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    How To Raise Finance For Your New Business
    No matter who you are the banks, business angels or government agencies who are lending you the money all want to know that their money is safe.Main factorsPoor management skills are the reason 80% of owner-managed firms go under. So this is the first thing that lenders will look at when considering you for a loan. Before they will lend you the money they will want to see that you have a good track record, the ex
    this happened I had to ask others ‘what’d he say?’

    That’s the point precisely. Whenever we use complicated words, phrases, language and acronyms known to us, we actually slow down or altogether halt the experience of having our audience, prospect and customer understand our meaning. And transferring our ideas and thoughts is what it’s all about – certainly what determines our ultimate success or failure in selling.

    So the next time you are tempted to jazz up your presentations, or as some describe it, put a little life in it, remember the following just like a good speaker:

    •Connect with your audience

    •Create a beginning, m

    Avoid Paid Surveys Scams Online
    Online paid surveys are being overestimated and they sound too promising at times to be believed. It is never a facile task and not always a means of earning easy money as the ads might have convinced you. You might get loads of offers that promise you to make you rich instantly. The safe way to make money completing surveys online is to select them after a thorough initial screening. For a foolproof paid survey experience, you
    Let’s face it, selling is a communications business.

    How well you express your ideas and thoughts to prospects and customers is what ultimately determines success or failure in selling.

    If you are, or have been fortunate enough to be a member of a public speaking group, you have learned one of the most vital elements of speaking is to use simple, crisp yet descriptive words that convey your meaning. You also know that your sentence structure, in fact the whole body of your speech should have a beginning, middle and an ending. Equally important is connecting with your audience at their level and to use common phrases and words with which they can relate.

    Making a presentation to a prospect or customer is very similar to giving a superb speech. And just in case you have not figured it out yet, everyone in the business of sales will be called on at some point to give a presentation. And just like a superb speech you must connect with your audience, have a plan (beginning, middle and ending) and transfer meaning from you to them in a coherent and cohesive manner.

    What separates good presentations from great ones is the ability to use everyday words to express your ideas no matter whether they are simple or complex ones. Using unfamiliar, uncommon or rarely used words almost always results in a confused prospect. Here’s why.

    You may believe you are showing knowledge of your product or service by using sophisticated and elegant words, but the truth of the matter is that the prospect may get stuck on that word and fail to follow (hear) the rest of your presentation. Using words that demonstrate your cleverness and command of the language may enhance your ego while at the same time bewilder your prospect.

    Here is a classic example. Recently I attended a weeklong seminar for the purpose of building my own business. Laced throughout the material were abbreviations and acronyms that were well known and understood by the seminar leaders, yet every time one was spoken, the entire attendee group had to stop, align their mind to the acronym and compute its meaning before they were capable of actually hearing what the rest of the message following the acronym was about.

    After each session each one of us left grimacing and shaking our head because of the needless confusion this caused. Whenever I got stuck on one of these acronyms not only did I go through the same mental gymnastics as the others, I came to realize a significant gem came right on the heels of the acronym. So naturally those gems were escaping me (and others I’m sure). In every case when this happened I had to ask others ‘what’d he say?’

    That’s the point precisely. Whenever we use complicated words, phrases, language and acronyms known to us, we actually slow down or altogether halt the experience of having our audience, prospect and customer understand our meaning. And transferring our ideas and thoughts is what it’s all about – certainly what determines our ultimate success or failure in selling.

    So the next time you are tempted to jazz up your presentations, or as some describe it, put a little life in it, remember the following just like a good speaker:

    •Connect with your audience

    •Create a beginning, mi

    Lions, Tigers, and Bears, OH MY! Liars, Cheaters, and Fears, OH MY!
    It’s, The Walmart TV Network... look up!When my grandson had just started to talk this was one of the first things he sung. Probably because there were so many days that he came to one of the stores while I was at work or someone else in the family was at work he heard it over and over.There was a time during my employ with Walmart that I would not stand for anyone saying anything negative about the company.<
    they can relate.

    Making a presentation to a prospect or customer is very similar to giving a superb speech. And just in case you have not figured it out yet, everyone in the business of sales will be called on at some point to give a presentation. And just like a superb speech you must connect with your audience, have a plan (beginning, middle and ending) and transfer meaning from you to them in a coherent and cohesive manner.

    What separates good presentations from great ones is the ability to use everyday words to express your ideas no matter whether they are simple or complex ones. Using unfamiliar, uncommon or rarely used words almost always results in a confused prospect. Here’s why.

    You may believe you are showing knowledge of your product or service by using sophisticated and elegant words, but the truth of the matter is that the prospect may get stuck on that word and fail to follow (hear) the rest of your presentation. Using words that demonstrate your cleverness and command of the language may enhance your ego while at the same time bewilder your prospect.

    Here is a classic example. Recently I attended a weeklong seminar for the purpose of building my own business. Laced throughout the material were abbreviations and acronyms that were well known and understood by the seminar leaders, yet every time one was spoken, the entire attendee group had to stop, align their mind to the acronym and compute its meaning before they were capable of actually hearing what the rest of the message following the acronym was about.

