| Casual Articles |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Finance > Finance > Economic Outlook: Cause and Effect |
|
Casual Articles - Economic Outlook: Cause and Effect
Online Business Effectiveness: What Makes It? do not suck up all the available resources. In our own country, at a time when we should all be left feeling wealthy, we find ourselves burdened with an ever-increasing cost of funding the leviathan instead. I find it hard not to mention again that the current administration has increased spending by more than any other in the history of our nation, despite all the rhetoric about reducing the burden on taxpayers. It’s fair to say that this trend is somewhat universal. Governments worldwide are increasing their burdens (taxes, regulation, intrusion) on society. If this trend is allowed to continue, all the great benefits of the new worldwide growth will be squandered.What makes an on-line business effective are the same ingredients that make any business effective. The only difference is that in an on-line business we don’t see our customers. We don’t see the other people who work in our business. We don’t see most of the people we bring in to the business. But the principles are the same.I did a research study a while back to find out the out the most common factors of effective businesses. My study design was a meta-analysis. All that means is that I studied what other people had already studied about what causes businesses to be effective, and I listed the factors that were most often mentioned. The meta-analysis approach is considered the most powerful of research studies, meaning the results are considered the most valid.After pouring over all the literature on successful business practices my findings boiled down to the following core.1. Effective businesses build into their organization a culture of change because their leaders seem to understand, as William Bridges put it, that “unless organizations change and change quickly they will not survive.” That makes sense. I teach cultural anthropology at a local University. I teach my students that one of the fundamental featu Lest we come across as purely pessimistic, let me add a positive note. According to Bear, Stearns’ chief economist David Malpass in last Monday’s Wall Street Journal, household savings in the U.S. is actually growing quite well, despite all the news to the contrary. He notes that our mechanism for measuring the savings rate of American consumers is flawed (go figure!), and that our measurements also “make no distinction between purchases for immediate consumption and purchases with lasting value,” citing personal education or corporate R&D spending as “consumption” items which should rather be treated as an investments in the future. In other words, things may not be as bad in the U.S. economy as some are painting it. Despite this cause for limited optimism, we still advocate that investors place a fair amount of their assets in positions where they may benefit from a weakening dollar. This is a trend that we see continuing. If we see higher inflation here at home, and a falling dollar overseas, we’d be happier holding foreign securities. We’ve seen emerging markets fall hard this quarter, despite strong results among the businesses, an What is an Expired Domain Name Drop Registrar? If you read many market analyses or economic predictions, you’re in for a lot of muddy thinking.Once a domain expires one of two things will happen. Firstly the domain will expire and become available to register as a domain name through the normal registration process. If the domain has any value then it is likely to be picked up by a name drop registrar.Before we go deeper into the world of dropped names you may want to know what an expired domain name is and how you go about getting hold of an expired domain name.You may have noticed that your registrar offers a back ordering service. A Back order service allows you to pay your domain registrar to try and acquire a specific domain name once it expires.There are drop registrars whose sole purpose is to try and register a domain name once it has dropped. These expired domain name catchers work on behalf of individuals and other domain registrars to acquire domain names on their behalf.Expired domains are a big business as webmasters and large corporations try to grab as many valuable domains as they drop. The reason for this virtual land grab is that many domain names can fetch high resale prices on the open market or have valuable existing traffic or type in traffic potential. Very often, economists and analysts lose track of the difference between cause and effect. Their analysis methods today measure events that tend to happen in concert (correlation), but miss any kind of reasoning about which event leads to the other (causation). The result is a foggy analysis which has little predictive value, but can always say “I told you so” when it’s too late. And, as any engineer will tell you, “correlation does not imply causation”. A key example is the analysis of inflation, where the mainstream press is inordinately foggy-headed, and where government analysts are only too happy to provide support for the fogginess. It’s easy enough to point fingers at some “bad guys” in foreign countries who are causing our prices to rise or our currency to fall, but the reality is that the blame belongs at