| Suggest You |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Internet and Businesses Online > Blogging > Bloggedy Blog Blawg |
|
Suggest You - Bloggedy Blog Blawg
What Is Your Real Intent? I decided to give blogging a try. I am releasing my first book this summer, Some Assembly Required: How to Make, Grow and Keep Your Business Relationships, and decided that if nothing else, a blog was a good way to help search engines, like Yahoo! and Google, find my website. With this in mind, I decide to make the topic of my book, networking and business development, the theme of my blog.Intent is important but your success comes from your action –what you do. I believe it is important to have positive (good) intentions but show me what a person does and I will show you what their REAL intent was.-I have friends who have been going to write a book for years, but haven’t started yet. -I know people who consistently say – some day I will…….. -I have heard hundreds of times – I would like to start my own business, but…. -I have observed thousands of people say they want to lose weight but can’ Thus Some Assembly Required - The Business Development / Networking Blog was born in March of 2005. 3 Little-Known Ways To Profit From Your Blog's Articles “Do you Blog?”The Internet is a great way to leverage your resources. Did you know that you can use your content in many different ways? You don’t have to waste time constantly creating new content when you can use content you have already created, and implement them in various different ways.Here are 3 little-used ways to profit from your blog’s content:1) Use them for freelancing projectsYou can make lots of money through freelancing. Simply bid for a project at freelancing sites like elance.com or guru.com. If the This seems to be the new question that is popping up in business and social circles around town, across the country and throughout the world. A year ago almost nobody, except those who were really hip, had heard of blogs, and now they are one of the hottest topics on the internet. What is a blog? A blog is a reverse-chronological log that is hosted on the web, or also called a weblog (blog for short). It can be either formal presentation or a random connection of thoughts. It can have posts from one author or many. There can be open commenting from the general public, or strictly just snippets from the blog’s owner. Individuals, companies and political pendants now have blogs, as they are a very easy tool with which to communicate to a wide audience via the web. Before the 2004 presidential campaign I had never heard of blogs (I guess I am admitting that I am just not terribly hip). During the campaign both Republican and Democrat supporters began to break news (and some fake or fabricated news) on blogs. A lot of information on the Swift Boat Veterans issue and the CBS Memogate stories were put into the public domain, not by the established news media, but rather by the bloggers. For better or worse, these blogs on both sides of the political isle were widely read and they themselves were one of the big stories of the 2004 election. Following the November elections, the term blog (or is it “blawg”?) has started to become a household term. I would regularly hear people talking about friends who were “blogging” their vacation, or corporate CEO’s who interacted daily with customers via the “company blog”. In March I attended a marketing seminar on blogging. At the start of the program they surveyed the audience about blogs, and most participants, like myself, had never read or written a blog. That was when I decided I wanted to figure out why someone would blog in the first place. Since I am a frustrated wanna-be writer, I decided to give blogging a try. I am releasing my first book this summer, Some Assembly Required: How to Make, Grow and Keep Your Business Relationships, and decided that if nothing else, a blog was a good way to help search engines, like Yahoo! and Google, find my website. With this in mind, I decide to make the topic of my book, networking and business development, the theme of my blog. Thus Some Assembly Required - The Business Development / Networking Blog was born in March of 2005.< Overcoming Objections Towards More Sales!
In this article, we are focusing on how to overcome objections from prospects and we will be sharing some great ideas on how you can make far more sales to really maximise the new business appointments you go on.One reason many businesses don't capitalise on all their opportunities, is when it comes to handling the objections and stalls from sales prospects. You probably know the ones, "let me think about it," "our budget is spent," "I need to get some other quotes in." "get back to me in 3 weeks." there are many more. ghts. It can have posts from one author or many. There can be open commenting from the general public, or strictly just snippets from the blog’s owner. Individuals, companies and political pendants now have blogs, as they are a very easy tool with which to communicate to a wide audience via the web. Before the 2004 presidential campaign I had never heard of blogs (I guess I am admitting that I am just not terribly hip). During the campaign both Republican and Democrat supporters began to break news (and some fake or fabricated news) on blogs. A lot of information on the Swift Boat Veterans issue and the CBS Memogate stories were put into the public domain, not by the established news media, but rather by the bloggers. For better or worse, these blogs on both sides of the political isle were widely read and they themselves were one of the big stories of the 2004 election. Following the November elections, the term blog (or is it “blawg”?) has started to become a household term. I would regularly hear people talking about friends who were “blogging” their vacation, or corporate CEO’s who interacted daily with customers via the “company blog”. In March I attended a marketing seminar on blogging. At the start of the program they surveyed the audience about blogs, and most participants, like myself, had never read or written a blog. That was when I decided I wanted to figure out why someone would blog in the first place. Since I am a frustrated wanna-be writer, I decided to give blogging a try. I am releasing my first book this summer, Some Assembly Required: How to Make, Grow and Keep Your Business Relationships, and decided that if nothing else, a blog was a good way to help search engines, like Yahoo! and Google, find my website. With this in mind, I decide to make the topic of my book, networking and