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So You Want to Tap Into the Minneapolis, MN Medical Device Industry?! oal, and selected the right strategy to achieve it.So you want to tap into the Minneapolis, MN Medical Device industry, aka 'Medical Alley'? Although this is a huge and rapidly growing industry, it seems impossible to tap into unless you already have medical device experience!As a Technical Recruiter, I have actually had great success placing folks into medical device companies who had little or no medical device experience at all! How did I do it? I would be lying if I said it was easy, but then again, I would be lying if I said it was hard! It seems to me that the number one most important skill that medical device companies look for is folks with strong experience in a HIGHLY REGULATED INDUSTRY!Let's say that you are currently a Manufacturing Engineer at a foods processing facility. Although food and medical device aren't similar in the product sense (actually Sad to say, there's a little more work to do in the form of "The Message." Hopefully, this will alter people's inaccurate perceptions about you and the organization. But it must be carefully written so that it is persuasive and perceived as creditable and believable. And it must speak the truth clearly and with authority. Now, here is where your "beasts of burden" come in. They are the communications tactics that will carry your newly-minted message from your computer direct to the attention of those key target audience members whose behavior you hope to alter in your direction. Happily, there are scores of communications tactics awaiting your pleasure. You might use a speech to communicate your message, or letters-to-the-editor, press releases, emails, brochures or face- to-face meetings, and many other tactics. Sooner or later, you'll wonder if you're making any progress towards your behavioral goal. Of course, you'll monitor local print and broadcast media, but REmonitoring those key audience members by i Become A Registered Nurse I believe this about public relations.Registered nurses play a significant role in promoting healthy lifestyles. They serve as educators for individuals, families, patients, and communities. To become a registered nurse, one should be capable of planning, assessing, evaluating, implementing, and co-coordinating total patient care. These nurses should be ready to work with people in a variety of areas such as hospitals, home health care agencies, clinics and offices of physicians, outpatient care centers, temporary help agencies, outpatient care centers, government agencies, schools, and nursing homes. Key components to become a registered nurse are experience and education; the job requires absolute dedication and patience. To become a registered nurse one should have a Bachelor of Nursing degree from an accredited institution.There are a number of educational p People act on their own perception of the facts before them, which leads to predictable behaviors about which something can be done. So, when we create, change or reinforce that opinion by reaching, persuading and moving-to-desired-action those people whose behaviors affect the organization, the public relations mission is accomplished. That fundamental premise grew out of many years in the public relations business. A time when I became increasingly appalled at what many general management people believe about public relations, if anything, and how the discipline does or does not fit into their organization's strategic plan. The result is, I've become a "preacher," but not to public relations practitioners. Rather, I direct my commentary to those general management people who, daily, pursue their goals and objectives largely without the insights, behavioral strategies and sheer power public relations can bring to the table. Here's what I believe they're missing, i.e., the essentials that flow from the fundamental premise at the top of this article. Any organization - non-profit, association, business, public entity, including your own -MUST take into account the perceptions held by those external audiences whose behaviors affect your organization, or the behaviors flowing from those perceptions can hurt. What my commentaries often say to these managers is this: Is it just a matter of "hits?" You know, articles or interviews sold to editors? Is that all there is to public relations? Or, could there be more to it? Of course there's more to it! Why do you want the "hits" in the first place? What are you trying to accomplish? I believe you want the same thing every other buyer of public relations services wants: to change somebody's behavior in a way that really helps your organization reach its objectives. So, wouldn't it make more sense to start at the beginning and save tactics like "publicity hits" for that moment when you need those "beasts of burden" to do their thing? Namely, to efficiently carry persuasive messages to a key target audience of yours? Sure it would. So let's start by taking a close look at those external target publics. They're so important because how they think and behave can actually determine the success or failure of your business. Don't believe it? Look at those audiences whose behaviors directly affect the organization's operations, in particular those completely unaware that the organization even exists. Are they likely to buy its products or services? No. Look at an external audience where members harbor a serious misconception about the organization. Does this reduce their desire to do business with you? Yes. Look at an external audience some of whose members believe a grossly negative and inaccurate set of facts about the organization. Will those people be first in line to buy its products or services? No. Obviously, what your key target audience