Archive for category mindset

Free Business Books for Your Kindle

Free Business Books for Your Kindle

http://tinyurl.com/4zeahur “Best Practices for Persuasive Presentations” — This is actually a collection of three separate guides, including the amusing titled “So What? How to Communicate What Really Matters to Your Audience.” “Instant MBA” — Don’t confuse this with a study guide. Instead, the book teaches you the best of “MBA thinking,” all with the idea of accelerating career advancement. “The Lazy Project Manager” — A humorous take on project management and how managers can and should strive to be “lazy” by being intelligent about organizing and running their projects. “Leading at a Higher Level” — Renowned management guru Ken Blanchard offers his take on becoming a better leader, serving your customers at a “higher level,” and coaching to boost performance at every level. “Marketing in the Moment” — Published just eight months ago, this guide for business owners explains how to choose from the growing array of “new marketing” options (Tumblr, Ustream, etc.) and make them work to their fullest potential. In case you’re wondering, each of these books is rated at least four stars out of five, and most of them normally cost around $20. The total value is well over $100.

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Wealth – Make Sure You Don’t Read This Information If You Have a Life Ambition to Be Poor

When considering wealth one thing is certain. No single person has ALL the answers. Different people are experts in different wealth building techniques. There is a WEALTH (pardon the pun) of information available for those seeking to build wealth but, sadly, most people do not avail themselves of any of it. They just do what they have always done and keep getting the results that they always have.

Let me ask you this… in this, the Information Age, if you are not accumulating knowledge are you going forwards or backwards?

I know some people who even brag that they have never read a book since they left school. You know something? They are often the most ignorant people that you could meet. You would think that books are evil they way they behave.

Do you know why I love books so much? Let me tell you. They are FULL of ideas that you can use. Often a book contains what its author has taken all his or her life to learn. Now, isn’t that amazing. For the cost of a takeaway meal YOU can learn everything that the author knows.

One such book is “How to Save $1000′s and Increase Your Net Wealth.”

Here are some snippets of what some very well educated and intelligent people have said about this book:

A Senior Accountant said:

…”one thing I have never paid attention to is the creating of my own personal wealth. Reading this book and following the exercises I was shocked at the miserable state of my own financial affairs. Through the use of the examples and exercises in this book, I have started to turn that around! As I mentioned above, I have just purchased a house, and I’m on the way to generating some serious assets!”

And a very savvy Business-Woman said this:

“What I really love about this book is that it is about the basics. I have a firm belief that the basics are being taught haphazardly if at all, and the result is the overwhelming debt load individuals are carrying. This book allows anyone to understand his or her own situation. If that understanding creates a devastating picture, then it’s none too soon!”

And then a Scientist said this:

“This book is about the attitude towards money and a wonderful source of motivation for those who want to change their financial destiny and develop a wealth mindset. It pinpoints the major sources of money drain and it shows strategies how to eliminate or minimize it.”

Do you think that an Accountant, a Business Woman and a Scientist would know what they were talking about?

Learning how to create wealth for yourself is very empowering. There is no better way to develop your future security than to become independently wealthy.

Everything is becoming more and more expensive. Look around you. You know that is the truth. When more and more people compete for finite resources (eg fuel, water, land, homes, food) the prices charged for those resources simply have to go up. That is simple economics.

What are you going to do to create wealth for yourself? I hope you have a plan. If you don’t you will just become a statistic in the wealth plans of those who DO understand the power of wealth creation.

If you want to be poor then do NOT educate yourself and do NOT take any action. Your outcome will be assured.

Gary Simpson operates the Turn Debt Into Wealth website. To read the full text of what the accountant, the business woman and the scientist said about this book go here: “How to Save $1000′s and Increase Your Net Wealth.”

Author: Gary Simpson
Article Source: EzineArticles.com
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Creating, Recognizing & Measuring Value

Price is what you pay – value is what you get.
Warren Buffett, Chairman of Berkshire Securities

Deliver value that your customers recognize, appreciate and reward. If you want your customers to value what you offer – you must demonstrate that you value them.

Value implies trust so start by building trust. Always under-promise and over-deliver. Be known for keeping your promise and then some. Be honest. Never promise what you cannot deliver.

