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Answer Upon - Marketing in the Face of Disaster: 7 Guidelines for Success
Franchise Agreements; Maintenance, Repair and Appearance of Business Location ity and give your customers a place to leave comments about
their own experiences. Empower your customers by setting up a place
at your website where your customers can click to donate money, such
as the Red Cross.Image is so vitally important to a franchising companies brand-name, that each and every franchisee must maintain consistency of appearance in their franchised outlets. This means that maintenance and repair of the business location must be up to standards of the confidential operations manual of the franchised business at all times.If a franchised outlet is in the state of disrepair and looks it, but customers will know and it will be difficult for them to maintain consistency and quality in the goods and services they perform and provide. It is for this Guideline #6: Call the doctor. Set up a teleconference bridge line call for your customers and bring in an expert on stress, to speak about how to be resilient in the face of disaster. Your customers will thank you for it, as you will be seen as someone who cares about them for more than their money. The best thing about this guideline is that you will feel good, too. Guideline #7: Don’t go down with the ship. Even if the disaster did not affect you directly, you are apt to feel some effects, both physically and me Adwords Keyword Research Tools & Tips to Find Profitable Keywords In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, many businesses are hesitating to
keep clients apprised of new offerings, perhaps afraid that they will
appear insensitive to the enormous human suffering that is going on
along the United States Gulf coast. The impact of this devastation will
undoubtedly continue for years to come, so many business owners are
understandably nervous.Adwords keyword research tools are valuable and essential to anyone using Google Adwords to promote their websites. Most people think that such keyword research tools are only capable of pulling out huge keyword lists to be used in their Adwords pay-per-click (PPC) campaign. Little do they know that these tools are also effective in digging out useful information about keywords that could be used for other PPC campaigns and even for search engine optimization. Let’s learn several useful Adwords keyword research tips and why Adwords keyword research tools are so pow But of course, life, as well as business, goes on and you must continue to contact existing and potential customers, or risk stormy weather of your own. How can you continue to promote your business, and at the same time, remain sensitive to disastrous events? Just this week, I faced this same problem. We were due to announce a new course offering to our existing subscribers and potential clients. The copy for our email broadcast was already written and ready to go. But I was hearing from colleagues that they were choosing to hold back on promoting their businesses…lest they offend their customers. What did we do? We sent the email anyway…but we prefaced it with a statement of concern for those affected by the situation and told our subscribers what we, as a company, were doing about it. Then, we explained why now, more than ever, was the time to take advantage of our offer. The results? Our offering went smoothly, with as large a conversion rate as ever. Will this same strategy work for you? It all depends…on your offering, your timing, and your attitude. Here are seven guidelines, when disaster strikes and rough seas abound, to help you decide whether to promote your business: Guideline #1: Don’t do it! Consider delaying or canceling altogether a particular promotion. If you feel that advertising your particular product or service would be in poor taste, then by all means, follow your instincts. After the tragic events of 9-11, Arnold Schwarzenegger’s movie, Collateral Damage, was postponed for four months and a Jackie Chan movie, Nose Bleed, about a window washer on the World Trade Center who foils a terrorist plot, was cancelled entirely. Guideline #2: Scrap your copy. You may need to completely rewrite your ad copy, making sure your readers understand you are sensitive to the circumstances at hand. Get input from others before you send anything out to customers, to make sure you are on the mark. Guideline #3: Run the ad anyway. But preface it with a statement, as we did, telling your readers exactly what you, as a company, are doing to help. You are helping, aren’t you? Guideline #4: Use reverse engineering. Let your subscribers know why now is the perfect time to purchase your product or service. But use caution with this one, as this guideline will only work if it truly is the right time for your offering. If this is not the right time, refer back to guideline #1. Guideline #5: Throw out a lifeline. Send out an email announcing a new blog or listserv, especially for your customers, to create a sense of community and give your customers a place to leave comments about their own experiences. Empower your customers by setting up a place at your website where your customers can click to donate money, such as the Red Cross. Guideline #6: Call the doctor. Set up a teleconference bridge line call for your customers and bring in an expert on stress, to speak about how to be resilient in the face of disaster. Your customers will thank you for it, as you will be seen as someone who cares about them for more than their money. The best thing about this guideline is that you will feel good, too. Guideline #7: Don’t go down with the ship. Even if the disaster did not affect you directly, you are apt to feel some effects, both physically and me Bootstrapping Your Way to Success subscribers and potential clients. The
