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  • Actual for You - Getting Rid of the Rulebook

    120 Seconds To Ace The Interview
    2 minutes. That’s how long it takes for an employer to decide whether they want to hire you or not. First impressions set the tone for the interview and in the vast majority of cases, once that impression is set, it is not usually turned around. So here are some important tips you can use to ensure you make a great first impression.Energy level. Show some bounce in your step. Act like you are excited to be there and are filled with ideas.Eye contact. Look the interviewer right in the eye to make person-to-person contact. And SMILE like you are happy to see them. People instinctively react well to happy, smiling people.Watch your handshake. Everyone knows that a dead-fish handshake is the kiss of death. So are sweaty palms (put baby powder in your pocket if you have to
    h that cleaners again.

    But this started Jeff thinking about his own store closing time and that he might also be guilty of the same rigid practice. Usually, he locked the doors exactly at the 6 PM closing, then went to the office to tally up. The salespeople left by the back door and he wasn’t far behind. So Jeff set a new “rule,” one more customer-friendly. The official store closing time would still be posted as 6 PM. But the door would not actually be locked until 6:15. He felt the additional 15 minutes of time this cost him was worth it.

    Contrast this c

    The Benefits Of Being Able To Print Postage At Home
    The United States Postal Service or USPS has listened to its customers and realized the need for more convenience in postage. Giving people the option to print postage in their own home has led to a booming market for online postage companies. Besides the USPS website, there are many other authorized companies that sell online postage. Giving people the ability to print postage from their own computer has really revolutionized the world of postage.The USPS is the best known place for getting postage. In the high tech world we live in where everyone is online and every business has a website, the USPS has capitalized on this to start something new in postage. Online postage is where a customer can buy and print postage from their own computer. This eliminates the need to go to the post
    One recent morning, at 10:35, I walked into a local McDonald’s and ordered a sausage biscuit. The counter person turned around to look up at the clock. Then she said to me: “Breakfast ends at 10:30.” A little surprised, I told her that it was only a few minutes after that time and couldn’t she sell me a biscuit? She just stood there and repeated “We don’t serve breakfast after 10:30.”

    What logic is there to selling a biscuit at 10:29 a.m. and deliberately not selling that item six minutes later, simply because that is the “rule”? What does McDonald’s do with left over sausage biscuits? Wouldn’t it be more profitable to sell them? Or is there some sort of sausage biscuit heaven in the sky they all must go to when the clock strikes 10:30?

    Now, McDonald’s is a much admired, sharp, successful organization, the largest fast food operation in the world. And McDonald’s, like all companies, must have policies to make its business run smoothly. And regulations must be set so employees know what the company expects of them. But does common sense go out the window? In this time of fierce competition and much talk of improving customer service, doesn’t judgment on a one-to-one basis have a place?

    After this experience, I started thinking about the rules and regulations we make as we run our business…rules that seem perfectly logical to us but totally illogical to our customers…rules that may even cause us to lose customers. I discussed this with several business colleagues and friends and every one of them had similar stories to tell, even one storeowner who realized he was guilty, too.

    Closing Time at the Cleaners
    Jeff, the owner of a men’s store, was going on a market trip Sunday and planned to pick up two suits from the cleaners on Saturday afternoon. Knowing the cleaners closed at 5:30, he left his business early in what he thought was time enough to get there. Well, slow moving traffic caused him to arrive at 5:40. The door was locked but he felt he was in luck as he saw the owner’s car in the driveway and could see someone moving in the back of the shop. Though he kept loudly knocking on the door and calling to the person inside, there was no response. Jeff made the market trip without those suits, vowing never to trade with that cleaners again.

    But this started Jeff thinking about his own store closing time and that he might also be guilty of the same rigid practice. Usually, he locked the doors exactly at the 6 PM closing, then went to the office to tally up. The salespeople left by the back door and he wasn’t far behind. So Jeff set a new “rule,” one more customer-friendly. The official store closing time would still be posted as 6 PM. But the door would not actually be locked until 6:15. He felt the additional 15 minutes of time this cost him was worth it.

