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Actual for You - Goodwill Builds Partnership: A Constructive Dialogue
Write An Effective Job Proposal transition in a merger, joint venture or other alliance types,
quickly identify and address potential stakeholder resistance…and treat it with
respect. Approaching others with respect is not a sign of compromise or weakness.
It is a sign of strength. No matter how it may be characterized by opponents, your
willingness to extend a hand of friendship can never be leveraged to your detriment,
nor can it be used to silence your views. Express your goodwill to create an
interpersonal zone where the exchange of common interests can be presented for
the benefit of all concerned. Finding common ground on the basis of mutual respect
allows partnerships to take shape.I am simply amazed at the problems some of my colleagues are experiencing regarding writing job proposals for customers. So often I hear that there has been some sort of disagreement between client and service provider, something that can and should be avoided before a project is started. Here are four tips to help you write an effective job proposal letter.Assume Nothing My junior high English teacher gave his students the real meaning of assume: if you assume something it makes an ass out of you and me: ass-u-me. Leave nothing to chance. When you speak with a client do not assume they understand much of what you have to offer. For instance, I sell website packages. I have learned to spell out everything that I will offer to my customers for a very specific price. If there are any "gray areas" I protect myself by telling customers that certain other expens Second, use your goodwill to diffuse resistance. Your goodwill is the most common and effective way to diffuse negative perceptions. Reach out to those who are concerned about who will go or how their job will get done or done well: “I respect your views. We’ll face it and get through it together. We have the same goals.” Goodwill gives you permission to articulate the needs and goals of your alliance. Keep in mind that your business goodwill may b Doomed Before You Dial? The value of business goodwill is in the throws of a major revival under the tent of
mutual interest and partnership. Amid a global partnering boom, the future value of
your business is at stake.Several weeks ago, I conducted a “Mastering the Cold Call” seminar for the Printing Industries of Connecticut and Western Massachusetts. At the end of the seminar, a participant came up to me and said, “Thank you! I learned so much! I learned ‘Don’t Take No for an Answer.’” Another participant standing to his side exclaimed, “No! What I learned is, ‘Don’t Make No Your Answer!’” How often do you do that—especially on an introductory call? How often do you project your fears and insecurities onto the prospect you are calling and decide that you are doomed before you dial? The definition of a cold call or an introductory call is that you are calling a stranger. This stranger could be having a good day—or a bad day. This stranger could be warm and friendly or brusque and dismissive. There is no way of determining this ahead of time. Beware of doing a mind rea Go-it-alone competitive practices are for the scrapbook. Partnering opportunities created by the communications and distribution revolution along with a global explosion in consumption and production are reshaping the ability of companies to reach larger audiences and acquire value creating resources. A growing number of countries are announcing international business alliances. Small to large enterprises are discovering partners across the global Internet. Nearly any business conference you attend this year is sure to feature passionate evangelists espousing the virtues of strategic alliances and economic goodwill. Shake here. Partner or Perish This fast-growing business climate is focused on collaboration and reciprocation. You can feel it building momentum. To survive in today’s worldwide growth and innovation game your company must seek alliances based on compatible differences. How do you get into the partnering game? Grow, shape and leverage your goodwill. Grow your goodwill by instituting best practices. Prepare your company for future alliances by using your goodwill to shape a receptive mindset within your organization. Leverage your goodwill to team up with allies and the allies of your allies. Are you involved in a constructive dialog with one or more potential partners? If not, what’s holding you back? The days of viewing your competitors with distant suspicion and enmity are over. Few enterprises can operate competitively working out of a cocoon. Today, it’s not unusual to find one division of a company signing on to an alliance with a direct competitor of another of its divisions. The first rule of this game is: “we work together, any chance we get, because working together is nearly always mutually advantageous.” Concerned about resistance from inside your organization? Some stakeholders will support your partnering aims and others will not depending on how they may be affected. Unsupportive stakeholders can kill