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Add You - Focusing on Consistency (Part 1)
It's That Time of Year Again! rry, we were wrong; it's really going to be next month!" in an endless stream of broken promises.And no I am not referring to holiday cheer, parties, gifts and the like. And not even ringing in the New Year with its associated celebrations and resolutions. But, as all you bookkeepers and accountants are aware, year end for most companies is right around the corner.One of the first issues to be deal with no matter the timing of your fiscal year end is all those pesky payroll chores. W2’s to be prepared, proved and mailed. And let’s not forget our favorite year end chore – preparation of 1099’s. If you have been keeping on top of things through out the year, then these processes should not be too onerous.One thing you should know if you are not using a payroll service, but preparing your W2’s With just the preceding two principles in mind, we have a better idea of what we can do to become leaders in our industries: * Retaining existing customers could entail asking customers, in surveys or during customer support calls, "What do you love about our products? What do you hate? What would it take to make you a raving fan of our company?" The answers will reveal what buyers value most, and any pet peeves they've been dying to unload. * Over-delivering on promises could entail ensuring that products and services work even better than advertised, and that interactions with customer support exceed all expectations for problem resolution. Since one unhappy experience can sour all other pleasant ones, strive to ensure that the most memorable interactions -- such as the first and last in any series -- are especially positive. On a vacation, if lost luggage, forgotten belongings, or final departure activiti Your Business Card - What Does It Say About You And Your Business? When we aim for consistency in our communications, values, messages, images, offerings, and the customer experiences we create, we take another significant step toward developing long-lasting and meaningful customer relationships that will boost our bottom line.A business card can be an extremely useful tool for marketing your business and yourself. Your business card should be professional in appearance and have several different methods to contact you. These should include telephone number, fax number, email address and mailing address. Additional contact information is a plus.One of the biggest mistakes you can make with your business cards is not handing enough of them out. Business cards are an inexpensive way of leaving a piece of yourself with a potential client.Handing you card to the right people is also very important. Get your business cards into the hands of decision makers. The people who can make the all-important buying decision are idea We know that as consumers, we are able to exercise our choices to achieve the most enjoyable and efficient experiences possible. But whenever we are unhappy consumers, how likely are we to complain about it? Research shows that only a small fraction of customers will inform a company of what they dislike. The majority of silent, unhappy buyers "vote with their feet" and simply don't return. Sam Walton, the late Wal Mart founder, said: "There is only one boss: the customer. And he can fire everybody in the company, from the chairman on down, simply by spending his money somewhere else." So, since buyers are unlikely to complain (unless they're very unhappy), we must be extremely careful to ensure that they don't become unhappy about anything in their experiences, or they're likely to leave without telling us why! This article (the first in a series) explains the role of consistency in boosting customer retention and satisfaction. Inventing Your Customer "Secret Sauce" What recipe makes any relationship with a product or service stand out deliciously from all of the others? Creating consistent customer experiences is the mantra savvy businesses have been chanting to achieve great prosperity. These companies pull out all the stops to ensure that dealing with their products, staff, and services is so consistently pleasant, buyers will want to become loyal customers. But that's not all -- pleasantness is fast becoming the minimum experience buyers expect. The fierce competition today requires creating raving fans of customers so they cannot stop telling their colleagues, friends, and family about your products or services. This requires raising the bar even further! What does it take to go from being a silently shunned company to one that creates raving fans? Assembling the Filling The success of this recipe comes from paying close attention to key ingredients. These ingredients pertain to quality, business systems, marketing/sales, customer service, and good common sense. They shape the "touch points" that influence our customers' experiences. For example: * It's far more cost effective to keep existing customers than to find new ones. Why? Customer retention research shows that once companies have loyal customers, the cost of keeping them is just one-fifth the cost of attracting new ones. The research also shows that companies can boost results up to 100% just from increasing customer loyalty by only five percent! This means that marketing to existing customers