believes about your organization matters, and matters a lot! Why not begin by heading-off such a situation by listing those outside groups - those target audiences - in order of how much their behaviors affect your organization? We'll use #1 on your list as our trial "public." Start by interacting with that group of people. Of course, if the budget will stand it, you could use a survey firm to gather their feelings, thoughts and perceptions. Minus such a budget, do it yourself, and with colleagues, by carefully monitoring how these people feel about your organization. When you interact this way, you get to ask a lot of questions and gather a lot of information you really need. What are you hearing? Misconceptions that need straightening out? Rumors that should not be allowed to fester? Inaccurate beliefs about your products and services that could drive people away from you? Notice other perceptions about you and your organization that need to be altered? The answers to such questions prepare you to create your public relations goal. In brief, alter, and thus correct, each misconception, or inaccuracy, or rumor. Worthy goals all! You've made some real progress by monitoring perceptions within your key target audience. You've established your public relations goal, and selected the right strategy to achieve it. Sad to say, there's a little more work to do in the form of "The Message." Hopefully, this will alter people's inaccurate perceptions about you and the organization. But it must be carefully written so that it is persuasive and perceived as creditable and believable. And it must speak the truth clearly and with authority. Now, here is where your "beasts of burden" come in. They are the communications tactics that will carry your newly-minted message from your computer direct to the attention of those key target audience members whose behavior you hope to alter in your direction. Happily, there are scores of communications tactics awaiting your pleasure. You might use a speech to communicate your message, or letters-to-the-editor, press releases, emails, brochures or face- to-face meetings, and many other tactics. Sooner or later, you'll wonder if you're making any progress towards your behavioral goal. Of course, you'll monitor local print and broadcast media, but REmonitoring those key audience members by in Hezbollah's Affect on Freight Transportation and Warehousing in Lebanon t the top of this article.Hezbollah terrorists are not just destroying homes and towns in Israel. Their actions are also having an effect on the global freight industry. As fighting continues in Lebanon the damage caused to Beirut airport has prevented any commercial flights to or from the country.A number of leading freight services (including companies from the UK) have suspended the transport of cargo to and from Beirut airport. Many freight forwarding companies are still transporting goods to Damascus. However if Syria enters the fray in support of Hezbollah with whom it has close links, commercial transportation to that country might also be affected.One of the key reasons for the cessation of flights to Beirut is the fact that the city’s runway has been damaged. However, if the violence escalates the issue of safety may also prevent the Any organization - non-profit, association, business, public entity, including your own -MUST take into account the perceptions held by those external audiences whose behaviors affect your organization, or the behaviors flowing from those perceptions can hurt. What my commentaries often say to these managers is this: Is it just a matter of "hits?" You know, articles or interviews sold to editors? Is that all there is to public relations? Or, could there be more to it? Of course there's more to it! Why do you want the "hits" in the first place? What are you trying to accomplish? I believe you want the same thing every other buyer of public relations services wants: to change somebody's behavior in a way that really helps your organization reach its objectives. So, wouldn't it make more sense to start at the beginning and save tactics like "publicity hits" for that moment when you need those "beasts of burden" to do their thing? Namely, to efficiently carry persuasive messages to a key target audience of yours? Sure it would. So let's start by taking a close look at those external target publics. They're so important because how they think and behave can actually determine the success or failure of your business. Don't believe it? Look at those audiences whose behaviors directly affect the organization's operations, in particular those completely unaware that the organization even exists. Are they likely to buy its products or services? No. Look at an external audience where members harbor a serious misconception about the organization. Does this reduce their desire to do business with you? Yes. Look at an external audience some of whose members believe a grossly negative and inaccurate set of facts about the organization. Will those people be first in line to buy its products or services? No. Obviously, what your key target audience believes about your organization matters, and matters a lot! Why not begin by heading-off such a situation by listing those outside groups - those target audiences - in order of how much their behaviors affect your organization? We'll use #1 on your list as our trial "public." Start by interacting with that group of people. Of course, if the budget will stand it, you could use a survey firm to gather their feelings, thoughts and perceptions. Minus such a budget, do it yourself, and with colleagues, by carefully monitoring how these people feel about your organization. When you interact this way, you get to ask a lot of questions and gather a lot of information you really need. What are you