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Suggest You - Should A Small Business Bother With Market Research?
Career Success - Got the Promotion - Now What? ns, or different ones, rather than jump in and take action based on what you have already discovered. Go back to what you were trying to get out of the research in the first place; unless what you have learned from the research helps you take meaningful steps to improve, the challenge is to find a better way to ask another follow-up question, not act prematurely.So you finally got the news that you are getting the promotion, and with the realization that now your job is going to be changing, you have this trepidation that you are not really ready for the new job. This feeling of wandering outside of your comfort zone to do something that you have not done before can be quite daunting. Have some faith in yourself and those that haven chosen you for the position. They would not have chosen you if they did not think that you were capable of doing the job better than any of the other applicants.So fortunately you have a few weeks before you are actually expected to fill the position - what is it that you are going to do with this time? Are you going to feel so good about getting the job, that you don't do anything to make the transition easier, or are you going to spend this time going over things that you could and maybe should do to make the transition as easy as pos Now, let’s get back to actually doing the "market research" - collecting the information that will help you make better decisions and take the right actions. Most businesses already have a huge amount of information on hand that they probably don't use as effectively as they could. Every day you have internal transactions that generate sales receipts, delivery orders, charge slips and shipping transactions, inventory trends etc; make sure you are pulling that information together in a deliberate, intentional, and meaning Career Joy - Step Three in Aligning Body, Mind, and Work
Our doubts are traitors and make us lose the good we oft might win by fearing to attempt. - William ShakespeareStep Three to Achieving Career Joy - Take InventoryNow that you have spent some time living with the idea that you deserve more out of your job and your career and you committed to giving yourself some time each week to go back to the things you love, you are ready for the next step. Step number three is to take inventory.Sometimes just the idea of making a change is scary and when you feel overwhelmed it is easy to forget all of the little pieces that could actually make this possible. Fear creates doubt and it clouds your vision so much that you can't see what you have done and even more importantly what you are capable of. Completing an inventory will help you get clear on the state of your life right now and what you need to do to get it where you want to be. How much is "market research" worth? Well, that's just another ROI question - or, it should be. If it's cheap and easy to get the research, great - you’ll take all you can get. If you have to pay for it, though, or spend too much of your time getting it, it's easy to say "I don’t really need that." But, let's not make a bigger deal out of this than it needs to be. Sure, you can buy market research, or pay someone a lot of money to collect it specifically for your business; or, you can use a little imagination and do a few simple things - often with the information that you already have - that will get you a lot closer to where you need to be than where you are now! Research can be surveys and polls and focus groups - the formal stuff that is usually time consuming and always expensive. Research can also be as simple as keeping your eyes and ears open, but in a very focused, organized, and disciplined way. There are things going on in your business every day and just having a "feel" for their impact is not sufficient. Taking the time to capture and use this information can yield huge dividends over time. Let's first come at this issue from the standpoint of what information a small business really needs and then circle back to how it can get the information and whether it's worth the effort. There are three areas that any business needs to know as much about as it possibly can - what its customers want, how much these customers are worth, and how the business' competition is trying to prevent it from accomplishing its objectives. There is no rocket science here - this is pretty straight forward stuff. Obviously, the more any business can learn about how it actually creates value for its customers and how much those customers are worth to the business, the better it can manage its own internal processes. Knowing what the competition really is - in other words where else your customers can buy exactly what you sell, what else they can purchase instead of what you sell, and what might drive them to just skip the purchase altogether (whether it's from you, or someone else) - is just common sense. There are several fundamentals for having an effective research process. First, make collecting market research a way of life in your business - in other words, do it all the time. Getting good at collecting information only comes when you make a commitment to it - when you first tell yourself and then imprint on everyone you work with that "this company" puts a premium on finding and using the information that is going to tell us what we need to know. It doesn't have to be complex, or difficult, or time consuming; but, there does need to be a mentality in the business, where everyone involved recognizes and understands that the company puts a premium on collecting and using actionable information that helps everyone