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Casual Articles - All I Really Need Is a Brochure
Private Label Products: Trend For The Best? hance to earn a little extra income. Hire an experienced professional to help you with the graphic art and copywriting. It is ideal to hire a marketing communications specialist to coordi¬nate your communications and sales materials. Companies with smaller budgets can find many skilled independent graphic artists and writers rather than large agencies.Lately, private label products have made a tremendous impact on the U.S. market, affecting almost everyone, from producers to retailers to consumers. Private label products are products whose name or brand solely belongs to a specific retailer (e.g. Wal-Mart and Marks & Spencer). Let’s say that you’re in a grocery store. At first you see all those gourmet sandwiches with brands that have long been familiar to you. Then you go to Marks & Spencer and lo and behold, now they’re selling the same type of sandwiches too!Private label products have grown significantly in Europe, especially in the Western half, and now it’s making its mark in the United States. Private labels can be divided into sub groups: s When hiring graphic artists, copywriters or printers, be sure to review samples of their previous work and ask for written bids. You can find these professionals through your network of business associates or through reference materials. Take your brochure seriously. If you are willing to spend time and money on a brochure, make sure the project is completed on time, on budget and that the company actually uses it for the intended purpose. Place it on your list of projects to manage with very definite timelines. Don't assume that someone else will take care of the details, including proofreading. Remember, this represents your company to the world - give it the time it deserves. Enjoy the proj UPDA Pumps Domestic Oil and Natural Gas; Investors Gush Over Profits How many times have you thought that all your business needs is a nice brochure? Nothing fancy, just something to pass out at trade shows. It would surely solve a lot of your sales problems. You may even think it shouldn't cost much. It would look great printed on the new office color printer, right? Unfortunately, nothing in life or business is quite that easy. Many small businesses rely on brochures as their first form of sales communication but find them unsuccessful because they underestimate the skills and resources necessary to publish effective and attractive materials. The appearance and content of brochures and other sales material are so important because they represent your company to customers, suppliers, investors and employees. This is the first impression and, basically, your sales materials are your company in many people's minds."With the continuing conflicts in the Middle East and the price of crude oil hovering at $60 per barrel, it's never been more important for the U.S. to reduce its reliance on foreign oil," says Kamal Abdullah, CEO of Universal Property Development and Acquisition Company (UPDA.OB). To that end, the Florida-based UPDA (www.updastock.com) is buying and leasing U.S. properties with proven oil reserves, applying state-of-the-art technology, and pumping out sought-after oil and natural gas. "Americans use over 20 million barrels of oil a day, over half of which is imported," says Abdullah. "That's why domestic drilling is so important, and why UPDA's investors are thrilled about their tremendous return on investm For that reason, even small businesses benefit from hiring qualified professionals to create their communication or advertising materials. However, for some businesses, the do-it-yourself route is the only option early on. Ultimately, whether you use professionals or rely on your own desktop publishing expertise, the following list of helpful hints can keep your brochure moving in the right direction. Talk to your reader. This gets back to the important premise of 'know your customer'. First, who is your audience? What is the best way to communicate with them? For example, when you talk to engineers, do they want to see photos of your company's equipment or charts on your product's performance? When you talk to the manager of a customer's purchasing department is he or she most interested in productivity, yield, costs, customer service or invoicing systems? Do you know whether customers want to see photos of your facility or your employees or both? Bottom line, what will make potential customers take the time to read your brochure? Clearly define the purpose of your brochure. Will it be your only sales piece? Will you hand it out at a trade show with other materials or mail it to potential customers with a cover letter? Does it need to communicate only general information about your company or actively help you make a sale? The purpose determines its design and content. Define and communicate this clearly to the writer and designer of your brochure. Get ideas about design and information. Check out brochures and other sales material from your competitors and others at the next trade show you attend. Pick up samples that you find attractive and informative to use as a basis for your own project. Look up catalogues in the Thomas Register and check out web pages on the Internet. Try to understand how these companies convey their message. Analyze the information, photos, writing and designs in the