| Actual for You |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Business > Small Business > Making the Best Decision |
|
Actual for You - Making the Best Decision
What To Know When Designing Your Small Business Logo your goals are defined, write out all the possible options you can think of - that is, possible paths you can decide to take. Even if you don’t like an option and are sure you don’t want to do it, write it down anyway. Going through this process often sparks new ideas or helps improve existing ones. The next step is We all know about big business and their national logos and branding. But how can a logo help Your small business? Here are three things to consider when designing your own logo.First let’s look at exactly what a logo is. The dictionary says:lo•go - a design used by an organization on its letterhead, advertising material, and signs as an emblem by which the organization can easily be recog Lean Manufacturing Quality Concept And Traditional Quality Concept – A Comparison There are many methods for making decisions. Some are as simple as trusting a gut feeling, others use complex methods of charts and statistical analysis. I’d like to first share with you a foundation of most methods, followed by a specific technique that many of my clients find very effective. Please keep in mind that the process you choose should be appropriate for the decision being made. It’s probably not necessary to go through much of a formal method when trying to decide what to have for lunch. However, when trying to choose which model of car to buy or whether to change careers, a good, solid process is essential. I will leave it to you where to draw the line between formal process and gut feeling, but I will point out that it rarely hurts to err on the safe side of going through a process. One key in any decision process is that it must be written down! We simply can’t keep enough details in our head to make good decisions. Next, we need to define what our goals are in making this decision. What do you ideally want to have happen as a result of this decision?Have you ever thought “quality products are expensive”? You might be prepared to pay some extra money for a high quality product. I believe you have taken the correct move. It is always better to buy a better quality product or service than a low quality one. But I have a small problem regarding your concept about higher price you are paying. Why you should pay extra money to get good quality product. Strange question isn It may be good to list these out in two categories. First, goals that the decision must reach, and secondly, those which would be nice, but which you might be willing to compromise on. After your goals are defined, write out all the possible options you can think of - that is, possible paths you can decide to take. Even if you don’t like an option and are sure you don’t want to do it, write it down anyway. Going through this process often sparks new ideas or helps improve existing ones. The next step is Pamphlets and the Money They'll Put in Your Pocket e process you choose should be appropriate for the decision being made. It’s probably not necessary to go through much of a formal method when trying to decide what to have for lunch. However, when trying to choose which model of car to buy or whether to change careers, a good, solid process is essential. I will leave it to you where to draw the line between formal process and gut feeling, but I will point out that it rarely hurts to err on the safe side of going through a process. One key in any decision process is that it must be written down! We simply can’t keep enough details in our head to make good decisions. Next, we need to define what our goals are in making this decision. What do you ideally want to have happen as a result of this decision?People are making a fortune on pamphlets. If you go into an airport you can purchase a pamphlet for around $6.95, and it probably cost under fifty cents to produce. It blows my mind to think that little folded up booklets are the sole reason that some people are rich today. It’s crazy.I know a woman who is selling one of these little books on how to design cool business cards. Her pamphlet consists of 100 tips and It may be good to list these out in two categories. First, goals that the decision must reach, and secondly, those which would be nice, but which you might be willing to compromise on. After your goals are defined, write out all the possible options you can think of - that is, possible paths you can decide to take. Even if you don’t like an option and are sure you don’t want to do it, write it down anyway. Going through this process often sparks new ideas or helps improve existing ones. The next step is The 10 Commandments of Selling to you where to draw the line between formal process and gut feeling, but I will point out that it rarely hurts to err on the safe side of going through a process. One key in any decision process is that it must be written down! We simply can’t keep enough details in our head to make good decisions. Next, we need to define what our goals are in making this decision. What do you ideally want to have happen as a result of this decision?Every successful entrepreneur must achieve a level of sales competence. Short of spending valuable capital on hiring sales professionals, there is no alternative. Selling is to business as fertilizer is to agriculture.Nothing happens in a company until somebody sells something. There are natural born salesmen. However, with application, practice and determination, anyone can hone selling skills and develop a style It may be good to list these out in two categories. First, goals that the decision must reach, and secondly, those which would be nice, but which you might be willing to compromise on. After your goals are defined, write out all the possible options you can think of - that is, possible paths you can decide to take. Even if you don’t like an option and are sure you don’t want to do it, write it down anyway. Going through this process often sparks new ideas or helps improve existing ones. The next step is The Differences Between Great Marketing and Terrible Marketing ine what our goals are in making this decision. What do you ideally want to have happen as a result of this decision?As a marketing consultant and copywriter, I see horrible marketing everyday. The most common mistake I see is what I call, "me too marketing"."Me too marketing" is when a business creates a marketing piece (advertisement, brochure, sales letter, website, etc.) that looks and reads like an exact copy of their competition’s marketing. Instead of demonstrating why their product or service is unique and offers outstand It may be good to list these out in two categories. First, goals that the decision must reach, and secondly, those which would be nice, but which you might be willing to compromise on. After your goals are defined, write out all the possible options you can think of - that is, possible paths you can decide to take. Even if you don’t like an option and are sure you don’t want to do it, write it down anyway. Going through this process often sparks new ideas or helps improve existing ones. The next step is Ten Goal Setting Techniques your goals are defined, write out all the possible options you can think of - that is, possible paths you can decide to take. Even if you don’t like an option and are sure you don’t want to do it, write it down anyway. Going through this process often sparks new ideas or helps improve existing ones. The next step is to look at each option and write down the results of choosing it relative to your goals. Ask yourself which of your original goals each option will fulfill. Be specific here, and go through each goal, but don’t cross any options off yet – that’s the next step. Now, we evaluate each of the options based on its results. If one looks pretty bad, this is the time to cross it off. Based on this step, you'll probably have one or two options left. Now is the time to improve your options. Look at what you’ve considered, can you combine elements from one with another to improve it? Are there other modifications you can make that will create an optimal outcome? Finally, you should have a single, decisive course of action. Write it out clearly. The last step is to commit to following through. You’ve chosen your best option based on a comprehensive process, try to avoid letting in-the-moment emotions sway your choice. If circumstances change and you do need to revise your decision, go through the process again from start to finish – it will be worth it. While this process seems involved at first, with practice, you can often do it in under ten minutes.1. Write down long, medium and short term goals. Long-term are your visions and your strategy, medium term is the planning to get to your long-term goals and short term are the to do's that make the plans come together.2. Don't forget Pareto's law when planning your goals. We get 80% of our result from 20% of our goals. Prioritise them.3. Carry out a SWOT, at least annually. Then set learning goals to maximi Finally, if you want something even simpler (perhaps for smaller, daily decisions), just write out your goa
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:
|