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    Reliance Retail - A Runaway Success
    New Delhi, March 29: In an encouraging spate of retail outlets opening in the National Capital Region in the last six months, Reliance Fresh can claim hands down that it is on top and rising. The sales have exceeded all estimates with average sale by a store being of the order of Rs five lakhs, while the company had estimated the same to be around Rs Two lakhs.The footfalls are also high being 4,000 per day.The 100th store in the retail chain is to be opened soon–, the question being debated is whether Pune can beat Delhi and breast the 100th outlet landmark. If so Delhi will have the honour of being the 101st shop.Without wanting to be identified, sources within the Reliance group of companies say the company has so far opened 96 Reliance Fresh stores, spread over a carpet area of 2,50,000 sq ft in 96 outlets in different parts of the country .Delhi has 24 of the 96 shops in the country today. and accounts for thirty per cent of the total sale.The company claims there has been overwhelming response to Rel
    e.

    Your experience is, I believe, a treasure worth perhaps more than the sum of your losses. It reminds me of how the most seaworthy vessels have typically been known to be the ones that have weathered the most devastating storms. Yours is a stellar effort, my friend. I will most certainly be purchasing your book.

    Thanks also to Daryl and Alan for their assistance and encouragement in helping to mould John’s encounter into the best trading tool of all – practical experience...”

    During 2001, not long after losing our home, we made contact with Daryl and I take this opportunity here to acknowledge and thank him once again for his wisdom and support since that time and also to Alan Hull and Dr Van Tharp since then. Daryl subsequently invited me to write a short article for his regular weekly newsletter (Tutorials in Applied Technical Analysis) which became the first of many articles as my wife Angela and I began our search for education.

    He made a strong point that by concentrating on the research needed to write the articles we would pick up good habits and through sharing with others, we ourselves would be more inclined to stick with the discipline involved in the subject being covered.

    We have recently

    Career Advice - How To Make Meetings Work For You
    You might as well stop complaining about meetings. Like it or not, they are here to stay. So it makes sense to make meetings work for you.Here eight things you can do to reach that goal.1. Do your homework. Most people don't. Just by being prepared you will enjoy an advantage. Know what the meeting is all about--the stated purpose as well as the hidden agenda. If you don't know, ask. Study the background materials. Set your own goal for the session. Make a list of the points you want to make and compile the facts to support them.2. Never be late for a meeting. If the others have started without you, you begin with a disadvantage. The positioning ritual has already begun, and some information has been exchanged.3. Understand that meetings go through stages: (1) participants feel out each other; (2) a pecking order is established; (3) ground rules and purposes emerge; and (4) the subject is addressed.Obviously, you clog up the process if you are operating in one stage while others are in another.<
    I had the pleasure of being invited on a friend’s yacht to sail in a race on Sydney Harbour yesterday. On board, as one of our motley crew, I met a top ranking corporate executive from one of Australia’s largest banks, who we’ll call ‘Phil’ here for the purpose of this article. After the race ended and after being told of my trading experience, he told me he has a large stock portfolio, many of which are speculative resources stocks. He said that he’s excited by all the money he’s making and wondering how long this has been going on?

    As would be expected, ‘Phil’ also asked me for some “hot tips” for more stocks to buy. He was surprised with my reply when I told him Daryl Guppy’s standard response of “Tips are for waiters” and that I thought he was asking the wrong questions. (Daryl Guppy is a well known Stock Trader and International bestselling author - see www.guppytraders.com)

    Rather, I explained he should be asking:

    * How much longer will this last?

    * When it finishes how will I know & what will I do?

    * How do I find out about Technical Analysis and Money & Risk Management?

    * What’s a Trading Plan and how do I put one together and follow it?

    * How and when do I add to the stocks I already own?

    * How should I structure my portfolio regarding individual stock risk, sector risk and total portfolio risk?

    * What’s my exit strategy for each stock I own?

    * What’s my exit strategy for my whole portfolio?

    * How do I keep accurate records and monitor my performance?

    * What am I going to do to learn more about myself and my own psychological weaknesses (many of which I may not even realise I have) that can make all the difference as to whether I win or lose long term?

    ‘Phil’ was genuinely surprised that I had taken the wind out of his sails – luckily it was after our sailing race together, but hopefully before he loses his own financial race.

    In January at http://www.prweb.com/releases/2005/1/prweb193459.htm I issued a worldwide press release to caution unprepared novice investors and traders of the potential pitfalls ahead in the market. My wife Angela and I lost our waterfront home on Sydney Harbour in the 'Tech wreck' of 2000, so we speak from hard personal experience.

