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    Motivational Marketing and Customer Loyalty Strategies for Business
    Marketing has changed dramatically during the past decade with the advent of the Internet and Search Engines such as Google and Yahoo. In simpler times, the approach of creating aggressive strategies to propel sales, was very Pavlovian – Stimulus – Response, you placed the ad, generated the demand and the sales happened, not much focus was given to the customer. The new style focuses on developing a service-oriented business and marketing plan dedicated to solving customers' problems. Too often businesses only focus on providing customer service, but customer loyalty is the one we want to engender with our clients, the diff
    week. If this works only 60% of the time, I make over $4,000 a year more than previously, and still shove some business her way. Since over half the sales to new customers result in repeat business, the raise is actually a lot more than that.

    Story number three also happened recently.

    A few months ago, I was looking back at some web sites I created back in 2000 and 2001, when I first began teaching myself html. They were pretty basic, but had a lot of good content. I hadn't promoted them in a couple of years, so I loaded them into a search engine submission program I have, and fired them off. A couple of weeks later, they gen

    Align The Enterprise & Make Beautiful Music Together
    Q: Why is a great business like a great marching band?A: The players in both organizations are in alignment.Alignment? Yes, Alignment.When a marching band passes by in a parade, the columns and rows are in straight alignment, the band members are all in-step, they play in-tune, and they are all playing the same music. Alignment separates the great from the good from the mediocre from the awful. It’s the same in business.A great business is also in alignment; all the players are aligned on their core foundational elements - mission, vision, and values. Great businesses know where they want to go
    If you will stay with me a while, I am going to tell three related stories and then make a point...I promise!

    Story number one goes back to the days when I was a truck driving instructor. Many new truck drivers are very cautious, and even frightened at first. It is not unusual for a student driver to drive verrrry slowly. However, one young lady was going at incredibly slow speeds in all circumstances, and nothing I could do could get her to speed it up a little. She constantly spoke about never having made any real money in her life, and this gave me an idea.

    One day, I said, "Shirley, how would you like a $4,000 a year raise?"

    She said she'd love that, so I went on. "The company is going to pay you 25 cents a mile when you start driving full time. Let's say you can safely improve your speed and efficiency by 10 miles per hour. You will easily drive 50 hours a week or even more. That's at least an extra 500 miles a week. Over the course of a year, even if you only did that 65% of the time, and took a two week vacation, you would still make an extra $4,000.00 a year or more."

    After that, Shirley speeded up quite a bit and turned into a fine driver.

    Story number two happened a few days ago.

    Several years ago, I put my daughter, a single mother, in one of my downlines, created a couple of web sites for her, and from time to time promoted them as well. One means of promotion involved a Pay-Per-Click search engine. Normally, I would send all visitors to my sites, but at the start of each week, I would switch the traffic to one of her sites until she got a couple of sales, then I would switch back. Now, for various reasons, which would take too long to describe here, this cost me about $100 a week out of my advertising funds. Her two sales would net me about $40 in commissions, so my net loss for doing this was $60 a week.

    One day, it came to me that one of her sites was immensely popular at a certain traffic exchange, but she didn't have internet access and I didn't have the time to get the requisite number of clicks needed weekly to generate the two sales. However, I WAS able to buy a sponsoring position for her at $35 a month. This made her two sales at a cost to me of a little over $8 a week. Commissions from those two sales was still $40, but now I made $32 a week instead of losing $60. Additionally, I used the $100 I had been spending on her on my own sites, netting two additional sales a week for me. I made about $60 per sale, so that was $120 plus the $32 for an increase in revenue of about $150 a week. If this works only 60% of the time, I make over $4,000 a year more than previously, and still shove some business her way. Since over half the sales to new customers result in repeat business, the raise is actually a lot more than that.

    Story number three also happened recently.