consistently is far more cost-effective. * It's critical not to over-promise and under-deliver. Either we can under-promise and over-deliver or over-promise and over-deliver, but, at all costs, we should strive not to under-deliver. One of the situations that will drive everyone crazy is believing that a product is supposed to be released on a certain date, and then it's not. Or hearing that a service will be rendered per an advertised guaranty, and then it's not. Credibility and trustworthiness evaporate whenever people make promises they can't keep. Baking the Pie Common sense tells us to find every possible way to keep our existing customers, and instead of ignoring them, we should market to them regularly. Common sense also suggests that if we consistently deliver on time or earlier, or with greater quality than promised, we will delight our customers! It may mean telling our customers truthfully that we won't have a product ready to offer until next year (instead of next month). But any momentary disappointment our customers may feel will be relatively minor compared to the confidence they will have in us when we do release on time or earlier. And it's nothing like the distrust and skepticism we will earn if we under-deliver by coming back repeatedly to say, "I'm sorry, we were wrong; it's really going to be next month!" in an endless stream of broken promises. With just the preceding two principles in mind, we have a better idea of what we can do to become leaders in our industries: * Retaining existing customers could entail asking customers, in surveys or during customer support calls, "What do you love about our products? What do you hate? What would it take to make you a raving fan of our company?" The answers will reveal what buyers value most, and any pet peeves they've been dying to unload. * Over-delivering on promises could entail ensuring that products and services work even better than advertised, and that interactions with customer support exceed all expectations for problem resolution. Since one unhappy experience can sour all other pleasant ones, strive to ensure that the most memorable interactions -- such as the first and last in any series -- are especially positive. On a vacation, if lost luggage, forgotten belongings, or final departure activiti The Successful Business Opportunity You Need to Know About heir experiences, or they're likely to leave without telling us why! This article (the first in a series) explains the role of consistency in boosting customer retention and satisfaction.Have you ever been interested in starting a home business but worried about the risks you have to take to succeed? Well my friend Michael Andrews can help you! Think you won't be able to close a deal? or do you need some free ways to get your company noticed? What about to get more traffic to your website? Mike's your man.The Internet business he has created called Profitlance Systems, is a system designed to promote business opportunities online and teach the beginner the methods needed to succeed. Profitlance makes it easy for people with little to no marketing experience to make money online from home. "It's an automated business" told by Mike. "It teaches you how to market and where to market, and you ca Inventing Your Customer "Secret Sauce" What recipe makes any relationship with a product or service stand out deliciously from all of the others? Creating consistent customer experiences is the mantra savvy businesses have been chanting to achieve great prosperity. These companies pull out all the stops to ensure that dealing with their products, staff, and services is so consistently pleasant, buyers will want to become loyal customers. But that's not all -- pleasantness is fast becoming the minimum experience buyers expect. The fierce competition today requires creating raving fans of customers so they cannot stop telling their colleagues, friends, and family about your products or services. This requires raising the bar even further! What does it take to go from being a silently shunned company to one that creates raving fans? Assembling the Filling The success of this recipe comes from paying close attention to key ingredients. These ingredients pertain to quality, business systems, marketing/sales, customer service, and good common sense. They shape the "touch points" that influence our customers' experiences. For example: * It's far more cost effective to keep existing customers than to find new ones. Why? Customer retention research shows that once companies have loyal customers, the cost of keeping them is just one-fifth the cost of attracting new ones. The research also shows that companies can boost results up to 100% just from increasing customer loyalty by only five percent! This means that marketing to existing customers consistently is far more cost-effective. * It's critical not to over-promise and under-deliver. Either we can under-promise and over-deliver or over-promise and over-deliver, but, at all costs, we should strive not to under-deliver. One of the situations that will drive everyone crazy is believing that a product is supposed to be released on a certain date, and then it's not. Or hearing that a service will be rendered per an advertised guaranty, and then it's not. Credibility and trustworthiness evaporate whenever people make promises they can't