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    Shortage of Auto Mechanics is Getting Serious
    If you are looking for a career and you like to tinker with things, well then look no further because there is a completely severe shortage of auto-mechanics in the United States and it is getting really serious. By the end of 2007 they are projecting some 200,000 mechanics short of what we need.You see, the issue with labor shortages in the auto mechanics arena is really problematic. But what can be done? Many High School and College Automotive Tech Shops have closed their doors, due to lawsuits and costs. Some charter schools are trying to revive the old "shop class" type education and vocational training schools and Congress is also trying to help with a 1.4 Billion Dollar Spending Bill. Smart thinking, but will it help?http://www.eschoolnews.com/news/showstoryts.cfm?Articleid=6499But even this may not be enough, more must be done to improve the number of mechanics in our civilization.
    holiday greeting like,
    Dear...,

    Happy New Year to you and Carlos! How is the baby?

    I have attached below a brief summary (admittedly canned) of the latest news in our life, along with our new home phone number at the end. If any of your contact details have changed, please mail me. In fact, we'd love to hear from you regardless, just to catch up!"

    Segment your database.
    Store information that will allow you to easily send messages to small groups of people:

    • All the people in a city you are going to visit ("Hi, I'm going to be in NYC next week and would love to see you if you have some time free.")
    • Everyone who shares a particular personal interest of yours ("I saw this article in Fast Company. I thought you might be interested in.")
    • People of a particular political, religious, or ethnic affiliation ("Happy St. Patrick's Day!")

    Customize your social networking invitations.
    Even with the new choices, tweak the default text to make it person

    Networking or Sweatworking
    Yes, I believe that networking works.Yes, I can give you examples of how networking helped boost my career and my business.No, networking is not a quick fix.Yes, networking can be frustrating – even when you are doing the right things. It’s more frustrating when you are doing the wrong things, and even more frustrating when you are not sure if you are doing the right things.What are the most common mistakes in networking?The myth is in thinking that networking is an event.The reality is that networking is a process.Perhaps you have attended a networking event and witnessed “Mr. Power Networker” in action. He runs around the room distributing his business card like a cheap flyer. He shakes as many hands as he can grab, while spewing his 30-second commercial like manure. Then he quickly pounces on the next victim.This misguided networker is not networking – he is sweatworking. He is sweating as he works the room. He believes that he is doing good
    Have you received one of these lately?

    Dear FirstName:

    I have been using YetAnotherSocialNetworkingService to keep track of my professional contacts. Since you and I know each other so well, we should connect and share each other's networks.

    or

    FirstName:

    I'm updating my address book. Please take a moment to update your latest contact information. Your information is stored in my personal address book and will not be shared with anyone else. SuperMegaHackableDirectoryService is free, private and secure if you'd like to give it a try.

    Did you immediately accept? Or did you let it languish in your in box for awhile before deciding to either delete it or do something about it? If you're typical, then the first two or three of these you received were intriguing and you signed right up, but by the time you receive 10, 20, 50 nearly identical messages, you start to get jaded, and the canned messages simply don't have the same impact.

    Similarly, have you ever had the experience of getting into someone's sequential autoresponder -- a program that sends a series of predetermined emails, usually either daily or weekly? Have you started to get seemingly personalized messages, but when you try to get through to them in person, you can't?

    How did that make you feel? And would you ever wish that on someone else?

    According to Robin Dunbar's research, as popularized in Malcolm Gladwell's The Tipping Point and Duncan Watts' Six Degrees, the human brain is only capable of handling about 150 close social relationships. That's approximately the number of people for whom we can remember their name, their face, where we met them, our last conversation with them, and other details. As Dunbar put it, "It's the number of people you would not feel embarrassed about joining uninvited for a drink if you happened to bump into them in a bar." For most professionals, a network of a mere 150 direct contacts, including friends and family, would be woefully insufficient to support you in achieving your business goals. But our brains simply can't handle more than that.

    And so we turn to technology -- distributed cognition. We use our computers to expand our processing power and storage capacity. Unfortunately, in so doing, many people lose track of the human element. They forget that the technology is meant to assist us in dealing with larger numbers of relationships, not to replace interpersonal interaction. Designers of social networking tools failed to understand this early in the design process. As a result, there is now some backlash against many of these tools and, to some extent, the people who continue to use them in this manner.

    Fortunately, most of the social networking companies have now figured this out and are shifting away from the canned messages. LinkedIn and ZeroDegrees have both added half a dozen or so different templates from which you can choose. Of course, one of them is still the default, and most people will simply accept the default without changing it. That's a big mistake if you want your invitations to not only be accepted, but to actually help build the relationship.

