How to Tell If Facebook is Worthwhile For Your Business Or a Waste of Time

Social media is here to stay. There. I said it. It will be around in some form for years to come. Do you really see Facebook, Twitter and Web videos going somewhere?

Or do you just see them evolving and becoming part of a larger system the same way business blogs did? Great. Then we can start figuring out how to use social media to our benefit.

Now that we're past this issue of whether we are in love with MySpace, LinkedIn, Facebook, Ning, etc., and we realize that we're focusing on whether these tools are useful or not, (not on whether or not they give us the warm fuzzies), there's still a fundamental question. This goes for whether you're using Facebook pages, Facebook ads, or a regular Facebook profile.

How do you know if sites like Facebook are for YOU? How can you tell if a social networking site can help YOUR company?

It boils down to three things.

1- Are There Enough People on the Site in Your Interest Area for it to Be Worth Your While?

You have to think about business connections too, not just clients.

You can connect with people who send you business. Think about what the value of a new client is too, whether you think can get one out of 100, and how long it takes. When people come to your profile, are they visiting your site? If not, is your profile set up correctly?

Experiment. There are several very subtle things you can do that maximize your exposure, not just daily clicks through to your site.

To find out if there are enough people on Facebook who need your plumbing services, search for home improvement groups. Check your regional network and look on the Marketplace page. See if you can find people in your local area to befriend who would need your services - but for heaven's sake, don't be aggressive in your promotion.

Instead, create a Facebook page, run an ad, or have the type of networking conversations where "so, what do you do?" will naturally come up. And you can take it from there.

Networking at Facebook can be like hanging out at a neighborhood mixer. Yeah, you might want to mention that you're a handyman, or that you work at the bank, and give someone your card, but you don't want to turn those first few getting-to-know-you conversations into a sales pitch.

Let them know who you are, what you do, and after a few conversations, send them a no-strings coupon for them or a friend "just in case you ever need it buddy" and go on being friends.

They'll remember you if you keep in touch, and are a nice enough guy.

2- Does your company have an RSS-capable site that updates frequently?

If it does, a profile on Facebook gives you another place to share your RSS link. You can import your blog posts going forward, or summaries. There are also applications like NetworkedBlogs that will help your blog posts get exposure from interested readers.

3- Do you already have clients, friends, associates, whose signal you can isolate, or whose noise you can penetrate, using Facebook?

This has to be the most underestimated use of Facebook. My first month at Facebook I had direct interactions with ten influential people I admire. Some of them I look up to for personal reasons, others are greats in some aspect of search, the internet or technology. One actually sent me a client.

Instead of installing hundreds of applications and super-poking someone or posting spam to their Super Wall, you can be the smart person who sends a letter and gets a response, the one who sends a private message and is sent a gift in return, or just get the wonderful feeling of having a world famous personality you admire not only acknowledge you, but contact you directly.

One of the greatest things about Facebook is how it can help cement relationships between you and people you know but didn't think you had much in common with. You know how sometimes, you want to write to say hello to someone, but at the same time, you don't want to waste their time?

Or when you think about some great author or celebrity you admire, and what you'd say to them if you could meet them? Maybe you just want to compliment a more famous colleague and not sound like a dork.

Facebook can help with this when it functions as an automatic ice-breaker, facilitating an intial contact between you and someone you wish you had more reason to interact with, then another, and another, until you become friends who call each other on the phone and plan to visit or meet at conferences.

Those are the reasons. It's not a matter of time because you can block all the nuisance requests and there are ways around the irritating app requests.

It's not a matter of just traffic because first, you can set up a profile in 15 minutes to automatically send you traffic and never mess with it again if you like. Or you can go in and meet people every day and it can be a major traffic source.

And it's not a matter of whether you can get anything out of it - it's more a matter of whether you're willing and whether the available traffic is targeted to your topic. It's not for everyone, because let's face it, not everyone wants to do the work, or even use Facebook that's way.

And that's okay! For some people, it's a nice little escape, like a mental, online Starbucks. For some it's a bother, and the pain of learning a new way to do things isn't worth the time. I don't mean that sarcastically - if you're functioning as a CEO, you may not want to focus on Facebook.

With a little research, you can find out what kind of role it will play in your life.





Confused about how to get clients, joint venture partners or more blog traffic from Facebook without violating their terms with traditional online marketing techniques? Go to http://freetraffictip.com/1-facebook to learn the advanced secrets of Facebook Marketing




How to Tell If Facebook Is Worthwhile For Your Business or a Waste of Time

Social media is here to stay. There. I said it. It will be around in some form for years to come. Do you really see Facebook, Twitter and Web videos going somewhere?

Or do you just see them evolving and becoming part of a larger system the same way business blogs did? Great. Then we can start figuring out how to use social media to our benefit.

Now that we're past this issue of whether we are in love with MySpace, LinkedIn, Facebook, Ning, etc., and we realize that we're focusing on whether these tools are useful or not, (not on whether or not they give us the warm fuzzies), there's still a fundamental question. This goes for whether you're using Facebook pages, Facebook ads, or a regular Facebook profile.

How do you know if sites like Facebook are for YOU? How can you tell if a social networking site can help YOUR company?

It boils down to three things.

1- Are There Enough People on the Site in Your Interest Area for it to Be Worth Your While?

You have to think about business connections too, not just clients.

You can connect with people who send you business. Think about what the value of a new client is too, whether you think can get one out of 100, and how long it takes. When people come to your profile, are they visiting your site? If not, is your profile set up correctly?

Experiment. There are several very subtle things you can do that maximize your exposure, not just daily clicks through to your site.

To find out if there are enough people on Facebook who need your plumbing services, search for home improvement groups. Check your regional network and look on the Marketplace page. See if you can find people in your local area to befriend who would need your services - but for heaven's sake, don't be aggressive in your promotion.

Instead, create a Facebook page, run an ad, or have the type of networking conversations where "so, what do you do?" will naturally come up. And you can take it from there.

Networking at Facebook can be like hanging out at a neighborhood mixer. Yeah, you might want to mention that you're a handyman, or that you work at the bank, and give someone your card, but you don't want to turn those first few getting-to-know-you conversations into a sales pitch.

Let them know who you are, what you do, and after a few conversations, send them a no-strings coupon for them or a friend "just in case you ever need it buddy" and go on being friends.

They'll remember you if you keep in touch, and are a nice enough guy.

2- Does your company have an RSS-capable site that updates frequently?

If it does, a profile on Facebook gives you another place to share your RSS link. You can import your blog posts going forward, or summaries. There are also applications like NetworkedBlogs that will help your blog posts get exposure from interested readers.

3- Do you already have clients, friends, associates, whose signal you can isolate, or whose noise you can penetrate, using Facebook?

This has to be the most underestimated use of Facebook. My first month at Facebook I had direct interactions with ten influential people I admire. Some of them I look up to for personal reasons, others are greats in some aspect of search, the internet or technology. One actually sent me a client.

Instead of installing hundreds of applications and super-poking someone or posting spam to their Super Wall, you can be the smart person who sends a letter and gets a response, the one who sends a private message and is sent a gift in return, or just get the wonderful feeling of having a world famous personality you admire not only acknowledge you, but contact you directly.

One of the greatest things about Facebook is how it can help cement relationships between you and people you know but didn't think you had much in common with. You know how sometimes, you want to write to say hello to someone, but at the same time, you don't want to waste their time?

Or when you think about some great author or celebrity you admire, and what you'd say to them if you could meet them? Maybe you just want to compliment a more famous colleague and not sound like a dork.

Facebook can help with this when it functions as an automatic ice-breaker, facilitating an intial contact between you and someone you wish you had more reason to interact with, then another, and another, until you become friends who call each other on the phone and plan to visit or meet at conferences.

Those are the reasons. It's not a matter of time because you can block all the nuisance requests and there are ways around the irritating app requests.

It's not a matter of just traffic because first, you can set up a profile in 15 minutes to automatically send you traffic and never mess with it again if you like. Or you can go in and meet people every day and it can be a major traffic source.

And it's not a matter of whether you can get anything out of it - it's more a matter of whether you're willing and whether the available traffic is targeted to your topic. It's not for everyone, because let's face it, not everyone wants to do the work, or even use Facebook that's way.

And that's okay! For some people, it's a nice little escape, like a mental, online Starbucks. For some it's a bother, and the pain of learning a new way to do things isn't worth the time. I don't mean that sarcastically - if you're functioning as a CEO, you may not want to focus on Facebook.

With a little research, you can find out what kind of role it will play in your life.



Confused about how to get clients, joint venture partners or more blog traffic from Facebook without violating their terms with traditional online marketing techniques? Go to http://freetraffictip.com/1-facebook to learn the advanced secrets of Facebook Marketing.


Remember Your Clients & Vendors This Holiday Season

Regardless of what holidays or religions your clients and vendors observe, the holiday season is a great time to thank them for their business and their contributions to your success. Here are a few thoughtful and affordable ways to remember your clients this year:

1) Send personalized holiday cards between Thanksgiving and New Year's Day. I go with a generic message such as Happy Holidays or Season's Greetings so they are all purpose, but I always sign each card personally and include a note thanking the client or vendor for working with me this year.

2) Send a gift of appreciation. I buy my ongoing and larger clients a small gift at Christmas - a nice pen & pencil set, a box of chocolates, a gift basket from Harry & David, or something else that I know that client would enjoy. For example, I have one client who prefers natural and organic products, so my gift to her will reflect that preference. For those who are far away, I ship the gifts. If they are local, however, I deliver the gift personally.

