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    Being a Guru Rich Jerk, or Just a Guru?
    Spare times.Paper and Pen.Losing by a careless button push.Sharing by full openness,the more so the merrier.The greedy dreams will be fulfilled.Trying to make it,pushes results further away.Being Chinese, success seems unbalanced.Actually once it seemed like the West had all the answers.There is a fear of loss to cheap workers.Yet with the success of a few services that promise that you can kick out the boss, I think most are probably overpaid anyway.What about visiting your internal self?Much
    oposal and the initialization fee from the client you begin work on their project. This initialization fee should be substantial enough to cover the majority of the cost of the job.

    Collect a ‘final stage’ amount.

    At approximately 50% completion, you should collect a final stage amount as formerly agreed upon in the contract. This amount should be all but a 20 – 25% balance of the entire contract and should actually pay for all the costs of fulfilling this particular proposal/bid.

    Final collection on delivery of product/service.

    The final paym

    IT Sales: It's All About Relationships
    Developing the bond and the relationship with your clients is very important. In this article, you'll learn how your relationships are your assets with IT sales. It's not about the size of your customer list necessarily. It's not even about the revenue. It's about the longevity and the long-term relationships you build with your customers.When you're talking about your ideal clients, the lifetime value could be well in the six-figure range, so it's well worth your time to really get to know the owner
    In general, all of us know how to accomplish the task and get the work done. The problem is in how to actually ‘get paid’ for what we do. If you, like me and most of the entrepreneurs I’ve worked with, have completed the project, turned it in and been left holding the proverbial bag waiting to be paid for months on end, you are probably just as tired of that scenario as the rest of us. So what can we, as entrepreneurs, do about that particular scenario?

    A few months ago – I might have answered that there is not much that can be done about it. However, great strides have been made in my business sense in the past several months. I got tired of turning the other cheek and taking it in the pocket (bad pun intended).

    There are many scenarios that just don’t work in the process of collecting for completed work, if you are a ‘one-man show’. Some of those include ‘traditional collection agencies’, legal action against the client, repeated billing for completed jobs, and the tiger claw through the phone ideology. These are just a few of the techniques tried and failed. The reality is that the majority of other businesses are either looking for a free handout and you are the hand providing it, out to stiff you, really don’t have the financial backing to pay you for the job you do for them, or once the service is completed you are no longer a necessity for them and they avoid you.

    Many of us have resorted to the deposit and final draft methods of collection, leaving only a small balance unpaid at the time the client receives the completed project. This is highly effective, and you do get paid for your work.

    Development of this type of collection takes some thought and development of the process using the following steps:

    Work by bid/proposal contracts.

    Develop a process of billing that allows you to provide a proposal for the job you will be doing for each client. This proposal or ‘bid’ (if you will) is a description of the job you will be doing in as complete a form as possible and acts as a contract for the job you will be doing. It includes a collection process that you will carry through during the time you are working for the client.

    Collect an initialization fee.

    When you get the signed contract portion of the proposal and the initialization fee from the client you begin work on their project. This initialization fee should be substantial enough to cover the majority of the cost of the job.

    Collect a ‘final stage’ amount.

    At approximately 50% completion, you should collect a final stage amount as formerly agreed upon in the contract. This amount should be all but a 20 – 25% balance of the entire contract and should actually pay for all the costs of fulfilling this particular proposal/bid.

    Final collection on delivery of product/service.

    The final paym

    Marketing Basics Aren't a Bad Thing
    When Advertising, it’s not always better to be the lone wolf.Before using a certain medium to advertise, consider those that went before you. If you are thinking of advertising in a newspaper for example, consider how many of your competitors are in the same paper. If you don’t see any competitors at all, there may be a good reason for it.Don’t think for one moment that your the first guy to think of using this particular medium to advertise. It is remotely possible you are b
    ides have been made in my business sense in the past several months. I got tired of turning the other cheek and taking it in the pocket (bad pun intended).

    There are many scenarios that just don’t work in the process of collecting for completed work, if you are a ‘one-man show’. Some of those include ‘traditional collection agencies’, legal action against the client, repeated billing for completed jobs, and the tiger claw through the phone ideology. These are just a few of the techniques tried and failed. The reality is that the majority of other businesses are either looking for a free handout and you are the hand providing it, out to stiff you, really don’t have the financial backing to pay you for the job you do for them, or once the service is completed you are no longer a necessity for them and they avoid you.

    Many of us have resorted to the deposit and final draft methods of collection, leaving only a small balance unpaid at the time the client receives the completed project. This is highly effective, and you do get paid for your work.

    Development of this type of collection takes some thought and development of the process using the following steps:

    Work by bid/proposal contracts.

    Develop a process of billing that allows you to provide a proposal for the job you will be doing for each client. This proposal or ‘bid’ (if you will) is a description of the job you will be doing in as complete a form as possible and acts as a contract for the job you will be doing. It includes a collection process that you will carry through during the time you are working for the client.