    The first thing you have to do is get the right frame of mind about why you're using technology to help you manage your relationships. It is not so you can pretend to a larger number of people that you care about them when you really don't. It's so you can treat more people who you really do care about as you would like to treat them, if only your brain were capable.

    This is not supposed to be a tool for mass marketing; it's simply a way of sustaining a lot more relationships with a little less effort.

    Here are some of the practical ways to apply this:

    Master email merge.
    Many people do not realize that this is a built-in function in Microsoft Word, most other word processors, and many email programs. For people who you truly have an established relationship with, mastering mail merge can be a huge time-saver. Besides the obvious things like basic contact information, store data about your contacts that allows you to really personalize your messages, such as a phrase that complete the sentence, "As you may recall, we met … ." For example, we suggest sending out a holiday greeting like,

    Dear...,

    Happy New Year to you and Carlos! How is the baby?

    I have attached below a brief summary (admittedly canned) of the latest news in our life, along with our new home phone number at the end. If any of your contact details have changed, please mail me. In fact, we'd love to hear from you regardless, just to catch up!"

    Segment your database.
    Store information that will allow you to easily send messages to small groups of people:

    • All the people in a city you are going to visit ("Hi, I'm going to be in NYC next week and would love to see you if you have some time free.")
    • Everyone who shares a particular personal interest of yours ("I saw this article in Fast Company. I thought you might be interested in.")
    • People of a particular political, religious, or ethnic affiliation ("Happy St. Patrick's Day!")

    Customize your social networking invitations.
    Even with the new choices, tweak the default text to make it persona

    Church Chairs and Used Church Chairs
    Church chairs are the most important piece of furniture a congregation can own and when they are in limited supply can hurt the attendance of the congregation and affect the message being taught in the sanctuary. When church members must stand for long periods of time, their focus is turned to the fact that the room does not have enough church chairs instead of the important truths being dispersed by the pastor on stage. Used church chairs are an option for start up churches or churches with a small budget. Those churches that are interested in making responsible purchases with God's money also prefer to buy used church chairs.There are certain benefits that come with the purchase of new church chairs, but when on a shoestring budget, a used church chairs provider may be a Godsend. There are certain ministries designed to act as a go between those that require church chairs and those that are selling or donating them. Used church chairs can be provided by any church that is replacing their exi
    ponder -- a program that sends a series of predetermined emails, usually either daily or weekly? Have you started to get seemingly personalized messages, but when you try to get through to them in person, you can't?

    How did that make you feel? And would you ever wish that on someone else?

    According to Robin Dunbar's research, as popularized in Malcolm Gladwell's The Tipping Point and Duncan Watts' Six Degrees, the human brain is only capable of handling about 150 close social relationships. That's approximately the number of people for whom we can remember their name, their face, where we met them, our last conversation with them, and other details. As Dunbar put it, "It's the number of people you would not feel embarrassed about joining uninvited for a drink if you happened to bump into them in a bar." For most professionals, a network of a mere 150 direct contacts, including friends and family, would be woefully insufficient to support you in achieving your business goals. But our brains simply can't handle more than that.

    And so we turn to technology -- distributed cognition. We use our computers to expand our processing power and storage capacity. Unfortunately, in so doing, many people lose track of the human element. They forget that the technology is meant to assist us in dealing with larger numbers of relationships, not to replace interpersonal interaction. Designers of social networking tools failed to understand this early in the design process. As a result, there is now some backlash against many of these tools and, to some extent, the people who continue to use them in this manner.

    Fortunately, most of the social networking companies have now figured this out and are shifting away from the canned messages. LinkedIn and ZeroDegrees have both added half a dozen or so different templates from which you can choose. Of course, one of them is still the default, and most people will simply accept the default without changing it. That's a big mistake if you want your invitations to not only be accepted, but to actually help build the relationship.

    The first thing you have to do is get the right frame of mind about why you're using technology to help you manage your relationships. It is not so you can pretend to a larger number of people that you care about them when you really don't. It's so you can treat more people who you really do care about as you would like to treat them, if only your brain were capable.

    This is not supposed to be a tool for mass marketing; it's simply a way of sustaining a lot more relationships with a little less effort.

    Here are some of the practical ways to apply this:

    Master email merge.
    Many people do not realize that this is a built-in function in Microsoft Word, most other word processors, and many email programs. For people who you truly have an established relationship with, mastering mail merge can be a huge time-saver. Besides the obvious things like basic contact information, store data about your contacts that allows you to really personalize your messages, such as a phrase that complete the sentence, "As you may recall, we met … ." For example, we suggest sending out a holiday greeting like,

    Dear...,

    Happy New Year to you and Carlos! How is the baby?

    I have attached below a brief summary (admittedly canned) of the latest news in our life, along with our new home phone number at the end. If any of your contact details have changed, please mail me. In fact, we'd love to hear from you regardless, just to catch up!"

