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    Why Invest In Real Estate?
    Wow, it was another exciting month in Calgary’s Real estate Market. Real estate prices are continuing to rise like there is no tomorrow with a bit of assistance from the volatile stock market. Earlier this week when I had tuned into the business news all I could hear is how the stock market has done it again. The biggest drop in one day since 9/11, leaving people staring like deer in a headlight and asking the question of now what? The stock sell off had started in the Asian markets, continuing to Europe and finally it finished in the North American market. Millions of people worldwide were going to bed not knowing what they’re going to face the following day. Should I sell my investments now to minimize my losses or wait and maybe it will recover in the long run?Over the last couple of years in Calgary, more and more people had deci
    and be sure to ask the host to mention where listeners who don't win can purchase a copy—and to announce your phone number or Web site.

    Giving Awards

    Awards are another intriguing promotional tactic. If no one in your area is doing so, why not institute a Good Citizen award? Have your assistant scan papers watching for stories of people who have performed a kind deed or helped significantly in the community. Each month select a winner; then send him or her a certificate and a letter explaining the program. Also be sure the media gets a copy of the letter and the name of that month's award recipient. Cap it with an annual award drawn from the monthly winners—and a big media splash.

    A New York-based consultancy, The Communication Workshop, annually presents the Percy Awards. They feature the business world'

    Media Training: Credibility is the Key to Success
    The key to a company’s credibility lies in its ability to communicate. Although media training generally focuses on speaking to the press, the same techniques can be used to increase effective communication between upper management and the rest of the company’s employees and between the company and its customers.In times of crisis, this communication becomes more important than ever. To paraphrase a former General Electric slogan, in times of crisis, credibility is our most important product. Consistently, executive and crisis response teams that participate in media training exercises on a regular basis inform and reassure the public better than the untrained.Maintaining Credibility The following media training tips provide a guideline for planning for, dealing with, and coming away from a crisis with you
    While mass marketers often run games and contests on a nationwide scale, small business can't afford this kind of promotion. But what we lack in money, we can make up for in moxie. Let's examine some other industries to discover what they have done. Hopefully, this will trigger some ideas for you.

    Holding Contests

    Texas is the birthplace of a lot of big ideas. The first Living Legends Classic, an annual bodybuilding competition, was held in Warton, Texas. What an ideal contest for a gym to sponsor. And you might know a Texas bank, TransFirst, came up with a sweepstakes idea to encourage customers to use its Moneymaker automatic teller machines (ATMs). A joint promotion with a local radio station and 7-Eleven stores, where the machines were placed, made the costs affordable. Sweepstake numbers appeared on each Moneymaker ATM transaction slip. A whopping 2.5 million entries resulted.

    On a smaller scale, one Halloween a market placed a giant pumpkin in its window and offered cash prizes to the person who guessed closest to the number of seeds inside the pumpkin. The contest drew thousands of entries—and sold an unprecedented number of pumpkins. Experimenters counted the seeds, seeking clues to aid in the guesstimating. Could you mold this concept to fit your operation in some way?

    Restaurants are famous for the fishbowl inviting customers to leave a business card for a drawing on a free meal. In return the restaurant gets a mailing list of their customers and a ready database to solicit for parties and meetings. Apply this concept to trade show exhibits and book festivals.

    Do be aware contests could dump you into legal hot water. Most states have laws regulating contests and declaring lotteries illegal unless they are sponsored by the government or a charity. The Federal Trade Commission also monitors some contests, as does the Federal Communications Commission and the U.S. Postal Service. You may want to check with an attorney before embarking on a journey into this highly regulated jungle.

    Contests are limited primarily by our imagination. What can you do to delight someone else and get free promotion for yourself? Just be sure your contest is relevant to your business. A beauty shop might give a free shampoo and style to the woman with the longest hair; a church could award their longest-standing member a token gift. An insurance agent could honor the driver with the longest safe-driving/no-ticket record. How about a travel agent giving the customer who has logged the most miles in a year a free trip to somewhere or a catered breakfast in bed at home. A weight control center might make the woman who lost the most pounds Queen for a Day.

