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    Event Marketing What, Why and When?
    The length of time it takes to get to market is critical to your product’s success. You need to deliver the right message about your product to the right audience, facilitate a rapid adoption rate and cover your territories to maximize market penetration. Here I want to tell you some thing about the Event Marketing means what is this and what is its benefits, as i told you first that you need to deliver the right message about your product to the right audience otherwise your efforts will be less effective.The event marketing is something that will appeal to targeted audience. means you need to create some events with the help of well known personalities and invite all those persons that are interested about this event and here you needs to demonstrate your product that is u
    ny entrepreneurs would rather have their front teeth pulled without anesthetic than go to the time and trouble of creating a feasibility plan; often because they are afraid of what it will reveal.

    The last thing an entrepreneur

    Coal Mines
    The deepest Coal Mine in the world is over 5000 feet below the ground in the UK. Many in the United States are over 1200 feet deep, most of those are closed and now few are remaining. There is a mine in Alabama, which is the deepest vertical shaft coalmine in North America, with operations at 2,140 feet beneath the surface. It is hard for the coalmines in Washington State, Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Alabama to compete with the incredible economies of scale of the Gillette WY above ground mine. Below ground coalmines can be quite dangerous. There are gases underground and coal dust and if a fire breaks out it steals all the oxygen. Learn more about the serious nature of these mine safety you may wish to visit this site: http://www.usmra.com.Recently the re
    Last week we talked about a few of the ways to test the feasibility of a business idea to help determine if the idea really had merit or just looked good on the surface. To recap, I said don’t bet the farm on the opinions of friends and family, consult with knowledgeable business experts, and conduct a SWOT (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats) Analysis. This week let’s take it a step further and talk about the creation of a formal Feasibility Plan which will help you determine the true feasibility of your big business idea.

    A feasibility plan is just that: a written plan that is created for the sole purpose of validating the feasibility of a business idea. Some call it a “Go/No Go” plan, because the results of a well-constructed feasibility plan will tell you whether or not the idea has a chance for success (that’s a Go) or if this idea would be best left on the drawing board (that’s a No Go).

    Many entrepreneurs would rather have their front teeth pulled without anesthetic than go to the time and trouble of creating a feasibility plan; often because they are afraid of what it will reveal.

    The last thing an entrepreneur

    Employee Theft: Examples of Misconduct by Occupation and Job Type
    Examples of employee malfeasance can be better understood when broken down into basic occupation types and categories. By doing so, the underlying principles that contribute to acts of fraud, theft and embezzlement become evident: one must have access, opportunity and motivation.Accounting/ Bookkeeping • Ghost companies • Fictitious employees • Fictitious or inflated invoices • "Cooking the books" inflating and skimming from accounts • Overlapping accounts Automobile and Service Mechanics • Billing customer for unneeded repairs • Failing to do repairs • Substituting inferior parts and products for premium charges • Theft of cash by not reporting invoices to garage • Theft from customer's cars • Intentionally causing additional da
    nd family, consult with knowledgeable business experts, and conduct a SWOT (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats) Analysis. This week let’s take it a step further and talk about the creation of a formal Feasibility Plan which will help you determine the true feasibility of your big business idea.

    A feasibility plan is just that: a written plan that is created for the sole purpose of validating the feasibility of a business idea. Some call it a “Go/No Go” plan, because the results of a well-constructed feasibility plan will tell you whether or not the idea has a chance for success (that’s a Go) or if this idea would be best left on the drawing board (that’s a No Go).

    Many entrepreneurs would rather have their front teeth pulled without anesthetic than go to the time and trouble of creating a feasibility plan; often because they are afraid of what it will reveal.

    The last thing an entrepreneur

    Whadda Jerk!
    If one does not understand a person, one tends to regard him as a fool. Carl Jung Sadly, public discourse today seems to have degenerated into warring parties spitting epithets at one another. With little inclination to see the other’s point of view, the parties are reduced to name calling, labeling and the simplification of complex issues. The only commonality is the shared belief that the other guy is a jerk. Thanks to Jung’s pioneering work on personality type, we know that there are at least sixteen discrete ways to view any data set. This means that given any situation, there are sixteen different, though perfectly normal, ways  of evaluating it. Not surprisingly, sixteen different points of view might yield very different conclusions. Too often we tend to
    hich will help you determine the true feasibility of your big business idea.

    A feasibility plan is just that: a written plan that is created for the sole purpose of validating the feasibility of a business idea. Some call it a “Go/No Go” plan, because the results of a well-constructed feasibility plan will tell you whether or not the idea has a chance for success (that’s a Go) or if this idea would be best left on the drawing board (that’s a No Go).

    Many entrepreneurs would rather have their front teeth pulled without anesthetic than go to the time and trouble of creating a feasibility plan; often because they are afraid of what it will reveal.

    The last thing an entrepreneur

    Here's The Information Your Customers Want- Which Your Competitors Forgot To Provide
    Have you ever visited the website for a small business and become frustrated that you can’t find seemingly basic information? You are not alone. As customers we want to get the information we want as quickly as we can. For some reason, many businesses – especially small businesses – either forget, or choose not to include the basics.Be sure your organization’s website includes all the most basic information. And make sure that information is available within ONE CLICK; this is what customers want. People don’t like to click through many pages to find what they are looking for.Some of this basic information includes: Your prices Business hours Your phone number Your address and map/directionsIn addition, you can include
    Go/No Go” plan, because the results of a well-constructed feasibility plan will tell you whether or not the idea has a chance for success (that’s a Go) or if this idea would be best left on the drawing board (that’s a No Go).

    Many entrepreneurs would rather have their front teeth pulled without anesthetic than go to the time and trouble of creating a feasibility plan; often because they are afraid of what it will reveal.

    The last thing an entrepreneur

    Those Wonderful Women Truckers
    Presently, there are about 8 million licensed CDL drivers in the United States. Approximately 4.5 million of these are active truck drivers. Professional truck driving, specifically over the road trucking, has always been noted as a field dominated by men. The rough and tough trucking life could only be handled by a real man . . . well, times are changing!Women in trucking actually goes back to 1929 when Lillie Elizabeth Drennan became the first women to receive the CDL license. Driving an old Chevrolet, she was a rugged lady who carried a loaded revolver with her on her trucking adventures. Born in 1897, she paved the way for women truckers up to her passing in 1974.Today, there are nearly 170,000 women truckers, making up 5% of all U.S. trucking jobs<
    ny entrepreneurs would rather have their front teeth pulled without anesthetic than go to the time and trouble of creating a feasibility plan; often because they are afraid of what it will reveal.

    The last thing an entrepreneur (particularly one without prior business experience) wants to hear is that their business idea won’t fly, so they put on blinders and resist testing the idea using real world information.

    In an entrepreneur’s head every idea is a good one, every hit is a home run, and every story ends with the hero sitting on a beach drinking Mai Tai’s and lighting cigars with hundred dollar bills. No one wants to imagine the story ending any other way and many would rather bury their heads in the sand and hope for the best than to test out their ideas before execution. Trust me. I’ve been there, done that, got the T-shirt and paid the bill. Not a smart thing to do.

    Writing a detailed feasibility plan will force you to take off the rose colored glasses and look at the idea honestly and entirely. It will help you define your market, identify your customers, potential partners and competitors, recognize opportunities and warn of

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