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Casual Articles - How To Avoid Costly Packaging Mistakes
Marketing & Business Development Questionnaire: Diagnose your Needs - Part One s type of packaging. Even with your best effort to make the clamshell easy to open, you may end up as an "Oyster Award" candidate and be labeled as one of the most difficult packages to open.Directions: Squint your eyes tight and reach frantically for sand (to bury your head). Or…you could thoughtfully and completely answer all questions in this marketing quiz. There are no right or wrong answers. If you are not currently doing something on this marketing and business development list, it does not mean that you must start. It does mean that you can use this questionnaire to diagnose your marketing and business development needs.Describe (in one or two paragraphs) your current Marketing & Business Development Program (who, what, when, where.) How many of the following elements apply to yo What is "green" packaging and how can I incorporate it into my packaging design? Whether to use green packaging or not should not be the question. What you should be asking is does utilizing environmentally friendly packaging materials make sense for my product? Am I going green legitimately or just jumping A Freelance Lifestyle - The Pros of Pursuing One You invest so much time and money in product development, why not invest a little more and protect yourself from making a bad packaging mistake? It is easy to make a packaging error that comes back to haunt you after you have packaged the product and sent it on its way to the retailer’s shelf.A freelance lifestyle isn’t for everyone. But, if you are dissatisfied with your current career, you might want to try it. Here are some of the pros that work for me in my freelance lifestyle:Flexibility and Autonomy (being in control). I love having the flexibility of doing what I want and need to do, when I want to do it. I can work late into the night, early in the morning, or all afternoon. It is up to me. As part of my schedule, I teach fitness classes most mornings, so work my projects and meetings around those classes. I also like the flexibility that comes with taking on project We think about bad packaging when they hit the news. For example "Ecoli Outbreak Attributed to Packaging." Packaging that on the surface seems like a good idea but then backfires due to some unforeseen circumstance that takes place. Why wait until it becomes an issue? Wolfgang Puck found out about "bad" packaging the hard way when his new self heating latte cans hit the retailer shelf and started exploding. Was it his fault? Probably not, but the words "Product Recall" were shouted from the isles. "Fabuloso" experienced a similar problem when it designed the packaging for its cleaning products to look like soda or beverage bottles. Children confused the "fabulous" colors with the real thing. A few poisonings later they realized they had made a huge mistake. All packaging problems certainly don't rise to the level of these two examples. A problem can be something of minor significance. Nonetheless, it is a problem and in many cases can be avoided or at the very least modified or anticipated. You would be surprised at how many people contact me knowing in advance that their packaging may have a problem yet they never do anything about it. Perhaps they will be the next big news story. In any case, there are ways to foresee potentially “bad” packaging situations. A little forward thinking may alleviate impending problems. Here are some common questions that could pave the way to avoiding potential packaging problems: Should I put my product in a plastic clamshell? The number one contested "packaging" issue revolves around the plastic clamshell and how difficult it is to open or penetrate without causing bodily harm. Can you anticipate this problem? You bet. Weigh your options when considering this type of packaging. Even with your best effort to make the clamshell easy to open, you may end up as an "Oyster Award" candidate and be labeled as one of the most difficult packages to open. What is "green" packaging and how can I incorporate it into my packaging design? Whether to use green packaging or not should not be the question. What you should be asking is does utilizing environmentally friendly packaging materials make sense for my product? Am I going green legitimately or just jumping No Accidental Business ce that takes place. Why wait until it becomes an issue?Sociologists put 100 people in a room for fifteen minutes. They secretly instructed two of those people to say only negative things, and the other 98 to say only positive things. Guess how long it took the two negative people to find each other and talk? Fifteen minutes! Like attracts like.Some entrepreneurs love to blame their bad financial circumstances on others. But when things are good, they’re quick to take credit for it. That doesn’t make sense. Two entrepreneurs in exactly the same city, same market, selling the same products for the same price: one makes a fortune while the other one goes ba Wolfgang Puck found out about "bad" packaging the hard way when his new self heating latte cans hit the retailer shelf and started exploding. Was it his fault? Probably not, but the words "Product Recall" were shouted from the isles. "Fabuloso" experienced a similar problem when it designed the packaging for its cleaning products to look like soda or beverage bottles. Children confused the "fabulous" colors with the real thing. A few poisonings later they realized they had made a huge mistake. All packaging problems certainly don't rise to the level of these two examples. A problem can be something of minor significance. Nonetheless, it is a problem and in many cases can be avoided or at the very least modified or anticipated. You would be surprised at how many people contact me knowing in advance that their packaging may have a problem yet they never do anything about it. Perhaps they will be the next big news story. In any case, there are ways to foresee potentially “bad” packaging situations. A little forward thinking may alleviate impending problems. Here are some common questions that could pave the way to avoiding potential packaging problems: Should I put my product in a plastic clamshell? The number one contested "packaging" issue revolves around the plastic clamshell and how difficult it is to open or penetrate without causing bodily harm. Can you anticipate this problem? You bet. Weigh your options when considering this type of packaging. Even with your best effort to make the clamshell easy to open, you may end up as an "Oyster Award" candidate and be labeled as one of the most difficult packages to open. What is "green" packaging and how can I incorporate it into my packaging design? Whether to use green packaging or not should not be the question. What you should be asking is does utilizing environmentally friendly packaging materials make sense