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Digg it UP - The Art of Wastebasketry
Finding An Advisory Service the information itself.It depends on your level of understanding of the market and the amount of money you have. If you a sophisticated investor with a substantial amount invested you are probably already receiving more than one. If you have very little market savvy it will be difficult to choose one that fits the size of your portfolio. If you are just getting started my advice is don't buy one - yet. In the last 100 years we have had 30 bear markets which are defined as the overall market going down more than 20 percent and some more than 40 percent. The NASDAQ recently tumbled 78%. Even th 4. Can I identify specific circumstances when I’d use this information? Usually, “just in case” is not good enough! Files labeled “Miscellaneous” are of little value, because there’s nothing to trigger you to look there. If you can’t identify how you’d use the information – at least well enough that you can file it for future reference, it’s unlikely that you’d remember you have it, let alone be able to find it later. 5. Are there any tax or legal implications? Here’s wh Home Buying - How to Avoid Paying Too Much Are your filing cabinets stuffed so full that it’s difficult to retrieve and file papers? If you’re like 80% of the people in the audiences to whom I speak, your answer is “Yes.” “Are there things in your filing cabinet you could probably throw out?” Most once again answer “Yes.” So what’s the problem?Whether you’re a first time buyer or a veteran of the real estate game, buying a home can be a mammoth process. It’s an emotional time often accompanied with difficult choices. Those same difficult choices are tied directly to costs and your ultimate return and happiness.Finding the right home for your family’s needs is hard, but managing to avoid paying too much is a another mastery of skills entirely. The following will show you not only how to make sure you’ve found the right house, but also how to negotiate the right price. * Know what you Certainly a major stumbling block is time. Some may say cleaning out the filing cabinet won’t make you money. My response is “Really?” Research shows the average person spends 150 hours each year looking for misplaced information. What would happen to your bottom line if you added that time to getting new customers or selling new products or services to old customers? Frequently people say to me “It never fails. Every time I throw out something, I need it the next day.” To which I reply, “Can you give me an example?” Mostly I get silence. Determine whether you want to keep each piece of paper at all by asking yourself these “Art of Wastebasketry?” questions: 1. Does this require any action on my part? Just because you receive information—even if it’s from your boss—doesn’t mean you need to keep it! If it doesn’t require action, file it or toss it right away! If it’s just an FYI, read it and toss. 2. Does this exist elsewhere? Is it in the library? Do you know an expert on the subject who’d be certain to have more complete information if you really needed it? Is the original filed elsewhere? Is it necessary to keep a hard copy if it already exists in the computer? 3. Is this information recent enough to be useful? Today, information becomes outdated very quickly. Would you want a customer to decide whether or not to choose your services based on a three-year-old brochure? The information in a 6-month-old magazine article about computer software has undoubtedly been superseded, as has a downloaded product review from an on-line service. In many cases, it is more appropriate to keep track of the source of the information, so you can get the latest version, rather than keeping the information itself. 4. Can I identify specific circumstances when I’d use this information? Usually, “just in case” is not good enough! Files labeled “Miscellaneous” are of little value, because there’s nothing to trigger you to look there. If you can’t identify how you’d use the information – at least well enough that you can file it for future reference, it’s unlikely that you’d remember you have it, let alone be able to find it later. 5. Are there any tax or legal implications? Here’s whe Future Outlook For Medical Transcription looking for misplaced information. What would happen to your bottom line if you added that time to getting new customers or selling new products or services to old customers?According to the U.S. Department of Labor, the future outlook for medical transcription looks good. This is a lucrative, in demand-career with great growth opportunities.If you’re considering a medical transcription course or are already taking one, this is good news. It means you will have plenty of employment as well as financial opportunities.Although, medical transcription is predicted to grow and remain stable, there are a few common concerns among the MT community.These are the most common.Will voice recognition replace transcriptionists Frequently people say to me “It never fails. Every time I throw out something, I need it the next day.” To which I reply, “Can you give me an example?” Mostly I get silence. Determine whether you want to keep each piece of paper at all by asking yourself these “Art of Wastebasketry?” questions: 1. Does this require any action on my part? Just because you receive information—even if it’s from your boss—doesn’t mean you need to keep it! If it doesn’t require action, file it or toss it right away! If it’s just an FYI, read it and toss. 2. Does this exist elsewhere? Is it in the library? Do you know an expert on the subject who’d be certain to have more complete information if you really needed it? Is the original filed elsewhere? Is it necessary to keep a hard copy if it already exists in the computer? 3. Is this information recent enough to be useful? Today, information becomes outdated very quickly. Would you want a customer to decide whether or not to choose your services based on a three-year-old brochure? The information in a 6-month-old magazine article about computer software has undoubtedly been superseded, as has a downloaded product review from an on-line service. In many cases, it is more appropriate to keep track of the source of the information, so you can get the latest version, rather than keeping the information itself. 4. Can I identify specific circumstances when I’d use this information? Usually, “just in case” is not good enough! Files labeled “Miscellaneous” are of little value, because there’s nothing to trigger you to look there. If you can’t identify how you’d use the information – at least well enough that you can file it for future reference, it’s unlikely that you’d remember you have it, let alone be able to find it later. 