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Digg it UP - How To Increase Your Income
Secret To Getting Handbags To Resell ss.If your looking for Coach, Prada, Gucci, or Dooney Bourke handbags to resell on ebay or overstock.com you may have a hard time finding a distributor. Ebay power sellers have this knowledge but they will be hard pressed to share this information with you. But, I am going to share their secrets with you. There are three techniques to finding a reputable wholesale distributor of handbags.First, and this maybe one of the harder techniques discussed. Develop a relationship with a brick and mortar store that's selling the brand handbag you want to sell and if they don't have a presence on ebay offer to bring their business to ebay for a share of the profit. This can become a win win situation for both of you. One, you will have gotten an unlimited supply of authentic handbags to sell on ebay and for your supplier, you have just increased their business. Offe You’ll need to market your event very well to get good numbers: - Use your own ezine, local press and radio, the chamber of commerce and online forums. - Write articles on your subject and submit them to article directories and other ezines. - Tell your trade association and use online event listings. - Go to networking events and take leaflets with you to advertise what you are doing. - Ask each client to bring one potential client to get a free place - Offer to speak at other events on the run up to yours with a taster of what people will get on the day. - Find another non-competing company who are aiming for the same market and do a joint event Don’t just rely on one way to get publicity – think of as many different ways as you can and use the best ones for your event. You'll need to be very organized and plan well ahead. Make sure you order any equipment you might need in plenty of time. Make up an event checklist and build yourself a kit with plenty of spares - pens, training materials, extension cables, flip chart paper, gaffer Career Change - Making the Big Leap Why on earth would you want to run an event for your business? Events take a lot of organizing and publicity, not to mention the time you might not have and, depending on what you want to do, they can also cost quite a bit of money.Often people contemplate a change of career with some trepidation, holding fears such as:- Will I be able to achieve what I am aiming for?- What if I don’t earn enough money?- Will I regret my decision?One common tool for helping you to decide whether you are right in wanting to change jobs is for you to draw up a list of costs and benefits of making the decision to make a big leap into a new career.Whilst this approach is useful, it is unlikely to resolve the fears or anxieties you have about making the big leap. In order to help with those, I would suggest the following approach:1. Make a Risk Assessment of the most significant risks of deciding to change career. In your Risk Assessment, for each potential risk you think of, set out:– What will be the potential negative c So is it really worth all that effort? In a word, yes! An event is a fantastic way to get a whole lot of your clients and potential clients together so you can present to them all at once, saving you huge amounts of time and effort trying to reach them all individually – and even better, as the speaker, you come across as an expert in your field. Give your clients valuable information and they will talk about you and recommend you to others. Having an event is also a great way to encourage your clients to network with each other and see how they can help each other – and of course, it’s you they’ll thank for that opportunity. Having your name on an event can be very good publicity for you and your business. If you pick a hot topic for your industry you could find yourself interviewed by the local press, on the radio, or even on television, all of which increase your chances of being seen as an expert by potential clients. You may even make money directly from your event – either by charging admission, finding sponsorship or by having products to sell at the event. Regular events could produce a nice stream of new income. You could generate yet another income stream just from one event by creating one or more products – you could video it, record it, transcribe it, turn the learning materials into an ebook or online course and sell it - the possibilities are endless. So once you've decided to go ahead - how do you pick a good topic? You'll need to look at what your industry is discussing right now and what they really want to know. There are lots of ways to find this out: - Run an online survey - www.surveymonkey.com has a free option you can use to create some very useful surveys - Ring several trusted clients and find out what they’d like to learn more about - Go to online forums on your subject and see what everyone is talking about - Post on online forums and ask people what they might be interested in - Look at the bestsellers on Amazon, Barns & Noble and Clickbank - Look at the most popular keywords using a word tracker tool - Go to your trade association and ask what their members are interested in - Look at competitor’s ezines and see what they are discussing at the moment. Once you have your topic you’ll need to pick a date and an event format. What kind of event should you offer? Look at where your potential clients are based: - If most people are in a particular area of the country, you should consider having a face to face meeting – this is always the best option if possible as you have much more chance to impress and to deal on the spot with any objections and questions, as well as providing that all important networking opportunity for your clients. If your clients are scattered across the country or even across the world, you’ll need to look at running a teleclass or web based event: - With a web based event using a facility such as