home. The key is to realize that inflation is, ever and always, caused by government action. Individual goods and services may rise or fall in price without any inflationary pressure, but when you see the overall U.S. price level rising, look to Washington, D.C. for the culprit. Inflation is the reduction in the value of the dollar (or any currency), caused by an increase in the number of dollars chasing the same number of goods. In other words, when the government prints up more money, each dollar you already hold is devalued by the simple fact that more dollars are out there seeking to buy in a world which, at that moment, has no more actual production. Printing more money doesn’t make the world richer. Here’s an experiment in a small “civilization” – a classroom, perhaps. Observe how prices rise when you give 30 people growing amounts of money to purchase the same few candy bars. The situation becomes clear when you observe people willing to pay the equivalent of $45 for a candy bar, simply because more “money” has been pumped into the classroom. No amount of good intention can change the clear result of expanding the money supply. Through the years, every such effort has led to economic disaster, despite the various government-loving economists who try to dispute the facts. The economic reputation of some Latin American nations stems from falling into this inflationary trap; in the U.S., the Jimmy Carter recession was clearly the result of this same catastrophic approach. When you hear about the dollar falling consistently against virtually every foreign currency, it’s a pretty good guess that something is wrong with how our currency is being managed. This is especially true if we realize that most other world currencies are also victims of inflation. We must assume that ours is even more watered-down than most of the world’s. So why aren’t we seeing the full impact of a falling dollar? We’ve only seen price increases in some select items. The reason is simple: we’ve reached a major turning point in history, where production costs are falling so fast that prices of most of the goods we buy are falling faster than the dollar’s value. China’s clothing production, for example, has been so cheap that we don’t even observe the little impact that inflation is having on these prices. In fact, these prices are falling so fast that countries like Mexico, Morocco, Turkey, and Madagascar are “losing jobs” to China. The economic arguments related to this issue are much too deep to address here, (and aren’t the focus of this story) but the idea is that Chinese production will counter the effect of the broader price inflation in many categories. Everything – from clothing to appliances to electronics to toys to batteries – is seeing downward pressure on pricing due to cheaper overseas production. Still, a few types of items are not in position to fall in the newly globalized economy. Among these have been some packaged foods, books, real estate, oil, and metals. Packaged foods and books, of course, have been rising modestly, and may give a good indication of what the real inflation rate is. These items aren’t as greatly influenced by world events and may provide a clearer picture of what our price level is doing. While that may seem like a weak (and unverifiable) method of measuring inflation, I’d argue that it is better than what we get from the government’s CPI index. This offers us a set of prices strongly influenced by government subsidies, trade restrictions, and choices about which items to count and which to avoid. In fact, the CPI is a political index; it tells us little or nothing. Oil -and to some extent, metals- are a different story. Today, when we see oil prices rising, there may be a number of causes, but inflation is certainly a big contributor. China’s rising demand for raw materials like oil and steel is having an effect on prices for most of these goods, of course. But without the added inflationary pressure, there is no doubt that the prices we see would still be lower. Further, commodity-driven price increases, such as that brought on by the oil component in delivery costs for all manufactured items, is distinct from the basic definition of inflation. All of this makes sorting out the precise cause for any particular price movement difficult. Indeed, in a free economy, so many forces converge that no central planner could possibly begin to fathom all the information necessary to adequately manage an economy. Nor could any analyst clearly see where true inflation is taking hold, and where issues are only normal supply and demand. In the end, the best measure of real price inflation is government spending. Is government spending money like it’s going out of style? It’s reasonable to assume that the country is pumping money into the economy. The impact of this activity on prices is not immediate, and information about what governments do is imperfect at best, which is why there is so much controversy and confusion about the cause and effect of these policies. But, in the end, if we observe where money is passed round like crazy, we can assume inflation will eventually take hold again. Where money is not being passed out like free samples, we can find economies most likely to be stable in the coming years. Meanwhile, inflation shrouds the biggest story in decades: prices on manufactured goods are falling at an