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Digg it UP - Assumptions Continue to Derail the Best Strategic Business Plans
Technology is Disruptive... And Empowering over 100 establishments and outside of the request "Would you like mushrooms on your steak," the filet comes natural without any sauces.Technology changes the way we work, live our lives, and have fun. Technology can empower businesses with improvements in productivity, faster development and production cycles, superior decision making by employees, and enhanced customer service. But deriving these benefits from incorporating new technology is not always a smooth process. Technology is often, at first, disruptive before it becomes empowering.Although the ideas developed in this article may have general applicability, they are main Assumptions kill businesses, plain and simple. They are very much like the lemon and butter sauce that this eatery assumed that everyone would like and furthermore, management did not have to tell the patrons about the sauce because of this assumption. These assumptions keep many well-written strategic business plans from being effectively executed. Remember, the steak was not eaten. Unfortunately, much like the Bill and Hilary story, many businesses do not even recognize the assumptions that are guiding their decision making and problem solving skills. Until you identify your assumptions, you will continue to have challenges and ultimat Getting Your Marketing Message Across with CD Business Cards Assumptions are the thought processes from our belief systems. In business, these assumptions can derail the very best strategic plans. For example, these assumptions interfere with the continued inability to effectively execute the best-laid business plans. Also, assumptions interfere with our decision making and problem solving process.CD Business cards allows any type of business that dynamic look. Hand out your business card on disc and see the expression on your clients faces. CD Business cards are aimed to provide your prospect with as much information as possible.Perfect for leaving a lasting impression at conferences and trade shows. Imagine handing out your businesses executive summary or PowerPoint presentation integrated within your CD Business Card.The cards come complete with a PDF and PowerPoint viewer. Your e One of the stories that I tell as a business coach is the Bill and Hilary story. This story quickly demonstrates the power of assumptions and how those assumptions can quickly and almost seamlessly transport us down the decision making and problem solving path. The story begins with a locked room with only one window that is wide open. Bill and Hilary are dead upon the floor. A chair and table are near them with broken glass and water on the floor. The question is how did Bill and Hilary die? Responses are many from Hilary poisoned Bill to someone climbs in through the window. My question always is: "Is that fact in evidence?" So, the responses continue until someone physically describes either Bill or Hilary as a human being. Again, I ask: "Is that fact in evidence?" "No." is the unified response. So, I continued, "If we remove that assumption from our belief system, how did Bill and Hilary die?" Usually, I receive a quick response is that "Bill and Hilary were goldfish and the wind blew the goldfish bowl off the table resulting in it breaking." The purpose of this story is to illustrate the power of our assumptions and how those assumptions act as filters to our decision making and problem solving skills. Those very same assumptions are in every business. For example, my husband and I went to dinner the other night. This was one of our favorite restaurants. However, their assumptions have cost them another patron. Let me explain. My husband in recent years has been diagnosed as being glutton intolerant. Simply speaking, he cannot digest any wheat products from bread to beer. Never being a fan of sauces, he now avoids any sauce because he does not know how they thickened it. He ordered a filet and receives a beautiful piece of meat with some sort of light yellow sauce on it. We later learned that it was a butter/lemon sauce. No where on the menu was this sauce identified. There was no mention of a tender filet with a butter/lemon sauce. The management assumed that everyone would enjoy a butter/lemon sauce on a filet. What was interesting in the past 6 months in frequenting this establishment and eating several different types of steaks, we never had this sauce on any of them. Needless to say, my husband was quite upset given that he was hungry. We paid the bill; the management did not charge us for the steak. My husband left to get the car and I spoke to the manager who apologized. The apology was received, but it did not make up for the assumption. We will no longer frequent this restaurant because we can no longer trust their menu. With so many people having allergens and intolerances such as my husband, restaurants should be more careful in how they garnish food. And let's be honest, I have eaten filets in well over 100 establishments and outside of the request "Would you like mushrooms on your steak," the filet comes natural without any sauces. Assumptions kill businesses, plain and simple. They are very much like