for my product? Am I going green legitimately or just jumping What Makes a Good Boss? ings later they realized they had made a huge mistake.According to Rob Sheehan, director of executive education at the James MacGregor Burns Academy of Leadership at the University of Maryland, “Being a good boss is important in any organization, but it’s particularly important for small business. With smaller businesses, you really have the opportunity to set the tone for the entire company.” There are several characteristics, traits, and attitudes that seem to be prevalent among executives that are viewed as “good bosses” by their employees. These include:• Including all levels of employees in decision making• Concentrating on the company’s All packaging problems certainly don't rise to the level of these two examples. A problem can be something of minor significance. Nonetheless, it is a problem and in many cases can be avoided or at the very least modified or anticipated. You would be surprised at how many people contact me knowing in advance that their packaging may have a problem yet they never do anything about it. Perhaps they will be the next big news story. In any case, there are ways to foresee potentially “bad” packaging situations. A little forward thinking may alleviate impending problems. Here are some common questions that could pave the way to avoiding potential packaging problems: Should I put my product in a plastic clamshell? The number one contested "packaging" issue revolves around the plastic clamshell and how difficult it is to open or penetrate without causing bodily harm. Can you anticipate this problem? You bet. Weigh your options when considering this type of packaging. Even with your best effort to make the clamshell easy to open, you may end up as an "Oyster Award" candidate and be labeled as one of the most difficult packages to open. What is "green" packaging and how can I incorporate it into my packaging design? Whether to use green packaging or not should not be the question. What you should be asking is does utilizing environmentally friendly packaging materials make sense for my product? Am I going green legitimately or just jumping Should Freelance Writers Have a Minimum Wage? there are ways to foresee potentially “bad” packaging situations. A little forward thinking may alleviate impending problems. Here are some common questions that could pave the way to avoiding potential packaging problems:With election season here, raising the minimum wage is a hot topic. This got me to thinking about freelance writers – severely underpaid professionals, in my humble opinion.Freelance writing is a profession where competition is fierce – so much so that many of us work for far below the minimum wage. So, I want to propose a minimum pay scale for web writing, as this is one of the most severely underpaid niches in freelancing.While I recognize that we live in a free market society, as professionals, I think we should at least have MINIMUM guidelines in place to begin to raise the pay stan Should I put my product in a plastic clamshell? The number one contested "packaging" issue revolves around the plastic clamshell and how difficult it is to open or penetrate without causing bodily harm. Can you anticipate this problem? You bet. Weigh your options when considering this type of packaging. Even with your best effort to make the clamshell easy to open, you may end up as an "Oyster Award" candidate and be labeled as one of the most difficult packages to open. What is "green" packaging and how can I incorporate it into my packaging design? Whether to use green packaging or not should not be the question. What you should be asking is does utilizing environmentally friendly packaging materials make sense for my product? Am I going green legitimately or just jumping Where Branding Becomes Important s type of packaging. Even with your best effort to make the clamshell easy to open, you may end up as an "Oyster Award" candidate and be labeled as one of the most difficult packages to open.So you've decided to open your own business. For the first little while, you could get sales or be comissioned but everybody wants their business to grow bigger and bigger. One of the ways to do that is to focus on branding. This article gives the main ideas for branding.Start with a focus on your image.Choose a logo. Don't just draw one for yourself. A freelancer or an artist is a good choice with grahpic designers being the best choice. Often with artists, you will find out that your logo lacks clarity or it can't go into a certain file. Hire a professional graphic designer with happy What is "green" packaging and how can I incorporate it into my packaging design? Whether to use green packaging or not should not be the question. What you should be asking is does utilizing environmentally friendly packaging materials make sense for my product? Am I going green legitimately or just jumping on the "green" bandwagon to make a buck? Will I be mandated to use "green" packaging materials by retailers? What other options can I consider that aren't "green?” You really need to take some time to analyze these and other questions before you advance your packaging development in the wrong direction. My packaging is working now should I change it to new and improved or give it a packaging makeover? Remember my negative packaging trend for 07. Don't fix it, if it ain't broken. Consumers hate change. When they go to look for their trusted brand on the retailer’s shelf, you want to ensure they recognize your product easily. If they don’t, they may be forced to buy from the competition. Keep packaging consistency and continuity to make it easy for consumers to buy from you. Who regulates what needs to be on my product packaging? The answer is just about everyone. Outside of the various regulatory agencies that tell you what can and must be placed on your product packaging you could be mandated by a plethora out outside influences. Here are a few examples. Going Green? Better listen to what Wal-Mart has to say with their "Packaging Scorecard." Trading in the organic space? Better understand what the work organic means to your product and who is watching out looking for a mislabeled package or a claim that can't be validated. Making weight loss claims or dietary claims on your product packaging? Just about every one will be on your case. These claims are heavily scrutinized, not just by regulatory agencies but by consumers too. They are taking charge of their own well being. They "can" and will read them. Pay attention to these common packaging questions to which many companies don't find adequate answers before they embark on their product packaging. By doing so, you may anticipate potential packaging problems that could result in packaging problems. Do your homework. Use a little common sense and think about packaging issues relative to your product. Consider what you can do to avoi
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