    As complete novices in the market in 1999, we doubled on paper a large stock portfolio in only six months. Then in less than a year we suffered catastrophic losses in the tech stock crash of 2000 and beyond:

    * We were set back more than 15 years financially and emotionally

    * We were forced to sell our waterfront home – the very same house we had set as a goal soon after arriving in Australia as new and penniless immigrants in 1979. We began renting what I called a ‘dog box’ - as the housing market then rocketed.

    * Angela was working as a retail assistant

    I have a First Class Honors Degree in Civil Engineering that didn’t help. In fact I have since come to understand that it actually helped to work against me. With our experience of riding some of the largest waves (up and down) in the market and having lost hundreds of thousands of dollars in the process, we know more than most stock traders in the world of the pitfalls that await unsuspecting novice traders and investors.

    We have since greatly appreciated being exposed to the successful methods taught by expert traders Alan Hull, Daryl Guppy, Jim Berg, Dr Van Tharp and others to trade profitably and with better risk control.

    The forum for serious investors www.stockmeetingplace.com is the only chatroom where you will find Daryl Guppy. We recently received the following response from a fellow Australian trader Nathan Unger on that site (see below):

    “...thank you for sharing. Your comments on this subject are very insightful, and rightfully so considering your near trading death experience, per se. Failure is always such a difficult moniker to be branded with, for it involves us having to acknowledge that we were wrong. Of course, acknowledging our mistakes means that we must swallow our pride – an admittedly difficult feat for many traders. Grappling with our own motives amidst the psychological matrix that is the stock market is, to say the least, a bewildering struggle.

    In an almost paradoxical fashion the stock market can create whelps out of us through both our losses as well as our victories. We are unnerved when we lose and must somehow muster the courage to tentatively re-enter the markets. Yet, potentially even more dangerous are the unbridled successes that often distort a trader’s perception about their ability to regulate further success – successes that work to chide the future admission of failure.

    Who would have thought that winning could actually become a setup for losing – a conundrum of the worst kind? I know of no other occupation that has the ability to masquerade as both friend and foe and then make you think that you can tell the difference.

    Your experience is, I believe, a treasure worth perhaps more than the sum of your losses. It reminds me of how the most seaworthy vessels have typically been known to be the ones that have weathered the most devastating storms. Yours is a stellar effort, my friend. I will most certainly be purchasing your book.

    Thanks also to Daryl and Alan for their assistance and encouragement in helping to mould John’s encounter into the best trading tool of all – practical experience...”

    During 2001, not long after losing our home, we made contact with Daryl and I take this opportunity here to acknowledge and thank him once again for his wisdom and support since that time and also to Alan Hull and Dr Van Tharp since then. Daryl subsequently invited me to write a short article for his regular weekly newsletter (Tutorials in Applied Technical Analysis) which became the first of many articles as my wife Angela and I began our search for education.

    He made a strong point that by concentrating on the research needed to write the articles we would pick up good habits and through sharing with others, we ourselves would be more inclined to stick with the discipline involved in the subject being covered.

    We have recently c

    AVOID the NUMBER ONE mistake of those who want to be Millionaires
    Most people are searching for answers to their money problems in the WRONG PLACES.Most people try to make money online, make money at home, make money on eBay, They try many different ways to become successful money makers and attract financial success and a great deal of wealth. But they FAIL to do what anyone who desires to create real wealth MUST do FIRST - not LAST!Let me repeat . . . These people try all sorts of business opportunities, which should make them veryrich -- from working at home, to auctions at ebay, to investing in real estate, stocks or commodities. And . . . the GREAT majority FAILS miserably!And they will continue to FAIL unless they learn the closely guarded 'secret' of the millionaires, multimillionaires and billionaires -- a 'secret' that MUST be learned and USED by anyone who really has that burning desire to succeed and attract money and wealth.WHY DO ALL THESE WELL INTENTIONED PEOPLE FAIL SO MISERABLY?These people do not
    ready own?

    * How should I structure my portfolio regarding individual stock risk, sector risk and total portfolio risk?

    * What’s my exit strategy for each stock I own?

    * What’s my exit strategy for my whole portfolio?

    * How do I keep accurate records and monitor my performance?

    * What am I going to do to learn more about myself and my own psychological weaknesses (many of which I may not even realise I have) that can make all the difference as to whether I win or lose long term?