an alliance before it comes together or slowly eat away at it over time. It no longer makes sense to let internal differences slow you down. If you're future is not in play, be warned. Sooner or later, it'll be partner or perish. Your goodwill can make a big difference in dealing with resistance and the prevention of sabotage. It's not just a paper asset. It is meant to be actionable. Look for silos in your organization. Appeal to those individuals using your goodwill Directly address their contribution to goodwill. Be determined to navigate such situations toward a positive outcome. Use the power of your goodwill as a change management tool to win over as many of your stakeholders as possible. Goodwill has profound impact on your equity value How does your business acquire goodwill? It cultivates it through best practices, such as good governance, customer service, efficiency, branding, pricing fairness, innovation, authenticity, consideration, cooperation, collaboration, thoughtfulness, decency, understanding, trust and community. The result is reflected in the valuation of your business reputation as measured by the loyalty of your customer base and the reliability, stability and good practices of your management and its employees. The dollar amount of your goodwill represents the excess price over fair market value that you’d expect to get at a takeover of your company. Alliance minded executives use their goodwill on a daily basis in communicating with stakeholders. Without the consistent expression of goodwill, they know, it is virtually impossible to sustain a partnering synergy that builds goodwill and benefits all stakeholders. The alternative course may in time result in stagnation and eventual decline. Fostering goodwill among your stakeholders prepares your organization for partnering. Your commitment to goodwill drives change and builds value. Apply goodwill on a daily basis. It may be your most powerful strategy in preparing for, processing and succeeding in the formation of alliances. Get them ready Here are three ways goodwill can be used to increase your organization’s alliance receptivity: First, use your business goodwill as a sign of strength. To achieve a successful transition in a merger, joint venture or other alliance types, quickly identify and address potential stakeholder resistance…and treat it with respect. Approaching others with respect is not a sign of compromise or weakness. It is a sign of strength. No matter how it may be characterized by opponents, your willingness to extend a hand of friendship can never be leveraged to your detriment, nor can it be used to silence your views. Express your goodwill to create an interpersonal zone where the exchange of common interests can be presented for the benefit of all concerned. Finding common ground on the basis of mutual respect allows partnerships to take shape. Second, use your goodwill to diffuse resistance. Your goodwill is the most common and effective way to diffuse negative perceptions. Reach out to those who are concerned about who will go or how their job will get done or done well: “I respect your views. We’ll face it and get through it together. We have the same goals.” Goodwill gives you permission to articulate the needs and goals of your alliance. Keep in mind that your business goodwill may be Long Term Success Achieved With The Appropriate Software For Small Business /p>The three S’s which spells success for your small business - Software, Security and Speed.Software for small businesses are very essential for fast and steady long term growth. The opportune software should be built on both communicative as well as a collaborative platform. Small business software caters to the basic needs such as sales, customer support and marketing. However selecting the right type of software to suit your specific business requirements is the key to success.Be it a big or small business, software is vital for smooth functioning of key area operations: sales, marketing and customer support. The sales functionality requires a system to track and follow up automatically on each and every transaction made by the customer as well as maintain unique individual files for each customer. This will enable swift communication to a How do you get into the partnering game? Grow, shape and leverage your goodwill. Grow your goodwill by instituting best practices. Prepare your company for future alliances by using your goodwill to shape a receptive mindset within your organization. Leverage your goodwill to team up with allies and the allies of your allies. Are you involved in a constructive dialog with one or more potential partners? If not, what’s holding you back? The days of viewing your competitors with distant suspicion and enmity are over. Few enterprises can operate competitively working out of a cocoon. Today, it’s not unusual to find one division of a company signing on to an alliance with a direct competitor of another of its divisions. The first rule of this game is: “we work together, any chance we get, because working together is nearly always mutually advantageous.” Concerned about resistance from inside your organization? Some