer screens, the interface between you and your audience, make reading difficult and their limited screen sizes exacerbate the difficulty.

    - As marketers we have come under the spell of a dominant visual hegemony that ignores our natural oral learning process, causing us to create websites that fail to deliver meaningful, memorable, marketing messages.

    - Over 70% of website visitors skip, scan, and skim text looking for headlines, subheads, captions, and bulleted points diluting sophisticated concepts and complex ideas, leading to misunderstandings, confusion and customer dissatisfaction.

    - Cross-browser differences and technological incompatibilities create un-uniform presentations and frustrating user experiences.

    - The very hyperlinked nature of the Web with all its advantages actually disrupts comprehension and retention by distracting the audience from what they crave, an organized linear narrative.

    The Web Audience

    We live in a fast paced world where everyone is busy multitasking their way through their workday: talking on cell phones, writing email proposals, text messaging colleagues, and searching the Web for vital business intelligence.

    It is not surprising that distracted Web-visitors are easily drawn away from sites that do not immediately deliver the information they are looking for. And it is no surprise that people are frustrated by having to sift their way through a maze of search engine friendly hyperlinks and incomprehensible advertising copy. If you're lucky, this approach may lead to some additional search engine traffic, but burying your critical content in a mountain of keywords, jargon, and specifications does nothing to engage, enlighten and evangelize your audience.

    Website visitors may, or may not be clients or even prospects, but what they are, are an audience, an audience searching for information. If they can't find that information, if they don't understand that information, and if they can't retain that information; your website, and by extension your company, is useless to them. By recasting Web-visitors as an audience you can organize and present material in ways that are useful, understandable, and memorable.

    The principles and practices required to create a compelling presentation may very well conflict with some search engine optimization maxims and even current Web design trends, but you have to ask yourself, "what is my prime directive?" Do you want tons of traffic that opts out of your site as quickly as possible, instantly forgetting who you are and what you do; or do you want visitors who will stay on your site, learn about you and your products, and ultimately convince themselves that your company is the one with the right solution that fulfills their needs.

    Websites are by their very nature compromises of content, presentation, and technology. By treating your visitors as an audience that needs to be informed, enlightened, and entertained, you will be able to make the most effective decisions, and you will ultimately end-up with more leads, sales, and customers.

    It is important to remember that Web-visitors are human beings who learn and relate through the primary sense of hearing.

    The Web Audience Summary

    - We live in a fast paced world where everyone is busy multitasking their way through their workday.

    - Perpetually distracted Web-visitors are easily drawn away from sites that do not immediately deliver the information they are looking for.

    - If Web-visitors can't find the information they need, if they don't understand that information, and if they can't retain that information, your website, and by extension your company, is useless to them.

    - By recasting Web-visitors as an audience you can organize and present material in ways that are useful, understandable, and memorable.

    - The principles and practices required to create a compelling presentation may very well conflict with some search engine optimization maxims and even current Web design trends.

    - Websites are compromises of content, presentation, and technology. By treating your visitors as an audience that needs to be informed, enlightened, and entertained, you will be able to make the most effective decisions, and you will ultimately end-up with more leads, sales, and customers.

    The Web Message

    We have all heard the expression 'content is king', but as marketers we must turn that old saying around slightly to read, 'message is king.'

    Any one who has ever run a sales organization knows how frustrating it can be to keep sales people on-message without turning them into automatons. Even if you can get them to lug all their samples into each and every customer's office, and even if they actually present all the samples, customers have this nasty habit of asking questions, disrupting the flow of well-planned flip chart and Power Point presentations.

    Having sales people on the road is an expensive method of delivering a sale's or marketing message, without any guarantee that, that message is being delivered properly or with any consistency throughout the organization. And if you're relying on independent sales reps, while let's not even go there.

    The answer of course in this new-age Web-business environment is the Internet and your website. It allows you t