business development, the theme of my blog. Thus Some Assembly Required - The Business Development / Networking Blog was born in March of 2005. How To Open A Free Merchant Administration Area? break news (and some fake or fabricated news) on blogs. A lot of information on the Swift Boat Veterans issue and the CBS Memogate stories were put into the public domain, not by the established news media, but rather by the bloggers. For better or worse, these blogs on both sides of the political isle were widely read and they themselves were one of the big stories of the 2004 election.You’ve got to be kidding me on this real situation.I can't ever thinking, I was a member the whole time, but I just didn’t do anything about it.Then, out of sheer boredom, I decided to test it out.Guess what?IT WORKED.When we start a Physical Store Location or a Web Site the first thing that come to mind is how can I have more Customers? and the reply is Simply Sign Up as a Merchant to create exciting and exclusive offers for consumers, to give the Coupons redeemed at the physical store locations Following the November elections, the term blog (or is it “blawg”?) has started to become a household term. I would regularly hear people talking about friends who were “blogging” their vacation, or corporate CEO’s who interacted daily with customers via the “company blog”. In March I attended a marketing seminar on blogging. At the start of the program they surveyed the audience about blogs, and most participants, like myself, had never read or written a blog. That was when I decided I wanted to figure out why someone would blog in the first place. Since I am a frustrated wanna-be writer, I decided to give blogging a try. I am releasing my first book this summer, Some Assembly Required: How to Make, Grow and Keep Your Business Relationships, and decided that if nothing else, a blog was a good way to help search engines, like Yahoo! and Google, find my website. With this in mind, I decide to make the topic of my book, networking and business development, the theme of my blog. Thus Some Assembly Required - The Business Development / Networking Blog was born in March of 2005. Identifying the Right Venture Capital Firm Partner erm. I would regularly hear people talking about friends who were “blogging” their vacation, or corporate CEO’s who interacted daily with customers via the “company blog”. In March I attended a marketing seminar on blogging. At the start of the program they surveyed the audience about blogs, and most participants, like myself, had never read or written a blog.Venture capital firms are comprised of individual partners. These partners make investment decisions and typically take a seat on each portfolio company’s Board. Partners tend to invest in what they know, so finding a partner that has past work experience in your industry is very helpful. This relevant experience allows them to more fully understand your venture’s value proposition and gives them confidence that they can add value, thus encouraging them to invest.Fortunately, most venture capital firm websites list their par That was when I decided I wanted to figure out why someone would blog in the first place. Since I am a frustrated wanna-be writer, I decided to give blogging a try. I am releasing my first book this summer, Some Assembly Required: How to Make, Grow and Keep Your Business Relationships, and decided that if nothing else, a blog was a good way to help search engines, like Yahoo! and Google, find my website. With this in mind, I decide to make the topic of my book, networking and business development, the theme of my blog. Thus Some Assembly Required - The Business Development / Networking Blog was born in March of 2005. Five Guaranteed Ways to Get Better Customer Service Every Time I decided to give blogging a try. I am releasing my first book this summer, Some Assembly Required: How to Make, Grow and Keep Your Business Relationships, and decided that if nothing else, a blog was a good way to help search engines, like Yahoo! and Google, find my website. With this in mind, I decide to make the topic of my book, networking and business development, the theme of my blog.Customer service, customer care, customer relations or whatever you want to call it has certainly lost its focus – the customer.Horror stories abound about waiting hours to get a simple problem resolved. Customers now expect to be on terminal hold, expect to argue for their rights, expect to deal with someone thousands of miles away in a foreign country who doesn’t understand American culture, and expect to repeatedly ask for the next level manager until they ultimately slam the phone down in disgust, start cussing up a stor Thus Some Assembly Required - The Business Development / Networking Blog was born in March of 2005. Since my book was not due out for another four months, and because the blog was just and experiment, I decided to keep it a secret. I wasn’t looking for any publicity, nor did I care if anyone read my posts. This was just an exercise in regularly writing articles on a topic that I know something about. The benefit was that linking my articles to my book’s website, it quickly succeeded in the goal of helping the search engines find the book’s main page. But then it got interesting. The more I researched how the blogosphere operated (blogosphere being the cyber world of those who blog), the more I realized that there is a whole blogging community. I discovered that one of the things bloggers do is to create links from their page to the pages of other blogs that they respect and read. I had uncovered many other business, marketing and sales oriented blogs that I began visiting, and linked to these pages from my blog. I also installed a piece of software counted how many people visited my blog. At first there was just one per day, and that was me. But then I started noticing the count was rising. Through my participation in the blogosphere, people were finding my blog and reading my posts. A couple of bloggers would quote my posts and link to my page. I started to receive emails from people who praised my work and then people I did not know began to pre-order my book. Now there are regular readers of my blog. I was at a cocktail party recently and was introduced to a local entrepreneur who, upon hearing my name, stated; “Oh, I read your blog!”. Wow. I will admit, that was a very flattering. Like the fax machine, cell phone, home computers and the internet, blogs are not a fad. The future is here and it involves blogging.
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:
|