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    Don't Let New Postal Rates Put You Out of Business
    Intermittently the USPS raises domestic and foreign postal rates. The last raise was on June 30, 2002. The latest rates take hold on January 9, 2006. The increase is 5.405% for a first class letter and 6.579 for the standard Priority Mail envelope. The new first class letter cost is $0.39. The new standard Priority Mail envelope cost is $4.05.Increasing postal rates have been hurting mail order and direct mail businesses for a lon
    ntal stores have several days per week where you can rent two for the price of one and the charge is normally $.99 to $2.50, so $2.13 isn’t that great of a deal. If you watch more movies per month, it can start being a better deal, but you don’t know until you look at your actual usage. What may be a good deal for someone else might be an awful deal for you and vice versa.

    On the other hand if you sign up for a DVD rental membership and cancel your cable subscription of $50 per month, you’ll be saving a significant amount of money. $50 per month works out to $600 per year. The DVD rental membership will cost you $204 per year, but y

    Free Content -- or Forbidden Fruit?
    Dear Cathy:I just found an interesting article on someone else's website. What are the rules if I want to put it into my own ezine? Can I paraphrase and indicate where I found the info?Or must I request permission to reprint, then list the item word for word? I am finding that most requests for permission go unanswered. Signed: Trying to Do the Right ThingDear Trying:First I would ask, "Why do you want to use
    Have you ever wondered how cell phone companies can afford to give away “free” cell phones when you sign up for a service plan? Its simple. They know that few people would sign up for a 1 to 2 year plan if they had to pay $150 for a cell phone. So instead they build the cost of the phone into the plan. $55 per month doesn’t seem so bad to most people even if $15 of it is going to the phone.

    When you are evaluating different deals and services ask yourself, “How much does this cost me in an entire year.” It is easy to see a low monthly payment as a savings especially on big items when it is actually a terrible deal.

    Automobiles are a good example of this. Paying $250 per month to lease a nice car, doesn’t seem like too much, but when you consider that it is $3000 per year going into a vehicle that you don’t own, it doesn't seem like such a great offer–especially when you consider that you can get a reliable used vehicle for $4,000 to $8,000 that you can drive for several years and then sell for several thousand dollars.

    Membership programs are another expense area where it is easy to spend a lot of money. I was looking at a health club membership this week and it was about $80 per month per person. So for two people that comes to $1920 per year. Now if you spend 5 or 6 hours per week at the gym using the equipment, swiming, playing tennis, etc. it might be a good deal. But many people would be better off investing in a stationary bike or home weight set.

    For evaluating membership programs like this, I suggest looking at how much you are paying per hour. If you pay 80 per month for access to the gym and you go for one hour per week, you are paying $20 per hour to use the gym. To me that seems kind of high. If you are spending 1 hour per day, the cost is $2.66 per hour. To me that seems much more affordable. I'm not saying that you shouldn't go to the gym, but make sure you know how much it is really costing you.

    Lets look at another popular membership plan with DVD rentals. Blockbuster and Netflicks have DVD rental plans where they send you DVDs through the mail. You watch them and send them back. The most popular plans cost around $17 per month and let you have 3 DVDs checked out at a time. They advertise that you can have “unlimited rentals.” Of course in actual practice you can only watch so many movies a week and it takes time for DVDs to get shipped back and forth.

    If someone watches two movies each week they will end up watching 8 per month. This puts the cost at $2.13 per movie. Where I live video rental stores have several days per week where you can rent two for the price of one and the charge is normally $.99 to $2.50, so $2.13 isn’t that great of a deal. If you watch more movies per month, it can start being a better deal, but you don’t know until you look at your actual usage. What may be a good deal for someone else might be an awful deal for you and vice versa.

    On the other hand if you sign up for a DVD rental membership and cancel your cable subscription of $50 per month, you’ll be saving a significant amount of money. $50 per month works out to $600 per year. The DVD rental membership will cost you $204 per year, but yo

    The Sales Training Series: Keep Replaying The Sales Call
    To Keep Growing, Replay The Call – Every TimeMost salespeople continue to make the same mistakes over and over, never recognizing their errors. Therefore, beyond a certain point, they never really get much better at what they do. How can you avoid that trap?Top salespeople never stop improving because they 'replay' every sales call they make.To continually improve your performance, you need two things. First, you
    are a good example of this. Paying $250 per month to lease a nice car, doesn’t seem like too much, but when you consider that it is $3000 per year going into a vehicle that you don’t own, it doesn't seem like such a great offer–especially when you consider that you can get a reliable used vehicle for $4,000 to $8,000 that you can drive for several years and then sell for several thousand dollars.

    Membership programs are another expense area where it is easy to spend a lot of money. I was looking at a health club membership this week and it was about $80 per month per person. So for two people that comes to $1920 per year. Now if you spend 5 or 6 hours per week at the gym using the equipment, swiming, playing tennis, etc. it might be a good deal. But many people would be better off investing in a stationary bike or home weight set.

    For evaluating membership programs like this, I suggest looking at how much you are paying per hour. If you pay 80 per month for access to the gym and you go for one hour per week, you are paying $20 per hour to use the gym. To me that seems kind of high. If you are spending 1 hour per day, the cost is $2.66 per hour. To me that seems much more affordable. I'm not saying that you shouldn't go to the gym, but make sure you know how much it is really costing you.

