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    How's Your OODA loop?
    What IS an OODA loop?John R. Boyd was a U.S. Air Force fighter pilot active during the 1950's. In the 1970's he helped design the F-16 and then went on to promote a concept called the OODA loop.OODA stands for Observation, Orientation, Decision and Action. This is a basic pattern for how we make tactical decisions. Col. Boyd is credited with coining this term, originating and promoting the concept which has become a strategic centerpiece for multiple military campaigns.Many acknowledge that the OODA loop concept is just as powerful in business as it is in the military. But it is just as powerful and simplistic a tool for an individual as it is for these larger venues. Particularly when it comes to decreasing the downti
    milies owed you money—on which you earn finance charges and late fees every month—you would be positively giddy, too.

    Let’s say you have an outstanding balance of $2,000 on a single credit card. Your annual interest rate is 9%, and your credit card company requires you to make a minimum $30 payment each month. Assuming you do not miss any payments (which would cause your interest rate to rise, as well as add late fees as high as $40 per month), it would take you 204 months to pay off this balance if you make only the minimum $30 payment each month—and by then, you will have paid an extra $1,028.43 in interest. This is how debt begins: A $2,000 charge winds up costing you $3,028.43.

    4. Switch Cards

    If you are still paying an annual fee on your credit card, it’s time to make the switch to a card that is not only free, but rewards yo

    Creating Your Niche & Brand - Part 1
    If you're a coach, student coach, business owner or someone with a desire to get into business, take careful note of the powerful tips and development strategies presented within this series and GET READY to make the leap to ultimate success.Knowing your clients Marketing is the process by which you articulate and espouse the attributes of your business and products to prospective clients. But before you can effectively market your business it’s critical that your service and product offering are in alignment with your target clients’ needs and desires. If they aren’t, you can spend an enormous amount of time, money and effort promoting your services without ever knowing why you get an extremely low take up rate.The
    You’ve probably never heard of Frank X. McNamara, but he revolutionized the way you shop on a daily basis.

    One evening in 1949, McNamara—head of the Hamilton Credit Corporation in New York City—was dining out with two business associates. Their topic of discussion: one of McNamara’s clients, who was defaulting on a loan because he had shared his gasoline and department-store credit cards with some friends in need. Unfortunately, the friends didn’t have the money to pay back what they had borrowed, so the good samaritan was now facing his own financial demise.

    As the meal ended, McNamara reached for his wallet so he could pick up the check. To his horror, he realized he had left it at home—and was forced to call his wife so she could bring him the cash he needed to settle the tab.

    This fateful meal led to an invention that has transformed how the world handles money to this very day: the credit card. While previously available gasoline and department-store credit cards allowed users to make purchases at a single location, McNamara’s personal plight—and that of his well-meaning client—prompted him to create a credit card that could be used in multiple venues. The Diners Club card was born. In its first year, 200,000 consumers signed up for one.

    The rest is history. After carefully observing Diners Club’s success, American Express and Bank Americard (soon to be renamed VISA) followed suit. Thank McNamara the next time you pay with plastic.

    But has McNamara’s novel concept become more of a curse than a blessing in your life? Are your credit cards managing you—and is your debt spiraling out of control?

    Here are 5 ways to tame the credit card beast.

    1. Know Your Limits

    If you have a tendency to overspend, limit your extravagances by relying on paper currency instead of plastic. Set spending limits before you leave the house, whether you’re shopping for groceries or heading to the mall to buy a new pair of shoes. If you find yourself reaching for your credit cards, freeze—and don’t move an inch until you can answer the following questions:

    • Why am I breaking my own rule?

    • Am I being self-destructive with my financial health?

    • Do I really need this item, or is my ability to say “charge it!” clouding my good judgment?

