Showing posts with label work at home income. Show all posts
Showing posts with label work at home income. Show all posts

Sunday, January 26, 2014

Here are the Ten Commandments for maximum (particularly home business) success. Thou shalt follow them if profits be thy goal.



Author's program note. As I write this article, the stirring chords of  Elmer Bernstein's  score for the 1956 classic "The Ten Commandments" are ringing in my ear, by  turns sultry, bombastic, holy and hubristic, suitable for philistines  everywhere, a  supreme illustration of why we go to the movies in the first place and  why we  always will; "of course, I want butter on my popcorn!"

 Specifically I am listening to the part that accompanies the Hebrew  slaves  as they leave Egypt and with joyful muddle begin their historic trek to  freedom.  As visualized by director Cecil B. DeMille (who had the chuptzah to cast himself  as the voice of God on Mt. Sinai), it is a moment of unsurpassed  happiness,  never mind that there's a whopping anachronism every minute. A man who  could rewrite the Bible could hardly be expected to toe the historic  line. He  wanted a Hollywood-style exodus... and what Mr. DeMille wanted, Mr.  DeMille  got.

 Thus, for this article, go to any search engine and find the music that  helped make  this clunker the seventh highest grossing film of all times. Well might  Nefertari, Throne  Princess of Egypt, (played by Anne Baxter as if dressed for a rendezvous with a pool  boy in Bevery Hills) say "O, Moses,  Moses" and then say it over and  over again.  The folks in the grand days certainly knew what they were doing... The  real question  is, do you? Let's put you under the microscope and see.

 1) Thou shalt not have money as thy prime objective. Of course you want  to make  money with your business, as much money as possible. That must never be  forgotten  or disputed. However, it's how you set about getting this money that's  the key to the  situation. Consider this...

 Years ago there was a program on t.v. which gave as its prize so many  minutes in a toy  shop. You could rush hither and yon grabbing everything within reach in  an orgy of  greed and high-octane avarice, damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead,  quick you've  only got 3 seconds left. This, I shouldn't have to tell you is NOT how  your business  should be run; capturing customers, squeezing customers, maximum  fleecing not  only permitted but encouraged. Exhilarating this might be... even  profitable this may  be (for a time) but it isn't business. It's organized larceny.

 Business has a different objective than merely holding customers upside  down and  emptying their pockets by any and all means, speed being the objective,  not  service. For those in this category, "Service with a smile" is a snare  capturing the  unwary, the equivalent of the big bad wolf dressing up in grandma's  bloody duds, "All  the better to eat you with, my dear" the corporate logo and policy.

 2) Thou shalt tend your business so it supports you for the long-term,  not just the  short. The first home-based business I remember was my Uncle Ray's farm  cut  with sweat and determination from the great windswept prairies of  Illinois. There he  defined for me, with few words but maximum dedication what one must do  to make  business work. What he did he made clear, he did for himself and wife,  but far  more importantly he did for his three children... and so, sustained by  his plan, he  did not merely work the land; he tended the land upon which his business was based;  he cherished and honored the land. You must do the same.

 3) Thou shalt give value to thy customer. We all have before us an  enterprise that  personifies, exemplifies and signifies how a customer must be treated;  that is, if you  want to gain the adherence and loyalty of that customer. That enterprise is Wal-Mart.   .  (founded 1962), and it became in short-order the premier retailer of the Great Republic,  thus the greatest business of the greatest country on Earth.

 How did they do it? In a single word, "value." Not only did they make a  fetish of delivering  value, they turned that delivery into a live, mesmerizing event as they, with art and skill,  slashed prices before your grateful eyes, their every move calculated to capture not just  eye but time, heart and their next purchase and the one after that...  Money, you see,  follows value. Thus delivering customer value is the first, the last,  the only thing.

 4) Honor thy customer. We all "know" the importance of customers; at  least we think  we do. But this is a promise far too often honored in the breach, which  is to say, hardly honored at all. Your policy should be encapsulated in these words:  "Check with us  first. Our value cannot be beat. See for yourself." Then do an  apples-to-apples strict  comparison with how you support your customers by actively enabling them to retain  more of their money. Don't just think it... don't just do it... always  make sure you have  informed your customers about what you've done. In this age of e-mail,  blogs, and  video marketing, that should be a piece of cake.