hearing? Misconceptions that need straightening out? Rumors that should not be allowed to fester? Inaccurate beliefs about your products and services that could drive people away from you? Notice other perceptions about you and your organization that need to be altered? The answers to such questions prepare you to create your public relations goal. In brief, alter, and thus correct, each misconception, or inaccuracy, or rumor. Worthy goals all! You've made some real progress by monitoring perceptions within your key target audience. You've established your public relations goal, and selected the right strategy to achieve it. Sad to say, there's a little more work to do in the form of "The Message." Hopefully, this will alter people's inaccurate perceptions about you and the organization. But it must be carefully written so that it is persuasive and perceived as creditable and believable. And it must speak the truth clearly and with authority. Now, here is where your "beasts of burden" come in. They are the communications tactics that will carry your newly-minted message from your computer direct to the attention of those key target audience members whose behavior you hope to alter in your direction. Happily, there are scores of communications tactics awaiting your pleasure. You might use a speech to communicate your message, or letters-to-the-editor, press releases, emails, brochures or face- to-face meetings, and many other tactics. Sooner or later, you'll wonder if you're making any progress towards your behavioral goal. Of course, you'll monitor local print and broadcast media, but REmonitoring those key audience members by i Need A Hot Tip On Writing Business Letter That Sells? it would.On the Internet, the competition is fierce. If your business is going to compete successfully you need to possess the ability to write persuasive sales letters. It's that critical if you want to be an online success.There are hundreds or thousands of marketers out there with exactly the same type of service or product you are selling; If you want to get your share of the market, you need to stand out among the crowd. And mastering the art of writing effective copy will help you very much.Don’t let this scare you! No one was born a copywriter. Copywriting is a learnable skill and one you should practice for yourself.Learning how to write business letter is not difficult. You can learn the proper business format for writing a letter by studying successful sales letters.No wonder advertisers and copywriters So let's start by taking a close look at those external target publics. They're so important because how they think and behave can actually determine the success or failure of your business. Don't believe it? Look at those audiences whose behaviors directly affect the organization's operations, in particular those completely unaware that the organization even exists. Are they likely to buy its products or services? No. Look at an external audience where members harbor a serious misconception about the organization. Does this reduce their desire to do business with you? Yes. Look at an external audience some of whose members believe a grossly negative and inaccurate set of facts about the organization. Will those people be first in line to buy its products or services? No. Obviously, what your key target audience believes about your organization matters, and matters a lot! Why not begin by heading-off such a situation by listing those outside groups - those target audiences - in order of how much their behaviors affect your organization? We'll use #1 on your list as our trial "public." Start by interacting with that group of people. Of course, if the budget will stand it, you could use a survey firm to gather their feelings, thoughts and perceptions. Minus such a budget, do it yourself, and with colleagues, by carefully monitoring how these people feel about your organization. When you interact this way, you get to ask a lot of questions and gather a lot of information you really need. What are you hearing? Misconceptions that need straightening out? Rumors that should not be allowed to fester? Inaccurate beliefs about your products and services that could drive people away from you? Notice other perceptions about you and your organization that need to be altered? The answers to such questions prepare you to create your public relations goal. In brief, alter, and thus correct, each misconception, or inaccuracy, or rumor. Worthy goals all! You've made some real progress by monitoring perceptions within your key target audience. You've established your public relations goal, and selected the right strategy to achieve it. Sad to say, there's a little more work to do in the form of "The Message." Hopefully, this will alter people's inaccurate perceptions about you and the organization. But it must be carefully written so that it is persuasive and perceived as creditable and believable. And it must speak the truth clearly and with authority. Now, here is where your "beasts of burden" come in. They are the communications tactics that will carry your newly-minted message from your computer direct to the attention of those key target audience members whose behavior you hope to alter in your direction. Happily, there are scores of communications tactics awaiting your pleasure. You might use a speech to communicate your message, or letters-to-the-editor, press releases, emails, brochures or face- to-face meetings, and many other tactics. Sooner or later, you'll wonder if you're making any progress towards your behavioral goal. Of course, you'll monitor local print and broadcast media, but REmonitoring those key audience members by i Tools of a Skip Tracer organization?Would you go to a dentist if the only tools she used are a chainsaw and a stick? Would you take your car to be