    ‘Phil’ was genuinely surprised that I had taken the wind out of his sails – luckily it was after our sailing race together, but hopefully before he loses his own financial race.

    In January at http://www.prweb.com/releases/2005/1/prweb193459.htm I issued a worldwide press release to caution unprepared novice investors and traders of the potential pitfalls ahead in the market. My wife Angela and I lost our waterfront home on Sydney Harbour in the 'Tech wreck' of 2000, so we speak from hard personal experience.

    As complete novices in the market in 1999, we doubled on paper a large stock portfolio in only six months. Then in less than a year we suffered catastrophic losses in the tech stock crash of 2000 and beyond:

    * We were set back more than 15 years financially and emotionally

    * We were forced to sell our waterfront home – the very same house we had set as a goal soon after arriving in Australia as new and penniless immigrants in 1979. We began renting what I called a ‘dog box’ - as the housing market then rocketed.

    * Angela was working as a retail assistant

    I have a First Class Honors Degree in Civil Engineering that didn’t help. In fact I have since come to understand that it actually helped to work against me. With our experience of riding some of the largest waves (up and down) in the market and having lost hundreds of thousands of dollars in the process, we know more than most stock traders in the world of the pitfalls that await unsuspecting novice traders and investors.

    We have since greatly appreciated being exposed to the successful methods taught by expert traders Alan Hull, Daryl Guppy, Jim Berg, Dr Van Tharp and others to trade profitably and with better risk control.

    The forum for serious investors www.stockmeetingplace.com is the only chatroom where you will find Daryl Guppy. We recently received the following response from a fellow Australian trader Nathan Unger on that site (see below):

    “...thank you for sharing. Your comments on this subject are very insightful, and rightfully so considering your near trading death experience, per se. Failure is always such a difficult moniker to be branded with, for it involves us having to acknowledge that we were wrong. Of course, acknowledging our mistakes means that we must swallow our pride – an admittedly difficult feat for many traders. Grappling with our own motives amidst the psychological matrix that is the stock market is, to say the least, a bewildering struggle.

    In an almost paradoxical fashion the stock market can create whelps out of us through both our losses as well as our victories. We are unnerved when we lose and must somehow muster the courage to tentatively re-enter the markets. Yet, potentially even more dangerous are the unbridled successes that often distort a trader’s perception about their ability to regulate further success – successes that work to chide the future admission of failure.

    Who would have thought that winning could actually become a setup for losing – a conundrum of the worst kind? I know of no other occupation that has the ability to masquerade as both friend and foe and then make you think that you can tell the difference.

    Your experience is, I believe, a treasure worth perhaps more than the sum of your losses. It reminds me of how the most seaworthy vessels have typically been known to be the ones that have weathered the most devastating storms. Yours is a stellar effort, my friend. I will most certainly be purchasing your book.

    Thanks also to Daryl and Alan for their assistance and encouragement in helping to mould John’s encounter into the best trading tool of all – practical experience...”

    During 2001, not long after losing our home, we made contact with Daryl and I take this opportunity here to acknowledge and thank him once again for his wisdom and support since that time and also to Alan Hull and Dr Van Tharp since then. Daryl subsequently invited me to write a short article for his regular weekly newsletter (Tutorials in Applied Technical Analysis) which became the first of many articles as my wife Angela and I began our search for education.

    He made a strong point that by concentrating on the research needed to write the articles we would pick up good habits and through sharing with others, we ourselves would be more inclined to stick with the discipline involved in the subject being covered.

    We have recently

    The 7 Critical Steps to Formulating Your Annual Strategic Business Plan
    Businesses tend to avoid doing their annual business plan thinking that it is an arduous task that does not accomplish much. Formulating your annual plan is, however, critical to your business success and if done correctly should be quick, easy and generate bottom line results.Rather than creating a business plan that achieves no results, other than to gather dust, you should be writing a strategic and operational plan. The words ‘strategic’ and ‘operational’ are important as they give purpose and results to the plan. Your annual plan needs to be strategic so that you know where you are going and what you would like to achieve from your business or division. The plan needs to be operational so that it will tell you how to get there. It will determine the strategies and goals that need to be achieved to reach your end point.Strategic business planning is about deciding on the future you want for your business or division and then deciding how you intend to obtain that future. If you have been in business for a number of ye

    * We were set back more than 15 years financially and emotionally

    * We were forced to sell our waterfront home – the very same house we had set as a goal soon after arriving in Australia as new and penniless immigrants in 1979. We began renting what I called a ‘dog box’ - as the housing market then rocketed.