the lemon and butter sauce that this eatery assumed that everyone would like and furthermore, management did not have to tell the patrons about the sauce because of this assumption. These assumptions keep many well-written strategic business plans from being effectively executed. Remember, the steak was not eaten. Unfortunately, much like the Bill and Hilary story, many businesses do not even recognize the assumptions that are guiding their decision making and problem solving skills. Until you identify your assumptions, you will continue to have challenges and ultimate How to Get Anyone to Do a Favor for You water on the floor. The question is how did Bill and Hilary die?Obligation has been used as a persuasive technique since the beginning of time. Door-to-door salespeople offer free brushes, free encyclopedias, and free estimates in the hopes of securing a sale. People throw parties in their homes, serving refreshments and giving away free Tupperware or other products. We all know how hard it is to attend a friend's party, eat their food, take their free gift, and then go home without buying a thing. So, what do we do? We order the cheapest item in the catalog to get r Responses are many from Hilary poisoned Bill to someone climbs in through the window. My question always is: "Is that fact in evidence?" So, the responses continue until someone physically describes either Bill or Hilary as a human being. Again, I ask: "Is that fact in evidence?" "No." is the unified response. So, I continued, "If we remove that assumption from our belief system, how did Bill and Hilary die?" Usually, I receive a quick response is that "Bill and Hilary were goldfish and the wind blew the goldfish bowl off the table resulting in it breaking." The purpose of this story is to illustrate the power of our assumptions and how those assumptions act as filters to our decision making and problem solving skills. Those very same assumptions are in every business. For example, my husband and I went to dinner the other night. This was one of our favorite restaurants. However, their assumptions have cost them another patron. Let me explain. My husband in recent years has been diagnosed as being glutton intolerant. Simply speaking, he cannot digest any wheat products from bread to beer. Never being a fan of sauces, he now avoids any sauce because he does not know how they thickened it. He ordered a filet and receives a beautiful piece of meat with some sort of light yellow sauce on it. We later learned that it was a butter/lemon sauce. No where on the menu was this sauce identified. There was no mention of a tender filet with a butter/lemon sauce. The management assumed that everyone would enjoy a butter/lemon sauce on a filet. What was interesting in the past 6 months in frequenting this establishment and eating several different types of steaks, we never had this sauce on any of them. Needless to say, my husband was quite upset given that he was hungry. We paid the bill; the management did not charge us for the steak. My husband left to get the car and I spoke to the manager who apologized. The apology was received, but it did not make up for the assumption. We will no longer frequent this restaurant because we can no longer trust their menu. With so many people having allergens and intolerances such as my husband, restaurants should be more careful in how they garnish food. And let's be honest, I have eaten filets in well over 100 establishments and outside of the request "Would you like mushrooms on your steak," the filet comes natural without any sauces. Assumptions kill businesses, plain and simple. They are very much like the lemon and butter sauce that this eatery assumed that everyone would like and furthermore, management did not have to tell the patrons about the sauce because of this assumption. These assumptions keep many well-written strategic business plans from being effectively executed. Remember, the steak was not eaten. Unfortunately, much like the Bill and Hilary story, many businesses do not even recognize the assumptions that are guiding their decision making and problem solving skills. Until you identify your assumptions, you will continue to have challenges and ultimat Align eCommerce Expectations olving skills. Those very same assumptions are in every business.Lauren Freedman compared two sets of surveys and found some "surprising variances" and striking differences between what e-tailers and their best customers want. Given the huge run up in holiday sales, it is remarkable that buyers' and sellers' expectations are so out of synch. Lauren, my old friend and colleague, is the premiere e-tailing consultant on the planet. She surveyed 2472 online shoppers of which 2000 bought an average of $488 in merchandise ( 2-10 items) during the last six months; clearly For example, my husband and I went to dinner the other night. This was one of our favorite restaurants. However, their assumptions have cost them another patron. Let me explain. My husband in recent years has been diagnosed as being glutton intolerant. Simply speaking, he cannot digest any wheat products from bread to beer. Never being a fan of sauces, he now avoids any sauce because he does not know how they thickened it. He ordered a filet and receives a beautiful piece of meat with