3) Make a donation on their behalf. This year because so many charities are struggling, I will make a toy or food donation on behalf of some of my clients. I know my clients will appreciate the gesture, and with so many people in need, this is a way for me to stretch my donation dollars too. To make the donation more personal, contact the client by phone or e-mail and ask for the name of their favorite nonprofit organization and make a donation to that charity in the client's name. Follow-up with a card noting the donation.

4) Present a homemade gift of cookies, chocolates or other gourmet treats that they can share. This is particularly nice if you do business with a group of people from one company.

5) Buy a gift card. If you know a particular client loves Starbucks or a local coffee shop or espresso stand like Kelly Latte's or Kona Kai (Kent, WA), buy a gift card in whatever amount you deem suitable. This way your client will think of you the next few times he or she purchases their favorite latte or mocha!

6) Offer free products or services as a thank you. If you aren't in a position this year to purchase gifts for your clients, consider offering them free products or services. Send them a gift certificate or coupon noting the freebie (Good for one free hour of marketing consultation to be used as you wish by May 1, 2009) along with a card thanking them for doing business with you.

7) Treat your client to lunch for a year-end wrap-up meeting, complimentary consultation or just to say thanks. If you space these out throughout the holiday season, this can be an affordable way to say thank you while also creating the opportunity to generate more business.

However you choose to remember your clients this holiday season, make sure the focus is on the client, not on you. Let them know you appreciate their business and hope to continue the relationship into the New Year.

Copyright ? 2008, Dana Blozis for Virtually Yourz.





Dana Blozis is the owner of Virtually Yourz, a Seattle-area marketing and PR firm catering to small businesses and nonprofits. For more free marketing tips, visit http://virtuallyyourz.blogspot.com or subscribe to the monthly Virtually Yourz marketing newsletter at http://www.virtuallyyourz.com.




A Unique Marketing Spin For A Coffee Shop

Loyalty programs used to maintain and obtain new clients.

Three business partners contacted me about creating a marketing plan for a coffee shop that they were opening in Greenwich Village in New York City. They had already leased a 3000 sq. foot space, which is very large for a coffee shop. They had not worked out what type of food or coffee they would serve. The location was too large for it to survive as just a coffee shop something extra would have to be added.

I met with the three partners where I discussed my concerns about there new business venture. I convinced them to follow a plan that I created that would solve the extra space problem for them. Since they had already signed the lease on the location that was to large to succeed as just a coffee shop I created a plan for the coffee shop to be used as a place for community service groups, discussion groups, art and theatre groups, and special interest groups.

I arranged for the coffee shop to operate a two-prong strategy. In the morning it will offer coffee, cappuccino, and breakfast muffins and an assortment of pastries to the people in the morning, 65% who are professional. After 9:30 A.M. the coffee house will strive to become a meeting place for various community groups, organizations, associations, and a place for college students to meet after classes. The coffee shop will have a part time program director who will work with the various groups to help facilitate community meetings and set up interesting forums and discussion groups, and to provide other entertainment for the college students.

I conducted some research on successful coffee shops and found that the espresso machines contribute well over 50 percent to a coffee shop's revenue and even more to its profits. The shops with the best tasting drinks did five to ten times the business of shops with average tasting espresso. To capitalize on this the coffee shop should try to get its espresso drinks to over 50 percent of the drinks served. To accomplish this, the coffee shop set up a separate espresso station, with instruction on how to make a great espresso. The coffee shop will set its pricing approximately 25 percent below typical Starbucks' pricing.

The key to the coffee shop is the merchandising and taste of its specialty drinks, which involves having the right coffeemaker and coffee, and people who understand the art of making good coffee. I suggested that the coffee shop purchased a high-end cappuccino coffeemaker that has a shiny copper and bronze exterior that can be set out in a separate station to attract interest to specialty coffees. Two employees along with the manager were trained in the proper technique of making specialty coffee drinks.

I worked with the part time program and sales director with finding groups and creating groups that will hold meetings in the coffee shop. A discount was offered to any group or individual who would bring in groups. I created a web site explaining what the coffee shop has to offer, and what meetings are taking place and how they can attend these meetings. The coffee shop will send out coupons to groups offering a 25-percent-off discount.

I bought a list from a list broker of organizations, associations, and local community groups in the area. I wrote solicitation letters to them explaining what services the coffee shop had to offer. I created online discussion groups that would involve potential clients for the coffee shop. Articles were written for on line publication for the organizations, associations, and local community groups that held meetings at the coffee shop. These articles contained links to the web site for the coffee shop that would list the upcoming events and discussions that would be held at the coffee shop. Print ads were also taken out in a small local publication that the targeted market reads.

After about 5 months the results of these marketing efforts had paid off. The coffee shops morning business was doing 10 percent better that was forecasted. The coffee shop had 8 regular groups, organizations, and associations holding weekly meetings in the coffee shop. I got permission from the clients who are using the coffee shop for meetings to use there names in the next set of ads that will run, and on the new web site. You must promote your success to get new business.






8 Secrets To Boost Your Brand -- And Your Sales

As children, we learned the adage, "It's what's on the inside that counts." While that theory teaches a valuable lesson to youngsters, it doesn't tell the whole story. As far as your business goes, there's something else that matters just as much as your service or the quality of your product. It's your image: how customers view your company.

Look at a few of today's top corporations: Starbucks, Nordstrom and GE. Companies with stellar images illustrate that it's not enough to be the best. Your customers must also see you as the best. Before buying from you, clients must view your company as one that:

• Understands their problem or need

• Is competent to help them

• Speaks their language

• Deserves to be trusted

You may fit that mold, but do your customers think so? If not, it doesn't matter what the truth is. That's because, to reach your potential, clients must hold the same opinion of your company that you do. But here's the good news - you can significantly improve your image in 8 simple steps:

1. Assess your current image. You may also use the terms "brand" or "reputation." In any case, compare how customers see you right now with how you want them to see you. Find out their honest opinions by conducting a survey or asking clients directly.

2. Put yourself in your customers' shoes. What do your clients really need or want, and how can you give it to them?

3. Speak your clients' language.

• In today's world, you must stand out - or you won't get noticed. The average person is exposed to 300 to 5,000 marketing messages per day. You have less than 3 seconds to catch their attention. Take yourself as an example: How many direct mail pieces do you actually open? How many newspaper articles do you read from beginning to end? People pay attention to what interests them, so make yourself interesting.

• Get rid of acronyms and jargon unless you know your audience understands them. Just because you comprehend it doesn't mean they will.

• Talk in terms of problem/solution. Remind customers of their problem or need. Then show how your company is the solution.

4. Toot your horn loudly! Go ahead, it's okay to brag. Tell customers about awards you won, notable accomplishments and testimonials from satisfied clients. Let them know about promotional offers, and give them advice in your field of expertise. Constantly communicate what sets your company apart. The more good your customers hear, the quicker they will forgive a rare bad experience.

5. Tell them until you're blue in the face. It's a hard truth - you are usually more interested in what you have to say than your customers are. Most clients won't read, hear or understand your message the first time around. So emphasize your main points on multiple occasions. As a rule of thumb, if you're tired of your message, it's probably just starting to sink in with your customers!

6. Be consistent.

• Confirm facts. (You would be surprised how many people skip this step.)

• Use spell-checker, but don't depend on it! Or you may end up with sentences like these (taken from actual communications):

o "Our massage treatments help relive your pain."

o "I know judo, karate, jujitsu and other forms of marital arts."

o "We proudly feature some-day shipping."

o Typos can cause customers to question your credibility, so proof your materials carefully.

• Make sure the image your clients see in one vehicle (e.g., your Web site) coincides with what they see in another (e.g., direct mail). Notice the font, logo and colors. Most collateral should keep the same general look-and-feel.

• Remember, a beautiful home is not built in a day, and neither is your image. You must invest years of hard work to develop an admirable brand, so keep it up.

7. Give your customers a reason to interact. Communication is a two-way street, and clients who feel involved are more likely to be loyal.

• Reality TV typifies this concept. Have you (or your teenager) ever posted a comment on a TV show message board? You would be amazed at how invested viewers become in a weekly reality program. And interactive tools only enhance that loyalty.

• Another example: Many e-commerce Web sites now offer customer reviews.

• How could you incorporate interaction into your communications? Perhaps you should answer a "question of the month" on your Web site, or include a coupon with your direct mail piece. Use your imagination, and add "customer-to-company" communication to your plan.

8. Live up to your promises. Image is (almost) everything, but your service still matters. Don't get so caught up in promoting what a remarkable company you are that you stop doing what made you that way.

Remember, your brand will make or break you. The opinions of your customers can mean the difference between failure and topping your revenue targets. Which will you choose? If you implement the steps shown here - while still offering your clients impeccable products and service - nothing can stop you. You'll have customers for life!






