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Ten Healthcare Fields That Can't Wait To Hire You se parts working
together:Healthcare is one of the hottest career fields in America today. The aging and retiring of the largest population segment in the country, known as “baby boomers”, has left the healthcare industry racing to find enough employees to fill the void. Advances in medical technology and treatment are causing people to live longer as well. Add the fact many universities and colleges don’t have enough teachers to train new employees; there becomes a ripe market for healthcare careers.You would be amazed how many types of healthcare careers there are available. This article will discuss three main categories; patient care * Positioning that sets you apart from others offering a similar service. From your target audiences’ perspective, what makes you different? Why should they choose you? * Packaging in the form of a value-packed website that you can send new contacts to, demonstrating your value (again, through their eyes) and building their confidence in you as a good solution to their problem. * Promotion: An easy way to keep-in-touch with contacts and prospects, even if you’re using other high-touch tactics, such as follow- up calls and meetings. The point is that not every new contact is a ready-buyer when you Why Are Resignation Letters Important? I just spent a week at the beach with my
family and, as much as I vowed not to think
about work, stumbled onto a highly relevant
lesson for marketing professional services.When the time comes to progress within the work world, you sometimes have to make the first move by submitting a letter of resignation. For some, completing this task is better said than done. The awkwardness of telling an employer you no longer wish to work for their company can become an overwhelming task to complete. It sometimes causes strained relationships and may even facilitate a few sleepless nights. Plus, in many work circles, the situation is rather delicate and the way you handle this assignment can make or break your future job prospects. Why Write a Resignation Letter?The proper way to alert an emp It was actually my mother who inspired this lesson, thanks to the following beachy quote she had on the refrigerator: "Saltwater taffy, for example, does not taste good. Seagulls are not pleasant birds. Most people look better in clothes – a lot of clothes. But it works. The beach is the ultimate triumph in setting." –from the article, Sea and Be Seen What does this have to do with marketing professional services? A lot. Just like saltwater taffy, seagulls, and under clothed people, any one thing done in isolation to market your professional services won’t work. When you take the sum of its parts, marketing works. Let’s take an easy example: networking. Done in a vacuum, networking is just a "part." Without ways to sustain a new contact’s attention, build their trust, or keep in touch – the other "parts" of your whole – you spend far more time and energy drumming up business than if you had other aspects of your marketing "machine" doing a lot of the work for you. Let’s get specific. The biggest mistake I see is when people go out, network (or make cold calls, or send direct mail pieces), is that they simultaneously scare prospects off with an anemic poorly-messaged website, no value- adding resources to build your prospect’s confidence, and new contacts that vanish into thin air because there’s no systematic way to stay in front of them that’s affordable and effective. The same "in isolation" principle applies to other marketing "parts." * If you invest in telemarketing, but send new leads to a lousy website (even if you don’t send them there, they’ll look you up), you’re shooting yourself in the foot. * If you’re a master at churning out brilliant weekly e-newsletters, but haven’t "packaged" your services into a range of ways potential clients can buy from you, you’re missing the point of using an e-zine as a smart promotional tool. * If you go to all of the time and effort to get booked as a speaker, then run around preparing for and delivering your talks, you’ll get nothing but a nice ego boost and applause unless you target the right audiences and hit them with "What in it for Me?" messages. All of that time, money and energy wasted…but not if you pay attention to the sum of your parts! To avoid wasting your resources and to make the most of your individual marketing efforts, make sure you have all of these parts working together: * Positioning that sets you apart from others offering a similar service. From your target audiences’ perspective, what makes you different? Why should they choose you? * Packaging in the form of a value-packed website that you can send new contacts to, demonstrating your value (again, through their eyes) and building their confidence in you as a good solution to their problem. * Promotion: An easy way to keep-in-touch with contacts and prospects, even if you’re using other high-touch tactics, such as follow- up calls and meetings. The point is that not every new contact is a ready-buyer when you f Unemployment Blues: Loss of Power, Loss of Meaning ls, and under clothed people,