make better decisions. Second, you have to figure out exactly what you want to accomplish by doing the research, before you start it. It doesn't make sense to approach it any other way - you’ll end up wasting your time and money, if you do. You’re also more likely to offend, or at least annoy, those that you are researching; don't make a customer, or anyone else go through a process that you know might frustrate, or annoy you, unless you have already determined why you need the information and what you are going to do with it. Finally, research has to be combined with analysis. Sometimes the answer that you get to a question isn't what you expect and really should be leading you to ask more questions, or different ones, rather than jump in and take action based on what you have already discovered. Go back to what you were trying to get out of the research in the first place; unless what you have learned from the research helps you take meaningful steps to improve, the challenge is to find a better way to ask another follow-up question, not act prematurely. Now, let’s get back to actually doing the "market research" - collecting the information that will help you make better decisions and take the right actions. Most businesses already have a huge amount of information on hand that they probably don't use as effectively as they could. Every day you have internal transactions that generate sales receipts, delivery orders, charge slips and shipping transactions, inventory trends etc; make sure you are pulling that information together in a deliberate, intentional, and meaningf Phone Words and Outdoor Advertising: Make the Most of Your Advertising Spend ized, and disciplined way. There are things going on in your business every day and just having a "feel" for their impact is not sufficient. Taking the time to capture and use this information can yield huge dividends over time.Outdoor advertising is enjoying a surge in popularity largely due to its relative cost effectiveness at reaching large numbers of people when compared to other mass media such as broadcast or print.On the positive side, an outdoor billboard space in Australia is generally “purchased” for a month while a major newspaper advertisement lasts one day. In broadcast, it’s as short as 15 or 30 seconds.So given this longevity, a well-executed outdoor advertisement (often at around the same price as a large newspaper advertisement) can be a good cost effective press advertising alternative.Of course, one of the limitations of billboards is that, compared to other forms of media, they cannot hold much detail. Due to the nature of the passing traffic, all the advertiser gets is a few seconds to make a very quick impact.Traditional advertisers will tell you not to include phone numbers in billboard Let's first come at this issue from the standpoint of what information a small business really needs and then circle back to how it can get the information and whether it's worth the effort. There are three areas that any business needs to know as much about as it possibly can - what its customers want, how much these customers are worth, and how the business' competition is trying to prevent it from accomplishing its objectives. There is no rocket science here - this is pretty straight forward stuff. Obviously, the more any business can learn about how it actually creates value for its customers and how much those customers are worth to the business, the better it can manage its own internal processes. Knowing what the competition really is - in other words where else your customers can buy exactly what you sell, what else they can purchase instead of what you sell, and what might drive them to just skip the purchase altogether (whether it's from you, or someone else) - is just common sense. There are several fundamentals for having an effective research process. First, make collecting market research a way of life in your business - in other words, do it all the time. Getting good at collecting information only comes when you make a commitment to it - when you first tell yourself and then imprint on everyone you work with that "this company" puts a premium on finding and using the information that is going to tell us what we need to know. It doesn't have to be complex, or difficult, or time consuming; but, there does need to be a mentality in the business, where everyone involved recognizes and understands that the company puts a premium on collecting and using actionable information that helps everyone make better decisions. Second, you have to figure out exactly what you want to accomplish by doing the research, before you start it. It doesn't make sense to approach it any other way - you’ll end up wasting your time and money, if you do. You’re also more likely to offend, or at least annoy, those that you are researching; don't make a customer, or anyone else go through a process that you know might frustrate, or annoy you, unless you have already determined why you need the information and what you are going to do with it. Finally, research has to be combined with analysis. Sometimes the answer that you get to a question isn't what you expect and really should be leading you to ask more questions, or different ones, rather than jump in and take action based on what you have already discovered. Go back to what you were trying to get out of the research in the first place; unless what you have learned from the research helps you take meaningful steps to improve, the challenge is to find a better way to ask another follow-up question, not act prematurely. Now, let’s get back to actually doing the "market research" - collecting the information that will help you make better decisions and take the right actions. Most