 5) Thou shalt try to buy your own product. As I write this article, it  is just after Christmas. This year my holiday was marred by companies over promising and under  delivering  products and services. The Boston Globe, for one, proved again that no  matter what  great things are promised, the failure to deliver the basics makes a  mockery of each and every grandiloquent assertion from the boardroom. Words, just words;  each more suspect  than the last.

 Thus, day after day, I called and yet again attempted to use a simple  credit card to order  home delivery (and across the street from Harvard University no less) of my daily  newspaper. To no avail. Calls were made, calls were answered, more  pledges were  made, more disappointment (and some hot language) engendered. Nothing  worked.  Thus did John Henry, brand-new owner of this venerable rag, show me what my  subscription was worth and so punched another hole in his sinking ship.  Copywriters  might ply their motivating trade... but it all came to naught in the  subscription department.  If he tried to order his own paper, he'd see for himself... I hope his  experience parallels  mine so he gets the whole picture of muddle and rooted inefficiency.

 6)  Thou shalt handle complaints with speed, thoroughness and zest. Want to know  how ordinary people handle complaints? They don't. They toss them into  the circular file with the most cursory of readings; then to the land fill. You,  however, you who  aspire to greatness and greater profits, must do better. You must see  that each  complaint points the way to improvements of every kind. Thus, properly  handled,  each complaint leads to increased profits. Is that how you do things  now?

 Consider the way you handled your last complaint. This may be painful,  but no pain, no  gain. Did you handle the complaint at once? Or did you put it in the  "Raven" file, to be  dealt with "Nevermore"? I think we both know, don't we?

 Now hear this, the way you handle complaints determines not merely how  fast and  how certainly your business will grow, but whether you have a business  at all. Act  accordingly... and do it with a smile, even it that smile be more forced than sincerely  meant. In this department as all others, practice makes perfect.

 7) Know thy staff. Here again is a commandment clearly known but too  seldom  honored. Do you even know the names of the people who are straining  every sinew  to advance you? Or are these just numbers on a page? Try this.

 See how long it takes you to write the names of the staff members you  are  immediately responsible for. Do these names come easily, or must you  must strain  to remember?

 Staff members must be honored, not just dealt with as quickly and  cursorily as  possible. Know their names, their family details, their good points, and bad. This  is not merely your job; it must be seen as your privilege. There is  after all no greater  honor than helping a fellow citizen of Spaceship Earth rise. Exercise  this privilege  at every opportunity.

 8) Reward both customers and staff spontaneously, when they least expect it.  After you become an adult, most of life's surprises are unwelcome,  involving as they  so often do frantic intelligence about health and financial matters.  Such surprises  unsettle and upset, and are not at all what I have in mind.

 Instead, become the master of unanticipated surprises that brighten  lives and help  build lifelong relationships, for these relationships are absolutely  essential for business  and personal success and satisfaction.

 Thus, seek out customers and employees and give them unexpected presents  ranging from a pair of movie passes, gift certificates to a fine retail  store, or a week-end  in Cancun. Your kindnesses will never be forgotten... and if that isn't  good business,  I don't know what is.

 9) Thou shalt  pay your suppliers at once. Whilst I was writing this  article, I received  an SOS call from one of my suppliers, a man whose organizational skills  are (I'm  chagrined to say) "challenged". He needed to pay some crucial bills and  would  I mind wiring funds for work he had not even invoiced me? I was able,  and so the  bank wire went out that very day.  His thanks were immediate, warm and  effusive.

 Why do such a good deed? Because with it you have bought yourself a  future favor  for need yet unknown. Here is a variation on this theme. When I'm able, I often send  funds "on account" to my various suppliers; that is for no invoice in  particular but  my account balance in general and not yet communicated to me. This never fails  to astonish these suppliers, who, like you, live in the area of "slow  pays" or, worst,  "no pays." Your name will be blessed accordingly.

 10) Finally, today's last Commandment: visit me at  jeffreylantarticles.com. There  you will find over a thousand articles of my authorship, a cornucopia of practical  business details and timely profit-making information, so beneficial to  you that  you'll never need to be commanded to use it but will embrace it with  joy. After  all, such information will deliver your personal exodus from wage  slavery and  give you the financial freedom you want. And we can all say "O Moses,  Moses"  to that!


About the Author Harvard-educated Dr. Jeffrey Lant is CEO of Worldprofit, Inc. at www.worldprofit.com, providing a wide range of online services for small and-home based businesses. Republished with author's permission by Ruthsella Corasol http://WorkingAtHome101.com.