Don’t confuse value with cost. A product’s value is almost never equal to its cost. For example, your product might cost you $2 and you sell it for $10. The value to you is $10. The value to the customer will usually be more than the selling price. If it was only worth $10 to the customer then they have no motivation to buy. But if the value to them is greater than the selling price, they are motivated to trade their money for something of greater value. It may be worth $25 to the customer. Then they will gladly give up $10 of their money for the product. The more that value exceeds the cost of the purchase, the more the customer will want to buy from you. Always offer value that is greater than the price they pay. Your challenge is to ensure the customer sees much more value than their cost.

The Value Formula
How can value be so different from cost? Examine the following formula, then discover where you can concentrate your efforts to enhance value.

Total value = real value + perceived value

Let’s take it apart to understand it. Real value comprises the tangibles. It is relatively easy to measure. Real value can be expressed in this manner:

Real value = function/cost

Function is what the product or service does in mechanical or analytical terms. Imagine you are buying a new car. If you are shopping for the best real value, you would get the most function efficient ground transportation for the lowest cost. You could measure the car’s function factor by comparing it with the cost of your practical alternatives; public transit, car pooling, taxi, bicycle, limousine, various car models. You might wish to consider the costs of these alternatives in terms of time and inconvenience. What does your new car give you that these other modes of transportation don’t?

Having determined the new car’s function factor, you can divide it by its cost. Is its function worth more to you than its cost? If so, the new car has real value. At the end of your analysis you would buy the cheapest car. Not necessarily. Remember that what you are willing to pay for your car is based on the total value to you, which is a factor of both real and perceived value. So, sometimes without realizing it, you assign value to less quantifiable benefits and buy something that you like. Liking is not part of real value, it is part of a product’s perceived value.

Perceived Value = belief x emotion

Compared with real value, perceived value is more difficult to measure directly. Yet it can have greater impact on total value. Perceived value is the product of belief times emotion. It is influenced by intangibles such as image, credibility, beauty and feelings – all the benefits you should emphasize in your marketing efforts. Emphasizing your perceived value is the surest way to differentiate yourself from the competition – and gain you more profit. Perceived value is what makes a brand name more valuable than a no-name. Nike is one example of a company that built a fortune on perceived value. As individuals we think differently, perceive differently, and place different values on things. Beware of that. Use it to your advantage. When your prospect wants to negotiate price, remember to build up your product’s perceived value.

How can you enhance the value of what you sell? If you are only looking at the cost of paper and ink then you are forcing yourself to compete in the commodity game. Instead find ways to emphasize the value of your relationship, the creative, – the intangibles.
Always deliver real value too but compete on the perceived value.

George Torok is co-author of the national bestseller, “Secrets of Power Marketing”, the first guide to personal marketing for the non-marketer. He delivers training programs and inspirational speeches to corporations and associations. To arrange for your speech or training program call 905-335-1997. To receive your free copy of the special guide, “50 Power Marketing Ideas” and subscribe to monthly marketing tips visit http://www.PowerMarketing.ca

Author: George Torok
Article Source: EzineArticles.com
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Forget About Customer Service & Satisfaction: Pursue Customer VALUE

For the longest time I have been uncomfortable with the various labels we place on our customer facing activities. They are referred to as:

Customer Service

Customer Care

Customer Support

Customer Relationship Management

Client Services

Client Relations.

Most of these titles and designations focus on what we DO without focusing on the results we are hoping to achieve.

We engage in these activities, presumably to promote:

Customer Satisfaction

Client Retention

Customer Loyalty.

And we trust that these aims and practices will contribute to PROFITS.

But as a long time management consultant and President of Customersatisfaction.com, I’m not at all convinced we’re headed in the right direction, that these words and phrases are helping us or our clients and customers as much as an alternative model, which I’m going to introduce, here.

I believe all would be better served by focusing our efforts on IMPROVING CUSTOMER VALUE.

Peter F. Drucker, renowned management guru, used to point out to those of us who studied with him, that customer service “Must be defined from the customer’s point of view.”

The true test of valuable service is whether, if unbundled, customers will pay extra money for what is being dispensed to them.

A fellow student, in senior management with a financial services company, boasted that his firm was superior to competitors because it had a network of “local branches close to customers.”

When grilled by Drucker as to whether he had PROOF that these expensive deployments had any significant value in the minds of customers, my colleague balked and stammered.