materials and use them as a reference when designing your own brochure. One word of caution and advice, don't let those expensive, glossy materials from the large companies intimidate you; learn from them. Get ideas that work from the expensive materials and adapt them to fit your budget. Large companies put large budgets of research and design into their materials, by reviewing them, you, too, can understand what works and use it too. Tell the benefits of your product or service. Remember that you are in business because you solve a problem for your customers and thus, give them a benefit. For example, your potential customer really needs a contractor to build and design parts for his airplane. If you are a parts manufacturer and have aerospace engineers on staff to design these parts, that is a benefit to your customer – be sure they know! How well you communicate your unique benefits to your customers will determine whether or not they will choose to do business with you. Provide something memorable and valuable. Don't bore your audience with sales clich?s or the same old industry charts that everyone uses. Try to create the brochure that people not only remember but also keep on file! Incorporate a call to action. Say "call now" or "visit our website" with the con¬tact information immediately following. Commit the necessary dollars. Although it is tempting to cut corners, this is not the time to give an out-of-work relative the chance to earn a little extra income. Hire an experienced professional to help you with the graphic art and copywriting. It is ideal to hire a marketing communications specialist to coordi¬nate your communications and sales materials. Companies with smaller budgets can find many skilled independent graphic artists and writers rather than large agencies. When hiring graphic artists, copywriters or printers, be sure to review samples of their previous work and ask for written bids. You can find these professionals through your network of business associates or through reference materials. Take your brochure seriously. If you are willing to spend time and money on a brochure, make sure the project is completed on time, on budget and that the company actually uses it for the intended purpose. Place it on your list of projects to manage with very definite timelines. Don't assume that someone else will take care of the details, including proofreading. Remember, this represents your company to the world - give it the time it deserves. Enjoy the proj Getting Into The Business Of Image Consulting tion early on. Ultimately, whether you use professionals or rely on your own desktop publishing expertise, the following list of helpful hints can keep your brochure moving in the right direction.You feel like you’re a square peg in a round hole at the office. You see yourself as a fashion icon or someone who knows the latest trends in clothing, make up and accessories and who dresses and acts in like manner. You have used your knowledge to help out your fashion-challenged friends and family members, turning them from dowdy ducks into graceful swans through the right clothes, the correct make-up and a few lessons in proper bearing, walk and projection.However, you’re working in an office where the majority dress as if they were stuck in the fifties.You decide it’s time to look for more suitable employment, perhaps in a company where the dress code is much more suited to your style. Y Talk to your reader. This gets back to the important premise of 'know your customer'. First, who is your audience? What is the best way to communicate with them? For example, when you talk to engineers, do they want to see photos of your company's equipment or charts on your product's performance? When you talk to the manager of a customer's purchasing department is he or she most interested in productivity, yield, costs, customer service or invoicing systems? Do you know whether customers want to see photos of your facility or your employees or both? Bottom line, what will make potential customers take the time to read your brochure? Clearly define the purpose of your brochure. Will it be your only sales piece? Will you hand it out at a trade show with other materials or mail it to potential customers with a cover letter? Does it need to communicate only general information about your company or actively help you make a sale? The purpose determines its design and content. Define and communicate this clearly to the writer and designer of your brochure. Get ideas about design and information. Check out brochures and other sales material from your competitors and others at the next trade show you attend. Pick up samples that you find attractive and informative to use as a basis for your own project. Look up catalogues in the Thomas Register and check out web pages on the Internet. Try to understand how these companies convey their message. Analyze the information, photos, writing and designs in the materials and use them as a reference when designing your own brochure. One word of caution and advice, don't let those expensive, glossy materials from the large companies intimidate you; learn from them. Get ideas that work from the expensive materials and adapt them to fit your budget. Large companies put large budgets of research and design into their materials, by reviewing them, you, too, can understand what works and use it too. Tell the benefits of your product or service. Remember that you are