unprecedented rate. This leads us to reevaluate the wisdom of investing in makers of manufactured goods who maintain operations in developed countries, or even earlier stage developing countries, such as Mexico. But the big story is that costs worldwide are falling, not rising, as the oil-fear crowd would have us believe. Life, at its core, is getting cheaper, not more expensive. Oil and metals may be incrementally more expensive due to greater demand, but this will likely only lead to incentives for marginal producers to dig deeper and recover more of these resources. In the end, those cases balance themselves out. Real estate may rise as long as interest rates remain relatively low, but at some point, this trend will come to an abrupt halt, as it always does. Still, as life’s necessities get cheaper, more money may be available for luxuries or investment, depending upon the individual’s status. This, of course, assumes that the one item getting more costly – governments – do not suck up all the available resources. In our own country, at a time when we should all be left feeling wealthy, we find ourselves burdened with an ever-increasing cost of funding the leviathan instead. I find it hard not to mention again that the current administration has increased spending by more than any other in the history of our nation, despite all the rhetoric about reducing the burden on taxpayers. It’s fair to say that this trend is somewhat universal. Governments worldwide are increasing their burdens (taxes, regulation, intrusion) on society. If this trend is allowed to continue, all the great benefits of the new worldwide growth will be squandered. Lest we come across as purely pessimistic, let me add a positive note. According to Bear, Stearns’ chief economist David Malpass in last Monday’s Wall Street Journal, household savings in the U.S. is actually growing quite well, despite all the news to the contrary. He notes that our mechanism for measuring the savings rate of American consumers is flawed (go figure!), and that our measurements also “make no distinction between purchases for immediate consumption and purchases with lasting value,” citing personal education or corporate R&D spending as “consumption” items which should rather be treated as an investments in the future. In other words, things may not be as bad in the U.S. economy as some are painting it. Despite this cause for limited optimism, we still advocate that investors place a fair amount of their assets in positions where they may benefit from a weakening dollar. This is a trend that we see continuing. If we see higher inflation here at home, and a falling dollar overseas, we’d be happier holding foreign securities. We’ve seen emerging markets fall hard this quarter, despite strong results among the businesses, and Real Estate Postcard Q&A: First Class Mail vs. Bulk Mail situation becomes clear when you observe people willing to pay the equivalent of $45 for a candy bar, simply because more “money” has been pumped into the classroom.
No amount of good intention can change the clear result of expanding the money supply. Through the years, every such effort has led to economic disaster, despite the various government-loving economists who try to dispute the facts. The economic reputation of some Latin American nations stems from falling into this inflationary trap; in the U.S., the Jimmy Carter recession was clearly the result of this same catastrophic approach.Agent's Question:Is it better to send real estate farming postcards by first class mail or bulk mail?Brandon's Answer:There are two major differences between Standard (bulk) mail and First Class mail. First of all, there's the speed factor. The U.S. Postal Service states that Standard mail usually arrives within 3 to 15 business days, while First Class mail averages 1 to 3 business days.Another big difference is that First Class mail offers a return service, while Standard mail does not. Let's say you send 1,000 postcards, but 150 of them have bad addresses. With First Class mail, you would know this because the bad ones would be returned to you (at no extra cost). The post office will also try to forward the postcard if the recipient has moved.But if you sent those 1,000 postcards by Standard mail, you wouldn't know about the bad addresses because Standard mail doesn't return to sender. In all likelihood the 150 postcards with bad addresses would wind up in the trash.A Postcard Revelation I once knew a broker whose agents had been mailing their farming postcards by Standard mail. The office later switched to First Class mail for faster delivery, and they were shocked by the numbe When you hear about the dollar falling consistently against virtually every foreign currency, it’s a pretty good guess that something is wrong with how our currency is being managed. This is especially true if we realize that most other world currencies are also victims of inflation. We must assume that ours is even more watered-down than most of the world’s. So why aren’t we seeing the full impact of a falling dollar? We’ve only seen price increases in some select items. The reason is simple: we’ve reached a major turning point in history, where production costs are falling so fast that prices of most of the goods we buy are falling faster than the dollar’s value. China’s clothing production, for example, has been so cheap that