    Segment your database.
    Store information that will allow you to easily send messages to small groups of people:

    • All the people in a city you are going to visit ("Hi, I'm going to be in NYC next week and would love to see you if you have some time free.")
    • Everyone who shares a particular personal interest of yours ("I saw this article in Fast Company. I thought you might be interested in.")
    • People of a particular political, religious, or ethnic affiliation ("Happy St. Patrick's Day!")

    Customize your social networking invitations.
    Even with the new choices, tweak the default text to make it person

    Lifestyles of Successful Network Marketers
    When you look at the lifestyles of successful network marketers you can either get very excited or you may feel jealous or upset. Let's take a look at the lifestyles that a few successful network marketers lead.To start with the income that a very successful mlm business can bring its owners is almost obscene. There are people for example that are making over $100,000 a month in one personal development network marketing company. What is really crazy is they are earning that per month in less than 2 years.I know of one long term mlm distributor who has the largest business in Discovery Toys. Her husband and she travel extensively and live in a mountain top home in Aspen, Colorado. How does that sound!This article is more going to be look at what lifestyle you would like to lead. Looking at the success of others is fun, but that and $4 will get you a cup of coffee at Starbucks. I mean who really cares.Many people start a network marketing business of their own for various r
    ognition. We use our computers to expand our processing power and storage capacity. Unfortunately, in so doing, many people lose track of the human element. They forget that the technology is meant to assist us in dealing with larger numbers of relationships, not to replace interpersonal interaction. Designers of social networking tools failed to understand this early in the design process. As a result, there is now some backlash against many of these tools and, to some extent, the people who continue to use them in this manner.

    Fortunately, most of the social networking companies have now figured this out and are shifting away from the canned messages. LinkedIn and ZeroDegrees have both added half a dozen or so different templates from which you can choose. Of course, one of them is still the default, and most people will simply accept the default without changing it. That's a big mistake if you want your invitations to not only be accepted, but to actually help build the relationship.

    The first thing you have to do is get the right frame of mind about why you're using technology to help you manage your relationships. It is not so you can pretend to a larger number of people that you care about them when you really don't. It's so you can treat more people who you really do care about as you would like to treat them, if only your brain were capable.

    This is not supposed to be a tool for mass marketing; it's simply a way of sustaining a lot more relationships with a little less effort.

    Here are some of the practical ways to apply this:

    Master email merge.
    Many people do not realize that this is a built-in function in Microsoft Word, most other word processors, and many email programs. For people who you truly have an established relationship with, mastering mail merge can be a huge time-saver. Besides the obvious things like basic contact information, store data about your contacts that allows you to really personalize your messages, such as a phrase that complete the sentence, "As you may recall, we met … ." For example, we suggest sending out a holiday greeting like,

    Dear...,

    Happy New Year to you and Carlos! How is the baby?

    I have attached below a brief summary (admittedly canned) of the latest news in our life, along with our new home phone number at the end. If any of your contact details have changed, please mail me. In fact, we'd love to hear from you regardless, just to catch up!"

    Segment your database.
    Store information that will allow you to easily send messages to small groups of people:

    • All the people in a city you are going to visit ("Hi, I'm going to be in NYC next week and would love to see you if you have some time free.")
    • Everyone who shares a particular personal interest of yours ("I saw this article in Fast Company. I thought you might be interested in.")
    • People of a particular political, religious, or ethnic affiliation ("Happy St. Patrick's Day!")

    Customize your social networking invitations.
    Even with the new choices, tweak the default text to make it person

    Achieve More with Nursing Continuing Education
    Many people consider the nursing profession as one the noblest professions. Nurses derive tremendous satisfaction from the noble act of caring for and nursing people to good health. Nursing has also become quite a lucrative profession in this day and age. However, becoming a nurse can be quite expensive. The course itself is expensive and nurses also have to pass certifying exams before they get the necessary licenses or registrations that enable them to become full-fledged nurses.A vast majority of nurses enter the workforce after they complete their basic nursing qualification because of the huge expenses. However, they realize that there are tremendous growth opportunities for nurses with better qualifications. This is why many nurses turn to nursing continuing education. To put it simply, these advanced nursing education is an “earn while you learn” scheme. Nurses that sign-up for nursing continuing education programs while working so that they can continue to work at their regular hospita
    thing you have to do is get the right frame of mind about why you're using technology to help you manage your relationships. It is not so you can pretend to a larger number of people that you care about them when you really don't. It's so you can treat more people who you really do care about as you would like to treat them, if only your brain were capable.

    This is not supposed to be a tool for mass marketing; it's simply a way of sustaining a lot more relationships with a little less effort.