www.hotconference.com, you have the option of using the whiteboard, showing a PowerPoint presentation, directing people to view a website and seeing the attendees online via webcam – this is a great way to give a presentation but make sure you are practiced at using all the features of the software first and consider whether your clients are technically-minded enough to be comfortable with this, and likely to have equipment such as webcams and microphones. - If this is your first time running an event, the easiest option is to run a teleclass, where you set a date and time and participants simply dial in and listen to you. Many companies, such as www.freeconference.com, offer this service and a quick Google search should bring up a long list of companies you could use. If you choose a live event you’ll need to find a good venue. Look at cost, position - find somewhere central with good transport links and parking. Make sure you see the room you’ll be using before the event so you can see the space you have available and plan your layout. Check maximum numbers the room can hold for fire regulations, find out where the fire exits and fire alarm are and make sure there is disabled access. You’ll need to market your event very well to get good numbers: - Use your own ezine, local press and radio, the chamber of commerce and online forums. - Write articles on your subject and submit them to article directories and other ezines. - Tell your trade association and use online event listings. - Go to networking events and take leaflets with you to advertise what you are doing. - Ask each client to bring one potential client to get a free place - Offer to speak at other events on the run up to yours with a taster of what people will get on the day. - Find another non-competing company who are aiming for the same market and do a joint event Don’t just rely on one way to get publicity – think of as many different ways as you can and use the best ones for your event. You'll need to be very organized and plan well ahead. Make sure you order any equipment you might need in plenty of time. Make up an event checklist and build yourself a kit with plenty of spares - pens, training materials, extension cables, flip chart paper, gaffer t A Yellow Page Expert Speaks Out f which increase your chances of being seen as an expert by potential clients.You first may be asking: what qualifies me as a Yellow Page expert? I worked as an advertising consultant for a Bell System division for nearly 25 years. During that time, I counseled about 3000 businesses in advertising design, marketing programs, and promotional campaigns. I was a top performer for about half that time and won numerous awards and honors. With that background, let me discuss the unique media known as directory advertising.In my market, we had about 80,000 businesses represented in the local city Yellow Pages. That’s a large sector of companies fairly reliant on a single product used by over 80% of the population. The Yellow Pages is a reliable constant that is relatively unchanged since its inception over 100 years ago. Back then, it was a list of companies and their ads, bound together in book form, and sent for free to every resident You may even make money directly from your event – either by charging admission, finding sponsorship or by having products to sell at the event. Regular events could produce a nice stream of new income. You could generate yet another income stream just from one event by creating one or more products – you could video it, record it, transcribe it, turn the learning materials into an ebook or online course and sell it - the possibilities are endless. So once you've decided to go ahead - how do you pick a good topic? You'll need to look at what your industry is discussing right now and what they really want to know. There are lots of ways to find this out: - Run an online survey - www.surveymonkey.com has a free option you can use to create some very useful surveys - Ring several trusted clients and find out what they’d like to learn more about - Go to online forums on your subject and see what everyone is talking about - Post on online forums and ask people what they might be interested in - Look at the bestsellers on Amazon, Barns & Noble and Clickbank - Look at the most popular keywords using a word tracker tool - Go to your trade association and ask what their members are interested in - Look at competitor’s ezines and see what they are discussing at the moment. Once you have your topic you’ll need to pick a date and an event format. What kind of event should you offer? Look at where your potential clients are based: - If most people are in a particular area of the country, you should consider having a face to face meeting – this is always the best option if possible as you have much more chance to impress and to deal on the spot with any objections and questions, as well as providing that all important networking opportunity for your clients. If your clients are scattered across the country or even across the world, you’ll need to look at running a teleclass or web based event: - With a web based event using a facility such as www.hotconference.com, you have the option of using the whiteboard, showing a PowerPoint presentation, directing people to view a website and seeing the attendees online via webcam – this is a great way to give a presentation but make sure you are practiced at using all the features of the software first and consider whether your clients are technically-minded enough to be comfortable with this, and likely to have equipment such as webcams and microphones. - If this is your first time running an event, the easiest option is to run a teleclass, where you set a date and time and participants simply dial in and listen to you. Many companies, such as www.freeconference.com, offer this service and a quick Google search should bring up a long list of companies you could use. If you choose a live event