serviced by a mechanic whose only tools were a chocolate bar and hairspray? Would you want to your child to go to an elementary school that only taught from a set of 1964 encyclopedias?Do you see the connection?It is simple- really. Every industry has tools that can be specific to that industry. The dentist would never use a chainsaw (even though it may feel like it). They use tools that are designed and that are necessary for the successful completion of their task- to assist with proper dental hygiene. The same holds true for ever other profession and industry. At the same time, to take tools that may not be useful to an industry can slow down the process.So here comes the question. Why is it that th We'll use #1 on your list as our trial "public." Start by interacting with that group of people. Of course, if the budget will stand it, you could use a survey firm to gather their feelings, thoughts and perceptions. Minus such a budget, do it yourself, and with colleagues, by carefully monitoring how these people feel about your organization. When you interact this way, you get to ask a lot of questions and gather a lot of information you really need. What are you hearing? Misconceptions that need straightening out? Rumors that should not be allowed to fester? Inaccurate beliefs about your products and services that could drive people away from you? Notice other perceptions about you and your organization that need to be altered? The answers to such questions prepare you to create your public relations goal. In brief, alter, and thus correct, each misconception, or inaccuracy, or rumor. Worthy goals all! You've made some real progress by monitoring perceptions within your key target audience. You've established your public relations goal, and selected the right strategy to achieve it. Sad to say, there's a little more work to do in the form of "The Message." Hopefully, this will alter people's inaccurate perceptions about you and the organization. But it must be carefully written so that it is persuasive and perceived as creditable and believable. And it must speak the truth clearly and with authority. Now, here is where your "beasts of burden" come in. They are the communications tactics that will carry your newly-minted message from your computer direct to the attention of those key target audience members whose behavior you hope to alter in your direction. Happily, there are scores of communications tactics awaiting your pleasure. You might use a speech to communicate your message, or letters-to-the-editor, press releases, emails, brochures or face- to-face meetings, and many other tactics. Sooner or later, you'll wonder if you're making any progress towards your behavioral goal. Of course, you'll monitor local print and broadcast media, but REmonitoring those key audience members by i Offshore IT - Enabled Services from Pakistan oal, and selected the right strategy to achieve it.The IT revolution can still change the destiny of Pakistan, but will require a readjustment of the sights. This readjustment will require her to work with what she has, and not what she currently doesn’t!Pakistan has been unable to produce software developers in increasing numbers, but does possess skilled workers in reasonable numbers in other fields that can provide services to clients all over the developed world through the Internet. These services range from data entry to telemarketing to insurance claims processing to payroll management to computer-aided designing to financial analysis and forecasting.Pakistan’s doctors can be employed for medical data analysis; lawyers can provide legal advice over the Web; graphic designers can produce animations. The possibilities are numerous and the opportunities lucrative. Sad to say, there's a little more work to do in the form of "The Message." Hopefully, this will alter people's inaccurate perceptions about you and the organization. But it must be carefully written so that it is persuasive and perceived as creditable and believable. And it must speak the truth clearly and with authority. Now, here is where your "beasts of burden" come in. They are the communications tactics that will carry your newly-minted message from your computer direct to the attention of those key target audience members whose behavior you hope to alter in your direction. Happily, there are scores of communications tactics awaiting your pleasure. You might use a speech to communicate your message, or letters-to-the-editor, press releases, emails, brochures or face- to-face meetings, and many other tactics. Sooner or later, you'll wonder if you're making any progress towards your behavioral goal. Of course, you'll monitor local print and broadcast media, but REmonitoring those key audience members by interacting with them all over again is the real ticket. This time around, you'll be looking for perception and attitude changes hopefully produced by the combination of your persuasive messages and carefully targeted communications tactics. And you'll be asking lots of questions all over again. If you note considerable movement in opinion in your direction, you may consider your public relations goal as having been achieved. Should little movement be noted, adjustments to the frequency and quantity of you communications tactics should be made. Your message also should be reviewed for its content and direction, and tested again for effect with a panel of target group members. Either way, your public relations program is on track and preparing to deliver the key target audience behaviors your business needs to succeed. Please feel free to publish this article and resource box in your ezine, newsletter, offline publication or website. A copy would be appreciated at bobkelly@TNI.net. Robert A. Kelly © 2003.
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