copy for our email broadcast was already written and ready to go. But I
was hearing from colleagues that they were choosing to hold back on
promoting their businesses…lest they offend their customers.There is no more accurate American descriptive phrase of the rags to riches success then: “He pulled himself up by his bootstraps”. The pioneers, backwoodsmen, cowboys, whalers and other prototypical American hero classes all possessed an air of courage, self-reliance, and belief that they could beat the odds. They are wonderful samples of entrepreneurs at the most elemental level.My favorite method of starting a business, launching a product or service is the old fashioned, do it myself, Bootstrapping. The ability to bootstrap a startup eliminates so many o What did we do? We sent the email anyway…but we prefaced it with a statement of concern for those affected by the situation and told our subscribers what we, as a company, were doing about it. Then, we explained why now, more than ever, was the time to take advantage of our offer. The results? Our offering went smoothly, with as large a conversion rate as ever. Will this same strategy work for you? It all depends…on your offering, your timing, and your attitude. Here are seven guidelines, when disaster strikes and rough seas abound, to help you decide whether to promote your business: Guideline #1: Don’t do it! Consider delaying or canceling altogether a particular promotion. If you feel that advertising your particular product or service would be in poor taste, then by all means, follow your instincts. After the tragic events of 9-11, Arnold Schwarzenegger’s movie, Collateral Damage, was postponed for four months and a Jackie Chan movie, Nose Bleed, about a window washer on the World Trade Center who foils a terrorist plot, was cancelled entirely. Guideline #2: Scrap your copy. You may need to completely rewrite your ad copy, making sure your readers understand you are sensitive to the circumstances at hand. Get input from others before you send anything out to customers, to make sure you are on the mark. Guideline #3: Run the ad anyway. But preface it with a statement, as we did, telling your readers exactly what you, as a company, are doing to help. You are helping, aren’t you? Guideline #4: Use reverse engineering. Let your subscribers know why now is the perfect time to purchase your product or service. But use caution with this one, as this guideline will only work if it truly is the right time for your offering. If this is not the right time, refer back to guideline #1. Guideline #5: Throw out a lifeline. Send out an email announcing a new blog or listserv, especially for your customers, to create a sense of community and give your customers a place to leave comments about their own experiences. Empower your customers by setting up a place at your website where your customers can click to donate money, such as the Red Cross. Guideline #6: Call the doctor. Set up a teleconference bridge line call for your customers and bring in an expert on stress, to speak about how to be resilient in the face of disaster. Your customers will thank you for it, as you will be seen as someone who cares about them for more than their money. The best thing about this guideline is that you will feel good, too. Guideline #7: Don’t go down with the ship. Even if the disaster did not affect you directly, you are apt to feel some effects, both physically and me 5 Tips to Consider Before You Quit Your Job to Start a Business when disaster
strikes and rough seas abound, to help you decide whether to promote
your business:Leaving your job to start a business is a major step in your life. There are many things to consider, here are five tips.1. Try talking to others who have taken a similar path to the one you are considering taking.These people are facing or have faced many of the same problems and issues that you might encounter. They can be a gold mine of information. They can also give you suggestions for insurance, and references for attorneys and tax professionals. They can also tell you about trade groups, associations or conventions. Not a resource to overloo Guideline #1: Don’t do it! Consider delaying or canceling altogether a particular promotion. If you feel that advertising your particular product or service would be in poor taste, then by all means, follow your instincts. After the tragic events of 9-11, Arnold Schwarzenegger’s movie, Collateral Damage, was postponed for four months and a Jackie Chan movie, Nose Bleed, about a window washer on the World Trade Center who foils a terrorist plot, was cancelled entirely. Guideline #2: Scrap your copy. You may need to completely rewrite your ad copy, making sure your readers understand you are sensitive to the circumstances at hand. Get input from others before you send anything out to customers, to make sure you are on the mark. Guideline #3: Run the ad anyway. But preface it with a statement, as we did, telling