you’ll need to find a good venue. Look at cost, position - find somewhere central with good transport links and parking. Make sure you see the room you’ll be using before the event so you can see the space you have available and plan your layout. Check maximum numbers the room can hold for fire regulations, find out where the fire exits and fire alarm are and make sure there is disabled access. You’ll need to market your event very well to get good numbers: - Use your own ezine, local press and radio, the chamber of commerce and online forums. - Write articles on your subject and submit them to article directories and other ezines. - Tell your trade association and use online event listings. - Go to networking events and take leaflets with you to advertise what you are doing. - Ask each client to bring one potential client to get a free place - Offer to speak at other events on the run up to yours with a taster of what people will get on the day. - Find another non-competing company who are aiming for the same market and do a joint event Don’t just rely on one way to get publicity – think of as many different ways as you can and use the best ones for your event. You'll need to be very organized and plan well ahead. Make sure you order any equipment you might need in plenty of time. Make up an event checklist and build yourself a kit with plenty of spares - pens, training materials, extension cables, flip chart paper, gaffer Spam Bashing ested inI have done my penance in the advertising industry. You might even call me an “ad-man.” I have engaged advertising’s rude and unwanted impressions. I have penetrated the unaware with my client’s messages. Oh, yes, I have been apart of the creation and distribution of junk mail and newspaper inserts. I have sold obnoxiously intrusive radio spots to car dealers. I have seen the glory of toll free numbers on television infomercials. However, never in my most effective advertising moments have I subjected human beings to the equivalent of the unbridled invasion of SPAM!It was 1937, in the sleepy town of Austin, Minnesota, when the Hormel Company introduced a new product. Two years prior, beer began to be distributed in cans. The Hormel family looked around and said, “If beer can, ham can” (Or something to that effect). And the concept of canned spiced ham was - Look at the bestsellers on Amazon, Barns & Noble and Clickbank - Look at the most popular keywords using a word tracker tool - Go to your trade association and ask what their members are interested in - Look at competitor’s ezines and see what they are discussing at the moment. Once you have your topic you’ll need to pick a date and an event format. What kind of event should you offer? Look at where your potential clients are based: - If most people are in a particular area of the country, you should consider having a face to face meeting – this is always the best option if possible as you have much more chance to impress and to deal on the spot with any objections and questions, as well as providing that all important networking opportunity for your clients. If your clients are scattered across the country or even across the world, you’ll need to look at running a teleclass or web based event: - With a web based event using a facility such as www.hotconference.com, you have the option of using the whiteboard, showing a PowerPoint presentation, directing people to view a website and seeing the attendees online via webcam – this is a great way to give a presentation but make sure you are practiced at using all the features of the software first and consider whether your clients are technically-minded enough to be comfortable with this, and likely to have equipment such as webcams and microphones. - If this is your first time running an event, the easiest option is to run a teleclass, where you set a date and time and participants simply dial in and listen to you. Many companies, such as www.freeconference.com, offer this service and a quick Google search should bring up a long list of companies you could use. If you choose a live event you’ll need to find a good venue. Look at cost, position - find somewhere central with good transport links and parking. Make sure you see the room you’ll be using before the event so you can see the space you have available and plan your layout. Check maximum numbers the room can hold for fire regulations, find out where the fire exits and fire alarm are and make sure there is disabled access. You’ll need to market your event very well to get good numbers: - Use your own ezine, local press and radio, the chamber of commerce and online forums. - Write articles on your subject and submit them to article directories and other ezines. - Tell your trade association and use online event listings. - Go to networking events and take leaflets with you to advertise what you are doing. - Ask each client to bring one potential client to get a free place - Offer to speak at other events on the run up to yours with a taster of what people will get on the day. - Find another non-competing company who are aiming for the same market and do a joint event Don’t just rely on one way to get publicity – think of as many different ways as you can and use the best ones for your event. You'll need to be very organized and plan well ahead. Make sure you order any equipment you might need in plenty of time. Make up an event checklist and build yourself a kit with plenty of spares - pens, training materials, extension cables, flip chart paper, gaffer Big Hat, No Cattle ion, directing people to view a website and seeing the attendees online via webcam – this is a great way to give a presentation but make sure you are practiced at using all the features of the software first and consider whether your clients are technically-minded enough to be comfortable with this, and likely to have equipment such as webcams and microphones.I did exactly what the magazine wanted me to do. I bought it solely for