    Collect an initialization fee.

    When you get the signed contract portion of the proposal and the initialization fee from the client you begin work on their project. This initialization fee should be substantial enough to cover the majority of the cost of the job.

    Collect a ‘final stage’ amount.

    At approximately 50% completion, you should collect a final stage amount as formerly agreed upon in the contract. This amount should be all but a 20 – 25% balance of the entire contract and should actually pay for all the costs of fulfilling this particular proposal/bid.

    Final collection on delivery of product/service.

    The final paym

    Performance Management Training
    The number of subordinates a manager can effectively manage depends on the impact of underlying factors. Aside from such personal capacities as comprehending quickly, getting along with people, and commanding loyalty and respect, the most important determinant is a manager’s ability to reduce the time he or she spends with subordinates. This ability naturally varies with managers and their jobs, but several factors materially influence the number and frequency of such contacts and therefore the span of manag
    e either looking for a free handout and you are the hand providing it, out to stiff you, really don’t have the financial backing to pay you for the job you do for them, or once the service is completed you are no longer a necessity for them and they avoid you.

    Many of us have resorted to the deposit and final draft methods of collection, leaving only a small balance unpaid at the time the client receives the completed project. This is highly effective, and you do get paid for your work.

    Development of this type of collection takes some thought and development of the process using the following steps:

    Work by bid/proposal contracts.

    Develop a process of billing that allows you to provide a proposal for the job you will be doing for each client. This proposal or ‘bid’ (if you will) is a description of the job you will be doing in as complete a form as possible and acts as a contract for the job you will be doing. It includes a collection process that you will carry through during the time you are working for the client.

    Collect an initialization fee.

    When you get the signed contract portion of the proposal and the initialization fee from the client you begin work on their project. This initialization fee should be substantial enough to cover the majority of the cost of the job.

    Collect a ‘final stage’ amount.

    At approximately 50% completion, you should collect a final stage amount as formerly agreed upon in the contract. This amount should be all but a 20 – 25% balance of the entire contract and should actually pay for all the costs of fulfilling this particular proposal/bid.

    Final collection on delivery of product/service.

    The final paym

    Know Your Competition
    Being familiar with your competitors is a valuable tool when you decide it's time for a new logo. Normally, your company will be competing directly against companies similar to yours; sometimes the competition will be much larger than you, and other times your company will be striving to beat out other small businesses. Regardless of whom you will be competing against, it's important to think about where you want to position your company in your market.For example, a lawn care company may want to posi
    t of the process using the following steps:

    Work by bid/proposal contracts.

    Develop a process of billing that allows you to provide a proposal for the job you will be doing for each client. This proposal or ‘bid’ (if you will) is a description of the job you will be doing in as complete a form as possible and acts as a contract for the job you will be doing. It includes a collection process that you will carry through during the time you are working for the client.

    Collect an initialization fee.

    When you get the signed contract portion of the proposal and the initialization fee from the client you begin work on their project. This initialization fee should be substantial enough to cover the majority of the cost of the job.

    Collect a ‘final stage’ amount.

    At approximately 50% completion, you should collect a final stage amount as formerly agreed upon in the contract. This amount should be all but a 20 – 25% balance of the entire contract and should actually pay for all the costs of fulfilling this particular proposal/bid.

    Final collection on delivery of product/service.

    The final paym

    The Book Read Negotiation Made Simple
    Negotiation made simple indeed, no this was not an actual book I bought this week, although there is no doubt someone has written such a book. The fact is that negotiation is not so simple and until you have done lots of negotiation, you really are not that good at it and it is not so simple. You see, there are so many little tricks that are used in negotiation. Simple psychological tricks of the trade and when it is all over if you are not so good at it, you think to yourself, what just happened.Obvi
    oposal and the initialization fee from the client you begin work on their project. This initialization fee should be substantial enough to cover the majority of the cost of the job.

    Collect a ‘final stage’ amount.

    At approximately 50% completion, you should collect a final stage amount as formerly agreed upon in the contract. This amount should be all but a 20 – 25% balance of the entire contract and should actually pay for all the costs of fulfilling this particular proposal/bid.

    Final collection on delivery of product/service.

    The final payment should be due on delivery or installation of your product or service, or at the very most within thirty days of delivery. This amount should not in anyway include your personal pay or costs of delivering the product. It should be only a portion of the profit for the completed project. Any discounts allowed to the customer should come out of this amount and only at the time of completion of the job and payment, never prior to this.

    Using this method to collect for a job ensures that you will be paid for the job you do and establishes a contractual agreement with the client that the job will be done. It is actually a secure way to provide the excellent service and product that your clients want and deserve while assuring your business financial stability. The financial stability of your business determines your personal financial status. Your personal financial stability is at risk in this manner, you need to be shrewd and creative in solving the problem of collections for your company from the earliest development of your business plan. If your collections process is not working in your business, you cannot bring the bacon home.

    Copyright © 2001 – Jan Verhoeff Printed in the USA

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