    2. Learn from McNamara’s Client

    As McNamara’s client learned the hard way, loaning your credit cards to even those closest to you is a surefire way to accrue debt. You are giving your spouse, children, other relatives and/or friends carte blanche to spend up a storm—and you are the one who is legally obligated to pay the bills that will find their way into your mailbox at the end of the month. Be extremely selective when passing the plastic to anyone who can run up a bill—and fail to pay you back.

    3. Show Interest in Interest

    Surveys consistently show that most people make only the required minimum payment on their credit card bills each month, leaving them with an outstanding balance that continues to climb. Not only do additional purchases add up, but you are continually paying interest on your existing and new balances—a sometimes considerable fee that has catapulted many consumers into life-altering debt.

    Today, the average American family, for example, owes approximately $8,000 on its credit cards—and the credit card companies could not be more pleased. If 115 million families owed you money—on which you earn finance charges and late fees every month—you would be positively giddy, too.

    Let’s say you have an outstanding balance of $2,000 on a single credit card. Your annual interest rate is 9%, and your credit card company requires you to make a minimum $30 payment each month. Assuming you do not miss any payments (which would cause your interest rate to rise, as well as add late fees as high as $40 per month), it would take you 204 months to pay off this balance if you make only the minimum $30 payment each month—and by then, you will have paid an extra $1,028.43 in interest. This is how debt begins: A $2,000 charge winds up costing you $3,028.43.

    4. Switch Cards

    If you are still paying an annual fee on your credit card, it’s time to make the switch to a card that is not only free, but rewards you

    Computer Furniture for Work-at-home Professionals
    The past couple of decades have seen the use of computers in homes and offices multiplied. You can have your rooms decked up with all kinds of exotic Amish made furniture. But when it comes to the furniture for your computers, most of the times, we tend to settle for inferior quality. And that, if I may add, is an absolutely wrong approach and a great compromise on your health.We are talking about the times when work-at-home professionals are constantly on a rise and computer is an indispensable tool in discharging their professional duties. This, often, results in spending long hours in front of the computer. And, if your experience in working with the computer is painful to any of your body parts, it could spell long-term health scar
    sformed how the world handles money to this very day: the credit card. While previously available gasoline and department-store credit cards allowed users to make purchases at a single location, McNamara’s personal plight—and that of his well-meaning client—prompted him to create a credit card that could be used in multiple venues. The Diners Club card was born. In its first year, 200,000 consumers signed up for one.

    The rest is history. After carefully observing Diners Club’s success, American Express and Bank Americard (soon to be renamed VISA) followed suit. Thank McNamara the next time you pay with plastic.

    But has McNamara’s novel concept become more of a curse than a blessing in your life? Are your credit cards managing you—and is your debt spiraling out of control?

    Here are 5 ways to tame the credit card beast.

    1. Know Your Limits

    If you have a tendency to overspend, limit your extravagances by relying on paper currency instead of plastic. Set spending limits before you leave the house, whether you’re shopping for groceries or heading to the mall to buy a new pair of shoes. If you find yourself reaching for your credit cards, freeze—and don’t move an inch until you can answer the following questions:

    • Why am I breaking my own rule?

    • Am I being self-destructive with my financial health?

    • Do I really need this item, or is my ability to say “charge it!” clouding my good judgment?

    2. Learn from McNamara’s Client

    As McNamara’s client learned the hard way, loaning your credit cards to even those closest to you is a surefire way to accrue debt. You are giving your spouse, children, other relatives and/or friends carte blanche to spend up a storm—and you are the one who is legally obligated to pay the bills that will find their way into your mailbox at the end of the month. Be extremely selective when passing the plastic to anyone who can run up a bill—and fail to pay you back.

    3. Show Interest in Interest

    Surveys consistently show that most people make only the required minimum payment on their credit card bills each month, leaving them with an outstanding balance that continues to climb. Not only do additional purchases add up, but you are continually paying interest on your existing and new balances—a sometimes considerable fee that has catapulted many consumers into life-altering debt.