    Aggressive Marketing
    Ezine publishers and other online business owners, seem to prefer Online Advertising options. But why stop there? You can reach a whole new market by taking your advertising efforts "offline". Adding Offline Advertising to your Online Advertising can help your business in ways that you have never imagined!I'm not talking about Direct Mail. That can be very costly. Keeping your costs down, especially when starting a new business should always be a top priority.So how to you advertise "offline", inexpensively? It's easier than you think. Flyers are a great, inexpensive way to advertise offline.Create an eye catching flyer that provides tear offs and post them in your local shopping center, schools, or other places that allow you to post flyers. When people pass by your flyer, they can tear off your information. Fast and convenient.Keep copies of flyers in your car and carry them wherever you go. You never know when you may find a place to post them. Then once a week, go back to where you placed the flyers and replace them with new ones.Chances are your tear offs will be gone and you need a fresh one to replace it !If you are looking to widen your reach, ask your subscribers if they would like to become helpers. Mail some flyers to them and ask them to post them in their local supermarkets and schools and any other place that allows postings. You might want to offer them a small gift for doing this for you. You will be surprised as to how many people will do this for you. It doesn't hurt to ask.Another inexpensive way is to create business cards. I have found that many places like beauty salons, mom and pop stores, stationery stores and other business establishments, will allow you to leave business cards on their counters. So why not get a few hundred Biz Cards printed up and start leaving them wherever you go? Send some to family , friends and to your helpers. I personally use Vistaprint.com. They are inexpensive and the quality is Top Notch.Go ahead, add Offline Advertising to your campaign and BECOME that aggressive marketer!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    and technological incompatibilities create un-uniform presentations and frustrating user experiences.

    - The very hyperlinked nature of the Web with all its advantages actually disrupts comprehension and retention by distracting the audience from what they crave, an organized linear narrative.

    The Web Audience

    We live in a fast paced world where everyone is busy multitasking their way through their workday: talking on cell phones, writing email proposals, text messaging colleagues, and searching the Web for vital business intelligence.

    It is not surprising that distracted Web-visitors are easily drawn away from sites that do not immediately deliver the information they are looking for. And it is no surprise that people are frustrated by having to sift their way through a maze of search engine friendly hyperlinks and incomprehensible advertising copy. If you're lucky, this approach may lead to some additional search engine traffic, but burying your critical content in a mountain of keywords, jargon, and specifications does nothing to engage, enlighten and evangelize your audience.

    Website visitors may, or may not be clients or even prospects, but what they are, are an audience, an audience searching for information. If they can't find that information, if they don't understand that information, and if they can't retain that information; your website, and by extension your company, is useless to them. By recasting Web-visitors as an audience you can organize and present material in ways that are useful, understandable, and memorable.

    The principles and practices required to create a compelling presentation may very well conflict with some search engine optimization maxims and even current Web design trends, but you have to ask yourself, "what is my prime directive?" Do you want tons of traffic that opts out of your site as quickly as possible, instantly forgetting who you are and what you do; or do you want visitors who will stay on your site, learn about you and your products, and ultimately convince themselves that your company is the one with the right solution that fulfills their needs.

    Websites are by their very nature compromises of content, presentation, and technology. By treating your visitors as an audience that needs to be informed, enlightened, and entertained, you will be able to make the most effective decisions, and you will ultimately end-up with more leads, sales, and customers.

    It is important to remember that Web-visitors are human beings who learn and relate through the primary sense of hearing.

    The Web Audience Summary

    - We live in a fast paced world where everyone is busy multitasking their way through their workday.

    - Perpetually distracted Web-visitors are easily drawn away from sites that do not immediately deliver the information they are looking for.

    - If Web-visitors can't find the information they need, if they don't understand that information, and if they can't retain that information, your website, and by extension your company, is useless to them.

    - By recasting Web-visitors as an audience you can organize and present material in ways that are useful, understandable, and memorable.

    - The principles and practices required to create a compelling presentation may very well conflict with some search engine optimization maxims and even current Web design trends.

    - Websites are compromises of content, presentation, and technology. By treating your visitors as an audience that needs to be informed, enlightened, and entertained, you will be able to make the most effective decisions, and you will ultimately end-up with more leads, sales, and customers.

    The Web Message

    We have all heard the expression 'content is king', but as marketers we must turn that old saying around slightly to read, 'message is king.'

    Any one who has ever run a sales organization knows how frustrating it can be to keep sales people on-message without turning them into automatons. Even if you can get them to lug all their samples into each and every customer's office, and even if they actually present all the samples, customers have this nasty habit of asking questions, disrupting the flow of well-planned flip chart and Power Point presentations.

    Having sales people on the road is an expensive method of delivering a sale's or marketing message, without any guarantee that, that message is being delivered properly or with any consistency throughout the organization. And if you're relying on independent sales reps, while let's not even go there.