Affiliate Marketing Reaches New Milestone

For her thoughtful contribution, Kellie received:

- A subscription to wordtracker for a year - http://www.abestweb.com

- A Starbucks Gift Card ($300.00) - http://www.abestweb.com

- 5 cartons of cigarettes (if they smoke) - http://www.bigdaddysmokes.com

- Our Famous "Beware of Parasiteware" T-Shirt - http://www.cafeshops.com/parasiteware

- $100 Shopping Spree - http://www.EssentialApparel.com

- A $50 Gift Certificate from http://www.Pets-Warehouse.com

- Choice of a Men's or Ladies watch from Mondera valued at $360 to $420 - http://www.Mondera.com

- Three month free membership - http://www.Datecam.com

- $25 of Body Jewelry of their choice - http://www.body-jewelry-body-piercing.com

- A a $100 shopping spree - http://www.Webundies.com

- $100 Spending Spree - http://www.EYIProducts.com

- A $50 Shopping Spree - http://www.SportsFanfare.com

- A $25 gift certificate and an Eastwoodcompany t-shirt - http://www.Eastwoodcompany.com

- A $50 gift certificate - http://www.ColdwaterCreek.com

- A $100 Gift Certificate - http://www.Fogdog.com

- $50 COLD HARD CASH - http://www.5StarAffiliatePrograms.com

- A $500.00 TigerDirect Gift Certificate - http://www.TigerDirect.com

- A FREE dental plan ($120 value) - http://www.Dentalplans.com

- A NetValveUSA 200 Hour Prepaid Internet Access (Value $100) - http://www.NetValveUSA.com

- A $50 gift certificate - http://www.IrvsLuggage.com

- Main page ad block - http://www.DesignerWiz.com

- A $250 Gift Certificate for Diecast Collectibles - http://www.Motormint.com

- A $100 Vegas Experts coupon (winning Advice) - http://www.VegasExperts.com

- LinkShare goodie bag - http://www.linkshare.com

- A copy of Search Engine Commando - http://www.SearchEngineCommando.com

- A $100 Gift Certificate - http://www.UrbanScooters.com

- A $25 Gift Certificate - http://www.netMagazines.com

- $100 worth of Music gear - http://www.zZounds.com

- $100.00 Gift Certificate - http://www.Vanns.COM

- A CJ Goody bag - http://www.CJ.com

- A ShareaSale T-shirt - http://www.shareasale.com

- a $50 gift certificate - http://www.JCWhitney.com

- Photo of the winners choice, largest size framed and delivered - http://www.irishphotoshop.com/

- 1 year of free hosting on Avid Hosting + domain name - http://www.AvidHosting.com

- A BeFree Goodie bag - http://www.Befree.com

- Two free Scripts and templates - http://www.scriptsforyoursite.com

- A shirt and hat signed by the Affiliate Team of CollectiblesToday.com โ€" http://www.collectiblestoday.com



ABestWeb is the Internet's leading affiliate forum, with over 10,000 registered members participating in 60 active merchant- or network-sponsored discussion groups. Founded in 2001, ABW receives over a million page views a month.






Can Your Prospects Feel The Benefit?

I met Rod at a Chamber of Commerce function in 1998. While everyone else took turns introducing themselves to the other business owners at the table telling them about their business, Rod was massaging my neck and shoulders. By the end of the morning I was asking him for his phone number. Now before your mind races too far ahead, let me tell you that Rod owned a business providing Shiatsu massage.


And he didn't just massage my shoulders โ€" he worked his way around from one person to another during introductions. While we hawked our businesses nervously putting on our best sales pitch, Rod enabled us to FEEL the value of his service.


What did it cost him? Nothing. Now, we don't all have the luxury of being able to let prospects sample our services so easily, but if we're creative we can help prospects FEEL the benefit of working with us.


Most of us work so hard developing our sales pitch, creating and refining it numerous times over the first couple of years as we obtain a sharper focus of exactly what we want to do in our business. But, ultimately, all of this hard work results in the same type of pitch โ€" โ€œHi, my name is Kimberly and I'm a Business Coach. I work with business owners to help them increase their sales, profits, and rate of success.โ€


Okay, that sounds fine. Quick and to the point. But, what did you really get from it? You know who my target customers are โ€" business owners. You know the results they will achieve by working with me โ€" increased sales, profits, and rate of success. But, what's missing? Do you know what it's going to feel like when your sales increase? Do you know how exhilarating it will be when your business is growing faster? No.


You hear what I say, but it's still a gamble for you. These days, coaches are everywhere promising all sorts of things from helping you find your spiritual center to helping businesses to deal with the impact of the economic downturn on their staff. So how do I enable business owners to FEEL the benefit of working with me as a Business Coach?


I offer them an opportunity to participate in a free 4-week MiniSeries of my FastTrack MBO (Mastering Business Ownership) Program. I invite them to experience exactly how business coaching and a structured learning program will increase their sales, profits and overall rate of success. This is my offering of a trial or sample. This is how I give them an opportunity to FEEL the benefit of the service I offer.


There are a million examples of this concept at work all around us everyday. My local Starbucks tempts me with a tray of cut-up cookies and muffins on the counter. Several photo studios sent me freebie coupons to capture the image of my beautiful new baby last year. A month ago, I saw a salon offering free haircuts at an outdoor fair. A virtual assistant I met offered prospects two free hours of work to help them feel the true relief that comes with delegating administrative tasks.


This has been going on forever. I remember the story I was told when I was first hired by the corporate offices of Circuit City. Sam Wurtzel started the company in 1949 when he saw the first television tower being constructed in Richmond, VA. Television was just being introduced in many cities. He would go door-to-door to offer families the free use of a television for a week. During that visit, he would have a nice chat with the family making sure to find out what show was their favorite. If they accepted the offer to keep the television for a week, he would wheel it into their living room right there on the spot. Now, these were times when most families had never seen a television, so this was big news. The family would start telling all of their friends and neighbors about this wonderful new television they got to use for a week for free with no strings attached. They would invite family and friends over to watch their favorite show all together. It was an event.


But guess who showed up right before the show came on? That's right โ€" Sam. From there, it went something like this โ€ฆ โ€œWell, I'm here to pick up your television. I hope you enjoyed it this week. Oh, your favorite show is just coming on? I'm really sorry, but I have to take the television back now.โ€ You get it. He approached them exactly when their interest was at its peak. They knew how it felt to watch television, and they liked it!


What can you take from Sam's story to apply to your business? What could you do to enable prospects to FEEL the benefit of your business? Provide a limited-time trial? Offer a product sample? Give them a free hour of service? Be creative. Brainstorm with other business colleagues to come up with ideas for each of your businesses.


Just remember - you can TELL prospects all you want about yourself and your business. It's when they FEEL the benefit that they'll start calling you.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Kimberly Stevens is a Business Coach who developed the FastTrack MBO (Mastering Business Ownership) Program as a series of ebooks and teleseminars to help business owners increase sales, maximize profits & improve their overall rate of success. Learn how you can experience the MBO Program for free by sending a blank email to: mailto:kim4-20129@autocontactor.com or by visiting http://www.askthebizcoach.com/fasttrackmbo.htm






How to Stay in the Forefront of Your Customers' Minds

Have you ever noticed that people get incredibly happy whenever you unexpectedly think of them or do something for them?
It doesn't matter if it's related to your business or personal life. Take Oprah Winfrey for example. At a live event a few years ago, she mentioned how she loves to purchase makeup whenever it's "Clinique Bonus Time" as she gets a gift.
Here we have a woman worth over a billion dollars who she loves receiving the cheap little makeup bag with f*ree blush and lipstick, in colors she will never wear, just because they are F*REE.
F*ree gifts, particularly those that are unexpected and just "show up" go a long way in reminding your clients that you are thinking of them - even when they're not paying you to!
I recently spent two weeks in Hawaii. While there, I picked up a t-shirt for a special client and also got one for her 2 ฝ year-old-son. It didn't cost much, it didn't weigh anything (I even mailed it from Maui so I wouldn't have to think about it), but it was unexpected and meant a lot to my client (and to her son).
With the holiday season fast approaching (sorry, but it's true), think about what you can send your clients as a "thank you".
This year, I'll be sending Thanksgiving Day cards to all my clients as a "thank you" for being my client - can you think of a better time to say "thanks"? While I'll also be sending holiday cards, I fully expect them to get buried with the onslaught of holiday cards that tends to arrive each December.
If you sell widgets, you can send a coupon for a f*ree item with a $50 purchase. If you sell services, you can send something related to what you offer.
Are you stuck?
Send a gift card: Starbucks, book stores and Dunkin Donuts (in the Northeast) are all good choices. Plus, with so many shopping online these days, an Amazon.com (or any online retailer) gift card is a great option.
Still stuck?
You can always find something at either Harry and David (www.harryanddavid.com) or Dale & Thomas (www.daleandthomas.com).
Don't think it needs to be expensive or unique. It's amazing how you can change someone's day just by giving them the unexpected. I even get happy when receiving the sample pens that arrive every few months - it's a pleasure to receive something other than a bill or solicitation in my mailbox!
Need to send several things without breaking the bank? Check out Oriental Trading Company (www.orientaltrading.com) for inexpensive goodies that you can send out to everyone on your list.
Gifts and goodies are an inexpensive way to help with client and customer retention - remember it's much less expensive to keep an existing customer than it is to get a new one. This is a great and simple way to stay at the forefront of your customers' minds.
Online Business Manager & Entrepreneur, Sandra Martini teaches small business owners how to create more success in their business while maintaining their sanity and having fun. Sandra's coaching programs are available via teleconferencing, emails and telephone calls. For more information and to receive the FREE special report, "7 Wealth-Building Secrets of Successful Entrepreneurs", go to http://www.Online-Biz-Coach.com






Key to Sales Stay in Touch and In the Mind of Your Prospect

Often sales people make mistakes in thinking that a comment from the prospect that they are not interested at this time, makes them a dead lead. They maybe a dead lead or they might be your very best future customer. The key is to leave the door open in case in the future they are interested at that time. The key to sales at this point is to stay in touch and stay in the mind of your prospect. How can you do this?
Well many sales professionals, sales trainers or those who write marketing books say that you should give them discount coupons or a "VIP" Awards card for your company services; perhaps a gift certificate for a restaurant or a Starbucks Card with $10-20 on it? We have all heard of larger industries giving season tickets or big ball game tickets as gifts to stay in the mind of the prospects? If you are small business this might be tough. But it is the thought that counts and you need your product or service in their thoughts.
Is this bribing the customer? Well in a way it could be construed as such, but if you stop by to talk and you give them something it shows you care about them and their time and will value their business if and when they ever decide to purchase from you and that you are there to serve them and will give them exemplary above average service in the event they purchase. I hope you will consider this in 2006.
"Lance Winslow" - Online Think Tank forum board. If you have innovative thoughts and unique perspectives, come think with Lance; http://www.WorldThinkTank.net/wttbbs/
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Lance_Winslow






How to Live Debt Free

If you are one of the few people living debt free, then you are a very lucky person. In 2005, the average American had about $8,000 worth of credit card debt. Many Americans live paycheck to paycheck, and several are just months away from bankruptcy. If you are one of those lucky few or about to be there, living and staying debt free can be a tricky but rewarding thing.