we don’t even observe the little impact that inflation is having on these prices. In fact, these prices are falling so fast that countries like Mexico, Morocco, Turkey, and Madagascar are “losing jobs” to China. The economic arguments related to this issue are much too deep to address here, (and aren’t the focus of this story) but the idea is that Chinese production will counter the effect of the broader price inflation in many categories. Everything – from clothing to appliances to electronics to toys to batteries – is seeing downward pressure on pricing due to cheaper overseas production. Still, a few types of items are not in position to fall in the newly globalized economy. Among these have been some packaged foods, books, real estate, oil, and metals. Packaged foods and books, of course, have been rising modestly, and may give a good indication of what the real inflation rate is. These items aren’t as greatly influenced by world events and may provide a clearer picture of what our price level is doing. While that may seem like a weak (and unverifiable) method of measuring inflation, I’d argue that it is better than what we get from the government’s CPI index. This offers us a set of prices strongly influenced by government subsidies, trade restrictions, and choices about which items to count and which to avoid. In fact, the CPI is a political index; it tells us little or nothing. Oil -and to some extent, metals- are a different story. Today, when we see oil prices rising, there may be a number of causes, but inflation is certainly a big contributor. China’s rising demand for raw materials like oil and steel is having an effect on prices for most of these goods, of course. But without the added inflationary pressure, there is no doubt that the prices we see would still be lower. Further, commodity-driven price increases, such as that brought on by the oil component in delivery costs for all manufactured items, is distinct from the basic definition of inflation. All of this makes sorting out the precise cause for any particular price movement difficult. Indeed, in a free economy, so many forces converge that no central planner could possibly begin to fathom all the information necessary to adequately manage an economy. Nor could any analyst clearly see where true inflation is taking hold, and where issues are only normal supply and demand. In the end, the best measure of real price inflation is government spending. Is government spending money like it’s going out of style? It’s reasonable to assume that the country is pumping money into the economy. The impact of this activity on prices is not immediate, and information about what governments do is imperfect at best, which is why there is so much controversy and confusion about the cause and effect of these policies. But, in the end, if we observe where money is passed round like crazy, we can assume inflation will eventually take hold again. Where money is not being passed out like free samples, we can find economies most likely to be stable in the coming years. Meanwhile, inflation shrouds the biggest story in decades: prices on manufactured goods are falling at an unprecedented rate. This leads us to reevaluate the wisdom of investing in makers of manufactured goods who maintain operations in developed countries, or even earlier stage developing countries, such as Mexico. But the big story is that costs worldwide are falling, not rising, as the oil-fear crowd would have us believe. Life, at its core, is getting cheaper, not more expensive. Oil and metals may be incrementally more expensive due to greater demand, but this will likely only lead to incentives for marginal producers to dig deeper and recover more of these resources. In the end, those cases balance themselves out. Real estate may rise as long as interest rates remain relatively low, but at some point, this trend will come to an abrupt halt, as it always does. Still, as life’s necessities get cheaper, more money may be available for luxuries or investment, depending upon the individual’s status. This, of course, assumes that the one item getting more costly – governments – do not suck up all the available resources. In our own country, at a time when we should all be left feeling wealthy, we find ourselves burdened with an ever-increasing cost of funding the leviathan instead. I find it hard not to mention again that the current administration has increased spending by more than any other in the history of our nation, despite all the rhetoric about reducing the burden on taxpayers. It’s fair to say that this trend is somewhat universal. Governments worldwide are increasing their burdens (taxes, regulation, intrusion) on society. If this trend is allowed to continue, all the great benefits of the new worldwide growth will be squandered. Lest we come across as purely pessimistic, let me add a positive note. According to Bear, Stearns’ chief economist David Malpass in last Monday’s Wall Street Journal, household savings in the U.S. is actually growing quite well, despite all the news to the contrary. He notes that our mechanism for measuring the savings rate of American consumers is flawed (go figure!), and that our measurements also “make no distinction between purchases for immediate consumption and purchases with lasting value,” citing personal education or corporate R&D spending as “consumption” items