stakeholders will support your partnering aims and others will not depending on how they may be affected. Unsupportive stakeholders can kill an alliance before it comes together or slowly eat away at it over time. It no longer makes sense to let internal differences slow you down. If you're future is not in play, be warned. Sooner or later, it'll be partner or perish. Your goodwill can make a big difference in dealing with resistance and the prevention of sabotage. It's not just a paper asset. It is meant to be actionable. Look for silos in your organization. Appeal to those individuals using your goodwill Directly address their contribution to goodwill. Be determined to navigate such situations toward a positive outcome. Use the power of your goodwill as a change management tool to win over as many of your stakeholders as possible. Goodwill has profound impact on your equity value How does your business acquire goodwill? It cultivates it through best practices, such as good governance, customer service, efficiency, branding, pricing fairness, innovation, authenticity, consideration, cooperation, collaboration, thoughtfulness, decency, understanding, trust and community. The result is reflected in the valuation of your business reputation as measured by the loyalty of your customer base and the reliability, stability and good practices of your management and its employees. The dollar amount of your goodwill represents the excess price over fair market value that you’d expect to get at a takeover of your company. Alliance minded executives use their goodwill on a daily basis in communicating with stakeholders. Without the consistent expression of goodwill, they know, it is virtually impossible to sustain a partnering synergy that builds goodwill and benefits all stakeholders. The alternative course may in time result in stagnation and eventual decline. Fostering goodwill among your stakeholders prepares your organization for partnering. Your commitment to goodwill drives change and builds value. Apply goodwill on a daily basis. It may be your most powerful strategy in preparing for, processing and succeeding in the formation of alliances. Get them ready Here are three ways goodwill can be used to increase your organization’s alliance receptivity: First, use your business goodwill as a sign of strength. To achieve a successful transition in a merger, joint venture or other alliance types, quickly identify and address potential stakeholder resistance…and treat it with respect. Approaching others with respect is not a sign of compromise or weakness. It is a sign of strength. No matter how it may be characterized by opponents, your willingness to extend a hand of friendship can never be leveraged to your detriment, nor can it be used to silence your views. Express your goodwill to create an interpersonal zone where the exchange of common interests can be presented for the benefit of all concerned. Finding common ground on the basis of mutual respect allows partnerships to take shape. Second, use your goodwill to diffuse resistance. Your goodwill is the most common and effective way to diffuse negative perceptions. Reach out to those who are concerned about who will go or how their job will get done or done well: “I respect your views. We’ll face it and get through it together. We have the same goals.” Goodwill gives you permission to articulate the needs and goals of your alliance. Keep in mind that your business goodwill may b My Twenty Cents Worth slowly eat away at it over time. It no longer makes sense to let internal differences
slow you down. If you're future is not in play, be warned. Sooner or later, it'll be
partner or perish.Back in mid-October of 2002, my husband Andy borrowed my Ford Taurus to drive to work. His truck was in the shop for the day, and since I stayed at home with our baby, I relinquished my car to him.Andy’s everyday route to work involves a short stint on the New York State Thruway, and the toll for this ride is twenty cents. Lucky for him, the benevolent Thruway Authority provides something they like to call E-Z Pass, wherein you place a sensor square on your windshield and are given permission to proceed through a special toll lane, sans human operator. A machine reads the sensor and charges your account, ostensibly saving the Capital Region’s commuters time by allowing them to glide through the lane (at a leisurely 5 mph) without stopping. Andy has one of these sensor squares stuck to the windshield of his truck, and every morning he habitually drives through the Your goodwill can make a big difference in dealing with resistance and the prevention of sabotage. It's not just a paper asset. It is meant to be actionable. Look for silos in your organization. Appeal to those individuals using your goodwill Directly address their contribution to goodwill. Be determined to navigate such situations toward a positive outcome. Use the power of your goodwill as a change management tool to win over as many of your stakeholders as possible. Goodwill has profound impact on your equity value How does your business acquire goodwill? It cultivates it through best practices, such