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  • Casual Articles - Sometime You'll Need To Sell Out

    What Is A Good Bookkeeper Worth?
    I am often asked what is a reasonable fee to charge my clients. And on the opposite side of the coin – what should I expect to pay for a bookkeeper? A bookkeeper who is honest, trustworthy, reliable and knowledgeable is worth their weight in gold. You might find a good honest hard working person, but if they don’t have the knowledge and experience that you need then you only h
    to stop putting time and energy into an idea that isn’t going anywhere or doing anything for you
  • Stop associating with people who are steering you in a direction that isn’t conducive for growing your business
  • Blocking out the desire to go in a million directions and start focusing on what you (not other people) want to do with your life as an entrepreneur
  • Don’t think of selling out as a bad thing, because it’s not. It’s a way to move forward with your business and to gain a superio

    How To Build A Brand Strategy To Steal Market Share
    Military metaphors work well for the field of marketing and advertising, and with great deference to the more serious conflict in Iran, we will look to both Napoleon and Sun Tzu for our foundation forstealing market share.Market leaders were generally on a deliberate track to build category. In many ways, this is not as true today as it was in the past. Today, only a
    Entrepreneurs have ideas galore! For many of us, we’ll use our ideas to build ventures in an effort to grow those ventures into something big, something great.

    Unfortunately, that rate of success to failure is usually pretty low as many of our ideas fall apart and we start to detach ourselves from them as we accumulate better ideas that we wish to push forward with.

    When that happens – especially for us serial entrepreneurs – we are left with a bag full of companies that we never really grew either because we didn’t have the means to do so or we simply lost interest in the project.

    Money, time, and energy were put into all of these ideas, thinking that they were going to be something big. However, just because you never followed through with the project, it doesn’t mean that the idea was weak – it probably means that your interests lie elsewhere.

    Have you ever considered selling those ventures to someone else? If not, you should start thinking about that. Just recently I was thinking how about my first company that I ever built (here’s the story) and how it was just sitting around on my hard drive not doing anything.

    Though I never really pushed forward with the site – even when it started making me some money – I strongly believe that it’s a viable business and in the right hands someone can turn it into something great. Which is why I plan to sell the service in a few days.

    As a young entrepreneur, you are going to accumulate ideas on top of ideas and there comes a point when you have to consolidate your resources into the things that you care about the most.

    You’ll need to practice a level of close-mindedness and have the ability to “sell out” on your other ideas and concentrate on the ones that you can really see growing into something big.

    Selling Out on your ideas (among other things) can be done in many ways:

    • Literally selling your old ventures to people to raise cash, solidifying your position
    • Simply to stop putting time and energy into an idea that isn’t going anywhere or doing anything for you
    • Stop associating with people who are steering you in a direction that isn’t conducive for growing your business
    • Blocking out the desire to go in a million directions and start focusing on what you (not other people) want to do with your life as an entrepreneur

    Don’t think of selling out as a bad thing, because it’s not. It’s a way to move forward with your business and to gain a superior

    Improve Your Small Business Through the #4 Universal Funnel Law
    Universal Funnel Law #4 – Every business needs customers or clients. A customer relationship plan further develops loyal customers and serves as a source for ongoing referrals.W. Edwards Deming who is considered to be the father of continuous or quality improvement said “Profit in business comes from repeat customers, customers that boast about your proje
    ve the means to do so or we simply lost interest in the project.

    Money, time, and energy were put into all of these ideas, thinking that they were going to be something big. However, just because you never followed through with the project, it doesn’t mean that the idea was weak – it probably means that your interests lie elsewhere.

    Have you ever considered selling those ventures to someone else? If not, you should start thinking about that. Just recently I was thinking how about my first company that I ever built (here’s the story) and how it was just sitting around on my hard drive not doing anything.

    Though I never really pushed forward with the site – even when it started making me some money – I strongly believe that it’s a viable business and in the right hands someone can turn it into something great. Which is why I plan to sell the service in a few days.

    As a young entrepreneur, you are going to accumulate ideas on top of ideas and there comes a point when you have to consolidate your resources into the things that you care about the most.

