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Digg it UP - Improving Your Studio's Business Through Serving Your Community
The Art of Networking and Business Cards s to pick the right renters (see “Do's and Don'ts” list below). Some studio owners have horror stories about how they rented their space out to someone who never paid their rent, or who had a rock band practice there and the neighbors called the police about noise…Forget about all that – we're going to get you good renters. There are usually two types of space a studio has available. One is the yoga class area, and the other may be smaller rooms used for private sessions. Different tenants naturally will be interested in different types of space. Here are some common types of renters.Every day we meet new people. It doesn’t matter how it happens or why it does, but it is essential to notice that we are constantly connecting with fresh faces. These new countenances could be our future employer, a potential best friend, or simply another person to pass on our services to. With hundreds of meetings each month, it is no surprise that the public is now taking advantage of these meet and greets.Business networking is a great way to make connections with others. Although we meet new people on a daily basis, we don’t always keep the relationship going. We all want to be known in our specialized field. Therefore, having an array of business cards would create more opportunities and a plethora of open doors.If you are running a small or large business, then it is necessary to have a great business card. One must always remember that this is an affordable way to adve Possibilities for larger spaces: T'ai Chi classes, some martial arts (they provide Maximizing Your Yellow Page Investment As a studio owner, you strive to provide the best you can for your students and clients. Yoga is a sacred experience for you, and you want to share its essence with as many people as possible.Yellow Page users are the hottest of all prospects – someone who has made the decision to buy, and now is looking for a place to do it. Does your ad convince them that your business is that place?It doesn’t have to be the biggest, although that can certainly help. And if you do it right, it won’t even matter if your business is listed first. What matters is that your ad is the most persuasive.“But, Lisa!” you’re saying in your most shocked whisper, “Everybody knows that the first listing in a category gets the most response! That’s why so many business names start with ‘A.’”Well, yeah, if I’m faced with a list of indistinguishable company names, I’ll just go with the first one I see. And 99% of all Yellow Page ads seem to have the company name as their headline.But your business may be better than the one that starts with “A.” So why don’t you tell me that? Move At the same time, you need to earn enough to pay the bills and hopefully make a reasonable living, because if you don't, you won't be able to stay in business. And if you can't keep your business open, then how many people will you serve? A critical part of the business of yoga is about doing what we do in a way that people are glad to pay for what they receive – no tricks or deception. Just honestly providing something that give people real value. This month, we'll focus on making passive income from your studio. How would you like to increase your studio's revenue by $2,000 or more each month while helping people at the same time? Passive income is money that you earn by essentially not directly working for it yourself, but instead using some other resource you have, like your studio space, that people will pay for. The people you serve will be grateful for your assistance, and you will earn extra income – it's totally a win-win arrangement. If this sounds good to you, read on… Improving Your Studio's Business Through Serving Your Community Running a studio is hard work. Lots of it. For most studio owners and directors, it's largely a labor of love – or at the very least, that's why they started doing what they do. For some studio owners, cash flow can be an ongoing problem, (though for others, it's just nice to have an additional stream of revenue). Can you relate to this? Whether you rent the space for your studio, or pay a mortgage, the space is yours 24 hours a day. Even if you only use it for 6 of them, you still pay for the remaining 18 hours. An excellent way for studios to earn reliable passive income is to rent out as much of the space as possible when you're not using it. Consider a studio that has two spaces they can rent out, a smaller one for $10 per hour and a larger one for $15 per hour ($25/hr. total). If they find people to rent these spaces for just 3 hours each day, 6 days a week (72 hours/month) that's an extra $1800 per month of income for virtually no extra work. What's more, this is usually dependable income that doesn't change month to month (if you pick the right kind of renters). Now consider that it's often possible to rent for far more than just 3 hours per day, and many studios have spaces that will rent for more than $25/hr. It's quite reasonable for a studio to earn an extra $3,000 to $5,000 per month in passive income this way. So, how do you do it? The key is to pick the right renters (see “Do's and Don'ts” list below). Some studio owners have horror stories about how they rented their space out to someone who never paid their rent, or who had a rock band practice there and the neighbors called the police about noise…Forget about all that – we're going to get you good renters. There are usually two types of space a studio has available. One is the yoga class area, and the other may be smaller rooms used for private sessions. Different tenants naturally will be interested in different types of space. Here are some common types of