keep. Baking the Pie Common sense tells us to find every possible way to keep our existing customers, and instead of ignoring them, we should market to them regularly. Common sense also suggests that if we consistently deliver on time or earlier, or with greater quality than promised, we will delight our customers! It may mean telling our customers truthfully that we won't have a product ready to offer until next year (instead of next month). But any momentary disappointment our customers may feel will be relatively minor compared to the confidence they will have in us when we do release on time or earlier. And it's nothing like the distrust and skepticism we will earn if we under-deliver by coming back repeatedly to say, "I'm sorry, we were wrong; it's really going to be next month!" in an endless stream of broken promises. With just the preceding two principles in mind, we have a better idea of what we can do to become leaders in our industries: * Retaining existing customers could entail asking customers, in surveys or during customer support calls, "What do you love about our products? What do you hate? What would it take to make you a raving fan of our company?" The answers will reveal what buyers value most, and any pet peeves they've been dying to unload. * Over-delivering on promises could entail ensuring that products and services work even better than advertised, and that interactions with customer support exceed all expectations for problem resolution. Since one unhappy experience can sour all other pleasant ones, strive to ensure that the most memorable interactions -- such as the first and last in any series -- are especially positive. On a vacation, if lost luggage, forgotten belongings, or final departure activiti Benefits of S Corporations tes raving fans?The owners of any business, irrespective of the size, can benefit from incorporating. With the Tax Reform Act of 1986, the S Corporation became a highly desirable entity for corporate tax purposes. An S Corporation is a special tax designation granted by the IRS to corporations. Many small business owners and entrepreneurs prefer S corporation because it combines many of the advantages of a sole proprietorship, partnership and the corporate forms of business structure. One person can form an S corporation, but is restricted to no more than 75 shareholders. The corporation must be formed in the United States and all shareholders must be individuals. The advantages of S corporations include limited personal liability Assembling the Filling The success of this recipe comes from paying close attention to key ingredients. These ingredients pertain to quality, business systems, marketing/sales, customer service, and good common sense. They shape the "touch points" that influence our customers' experiences. For example: * It's far more cost effective to keep existing customers than to find new ones. Why? Customer retention research shows that once companies have loyal customers, the cost of keeping them is just one-fifth the cost of attracting new ones. The research also shows that companies can boost results up to 100% just from increasing customer loyalty by only five percent! This means that marketing to existing customers consistently is far more cost-effective. * It's critical not to over-promise and under-deliver. Either we can under-promise and over-deliver or over-promise and over-deliver, but, at all costs, we should strive not to under-deliver. One of the situations that will drive everyone crazy is believing that a product is supposed to be released on a certain date, and then it's not. Or hearing that a service will be rendered per an advertised guaranty, and then it's not. Credibility and trustworthiness evaporate whenever people make promises they can't keep. Baking the Pie Common sense tells us to find every possible way to keep our existing customers, and instead of ignoring them, we should market to them regularly. Common sense also suggests that if we consistently deliver on time or earlier, or with greater quality than promised, we will delight our customers! It may mean telling our customers truthfully that we won't have a product ready to offer until next year (instead of next month). But any momentary disappointment our customers may feel will be relatively minor compared to the confidence they will have in us when we do release on time or earlier. And it's nothing like the distrust and skepticism we will earn if we under-deliver by coming back repeatedly to say, "I'm sorry, we were wrong; it's really going to be next month!" in an endless stream of broken promises. With just the preceding two principles in mind, we have a better idea of what we can do to become leaders in our industries: * Retaining existing customers could entail asking customers, in surveys or during customer support calls, "What do you love about our products? What do you hate? What would it take to make you a raving fan of our company?" The answers will reveal what buyers value most, and any pet peeves they've been dying to unload. * Over-delivering on promises could entail ensuring that products and services work even better than advertised, and that interactions with customer support exceed all expectations for problem resolution. Since one unhappy experience can sour all other pleasant ones, strive to ensure that the most memorable