    * Angela was working as a retail assistant

    I have a First Class Honors Degree in Civil Engineering that didn’t help. In fact I have since come to understand that it actually helped to work against me. With our experience of riding some of the largest waves (up and down) in the market and having lost hundreds of thousands of dollars in the process, we know more than most stock traders in the world of the pitfalls that await unsuspecting novice traders and investors.

    We have since greatly appreciated being exposed to the successful methods taught by expert traders Alan Hull, Daryl Guppy, Jim Berg, Dr Van Tharp and others to trade profitably and with better risk control.

    The forum for serious investors www.stockmeetingplace.com is the only chatroom where you will find Daryl Guppy. We recently received the following response from a fellow Australian trader Nathan Unger on that site (see below):

    “...thank you for sharing. Your comments on this subject are very insightful, and rightfully so considering your near trading death experience, per se. Failure is always such a difficult moniker to be branded with, for it involves us having to acknowledge that we were wrong. Of course, acknowledging our mistakes means that we must swallow our pride – an admittedly difficult feat for many traders. Grappling with our own motives amidst the psychological matrix that is the stock market is, to say the least, a bewildering struggle.

    In an almost paradoxical fashion the stock market can create whelps out of us through both our losses as well as our victories. We are unnerved when we lose and must somehow muster the courage to tentatively re-enter the markets. Yet, potentially even more dangerous are the unbridled successes that often distort a trader’s perception about their ability to regulate further success – successes that work to chide the future admission of failure.

    Who would have thought that winning could actually become a setup for losing – a conundrum of the worst kind? I know of no other occupation that has the ability to masquerade as both friend and foe and then make you think that you can tell the difference.

    Your experience is, I believe, a treasure worth perhaps more than the sum of your losses. It reminds me of how the most seaworthy vessels have typically been known to be the ones that have weathered the most devastating storms. Yours is a stellar effort, my friend. I will most certainly be purchasing your book.

    Thanks also to Daryl and Alan for their assistance and encouragement in helping to mould John’s encounter into the best trading tool of all – practical experience...”

    During 2001, not long after losing our home, we made contact with Daryl and I take this opportunity here to acknowledge and thank him once again for his wisdom and support since that time and also to Alan Hull and Dr Van Tharp since then. Daryl subsequently invited me to write a short article for his regular weekly newsletter (Tutorials in Applied Technical Analysis) which became the first of many articles as my wife Angela and I began our search for education.

    He made a strong point that by concentrating on the research needed to write the articles we would pick up good habits and through sharing with others, we ourselves would be more inclined to stick with the discipline involved in the subject being covered.

    We have recently

    Affiliates - Beware Of Hype
    This is not my first article about affiliate marketing hype and you can be cheated by so called gurus. Again this time, I am not saying all ebook authors are scammers. The truth is they are almost all saying the same, they even promote each others ebooks at the same time.Their new release is supposed to be better than the previous. Some authors, serial writers, are selling the same infos on different websites. They just change the title and the words, but the content is the same.How can you spot hype ? Is the offer too good to be true ? Study the sales letter and see if there is something you already read somewhere else. Look for reviews. Go to Google and search for 'xyz review', 'xyz scam', etc. Then visit forums and ask people to share their experience.You will always get better point of views from users, because they are buyers. If they don't like what they purchase, they will tell you. Some people will just say "nothing new", some will even tell you what are the techniques inside the ebook. Not in details, but

    “...thank you for sharing. Your comments on this subject are very insightful, and rightfully so considering your near trading death experience, per se. Failure is always such a difficult moniker to be branded with, for it involves us having to acknowledge that we were wrong. Of course, acknowledging our mistakes means that we must swallow our pride – an admittedly difficult feat for many traders. Grappling with our own motives amidst the psychological matrix that is the stock market is, to say the least, a bewildering struggle.

    In an almost paradoxical fashion the stock market can create whelps out of us through both our losses as well as our victories. We are unnerved when we lose and must somehow muster the courage to tentatively re-enter the markets. Yet, potentially even more dangerous are the unbridled successes that often distort a trader’s perception about their ability to regulate further success – successes that work to chide the future admission of failure.

    Who would have thought that winning could actually become a setup for losing – a conundrum of the worst kind? I know of no other occupation that has the ability to masquerade as both friend and foe and then make you think that you can tell the difference.