renters. Possibilities for larger spaces: T'ai Chi classes, some martial arts (they provide The Most Important Thing That Sells Your Product or Service month, we'll focus on making passive income from your studio. How would you like to increase your studio's revenue by $2,000 or more each month while helping people at the same time?As a copywriter, it'd be so easy if all I ever had to do was list the features and benefits of your product or service. But while these are important and even necessary, there's something else that's equally as important that you may not think about.Emotion.Now that's a loaded word. Some people read it and immediately think of loud, exclamation-point-laden phrases. Some people think of excessive capitalization and way, way too much bolded and/or yellow-highlighted copy.That's emotional alright - too much of it will cause headaches, seared eyeballs, and most importantly...the potential customer quickly clicking on the "Back" button on her browswer!However, exclamation points, bold, and highlighted text can be effective if used properly. But the kind of emotions I'm talking about are the real ones that you get directly from the client who uses your service or produ Passive income is money that you earn by essentially not directly working for it yourself, but instead using some other resource you have, like your studio space, that people will pay for. The people you serve will be grateful for your assistance, and you will earn extra income – it's totally a win-win arrangement. If this sounds good to you, read on… Improving Your Studio's Business Through Serving Your Community Running a studio is hard work. Lots of it. For most studio owners and directors, it's largely a labor of love – or at the very least, that's why they started doing what they do. For some studio owners, cash flow can be an ongoing problem, (though for others, it's just nice to have an additional stream of revenue). Can you relate to this? Whether you rent the space for your studio, or pay a mortgage, the space is yours 24 hours a day. Even if you only use it for 6 of them, you still pay for the remaining 18 hours. An excellent way for studios to earn reliable passive income is to rent out as much of the space as possible when you're not using it. Consider a studio that has two spaces they can rent out, a smaller one for $10 per hour and a larger one for $15 per hour ($25/hr. total). If they find people to rent these spaces for just 3 hours each day, 6 days a week (72 hours/month) that's an extra $1800 per month of income for virtually no extra work. What's more, this is usually dependable income that doesn't change month to month (if you pick the right kind of renters). Now consider that it's often possible to rent for far more than just 3 hours per day, and many studios have spaces that will rent for more than $25/hr. It's quite reasonable for a studio to earn an extra $3,000 to $5,000 per month in passive income this way. So, how do you do it? The key is to pick the right renters (see “Do's and Don'ts” list below). Some studio owners have horror stories about how they rented their space out to someone who never paid their rent, or who had a rock band practice there and the neighbors called the police about noise…Forget about all that – we're going to get you good renters. There are usually two types of space a studio has available. One is the yoga class area, and the other may be smaller rooms used for private sessions. Different tenants naturally will be interested in different types of space. Here are some common types of renters. Possibilities for larger spaces: T'ai Chi classes, some martial arts (they provide Problem-Solving Success Tip: Avoid Bug Mentality t. For most studio owners and directors, it's largely a labor of love – or at the very least, that's why they started doing what they do. For some studio owners, cash flow can be an ongoing problem, (though for others, it's just nice to have an additional stream of revenue). Can you relate to this?Fixing bugs fixes symptoms: like taking aspirin for a headache, it may provide temporary relief but does nothing to prevent the next headache. It’s ok, and often necessary, to relieve the symptoms but you have to dig deeper if you’re going to prevent problems from recurring.The reasons and benefits for getting past the symptoms to the root causes are well-known, but many companies still tend to confine their root cause analysis efforts to well-defined technical problems such as physical component failures. We need to apply the same philosophy to general business problems, especially if they are chronic.The first difficulty in getting to root causes of business problems is in identifying that a problem is chronic in the first place. To continue the headache analogy: taking aspirin and forgetting about it is appropriate behavior for the occasional headache that most of us Whether you rent the space for your studio, or pay a mortgage, the space is yours 24 hours a day. Even if you only use it for 6 of them, you still pay for the remaining 18 hours. An excellent way for studios to earn reliable passive income is to rent out as much of the space as possible when you're not using it. Consider a studio that has two spaces they can rent out, a smaller one for $10 per hour and a larger one for $15 per hour ($25/hr. total). If they find people to rent these spaces for just 3 hours each day, 6 days a week (72 hours/month) that's an extra $1800 per month of income for virtually no extra work. What's more, this is usually dependable income that doesn't change month to month (if you pick the right kind of renters). Now consider that it's often possible to rent for far more than just 3 hours per day, and many studios have spaces that will rent for more than $25/hr. It's quite reasonable for a studio to earn an extra $3,000 to $5,000 per month in passive income this way. So, how do you do it? The key is to pick the right renters (see “Do's and Don'ts” list below). Some studio owners have horror stories about how they rented their space out to someone who never paid their rent, or who had a rock band practice there and the neighbors called the police about noise…Forget about all that – we're going to get you good renters. There are usually two types of space a studio has available. One is the yoga class area, and the other may be smaller rooms used for private sessions. Different tenants naturally will be interested in different types of space. Here are some common types of renters. Possibilities for larger spaces: T'ai Chi classes, some martial arts (they provide 6 Great Ways to Use E-Technology to Fund Your Business - and When Not to Use It At All a smaller one for $10 per hour and a larger one for $15 per hour ($25/hr. total). If they find people to rent these spaces for just 3 hours each day, 6 days a week (72 hours/month) that's an extra $1800 per month of income for virtually no extra work.Beginning with Dible’s Up Your Own Organization several decades ago, business plans have been nearly sacred tools in communicating with potential lenders and investors.Now the electronic age has brought an avalanche of new gizmos to the equation, such as CDs, emails, and online business plans. A cell phone number has become as essential as a business land line.Just how useful are these gizmos, really? In truth, by themselves, they are just not very useful at all.For instance, it is not unusual for me to receive emails with business plans attached. Some come with a cover note in the email, some don’t. They all get trashed without being opened.What the dickens makes that entrepreneur think that I’m going to spend my time and money to open the business plan, print it on my printer, and then cheerfully read it, especially when I might be letting loose a new virus What's more, this is usually dependable income that doesn't change month to month (if you pick the right kind of renters). Now consider that it's often possible to rent for far more than just 3 hours per day, and many studios have spaces that will rent for more than $25/hr. It's quite reasonable for a studio to earn an extra $3,000 to $5,000 per month in passive income this way. So, how do you do it? The key is to pick the right renters (see “Do's and Don'ts” list below). Some studio owners have horror stories about how they rented their space out to someone who never paid their rent, or who had a rock band practice there and the neighbors called the police about noise…Forget about all that – we're going to get you good renters. There are usually two types of space a studio has available. One is the yoga class area, and the other may be smaller rooms used for private sessions. Different tenants naturally will be interested in different types of space. Here are some common types of renters. Possibilities for larger spaces: T'ai Chi classes, some martial arts (they provide Concrete Roof Tile Machinery s to pick the right renters (see “Do's and Don'ts” list below). Some studio owners have horror stories about how they rented their space out to someone who never paid their rent, or who had a rock band practice there and the neighbors called the police about noise…Forget about all that – we're going to get you good renters. There are usually two types of space a studio has available. One is the yoga class area, and the other may be smaller rooms used for private sessions. Different tenants naturally will be interested in different types of space. Here are some common types of renters.The production of concrete roof tiles in the world is growing constantly, the investment is not so big like to invest in a clay roof tile factory and also the advantages from a concrete roof tile are many.Concrete roof tile machinery is a very profitable business if you plan to produce 3,000 pieces in 8 hours to 50,000 pieces in 8 hours.An extruder is the key , because when you use a concrete extruder to produce your concrete roof tiles you will get roof tiles according to what that extruder can produce and also how many molds you can buy to produce your roof tiles. There are extruders that can produce 15 tiles in one minute or extruders that can produce 30 tiles in one minute or 60 tiles in one minute up to 150 concrete roof tiles in one minute.There are many secrets in the production of concrete roof tiles because what you can put in a concrete mass depends on the k Possibilities for larger spaces: T'ai Chi classes, some martial arts (they provide their own mats – charge extra if you store stuff for them), meditation groups, community groups (Addiction management groups like AA, weight-loss groups, women's groups, men's groups, some community clubs like investment clubs or Toastmasters), educational lecture series, musical groups (as long as they won't disturb anyone), adult education classes, religious groups (that don't have their own space), etc. Possibilities for smaller spaces: Massage therapists, Rolfers, acupuncturists, facial and skin therapists, Ayurvedic practitioners, chiropractors, yoga privates (even from teachers who teach at a gym or YMCA), students (of all types), etc. Coach Al's list of Do's and Don'ts for renters:
Sometimes having some basic “equipment” like a couple of dozen folding chairs or a blackboard on wheels available can allow you to rent you space out for many extra hours per month. Even if you have a couple of renters now, think about how you could fill unused studio time with even more. Usually renters won't seek you out. It's a matter of identifying them (through brainstorming ideas, the yellow pages, internet, community services directory, or whatever mean
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