Monday, September 9, 2013

How To Pick a Legitimate Home Business Opportunity



You've seen the emails, the offers, the promises and the claims. Everyone it seems has a way to help you make money online.

But how do you know who you can trust? How do you know what system works? How do you protect yourself?  

The fact is that you CAN earn money online from legitimate sources, here's what to look for when picking an online business opportunity.

Products or Services with actual value

Many companies including large companies like Amazon and ClickBank offer what is known as an Affiliate marketing program, or sometimes called a Reseller program. This allows you to promote a company's products or services and earn a commission when a sale is made through your website link.   The key in knowing what is legitimate is to be sure you are actually promoting a real product, or a digital product, or an actually service.  Beware of selling anything that seems without substance, and has no real market value.   An example of something suspect would be getting paid to recruit people into a program who have not paid any money to do so.  All business online and off works when there is an exchange of money for a product or service.    Pyramid schemes exist online and off and are an example of focus on recruitment into a program rather then the sale of an actual product. In the case of a pyramid scheme, and example is someone paying to join a program but receives no product or service of REAL value in return.  In short, make sure that you are actually selling something of value. 


Customer Service and Support

Legitimate companies that sell actual products and services will support or service what they sell. In other words, good companies will have a Customer Support Department, or a Service Department or Technical Support division to assist customers who have either bought a product or intend to do so.    Reputable companies offer this support in any number of ways, online chat, support forums, Twitter, Facebook, telephone support, or online support.  


Time in business

Legitimate business opportunities most trustworthy are often those that have stood the test of time.  On the web it is very easy to set up a company, sell questionable products and services, then disappear into the night when the business practices come into question.   When picking an online business opportunity select a company that has been around for at least a few years. Companies that continue to exist are usually those that demonstrate an interest in keeping their customers happy, are accountable, and adhere to policy and legislation that permits them to provide a product or service.

Reputation

When picking a reputable business opportunity people will often look to review sites for feedback from others. This can offer you some interesting details about what people think about a company and how the company responds to complaints.  In reading the reviews though keep an open mind knowing that no company exists without complaints against it. Good companies that you would want to associate with, are those that try to address customer complaints or resolve issues brought to their attention.  People with an axe to grind will sometime post negative reviews and hide in the anonymity of that post.  So be  smart when reading review sites, and look for dates, patterns or themes and try to separate the intelligent comments from the less helpful and questionable ones.


Look before you leap

When you decide on which business opportunity you wish to join, be sure to take your time and read over what you are agreeing to before you sign on the dotted line or hit the submit button. Determine what your up front cost is, your monthly cost (if any), your ongoing cost? What happens if you want to cancel, is there a guarantee, or is there any long term obligation or a penalty for cancelling?  Find out how your sales will be tracked, how often will you paid, for which services and how will you be paid.

In summary, here are 5 questions to ask yourself for any company you are considering for a home business opportunity.

1. How long has the company been in business? What is their reputation?

2. What is the product or service you will be selling? What is the value in the market place? There should ALWAYS be a product or service being sold.

3. What is the initial cost to get started in the business? What do you get for that amount of money? What are the ongoing costs? 

4. What kind of support or service will you receive as an Affiliate Marketer or Reseller for the company to help you make sales? What kind of support of service will the people you refer receive when they make a purchase?

5. How much money are you paid by this company when you make a sale, how often, and how will your sales be tracked?  

These questions and information contained within are a guideline to help you make a smart decision about an online business opportunity that is right for you.

One final bit of advise. Once you have found a company to represent be sure to be realistic about your earnings and accept some responsibility for your own success.  At the end of the day, your success comes down to you, and your efforts.  It won't matter what business opportunity you select if you don't take the time to learn about the program, learn how to market online, and make an honest consistent effort to build your own success.

I hope this has helped you so you can select one or more legitimate companies and you can join the growing population of people making money at home using the power of the web.


About the Author Sandi Hunter is the President of Worldprofit Inc., a company providing training and support for small and home based business since 1994. Services include home business training, reseller programs, affiliate marketing training, earn-at-home programs, traffic tools, advertising, webcasting, hosting, design, WordPress Blogs and more. Find out why Worldprofit is considered the # 1 online Home Business Training program by getting a free Associate Membership today. Republished with author's permission by Ruthsella Corasol http://WorkingAtHome101.com.
 

