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Casual Articles - Totally Different Questions
Requirements to become Physician Assistant vents and reimburse for programs or seminars that allow employees to (as Stephen Covey says) “sharpen the saw.”The road to Physician Assistant certificateSome may think of Physician Assistant’s profession as just another job, while others have never heard of this career. Physician Assistant or PA is relatively new profession. It was established in the late 1960’s after the Vietnam War. During that time there were a lot of experienced Navy corpsmen coming home from the war. Navy corpsmen are Navy medics who serve with the Marines. Corpsman gained an extensive amount of combat medicine. They cared for hundreds of wounded changing their bandages, administering medications, performing minor surgical procedures, and numerous life-saving procedures. Corpsmen had no equivalent job in the civilian life, so the Physician Assistant profession was developed.Today, those who wish to apply to PA program don’t have to be Navy corpsmen, however medical experience is a must. Usually, PA programs like their applicants to have at least two years of relevant medical background. What that means is someone who has been working as a medical assistant, a nurse, paramedic, respiratory therapists, and such. Volunteering, medical billing, coding, office type of work is not considered to be relevant Travel down roads rarely taken. If a company intends to truly transform itself into one that routinely practices high creativity, it must take risks as a culture by choosing unknown directions, attempting grand experiments, leaping off cliffs! Has an ages-old marketing approach been failing to produce results lately? Try something dramatic, different, looney. A salesman I once knew named Jed, for example, had a terrible time getting a prospect to look at his marketing materials. Every time he made his follow-up call, the prospect insisted he just wasn’t interested in Jed’s service, so why should he look at Jed’s stuff? One day, out of frustration, Jed did the total opposite of what he’d learned back in sales training class by packing all his marketing materials in a big cardboard box and writing over it warnings like, “Do NOT open this!” and “Do NOT look inside!” and “Whatever you do, keep this sealed!” Then he mailed the box to his prospect, with no return address. You can guess what happened: The prospect couldn’t help looking inside, thus immediately encountering Jed’s lively marketing materials and before long he has read them all, called Jed up and gave him his business. By taking a rarely traveled road-- actually, a NEVER-traveled road, in this case! -- Jed’s pursuit of his prospect finally succeeded. The ability to be highly creative resides within us all. Despite pressures and suggestions to the contrary, it arrives into the world the day we do and, even if rarely used for many years, it never dissolves or goes away. Happily, it can be reactivated surprisingly quick, and managers who understand this can activate their employees’ creative abilities to extraordinary competitive adva House Cleaning - The Low Investment Fallacy In a high-speed global marketplace that reverberates daily with quick-shifting customer expectations and demands from the marketplace to immediately respond, companies may no longer rest on their laurels or keep doing things the way they’ve traditionally been done. The smartest, most successful companies, for example, take pains to pursue not only present customer desires but anticipated, as-yet unexpressed, customers needs and desires in the future. Such projections require both research and imagination.You can buy books telling you what a low investment, high growth opportunity residential house cleaning can be. We believe that the house cleaning’s 50% per annum failure rate speaks for itself. It is an attractive industry, but it is the potential for limitless scale and profits from cleaning nice homes, not the misconception about low investment, which makes it attractive. Most certainly the industry does require a low level of investment relative to many specialty retail, restaurant or manufacturing industries, and it has fantastically greater potential for scale, but it is irresponsible for experts to tout prospects for high growth and profits based on an operating model of operating from home with a cell phone and a bucket.We are not saying that entry into our industry requires investment. In fact, for those cleaning themselves, or employing just one or two others to clean with them, it is possible to get into the industry with just a hundred bucks, and we have nothing against someone else taking such an approach. It's just that we don't consider the growth or profit potential for such endeavors to be interesting. Rather, we believe that (in addition to typically dam Take Toyota, for example, perennially ranked among the top five sellers of cars and trucks in the US. Its management tinkers constantly with fresh ideas for customizing its vehicles to meet customer desires, each year introducing more models, lighter weight materials, faster cruising speeds, even a first-of-its-kind hybrid engine utilizing electric as well as gas fuel sources. Toyota managers search round-the-clock for ways to do things better and different. “The companies who are innovative ask totally different questions from those who are not,” says Jack Ricchiuto, a creativity consultant based in Cleveland and author of Collaborative Creativity: Unleashing the Power of Shared Thinking (Oakhill Press). “A traditional set of management questions begins with ‘How can we listen to our market better?’ and ‘How can we meet customers’ requirements?’ But creative companies like Toyota ask ‘How can we SURPRISE our market?’ Answering that one requires a high level of commitment to management creativity.” For such reasons, creative companies and managers continually re-evaluate, re-tool and revise what they’re doing, forever gazing beyond the horizon, eager to glimpse what’s to come. Their transition from the traditional to the creative rarely proceeds easily, however, especially with so many managers conditioned since grade one to tow the line and think of themselves as LACKING creativity. Research in this area reveals, for example, that differences in creative behavior between adults and children represents a very wide gap indeed. One study found that only 2% of adults of any age level can be accurately classified as “highly creative” while over 90% of children five years old or younger can be classified this way. The huge drop-off begins at ages 6 and 7 (only 10% in these age groups were found to be considered “highly creative”) and at age 8, adult levels begin. Only 2% of children aged 8 and above test out as highly creative and this figure does not rise again for any age group thereafter. The researchers directing this study concluded that repeated instructions throughout our school years on how to do things “right,” after years of hearing such admonitions as “no,” “bad,” “wrong,” and “incorrect” take their toll. Negative signals sear little minds with the impression that there’s only one way to do things. Disagree with that and you’re officially “deficient.” With society officially downgrading the idea of creativity so strongly, it becomes problematic for businesses to get their managers and other employees thinking truly freely and “out of the box.” Also, genuine creativity, by definition, subverts the status quo by facing down long-held assumptions and uncorking new ways of approaching things. Thus, employee and manager alike may resist attempts to uproot established company traditions or fiddle with untried, risky procedures. Their responses to creativity initiatives may in fact take shape vigorously, adamantly and fearfully. “I always ask my clients what they’re experimenting with,” says Ricchiuto. “The scariest response I hear is, ‘We don’t like to experiment—it’s messy and we don’t like to fail.’ Of course that’s just kidding yourself. Innovative companies understand that you’ve got to put up with ‘messiness’ and failure in order to succeed.” Ricchiuto continues, ”The truth is if you want to learn to do it better, you’ve got to try a lot of things, many of which won’t work. Most artists will tell you the biggest item in their studios is their dumpster. A leading design firm uses the motto, ‘Fail often to succeed sooner.’ That’s how successful companies and individuals truly employing their natural creativity think.” It’s a wise move, then, for a company to consider injecting innovative thinking and action into its corporate atmosphere. However, taking into account that creativity, by definition, knows no bounds, there’s no absolute or guaranteed formula for making the switch. However, creativity experts do agree on a number of vital tenets that must be observed. Here are four: Let “ideas” flow. Our schools and workplaces have fostered for centuries intellect-dependent relationships. “Right” answers are those in the minds of a teacher or boss, the thinking goes, “wrong” answers are in the heads of everyone else. Variations of course play themselves out in the workplace every day, especially during meetings, i.e., someone volunteers an idea, then is quickly dismissed by the manager, moderator or someone else at the table. Naturally, the effect will be that all such volunteering soon stops. Managers must resist a temptation to blurt out, “No, no, that would never work!” The essence of brainstorming, after all, is to let ALL ideas fly, no matter how wild, impractical or outrageous. First spend a few minutes scribbling everyone’s ideas down on a topic before analyzing them for practicality. Even putting up totally wacky ideas on a white board or flip chart, where all can see them, could end up inspiring, by the end of the meeting, the most workable solution. Make failure OK. Many companies pay lip service to the idea that it’s OK to fail, make mistakes, get things wrong. But then, whenever something really does go wrong, KA-BOOM! There’s yelling, recriminations, weeping and wailing. Instead, truly creative managers invite open discussion of mistakes and failures on the theory there’s always a lesson to be learned from them. Risk-taking, after all, by definition, means sometimes you win and sometimes you lose. Failure is understood as one possible outcome in the overall game. Don’t try playing without it! When creative managers truly understand