Baby Steps
If you are just starting out living a debt free life, take baby steps; don't try to do everything at once! Pick one task each month and stick to it. If you try to do everything at once, you will get burnt out and be more likely to have a binge. It's just like dieting: if you try to lose 20 pounds a week, you are destined to fail.

Set Goals
Setting goals and sticking to them are very important to living debt free. Start by setting a goal every month and sticking to that goal. For example, start with setting a grocery budget for each week. Make your list, clip coupons, and only bring enough cash to get what is on the list. Many people are surprised about how much money they waste on stuff they don't need at the grocery store. If you and your family eat at home every night, make a weekly menu. This will help you stay on track with your shopping.

Give Up the Small Things
I am sure that everyone has heard this before, but skipping little things like the morning trip to Starbucks and the afternoon trip to the vending machine can make a huge difference. Also, if you start packing your lunch, you will save a lot of money.

Fighting the Urges
No matter how hard you try, temptation is going to hit. If you try to never spend money, ultimately you are going to break down and want something. So instead of binging and putting it on a credit card, save for it. If it's a new computer, put away a little every month. You may not get instant gratification, but you will feel more like you earned it.
To see a list of recommended companies for debt advice, or for credit repair advice, visit ABC Loan Guide.






Offline Advertising For Online Business

If you're pretty new to online business and just starting one right now, you may want to consider advertise your business offline first. There're many ways to pull successful results from offline advertising methods, and I'll list 8 of the most successful offline advertising method that brings results.
1. The old-school method - make flyers. Make sure your design are property done by professional or fresh graduated college student who has high sense in arts. Carry some in your car, while you're out driving, leave at bus stops, rest areas, laundry mats, grocery stores and a lot more places you can go.
2. Stamp your dollar bills. Customize a rubber stamp with your website URL and start stamping each dollar notes to spend them away. Just imagine about all the times you've gotten a dollar bill and someone wrote on it, didn't you read it? Don't worry it's legal, at least in my country and in the United States.
3 Advertise in your local newspaper classified columns. This is like writing an online sale letter, only it limited to a few words so you better come out with a killer headline that draw readers attention to your website.
4. One clever idea is to use your business cards. You can use your own existing business cards if you already have a few packs, but I highly recommend you to re-design a whole new look just to promote your online business. One tip that you can design your own business cards is using your own computer with a business card designing software or just use the Photoshop.
Another way you could use your business card to promote your website is: go to your local library and insert your business cards in all the books that are related to your online business. You might think this is illegal but it not wrong with using a business card for a bookmark.
5. I had very good success with using flyers with tear off strips that have your website URL on every strip, I post them at all public bulletin boards in my town and have a few of my friends sick them up colleges' bulletin boards.
6. Have you heard of 'Hot Pocket' marketing? Just get 3x3 poly bags with a peel and stick back, printed "Take One" on the front. Print out 8 little flyer on 8x11 paper using a bright yellow paper (fluorescent) so it POPS out, cut them out, then slip them into the pockets. As you go through your day, stick them up them at everywhere, such as at the ATM, pay phones at bars, gas pumps station, newspaper stand at the coffee shop (Starbucks), bus stops and even on the back of bathroom stall doors (Think about this, something to read while sitting there! LOL).
The poly bags are cheap, it's a pack of a thousand bags for 20 bucks. Each bag holds 10 flyers. You can buy poly bags by search in Ebay online or just search the term 'poly bag' in google.
7. If you can have some cash to spare, advertise your website on the movie space. You know advertisements that appear before the movie is screened. You may have to hire professional art designers in websites to make you a splash screen. There's another catch for this advertising method, use an easy-to-remember and short domain name for your website. After all, people will only write it down if your URL is catchy and easy to remember then they might go home and check it out.
Also, some theatres even have an advertising option where you can put your coupon or ad on the ticket stub. You might want to use this as well.
8. Another interesting method you can use: get an 800 numbers at http://tollfree.kall8.com/7556.htm It's $2 to sign up & $2 a month plus 6.9 cents a minute. Then set up your message on the 800 number (like a busy Office). When they leave a message it is delivered via email in a wave file. This gives you the opportunity to speak with them. By getting an 800 number your personal numbers not all over the streets. Put the 800 number on the flyer next to your web address. Some people like to talk to a human to feel a little more secure about my services.
Copyright (c) Edwin Lim






How to Provide Exceptional Solutions (Not Just Service) to Your Clients

In 2003, I moved to Little Rock, AR, and I was amazed with how helpful my new property manager was. If you haven't moved recently, you may have forgotten all the joy associated with having to arrange to shut off your utilities, phone, cable, etc. and arrange to have them hooked up at your new location. Then, you have to deal with mail forwarding, finding new service providers for all aspects of your life, and then deal with the move itself. When I made a cross-country move in 1998 from MA to TX, I had the luxury of being able to quit my job and focus solely on the move and on selling unwanted items. Now, as a solo business owner, I no longer have that luxury, and the processed caused a meltdown or two.
However, my saving grace was my property manager.. The information and resources that she had available has greatly decreased the amount of time I'd need to find this info on my own, and in some cases, she had her own contacts with some of the companies. For example, upon my decision to rent from her company and completing the paperwork, she handed me a packet of info to help with my move. Within that I found contacts for the electric, gas, telephone and water companies, along with the deposit fees required and installation charges I could expect to pay. There was a brochure from the cable company with all the options available from them, along with the pricing of their services. All of this info was in a great folder from a moving company with moving tips, in addition to having mail forwarding cards that I could complete and return to my local post office. I was talking to her about my options for a mover, and she proceeded to open the Little Rock phone directory and found the name of a moving company she could recommend, as well as ripping out a discount coupon for them from the back of the book. When I decided that I wanted to rent a PO Box as a business address for my business, I called her and discovered the branches of the USPS that are close to my new home. I can honestly say that I've never had such a great one-stop shopping experience in my entire life!
And, it didn't end there! While in her office, I noticed that she had bookcases full of videos and DVDs. The residents of all of the properties owned by the company could drop by the office and check out videos at no charge. What an amazing array of resources I had at my disposal! I truly felt I had gotten exceptional service from this company because of all the resources that my property manager had at her disposal that provided solutions to the problems I was having.
The idea of being in the solutions business came to me when I read about an article in the Arizona Republic regarding a child care facility in Ohio that offers fresh Starbuck's coffee for the parents when they drop off their children in the morning, a dry cleaner drop-off service, as well as home-cooked and healthy meals that parents can take home with them when they pick their kids up. Now, isn't that a big jump from offering child care services to offering a solution for really busy parents?
So, how can you be a solutions provider instead of a service provider in your business?
The first way is to identify ALL of the problems that your clients may have. If you're not sure what those are, ask them! Your business may not be able to help solve all of them, but you may be able to help your client with those that are most pressing. Brainstorming these may cause you to have to think outside the box and figure out how you might best serve your client. You will probably discover that you'll need to have a list of tried-and-true reliable service professionals at your disposal.
If you don't have a list of professionals at hand, there's no time like the present to create this list. If you can create strategic alliances with other businesses who can service your client base, by how much might all of your businesses profit from such an alliance? There's strength in numbers, and truly the business owners with the biggest Rolodex and the greatest number of contacts wins!
Your clients are busy -- heck, we're all busy these days. Anything you can do to save them money, time, or energy will engender their lifelong loyalty to you, and lifetime referrals! Start providing solutions to your clients, and they'll become your most vocal referral agents!
Copyright 2006 Donna Gunter
Online Business Coach Donna Gunter helps self-employed professionals make more profit in less time online. To sign up for more FREE tips like these and claim your FREE ebook, TurboCharge Your Productivity: 50 + Tools To Help You Automate Your Business and Make More Profit in Less Time Online!, visit her site at http://www.OnlineBizCoachingCompany.com






Adding Express Detailing Services to Your Already Successful Car Wash or Automotive Business