    You’ll need to practice a level of close-mindedness and have the ability to “sell out” on your other ideas and concentrate on the ones that you can really see growing into something big.

    Selling Out on your ideas (among other things) can be done in many ways:

    • Literally selling your old ventures to people to raise cash, solidifying your position
    • Simply to stop putting time and energy into an idea that isn’t going anywhere or doing anything for you
    • Stop associating with people who are steering you in a direction that isn’t conducive for growing your business
    • Blocking out the desire to go in a million directions and start focusing on what you (not other people) want to do with your life as an entrepreneur

    Don’t think of selling out as a bad thing, because it’s not. It’s a way to move forward with your business and to gain a superio

    Medical Assistant Guide - Essential Duties of Medical Assistants
    Medical assistant is an unlicensed multi-skilled health professional who offers administrative, clerical and technical support to the physician. Medical assistant provides services for front office, back office and other clinical laboratory areas. Medical assisting is a versatile career for men and women.Medical assistant provides services in the offices of physicians,
    arget="_new" href="http://cashcampus.com/ftt/2006/03/21/cashcampus/cashcampus-memory-lane-part-1/">here’s the story) and how it was just sitting around on my hard drive not doing anything.

    Though I never really pushed forward with the site – even when it started making me some money – I strongly believe that it’s a viable business and in the right hands someone can turn it into something great. Which is why I plan to sell the service in a few days.

    As a young entrepreneur, you are going to accumulate ideas on top of ideas and there comes a point when you have to consolidate your resources into the things that you care about the most.

    You’ll need to practice a level of close-mindedness and have the ability to “sell out” on your other ideas and concentrate on the ones that you can really see growing into something big.

    Selling Out on your ideas (among other things) can be done in many ways:

    • Literally selling your old ventures to people to raise cash, solidifying your position
    • Simply to stop putting time and energy into an idea that isn’t going anywhere or doing anything for you
    • Stop associating with people who are steering you in a direction that isn’t conducive for growing your business
    • Blocking out the desire to go in a million directions and start focusing on what you (not other people) want to do with your life as an entrepreneur

    Don’t think of selling out as a bad thing, because it’s not. It’s a way to move forward with your business and to gain a superio

    Everyone talks in code!
    How often have you left a meeting with a customer or your boss telling yourself he likes my ideas. Only to find later that you didn’t get the sale or your boss has told everyone that you are crazy.As we get older it seems to us that everyone talks in code. No one tells us what they really mean. Everything is hidden behind a veil of double talk.But all is not lost
    of ideas and there comes a point when you have to consolidate your resources into the things that you care about the most.

    You’ll need to practice a level of close-mindedness and have the ability to “sell out” on your other ideas and concentrate on the ones that you can really see growing into something big.

    Selling Out on your ideas (among other things) can be done in many ways:

    • Literally selling your old ventures to people to raise cash, solidifying your position
    • Simply to stop putting time and energy into an idea that isn’t going anywhere or doing anything for you
    • Stop associating with people who are steering you in a direction that isn’t conducive for growing your business
    • Blocking out the desire to go in a million directions and start focusing on what you (not other people) want to do with your life as an entrepreneur

    Don’t think of selling out as a bad thing, because it’s not. It’s a way to move forward with your business and to gain a superio

    Just a Series of Choices
    Steve’s a pretty regular guy – wife, 4 kids in their blended family, 12+ years of engineering experience, a degree, mortgage, car payments, some debt… and feeling depressed because he waited to look till the end. Last time he transitioned was 5 years ago for more money and he liked some of the people and it was simple…this time he’s heard some in his professional associati
    to stop putting time and energy into an idea that isn’t going anywhere or doing anything for you
  • Stop associating with people who are steering you in a direction that isn’t conducive for growing your business
  • Blocking out the desire to go in a million directions and start focusing on what you (not other people) want to do with your life as an entrepreneur
  • Don’t think of selling out as a bad thing, because it’s not. It’s a way to move forward with your business and to gain a superior position with what you are trying to do.

    When you’re running a business you should be playing chess, not checkers. Entrepreneurship – to a larger degree – take strategy and plotting; each move you make is going to be critical and you can’t be scared to sacrifice a few pawns when your ultimate goal is to sack that king – to change the world!

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