this, they exhibit their support of it in extraordinary ways. One of Henry Ford’s the First’s VPs once made a colossal inventory error, for example, that cost the pioneering car company over one million dollars, a lot of bread back in 1920. Assuming he would be fired anyway, the VP wrote up his resignation and handed it over to his boss. Mr. Ford looked at the piece of paper, then tore it up on the spot. “Do you think I would fire you after what just happened?” he asked. “My boy, I’ve just invested one million dollars in your education. Now get back to work!” Mix in color and music. The first things to go when budgets get tight in our schools are “non-essentials” like art and music. Yet much brain research in the last twenty years has determined that creativity amplifies if coupled with such traditionally “peripheral” educational activities. Along with drawing, painting, singing and dancing, brain scientists also tout the practical value of taking breaks, relaxing, meditating, playing games (recess!) and daydreaming. Thus, creative companies find ways to add music to the office or factory air, maintain colorful decors, sponsor company (fun) events and reimburse for programs or seminars that allow employees to (as Stephen Covey says) “sharpen the saw.” Travel down roads rarely taken. If a company intends to truly transform itself into one that routinely practices high creativity, it must take risks as a culture by choosing unknown directions, attempting grand experiments, leaping off cliffs! Has an ages-old marketing approach been failing to produce results lately? Try something dramatic, different, looney. A salesman I once knew named Jed, for example, had a terrible time getting a prospect to look at his marketing materials. Every time he made his follow-up call, the prospect insisted he just wasn’t interested in Jed’s service, so why should he look at Jed’s stuff? One day, out of frustration, Jed did the total opposite of what he’d learned back in sales training class by packing all his marketing materials in a big cardboard box and writing over it warnings like, “Do NOT open this!” and “Do NOT look inside!” and “Whatever you do, keep this sealed!” Then he mailed the box to his prospect, with no return address. You can guess what happened: The prospect couldn’t help looking inside, thus immediately encountering Jed’s lively marketing materials and before long he has read them all, called Jed up and gave him his business. By taking a rarely traveled road-- actually, a NEVER-traveled road, in this case! -- Jed’s pursuit of his prospect finally succeeded. The ability to be highly creative resides within us all. Despite pressures and suggestions to the contrary, it arrives into the world the day we do and, even if rarely used for many years, it never dissolves or goes away. Happily, it can be reactivated surprisingly quick, and managers who understand this can activate their employees’ creative abilities to extraordinary competitive advan Medical Conferences ce grade one to tow the line and think of themselves as LACKING creativity.Medical conferences brings physicians and researchers together to present and discuss their work. These conferences provide an important channel to exchange of information between health care professionals.Professsinal medical conferences can expose those in the field to new ideas and skills. They are considered essential in the field to keep abreast with new techniques and methodologies that those in the profession need to ehance their practice or research. If your in the medical field have attending a conference is in your future, there are some tips that will make your conferencing experience rewarding for you.Think about your primary reason for going to the conference and what you expect to gain from it. Neworking with co-workers is always advisable, but you should limit conference networking to those who can give you information that you are looking form.Before arriving at the conference, look at all the brochures, shedules, etc. that were sent to you, so that you have a pretty good ideas about what sessions you want to attend and who is presenting. Make sure you take a notebook, pen and plenty of business cards. Take organized notes because you will pr Research in this area reveals, for example, that differences in creative behavior between adults and children represents a very wide gap indeed. One study found that only 2% of adults of any age level can be accurately classified as “highly creative” while over 90% of children five years old or younger can be classified this way. The huge drop-off begins at ages 6 and 7 (only 10% in these age groups were found to be considered “highly creative”) and at age 8, adult levels begin. Only 2% of children aged 8 and above test out as highly creative and this figure does not rise again for any age group thereafter. The researchers directing this study concluded that repeated instructions throughout our school years on how to do things “right,” after years of hearing such admonitions as “no,” “bad,” “wrong,” and “incorrect” take their toll. Negative signals sear little minds with the impression that there’s only one way to do things. Disagree with that and you’re officially “deficient.” With society officially downgrading the idea of creativity so strongly, it becomes problematic for businesses to get their managers and other employees thinking truly freely and “out of the box.” Also, genuine creativity, by definition, subverts the status quo by facing down long-held assumptions and uncorking new ways of approaching things. Thus, employee and manager alike may resist attempts to uproot established company traditions or fiddle with untried, risky procedures. Their responses to creativity initiatives may in fact take shape vigorously, adamantly and fearfully. “I always ask my clients what they’re experimenting with,” says Ricchiuto. “The scariest response I hear is, ‘We don’t like to experiment—it’s messy and we don’t like to fail.’ Of course that’s just kidding yourself. Innovative companies understand that you’ve got to put up with ‘messiness’ and failure in order to succeed.” Ricchiuto continues, ”The truth is if you want to learn to do it better, you’ve got to try a lot of things, many of which won’t work. Most artists will tell you the biggest item in their studios is their dumpster. A leading design firm uses the motto, ‘Fail often to succeed sooner.’ That’s how successful companies and individuals truly employing their natural creativity think.” It’s a wise move, then, for a company to consider injecting innovative thinking and action into its corporate atmosphere. However, taking into account that creativity, by definition, knows no bounds, there’s no absolute or guaranteed formula for making the switch. However, creativity experts do agree on a number of vital tenets that must be observed. Here are four: Let “ideas” flow. Our schools and workplaces have fostered for centuries intellect-dependent relationships. “Right” answers are those in the minds of a teacher or boss, the thinking goes, “wrong” answers are in the heads of everyone else. Variations of course play themselves out in the workplace every day, especially during meetings, i.e., someone volunteers an idea, then is quickly dismissed by the manager, moderator or someone else at the table. Naturally, the effect will be that all such volunteering soon stops. Managers must resist a temptation to blurt out, “No, no, that would never work!” The essence of brainstorming, after all, is to let ALL ideas fly, no matter how wild, impractical or outrageous. First spend a few minutes scribbling everyone’s ideas down on a topic before analyzing them for practicality. Even putting up totally wacky ideas on a white board or flip chart, where all can see them, could end up inspiring, by the end of the meeting, the most workable solution. Make failure OK. Many companies pay lip service to the idea that it’s OK to fail, make mistakes, get things wrong. But then, whenever something really does go wrong, KA-BOOM! There’s yelling, recriminations, weeping and wailing. Instead, truly creative managers invite open discussion of mistakes and failures on the theory there’s always a lesson to be learned from them. Risk-taking, after all, by definition, means sometimes you win and sometimes you lose. Failure is understood as one possible outcome in the overall game. Don’t try playing without it! When creative managers truly understand this, they exhibit their support of it in extraordinary ways. One of Henry Ford’s the First’s VPs once made a colossal inventory error, for example, that cost the pioneering car company over one million dollars, a lot of bread back in 1920. Assuming he would be fired anyway, the VP wrote up his resignation and handed it over to his boss. Mr. Ford looked at the piece of paper, then tore it up on the spot. “Do you think I would fire you after what just happened?” he asked. “My boy, I’ve just invested one million dollars in your education. Now get back to work!” Mix in color and music. The first things to go when budgets get tight in our schools are “non-essentials” like art and music. Yet much brain research in the last twenty years has determined that creativity amplifies if coupled with such traditionally “peripheral” educational activities. Along with drawing, painting, singing and dancing, brain scientists also tout the practical value of taking breaks, relaxing, meditating, playing games (recess!) and daydreaming. Thus, creative companies find ways to add music to the office or factory air, maintain colorful decors, sponsor company (fun) events and reimburse for programs or seminars that allow employees to (as Stephen Covey says) “sharpen the saw.” Travel down roads rarely taken. If a company intends to truly transform itself into one that routinely practices high creativity, it must take risks as a culture by choosing unknown directions, attempting grand experiments, leaping off cliffs! Has an ages-old marketing approach been failing to produce results lately? Try something dramatic, different, looney. A salesman I once knew named Jed, for example, had a terrible time getting a prospect to look at his marketing materials. Every time he made his follow-up call, the prospect insisted he just wasn’t interested in Jed’s service, so why should he look at Jed’s stuff? One day, out of frustration, Jed did the total opposite of what he’d learned back in sales training class by packing all his marketing