which should rather be treated as an investments in the future. In other words, things may not be as bad in the U.S. economy as some are painting it. Despite this cause for limited optimism, we still advocate that investors place a fair amount of their assets in positions where they may benefit from a weakening dollar. This is a trend that we see continuing. If we see higher inflation here at home, and a falling dollar overseas, we’d be happier holding foreign securities. We’ve seen emerging markets fall hard this quarter, despite strong results among the businesses, an How Can I Get A Personal Loan to toys to batteries – is seeing downward pressure on pricing due to cheaper overseas production. Still, a few types of items are not in position to fall in the newly globalized economy. Among these have been some packaged foods, books, real estate, oil, and metals.A personal loan is a loan that you can get for any particular reason. You can do with the money whatever you want. Whether you want it to consolidate your debts, buy a new car, fix up the house, or take a trip - that is up to you to decide. Here are some things you need to know about how to get a personal loan.Two KindsPersonal loans come in basically two forms - secured and unsecured. The secured form of a personal loan means, like most loans, that you could lose the item if you do not make the payments. Security is usually in the form of a house, but a car will usually work, too, for a smaller loan. Having security for a loan will usually mean that you can get a larger loan and a much better rate of interest. This is the best kind of personal loan to get.An unsecured loan means that you give nothing in the form of security for the loan. Since it also means a greater risk to the lender, this type of loan usually means higher interest rates, and a shorter time for repayment.What Is NeededIn order to qualify for this type of loan you will need a couple of things. The lender is not going to loan money to anybody who walks in off the street. So, besides the usual identification requirements, you will need Packaged foods and books, of course, have been rising modestly, and may give a good indication of what the real inflation rate is. These items aren’t as greatly influenced by world events and may provide a clearer picture of what our price level is doing. While that may seem like a weak (and unverifiable) method of measuring inflation, I’d argue that it is better than what we get from the government’s CPI index. This offers us a set of prices strongly influenced by government subsidies, trade restrictions, and choices about which items to count and which to avoid. In fact, the CPI is a political index; it tells us little or nothing. Oil -and to some extent, metals- are a different story. Today, when we see oil prices rising, there may be a number of causes, but inflation is certainly a big contributor. China’s rising demand for raw materials like oil and steel is having an effect on prices for most of these goods, of course. But without the added inflationary pressure, there is no doubt that the prices we see would still be lower. Further, commodity-driven price increases, such as that brought on by the oil component in delivery costs for all manufactured items, is distinct from the basic definition of inflation. All of this makes sorting out the precise cause for any particular price movement difficult. Indeed, in a free economy, so many forces converge that no central planner could possibly begin to fathom all the information necessary to adequately manage an economy. Nor could any analyst clearly see where true inflation is taking hold, and where issues are only normal supply and demand. In the end, the best measure of real price inflation is government spending. Is government spending money like it’s going out of style? It’s reasonable to assume that the country is pumping money into the economy. The impact of this activity on prices is not immediate, and information about what governments do is imperfect at best, which is why there is so much controversy and confusion about the cause and effect of these policies. But, in the end, if we observe where money is passed round like crazy, we can assume inflation will eventually take hold again. Where money is not being passed out like free samples, we can find economies most likely to be stable in the coming years. Meanwhile, inflation shrouds the biggest story in decades: prices on manufactured goods are falling at an unprecedented rate. This leads us to reevaluate the wisdom of investing in makers of manufactured goods who maintain operations in developed countries, or even earlier stage developing countries, such as Mexico. But the big story is that costs worldwide are falling, not rising, as the oil-fear crowd would have us believe. Life, at its core, is getting cheaper, not more expensive. Oil and metals may be incrementally more expensive due to greater demand, but this will likely only lead to incentives for marginal producers to dig deeper and recover more of these resources. In the end, those cases balance themselves out. Real estate may rise as long as interest rates remain relatively low, but at some point, this trend will come to an abrupt halt, as it always does. Still, as life’s necessities get cheaper, more money may be available for luxuries or investment, depending upon the individual’s