    In a promotion aimed at bookstores, Bard Books, Inc.—publishers of an offbeat corporate biography titled NUTS! Southwest Airlines' Crazy Recipe for Business and Personal Success—doled out 10 free round-trip tickets to anywhere Southwest flies. To qualify for the contest, store managers had to "Go NUTS!" creating a window display that portrayed the zany style and maverick spirit of the airline.

    Want free radio exposure? Call a talk show host or disk jockey on a popular morning drive-time show in your area and suggest an idea for a call-in contest that ties in with your book. Donate a dozen copies and be sure to ask the host to mention where listeners who don't win can purchase a copy—and to announce your phone number or Web site.

    Giving Awards

    Awards are another intriguing promotional tactic. If no one in your area is doing so, why not institute a Good Citizen award? Have your assistant scan papers watching for stories of people who have performed a kind deed or helped significantly in the community. Each month select a winner; then send him or her a certificate and a letter explaining the program. Also be sure the media gets a copy of the letter and the name of that month's award recipient. Cap it with an annual award drawn from the monthly winners—and a big media splash.

    A New York-based consultancy, The Communication Workshop, annually presents the Percy Awards. They feature the business world'

    Work Choices Legislation in Australia - What You Need to Understand
    IntroductionThe successful introduction and passing of the work choices legislation in Australia in December 2005 embarks Australia on the most comprehensive shake up of industrial relations since federation.While naturally the ‘devil is in the detail’ what we do know is the industrial and employment environment has forever changed.Changes include• A unitary (single) system of industrial relations where previously there had been a federal system and one for each state,• An emphasis on the Australian economy away from wages and conditions,• Changes to Awards and Agreements including transitional arrangements,• A reduction in the number of awards from an estimated 4,000 to 12,• The setting up of the Australian Fair Pay Commission to determine minimum wages and conditions,• A reduc
    oneymaker ATM transaction slip. A whopping 2.5 million entries resulted.

    On a smaller scale, one Halloween a market placed a giant pumpkin in its window and offered cash prizes to the person who guessed closest to the number of seeds inside the pumpkin. The contest drew thousands of entries—and sold an unprecedented number of pumpkins. Experimenters counted the seeds, seeking clues to aid in the guesstimating. Could you mold this concept to fit your operation in some way?

    Restaurants are famous for the fishbowl inviting customers to leave a business card for a drawing on a free meal. In return the restaurant gets a mailing list of their customers and a ready database to solicit for parties and meetings. Apply this concept to trade show exhibits and book festivals.

    Do be aware contests could dump you into legal hot water. Most states have laws regulating contests and declaring lotteries illegal unless they are sponsored by the government or a charity. The Federal Trade Commission also monitors some contests, as does the Federal Communications Commission and the U.S. Postal Service. You may want to check with an attorney before embarking on a journey into this highly regulated jungle.

    Contests are limited primarily by our imagination. What can you do to delight someone else and get free promotion for yourself? Just be sure your contest is relevant to your business. A beauty shop might give a free shampoo and style to the woman with the longest hair; a church could award their longest-standing member a token gift. An insurance agent could honor the driver with the longest safe-driving/no-ticket record. How about a travel agent giving the customer who has logged the most miles in a year a free trip to somewhere or a catered breakfast in bed at home. A weight control center might make the woman who lost the most pounds Queen for a Day.

    In a promotion aimed at bookstores, Bard Books, Inc.—publishers of an offbeat corporate biography titled NUTS! Southwest Airlines' Crazy Recipe for Business and Personal Success—doled out 10 free round-trip tickets to anywhere Southwest flies. To qualify for the contest, store managers had to "Go NUTS!" creating a window display that portrayed the zany style and maverick spirit of the airline.

    Want free radio exposure? Call a talk show host or disk jockey on a popular morning drive-time show in your area and suggest an idea for a call-in contest that ties in with your book. Donate a dozen copies and be sure to ask the host to mention where listeners who don't win can purchase a copy—and to announce your phone number or Web site.

    Giving Awards

    Awards are another intriguing promotional tactic. If no one in your area is doing so, why not institute a Good Citizen award? Have your assistant scan papers watching for stories of people who have performed a kind deed or helped significantly in the community. Each month select a winner; then send him or her a certificate and a letter explaining the program. Also be sure the media gets a copy of the letter and the name of that month's award recipient. Cap it with an annual award drawn from the monthly winners—and a big media splash.