businesses already have a huge amount of information on hand that they probably don't use as effectively as they could. Every day you have internal transactions that generate sales receipts, delivery orders, charge slips and shipping transactions, inventory trends etc; make sure you are pulling that information together in a deliberate, intentional, and meaning 2007 Thoughts And Entrepreneurial Insights For The Over Achiever better it can manage its own internal processes. Knowing what the competition really is - in other words where else your customers can buy exactly what you sell, what else they can purchase instead of what you sell, and what might drive them to just skip the purchase altogether (whether it's from you, or someone else) - is just common sense.Do you have what it takes to win in business? Are you a hard charger, kick butt type person and an over achiever? Well here is some good news; in no other human endeavor does the over achiever have more of an advantage than in entrepreneurial pursuits. The over achiever who is willing to press on and remain committed and dedicated to persevere in their mission will indeed excel past their peers and fly over the nay sayer who proclaimed their mission impossible.Over achievers in sports, business, politics, war and academic achievements are often scrutinized and attacked, but in entrepreneurial pursuits they often get a free pass as they grow their companies. A little community service, public relations and publicity and the over achiever can launch an entrepreneurial business into orbit. How might I know this? Well, as an over achiever, I have started many an entrepreneurial company and having done so, well There are several fundamentals for having an effective research process. First, make collecting market research a way of life in your business - in other words, do it all the time. Getting good at collecting information only comes when you make a commitment to it - when you first tell yourself and then imprint on everyone you work with that "this company" puts a premium on finding and using the information that is going to tell us what we need to know. It doesn't have to be complex, or difficult, or time consuming; but, there does need to be a mentality in the business, where everyone involved recognizes and understands that the company puts a premium on collecting and using actionable information that helps everyone make better decisions. Second, you have to figure out exactly what you want to accomplish by doing the research, before you start it. It doesn't make sense to approach it any other way - you’ll end up wasting your time and money, if you do. You’re also more likely to offend, or at least annoy, those that you are researching; don't make a customer, or anyone else go through a process that you know might frustrate, or annoy you, unless you have already determined why you need the information and what you are going to do with it. Finally, research has to be combined with analysis. Sometimes the answer that you get to a question isn't what you expect and really should be leading you to ask more questions, or different ones, rather than jump in and take action based on what you have already discovered. Go back to what you were trying to get out of the research in the first place; unless what you have learned from the research helps you take meaningful steps to improve, the challenge is to find a better way to ask another follow-up question, not act prematurely. Now, let’s get back to actually doing the "market research" - collecting the information that will help you make better decisions and take the right actions. Most businesses already have a huge amount of information on hand that they probably don't use as effectively as they could. Every day you have internal transactions that generate sales receipts, delivery orders, charge slips and shipping transactions, inventory trends etc; make sure you are pulling that information together in a deliberate, intentional, and meaning An Interpretation of Language a mentality in the business, where everyone involved recognizes and understands that the company puts a premium on collecting and using actionable information that helps everyone make better decisions.The art slash science of language or literary translation is inarguably considered a most key essential function throughout the worlds industries today and has undoubtedly been a crucial factor in the international inter lingual network of human beings over some millennia. Right from the early days, about sixty thousand years in the past, the immature versions of mankind fabricated the first elements of modern speech, the development of language has been responsible and a central component for much of the surrounding achievement that mankind can claim credit for.Without fundamental communication skills, which before actual spoken language, was comprised of far simpler rudiments such as gestures of the hands and limbs or eye movement and facial expression, men or women could never have developed the sophisticated social connections that they did. We probably would never have been able to derive the conscious Second, you have to figure out exactly what you want to accomplish by doing the research, before you start it. It doesn't make sense to approach it any other way - you’ll end up wasting your time and money, if you do. You’re also more likely to offend, or at least annoy, those that you are researching; don't make a customer, or anyone else go through a process that you know might frustrate, or annoy you, unless you have already determined why you need the information and what you are going to do with it. Finally, research has to be combined with analysis. Sometimes the answer that you get to a