    The answer of course in this new-age Web-business environment is the Internet and your website. It allows you t

    Personal Change Management - It Starts When You Finished Your Career
    Only a limited number of careers and the people that finished these will do exactly what is in line with the expectation of the career. For example: You study medicine, follow a specialization and you finish as a surgeon. You work as a surgeon most of your life. Even if you would switch your practice to another country, your job -- being a surgeon -- will be much the same.The same holds true for the accountant, the architect, the programmer, the coach (sports) or the engineer. But the surgeon could also become the director of a hospital. After years of service this would be a logical next step. Even though the management of health institutions has been professionalized, the possibility still exists.And, the engineer could become the manager of the engineering department, the programmer could become the manager of the development team or the salesman could become an entrepreneur. Basically change starts with or after we finish school or university. You have studied to be employed in a certain direction, but after “tasting” the real thing you could very well switch and refocus on new opportunities.For some it starts even earlier. They do not know what to do later on and they study something “randomly.” Law is always a good starting point you can use this background in nearly any job.And then it is all up to you. How well do you know what you want and where you are heading to? That is basically what change is all about.© 2006 Hans Bool
    ke the most effective decisions, and you will ultimately end-up with more leads, sales, and customers.

    It is important to remember that Web-visitors are human beings who learn and relate through the primary sense of hearing.

    The Web Audience Summary

    - We live in a fast paced world where everyone is busy multitasking their way through their workday.

    - Perpetually distracted Web-visitors are easily drawn away from sites that do not immediately deliver the information they are looking for.

    - If Web-visitors can't find the information they need, if they don't understand that information, and if they can't retain that information, your website, and by extension your company, is useless to them.

    - By recasting Web-visitors as an audience you can organize and present material in ways that are useful, understandable, and memorable.

    - The principles and practices required to create a compelling presentation may very well conflict with some search engine optimization maxims and even current Web design trends.

    - Websites are compromises of content, presentation, and technology. By treating your visitors as an audience that needs to be informed, enlightened, and entertained, you will be able to make the most effective decisions, and you will ultimately end-up with more leads, sales, and customers.

    The Web Message

    We have all heard the expression 'content is king', but as marketers we must turn that old saying around slightly to read, 'message is king.'

    Any one who has ever run a sales organization knows how frustrating it can be to keep sales people on-message without turning them into automatons. Even if you can get them to lug all their samples into each and every customer's office, and even if they actually present all the samples, customers have this nasty habit of asking questions, disrupting the flow of well-planned flip chart and Power Point presentations.

    Having sales people on the road is an expensive method of delivering a sale's or marketing message, without any guarantee that, that message is being delivered properly or with any consistency throughout the organization. And if you're relying on independent sales reps, while let's not even go there.

    The answer of course in this new-age Web-business environment is the Internet and your website. It allows you to deliver a consistent, error-free message without omissions or deletions.

    And if you do it in an oral presentation using a professional, signature voice, that message informs and enlightens, entertains and persuades, brands and penetrates, and most importantly compels action.

    "Sound is the foundation of experience … capable of infinite variation in contrast to sight" - Hearing is Believing, Richard Thorn, Fauculty of Art, Media & Design, UWE, Bristol

    We live in a highly complicated world where knowledge and expertise are demanded of almost every routine task we perform. Simply operating a cell phone can be rocket science to some; or dealing with the indecipherable instructions for the universal remote that controls everything from your TIVO to your coffeemaker is a guaranteed cause of high blood pressure.

    Life is complex, and how things work is increasing difficult to digest and comprehend. Who has time to read all the manuals, all the specifications, and all the things you need to know just to function in a high-tech world.

    If you had trouble with the instructions for putting together Junior's bike on Christmas morning, how then are you expected to deal with life's more byzantine demands? Audio on the Web clarifies abstract ideas, complicated explanations, and compound procedures.

    No more will Web audiences tolerate the 'Blather Syndrome' were meaningless strings of keywords, advertising hype, and pointless specifications are strung together to form what passes for content.

    The solution to the inarticulate drone of content-overload and the banality 'brochure-speak' is focus. Focus your message on a single relevant idea or concept. Don't try to cram everything thing you can do into a single presentation. Narrow the focus and concentrate the message.

    And if you are speaking to multiple audiences, remember, one-size-fits-all doesn't work for websites any better than it works for hats. URLs are cheap. Create different websites for different audiences and different messages.

    Like most website design firms we have a portfolio site (www.mrpwebmedia.com), but when we wanted to tell people about the power of web-audio and its ability to deliver a powerful, memorable message, we created a separate website (www.136words.com).

    136words.com is dedicated to one simple idea: you can effectively deliver your marketing message on a website or an email landing page with only 136 words: 136 finely crafted words, presented by a professional signature voice that establishes your corporate identity, presents your information, and penetrates the consciousness of your audience.

    The Web Message Summary

    - We have all heard the expression 'content is king', but as marketers we must turn that old saying around slightly to read, 'message is king.'