Saturday, July 20, 2013

Having A Successful Home Based Business Made Easy

There are numerous reasons why you might be interested in starting your own home-based business, along with a great deal of doubt, concern and questions. The following article offers some tips and advice to help quell the concerns, and offer resolution to common issues many people face in the operation or start-up of a home business.

Before starting a home business, be sure to research your market fully. If your product is something that your target market doesn't want or need, you won't get many sales. Rather than spending all your energy trying to force the market to buy your product, spend that energy designing and promoting a product the market wants.

If you are going to splurge on any home office furniture, splurge on a very comfortable office chair. You are going to spend many, many hours in this chair and if it is uncomfortable, you will not be as productive as you could be and you could technically, do damage to your body.

Since your home is also your work place, make a point to get out of the house on a regular basis. Don't isolate yourself for the sake of convenience. Go have lunch in the park, grab your coffee at a bookstore, etc. Just make sure you are out breathing fresh air at least once a day.

If you have a business, then you need a budget. How can you run a cost efficient business without a budget? It is impossible, and therefore imperative that you incorporate a well devised budget into the planning process. This budget should include what your expenses are of course and it should itemize them. Make sure you are thorough and include everything so that you are not misleading yourself.

Use your web site to advertise a free product for visitors. This will increase traffic on your site and give potential customers the ability to sample your product. Although it may cost a little money in the beginning, you should make up for it in sales from impressed new customers.

Do not be afraid to post your email address on your web site. Make sure that you include it on every separate page that you have. You do not want potential customers to search to figure out how to get in touch with you. The more effort that it takes them, the more likely they are to go on to something else without purchasing from you.

Make sure you have a support network before starting your home business. This includes family members who need to be aware of the time commitment involved, as well as an external networks you can reach out to for advice or support. Working from home has numerous benefits, but remaining a part of a group outside your home is invaluable.

Making the decision to start a home business or to invest more time in the one you've already gotten off the ground can be a cause of concern. There's so many questions about what to do, when to do it, how to do it, and why to do it, from marketing to overhead to product choice. Whether you just graduated with your MBA or are a stay-at-home mom or dad, you can simplify the answers to these questions by using the sensible advice in these tips.


 Ruthsella Corasol is the Owner of http://WorkingAtHome101.com. Check us out anytime for marketing tips and a free subscription to our cutting edge newsletter.

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

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Monday, July 30, 2012

'Just One Of Those Things.' Thoughts on America, our massacres, and randomdeath. Do we really care and are we willing to do the necessary?


by  Dr. Jeffrey Lant

Author's program note. In 1935 two of America's greatest talents, Frank Sinatra and Cole Porter, created a catchy little number called "Just One Of Those Things." It instantly rose, fueled by the sophistication and class that oozed from both these men of the world. In it, they took us on "A trip to the moon on gossamer wings." Hearing it (and you should go to any search engine now so you can), one felt one could be anyone, achieve anything.

To say it was heady is a decided understatement... it was what America was all about... and we thought exceedingly well of ourselves for the Great Republic we had wrought, the cynosure and envy of the world.

That was then...

... this is now. Now, with time's  mordant wit and cruel irony apparent, what was once so lucid, now seems murky at best. Things we once thought important, affirming as they did our "can-do" orientation and proven ability to improve most everything we touched, now affront by reminding us of what we were... and what we have become. "Can-do" has morphed into "no-can-do" while we were engaged in congratulating ourselves on just how good, clever, and deserving we were of every plaudit and paean. America became something from the "good old days", something we had unaccountably lost... to our puzzlement, pain, and perplexity. Where had we gone so terribly, perhaps irrevocably wrong?

"The Dark Knight Rises" in Aurora, part of the greater Colorado Springs area.

One is hardly surprised to learn (December, 2011) that "Forbes" magazine named Colorado Springs, Colorado and environs one of the best and most livable communities in the land. This view is reinforced by its picture perfect post card views, its warm and amiable residents, and municipal services which actually work and no bankruptcy pending. It all seems too good to be true... and, of course it is, for the currents that disturb the nation are all present and accounted for in Colorado Springs, as became evident to all July 20, 2012 when a real-life "dark knight" in full body armor named James Eagen Holmes,  24, blasted his way out of obscurity making 12 victims pay the ultimate price to cover his cost of egress, with 59 others wounded and seared for life .