question isn't what you expect and really should be leading you to ask more questions, or different ones, rather than jump in and take action based on what you have already discovered. Go back to what you were trying to get out of the research in the first place; unless what you have learned from the research helps you take meaningful steps to improve, the challenge is to find a better way to ask another follow-up question, not act prematurely. Now, let’s get back to actually doing the "market research" - collecting the information that will help you make better decisions and take the right actions. Most businesses already have a huge amount of information on hand that they probably don't use as effectively as they could. Every day you have internal transactions that generate sales receipts, delivery orders, charge slips and shipping transactions, inventory trends etc; make sure you are pulling that information together in a deliberate, intentional, and meaning Subliminal Advertising - How To Use It ns, or different ones, rather than jump in and take action based on what you have already discovered. Go back to what you were trying to get out of the research in the first place; unless what you have learned from the research helps you take meaningful steps to improve, the challenge is to find a better way to ask another follow-up question, not act prematurely.Some of us scoff at subliminal advertising techniques. We like to think our minds are entirely logical and immune to the influence of others. This just isn't true, as any good salesman knows. After studying the subject for some time, I have come to accept that I will not just buy things, but I will be "sold" things, even by way of subliminal techniques.What I CAN do is learn the techniques that are used on me. Then, if I want to, I can use them too, when I believe it is ethical to do so. More importantly, I can protect myself from these techniques, or at least be sold the RIGHT things. Want to do the same? Would you like to learn a few subliminal advertising techniques? Start with the following sales pitch:"Does public speaking make you nervous? What if it was easy? Imagine standing at the podium, knowing exactly what to say to make them love you. Wouldn't that feel great? Just apply our simple metho Now, let’s get back to actually doing the "market research" - collecting the information that will help you make better decisions and take the right actions. Most businesses already have a huge amount of information on hand that they probably don't use as effectively as they could. Every day you have internal transactions that generate sales receipts, delivery orders, charge slips and shipping transactions, inventory trends etc; make sure you are pulling that information together in a deliberate, intentional, and meaningful way - again to answer the specific research questions that you identified at the beginning of this process. Customers give you feedback every day; why not be proactive in determining what you want to learn from them, rather than just trying to respond to what they ask of you. Identify single pieces of information that you can obtain over time in an unobtrusive way and that you can "aggregate" to answer some of your specific, strategic questions. Look for this information one piece at a time - birth announcements, people moving to a new home, things people want, or do. This is a game of inches. You don't have to collect all of this information at once; you collect the data one piece at a time, add it together and think about it, and turn it into actionable information that will help you run your business more effectively. Most important, train your employees to always ask the "right" questions when they talk to anyone outside the company – in other words, the questions that you want them to ask and that fit into the overall approach that you have for collecting information. Make sure they understand the strategy behind what you are asking them to do. Build this into their performance plans and make their performance rating partly contingent on getting answers to your questions. Help them to collect this information in a "conversational" way that is unobtrusive to customers. One of the keys to good market research is for people to never suspect that's what you're doing; help your employees understand that you never want the "target" of your research to go through anything that you wouldn't want to go through yourself. Finally, think outside of the box; look for ways to collect information that others might not think of. Talk to your customers' customers. Mystery-shop your competition. Keep tabs on who might be selling your product(s) on E-Bay and why they are doing the things they are doing. Look for other companies that might be willing to share your research costs with you - companies that would also benefit from having the same information, but who are not direct competitors. Contact the Dean of a local business school to see if a couple of students would be interested in taking on an unpaid research project as part of their college studies. In other words, use your imagination to come up with inexpensive ways to collect the information that can really make a difference in what you do. You don't have to pay a fortune for market research and you don't have to make the excuse that there just isn't enough time to collect it. You do, however, have to commit yourself and your business to make it happen. You do have to make it part of your process and help your employees understand why it's important to you and what their responsibilities are to help make it happen. You do have to create the mentality and then the simple "systems" that will make it happen.
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