    - Audio allows you to deliver a consistent, error-free message without omissions or deletions

    - A professional, signature voice can deliver a finely crafted, focused message that informs and enlightens, entertains and persuades, brands and penetrates, and most importantly compels action

    - We live in a highly complicated world where knowledge and expertise are demanded of almost every routine task we perform.

    - Audio on the Web clarifies abstract ideas, complicated explanations, and compound procedures

    - The solution to the inarticulate drone of content overload and the banality 'brochure-speak' is focus. Focus your message on a single relevant idea or concept.

    - Create different websites for different audiences and different messages.

    - 136 finely crafted words, presented by a professional signature voice in sixty seconds of audio establishes your corporate identity, presents your information, and penetrates the consciousness of your audience.

    The Messenger

    We should rethink Marshall McLuhan's adage, 'the medium is the message', and restate it as the 'messenger is the message.' Can you think about CNN's signature bumper, 'This is CNN' without the sound of James Earl Jones's voice ringing in our ears? You probably never heard of John Facenda, but before the days of instant sports replays, his highly recognizable voice combined with dazzling film clips and over-the-top ballet-like descriptions of NFL game highlights was arguably one of the critical ingredients in making football the television phenomenon it is today.

    If people are what they eat, then marketers and advertisers are how they sound. Would Ford truck commercials deliver the same image of power and performance without the distinctive gravitas of Keifer Sutherland's Jack Bauer persona? The audience knows the voice, character and image, and they are all projected onto Ford's products without ever identifying the actor or his popular character.

    People relate to people not to abstract concepts or product specifications. It's all about storytelling, it's how we learn, how we comprehend, and how we remember what's important. And you can't have a memorable story without a compelling storyteller.

    An expert storyteller creates an emotional connection with his or her audience by tapping into commonly shared experiences creating a bond of trust. The hugely popular comedian and 'Tonight Show' host, Jay Leno, describes how he constructs a joke, a method that illustrates how to tap into an audience's shared experience: "You start with something people believe. You tell them it's not true. And then you reinforce what they always believed." Making the connection with a good story works for the comedian and for the sophisticated marketer.

    Rod Serling is another example of a great storyteller who combined great stories with a distinctive style and delivery. Long after his death, his style, delivery, and voice are still being copied. If you want to connect with your audience, you best do it through the sound of a signature voice.

    The Messenger Summary

    - We should rethink Marshall McLuhan's adage, 'the medium is the message', and restate it as the 'messenger is the message.'

    - If people are what they eat, then marketers and advertisers are how they sound.

    - People relate to people not to abstract concepts or product specifications.

    - You can't have a memorable story without a compelling storyteller.

    - An expert storyteller creates an emotional connection with his or her audience by tapping into common shared experiences creating a bond of trust.

    - If you want to connect with your audience, you best do it through the sound of a signature voice.

    The Process

    Honestly and Correctly Test

    The process of creating a signature voice for your webmedia presentations and campaigns starts with an honest look in the corporate mirror. You need to be able to honestly and correctly define who you are, what you do, and why you do it better than the competition before you can consider who should speak for you or how they should sound.

    You must find out how you are viewed by your audience, and if your desired identity is compatible with their perception of who you are and what you do. If you don't like how you are perceived, you can change it, but only if you start off with a true assessment of where you currently exist in your audience's mind.

    The tough part of this exercise is the 'honestly and correctly' part. There are many reasons why companies fail to see themselves how others see them. These reasons can range from arrogance to ignorance to bureaucratic myopia. Take Wal-Mart for example: Wal-Mart tried to attract hip teenagers by creating a youth-oriented site on the 'hot-site-du-jour', MySpace. Wal-Mart, may be a lot of things but hip and trendy, just 'ain't' one of them. An honest look at who they are, and what they do, and of course, how they are perceived, would have told them that this approach would fail.

    Most company mission statements fail the 'honestly and correctly' test miserably; these corporate self-indulgences tend to be pathetic recitations of everything the company thinks it does, expressed in disingenuous, over-hyped, condescending language, that nobody in the organization or the marketplace believes.

    Once you know how you are perceived, you can go about reinforcing that image, or changing it, by implementing a long-term campaign using all the marketing tools at your disposal. And webmedia, audio and video on websites and landing pages, is by far one of the most cost effective tools you have available.

    Developing Your Signature Voice

    1. List all the qualities that represent the image you are trying to project.

    2. Determine the style of language, phrasing and cadence of the delivery.

    3. No matter what kind of presentation you want to deliver, your script must be well written, focused on a single idea, and written for audio not print.

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