    Contrast this c

    Make Success Your Priority
    Overwhelm, distractions and the inability to say NO keep many people from achieving their potential. Too many opportunities paralyzes your ability to make the right decisions; Email prevents focus. Guilt and 'shoulds' keep us busy with activities that fill our days, but do not get us closer to success!We are not machines, so these things will happen. The key is to prioritize what you will allow to use your time. What is most important to you?We read stories in Oprah's magazine and see on TV all these women who start multi-million dollar businesses while raising their 4 kids and their sister's 3 kids and all while volunteering at the school. Don't be fooled! You do not have the same life nor the same opportunities.Here is what we don't see - her mom helps take care of the
    over sausage biscuits? Wouldn’t it be more profitable to sell them? Or is there some sort of sausage biscuit heaven in the sky they all must go to when the clock strikes 10:30?

    Now, McDonald’s is a much admired, sharp, successful organization, the largest fast food operation in the world. And McDonald’s, like all companies, must have policies to make its business run smoothly. And regulations must be set so employees know what the company expects of them. But does common sense go out the window? In this time of fierce competition and much talk of improving customer service, doesn’t judgment on a one-to-one basis have a place?

    After this experience, I started thinking about the rules and regulations we make as we run our business…rules that seem perfectly logical to us but totally illogical to our customers…rules that may even cause us to lose customers. I discussed this with several business colleagues and friends and every one of them had similar stories to tell, even one storeowner who realized he was guilty, too.

    Closing Time at the Cleaners
    Jeff, the owner of a men’s store, was going on a market trip Sunday and planned to pick up two suits from the cleaners on Saturday afternoon. Knowing the cleaners closed at 5:30, he left his business early in what he thought was time enough to get there. Well, slow moving traffic caused him to arrive at 5:40. The door was locked but he felt he was in luck as he saw the owner’s car in the driveway and could see someone moving in the back of the shop. Though he kept loudly knocking on the door and calling to the person inside, there was no response. Jeff made the market trip without those suits, vowing never to trade with that cleaners again.

    But this started Jeff thinking about his own store closing time and that he might also be guilty of the same rigid practice. Usually, he locked the doors exactly at the 6 PM closing, then went to the office to tally up. The salespeople left by the back door and he wasn’t far behind. So Jeff set a new “rule,” one more customer-friendly. The official store closing time would still be posted as 6 PM. But the door would not actually be locked until 6:15. He felt the additional 15 minutes of time this cost him was worth it.

    Contrast this c

    Creating a Powerful Project Vision
    You walk into your local grocery or market, looking for apples. You see the displays. They are bursting with apples of many varieties. To your left you notice a sea of yellow and red apples – the sign says they are Jonathans. To your right you see bright, green Granny Smiths. But straight ahead, you see the biggest, reddest Red Delicious apples you have ever seen. You are drawn to the display knowing that is what you want. As you walk closer you can see that the merchant has polished every one.You pick up a bag and start to select a few of the red marvels. Usually in this process you sort through looking for the fruit with no blemishes or soft spots. Today, though, each of these beauties is perfect. It is as if the merchant has already done the work for you. As you hold each apple
    mer service, doesn’t judgment on a one-to-one basis have a place?

    After this experience, I started thinking about the rules and regulations we make as we run our business…rules that seem perfectly logical to us but totally illogical to our customers…rules that may even cause us to lose customers. I discussed this with several business colleagues and friends and every one of them had similar stories to tell, even one storeowner who realized he was guilty, too.

    Closing Time at the Cleaners
    Jeff, the owner of a men’s store, was going on a market trip Sunday and planned to pick up two suits from the cleaners on Saturday afternoon. Knowing the cleaners closed at 5:30, he left his business early in what he thought was time enough to get there. Well, slow moving traffic caused him to arrive at 5:40. The door was locked but he felt he was in luck as he saw the owner’s car in the driveway and could see someone moving in the back of the shop. Though he kept loudly knocking on the door and calling to the person inside, there was no response. Jeff made the market trip without those suits, vowing never to trade with that cleaners again.

    But this started Jeff thinking about his own store closing time and that he might also be guilty of the same rigid practice. Usually, he locked the doors exactly at the 6 PM closing, then went to the office to tally up. The salespeople left by the back door and he wasn’t far behind. So Jeff set a new “rule,” one more customer-friendly. The official store closing time would still be posted as 6 PM. But the door would not actually be locked until 6:15. He felt the additional 15 minutes of time this cost him was worth it.