    Today, the average American family, for example, owes approximately $8,000 on its credit cards—and the credit card companies could not be more pleased. If 115 million families owed you money—on which you earn finance charges and late fees every month—you would be positively giddy, too.

    Let’s say you have an outstanding balance of $2,000 on a single credit card. Your annual interest rate is 9%, and your credit card company requires you to make a minimum $30 payment each month. Assuming you do not miss any payments (which would cause your interest rate to rise, as well as add late fees as high as $40 per month), it would take you 204 months to pay off this balance if you make only the minimum $30 payment each month—and by then, you will have paid an extra $1,028.43 in interest. This is how debt begins: A $2,000 charge winds up costing you $3,028.43.

    4. Switch Cards

    If you are still paying an annual fee on your credit card, it’s time to make the switch to a card that is not only free, but rewards yo

    Hurricanes and Online Auctions
    Wow there are so many garage sales in Hurricane Areas as people clean out their junk and decide to move because they cannot handle it anymore. This makes it a buyers' paradise for eBay sellers online.In fact there are so many sellers at garage sales that the stuff goes for pennies on the dollar and that means you can make a profit by selling it on eBay, of course you need to know a little bit about the prices on eBay and what things sell for as well. Hurricane ridden areas can give the eBay seller the edge and you should look into this and consider this in the future if you are a Professional eBay seller.Even better yet perhaps you have an auction website yourself and you maybe able to use this to your advantage. Think how many
    w Your Limits

    If you have a tendency to overspend, limit your extravagances by relying on paper currency instead of plastic. Set spending limits before you leave the house, whether you’re shopping for groceries or heading to the mall to buy a new pair of shoes. If you find yourself reaching for your credit cards, freeze—and don’t move an inch until you can answer the following questions:

    • Why am I breaking my own rule?

    • Am I being self-destructive with my financial health?

    • Do I really need this item, or is my ability to say “charge it!” clouding my good judgment?

    2. Learn from McNamara’s Client

    As McNamara’s client learned the hard way, loaning your credit cards to even those closest to you is a surefire way to accrue debt. You are giving your spouse, children, other relatives and/or friends carte blanche to spend up a storm—and you are the one who is legally obligated to pay the bills that will find their way into your mailbox at the end of the month. Be extremely selective when passing the plastic to anyone who can run up a bill—and fail to pay you back.

    3. Show Interest in Interest

    Surveys consistently show that most people make only the required minimum payment on their credit card bills each month, leaving them with an outstanding balance that continues to climb. Not only do additional purchases add up, but you are continually paying interest on your existing and new balances—a sometimes considerable fee that has catapulted many consumers into life-altering debt.

    Today, the average American family, for example, owes approximately $8,000 on its credit cards—and the credit card companies could not be more pleased. If 115 million families owed you money—on which you earn finance charges and late fees every month—you would be positively giddy, too.

    Let’s say you have an outstanding balance of $2,000 on a single credit card. Your annual interest rate is 9%, and your credit card company requires you to make a minimum $30 payment each month. Assuming you do not miss any payments (which would cause your interest rate to rise, as well as add late fees as high as $40 per month), it would take you 204 months to pay off this balance if you make only the minimum $30 payment each month—and by then, you will have paid an extra $1,028.43 in interest. This is how debt begins: A $2,000 charge winds up costing you $3,028.43.

    4. Switch Cards

    If you are still paying an annual fee on your credit card, it’s time to make the switch to a card that is not only free, but rewards yo

    Home Businesses With Potential
    Success online is not as easy as it seems. Finding the right home business takes time. How much failure is involved? A lot. Everyone fails upon trying to succeed. Dedication is what it takes daily to help build your business. I will give you a few tips in what I think will help you pick the right business for you.1) Be prepared to spend money to make money. If you believe you should not pay for succeeding your wrong. Search engine submission monthly and getting indexed regularly goes along with advertising which comes back to money. Submitting to Google and Yahoo are a big plus for anyone looking for exposure. Pay per click also helps but limit your budget to what you can afford.2) Ask questions to see if the specific
    spend up a storm—and you are the one who is legally obligated to pay the bills that will find their way into your mailbox at the end of the month. Be extremely selective when passing the plastic to anyone who can run up a bill—and fail to pay you back.