interactions -- such as the first and last in any series -- are especially positive. On a vacation, if lost luggage, forgotten belongings, or final departure activiti Overcome Stalled Mind-Sets That Keep You from Accomplishing 20 Times More e crazy is believing that a product is supposed to be released on a certain date, and then it's not. Or hearing that a service will be rendered per an advertised guaranty, and then it's not. Credibility and trustworthiness evaporate whenever people make promises they can't keep.A mind-set is a way we organize our thinking, whether consciously or unconsciously. Most of the time, we act based on unconscious mind-sets that simply repeat what we've done most recently. In a new situation where our conscious mind is engaged, we may also repeat past behavior because when faced with a new choice, we often search through our alternatives in a predictable pattern that includes some perspectives while ignoring many others.Organizations develop their mind-sets through rules, processes, and rituals, as well as through the mind-sets of those who work in them. The fewer people who enter an organization, the more likely the organizational mind-set is to become fixed.The Individual Stall Min Baking the Pie Common sense tells us to find every possible way to keep our existing customers, and instead of ignoring them, we should market to them regularly. Common sense also suggests that if we consistently deliver on time or earlier, or with greater quality than promised, we will delight our customers! It may mean telling our customers truthfully that we won't have a product ready to offer until next year (instead of next month). But any momentary disappointment our customers may feel will be relatively minor compared to the confidence they will have in us when we do release on time or earlier. And it's nothing like the distrust and skepticism we will earn if we under-deliver by coming back repeatedly to say, "I'm sorry, we were wrong; it's really going to be next month!" in an endless stream of broken promises. With just the preceding two principles in mind, we have a better idea of what we can do to become leaders in our industries: * Retaining existing customers could entail asking customers, in surveys or during customer support calls, "What do you love about our products? What do you hate? What would it take to make you a raving fan of our company?" The answers will reveal what buyers value most, and any pet peeves they've been dying to unload. * Over-delivering on promises could entail ensuring that products and services work even better than advertised, and that interactions with customer support exceed all expectations for problem resolution. Since one unhappy experience can sour all other pleasant ones, strive to ensure that the most memorable interactions -- such as the first and last in any series -- are especially positive. On a vacation, if lost luggage, forgotten belongings, or final departure activiti SearchClickZ rry, we were wrong; it's really going to be next month!" in an endless stream of broken promises.Have you ever heard of backlinks? If not, you have come to the right place. Here, through this informative article, we will take a much closer examination of backlinks. Not only will you be able to learn more about backlinks are and how they work, but you will also be able to find out how to build your own backlink. Read on to find out more.What Are Backlinks?Backlinks are incoming links to a website. They allow you to keep track of other websites on the Internet which have links to yours, whether or not the links are direct, and what types of keywords the website has provided in their anchor text (meaning what the link says). They are used in order to rank the popularity of a particular website, whic With just the preceding two principles in mind, we have a better idea of what we can do to become leaders in our industries: * Retaining existing customers could entail asking customers, in surveys or during customer support calls, "What do you love about our products? What do you hate? What would it take to make you a raving fan of our company?" The answers will reveal what buyers value most, and any pet peeves they've been dying to unload. * Over-delivering on promises could entail ensuring that products and services work even better than advertised, and that interactions with customer support exceed all expectations for problem resolution. Since one unhappy experience can sour all other pleasant ones, strive to ensure that the most memorable interactions -- such as the first and last in any series -- are especially positive. On a vacation, if lost luggage, forgotten belongings, or final departure activities are not handled with the utmost care, everything positive that preceded those disappointments may be erased from the vacationer's memory! In conclusion, the recipe for positive and rewarding customer relationships includes, but is not limited to, recognizing the value of consistency in customer retention and in over-delivering on promises, both explicit and implied. These two ingredients are a few of the ways to plug the gaps that would cause buyers to "vote with their feet." Alone, they might not be quite enough to create raving fans, but without them, we won't create any loyal customers, either.
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