    A few months ago, I was looking back at some web sites I created back in 2000 and 2001, when I first began teaching myself html. They were pretty basic, but had a lot of good content. I hadn't promoted them in a couple of years, so I loaded them into a search engine submission program I have, and fired them off. A couple of weeks later, they gene

    Marketing Goals and Objectives
    Do you have a good marketing plan as part of your business plan for your small company? All large corporations and companies do or think they do. It seems rather odd that many small businesses do not be achieve the goals and objectives they wish to achieve when investing in their marketing dollars.Many small businesses do not plan very well their marketing and have a mix-matched message to the customer and worse off a patchwork of marketing techniques that are hard to track and deliver a disarrayed message to the public. If you want to achieve results in marketing you must establish goals and objectives of what you wi
    "

    She said she'd love that, so I went on. "The company is going to pay you 25 cents a mile when you start driving full time. Let's say you can safely improve your speed and efficiency by 10 miles per hour. You will easily drive 50 hours a week or even more. That's at least an extra 500 miles a week. Over the course of a year, even if you only did that 65% of the time, and took a two week vacation, you would still make an extra $4,000.00 a year or more."

    After that, Shirley speeded up quite a bit and turned into a fine driver.

    Story number two happened a few days ago.

    Several years ago, I put my daughter, a single mother, in one of my downlines, created a couple of web sites for her, and from time to time promoted them as well. One means of promotion involved a Pay-Per-Click search engine. Normally, I would send all visitors to my sites, but at the start of each week, I would switch the traffic to one of her sites until she got a couple of sales, then I would switch back. Now, for various reasons, which would take too long to describe here, this cost me about $100 a week out of my advertising funds. Her two sales would net me about $40 in commissions, so my net loss for doing this was $60 a week.

    One day, it came to me that one of her sites was immensely popular at a certain traffic exchange, but she didn't have internet access and I didn't have the time to get the requisite number of clicks needed weekly to generate the two sales. However, I WAS able to buy a sponsoring position for her at $35 a month. This made her two sales at a cost to me of a little over $8 a week. Commissions from those two sales was still $40, but now I made $32 a week instead of losing $60. Additionally, I used the $100 I had been spending on her on my own sites, netting two additional sales a week for me. I made about $60 per sale, so that was $120 plus the $32 for an increase in revenue of about $150 a week. If this works only 60% of the time, I make over $4,000 a year more than previously, and still shove some business her way. Since over half the sales to new customers result in repeat business, the raise is actually a lot more than that.

    Story number three also happened recently.

    A few months ago, I was looking back at some web sites I created back in 2000 and 2001, when I first began teaching myself html. They were pretty basic, but had a lot of good content. I hadn't promoted them in a couple of years, so I loaded them into a search engine submission program I have, and fired them off. A couple of weeks later, they gen

    Benefits of Working In a Data Center
    As the Internet continues to grow and produce large amounts of traffic the need for data centers and data center management increases. This continued growth creates data center jobs and IT careers in the technology field. Data Centers not only provide large hubs for Internet traffic, but it also completes the network infrastructure of most mid-large size companies. Data centers usually house thousands of computers, servers, and technical components. This in itself tells why it is a tremendous benefit to working within a data center. Just the amount of knowledge you can gain while on the job is rewarding enough. Having a d
    other, in one of my downlines, created a couple of web sites for her, and from time to time promoted them as well. One means of promotion involved a Pay-Per-Click search engine. Normally, I would send all visitors to my sites, but at the start of each week, I would switch the traffic to one of her sites until she got a couple of sales, then I would switch back. Now, for various reasons, which would take too long to describe here, this cost me about $100 a week out of my advertising funds. Her two sales would net me about $40 in commissions, so my net loss for doing this was $60 a week.

    One day, it came to me that one of her sites was immensely popular at a certain traffic exchange, but she didn't have internet access and I didn't have the time to get the requisite number of clicks needed weekly to generate the two sales. However, I WAS able to buy a sponsoring position for her at $35 a month. This made her two sales at a cost to me of a little over $8 a week. Commissions from those two sales was still $40, but now I made $32 a week instead of losing $60. Additionally, I used the $100 I had been spending on her on my own sites, netting two additional sales a week for me. I made about $60 per sale, so that was $120 plus the $32 for an increase in revenue of about $150 a week. If this works only 60% of the time, I make over $4,000 a year more than previously, and still shove some business her way. Since over half the sales to new customers result in repeat business, the raise is actually a lot more than that.

    Story number three also happened recently.