It was merely an ARTICLE OF FAITH on his part; and in fairness to him, also in the minds of many at his company, that all of their efforts to serve were actually serving.

Upon closer scrutiny, the local service centers were found to have slight, if any, marginal utility to the customers in whose name they were built.

So, what IS value to customers? And how is it linked to achieving value to companies?

It is a moving target, for one thing. Yesterday’s first class air traveler insisted on a larger seat with more leg room. Today’s requires sleeper seats, independent audio and video programming, expedited baggage services, and an amenities kit on international flights.

One of the key components of providing value to customers is by offering an attractive PRICE. Take the shopper at a 99 Cents Only store. He or she can expect to find a tube of toothpaste for 99 cents, where the same item costs three times as much at a typical drug store or supermarket.

That’s value, without question. The amount and quality tendered should offer substantial utility to the customer.

But stark utility and functionality are only part of the equation.

The Mercedes dealer that has a Hall of Fame, a Polaroid portrait gallery of every buyer dating back decades displayed on the wall, insists on awarding men and women a dozen long-stem roses with each car purchase. It’s a moment in which every customer feels special and important, and a snapshot commemorates it, and is placed on the wall joining similar images of Hollywood celebrities such as Clark Gable, that have bought cars over more than a half-century at this famous dealership.

That’s value, too. Compared to the cost of an upscale car, the roses and the photo are very inexpensive. But they are part of a much greater ritual that the dealership has orchestrated to create an ELITE club, consisting of mostly ordinary purchasers.

This example shows the possibilities for IMPROVING CUSTOMER VALUE are practically endless.

Frequency marketing plans, based on airline miles, cash-back rebates, and even free dinners and haircuts, have had a dramatic impact on generating repeat business and a perception of value for buyers. At the same time, they have introduced loyalty and more predictable revenue streams into otherwise fickle industries.

These promotions show the Win-Win potential of focusing on creating VALUE.

From the business’s standpoint, when a customer can be induced to spend more, to buy the higher profit items, to resist the siren songs of competitors, and to be a source of referrals, then a CUSTOMER’S VALUE has been increased, and for that matter, so has the value of the overall enterprise.

The trick is to create better FITS and ALIGNMENTS between what a company offers by way of customer-facing practices and to increase the willingness of customers to select and prefer their vendors.

Does the company that answers the phone more pleasantly and faster than its competitor, win more business and better retain its customer base? We presume it does, and millions of dollars are invested annually by firms to train their personnel in telephone etiquette and call handling techniques.

As the author of MONITORING, MEASURING & MANAGING CUSTOMER SERVICE, let me ask you to consider these questions:

Where are the MEASURES that show such a correlation between good calls and good business? Where are the MONITORING techniques that capture and compare the RESULTS achieved by well trained versus poorly trained reps? How many customers have been DETECTED grumbling instead of singing as conversations conclude, or have explicitly responded to post-mortems and surveys by stating, “I went to your competitor because your call handling is inferior”?

Instead of focusing mostly on what we do, we need to ask “What are customers achieving?” and equally important, “What are we getting, in return?”

I have often said the truest test of customer satisfaction is this question:

“Will your customers reorder, or permit you to up-sell or to suggestively sell them more, RIGHT NOW?”

If not, you have not increased a customer’s VALUE to your firm, and you have demonstrated that you have not dispensed enough value to the customer, up to that point.

There is a VALUE DEFICIT that should be detected and remedied, immediately, but all too often it evades review and repair.

How do we create better FITS and ALIGNMENTS?

We need to (1) Seek and obtain FEEDBACK from clients on an ongoing basis that we’re delivering what they value. We should employ explicit and implicit measures of value tendered and received. (2) We should benchmark our processes against known BEST PRACTICES in the field and across industries.

But we can’t be satisfied with these initiatives, important as they are.

We also need to (3) CREATE NEW SATISFACTIONS and NEW VALUE for customers and for our companies.

This means taking risks.

For example, today’s hybrid vehicles cost more off the showroom floor, but they deliver more over time, including long-range economy and an increasingly important perception that the buyer is doing his share to reduce dependency on foreign energy sources, making his country more safe and secure in the process.

But when hybrids were designed, gas cost about $1.80 per gallon, and manufacturers had to get in front of their customers and entice them into the future.