Express Detailing is a term, which has been marketed and inevitably defined by fixed site car washes in their attempt to increase average per ticket transactions. By using express detailing as an "add-on" service for between $35.00-$60.00 they are able to up sell a $4.99 exterior wash direct mail coupon that a customer brings in to a $40.00- 70.00 charge. Their theory is sound and tends to work well for them. A car wash in and out wash which takes 10-15 minutes for vacuum, tunnel wash and dry and then another 15-20 minutes for a solvent polymer wax, with dash and tire dressing is consistent with their industry $/hour goals. Now car wash owners have gone one step further with The Blue Coral Wax Treatment.
This is a wax put on while the car is still wet, thus eliminating the drying step. The wax is rubbed on the wet car, dries to a haze and is wiped off which dramatically increases efficiency and adds even greater revenue. Thus by speeding up the process they cater even more to the new consumers attitude. "I want it now", the quicker the better, give me my detail, I have things to do, I'm outta here. Similar customer attitudes are found in the demands of e-commerce where you buy a product today and it shows up at your doorstep next morning guaranteed by Fed EX or Two day service by RPS, Airbourne, UPS, Emery Express, or Fed EX.
In a world of co-branding, point of destination strategies and co-op marketing, all industries are evolving and diversifying to capture greater profits within a single brick and mortar location or as is appearing more commonly on Internet web sites. In general much of the new thinking has been customer driven due to lifestyle changes, low unemployment, time factors and quality of life issues of the consumer. If you look at amazon.com which now sells tapes, records and toys when previously it was strictly a books sales site. It can quickly add new revenue streams by offering it's customer base more reasons to buy more things. You to see the revolutionizing effect of this trend? We have on-line search engines being paid million dollars from car companies and furniture companies for their industries exclusive rights to e-commerce directly on those sites. As Starbucks begins to sell housewares on their web site, and Home Depots add McDonalds inside their stores and Bank of Wal-Mart opening it's own brand of bank within its 5 superstores; you have to think that 'express detailing' at car washes is simply a natural progression. Many professional detailers would disagree saying these types of services are different animals. Some complain that fixed site car washes have ruined the true definition of the term detailing. Yet if you look closely this is nothing more than true capitalism in a free market system generating additional revenues with existing resources.
Think about it for a minute. Professional Detailing Centers often do glass repair, window tinting, pin-striping and graphics, gold plating, ozone treatment, dent repair, color sanding, upholstery repair, wood grain paneling, and even after market auto accessories. These are all industries in their own right and these industry leaders with their own definitions and trade publications and accepted operational procedures complain about us offering similar services as professional detailers. They say we are stealing their customers and not providing the same quality workmanship as the craftsmen do in those industries, which may or may not be true. For example a person specializing in upholstery repair for twenty years can obviously do a better quality job than a detailer on fabrics of almost any type. You are affecting his bottom line with an inferior service since you don't have 20 years experience in upholstery repair understanding the dynamics of thirty different types of fabric, dyes, and manufacturers suggestions for preservation.
Should he be mad at you for offering a greater array of service to you customers? No, the upholstery craftsman will need to have his own set of value added services and products he can offer to his customers such as removing and replacing seats and headliners and using the highest grade fabrics and stainless steel screws. You must have a specialty or an area of expertise, but you must also understand and then cater to the needs and more importantly the wants of your customer. If you don't know their wants and needs, ask your customers directly in an informal survey or indirectly during conversations.
Saying that fixed site car washes have destroyed the meaning of the word detailing may be true to some extent. Yet one must ask, "Did McDonalds destroy the definition of a hearty breakfast when it introduced the 'Egg McMuffin' in Santa Barbara, CA?" Comparing 'express detailing' with a complete detailing service is merely another apples and oranges issue. We as professional detailers realize that there is no comparison. Why does this make so many of us angry? It is all those years of perfection being thrown out the window? But do not look at it that way, look at it as an incredible opportunity. Channel the frustration and anger into energy and perseverance. The fixed site car washes with their quick wax, 'express detail' have popularized the phrase 'detailing' to an entirely new group of consumers who normally might not be interested in your services prior to this introduction. It is up to us to expand upon this and take advantage of the fact that now the general workforce is buying detailing services. Sure it's inferior, but a need, a want and desire to spend money for detailing has been formally introduced. This has opportunity written all over it as Bud Abraham said in a speech he delivered at the ICA (International Carwash Association) annual conference in Las Vegas.
Many feel that this new spin on the old terminology of detailing has adversely affected the professional detailers retail business. Fixed detailers must adapt to this market challenge or loose a large percentage of their retail detail volume and thus have their profitability affected. By differentiating their service and educating customers to the definition of a 'Full Detail' or 'Complete Detailing Service' the professional detailer is able to cater to the ideal retail customer in the middle to upper income classes. Generally members of this market segment understand the difference and are aware of the value of a real detail versus an express service. This high-end crowd can be as much as 15-35% of the professional detailers retail clientele. Let's say that a Professional Detailer has 70% of its business in new and used Car Dealerships and other fleet customers who occasionally need detailing. Vehicles such as rent-a-cars, work vans, or sales cars for corporations and 30% in individual retail, the higher per car profit of all services offered. It is not good business sense for a Professional Detailer to simply ignore that much of their customer base, and therefore they must develop a strategy to help customers and clients understand the difference between the express service and full detail.
Some of the communication problems come into play when a customer is convinced that the $50.00-$60.00 (sometimes as low as $35.00) he or she paid for an express detail is the same service they will get when they pay a $100.00+ complete detailing service. Even when the higher price comes from a professional and reputable detailing establishment and not a 30 minute 'express service' from a car wash. Unfortunately unless otherwise educated, perception becomes reality.
The problems are compounded when you throw the mobile detailer into the loop. Usually charging $60.00-$80.00 and then calling his detailing services a 'full detail'. This market player is fiercely competitive for price as he attempts to establish his new business and has the advantage of on-site service. Many of these new small companies will be in business for a summer or two, or at most a couple of years. Many opt later to establish fixed sites and raise their prices due to increased capital expenditures such as a phone system, fixtures, electrical work, reclaim devises and work benches and increased overhead or rent, electricity, office supplies, water, and reclaim waste water removal. Established mobile detailers who last over two years generally develop a larger clientele and raise their prices simply because of supply and demand economics. Their prices will usually be $100.00+ for a complete detail.
Many also offer a monthly program including washes, detailing services and monthly billing. Most mobile operations have not adopted the term Express Detailing because they believe they do a better job than the car washes with regard to quality. Many mobile operations will continue the low price of their original full detail of $60.00-$80.00, but now use the term 'mini-detail'. This allows them to charge a full detail price to new customers but still offer previous customers and those original customers' word of mouth referrals a low price without giving away services. It also allows them to tap into the customers that may not be able to afford a real detail but still wish to have detailing services for ego reasons, being able to tell friends, "I had my car detailed." Why own a BMW if you can't have it detailed. This appeals to the young executive on his way up the ladder.
A few mobile detailers have used the term 'express detailing', which adds even more confusion to the issue. "What is an Express Detail anyway?" Most of the new mobile detailers eventually go out of business or raise prices due to environmental reclaim issues, competition, seasonal weather, lack proper image, inferior learn as you go training or lack of industry knowledge. Many of the new professional detailers in our industry come from the mobile sector and they tend to price and deliver whatever they can sell to the customer, using the word detail whenever they think it will command a higher price. They will use the word detailing loosely to sell the job.
I think it would be fair to say that the word 'detail' has been over used for marketing purposes at fixed site car washes and has caused problems with the definition and mystique of professional automobile detailing. It has caused havoc for those true professionals who have worked hard and sacrificed to keep the word sacred for many years and have prided themselves in the most excellent service.
Many Old Time Detailing Professionals have been forced to address this express detailing issue by adding express services to their menu of services. This appeases the customer's desire for quick and affordable service between quarterly of semi-annual full detailing appointments. Sometimes this cannibalizes full detailing services but if done correctly it can attract new customers to your business ho will eventually try the real thing. Once they do they will be hooked forever. By letting your customer's experience a full detailing service you will build your complete detailing customer base.
See the chart provided to us by Nicholas J. Vacco, a seasoned detailing veteran. These are the things most full and complete detailing services include:
FULL DETAILING-INSPECTION CHECK-LIST
EXTERIOR:
_____ Make sure all wax is removed
_____ Check for wax dust
_____ Check emblems and crevices
_____ Check to see if \chrome has been polished
_____ Check grill and all front areas for bug removal
_____ Look at rocker panels for tar
_____ Check wheels for brake dust
_____ Check white walls
_____ Make sure tires are dressed evenly
_____ Check wheel wells
_____ Make sure wheel well lips are clean
_____ Check all bezels for wax removal and cleanliness
_____ Check windows for smears/paint overspray
_____ Look at mirrors for cleanliness
_____ Check headlights/tail lights for cleanliness
_____ Check moldings, weather striping, front air dams, bumper strips for dressing
_____ Make sure vinyl top is clean and conditioned
_____ Check wipers for overspray
INTERIOR:
_____ Make sure carpet is vacuumed
_____ Check under seats
_____ Check ash trays
_____ Check rear shelf
_____ Check carpet for stains and cleanliness
_____ Check seats for stains and cleanliness
_____ Look at door panes for cleanliness
_____ Check dash board; ac vents, gauges, radio knobs, steering column, levers, crevices
_____ Check all chrome including seat belt ends, door handles, step plates
_____ Make sure all vinyl and leather has been evenly dressed
_____ Check headliner, visors, sail panels
_____ Check dome light area
_____ Check seat belts
_____ Make sure all pedals are cleaned
_____ Check lower dash for dressing
_____ Check all door jambs for cleanliness and tar removal
_____ Check consoles and glove compartment for cleanliness
_____ Check windows; below inspection stickers, inside rear brake lights, window tips
_____ Check rear view mirror
_____ Check vanity mirrors
_____ Make sure mats are in trunk
_____ Check to see that personal items are placed in clear plastic bag
_____ Check for plastic drivers seat cover
_____ Check for paper mats
_____ Be sure a hand-out flyer has been placed in car
--------
If a professional detailer will simply look past customer perception that "a detail is a detail" and educate them on the differences, then that professional will get the best of all worlds. By letting car washes introduce the idea and market to the consumers of the world, you will get free advertising. By car washes using the term detailing, even if it is out of context and even if they lower the once high standards in the minds of consumers, they still have opened the market ten fold. Now that this market is wide open and almost everyone has become in their own minds a detailing customer; it is up to the professional detailers to show them 'a real detail'. It is up to us to expand our retail market mix, to expand that percentage of our business' total sales.
Once the customer experiences the difference, they will see our point and know that an 'express detail' is merely a glorified wash with a hand wax, some extra dressings, and perhaps some carpet cleaning thrown in for good measure. It is hardly what professional detailers call a 'complete and full detail'. Once your customer has become accustomed to a real detail and received a service which has exceeded their wildest expectations, that person will be a walking, talking one-person sales army for you and every other professional detailer in our industry. So press on! Let's make believer out of our retail clientele one customer at a time.
"Lance Winslow" - Online Think Tank forum board. If you have innovative thoughts and unique perspectives, come think with Lance; www.WorldThinkTank.net/wttbbs/






Wifi Hotspot Locations for Sale..is that a Good Thing?