    A New York-based consultancy, The Communication Workshop, annually presents the Percy Awards. They feature the business world'

    Increasing Website Credibility: 7 Do-It-Yourself Web Design Tips for Non-Designers
    Need to clean up your web site image fast but don't have a budget for a designer? Following these 7 web site design tips should go a long way towards scraping off the cheese and increasing the credibility of your business web site.1. Lose the clip art, no matter how cute or clever. Use a nice-looking photograph instead. Preferably a photo that shows your product in use or a satisfied client, but even a well-chosen stock photo would be better than clip art. And animated clip art? Unless you're a real design whiz, just say "never".2. Reduce the size of large photos. If a any single photo is over 350 pixels wide or 300 pixels high it's probably too big for your business web site. Hint: use your photo-editing software, not your HTML editor, to reduce the size.3. Unless you really know what you're doing,
    legal hot water. Most states have laws regulating contests and declaring lotteries illegal unless they are sponsored by the government or a charity. The Federal Trade Commission also monitors some contests, as does the Federal Communications Commission and the U.S. Postal Service. You may want to check with an attorney before embarking on a journey into this highly regulated jungle.

    Contests are limited primarily by our imagination. What can you do to delight someone else and get free promotion for yourself? Just be sure your contest is relevant to your business. A beauty shop might give a free shampoo and style to the woman with the longest hair; a church could award their longest-standing member a token gift. An insurance agent could honor the driver with the longest safe-driving/no-ticket record. How about a travel agent giving the customer who has logged the most miles in a year a free trip to somewhere or a catered breakfast in bed at home. A weight control center might make the woman who lost the most pounds Queen for a Day.

    In a promotion aimed at bookstores, Bard Books, Inc.—publishers of an offbeat corporate biography titled NUTS! Southwest Airlines' Crazy Recipe for Business and Personal Success—doled out 10 free round-trip tickets to anywhere Southwest flies. To qualify for the contest, store managers had to "Go NUTS!" creating a window display that portrayed the zany style and maverick spirit of the airline.

    Want free radio exposure? Call a talk show host or disk jockey on a popular morning drive-time show in your area and suggest an idea for a call-in contest that ties in with your book. Donate a dozen copies and be sure to ask the host to mention where listeners who don't win can purchase a copy—and to announce your phone number or Web site.

    Giving Awards

    Awards are another intriguing promotional tactic. If no one in your area is doing so, why not institute a Good Citizen award? Have your assistant scan papers watching for stories of people who have performed a kind deed or helped significantly in the community. Each month select a winner; then send him or her a certificate and a letter explaining the program. Also be sure the media gets a copy of the letter and the name of that month's award recipient. Cap it with an annual award drawn from the monthly winners—and a big media splash.

    A New York-based consultancy, The Communication Workshop, annually presents the Percy Awards. They feature the business world'

    North Dakota Refinance Loans – Using Online Resources to Refinance Your Loan
    Refinancing is a big decision. There are many different things you will need to consider before determining that a North Dakota refinance loan is right for you. If you want to make the research process quick and easy, try using some of the many online resources that are available to refinance your loan.Refinance ArticlesIf you aren't familiar with refinance loans, the first thing you will want to do is read some of the refinance articles that can be found around the web. Learn the difference between adjustable rates, fixed rates, interest only, and balloon refinance loans, find out the pros and cons of long terms and short term loans, and much more. By reading up on the subject, you can make an informed decision when it comes time to choose a North Dakota refinance loan package.Refinance Calculators and Rate R
    l agent giving the customer who has logged the most miles in a year a free trip to somewhere or a catered breakfast in bed at home. A weight control center might make the woman who lost the most pounds Queen for a Day.

    In a promotion aimed at bookstores, Bard Books, Inc.—publishers of an offbeat corporate biography titled NUTS! Southwest Airlines' Crazy Recipe for Business and Personal Success—doled out 10 free round-trip tickets to anywhere Southwest flies. To qualify for the contest, store managers had to "Go NUTS!" creating a window display that portrayed the zany style and maverick spirit of the airline.