    Your experience is, I believe, a treasure worth perhaps more than the sum of your losses. It reminds me of how the most seaworthy vessels have typically been known to be the ones that have weathered the most devastating storms. Yours is a stellar effort, my friend. I will most certainly be purchasing your book.

    Thanks also to Daryl and Alan for their assistance and encouragement in helping to mould John’s encounter into the best trading tool of all – practical experience...”

    During 2001, not long after losing our home, we made contact with Daryl and I take this opportunity here to acknowledge and thank him once again for his wisdom and support since that time and also to Alan Hull and Dr Van Tharp since then. Daryl subsequently invited me to write a short article for his regular weekly newsletter (Tutorials in Applied Technical Analysis) which became the first of many articles as my wife Angela and I began our search for education.

    He made a strong point that by concentrating on the research needed to write the articles we would pick up good habits and through sharing with others, we ourselves would be more inclined to stick with the discipline involved in the subject being covered.

    We have recently

    How To Make Money With Blogs
    Money making blogs are fast becoming the top earners for thousands of people.How to make money with blogs is quite a simple procedure and it can easily become a full time job working at home.It is very unlikely that you have never heard of a blog but in case your in the dark her are the simple facts.It is simply like keeping a diary you write a long or short version every day about whatever interests you.The internet is full of facts, take for instance the Wikpedia encyclopedia it contains facts about every thing under the sun and if you are stumped for ideas just go and take a look.You can find a blog website anywhere on the internet and they are free to join and won't cost you a single cent. Its a great bonus as you don't need a domain name and hosting is free. An excellent site is Sir Look it is so simple to use and it gives you loads of information on what to do to make money.To write money making blogs, keywords are of great importance so when you decide what your subject is to be you n
    e.

    Your experience is, I believe, a treasure worth perhaps more than the sum of your losses. It reminds me of how the most seaworthy vessels have typically been known to be the ones that have weathered the most devastating storms. Yours is a stellar effort, my friend. I will most certainly be purchasing your book.

    Thanks also to Daryl and Alan for their assistance and encouragement in helping to mould John’s encounter into the best trading tool of all – practical experience...”

    During 2001, not long after losing our home, we made contact with Daryl and I take this opportunity here to acknowledge and thank him once again for his wisdom and support since that time and also to Alan Hull and Dr Van Tharp since then. Daryl subsequently invited me to write a short article for his regular weekly newsletter (Tutorials in Applied Technical Analysis) which became the first of many articles as my wife Angela and I began our search for education.

    He made a strong point that by concentrating on the research needed to write the articles we would pick up good habits and through sharing with others, we ourselves would be more inclined to stick with the discipline involved in the subject being covered.

    We have recently collated the articles I have written for his newsletter and they are now available as ‘The Atkinson - Guppy Articles - Stock Market Educational Options for Investing Online & Online Trading - Opportunity for a Home Based Business’. Most of these articles deal with concepts and trading skills which are still relevant to readers today and include the following:

    * CONDITIONAL STOP LOSS ORDERS: A real life comparison between using two brokers for monitoring stop loss orders - the true cost of slippage

    * DIRECTORS DEALINGS: A snapshot study of the Australian share market to determine, if by monitoring the purchases and sales of company directors with their own shares, whether it is possible to obtain an insight into the future direction of the share price and hitch a ride in the right direction - or jump ship with them.

    * EXPECTANCY - the net profit or loss that you can expect over a large number of single unit trades. A series of articles with thanks to the work of Dr Van Tharp, author of 'Trade Your Way to Financial Freedom'

    * TAKE-OVERS: A brief overview of some of the strategies traders apply to take-overs.

    * AVALANCHE SELLING and KANGAROO TAILS: A series of articles on the recent phenomenon in the Australian share market caused by computerised automated conditional stop loss brokers savagely cascading sell orders into the market, with prices often rebounding several percent within minutes

    Through my writing articles and through our site, my wife Angela and I now aim to provide a ‘Road Map of Discovery to the Stock Market' to help new and existing online investors and traders find the trading education information they need to initially survive the pitfalls ahead, then to thrive in the market.

    We wish you every success in 2005 and beyond and trust that if you haven’t done so already, you will be seeking out the answers to the questions I offered to my sailing team member ‘Phil’.

    This article was printed in Alan Hull’s weekly newsletter ‘ActVest’ for Active Investors in March 2005 (available from www.alanhull.com) and is reprinted here with Alan’s permission.

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