materials in a big cardboard box and writing over it warnings like, “Do NOT open this!” and “Do NOT look inside!” and “Whatever you do, keep this sealed!” Then he mailed the box to his prospect, with no return address. You can guess what happened: The prospect couldn’t help looking inside, thus immediately encountering Jed’s lively marketing materials and before long he has read them all, called Jed up and gave him his business. By taking a rarely traveled road-- actually, a NEVER-traveled road, in this case! -- Jed’s pursuit of his prospect finally succeeded. The ability to be highly creative resides within us all. Despite pressures and suggestions to the contrary, it arrives into the world the day we do and, even if rarely used for many years, it never dissolves or goes away. Happily, it can be reactivated surprisingly quick, and managers who understand this can activate their employees’ creative abilities to extraordinary competitive adva Tips for your 1st Interview urse that’s just kidding yourself. Innovative companies understand that you’ve got to put up with ‘messiness’ and failure in order to succeed.”You’ve handed in your resume and now the wait by the phone begins. Will it ring? Will you finally land your first interview? If you presented a qualified resume and made a great first impression, the chances are fairly good you’ll at least get called.So now what do you do? You’re probably a little scared and that’s okay. It shows you’re taking the interview seriously. After all you’re one step closer to getting your first job and on the road to increased independence. Isn’t that what it’s all about? So nail the interview! Here are a few tips to help: • Don’t be late! Whatever you do, DO NOT be late. Being late or running in at the last moment gives the impression that you’re not serious about getting the job. • Show up at least 15 minutes ahead of time and wait patiently. DO NOT look annoyed if your interviewer is running behind. You’re probably not the only one being brought in for an interview. Remember it’s not personal. • Dress appropriately. A ripped and dirty T-shirt or a mini-skirt that barely covers the assets is not acceptable. Use common sense. • Do not smoke before the interview or while you are waiting. The smell will lin Ricchiuto continues, ”The truth is if you want to learn to do it better, you’ve got to try a lot of things, many of which won’t work. Most artists will tell you the biggest item in their studios is their dumpster. A leading design firm uses the motto, ‘Fail often to succeed sooner.’ That’s how successful companies and individuals truly employing their natural creativity think.” It’s a wise move, then, for a company to consider injecting innovative thinking and action into its corporate atmosphere. However, taking into account that creativity, by definition, knows no bounds, there’s no absolute or guaranteed formula for making the switch. However, creativity experts do agree on a number of vital tenets that must be observed. Here are four: Let “ideas” flow. Our schools and workplaces have fostered for centuries intellect-dependent relationships. “Right” answers are those in the minds of a teacher or boss, the thinking goes, “wrong” answers are in the heads of everyone else. Variations of course play themselves out in the workplace every day, especially during meetings, i.e., someone volunteers an idea, then is quickly dismissed by the manager, moderator or someone else at the table. Naturally, the effect will be that all such volunteering soon stops. Managers must resist a temptation to blurt out, “No, no, that would never work!” The essence of brainstorming, after all, is to let ALL ideas fly, no matter how wild, impractical or outrageous. First spend a few minutes scribbling everyone’s ideas down on a topic before analyzing them for practicality. Even putting up totally wacky ideas on a white board or flip chart, where all can see them, could end up inspiring, by the end of the meeting, the most workable solution. Make failure OK. Many companies pay lip service to the idea that it’s OK to fail, make mistakes, get things wrong. But then, whenever something really does go wrong, KA-BOOM! There’s yelling, recriminations, weeping and wailing. Instead, truly creative managers invite open discussion of mistakes and failures on the theory there’s always a lesson to be learned from them. Risk-taking, after all, by definition, means sometimes you win and sometimes you lose. Failure is understood as one possible outcome in the overall game. Don’t try playing without it! When creative managers truly understand this, they exhibit their support of it in extraordinary ways. One of Henry Ford’s the First’s VPs once made a colossal inventory error, for example, that cost the pioneering car company over one million dollars, a lot of bread back in 1920. Assuming he would be fired anyway, the VP wrote up his resignation and handed it over to his boss. Mr. Ford looked at the piece of paper, then tore it up on the spot. “Do you think I would fire you after what just happened?” he asked. “My boy, I’ve just invested one million dollars in your education. Now get back to work!” Mix in color and music. The first things to go when budgets get tight in our schools are “non-essentials” like art and music. Yet much brain research in the last twenty years has determined that creativity amplifies if coupled with such traditionally “peripheral” educational activities. Along with drawing, painting, singing and dancing, brain scientists also tout the practical value of taking breaks, relaxing, meditating, playing games (recess!) and daydreaming. Thus, creative companies find ways to add music to the office or factory air, maintain colorful decors, sponsor company (fun) events and reimburse for programs or seminars that allow employees to (as Stephen Covey says) “sharpen the saw.” Travel down roads rarely taken. If a company intends to truly transform itself into one that routinely practices high creativity, it must take risks as a culture by choosing unknown directions, attempting grand experiments, leaping off cliffs! Has an ages-old marketing approach been failing to produce results lately? Try something dramatic, different, looney. A salesman I once knew named Jed, for example, had a terrible time getting a prospect to look at his marketing materials. Every time he made his follow-up call, the prospect insisted he just wasn’t interested in Jed’s service, so why should he look at Jed’s stuff? One day, out of frustration, Jed did the total opposite of what he’d learned back in sales training class by packing all his marketing materials in a big cardboard box and writing over it warnings like, “Do NOT open this!” and “Do NOT look inside!” and “Whatever you do, keep this sealed!” Then he mailed the box to his prospect, with no return address. You can guess what happened: The prospect couldn’t help looking inside, thus immediately encountering Jed’s lively marketing materials and before long he has read them all, called Jed up and gave him his business. By taking a rarely traveled road-- actually, a NEVER-traveled road, in this case! -- Jed’s pursuit of his prospect finally succeeded. The ability to be highly creative resides within us all. Despite pressures and suggestions to the contrary, it arrives into the world the day we do and, even if rarely used for many years, it never dissolves or goes away. Happily, it can be reactivated surprisingly quick, and managers who understand this can activate their employees’ creative abilities to extraordinary competitive adva Stress at Work and Satisfaction ring, by the end of the meeting, the most workable solution.There appears little doubt that one of the major adverse influences on job satisfaction, work performance, absenteeism, turnover and productivity, is the incidence of stress at work. Stress is a source of tension and frustration that may arise through a number of interrelated influences on behavior, including the individual, group, organizational and environmental factors. In a recent survey into attitudes to work, when a random sample of 1,000 workers was asked to specify the biggest problem at work, the second most common response (after poor pay - 18%) was stress at 17%. This would seem to support the contention that stress is a problem of the nineties.The causes of stress are complex. Stress is also a very personal experience, as is the response of each individual to it and their beliefs about how best to cope with the causes and the effects of stressful situations. Although considered as having a negative impact, a certain amount of stress may be seen as positive and even as a good thing, which helps and promotes a high level of performance. Keeping the balance is the challenging task of management.The five situations that are most commonly considered as stres Make failure OK. Many companies pay lip service to the idea that it’s OK to fail, make mistakes, get things wrong. But then, whenever something really does go wrong, KA-BOOM! There’s yelling, recriminations, weeping and wailing. Instead, truly creative managers invite open discussion of mistakes and failures on the theory there’s always a lesson to be learned from them. Risk-taking, after all, by definition, means sometimes you win and sometimes you lose. Failure is understood as one possible outcome in the overall game. Don’t try playing without it! When creative managers truly understand this, they exhibit their support of it in extraordinary ways. One of Henry Ford’s the First’s VPs once made a colossal inventory error, for example, that cost the pioneering car company over one million dollars, a lot of bread back in 1920. Assuming he would be fired anyway, the VP wrote up his resignation and handed it over to his boss. Mr. Ford looked at the piece of paper, then tore it up on the spot. “Do you think I would fire you after what just happened?” he asked. “My boy, I’ve just invested one million dollars in your education. Now get back to work!” Mix in color and music. The first things to go when budgets get tight in our schools are “non-essentials” like art and music. Yet much brain research in the last twenty years has determined that creativity amplifies if coupled with such traditionally “peripheral” educational activities. Along with drawing, painting, singing and dancing, brain scientists also tout the practical value of taking breaks, relaxing, meditating, playing games (recess!) and daydreaming. Thus, creative companies find