status. This, of course, assumes that the one item getting more costly – governments – do not suck up all the available resources. In our own country, at a time when we should all be left feeling wealthy, we find ourselves burdened with an ever-increasing cost of funding the leviathan instead. I find it hard not to mention again that the current administration has increased spending by more than any other in the history of our nation, despite all the rhetoric about reducing the burden on taxpayers. It’s fair to say that this trend is somewhat universal. Governments worldwide are increasing their burdens (taxes, regulation, intrusion) on society. If this trend is allowed to continue, all the great benefits of the new worldwide growth will be squandered. Lest we come across as purely pessimistic, let me add a positive note. According to Bear, Stearns’ chief economist David Malpass in last Monday’s Wall Street Journal, household savings in the U.S. is actually growing quite well, despite all the news to the contrary. He notes that our mechanism for measuring the savings rate of American consumers is flawed (go figure!), and that our measurements also “make no distinction between purchases for immediate consumption and purchases with lasting value,” citing personal education or corporate R&D spending as “consumption” items which should rather be treated as an investments in the future. In other words, things may not be as bad in the U.S. economy as some are painting it. Despite this cause for limited optimism, we still advocate that investors place a fair amount of their assets in positions where they may benefit from a weakening dollar. This is a trend that we see continuing. If we see higher inflation here at home, and a falling dollar overseas, we’d be happier holding foreign securities. We’ve seen emerging markets fall hard this quarter, despite strong results among the businesses, an The Secret to Business Success for Entrepreneurs, Part II - Network Marketing where issues are only normal supply and demand. In the end, the best measure of real price inflation is government spending. Is government spending money like it’s going out of style? It’s reasonable to assume that the country is pumping money into the economy.So you've started a network marketing business and are trying to figure out what to do next. Here are 10 Tips For Success in Network Marketing whether you work your home based business part time or full time.Develop a better business plan. If you keep doing what you are doing, you'll end up with the same results. Promote your business consistently. Work at finding people who are trying to find you. Create action plans for your key distributors. If they have passion and are willing to work help them create success early on. Be passionate about what you do. Work at maximum fire! Don't recruit for a day and then try it again in a week. Create heat in your words, fire in your eyes and a flame in your presence everyday. Survey your customers. Maybe the way you're doing business is costing you relationships. The first word in Network Marketing is NETWORK. Make sure you are building a Network of loyal customers. Set up goal boards and performance charts among yo The impact of this activity on prices is not immediate, and information about what governments do is imperfect at best, which is why there is so much controversy and confusion about the cause and effect of these policies. But, in the end, if we observe where money is passed round like crazy, we can assume inflation will eventually take hold again. Where money is not being passed out like free samples, we can find economies most likely to be stable in the coming years. Meanwhile, inflation shrouds the biggest story in decades: prices on manufactured goods are falling at an unprecedented rate. This leads us to reevaluate the wisdom of investing in makers of manufactured goods who maintain operations in developed countries, or even earlier stage developing countries, such as Mexico. But the big story is that costs worldwide are falling, not rising, as the oil-fear crowd would have us believe. Life, at its core, is getting cheaper, not more expensive. Oil and metals may be incrementally more expensive due to greater demand, but this will likely only lead to incentives for marginal producers to dig deeper and recover more of these resources. In the end, those cases balance themselves out. Real estate may rise as long as interest rates remain relatively low, but at some point, this trend will come to an abrupt halt, as it always does. Still, as life’s necessities get cheaper, more money may be available for luxuries or investment, depending upon the individual’s status. This, of course, assumes that the one item getting more costly – governments – do not suck up all the available resources. In our own country, at a time when we should all be left feeling wealthy, we find ourselves burdened with an ever-increasing cost of funding the leviathan instead. I find it hard not to mention again that the current administration has increased spending by more than any other in the history of our nation, despite all the rhetoric about reducing the burden on taxpayers. It’s fair to say that this trend is somewhat universal. Governments worldwide are increasing their burdens (taxes, regulation, intrusion) on society. If this trend is allowed to continue, all the great benefits