Recent companies have been advertising wifi hotspot locations that are 'turnkey' (they can run themselves), and only cost between $13,000 and $20,000 to start. Is that good?
First of all, if it's so turnkey then why aren't they just popping off wifi hotspot locations left and right for themselves, is it their newfound generosity that has them 'sharing' the opportunities they have available. I'm not knocking the possibility of some companies to provide a business model, like in the restaurant business where they allow you to own a branded franchise for an initial investment in order to spread out locations in a more easier return on investment. However, wifi locations normally have an additional service or product that acts as an anchor for customers to come in and use the benefit of wi-fi to connect to the Internet thru broadband high speed access. Starbucks and Hilton Hotels are prime examples of a business model that has customers coming in for a service or product and then using wifi access as a secondary product/service.
Secondly, the potential for wifi hotspots cannot be limited to a cookie-cutter system that will fit everyone, after all if that were the case the other auto makers wouldn't be in business and we would still be driving 'Model T' Fords. Not to mention the fact that if you open a business with only wifi access as the only product/service available and then the community, town or city where your business is located decides to wirelessly enable the public transportation system like in the southern California city of Cerritos; guess what - your business just got knocked the flip out.
African American small business people have resources, and some may believe those resources are unlimited. But if you shell out $20,000 for a new business and after 6 months get locked out of your client base by a larger business or business model, you have lost more than your investment. A wifi business is not something that can be advanced as able to stand on it's own in the present day. In the example above the city of Cerritos is delivering wifi along with it's transportation system, which should probably increase ridership as people will opt to ride and check their email or just finish up a project as they go to work or to shop.
Look carefully at starting to use wifi in your business, research and see if there is a potential for competition to knock you client base out of the ballpark. Even then, when is your competition going to implement their wifi access and see if you have time to enhance your wifi service with coupons or other attractive services that may not be available to your competition. Wifi access will become a very powerful business asset in the coming year and more so in the future. Now is the time to get your feet wet, just check out your options in order not to get drowned out of business.
We can help give you your freedom back...and a whole lot more. M.D.T.G.
Daviyd Peterson: 10-year consultant, instructor, trainer
Helps african american SMBs bridge the digital divide by becoming wireless Small Office Digital Offices (SODO). Free article on Home Wireless Internet Security and other related articles http://www.mogendaviydtechgroup.com/firewallsmb.htm See a video where big time firewalls duke it out!






Why Do They Buy?

A recent issue of Entrepreneur magazine included a marketing story with five important questions all business owners should be able to answer about themselves and their competition.
Understanding these five critical areas will help you better develop and implement your marketing plan, and sell more to your customers and prospects.
1) What does my customer buy?
My clients know I am a big believer in the principle that customers don't necessarily buy what we think we're selling. (Al Lautenslager, owner of The Ink Well in Wheaton, Illinois, and co-author with Jay Conrad Levinson of Guerrilla Marketing in 30 Days taught me this approach many years ago.) The classic example is people don't buy drills they buy holes. Similarly, they buy thrills, not NASCAR tickets. They buy vision and image, not eyeglasses. Memories, not vacations. Community, not five dollar cups of coffee at Starbucks. Fairways, not Calloway's Great Big Bertha drivers with strong flex, low torque and a high kick point.
Success Handler Action: After you finish reading this E-newsletter, take some time with your team to write down examples of what your customers buy. Is it printing and copying, or communications materials? Business cards, or self-promotion items? Shipping, or convenience? Technology education, or kids' futures? Medical products, or feeling good about herself again? There could be multiple examples in your small business. List as many as you can. For the remaining questions, take a few moments after each one with your team to brainstorm answers.
2) What does my customer consider value?
Price is only a number, arrived at by market demand, gut feeling, or, in the case of some car dealers, extensive haggling and customer frustration. Value, on the other hand, is a fair exchange for something received. In the case of a college education, it's knowledge that leads to a career. At Walt Disney Worldฎ Resort, it's entertainment and magic. With the Sunday newspaper, it's information and coupon savings. What is it in your small business?
3) Why is my product superior to my competition?
This answer typically runs the gamut from better materials, to longer warranties, to state-of-the-art technology. The clich้, of course, is "our people"; but can everyone really offer the best customer service? In your business, is it faster turnaround? Better design? Compassionate and caring atmosphere? Highly educated teachers? Professional product packers? What is the "one thing" you do better than anyone else?
4) Why do prospects buy from my competition?
To answer this one, you have to do some work. Call a few folks who didn't accept your quotes, and find out why you missed those sales. Blind shop your competition, and see what they're offering you didn't know about. At your next networking event, ask people which of your competitors they use, and why. Then ask them these three questions: What do you like most about your current provider? What do you like least? Is there anything they don't offer you wish they did? With this information in hand, you will be ready to look for growth opportunities and recognize threats that could change your business model.
5) What does a prospect need to be convinced of to buy?
Anyone who has taken sales training knows that there are many steps in the buying process. Closing is an art, and some are much better at it than others. Yet, in its simplest form, your prospect must reach a "Eureka Moment!" when everything clicks, and she realizes she would be absolutely crazy to do business with anyone else but you. What is it that triggers that moment? Is it understanding all the benefits of your product/service? Recognizing value? Having the time to focus on what you're offering? Overcoming the fear of changing suppliers?
Competitive advantages could and should change with time, and a competitive advantage is not a product or service; it's an intangible that adds value in the perception of the customer. Although you may think your products/services are not commodities, to the customer they often are just that. In the customer's mind, you're just one more project to move off their desk and on to someone else. With commodities, the value lies outside of the products and services. To truly have a competitive advantage, you have to ask the right questions that uncover critical issues important to your prospect. Those are the intangibles that make the difference in getting the sale.
Success Handler Action: After working through all five questions, spend some time with your team discussing areas where your organization needs improvement. Make sure everyone understands what turns your prospects into customers. Look for opportunities to define your business, and for ways to grow sales by capitalizing on your competition's inefficiencies.
When you get right down to it, the best value in the world may be the postage stamp. Despite all the post office jokes, where else can you get so much for just 37 cents? Stick a commemorative stamp on an envelope, and you can send a letter across the country in a matter of days. Stick that same stamp in a drawer, and it may quadruple in worth in 30 years.
With that in mind, always remember people don't buy postage; they buy delivery of birthday wishes, mortgage checks and, unfortunately for the rest of us, those never-ending credit card offers.
Copyright ฉ 2004 by Success Handler, LLC. All rights reserved.
The Coach, David Handler, is the founder of Success Handler, (http://www.successhandler.com), and specializes in helping small business leaders, franchisees and franchisors find clarity and take action. He understands the challenges of running a business, because he's been there - as a small business owner, franchisee, franchisor, corporate leader and trainer. Much like sports coaches, his coaching will show you how to compete on a level playing field in your industry.






Twitter 101 For Business

Laugh all you want but the social media messenger known as Twitter is a useful tool for getting your business message out to the masses. Twitter has grown from 140 characters of people saying their cat has rolled over to a powerful 140 character messages delivering messages filled with URL addresses, video links, advertisements, and more to millions of people and companies who Tweet plus many more lurkers (those who just read messages and don't Tweet). Twitter has become a mega-useful way to broadcast information to the masses - for free!

Building on Twitter's growing success many companies have built applications using Twitter's API to help use Twitter more efficiently than it's current model allows. There's applications that let you schedule Tweets so you don't have to be online 24/7, analytical tools and search tools to help you measure your reader reactions, there's even tools that report back to you every time your business name or whatever search term you use appears on Twitter. Bing, Microsoft's new search engine is even offering a Twitter search tool.

Companies such as Starbucks, Whole Foods Markets, and many more have gained new customers and repeat customers using Twitter to tell people what they're promoting, run coupon codes, and stream messages. Information Week Online even published an article (June 12, 2009) reporting "Dell (Dell) saying it has surpassed $3 million in sales attributed to Twitter at @DellOutlet which now has over 800,000 Twitter followers. This opportunity is golden!

So what is Twitter and how do I get it?

Twitter is a free messaging service that lets it's users send out 140 character messages. Each user has the option to "follow" as many other twitterers as they choose so they are able to see those specific user's tweets (messages). The more users you follow the more messages you will see in your Twitter homepage. If the user you are following decides to follow you back then you are now "friends." Whether you as a business gain more from being friends is up for debate but as a business you definitely want as many followers as you can get. the more users that see your tweets the further your message reaches. Get the picture?

Getting a Twitter account is easy once you figure out a name for your account. Just got to Twitter.com and sign up. Once you've got your account you're ready to go!

Your first message can be as simple as "Hello world. Company ABC is now on Twitter." but would capture a lot more interest by saying "Great News! ABC Company is now on Twitter and we can't wait to tweet with you!". Remember, Twitter messages are only 140 characters long and it helps to be direct and error on the side of being positive. Think about how easy it is to misunderstand the tone in someone's email when they are being brief. You need to make sure you're company isn't being perceived as always negative or curt. You can attract more bees with honey.

Interact with users. Although many companies are on Twitter that majority of users are still people and people like to get to know you on a somewhat personal level. They want to know you are human and have a personality. It helps them trust you and make them feel like you (and your company) are a good company to do business with. It's a matter of building trust.

KIS or Keep it simple.

Thankfully although tweets are limited to 140 characters there's a lot you can do with that amount of space. If you have a link that takes someone to a coupon or explains a policy then you can save space by shrinking that link using a URL shortening service like tr.im, BIT.LY or TinyURL.com.