ways to add music to the office or factory air, maintain colorful decors, sponsor company (fun) events and reimburse for programs or seminars that allow employees to (as Stephen Covey says) “sharpen the saw.” Travel down roads rarely taken. If a company intends to truly transform itself into one that routinely practices high creativity, it must take risks as a culture by choosing unknown directions, attempting grand experiments, leaping off cliffs! Has an ages-old marketing approach been failing to produce results lately? Try something dramatic, different, looney. A salesman I once knew named Jed, for example, had a terrible time getting a prospect to look at his marketing materials. Every time he made his follow-up call, the prospect insisted he just wasn’t interested in Jed’s service, so why should he look at Jed’s stuff? One day, out of frustration, Jed did the total opposite of what he’d learned back in sales training class by packing all his marketing materials in a big cardboard box and writing over it warnings like, “Do NOT open this!” and “Do NOT look inside!” and “Whatever you do, keep this sealed!” Then he mailed the box to his prospect, with no return address. You can guess what happened: The prospect couldn’t help looking inside, thus immediately encountering Jed’s lively marketing materials and before long he has read them all, called Jed up and gave him his business. By taking a rarely traveled road-- actually, a NEVER-traveled road, in this case! -- Jed’s pursuit of his prospect finally succeeded. The ability to be highly creative resides within us all. Despite pressures and suggestions to the contrary, it arrives into the world the day we do and, even if rarely used for many years, it never dissolves or goes away. Happily, it can be reactivated surprisingly quick, and managers who understand this can activate their employees’ creative abilities to extraordinary competitive adva No-cost Advertising for Small Businesses vents and reimburse for programs or seminars that allow employees to (as Stephen Covey says) “sharpen the saw.”Many small businesses are run from people’s home computers and fall under the radar of business statistics. Whether you are working for a multi-level marketing company or selling painted bird houses the difficulty of advertising your products without a budget is overwhelming. Let us face the fact that $20 a month spent on classified advertisement isn’t going to bring in a flood of visitors. A home-based business cannot compete with their larger counterparts. That is why in many cases owners are expected to tap into their personal relationships to make sales.Like many of you I run a small home based business and have learned through trial and error what works and what doesn’t. Despite putting some “notches in my belt” I have never stopped learning. In the beginning, many years ago, I wasted money paying for different types of advertisements. None of them worked well. Now my budget is nearly $0 and I receive thousands of visitors a year. How did I do this?Strategy #1 Email: Instead of paying for lists and possibly getting in trouble for spamming I send businesses a very personalized email message. How do I find these businesses? I find them by looking on the web, goi Travel down roads rarely taken. If a company intends to truly transform itself into one that routinely practices high creativity, it must take risks as a culture by choosing unknown directions, attempting grand experiments, leaping off cliffs! Has an ages-old marketing approach been failing to produce results lately? Try something dramatic, different, looney. A salesman I once knew named Jed, for example, had a terrible time getting a prospect to look at his marketing materials. Every time he made his follow-up call, the prospect insisted he just wasn’t interested in Jed’s service, so why should he look at Jed’s stuff? One day, out of frustration, Jed did the total opposite of what he’d learned back in sales training class by packing all his marketing materials in a big cardboard box and writing over it warnings like, “Do NOT open this!” and “Do NOT look inside!” and “Whatever you do, keep this sealed!” Then he mailed the box to his prospect, with no return address. You can guess what happened: The prospect couldn’t help looking inside, thus immediately encountering Jed’s lively marketing materials and before long he has read them all, called Jed up and gave him his business. By taking a rarely traveled road-- actually, a NEVER-traveled road, in this case! -- Jed’s pursuit of his prospect finally succeeded. The ability to be highly creative resides within us all. Despite pressures and suggestions to the contrary, it arrives into the world the day we do and, even if rarely used for many years, it never dissolves or goes away. Happily, it can be reactivated surprisingly quick, and managers who understand this can activate their employees’ creative abilities to extraordinary competitive advantage. Yes, it may take time, it may take patience, it may take newly acquired skills. But indeed it can be done. Smart companies, then, the winners, the leaders, make a firm commitment to doing so, then bravely and effectively forge ahead.
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