    Contrast this c

    Applying Blue Ocean Strategy to Product Development
    Henry Ford didn't invent the car. He wasn't even the first manufacturer of the car. In fact, when he jumped into the industry, there were more than 500 manufacturers building automobiles. That's a heavy market. It's what some call a red ocean, tainted by the battling competition. So, why is it that we think of Ford when we think of cars? Because he didn't sail that red ocean. He made a blue ocean strategy that not only built long-term brand equity, but brought the cost of a car down from $1,500 to $250 in a matter of a few years, sending him into uncontested market space.Not long ago, W. Chan Kim and Ren?e Mauborgne detailed the benefits of a blue ocean strategy in the Harvard Business Review. They define a red ocean as an existing industry where value is lost to cost-cutting warfare. On the
    rket trip Sunday and planned to pick up two suits from the cleaners on Saturday afternoon. Knowing the cleaners closed at 5:30, he left his business early in what he thought was time enough to get there. Well, slow moving traffic caused him to arrive at 5:40. The door was locked but he felt he was in luck as he saw the owner’s car in the driveway and could see someone moving in the back of the shop. Though he kept loudly knocking on the door and calling to the person inside, there was no response. Jeff made the market trip without those suits, vowing never to trade with that cleaners again.

    But this started Jeff thinking about his own store closing time and that he might also be guilty of the same rigid practice. Usually, he locked the doors exactly at the 6 PM closing, then went to the office to tally up. The salespeople left by the back door and he wasn’t far behind. So Jeff set a new “rule,” one more customer-friendly. The official store closing time would still be posted as 6 PM. But the door would not actually be locked until 6:15. He felt the additional 15 minutes of time this cost him was worth it.

    Contrast this c

    5 Tips for Hot Yellow Pages Ads
    Yellow Pages advertising is one of the most popular forms of advertising in the country today. Almost every home in America (96.9%) and business has at least one copy of "the book".Almost three out of five (58%) of all adults say they check the Yellow Pages for a phone number and/or address at least once per week, with 77% using the book monthly.While the Yellow Pages are an excellent reference tool, they fare less well when considered as an advertising medium. People use the Yellow Pages to look for a familiar name. If your other advertising works, then fining you in the Yellow Pages should be a snap.Remember, once the book is published, you can't change your ad until the next publish date.Here BIG Mike's 5 Tips to make your Yellow Pages Ad HOT.1 - S
    h that cleaners again.

    But this started Jeff thinking about his own store closing time and that he might also be guilty of the same rigid practice. Usually, he locked the doors exactly at the 6 PM closing, then went to the office to tally up. The salespeople left by the back door and he wasn’t far behind. So Jeff set a new “rule,” one more customer-friendly. The official store closing time would still be posted as 6 PM. But the door would not actually be locked until 6:15. He felt the additional 15 minutes of time this cost him was worth it.

    Contrast this cleaners story with one that Mike, the bell captain at the Hotel Algonquin in New York City, told me about his experience in a new Nordstrom store that had just opened in his New Jersey neighborhood. Mike and his wife were looking around the store and stopped at the customer service counter to ask what time the store closed. The associate smiled and said: “Whenever you’re finished shopping, sir.” What a very customer-friendly answer! Mike and his wife felt like royalty. Doesn’t Nordstrom have an official closing time? Of course. But apparently you won’t get thrown out of the store with bells going off.

    Rule: No exceptions to a promotional policy.
    A local store was having a promotion: Buy $75. in our fragrance department and receive a complimentary crystal vase. My purchase came to $72.75. I asked if I could have a crystal vase. “Oh, I’m so sorry, but the purchase has to be $75.” When I protested, I was told that “if we make an exception for you with that amount, we would have to do it for everyone who asks.” (So?) I was annoyed with this rigid and unreasonable attitude and since I knew I could find the same brand in at least two other stores in town, I decided to go elsewhere to make my purchase.

    Company policy should be to make a decision on a situation based on its own merits, never a blanket rule. Since I obviously felt strongly enough about this to cancel the purchase, wouldn't it have been better to please me by granting my request than to annoy me enough to leave the store? That store lost more than $2.25 that day with its no-exception rule. When the amount is within a few dollars of a promotion, exceptions could be made 1. when the customer specifically asks and 2. as a gesture of goodwill even when the customer does not ask. “Since your purchase is so close,” the salesperson could say, “I’d like to give you a complimentary crystal vase for shopping with us.” Choose to delight the customer at every opportunity you’re given.

    There is another lesson in this scenario: the power of differentiation. If this store had an exclusive on the fragrance label or something different about the offerings that I could not find anyplace else, they would have had me. They didn’t. Whether you sell apparel, lumber, or insur

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