any one thing done in isolation to market your
professional services won’t work.General Motors just announced a plan to close plants throughout the country and to lay off 30,000 workers. Alcoa is going to lay off most of their workforce, and probably close its plant in Maryland. GM blames the high cost of union wages and the expense of health and retirement benefits; Alcoa cites the cost of electricity and intends to offshore its new plants where energy costs are lower.Heartened by corporate decisions to improve their bottom line, the stock market responded with an increase in share prices. Big business just loves lay-offs and the increased profitability they promise.And the business When you take the sum of its parts, marketing works. Let’s take an easy example: networking. Done in a vacuum, networking is just a "part." Without ways to sustain a new contact’s attention, build their trust, or keep in touch – the other "parts" of your whole – you spend far more time and energy drumming up business than if you had other aspects of your marketing "machine" doing a lot of the work for you. Let’s get specific. The biggest mistake I see is when people go out, network (or make cold calls, or send direct mail pieces), is that they simultaneously scare prospects off with an anemic poorly-messaged website, no value- adding resources to build your prospect’s confidence, and new contacts that vanish into thin air because there’s no systematic way to stay in front of them that’s affordable and effective. The same "in isolation" principle applies to other marketing "parts." * If you invest in telemarketing, but send new leads to a lousy website (even if you don’t send them there, they’ll look you up), you’re shooting yourself in the foot. * If you’re a master at churning out brilliant weekly e-newsletters, but haven’t "packaged" your services into a range of ways potential clients can buy from you, you’re missing the point of using an e-zine as a smart promotional tool. * If you go to all of the time and effort to get booked as a speaker, then run around preparing for and delivering your talks, you’ll get nothing but a nice ego boost and applause unless you target the right audiences and hit them with "What in it for Me?" messages. All of that time, money and energy wasted…but not if you pay attention to the sum of your parts! To avoid wasting your resources and to make the most of your individual marketing efforts, make sure you have all of these parts working together: * Positioning that sets you apart from others offering a similar service. From your target audiences’ perspective, what makes you different? Why should they choose you? * Packaging in the form of a value-packed website that you can send new contacts to, demonstrating your value (again, through their eyes) and building their confidence in you as a good solution to their problem. * Promotion: An easy way to keep-in-touch with contacts and prospects, even if you’re using other high-touch tactics, such as follow- up calls and meetings. The point is that not every new contact is a ready-buyer when you Tips For Finding Jobs In The Middle East ct mail pieces), is that they
simultaneously scare prospects off with an
anemic poorly-messaged website, no value-
adding resources to build your prospect’s
confidence, and new contacts that vanish
into thin air because there’s no systematic
way to stay in front of them that’s affordable
and effective.Middle East CareersJobs in the Middle Eastern countries continue to be highly sought by people of various backgrounds. Jobs in certain countries such as Saud-Arabia, Qatar, Dubai, Bahrain and other neighboring countries are still high in demand. Unfortunately, the channels and infrastructure to look and apply for Middle East careers are limited and not as easy as finding jobs in certain markets such as the North American job market.The following provides certain trips for candidates to pursue job opportunities in the Middle Eastern countries.- Although you can use the services of web based The same "in isolation" principle applies to other marketing "parts." * If you invest in telemarketing, but send new leads to a lousy website (even if you don’t send them there, they’ll look you up), you’re shooting yourself in the foot. * If you’re a master at churning out brilliant weekly e-newsletters, but haven’t "packaged" your services into a range of ways potential clients can buy from you, you’re missing the point of using an e-zine as a smart promotional tool. * If you go to all of the time and effort to get booked as a speaker, then run around preparing for and delivering your talks, you’ll get nothing but a nice ego boost and applause unless you target the right audiences and hit them with "What in it for Me?" messages. All of that time, money and energy wasted…but not if you pay attention to the sum of your parts! To avoid wasting your resources and to make the most of your individual marketing efforts, make sure you have all of these parts working together: * Positioning that sets you apart from others offering a similar service. From your target audiences’ perspective, what makes you different? Why should they choose you? * Packaging in the form of a value-packed website that you can send new contacts to, demonstrating your value (again, through their eyes) and building their confidence in you as a good solution to their problem. * Promotion: An easy way to keep-in-touch with contacts and prospects, even if you’re using other high-touch tactics, such as follow- up calls and meetings. The point is that not every new contact is a ready-buyer when you How To Build A Great Promotional Gift Bag d" your services into a range of