Toyota made the bet that the market, and global events would catch up with their vision, and they bet right, winning a leading worldwide market share in the process.

You don’t have to be big to emulate them.

For the price of a few roses or a snapshot, you might accomplish the same thing, providing customers find VALUE in it.

Best-selling author of 12 books and more than 1,000 articles, Dr. Gary S. Goodman is considered “The Gold Standard” in negotiation, sales development, customer service, and telephone effectiveness. Top-rated as a speaker, seminar leader, and consultant, his clients extend across the globe and the organizational spectrum, from the Fortune 1000 to small businesses. He can be reached at: gary@customersatisfaction.com.

Author: Dr. Gary S. Goodman
Article Source: EzineArticles.com
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Happy New Year from Black Swan Management, LLC

Happy New Year from Black Swan Management, LLC!

Hopefully your 2011 is off to a productive start. Here is a link to an informative post by Steve Tobak, a consultant, writer, and former senior executive with more than 20 years of experience in the technology industry. He is discussing some practical lessons he learned the good old-fashioned way…through experience.

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5 Rules to Reduce Risk When Starting a Business

5 Rules to Reduce Risk When Starting a Business in the Other 8 Hours

By Robert Pagliarini

I have a metal paperweight on my desk with the inscription, “What would you do if you could not fail?” It’s a nice ornament with a feel good message, but it’s completely wrong and dangerous. Anybody can fail at anything. If you start a new venture without first thinking about and limiting risks, you can put your finances — and worse yet — your relationships in jeopardy. What starts as a way to build a dream life during the other 8 hours, become your own boss, or make a fortune can turn into a nightmare if you don’t limit your risk.

A better and more useful message would be, “What would you do if it didn’t matter if you failed?” To me, that’s much more realistic and powerful. Instead of taking a risk that could end in a cataclysmic strikeout, your goal is to limit the risk of financial catastrophe. This means containing projects so that a swing and a miss doesn’t have the potential to ruin your life.

Here are 5 rules to reduce risk when starting a business in the other 8 hours:

  • Get free help. You should enlist the support of others. Find service partners willing to invest their time a piece of the venture’s future income instead of upfront cash. The same person who would laugh you out of their office if you asked them for a $2,500 investment may gladly trade $2,500 of their services for a small piece of ownership in a promising new venture. Why? Like you, most people are looking for an opportunity to get ahead without risking too much. If someone can invest a little of their time with the hopes of making a huge return, they may jump at the chance.
  • Make small bets. In the investing world, everyone talks about risk tolerance — a measure that determines how psychologically comfortable you are with the possibility of losing money. This is good to know, but more critical is knowing your risk capacity — that is, how much money can you afford to lose without it destroying your finances and your ability to pay your rent? Start small and start slowly. Immediately committing thousands of dollars to an idea is as ridiculous as walking up to a girl you’ve never met and asking her to marry you. You need to put a little out there and get a little back. Then you can put a little more out there and hopefully get a little more back.
  • Negotiate fiercely. You must be relentless about getting what you need. You don’t have the luxury of a six-figure budget. You’ve got to get your ventures up and running as cheaply as you can. One way to minimize risk is to negotiate everything. Don’t accept anything as is. Negotiate discounts, concessions, bonuses, terms, etc. It will feel awkward at first, but keep practicing.
  • Limit liability. If you are producing a product or providing a service that could lead you to get sued, you must protect yourself against lawsuits by incorporating and by having the proper liability insurance. Don’t risk financial disaster by not shielding your personal assets from your business assets.
  • Keep your day job (at least for now). It’s important to have that steady and predictable income during the day while you swing for the fences at night.

Unless you’re sports-challenged, you know if you get three strikes you’re out. But what if that weren’t the case? What if you could swing and swing and swing without ever striking out? A swing and a miss is not a failure when you follow these rules. A swing is simply one swing closer to a hit.

You can download several free resources(assessment, poster, audio interview, video, and more) at www.other8hours.com and learn more about my new book, The Other 8 Hours: Maximize Your Free Time to Create New Wealth & Purpose.

Read More

* Bad Day? 5 Tips to Keep Your Motivation
* Is it Too Late to Improve Your Finances?
* Make Money From Your Hobbies

(Baseball image by Scott AblemanCC 2.0)

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