some sort of light yellow sauce on it. We later learned that it was a butter/lemon sauce. No where on the menu was this sauce identified. There was no mention of a tender filet with a butter/lemon sauce. The management assumed that everyone would enjoy a butter/lemon sauce on a filet. What was interesting in the past 6 months in frequenting this establishment and eating several different types of steaks, we never had this sauce on any of them. Needless to say, my husband was quite upset given that he was hungry. We paid the bill; the management did not charge us for the steak. My husband left to get the car and I spoke to the manager who apologized. The apology was received, but it did not make up for the assumption. We will no longer frequent this restaurant because we can no longer trust their menu. With so many people having allergens and intolerances such as my husband, restaurants should be more careful in how they garnish food. And let's be honest, I have eaten filets in well over 100 establishments and outside of the request "Would you like mushrooms on your steak," the filet comes natural without any sauces. Assumptions kill businesses, plain and simple. They are very much like the lemon and butter sauce that this eatery assumed that everyone would like and furthermore, management did not have to tell the patrons about the sauce because of this assumption. These assumptions keep many well-written strategic business plans from being effectively executed. Remember, the steak was not eaten. Unfortunately, much like the Bill and Hilary story, many businesses do not even recognize the assumptions that are guiding their decision making and problem solving skills. Until you identify your assumptions, you will continue to have challenges and ultimat Visuals in Public Speaking: How to Use Them to Get Results ent assumed that everyone would enjoy a butter/lemon sauce on a filet. What was interesting in the past 6 months in frequenting this establishment and eating several different types of steaks, we never had this sauce on any of them.If you want to get results from your presentations, and from your speeches, you need, basically, a message and a presentation focused on the results you want. You use the visuals, then, to support that message – give it power. And you must be seen, in your presentation and in your use of those visuals, as competent and confident. Then you will produce the impact that you choose.It may be that in the culture of your organisation or of your audience, impact will be created by your visuals. If Needless to say, my husband was quite upset given that he was hungry. We paid the bill; the management did not charge us for the steak. My husband left to get the car and I spoke to the manager who apologized. The apology was received, but it did not make up for the assumption. We will no longer frequent this restaurant because we can no longer trust their menu. With so many people having allergens and intolerances such as my husband, restaurants should be more careful in how they garnish food. And let's be honest, I have eaten filets in well over 100 establishments and outside of the request "Would you like mushrooms on your steak," the filet comes natural without any sauces. Assumptions kill businesses, plain and simple. They are very much like the lemon and butter sauce that this eatery assumed that everyone would like and furthermore, management did not have to tell the patrons about the sauce because of this assumption. These assumptions keep many well-written strategic business plans from being effectively executed. Remember, the steak was not eaten. Unfortunately, much like the Bill and Hilary story, many businesses do not even recognize the assumptions that are guiding their decision making and problem solving skills. Until you identify your assumptions, you will continue to have challenges and ultimat Some of the Many Uses of Bulletproof and Bullet Resistant Glass over 100 establishments and outside of the request "Would you like mushrooms on your steak," the filet comes natural without any sauces.Many of us are familiar with at least the concept of bulletproof and bullet resistant glass, but for most of us these concepts play little role in our day to day lives. Even so, this powerful and potentially life saving technology is important in a number of locations, including some you may not have been aware of. Some of the many uses of bulletproof and bullet resistant glass products include:- The Military – When many people think of b Assumptions kill businesses, plain and simple. They are very much like the lemon and butter sauce that this eatery assumed that everyone would like and furthermore, management did not have to tell the patrons about the sauce because of this assumption. These assumptions keep many well-written strategic business plans from being effectively executed. Remember, the steak was not eaten. Unfortunately, much like the Bill and Hilary story, many businesses do not even recognize the assumptions that are guiding their decision making and problem solving skills. Until you identify your assumptions, you will continue to have challenges and ultimately create dissatisfied customers who are very willingly to share their stories with others.
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