in business because you solve a problem for your customers and thus, give them a benefit. For example, your potential customer really needs a contractor to build and design parts for his airplane. If you are a parts manufacturer and have aerospace engineers on staff to design these parts, that is a benefit to your customer – be sure they know! How well you communicate your unique benefits to your customers will determine whether or not they will choose to do business with you. Provide something memorable and valuable. Don't bore your audience with sales clich?s or the same old industry charts that everyone uses. Try to create the brochure that people not only remember but also keep on file! Incorporate a call to action. Say "call now" or "visit our website" with the con¬tact information immediately following. Commit the necessary dollars. Although it is tempting to cut corners, this is not the time to give an out-of-work relative the chance to earn a little extra income. Hire an experienced professional to help you with the graphic art and copywriting. It is ideal to hire a marketing communications specialist to coordi¬nate your communications and sales materials. Companies with smaller budgets can find many skilled independent graphic artists and writers rather than large agencies. When hiring graphic artists, copywriters or printers, be sure to review samples of their previous work and ask for written bids. You can find these professionals through your network of business associates or through reference materials. Take your brochure seriously. If you are willing to spend time and money on a brochure, make sure the project is completed on time, on budget and that the company actually uses it for the intended purpose. Place it on your list of projects to manage with very definite timelines. Don't assume that someone else will take care of the details, including proofreading. Remember, this represents your company to the world - give it the time it deserves. Enjoy the proj Sending Money Abroad e only general information about your company or actively help you make a sale? The purpose determines its design and content. Define and communicate this clearly to the writer and designer of your brochure.Boundaries have been broken and now within a few minutes you can send money abroad. Previously sending money abroad wasn’t so easy as anyone wishing to send money abroad had to undergo various formalities. Those formalities were very grueling and involved a lot of paperwork but now time has changed as with a simple click you can send money abroad.Sending money abroad has now become a very easy and smooth task as you don’t have to do any paperwork. All you need to do is just click on the money transfer, enter yours and the receiver’s account number, and within a few minutes money will be transferred.There are various websites helping you in sending money abroad but it’s Afex that leads them all. Get ideas about design and information. Check out brochures and other sales material from your competitors and others at the next trade show you attend. Pick up samples that you find attractive and informative to use as a basis for your own project. Look up catalogues in the Thomas Register and check out web pages on the Internet. Try to understand how these companies convey their message. Analyze the information, photos, writing and designs in the materials and use them as a reference when designing your own brochure. One word of caution and advice, don't let those expensive, glossy materials from the large companies intimidate you; learn from them. Get ideas that work from the expensive materials and adapt them to fit your budget. Large companies put large budgets of research and design into their materials, by reviewing them, you, too, can understand what works and use it too. Tell the benefits of your product or service. Remember that you are in business because you solve a problem for your customers and thus, give them a benefit. For example, your potential customer really needs a contractor to build and design parts for his airplane. If you are a parts manufacturer and have aerospace engineers on staff to design these parts, that is a benefit to your customer – be sure they know! How well you communicate your unique benefits to your customers will determine whether or not they will choose to do business with you. Provide something memorable and valuable. Don't bore your audience with sales clich?s or the same old industry charts that everyone uses. Try to create the brochure that people not only remember but also keep on file! Incorporate a call to action. Say "call now" or "visit our website" with the con¬tact information immediately following. Commit the necessary dollars. Although it is tempting to cut corners, this is not the time to give an out-of-work relative the chance to earn a little extra income. Hire an experienced professional to help you with the graphic art and copywriting. It is ideal to hire a marketing communications specialist to coordi¬nate your communications and sales materials. Companies with smaller budgets can find many skilled independent graphic artists and writers rather than large agencies. When hiring graphic artists, copywriters or printers, be sure to review samples of their previous work and ask for written bids. You can find these professionals through your network of business associates or through reference materials. Take your brochure seriously. If you are willing