    Lets look at another popular membership plan with DVD rentals. Blockbuster and Netflicks have DVD rental plans where they send you DVDs through the mail. You watch them and send them back. The most popular plans cost around $17 per month and let you have 3 DVDs checked out at a time. They advertise that you can have “unlimited rentals.” Of course in actual practice you can only watch so many movies a week and it takes time for DVDs to get shipped back and forth.

    If someone watches two movies each week they will end up watching 8 per month. This puts the cost at $2.13 per movie. Where I live video rental stores have several days per week where you can rent two for the price of one and the charge is normally $.99 to $2.50, so $2.13 isn’t that great of a deal. If you watch more movies per month, it can start being a better deal, but you don’t know until you look at your actual usage. What may be a good deal for someone else might be an awful deal for you and vice versa.

    On the other hand if you sign up for a DVD rental membership and cancel your cable subscription of $50 per month, you’ll be saving a significant amount of money. $50 per month works out to $600 per year. The DVD rental membership will cost you $204 per year, but y

    Internet Marketing Online - 4 Reasons Why Blogging Is Superior
    There are tons of ways to reach out to your customers on the Internet. The Internet never fails to amaze me. A system which people thought six years ago as ‘just another small thing on the Internet' has been transformed into a world wide phenomenon.The weblog, more affectionately known as a blog, was previously and is still commonly used as an ‘online diary'. But with the forever-changing Internet, its new purpose has dramatically
    spend 5 or 6 hours per week at the gym using the equipment, swiming, playing tennis, etc. it might be a good deal. But many people would be better off investing in a stationary bike or home weight set.

    For evaluating membership programs like this, I suggest looking at how much you are paying per hour. If you pay 80 per month for access to the gym and you go for one hour per week, you are paying $20 per hour to use the gym. To me that seems kind of high. If you are spending 1 hour per day, the cost is $2.66 per hour. To me that seems much more affordable. I'm not saying that you shouldn't go to the gym, but make sure you know how much it is really costing you.

    Lets look at another popular membership plan with DVD rentals. Blockbuster and Netflicks have DVD rental plans where they send you DVDs through the mail. You watch them and send them back. The most popular plans cost around $17 per month and let you have 3 DVDs checked out at a time. They advertise that you can have “unlimited rentals.” Of course in actual practice you can only watch so many movies a week and it takes time for DVDs to get shipped back and forth.

    If someone watches two movies each week they will end up watching 8 per month. This puts the cost at $2.13 per movie. Where I live video rental stores have several days per week where you can rent two for the price of one and the charge is normally $.99 to $2.50, so $2.13 isn’t that great of a deal. If you watch more movies per month, it can start being a better deal, but you don’t know until you look at your actual usage. What may be a good deal for someone else might be an awful deal for you and vice versa.

    On the other hand if you sign up for a DVD rental membership and cancel your cable subscription of $50 per month, you’ll be saving a significant amount of money. $50 per month works out to $600 per year. The DVD rental membership will cost you $204 per year, but y

    Curb the Learning Curve and Develop Yourself Properly for the Share Market
    "The share market is a place where people with money meet people with experience. The people with experience get the money. And the people with money get the experience.-Anon"Below is the development path that I have advocated and seen work successfully for over a decade.Step 1: Education about the share market and strategies for investing The Safe Investing Method has been designed to provide a thorough groun
    ch it is really costing you.

    Lets look at another popular membership plan with DVD rentals. Blockbuster and Netflicks have DVD rental plans where they send you DVDs through the mail. You watch them and send them back. The most popular plans cost around $17 per month and let you have 3 DVDs checked out at a time. They advertise that you can have “unlimited rentals.” Of course in actual practice you can only watch so many movies a week and it takes time for DVDs to get shipped back and forth.

    If someone watches two movies each week they will end up watching 8 per month. This puts the cost at $2.13 per movie. Where I live video rental stores have several days per week where you can rent two for the price of one and the charge is normally $.99 to $2.50, so $2.13 isn’t that great of a deal. If you watch more movies per month, it can start being a better deal, but you don’t know until you look at your actual usage. What may be a good deal for someone else might be an awful deal for you and vice versa.

    On the other hand if you sign up for a DVD rental membership and cancel your cable subscription of $50 per month, you’ll be saving a significant amount of money. $50 per month works out to $600 per year. The DVD rental membership will cost you $204 per year, but y

    Making Money Through Advertisements Online
    The internet has truly revolutionized the way we work nowadays. I'm sure many of us are on the computer almost daily, using it to check our emails, surf the web for information, using it as a medium to conduct business ... The list of uses is expanding even as I write. Even "google" is now more than a pronoun. It has become a verb - eg. I googled for information about making money.Take a quick look at some of the advertisements
    ntal stores have several days per week where you can rent two for the price of one and the charge is normally $.99 to $2.50, so $2.13 isn’t that great of a deal. If you watch more movies per month, it can start being a better deal, but you don’t know until you look at your actual usage. What may be a good deal for someone else might be an awful deal for you and vice versa.

    On the other hand if you sign up for a DVD rental membership and cancel your cable subscription of $50 per month, you’ll be saving a significant amount of money. $50 per month works out to $600 per year. The DVD rental membership will cost you $204 per year, but you will get to pick the movies you want to see and spend significantly less time watching commercials.

    I’m sure you can think of many other monthly payments that may or may not be good deals. Just make sure that you evaluate your expenses based on the total cost over time and your actual usage.

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