your readers exactly what you, as a company, are doing to help. You are helping, aren’t you? Guideline #4: Use reverse engineering. Let your subscribers know why now is the perfect time to purchase your product or service. But use caution with this one, as this guideline will only work if it truly is the right time for your offering. If this is not the right time, refer back to guideline #1. Guideline #5: Throw out a lifeline. Send out an email announcing a new blog or listserv, especially for your customers, to create a sense of community and give your customers a place to leave comments about their own experiences. Empower your customers by setting up a place at your website where your customers can click to donate money, such as the Red Cross. Guideline #6: Call the doctor. Set up a teleconference bridge line call for your customers and bring in an expert on stress, to speak about how to be resilient in the face of disaster. Your customers will thank you for it, as you will be seen as someone who cares about them for more than their money. The best thing about this guideline is that you will feel good, too. Guideline #7: Don’t go down with the ship. Even if the disaster did not affect you directly, you are apt to feel some effects, both physically and me Brand Positioning - Brand Image d. Get input from others before you send anything
out to customers, to make sure you are on the mark.That cross-trainer you're wearing -- one look at the distinctive swoosh on the side tells everyone who's got you branded. That coffee travel mug you're carrying -- ah, you're a Starbucks woman! Your T-shirt with the distinctive Champion "C" on the sleeve, the blue jeans with the prominent Levi's rivets, the watch with the hey-this-certifies-I-made-it icon on the face, your fountain pen with the maker's symbol crafted into the end ...You're branded, branded, branded, branded.It's time for me -- and you -- to take a lesson from the big brands, a lesson Guideline #3: Run the ad anyway. But preface it with a statement, as we did, telling your readers exactly what you, as a company, are doing to help. You are helping, aren’t you? Guideline #4: Use reverse engineering. Let your subscribers know why now is the perfect time to purchase your product or service. But use caution with this one, as this guideline will only work if it truly is the right time for your offering. If this is not the right time, refer back to guideline #1. Guideline #5: Throw out a lifeline. Send out an email announcing a new blog or listserv, especially for your customers, to create a sense of community and give your customers a place to leave comments about their own experiences. Empower your customers by setting up a place at your website where your customers can click to donate money, such as the Red Cross. Guideline #6: Call the doctor. Set up a teleconference bridge line call for your customers and bring in an expert on stress, to speak about how to be resilient in the face of disaster. Your customers will thank you for it, as you will be seen as someone who cares about them for more than their money. The best thing about this guideline is that you will feel good, too. Guideline #7: Don’t go down with the ship. Even if the disaster did not affect you directly, you are apt to feel some effects, both physically and me 4 Tips for Making Successful Job Offers ity and give your customers a place to leave comments about
their own experiences. Empower your customers by setting up a place
at your website where your customers can click to donate money, such
as the Red Cross.The interviews are completed, the paperwork is all filled out for Human Resources, and you have decided that this is the right candidate for the job. Now comes the formal job offer. Here are four tips to increase the success rate of your job offers:1. No Surprises: During the recruitment process, information should be mutually exchanged between candidate and potential employer. Beyond the simple job description and duties, each side should have detailed their general perceptions and expectations about the role. Both the candidate and the employer should know Guideline #6: Call the doctor. Set up a teleconference bridge line call for your customers and bring in an expert on stress, to speak about how to be resilient in the face of disaster. Your customers will thank you for it, as you will be seen as someone who cares about them for more than their money. The best thing about this guideline is that you will feel good, too. Guideline #7: Don’t go down with the ship. Even if the disaster did not affect you directly, you are apt to feel some effects, both physically and mentally. Take some time to reflect on your feelings about what has happened and also remember to pay attention to the basics, like eating right and getting enough sleep. So don’t despair! You can still market in the face of disaster, if you use sensitivity, compassion and common sense. Adhering to the seven guidelines can help you steer around submerged obstacles and get you into open water for clear sailing ahead. Copyright, Ellen Britt, 2005. This article may be freely distrubuted and reprinted as long as it is reprinted in its entirety, with the author's information and web link included at the bottom of the article. The web link should be active when the article is reprinted on a web site or in an email.
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