Want a picture or photo in your tweet? Many services now offer space for you to share a photo on Twitter. This is especially useful when you want to send a picture from your cell phone. A few of these services to try are: twitpic.com, tweetphoto.com, brightkite.com, and friendfeed.com. Don't forget, all these photos are publicly viewable.

To aid in keeping messages short people started using an abbreviated language when Instant Messaging and SMS messaging began and it has carried over to Twitter messaging. A few of these words are: L8 = late, C U L8R = See You Later, BRB = be right back, RUOK? = Are you OK?, BCNU = Be seeing you, 2DAY = today, = why, and more. For a better list of abbreviations just use a search engine to look up "Messaging Abbreviations" or visit AIM's Acronym Dictionary @ www.aim.com/acronyms.adp.

As you can see there's plenty of opportunity for business use on Twitter. All it takes is some planning, research and someone who enjoys connecting with people. Start using Twitter and B4 long U'll quit Bing a noob in no time!





For more information on Internet Marketing, SEO, Social Media and more visit http://socialmediacupcake.com.




Curtains, Pancakes and Broom Hockey: 12 Ways to Build Self Esteem in Kids

Few things are as rewarding as seeing your child glow from the inside out. And it happens when children have a high self esteem: when they know themselves to be unconditionally accepted, when they feel both loved and lovable, and when they feel a sense of belonging and self worth.
Here are twelve simple activities that have really made a difference in our family. These are the rituals that I find especially important to staying connected and to communicating my love and appreciation for each child.
1. Rely on rituals to help you reconnect. We have such a ritual following every school day. The kids think of it as "after school snack time" but I know it to be much more than that. It is a time when they tell me whatever they like about their day. Try to create this special time as soon as possible after their day away at school. I find that if I wait until later in the evening to ask them the same open ended questions, I hear mostly "I do not remember" and "Everything was fine." For us, immediacy is important, and so is the ability to sit and listen without offering too much unsolicited advice. Family dinners are another wonderful time to reconnect.
2. Create special time for just your immediate family. To do this, you may need to set gentle boundaries for neighbors and friends. For example, we have a neighborhood filled with very close relationships and no fewer than 14 young children. When we first moved in, we had kids knocking on our door from the crack of dawn till way past the sun set in the evening. We found that our time alone as a family was diminishing by the day as our younger children would run outside to play at the first invitation, and the competition from such a fun outdoor world really disrupted the closeness of certain special family times. It did not take long before our family relationship was feeling the stress, so we chose a symbol that is universally accepted and respected throughout the neighborhood: when the curtains on our front windows are drawn, the neighborhood children know that we are having time together as a family. When the curtains open for the day, we welcome the neighborhood children with open arms. I hope this gentle boundary sends a message to our kids, too, that it is okay (essential, even) to take time out for yourself and for nurturing the relationships with your closest loved ones.
3. Give each child tangible reminders of your love. You could write a note to your child on each birthday, detailing events over the past year that made you particularly proud and spotlighting traits that make him or her special. Or keep a jar, box, or journal titled "Things I Love About You" and add notes to it whenever they occur to you. Whenever your child is feeling down, he or she can spend a few moments with these treasures.
4. Develop a special song or phrase for each of your children. My second child, for example, has always adored the song "You are my sunshine," but part of the song defines the relationship in terms of exclusivity. ("You are my sunshine, my only sunshine.") So we had to adapt it for each of the other children. To do this, we substituted a special word for each child and that has become their own special song. My son is Moonshine and my older daughter is Starshine. (In case you are wondering, Mom is Heartshine and Dad is SuperHeroshine. No kidding.) Even as they get older, they love to hear their own special song and they love to sing the songs to one another, too.
5. Use repetitive phrases to teach important life lessons. With my oldest child, we are working to help her feel a sense of control over her own emotions. Whenever something comes up, we say these words repeatedly: "You can not choose what people do, but you can choose how you react to it." I have heard her say it now, too, to her younger siblings. Choose an important lesson that you want to pass on. Then figure out an easy way to say it, and say it often. You might even want to make it a little melody.
6. Carve out "one on one" time with each child. Try to come up with a shared activity that honors what each of you enjoy. My daughter loves to go on a date to Starbucks, just the two of us, for a shared Double Chocolate Chip Frappucino. The other likes to go to the library where we each choose special books. The other likes to ride his tricycle up and down the neighborhood streets with me running alongside. This does not have to take a lot of time and can involve an activity that you would be doing anyway. You can even decide to allow one child to go to bed a bit later each week so you have some time alone to chat, read together, or play a game of cards.
7. Create a safe environment. It has been really important for us to make the kids know it is safe to make mistakes. As someone who has battled perfectionism in the past, I know that the unconditional acceptance of a family is vital. When your home is a safe place for your children to share their mistakes and perceived failures as well as their triumphs, you foster a sense of safety and acceptance. You might want to share times in your own life when you made a mistake (or even those times when a perceived mistake was actually a blessing.) And try to pay close attention to an overemphasis on criticizing or correcting your child, as well as to an overemphasis of criticizing things that other people do.
8. Engage your children in the tasks of the household. This fosters a sense of belongingness and personal responsibility, a mutual respect and a sense of teamwork. There are jobs that children of all ages can do. Maybe it is setting the table or passing out the napkins. My three year old son likes to help me sweep the floor, but I suspect he really just likes to play broom hockey with the crumbs. At some point, they grow up enough where their efforts to help are actually helpful. One child likes to help me make dinner, another likes to help me clean up. We are still working on my son.
9. Make simple occasions special. The kids love it when we turn off all the lights at dinner and eat by candlelight. It makes them feel treasured, and we talk about how just a simple change in the way we do things can make all the difference.
10. Show your enthusiasm. I remember as a child, even if my mom or dad was embroiled in a task, I knew that they were happy I was around. The deep roots of self esteem that come from such a knowing have affected everything I have done since. Even if you are busy, make sure your enthusiasm shows when your child walks into the room. You do not have to stop what you are doing. Just send them signals, verbal or nonverbal, that you are happy they arrived.
11. Praise. So much has been said lately about the danger of overpraising a child, and it is certainly important to be careful when offering praise. You want the child to reward themselves internally for a job well done, and not to be constantly looking for a carrot. I have recently heard it said that the most positive kind of praise occurs when you are praising their personal judgment, and I think that is very wise. Lots of healthy praise is a beautiful thing.
12. Reflect often on the beauty (and the power) of parenting. Here is a ritual from my household: Once my children have fallen asleep at night, I watch them peacefully sleep for a few moments and think about how much happiness they created that day for me. I try to quiet my mind, just for a moment or two, and think about how very much I adore them. Meditating on this inner knowing, however briefly, can make it easier to be tolerant of those little things that all children do to drive us nuts. It is also helpful to think often about how instrumental your love will be to their happiness and their worldview both now and way off into the future.
Susie Cortright is the founder of Momscape.com, devoted to providing valuable resources for parents. Visit the site today for the latest online Coupon Codes including Children's Place Coupons.






The Twitter Business Model - Tips and Tools to Achieve Revenues

So you thought Twitter was just for fun, I have even funnier news for you: It can be used to boost your business. It does not matter if you are a small company, huge or medium one. It really does not matter what country you are at.Twitter works in spite of any circumstances whatsoever; if you apply certain techniques we will share with you here.