To secure his notorious place in history, he carried with him into a packed cinema two cannisters of debilitating gas, two pistols, an assault rifle, a shot gun and an ample supply of the thousands of rounds of ammunition it had been so easy and perfectly legal to secure on the 'net from the ease, comfort, and privacy of his booby-trapped home.

Never had mass murder been so effortless, so efficient, and so easy, a very model for incipient mass murderers of every ilk and  persuasion, everywhere on Earth. We need not waste another word on Holmes, beyond our supposition that he did what he wanted to do to secure the pernicious result he desired. If so, his is the only satisfaction emanating from the killing fields of Colorado, for he achieved his destructive mission... while the rest of us have not even begun to accomplish ours. And that is a measure of our tragedy as a nation which once prided itself on its ability to solve even the most intractable of problems. Now instead of rolling up our sleeves in an earnest attempt to solve, we instead see events like this as "inevitable", "certain", "unavoidable". And that's that, "just one of those things."

The growth and consequences of "event fatigue".

The entire nation, all citizens of the Great Republic know well and have often participated in the lugubrious ritual which follows each massacre. First come the news announcements "We interrupt this program...." Then come the wire service reports (carried at once on the Internet)... and the first bloody photos of carnage at the scene, the innocent corpses who never knew what hit them... the dazed survivors sobbing, their certainties of just moments before now gone forever, unendurable grief and dismay now their portion.

At the White House, the president is alerted... and plans to leave at once, his remarks an amalgamation of what every president before him has said of such increasingly frequent incidents. Folks visit the site, tear up, hug, drop bouquets of store- bought flowers, festooned with bright colored helium balloons and often children's stuffed animals, festive cards now featuring the names of victims. "Something must be done", but only this little, this inadequate is ever done... until the next "inevitable" massacre when this paltry, petty, pitiful response is trotted out again, less satisfying, less persuasive, less acceptable than it was before.

What then is needed since the response to each new massacre becomes less acceptable and less acceptable still, these responses victims of "event fatigue" which turn even the most exemplary and conscientious of citizens into ostriches, adamant in their desire neither to see nor hear the palpable evil, thus by such means "dealing with it" by doing absolutely nothing at all?

This is what such a result means: that each innocent body laid out in its own blood on school room floor, on campus green or cinema parking lot, each life cut short, each family riven with anger, sadness, and an infinity of regrets and thoughts of what might have been but which now can never be... these things, once the most profound of horrors, are now regarded as a mere tax we pay for the "free" society we have fashioned. And this is acceptable.. so long as it is not their bloody body laid out... the lives of their near and dear cut short, or their plans and dreams destroyed in an instant of hell. This is ignoble... but we are beginning to live with it...  and that is the most unacceptable thing of all.

Back to the future.

To move beyond the current unsatisfactory situation, where each new outrage and massacre produces less response and more acceptance, we must remember that every great society became so when it attacked such problems with will and resolution, understanding that such is always the price of growth, development, and greatness. So far, we have set no goals, canvassed no solutions, engaged in no general discussions, debates, or dialogs. Instead, we have tried to bury the problem as we bury its victims, one after another, all too soon taken. And so a great nation, our Great Republic, betrays through its inertia its tolerance for evil and its moving away from good on which we built a city that could indeed be a shining city on a hill.

Thus, know this: every needless death that has occurred, every life cut short, has occurred not because such events are "inevitable" but because we have accepted them as such, rather than human problems with human solutions. In short we have done what no great people can ever do and retain their self-esteem and any claim to preeminence: we have declared defeat before we have done anything to achieve victory. And this marks the full measure of our continuing decline from our special, Godly mission.

"So good-bye, and amen/ Here's hoping we meet now and then/ It was great fun/ But it was just one of those things."

Could this be our epitaph, the best we are capable of?  Until we change our thinking from "just one of those things" to "just one of those things we can solve" it may well be. The answer resides in each of us and is urgently required...

About the Author

Harvard-educated Dr. Jeffrey Lant is CEO of Worldprofit, Inc., providing a wide range of online services for small and-home based businesses. Services include home business training, affiliate marketing training, earn-at-home programs, traffic tools, advertising, webcasting, hosting, design, WordPress Blogs and more. Find out why Worldprofit is considered the # 1 online Home Business Training program by getting a free Associate Membership today. Republished with author's permission by Ruthsella Corasol  http://WorkingAtHome101.com