of the new worldwide growth will be squandered. Lest we come across as purely pessimistic, let me add a positive note. According to Bear, Stearns’ chief economist David Malpass in last Monday’s Wall Street Journal, household savings in the U.S. is actually growing quite well, despite all the news to the contrary. He notes that our mechanism for measuring the savings rate of American consumers is flawed (go figure!), and that our measurements also “make no distinction between purchases for immediate consumption and purchases with lasting value,” citing personal education or corporate R&D spending as “consumption” items which should rather be treated as an investments in the future. In other words, things may not be as bad in the U.S. economy as some are painting it. Despite this cause for limited optimism, we still advocate that investors place a fair amount of their assets in positions where they may benefit from a weakening dollar. This is a trend that we see continuing. If we see higher inflation here at home, and a falling dollar overseas, we’d be happier holding foreign securities. We’ve seen emerging markets fall hard this quarter, despite strong results among the businesses, an Targeted Email Marketing for List Building Success do not suck up all the available resources. In our own country, at a time when we should all be left feeling wealthy, we find ourselves burdened with an ever-increasing cost of funding the leviathan instead. I find it hard not to mention again that the current administration has increased spending by more than any other in the history of our nation, despite all the rhetoric about reducing the burden on taxpayers. It’s fair to say that this trend is somewhat universal. Governments worldwide are increasing their burdens (taxes, regulation, intrusion) on society. If this trend is allowed to continue, all the great benefits of the new worldwide growth will be squandered.Targeted email marketing a form of direct and bulk emailing to market your website to potential customers. Mainly this is done by emailing to specific people who have requested information pertaining to what you have to offer. With Target Email Marketing there are many steps to follow. Below are the first 5 steps to ensure that you are providing a profitable marketing strategy.1. Make sure that the provider you choose can create an outstanding message. Pretty templates, graphics and sending the email just don’t cut it anymore. Your email needs to stand out from all the others. Try to locate a provider that can relate international language emails, personalized and conditional subject titles. This will increase your range of potential customers.2. Ensure that you have the most updated reporting and tracking functions that are out there. Email programs and messages that are reported and tracked provide a better form of content strategy and detailing activities of the receivers. Tracking open mail, those click through, allow you to be able to remarketing tracking to pinpoint and create new campaigns from previous history and activity.3. Make sure that all emails are accurate. Make sure that the emails are tested. No need in having to Lest we come across as purely pessimistic, let me add a positive note. According to Bear, Stearns’ chief economist David Malpass in last Monday’s Wall Street Journal, household savings in the U.S. is actually growing quite well, despite all the news to the contrary. He notes that our mechanism for measuring the savings rate of American consumers is flawed (go figure!), and that our measurements also “make no distinction between purchases for immediate consumption and purchases with lasting value,” citing personal education or corporate R&D spending as “consumption” items which should rather be treated as an investments in the future. In other words, things may not be as bad in the U.S. economy as some are painting it. Despite this cause for limited optimism, we still advocate that investors place a fair amount of their assets in positions where they may benefit from a weakening dollar. This is a trend that we see continuing. If we see higher inflation here at home, and a falling dollar overseas, we’d be happier holding foreign securities. We’ve seen emerging markets fall hard this quarter, despite strong results among the businesses, and little sign of weakening in the economies. Could fear and uncertainty among investors be taking its toll unjustly? Or are these shares simply falling as U.S. interest rates rise? Of course, as always, we advocate sticking to nations where the risk of expropriation is low. Venezuela, China, and Zimbabwe are out. But there are many other nations with promising growth and relatively trustworthy governments – Ireland, Switzerland, and New Zealand are a few that come to mind, not to mention Iceland, Botswana, and even Colombia. None of these are pure or perfect, but each provides reasonable opportunities and fair levels of risk. Don’t let momentary blips in world markets dissuade you. The recent drop in emerging markets is a buying opportunity. Find great companies in nations with respect for rule of law, and buy. This is a pivotal moment in history, and those who ignore it will be left on the sidelines.
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:Discover Which Business Home Internet Work Secrets Produce Results Error Messages Matter, Make No Mistake About It
|