    A few months ago, I was looking back at some web sites I created back in 2000 and 2001, when I first began teaching myself html. They were pretty basic, but had a lot of good content. I hadn't promoted them in a couple of years, so I loaded them into a search engine submission program I have, and fired them off. A couple of weeks later, they gen

    5 Ways To Delegate Without A Payroll
    Assign Tasks to KidsDo not underestimate the potential of your kids. Kids can handle some task that you do not have time to do: filing, recording messages, paper shredding documents, etc. My 15 year old daughter is responsible for inputting information from business cards that I collect from meetings, into my contact management system, proof reading documents, filing, typing and other small administrative task. She loves it and it gives her great employability skills and inclusion in my business. It is a great way for kids to receive an allowance and special privileges. It allows me to concentrate on other ta
    immensely popular at a certain traffic exchange, but she didn't have internet access and I didn't have the time to get the requisite number of clicks needed weekly to generate the two sales. However, I WAS able to buy a sponsoring position for her at $35 a month. This made her two sales at a cost to me of a little over $8 a week. Commissions from those two sales was still $40, but now I made $32 a week instead of losing $60. Additionally, I used the $100 I had been spending on her on my own sites, netting two additional sales a week for me. I made about $60 per sale, so that was $120 plus the $32 for an increase in revenue of about $150 a week. If this works only 60% of the time, I make over $4,000 a year more than previously, and still shove some business her way. Since over half the sales to new customers result in repeat business, the raise is actually a lot more than that.

    Story number three also happened recently.

    A few months ago, I was looking back at some web sites I created back in 2000 and 2001, when I first began teaching myself html. They were pretty basic, but had a lot of good content. I hadn't promoted them in a couple of years, so I loaded them into a search engine submission program I have, and fired them off. A couple of weeks later, they gen

    Wide World Branding
    Guerilla marketing, targeted PR, SEO, electronic mail and online advertising give clients looking for media exposure a new arsenal for branding their firms that is diverse, inexpensive and effective--if handled the right way. These latest electronic branding techniques, combined with traditional PR methods have brought corporate visibility to a new level. Now any company can become newsworthy and every company can be in the consumer's eye.But getting the most for your marketing dollar still means staying focused. Maybe even more so now then when the most important tool used to spread news was the press release. That’s be
    week. If this works only 60% of the time, I make over $4,000 a year more than previously, and still shove some business her way. Since over half the sales to new customers result in repeat business, the raise is actually a lot more than that.

    Story number three also happened recently.

    A few months ago, I was looking back at some web sites I created back in 2000 and 2001, when I first began teaching myself html. They were pretty basic, but had a lot of good content. I hadn't promoted them in a couple of years, so I loaded them into a search engine submission program I have, and fired them off. A couple of weeks later, they generated a nice little batch of inquiries, several of which resulted in sales. After a few weeks, this tapered off, so I brushed them up and shot them off again. Again, more inquiries, more sales. The increase isn't all that big, but it's averaging about one and a half sales a week. Since I made $60 on average per sale, that's about $90 per week. That's a little over $4,000 a year more than before.

    I said there was a point to all this, and here it is. Two points, actually.

    First, in my own experience, and in all the internet marketing and network marketing courses and literature I've studied, the importance of testing, reviewing, and refining your advertising and marketing strategies is of paramount importance. Sometimes simply changing an attitude, a technique, a wording, a process, or something else may be what it takes to generate or rejuvenate a successful process.

    Second, complacency is a killer. You must always continue to strive to achieve maximum performance. Sitting back and saying, "There. That's done. Now I can quit." will eventually result in failure more often than not. My wife is a fairly successful, semi-professional online poker player, and every time she thinks she's got it all figured out, she realizes that she has to go back over everything she thought she knew and refine it even more to stay on top of her game. Every time she sits back and figures she's got it down to a system, she faces an opponent or situation that requires her to go back to the drawing board, despite her knowledge, skill, and success.

    So, take a look at what you're doing. No matter how successful, or unsuccessful it may or may not be, review it, refine it, revise it, retry it...massage it and thump it. Who knows? Maybe it will give you a $4,000 a year pay raise...or more!

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