ways potential clients can buy from you,
you’re missing the point of using an e-zine
as a smart promotional tool.From “How to Shop on eBay for Dummies” to “How to Loose a Guy in 10 Days,” how to’s are all the rage. It seems like we can’t do anything without being told how to do it first. But, as easy as shopping on eBay and dumping a boy can seem, these things can get difficult at times—especially when attempting to build the perfect promotional gift bag for an event. Even seasoned pro’s can rip their hair out at the thought of a promotional gift bag. But with a few easy and timeless tips, hair loss will merely be a bad memory.Crafting an effective promotional gift bag does not need to consume hours of your day nor tons of * If you go to all of the time and effort to get booked as a speaker, then run around preparing for and delivering your talks, you’ll get nothing but a nice ego boost and applause unless you target the right audiences and hit them with "What in it for Me?" messages. All of that time, money and energy wasted…but not if you pay attention to the sum of your parts! To avoid wasting your resources and to make the most of your individual marketing efforts, make sure you have all of these parts working together: * Positioning that sets you apart from others offering a similar service. From your target audiences’ perspective, what makes you different? Why should they choose you? * Packaging in the form of a value-packed website that you can send new contacts to, demonstrating your value (again, through their eyes) and building their confidence in you as a good solution to their problem. * Promotion: An easy way to keep-in-touch with contacts and prospects, even if you’re using other high-touch tactics, such as follow- up calls and meetings. The point is that not every new contact is a ready-buyer when you What Makes a Successful Yellow Page Ad Headline? se parts working
together:Be daring and be different!As a former Yellow Page consultant for 25 years, I would recommend you take the time to figure out what makes you different from your competition and work from that base. After all, how else is Mrs. Jones going to choose from the hundreds of plumbers in the directory?Begin in the beginning. That’s not as easy as it sounds. Build your ad from the headline on down. It’s the place most users will see first. So conceive a headline that takes you out of the ordinary.Sticking with “Plumbing,” I’ve seen the same headlines year after year:< * Positioning that sets you apart from others offering a similar service. From your target audiences’ perspective, what makes you different? Why should they choose you? * Packaging in the form of a value-packed website that you can send new contacts to, demonstrating your value (again, through their eyes) and building their confidence in you as a good solution to their problem. * Promotion: An easy way to keep-in-touch with contacts and prospects, even if you’re using other high-touch tactics, such as follow- up calls and meetings. The point is that not every new contact is a ready-buyer when you first meet. You need to stay on their radar, at least monthly, so that when they’re ready to buy, you’re there. A monthly e-newsletter or e- zine is the perfect vehicle. * Persuasion: You’ve got to turn contacts into prospects, prospects into clients, clients into referrers, and so on. Simply setting up sales calls and writing proposals won’t do it, though. As any successful sales person knows, there are many moving "parts" to master. You’ve got to know who the decision makers are, what they’re willing to spend, how buying decisions get made, how to stay in control of the selling conversation, and how to ask for referrals, to name a few. * Performance is the one "part" most of us in professional services rely on most – it’s how we get referrals and maintain (or tarnish) our reputation in the marketplace. It’s the marketing part that keeps me on my toes the most, above any other marketing challenge I take on, including writing this e-newsletter, upgrading my website, closing a sale, or giving a public talk. Why? Because it’s all about managing and exceeding client expectations, two very tricky "parts" to master. If this doesn’t ring a bell with you, then take this quick quiz to find out what it really takes to master Performance: http://www.turningpointemarketing.com/Is_This_For_You.html In isolation, I’m definitely not a fan of saltwater taffy, seagulls or bathing suits. But in the right setting and working all together, they’re part of the most effective vacation I can think of. The sum of its parts works. So too can your marketing.
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