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    Business for Pleasure
    We might be in the electronic gaming era, but it’s more like a fun game of Monopoly this business for pleasure of sport franchise ownership. The stakes are high, spending free, and visible worries few.Despite the escala
    et access or cable television.

    If you purchase one service, you get a discount on additional services. This type of 'packaging/bundling' has been very successful for telecommunications companies.

    The moral of the story is 'it's not what you sell... it's how you sell it'.

    If you're having trouble getting your products and

    Medical Billing - AA0 Record Fields 1 through 18
    This is the first in a series of articles that cover in detail the formats of each record that is sent electronically when doing medical billing. It should be noted that the following stats are for NSF 3.01 format. We'll be
    In this article, when we talk about 'packaging', we're not referring to the physical packaging of your product (e.g. cardboard box).

    Rather, we're referring to the way your product is positioned in the marketplace. Here's an interesting story that highlights the importance of packaging:

    In the early 1900's Kraft created a cheap powdered cheese designed to have a long shelf life.

    Unfortunately for Kraft, the product was a flop and they ended up dumping 6 million pounds of the powdered processed cheese with the U.S. Army.

    In the mean time, a clever salesman within Kraft decided to combine the powdered cheese with macaroni pasta to create 'Kraft Dinner'.

    The product was an instant success and was marketed to families as a cheap and easy dinner. Kraft had sparked the beginning of modern packaged food products.

    So while the powdered cheese was a terrible flop, when combined with macaroni and marketed from a different angle - 'Kraft Dinner' became one the most successful packaged food products of all time.

    Today, the company sells over 7 million boxes of macaroni and cheese every week.

    Another example is the telecommunications industry.

    If you've had a phone line connected recently you might have noticed that all the phone companies are bundling their basic products with extra services like Internet access or cable television.

    If you purchase one service, you get a discount on additional services. This type of 'packaging/bundling' has been very successful for telecommunications companies.

    The moral of the story is 'it's not what you sell... it's how you sell it'.

    If you're having trouble getting your products and s

    The Role of the Machine Metaphor in Mixed-initiative Organizational Leadership
    “Can This Marriage be Saved?” So reads the title of the cover story in the August 15, 2005 issue of BusinessWeek (www.businessweek.com). The article describes the seven-year (1998-2005) story of the merger of Daimler and Chrys
    powdered cheese designed to have a long shelf life.

    Unfortunately for Kraft, the product was a flop and they ended up dumping 6 million pounds of the powdered processed cheese with the U.S. Army.

    In the mean time, a clever salesman within Kraft decided to combine the powdered cheese with macaroni pasta to create 'Kraft Dinner'.

    The product was an instant success and was marketed to families as a cheap and easy dinner. Kraft had sparked the beginning of modern packaged food products.

    So while the powdered cheese was a terrible flop, when combined with macaroni and marketed from a different angle - 'Kraft Dinner' became one the most successful packaged food products of all time.

    Today, the company sells over 7 million boxes of macaroni and cheese every week.

    Another example is the telecommunications industry.

    If you've had a phone line connected recently you might have noticed that all the phone companies are bundling their basic products with extra services like Internet access or cable television.

    If you purchase one service, you get a discount on additional services. This type of 'packaging/bundling' has been very successful for telecommunications companies.

    The moral of the story is 'it's not what you sell... it's how you sell it'.

    If you're having trouble getting your products and

    The Power of Effective Decissions on Powerful Health Care Practices
    “Life is a checkerboard…”One recent morning while rereading Napoleon Hill, I came across this quote. Now, he has it in quotations too, but does not attribute it to anybody else.“Life is a checkerboard and the pla

    The product was an instant success and was marketed to families as a cheap and easy dinner. Kraft had sparked the beginning of modern packaged food products.

    So while the powdered cheese was a terrible flop, when combined with macaroni and marketed from a different angle - 'Kraft Dinner' became one the most successful packaged food products of all time.

    Today, the company sells over 7 million boxes of macaroni and cheese every week.

    Another example is the telecommunications industry.

    If you've had a phone line connected recently you might have noticed that all the phone companies are bundling their basic products with extra services like Internet access or cable television.

    If you purchase one service, you get a discount on additional services. This type of 'packaging/bundling' has been very successful for telecommunications companies.

    The moral of the story is 'it's not what you sell... it's how you sell it'.

    If you're having trouble getting your products and

    Medical Billing - GU0 Record Fields 63 Through 65
    If you read our last installment on medical billing, you probably noticed that it took an entire installment just to cover field number 62 of the GU0 record. If this surprised you, it shouldn't. The GU0 record is probably th
    food products of all time.

    Today, the company sells over 7 million boxes of macaroni and cheese every week.

    Another example is the telecommunications industry.

    If you've had a phone line connected recently you might have noticed that all the phone companies are bundling their basic products with extra services like Internet access or cable television.

    If you purchase one service, you get a discount on additional services. This type of 'packaging/bundling' has been very successful for telecommunications companies.

    The moral of the story is 'it's not what you sell... it's how you sell it'.

    If you're having trouble getting your products and

    Self-Promoting Yourself into a Job
    If you’re like most people, you’ve never written a press release to call attention to a success you’ve had.And rightly so.But some of you should be sending out press releases or encouraging your company to promot
    et access or cable television.

    If you purchase one service, you get a discount on additional services. This type of 'packaging/bundling' has been very successful for telecommunications companies.

    The moral of the story is 'it's not what you sell... it's how you sell it'.

    If you're having trouble getting your products and services out the door, try packaging them in a different way and experiment with new marketing angles.

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