Many people are still thinking these Social Network sites are a waste of time and money. But from many Social Network experts' point of view, you are actually investing money and time just by sitting in front of your PC and micro blogging every now and then. If you are an employee,you can increase the productivity ratios of your company just by Tweeting. Just exactly as was confirmed by a research made by the University of Melbourne. Inthe medium and longer run ROIcan experience plausible increasing rates, and if it's being used effectivelyin the shorter run. Social Network and more especially Twitter, for example are being used byfamous brands. They use it either for promoting their corporate blog just like Kodak, to keep on track of their customer's file feedback, Samsung or the North American fast food brand Popeye Chicken and Ford Motors. They have placed a Twitter Follow me gadget on their front page. There are quite a lot of companies using Twitter in order to enrich their Organizational Culture, by sharing internal news with the employees. They have different Twitter accounts for different departments such as Customer Service, Value Chain Management, for example in the case of Ford, for their different sub-brands such as Mustang, Racing, trucks, etc. Also to mention ATTnews use this system to keep updated their fans with recent news about their company, Jetblue Airlines use this wonderful system as an efficient option to support their customers and Comcast is using this tool to strengthen and add value to their customer relationship service. One of the ways they are adding value is by placing a real photo in the profile rather than a cold logo. According to their opinion this is a good RRPP weapon. Twitter is also being used for companies' product releases. For example Dell computers use this to show coupons or offers on many products and services and Starbucks coffee company is staying tune with their customers on the latest introductory offers related to their specialty coffee products around the world. A remarkable thing about Starbucks is that they are planning to install more sophisticated applications that will enable them to interact more with their customers, applications similar to phone to phone conversation. HRBlock, Whole Foods Markets, Corn Flakes, Southwest Airlines or Quaker Wheat etc, another list of companies could be endless. Twittercreates sustainabilitywithin a real and efficient marketing plan and because of that, certain important steps to make it work should be pondered: *Invest quite a considerable time on building a strong profile, as in real life the first impression is highly important. Hire a good graphic designer if possible, or simply grab an eye catching Twitter background; there are a lot around the net. Remember to respect your corporate image mood and feel. Any brand should have that and it will definitely differentiate you from the pack. Make it constant in any other ways such as real personalized cards, pens, pins, etc. *Start widening your network by adding worth following people, celebrities and government officials. Posting useful information in a regular basis and sending a warm welcome to your new followers gives a good impression of you. Start adding potential followers, those related to your business or who you might consider to be key contacts. Remember to use your profile as an ongoing profile, which means starting to add feeds to your Twitter from your website rather than a static or boring link. Twitter has a very good application named Twitterfeeds which updates your Twitter with any content or title you add to your site, providing fresh content to your Twitter as well. * Twitter API's to increase higher and more effective interactional levels among your followers from your Desktop, Twhirl, TweetDeck or Twitterrific etc. * As always keep alive the social fire, by helping others and being useful to others. Joining to social organizations and professional associations or by attending conferences and other events is another good tactic. Twitter has also a tool named Tweetup, where you can plan virtual meetups that would possible lead you to the real world. Please do not discredit real social interactions, especially for sales closures. * Be a proactive Twitter, that means do not just post or copy paste information from other sources or sites but post your own work from your own website. If you are working on a new research or project start sharing the information from your own website by sharing your expertise, it will help you to boost your personal brand. Just remember not to boast about, arrogance is a big thumb down in this case. Instead try to flow and have a good time with your new Twitter friends. Retweeting (@RT) useful information from other users is in this case a good tactic. By doing so you will give credit to those who deserves them and it will help you a lot as well. Once you have set up the previous mentioned Twitter fundamentals, you can use now the most important business Twitter research tools which are highly efficient. Many companies are already including them in their market domination programs: *Tweetdeck that was mentioned before and helps you in this case to organize and optimize your list, all this in front of your eyes, in your desktop. *Tweetbeep is another wonderful tool which helps you to monitor your brand. It is compared to Google Alerts. By using this tool you will be able to monitor your industry and name and the best thing in this is all information needed is sent to your email or folder if you enable it. You can catalogue it and categorize it in real time by field and segmentations. *Tweellow as we mentioned in previous articles, is like a Twitter Yellow pages or a huge Twitter data base. It is a digital directory, which has all what you want for a global and holistic order either locally, regionally, worldly or statistically. This tool can be used together with Twellowhood and allows you to do your business research in a geographical basis; unfortunately for now it only includes Canada and United States. Twellow is highly used for job hunting and this tool isbeing used by renownedhead hunters. Of course it can be used byjob seekers as well. *Nearby Tweets is a very useful application, this helps you to search for tweets based on desired keywords or location. Although it is quite new (launched on January 2009), it promises to be the boom of all applications. By using Nearby Tweets, your local or geographical research can also be filtered by locating other's interests by enriching your search and adding value to your work. It is a real time application and you do not have to be nobody's friend to follow market trends, it is like you are watching through the window of your 10th floor apartment what is happening at a crowded street of New York. *TweetTree is another Twitter user research tool. Only the difference from other research tools and search tools is that it displays similar resultsfromother Twitter'sposts even from other social network sites such as YouTube, Twitpic, Flicker, etc. *Blip.FM is like having a Twitter profile but with a CD player included, where you can choose your music and start swaying to and fro your Twitts away. *TwinFluence and TwinCounter helps you to monitor either your whole trajectory or influence level or simply just analyzing your Twitter strength level among other Twitters, same as other statistic with charts and graphs. These tools can help youstructuring a solid personal or brand SWOT. Twitter's algorithm is also changing and mutating into more search engines friendly crawling system, changing traditional marketing and business paradigms into the twitter business strategy and twitter marketing ones. That means in the mean time it will compete with Google as a search engine system. Because of this, certain mathematical parameters should be applied here in this case and for thoseinto search engine marketing works, however this is the topic of another article which will come soon.





© Copyright 2009 - Henry Alzamora

A good help and advising on how to use the best twitter business strategy, would allow you to reduce coordination expenses in your Marketing Plan. Contacting a good internet marketing specialist with a scientific and holistic approach in the field is highly recommended. Contact twitter marketing Europe for a free quote.




Tips For eBay Sellers - Getting That First Bid

eBay sellers of all experience levels are at one time or another particularly challenged to get that first bid on their auction-style listing, let alone turn a profit when the bidding closes. Breaking through that obstacle of the first bid can sometimes act as a form of lubrication to the bidding process, opening the door to visitor interest and subsequent bidding that would've otherwise been postponed or deterred by that dreary "Bids: 0" initial stage we're all required to start our auction's journey at. Here are some easy tips I've learned that can help a seller overcome that sometimes formidable hurdle.

First and foremost, one must address listing visibility issues. This topic is relatively expansive and beyond the scope of this article, so I'll just mention some of the most important and long-standing factors to tend to. Aside from having a professional looking listing (that need not be necessarily ornate or embellished), using properly researched title keywords is probably the most important factor in making your listing easily found by eBay shoppers. After that "huber-critical" factor has been dealt with, several others quickly rise to the top of the to-do list: inclusion of quality photographs, proper category selection, maintaining a history of high DSR's and positive feedback ranking, catering to the latest alleged Best Match criteria, and so forth. I won't elaborate on these oft' discussed issues here; many an eBay strategist have expounded on this wide-ranging theme, and worthwhile strategies to that effect abound elsewhere on the internet.

Moving on, a technique I've used time and again to fan the flames of interest and enthusiasm and to incite that first bid is to offer a special "First Bidder's Bonus." I include a well-highlighted paragraph in my listing that offers a bonus item if the first bidder is the also the winning bidder (using the same eBay user ID) of the listed item. This can often give the listing a much needed jump start early on in the listing's duration. Since only the first bidder can obtain the bonus, a certain psychology comes in to play both before that first bid is made, and throughout the bidding process. There's suddenly value in being the first bidder.

Who's likely to spring for the bonus? I like to target the shopper who'd normally place their bid in the end-stages of listing (someone with genuine interest in the listed product) but is now enticed to get their bid in early to procure the bonus. Others who might make that initial leap might even be more interested in the bonus than the original item! Oddly, there's even the occasional bidder who has no intention of winning the auction at all, but slaps down a bid to prevent others from obtaining the bonus (yes, there are people out there of that ilk).

In selecting a product to be this "First Bidder's Bonus," while you do want an item valuable enough to reel in that important first bid, it's also important the bonus be "small enough" not to discourage subsequent bidding. When potential bidders approach the listing and see that they are already locked out of winning the bonus because Bidder #1 already has their foot in the door, we want the subsequent dialog in their head to be along the lines of "Oh well, the bonus isn't worth that much anyway," and to proceed placing their follow-up bid. For the bonus I usually offer a faster shipping upgrade at no charge or an second item related to the auctioned item that could be interesting to the buyer while not being too valuable. If relevant and related in any way to the auctioned item, consider the bonus being a paper discount coupon or article clipping of some kind from a recent newspaper. Generally speaking, paper products (with interesting/valuable information printed on them!) are great bonuses because they're often easy to obtain and ship.

Be sure to consider, though, if the product being auctioned is valuable enough, the bonus item should also follow suit. If you're auctioning a Bon Jovi collector's once-used backstage pass, a Bon Jovi newspaper clipping might not quite cut it as a bonus (or maybe it will), but perhaps a Bon Jovi CD might. An interesting and unique bonus, possibly good for a broad range of products (at least for US-based sales) is a simple US $2 bill. You may not know that a $2 bill is easily obtained at most banks, worth exactly $2, but with a higher perceived value with historical and sentimental value that can make a fantastic kick-starter to your listing. As you might imagine, cold hard cash will always have a certain unique appeal, even more so when offered for free.

If you're confident in the value of your item, it behooves you to start the bidding as low as possible, perhaps even at $0.01. Know your product and your audience so you can be sure you don't get stuck selling the item below cost, should the item not get bid up to market value. With a $0.01 starting bid, for example, when you are sure of the market value of your item, you can witness bidders throwing their hats in the ring just to get in early while things are quiet. They may be hoping for the chance to scoop up a sacrificial low bid, or they're testing the waters to see who's laid down proxy bids before them. In any case they've initiated some momentum for your benefit early on in the game.

Often recommended alongside the above tip is to abstain from setting a Reserve Price on your listing. Reserves often play the role of "anti-lubrication" in the bidding process, as the urge to pledge a bid is quickly deflated when the shopper knows there's a hidden barrier that may never get crossed in the fight for ownership of the prized item.

Now here's a clever technique I learned from well-known eBay PowerSeller, Avril Harper. Sometimes a product for auction can entertain interest from more than 1 market. A Victorian painting of a train, for example, might draw the attention of art collectors, train hobbyists, as well as purveyors of the artist him/herself. That old Starbucks Card you have laying around that has a picture of an Alaskan Husky on it may be in demand to both Starbucks Card collectors AND Alaskan Husky lovers! If you can anticipate this possibility, consider listing the item in multiple appropriate categories to siphon interest from various angles, pressuring that first bid to erupt sooner rather than later -- and potentially driving a bidding war toward the end. (Don't forget to do your keyword research, too, when writing the title; you want buyers from the different target markets to locate your item via their searches.) Similarly, there's the idea of bundling 2 or more items that are related in theme, but that appeal to distinctly different audiences. With greater and more diverse interest descending upon the item-pair, a first bid is that much more likely to happen.

Naturally we can mix and match these, and other, techniques, applying whatever suits the item and its speculative level of demand. Once the ball gets rolling, inertia becomes our friend, and hopefully we can enjoy accelerated bidding as the listing progresses and a zero Bid Count is a statistic long in the past.





Helping eBayers better frame their buying and selling activities, Jake Becker's site http://www.WatchCount.com offers free Watch Count related tools. Revealing the Watch Count on many eBay items (including those on eBay Pulse), WatchCount.com helps shoppers and sellers alike identify popular items. Sellers can also avail themselves of advanced search options and listing enhancements, such as the WatchCount.com Widget which boasts an item's Watch Count to increase perceived value.