    3. Show Interest in Interest

    Surveys consistently show that most people make only the required minimum payment on their credit card bills each month, leaving them with an outstanding balance that continues to climb. Not only do additional purchases add up, but you are continually paying interest on your existing and new balances—a sometimes considerable fee that has catapulted many consumers into life-altering debt.

    Today, the average American family, for example, owes approximately $8,000 on its credit cards—and the credit card companies could not be more pleased. If 115 million families owed you money—on which you earn finance charges and late fees every month—you would be positively giddy, too.

    Let’s say you have an outstanding balance of $2,000 on a single credit card. Your annual interest rate is 9%, and your credit card company requires you to make a minimum $30 payment each month. Assuming you do not miss any payments (which would cause your interest rate to rise, as well as add late fees as high as $40 per month), it would take you 204 months to pay off this balance if you make only the minimum $30 payment each month—and by then, you will have paid an extra $1,028.43 in interest. This is how debt begins: A $2,000 charge winds up costing you $3,028.43.

    4. Switch Cards

    If you are still paying an annual fee on your credit card, it’s time to make the switch to a card that is not only free, but rewards yo

    Real Estate Marketing Online - The 5 Laws of Lead Generation
    Here's an Internet marketing observation that may shock you. The average real estate website has more than enough traffic to support the real estate agent's business goals -- but he or she is simply not capitalizing on it.I've worked with many real estate clients who swore they did not have enough website traffic, based on the fact that they were getting very few leads from their website. After analyzing their website logs or analytics program, I would discover that they had steady streams of web traffic, day after day.In other words, these folks wrongfully assumed that web traffic equals web leads. This is not the case at all. Traffic equals traffic. You don't generate leads until you put an effective lead generation plan in pl
    milies owed you money—on which you earn finance charges and late fees every month—you would be positively giddy, too.

    Let’s say you have an outstanding balance of $2,000 on a single credit card. Your annual interest rate is 9%, and your credit card company requires you to make a minimum $30 payment each month. Assuming you do not miss any payments (which would cause your interest rate to rise, as well as add late fees as high as $40 per month), it would take you 204 months to pay off this balance if you make only the minimum $30 payment each month—and by then, you will have paid an extra $1,028.43 in interest. This is how debt begins: A $2,000 charge winds up costing you $3,028.43.

    4. Switch Cards

    If you are still paying an annual fee on your credit card, it’s time to make the switch to a card that is not only free, but rewards you for using it.

    Assuming you have good credit and can secure a new card, explore your options. Banks offer cards that award cash-back bonuses, airline miles, gasoline rebates and other perks each time you use them. If you can manage your credit appropriately, keep pace with payments and pay your bills on time, you may as well reap the benefits of your spending habits.

    5. Read Your Statements—Carefully Some consumers pay their credit card bills without carefully reviewing their statements. This is one of the most serious mistakes you can make—especially in an age of identity theft, when someone can use your card to make purchases in your name.

    Always keep your credit card receipts, and check them against the bill when it arrives each month. Make sure every charge is accurate, and notify your credit card company immediately if there are any charges you did not make. The company can reverse the charge if it is a simple error—or if someone has used your card without authorization. In the latter case, ask the company to cancel the card, review any additional purchases made since that date and issue a new card with enhanced security features, such as a personal identification number (PIN), to be entered each time the card is used.

    In addition, check due dates on credit card bills. You may be used to paying your bill by the 20th of each month, but credit card companies have been shortening the length of time consumers have to pay their balances. Very often, there is no notification of a policy change—or the fine print is buried somewhere on your statement. Note the payment due date each month, and try to pay the full amount to avoid accruing interest or late fees.

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