5. Are there any tax or legal implications? Here’s wh Have No Fear - Total Gym 2000 and Total Gym XL Are Here action on my part? Just because you receive information—even if it’s from your boss—doesn’t mean you need to keep it! If it doesn’t require action, file it or toss it right away! If it’s just an FYI, read it and toss.If you have never tried the Total gym, this page provides information to help you make your decision. Total gym 2000 and Total gym xl are manufactured by Fitness Quest, Inc. It allows you to train with multi-plane movements that are quite natural. When using this fitness equipment, you work your large muscles synergistically against gravity.You can get a full body workout in as little as 20 minutes a day because you stretch and flex your muscles, recruiting stabilizer muscles in almost every exercise. It provides functional exercise tied to the way you function in 2. Does this exist elsewhere? Is it in the library? Do you know an expert on the subject who’d be certain to have more complete information if you really needed it? Is the original filed elsewhere? Is it necessary to keep a hard copy if it already exists in the computer? 3. Is this information recent enough to be useful? Today, information becomes outdated very quickly. Would you want a customer to decide whether or not to choose your services based on a three-year-old brochure? The information in a 6-month-old magazine article about computer software has undoubtedly been superseded, as has a downloaded product review from an on-line service. In many cases, it is more appropriate to keep track of the source of the information, so you can get the latest version, rather than keeping the information itself. 4. Can I identify specific circumstances when I’d use this information? Usually, “just in case” is not good enough! Files labeled “Miscellaneous” are of little value, because there’s nothing to trigger you to look there. If you can’t identify how you’d use the information – at least well enough that you can file it for future reference, it’s unlikely that you’d remember you have it, let alone be able to find it later. 5. Are there any tax or legal implications? Here’s wh The Tech Heads Need To Make It Simple For the Average Human s information recent enough to be useful? Today, information becomes outdated very quickly. Would you want a customer to decide whether or not to choose your services based on a three-year-old brochure? The information in a 6-month-old magazine article about computer software has undoubtedly been superseded, as has a downloaded product review from an on-line service. In many cases, it is more appropriate to keep track of the source of the information, so you can get the latest version, rather than keeping the information itself.The tech-heads need to build new software that makes obtaining information and collective communication a simple process for the average human.Being the total opposite to a technical person, it is hard to imagine future Internet software advances. The techno-humans have come up with incredible ideas and subsequently their ideas have come to fruition. It seems like anything a human puts their mind to can be done. Our species has come such a long way, but I feel the key to the next part in our evolution of technology and consciousness is to integrate the ideas of th 4. Can I identify specific circumstances when I’d use this information? Usually, “just in case” is not good enough! Files labeled “Miscellaneous” are of little value, because there’s nothing to trigger you to look there. If you can’t identify how you’d use the information – at least well enough that you can file it for future reference, it’s unlikely that you’d remember you have it, let alone be able to find it later. 5. Are there any tax or legal implications? Here’s wh Using Ego In Closing The Sale the information itself.In persuasion, we are faced with the difficult task of building the egos of our listeners while placing our own egos on hold. In order to effectively persuade, you have to let go of your ego and focus on your objective. You don't have time to mend a bruised ego. Check your ego in at the door and remember your overriding purpose. Focus on persuasion, not on yourself.In an interesting study, school administrators sought to find the ratio of positive to negative statements overheard in the schools' faculty lounges. Thirty-two schools throughout the nation were 4. Can I identify specific circumstances when I’d use this information? Usually, “just in case” is not good enough! Files labeled “Miscellaneous” are of little value, because there’s nothing to trigger you to look there. If you can’t identify how you’d use the information – at least well enough that you can file it for future reference, it’s unlikely that you’d remember you have it, let alone be able to find it later. 5. Are there any tax or legal implications? Here’s where “just in case” works. Unfortunately, we’re frequently required to resurrect paper that we’d much rather have forgotten. Sometimes, having outdated information in your files can create unnecessary problems. A client of mine was sued. When the company’s files were subpoenaed, the prosecuting attorney found my client’s unsigned contract proposal, and used it to prove wrongful intent. My client lost the suit and had to pay $147,000. Had the files had been properly cleaned; I don’t believe that would have happened. If you answer “No” to all the above questions, but are still not comfortable throwing something away, ask one last question: 6. What is the worst possible thing that could happen if I didn’t have this information? If you can live with your answer, toss it – and live happily ever after. For years I have orchestrated “File Clean-Out Days” with companies. I used to live in fear that someone would come back to me afterward with a horror story of something we threw out, and they needed later. In 20 years, it’s never happened! Recently a woman told me that one of the big frustrations in her advertising company was staff spending time looking for materials from client projects years’ prior. I suggested a plan. Why not establish a company policy that “We keep client materials for three years.” At the end of each year, you send a letter to the client saying “We have the following materials from the project we did together. Our policy is to keep client materials for three years. If we don’t hear from you in 60 days, the materials will be destroyed.” What’s the worst possible thing that could happen? Four possibilities than I can think of. (1) You won’t waste valuable time looking for something that brings back nothing to the company, (2) Your policy makes you look very professional, or (3) Your letter reminds the client of your availability, and you get a new contract! Who says using your wastebasket doesn’t make money? And (4), somebody somewhere probably has it anyway – in spite
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