    After each session each one of us left grimacing and shaking our head because of the needless confusion this caused. Whenever I got stuck on one of these acronyms not only did I go through the same mental gymnastics as the others, I came to realize a significant gem came right on the heels of the acronym. So naturally those gems were escaping me (and others I’m sure). In every case when this happened I had to ask others ‘what’d he say?’

    That’s the point precisely. Whenever we use complicated words, phrases, language and acronyms known to us, we actually slow down or altogether halt the experience of having our audience, prospect and customer understand our meaning. And transferring our ideas and thoughts is what it’s all about – certainly what determines our ultimate success or failure in selling.

    So the next time you are tempted to jazz up your presentations, or as some describe it, put a little life in it, remember the following just like a good speaker:

    •Connect with your audience

    •Create a beginning, m

    8 Cheap Business Marketing Ideas
    The majority of small business owners rely on only 2-3 marketing strategies for pulling potential customers within their grasp. However, the fact is that "Caffeine Marketing" is about encompassing all possible marketing resources available and gaining a profit from it. Here are a few tactics for gaining more customers and referrals:1) Referrals: The key to productive referral business is a proactive approach. You cannot
    st always results in a confused prospect. Here’s why.

    You may believe you are showing knowledge of your product or service by using sophisticated and elegant words, but the truth of the matter is that the prospect may get stuck on that word and fail to follow (hear) the rest of your presentation. Using words that demonstrate your cleverness and command of the language may enhance your ego while at the same time bewilder your prospect.

    Here is a classic example. Recently I attended a weeklong seminar for the purpose of building my own business. Laced throughout the material were abbreviations and acronyms that were well known and understood by the seminar leaders, yet every time one was spoken, the entire attendee group had to stop, align their mind to the acronym and compute its meaning before they were capable of actually hearing what the rest of the message following the acronym was about.

    After each session each one of us left grimacing and shaking our head because of the needless confusion this caused. Whenever I got stuck on one of these acronyms not only did I go through the same mental gymnastics as the others, I came to realize a significant gem came right on the heels of the acronym. So naturally those gems were escaping me (and others I’m sure). In every case when this happened I had to ask others ‘what’d he say?’

    That’s the point precisely. Whenever we use complicated words, phrases, language and acronyms known to us, we actually slow down or altogether halt the experience of having our audience, prospect and customer understand our meaning. And transferring our ideas and thoughts is what it’s all about – certainly what determines our ultimate success or failure in selling.

    So the next time you are tempted to jazz up your presentations, or as some describe it, put a little life in it, remember the following just like a good speaker:

    •Connect with your audience

    •Create a beginning, m

    Got Publicity-2007?
    Most people do not factor in publicity into their marketing program. They forget about it when planning. Or they think it happens spontaneously with enough word of mouth marketing. Most people do not plan for their marketing. They have no budget set aside to market. They think their products are so good, people will spontaneously start using them and they will make tons of sales. They launch their product and wait and wait an
    stood by the seminar leaders, yet every time one was spoken, the entire attendee group had to stop, align their mind to the acronym and compute its meaning before they were capable of actually hearing what the rest of the message following the acronym was about.

    After each session each one of us left grimacing and shaking our head because of the needless confusion this caused. Whenever I got stuck on one of these acronyms not only did I go through the same mental gymnastics as the others, I came to realize a significant gem came right on the heels of the acronym. So naturally those gems were escaping me (and others I’m sure). In every case when this happened I had to ask others ‘what’d he say?’

    That’s the point precisely. Whenever we use complicated words, phrases, language and acronyms known to us, we actually slow down or altogether halt the experience of having our audience, prospect and customer understand our meaning. And transferring our ideas and thoughts is what it’s all about – certainly what determines our ultimate success or failure in selling.

    So the next time you are tempted to jazz up your presentations, or as some describe it, put a little life in it, remember the following just like a good speaker:

    •Connect with your audience

    •Create a beginning, m

    Utilizing the Power of Color for Vending Machines
    Humans are a visual species. According to the secretariat of the Seoul International Color Expo 2004, 92.6 percent of consumers put more importance on visual factors when purchasing products than on physical feel, hearing or smell, and 84.7 percent think that color is the visual factor most used for making buying decisions.So how can this apply to vending machines?If color is the number one factor that consumers u
    this happened I had to ask others ‘what’d he say?’

    That’s the point precisely. Whenever we use complicated words, phrases, language and acronyms known to us, we actually slow down or altogether halt the experience of having our audience, prospect and customer understand our meaning. And transferring our ideas and thoughts is what it’s all about – certainly what determines our ultimate success or failure in selling.

    So the next time you are tempted to jazz up your presentations, or as some describe it, put a little life in it, remember the following just like a good speaker:

    •Connect with your audience

    •Create a beginning, middle and ending

    •Use simple, easy to understand words that require minimal audience interpretation

    •and most importantly of all ax the acronyms.

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