an article featured on the cover. But when I got it home and started searching for the piece I wanted to read, I couldn't find it. The headline drew me in, but hidden behind other features was an article with a different title that sort of, kind of, talked about the topic. I felt cheated.I feel cheated sometimes at work, too. There are people who make claims they can do this or that or boldly state they've already done it. But when you dig deeper into the specifics, you discover they're "big hat, no cattle" people. Living in Montana, a state where hats and cattle mean something, I say forget the hat and give me the cattle.I admit I've been duped by these boastful, confident talkers. I've allowed hope for their promised skills to sway me, only to discover the limited possibility of - If this is your first time running an event, the easiest option is to run a teleclass, where you set a date and time and participants simply dial in and listen to you. Many companies, such as www.freeconference.com, offer this service and a quick Google search should bring up a long list of companies you could use. If you choose a live event you’ll need to find a good venue. Look at cost, position - find somewhere central with good transport links and parking. Make sure you see the room you’ll be using before the event so you can see the space you have available and plan your layout. Check maximum numbers the room can hold for fire regulations, find out where the fire exits and fire alarm are and make sure there is disabled access. You’ll need to market your event very well to get good numbers: - Use your own ezine, local press and radio, the chamber of commerce and online forums. - Write articles on your subject and submit them to article directories and other ezines. - Tell your trade association and use online event listings. - Go to networking events and take leaflets with you to advertise what you are doing. - Ask each client to bring one potential client to get a free place - Offer to speak at other events on the run up to yours with a taster of what people will get on the day. - Find another non-competing company who are aiming for the same market and do a joint event Don’t just rely on one way to get publicity – think of as many different ways as you can and use the best ones for your event. You'll need to be very organized and plan well ahead. Make sure you order any equipment you might need in plenty of time. Make up an event checklist and build yourself a kit with plenty of spares - pens, training materials, extension cables, flip chart paper, gaffer Brand Work Will Make Your Advertising Work Smarter ss.As a corporation, Stealing Share battles many misconceptions because we define ourselves as a brand development firm. Most companies confuse the idea of brand with the product name and only think about brand when they are launching or re- launching a product into the market. The misconception is that brand is something you consider and invest in only at the product’s germinal stage and is simply “managed” for the rest of the product’s life cycle.Few Need Name Changes However, the majority of our work does not involve a name change or new name. In fact, most of our critical brand work is designed to empower an existing brand to be more important to the target audience and to make all advertising and communications more effective. This indicates that there is a big disconnect between what the market believes BRAND is a You’ll need to market your event very well to get good numbers: - Use your own ezine, local press and radio, the chamber of commerce and online forums. - Write articles on your subject and submit them to article directories and other ezines. - Tell your trade association and use online event listings. - Go to networking events and take leaflets with you to advertise what you are doing. - Ask each client to bring one potential client to get a free place - Offer to speak at other events on the run up to yours with a taster of what people will get on the day. - Find another non-competing company who are aiming for the same market and do a joint event Don’t just rely on one way to get publicity – think of as many different ways as you can and use the best ones for your event. You'll need to be very organized and plan well ahead. Make sure you order any equipment you might need in plenty of time. Make up an event checklist and build yourself a kit with plenty of spares - pens, training materials, extension cables, flip chart paper, gaffer tape, scissors, etc. Check with the venue that everything’s ready for you the day before the event. The more value you provide, the more likely you are to be seen as an expert in your area and the more business you will get from your event and from word of mouth after the event as a result, so don’t deliver a sales pitch – your content has to be high quality, entertaining and informative or people will feel cheated, particularly if they paid to attend. Once the event is over make sure you follow up and ask for feedback – it’s the best way to find out if the event was what your clients wanted, to get ideas for future events, and also a great to chance to chat to prospective clients to see if they’re interested in working with you. You can also collect testimonials which will help you if you plan to run events on a regular basis, and which you can also use to promote any products you develop from your event content. In short, pick a great topic, plan everything carefully, publicize what you are doing as much as you can, and check everything is in place the day before the event. On the day, don’t forget to relax and enjoy yourself – if you are having fun, the audience will too. Lastly and by no means least, whatever you do, don’t forget to follow up. Just by following these guidelines you could find yourself with any amount of new clients, lots of publicity and several new income streams. Worth it? Definitely!
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