to spend time and money on a brochure, make sure the project is completed on time, on budget and that the company actually uses it for the intended purpose. Place it on your list of projects to manage with very definite timelines. Don't assume that someone else will take care of the details, including proofreading. Remember, this represents your company to the world - give it the time it deserves. Enjoy the proj Poor Work Ethics Risk Future of U.S. Business, Education and Ultimately Freedom stand what works and use it too.With all of the political campaigning, a report released this fall by the Josephson Institute received very little attention and unfortunately should have been both front page news and the lead story for every major media outlet. This annual report of over 36,000 students revealed poor work ethics where 60% of American high school students in order to improve their performance cheated on a test with 28% said that they stole from a store.What is even more incredible is the disconnect between these students’ behaviors and their personal beliefs. Ninety-two percent of these students believed that their personal characters were satisfactory with a whopping 74% agreeing to the statement: "When it comes Tell the benefits of your product or service. Remember that you are in business because you solve a problem for your customers and thus, give them a benefit. For example, your potential customer really needs a contractor to build and design parts for his airplane. If you are a parts manufacturer and have aerospace engineers on staff to design these parts, that is a benefit to your customer – be sure they know! How well you communicate your unique benefits to your customers will determine whether or not they will choose to do business with you. Provide something memorable and valuable. Don't bore your audience with sales clich?s or the same old industry charts that everyone uses. Try to create the brochure that people not only remember but also keep on file! Incorporate a call to action. Say "call now" or "visit our website" with the con¬tact information immediately following. Commit the necessary dollars. Although it is tempting to cut corners, this is not the time to give an out-of-work relative the chance to earn a little extra income. Hire an experienced professional to help you with the graphic art and copywriting. It is ideal to hire a marketing communications specialist to coordi¬nate your communications and sales materials. Companies with smaller budgets can find many skilled independent graphic artists and writers rather than large agencies. When hiring graphic artists, copywriters or printers, be sure to review samples of their previous work and ask for written bids. You can find these professionals through your network of business associates or through reference materials. Take your brochure seriously. If you are willing to spend time and money on a brochure, make sure the project is completed on time, on budget and that the company actually uses it for the intended purpose. Place it on your list of projects to manage with very definite timelines. Don't assume that someone else will take care of the details, including proofreading. Remember, this represents your company to the world - give it the time it deserves. Enjoy the proj Why Good Staff Leave and What to Do About It hance to earn a little extra income. Hire an experienced professional to help you with the graphic art and copywriting. It is ideal to hire a marketing communications specialist to coordi¬nate your communications and sales materials. Companies with smaller budgets can find many skilled independent graphic artists and writers rather than large agencies.In the last five years, employee turnover has increased by more than 25 percent. Recent studies reveal that at any one time, one third of employees plan to resign within the next two years. Successive surveys in the UK of employee turnover show that in retailing, hotels and restaurants, call centers and other lower paid groups turnover is often in excess of 50% per annum.Why is this happening?Since the late 1980s when organizations began to downsize to reduce costs, employees got the message that everyone was expendable. When organizations cut back a little too much there were always other willing recruits to join. Other processes which historically reinforced the employee/employer ‘ When hiring graphic artists, copywriters or printers, be sure to review samples of their previous work and ask for written bids. You can find these professionals through your network of business associates or through reference materials. Take your brochure seriously. If you are willing to spend time and money on a brochure, make sure the project is completed on time, on budget and that the company actually uses it for the intended purpose. Place it on your list of projects to manage with very definite timelines. Don't assume that someone else will take care of the details, including proofreading. Remember, this represents your company to the world - give it the time it deserves. Enjoy the project and the rewards. Remember that a well-done communications project impacts your company's profits as well as its image. A good marketing piece also helps inform and focus the sales staff and provide them tools for the trade. Develop the message with your sales force and they will utilize the brochure in their customer calls.
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