    Here are some of the practical ways to apply this:

    Master email merge.
    Many people do not realize that this is a built-in function in Microsoft Word, most other word processors, and many email programs. For people who you truly have an established relationship with, mastering mail merge can be a huge time-saver. Besides the obvious things like basic contact information, store data about your contacts that allows you to really personalize your messages, such as a phrase that complete the sentence, "As you may recall, we met … ." For example, we suggest sending out a holiday greeting like,

    Dear...,

    Happy New Year to you and Carlos! How is the baby?

    I have attached below a brief summary (admittedly canned) of the latest news in our life, along with our new home phone number at the end. If any of your contact details have changed, please mail me. In fact, we'd love to hear from you regardless, just to catch up!"

    Segment your database.
    Store information that will allow you to easily send messages to small groups of people:

    • All the people in a city you are going to visit ("Hi, I'm going to be in NYC next week and would love to see you if you have some time free.")
    • Everyone who shares a particular personal interest of yours ("I saw this article in Fast Company. I thought you might be interested in.")
    • People of a particular political, religious, or ethnic affiliation ("Happy St. Patrick's Day!")

    Customize your social networking invitations.
    Even with the new choices, tweak the default text to make it person

    Why Your MLM Support System Gives You A 90% Chance Of Being A Failure!
    One of the biggest reasons why I see network marketers drop like flies is because of the support system. Yes you heard that right, your support system TRULY stinks! But I am not telling you to get you mad, but help you realize that by "plugging into the system" with blind faith is a huge mistake.Sure you may feel a temporary high after listening to your big time upline repeat these lines. But have you actually taken into consideration if it has actually helped you become richer and more successful? Probably not. See if you can relate:Upline: You can do it winner! You: Yeah, yeah I heard that a billion timesUpline: Staying excited and enthusiastic is the secret. Do you know what enthusiastic means? It means the God within YOU man! You: I stayed enthusiastic for the whole year, have no results to show for it. And people, especially my family, think I'm some sort of a happy cult fanatic with no money.Upline: Ain't i
    holiday greeting like,
    Dear...,

    Happy New Year to you and Carlos! How is the baby?

    I have attached below a brief summary (admittedly canned) of the latest news in our life, along with our new home phone number at the end. If any of your contact details have changed, please mail me. In fact, we'd love to hear from you regardless, just to catch up!"

    Segment your database.
    Store information that will allow you to easily send messages to small groups of people:

    • All the people in a city you are going to visit ("Hi, I'm going to be in NYC next week and would love to see you if you have some time free.")
    • Everyone who shares a particular personal interest of yours ("I saw this article in Fast Company. I thought you might be interested in.")
    • People of a particular political, religious, or ethnic affiliation ("Happy St. Patrick's Day!")

    Customize your social networking invitations.
    Even with the new choices, tweak the default text to make it personal. Even better, segment your invitations. For example, send one invitation to people in your executive club saying, "I know we have the directory for connecting with each other, but by joining this site, we can help each other even better by leveraging our extended relationships."

    Write every group message as if you were writing it to just one person.
    This is a great lesson from the Internet marketing gurus. An email from Mark Joyner will have you convinced that he really is personally expecting to see you at the next big Internet marketing convention. Think of one person in the group you're writing to, and write the email as if it were just to them.

    Review everything by hand before it goes out.
    Automated data will do wacky (and often embarrassing) things. Scott recently received a contact update request from a close friend that showed his name as "Scott Guide", because Scott's About.com email account has his name listed as "Scott Allen, About.com Entrepreneurs Guide". Or you may accidentally send a message that says "I haven't seen you in a while" to someone you just saw yesterday. If you set your mail merge to not automatically send, you can go through and tweak individual messages to fit the particular situation.

    Don't send automated contact update requests.
    Instead, send a personal update message with a contact update request incidental to it. Consider the possibilities:

    • The contact info you have is correct, in which case it's a pointless nuisance to ask them for an update.
    • Their email is inaccurate, in which case you're not reaching them anyway.
    • Their email is accurate, but the other info you have isn't. In this case, you can reach them via email, and if you need their phone number, you can probably track it down.
    A better approach is just to send out a personal update once or twice a year -- what's going on in your personal life, maybe a business highlight or two, and ask them to send you their updated info in reply.

    You'll notice that this approach requires you to get a fair amount of information about the people in your network, as well as some time to manage it effectively. If you're trying to create an anonymous mailing list, there are ways to do that, but that's not how you build strong one-on-one relationships. If you want more than 150 strong relationships, you have to make sure you don't make them feel like a number.

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
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    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.actual4u.com/article/31907/actual4u-I-Am-Not-a-Number.html]I Am Not a Number![/url]

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