    Want free radio exposure? Call a talk show host or disk jockey on a popular morning drive-time show in your area and suggest an idea for a call-in contest that ties in with your book. Donate a dozen copies and be sure to ask the host to mention where listeners who don't win can purchase a copy—and to announce your phone number or Web site.

    Giving Awards

    Awards are another intriguing promotional tactic. If no one in your area is doing so, why not institute a Good Citizen award? Have your assistant scan papers watching for stories of people who have performed a kind deed or helped significantly in the community. Each month select a winner; then send him or her a certificate and a letter explaining the program. Also be sure the media gets a copy of the letter and the name of that month's award recipient. Cap it with an annual award drawn from the monthly winners—and a big media splash.

    A New York-based consultancy, The Communication Workshop, annually presents the Percy Awards. They feature the business world'

    Finding the Best Student Loan Consolidation
    Many people need to take out student loans in order to further their education, with the promise of repayment within a certain time frame after getting your degree. This puts a financial burden on graduates who are just starting out in life, and just beginning their careers. Student loan consolidation is now available, to help meet take command of that debt. The following paragraphs will describe what this is, and provide advice on seeking additional information on the subject.When you consolidate you are generally given a longer period of time to repay than you were given with the unconsolidated debt. The time period can be up to 30 years. This means that your payment will often be lower than the total payments you would be making without consolidation. You will often have to pay more interest, though, because the length of th
    and be sure to ask the host to mention where listeners who don't win can purchase a copy—and to announce your phone number or Web site.

    Giving Awards

    Awards are another intriguing promotional tactic. If no one in your area is doing so, why not institute a Good Citizen award? Have your assistant scan papers watching for stories of people who have performed a kind deed or helped significantly in the community. Each month select a winner; then send him or her a certificate and a letter explaining the program. Also be sure the media gets a copy of the letter and the name of that month's award recipient. Cap it with an annual award drawn from the monthly winners—and a big media splash.

    A New York-based consultancy, The Communication Workshop, annually presents the Percy Awards. They feature the business world's most fuzzy, laughable, and misworded communications. Although copies of the winners are available, company names are not released "to protect the guilty."

    Conducting Surveys

    Besides a huge jump in the number of politically oriented commercials, what else accompanies a national election? Yep, political polls abound. You don't have to wait for 2008 to focus attention on industry issues, however. You can conduct a poll—complete with percentages and statistics—anytime. Surveys display your knowledge and specialty. They establish you as the expert and inevitably lead to new business.

    According to PRink, the best topics for surveys are those that make for stimulating conversation: health, leisure time, hobbies and interests, sports, retirement/life cycle issues, quality of life, education, the arts, and people's feelings about entrepreneurial behavior.

    Author Lisa Kanarek (Everything's Organized) contacted 600 women who responded about how much time they spend each day looking for lost items. The study was given generous coverage in Entrepreneur magazine.

    A study commissioned by the Girl Scouts turned out interesting findings that support "smart cookies" join this organization. Girl Scout alumnae end up with a lot more than merit badges. The study found that 61 % of the 1,339 women queried credit their professional success, particularly in terms of self-confidence and teamwork, to their scouting experience. That should make for good recruitment material!

    Word survey questionnaires objectively, get as large a sample as possible, and double-check all mathematical calculations. Your survey can be an informal analysis done among your customers/clients. A health spa, for instance, might shape questions to explore attitudes about exercise, weight loss, and the importance of a careful diet.

    Another approach is to explore your company files. You may be sitting on proprietary information that could be molded into a fascinating survey. Be sensitive to gathering information that will involve your prospects. Human interest stuff is always appreciated. For instance, the public "gobbled up" Nabisco Brands, Inc.'s study on how people eat their Oreo cookies.

    Once the poll is complete, write up your conclusions and offer them both locally and to the wire services. Recycle this information in other ways. How about a direct-mail piece, slated for buyers, summarizing your findings?

    Holding a contest, giving awards, and conducting a survey—then circulating the results— is a low-budget, high-impact way to promote yourself and your books.

    © Copyright 2005 Marilyn Ross

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