Like this article? PLEASE +1 it! Evan Signature
Evan Carmichael Top Header about About Home Profiles articles Tools forums inspirational quotes About facebook Twitter YouTube Blog

chairs Tagged Articles



Former VCs Discover Entrepreneurship is Hard Work, and VCs are Assholes
Funny article in the SJ Merc about VCs turned entrepreneurs newly discovering that a) startups are hard work, and b) many VCs are clueless assholes. Nothing like being whacked in the head by reality to learn things that the rest of the startup world knew a long time ago.

Always on (everybody markets)
I walked past a private dinner being given at a restaurant in New York last night. Perhaps forty people, listening to an after-dinner speaker.

How to organize the room
One more post about conferences. (Except it's really about any meeting).

Curiosity
One thing I’ve learned over the years is that curiosity is a good way to stay stimulated and informed as well as young. Ever notice that children are curious about everything? That’s how they learn and the same thing should apply to adults.

The 800 Pound Gorilla Problem
I was at a board meeting recently where the board and management was discussing the company’s market position. This is a strong company that leads its market and, as a result, one of the board members stated that we were “the 800 pound gorilla in the market.” In my world view, the market was still relatively small so I suggested that we were the 12 pound gorilla. While this got a chuckle, it was instructive and moved the conversation down an interesting path.

Have You Created a Contagious Customer Experience?
There are many opportunities to create a remarkable, memorable, and sustainable customer experience, recognized by your buyers and embraced by your employees. Most businesses have three stages of contact where they can create a contagious customer experience: before customers buy, while they buy, and after they buy.

Create Business Rapport in an Instant
Rapport usually happens at a level that we are unaware of so people will say that they had a gut instinct or a feeling to describe having a good or bad rapport with another person. Statements such as ” I had a good feeling about her” or ” There was something just not right about him” will be used to describe communications such as interviews or sales meetings.

Looking Inside to Create What we Want
Before looking outwards at our prospects and customers, we need to look at ourselves, because each of us is a unique human being with our own desires, dreams, problems and thoughts. To understand how we can communicate and therefore sell more effectively we need to understand the human communication process.

Your Profitability is Determined by the Customers you Keep
We've all heard the adage "not all business is good business". With that being said, we are all trying to keep cash flow robust and are challenged to turn any business away. So what can be done in situations where we know the business is not good for long-term profitability and will demand the continued commitment of precious resources?

Could You Increase Your Sales Watching a Guy Selling Cookware at a County Fair?
Even though there are big differences between selling products and selling a service when someone does a superior job selling there are lessons to be learned. When you watch a top producer selling anything there are tremendous lessons to be learned from the obvious to the subtle nuances.

Here Is A Method That Is Helping Managers Deal With Difficult Staff
The majority of new managers waste around 57% of their time dealing with difficult staff? Why? It is because they don’t know the secrets of how to easily deal with these problem staff that every business has. You cannot just end the employees’ contract anymore, like you could in the old days due to the new employment laws, so you as a manager have the challenge of handling and rectifying the situation, so ...

Other chairs Related Articles

A Price-Value Matrix - A Cool Tool for Finding Your Just Right Pricing Strategy
Is the price right? Goldilocks tried three chairs, three bowls of porridge, and three beds before finding the ones that were "just right." In much the same way, your working toward "just right" prices and marketing methods will definitely pay off, as it did for me.

Starbucks Nutrition Facts
It’s a sweltering 30 degrees outside and you’re baking in the summer heat. Suddenly, you notice that beloved black and green siren logo that you have come to care for so dearly. Finally, Starbucks respite! You wander inside, order an ice-cold Frappuccino and plop down into one of their easy chairs. Ah, Frappuccino, you think to yourself – does a body good. But, does it?

Finger Lickin’ Good: Sanders Opens Kentucky Fried Chicken
In 1930, Sanders opened up a service station along U.S. 25, a busy highway which ran through Kentucky. It was not just a regular gas station. When people stopped to refill their gas tanks, Sanders made sure they refilled their stomachs as well. With home-cooked meals that his wife and children helped to prepare, Sanders’ first venture into the fast-food industry had begun. His station might have been simple, with only one table and six chairs, but it was a start.

The Balancing Act
Most people think of “getting organized” as a physical act – clearing piles of paper, putting things away, etc. What many people overlook is the mental part of getting organized. And I always say that organizing your physical environment without first clarifying your priorities is like rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic!

Understanding the Need for Radical Change
Why do organizations often turn on those within it who have their best interests at heart? Why do change efforts so frequently end in 'more of the same'? Much of it has to do with the cultural systems operative in each organization. Change is scary, and the 'poison we know' often seems preferable to the 'poison we don't know'. Even rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic can be doubly aggravating when there's someone coming along behind you, putting them all back where they were. Radical change is more than 'thinking outside the box' — it's acting outside the organizational box.

Public Speaking: Its Many Benefits Can Grow Your Business
Smart professionals well understand the value of relationship building in developing and keeping new business. What better vehicle to further such cause than an event at which you are a featured speaker? Speaking multiplies the benefits of networking by initiating face-to-face personal connections. By addressing a topic which illustrates something you know about, you’ll be pleasantly surprised at how fruitful public speaking can be. New prospects and clients will come out of the woodwork... or at least the folding chairs!

Tell Them Why They Should Buy
A billboard caught my attention. It was a cut-away shot of a new minivan - the one with the pop-up table in the back. The billboard showed the interior of the van with four captain's chairs encircling the pop-up table with a headline that said "Your Table Is Served".

Directors Want Better Boards - And Rightly So
One of the many issues we identify is when Board Chairs and CEO's take the lead in areas in which they don't have the strengths or skills to justify taking the lead. They often discount the contributions, thoughts and ideas of directors or executives who are stronger than they are in that area. As a result, the company is not always choosing the best strategies and ideas, or having the right discussions, asking the right questions, or making the right decisions at the right times.

Are We What We See?
So many of us think we look into a mirror, but looking and seeing are two very different things. How many times do we hold our tummy’s in when walking past a shop window? Or walk around a table in a bar or restaurant because we don’t think that we will be able to pass between chairs on a more direct route? Most people do not have an accurate idea of their own body shape and size; this is because we tend to focus on the areas we are particularly unhappy with.

Giveaway Marketing Basics
Here's something to consider whenever launching a giveaway marketing campaign: what's in it for the giver? Giving stuff away just to get the word out isn't really much of a justification. For instance, giving away free chairs would be pretty pointless for a chair seller. The buyer already has a chair, so why would they ever bother going into the store and buying one now?

Featured Article

Bottom Footer



Newsletter

Get advice & tips from famous business
owners, new articles by entrepreneur
experts, my latest website updates, &
special sneak peaks at what's to come!
Name:
Email:
Popular Articles

SEO and the Entrepreneur

Hypotheticals, Scenarios and Foresight

Local Marketing: 3 Simple Low-Cost Strategies

Suggestions

Email us your ideas on how to make our
website more valuable! Thank you Sharon
from Toronto Salsa Lessons / Classes for
your suggestions to make the newsletter
look like the website and profile younger
entrepreneurs like Jennifer Lopez.