as good governance, customer service, efficiency, branding, pricing fairness, innovation, authenticity, consideration, cooperation, collaboration, thoughtfulness, decency, understanding, trust and community. The result is reflected in the valuation of your business reputation as measured by the loyalty of your customer base and the reliability, stability and good practices of your management and its employees. The dollar amount of your goodwill represents the excess price over fair market value that you’d expect to get at a takeover of your company. Alliance minded executives use their goodwill on a daily basis in communicating with stakeholders. Without the consistent expression of goodwill, they know, it is virtually impossible to sustain a partnering synergy that builds goodwill and benefits all stakeholders. The alternative course may in time result in stagnation and eventual decline. Fostering goodwill among your stakeholders prepares your organization for partnering. Your commitment to goodwill drives change and builds value. Apply goodwill on a daily basis. It may be your most powerful strategy in preparing for, processing and succeeding in the formation of alliances. Get them ready Here are three ways goodwill can be used to increase your organization’s alliance receptivity: First, use your business goodwill as a sign of strength. To achieve a successful transition in a merger, joint venture or other alliance types, quickly identify and address potential stakeholder resistance…and treat it with respect. Approaching others with respect is not a sign of compromise or weakness. It is a sign of strength. No matter how it may be characterized by opponents, your willingness to extend a hand of friendship can never be leveraged to your detriment, nor can it be used to silence your views. Express your goodwill to create an interpersonal zone where the exchange of common interests can be presented for the benefit of all concerned. Finding common ground on the basis of mutual respect allows partnerships to take shape. Second, use your goodwill to diffuse resistance. Your goodwill is the most common and effective way to diffuse negative perceptions. Reach out to those who are concerned about who will go or how their job will get done or done well: “I respect your views. We’ll face it and get through it together. We have the same goals.” Goodwill gives you permission to articulate the needs and goals of your alliance. Keep in mind that your business goodwill may b Once Upon a Time loyalty of your customer base and the reliability, stability and good practices of
your management and its employees. The dollar amount of your goodwill represents
the excess price over fair market value that you’d expect to get at a takeover of your
company.So there you are at a social or business event. You are in line for appetizers (bet you can’t wait to get to those spicy wings) and you strike up a conversation with the person next to you in line. You introduce yourselves, shake hands, and quickly the question, “What do you do for a living” is asked.” It’s the moment of truth!Ordinarily one’s response is a generic, dull, uninspired, noun stating, “what you are” instead of “what you do.” It is as if one were to say, “I sell a commodity” or even worse, “I AM a commodity.” Once that commodity statement is finished, the response is typically a tepid “uh huh” accompanied with glazed-over eyes. That’s not the response you want is it?If you want to attract business, your tactic should be to engage the person you are speaking with so you can impress them with the benefits of being your client. In order to im Alliance minded executives use their goodwill on a daily basis in communicating with stakeholders. Without the consistent expression of goodwill, they know, it is virtually impossible to sustain a partnering synergy that builds goodwill and benefits all stakeholders. The alternative course may in time result in stagnation and eventual decline. Fostering goodwill among your stakeholders prepares your organization for partnering. Your commitment to goodwill drives change and builds value. Apply goodwill on a daily basis. It may be your most powerful strategy in preparing for, processing and succeeding in the formation of alliances. Get them ready Here are three ways goodwill can be used to increase your organization’s alliance receptivity: First, use your business goodwill as a sign of strength. To achieve a successful transition in a merger, joint venture or other alliance types, quickly identify and address potential stakeholder resistance…and treat it with respect. Approaching others with respect is not a sign of compromise or weakness. It is a sign of strength. No matter how it may be characterized by opponents, your willingness to extend a hand of friendship can never be leveraged to your detriment, nor can it be used to silence your views. Express your goodwill to create an interpersonal zone where the exchange of common interests can be presented for the benefit of all concerned. Finding common ground on the basis of mutual respect allows partnerships to take shape. Second, use your goodwill to diffuse resistance. Your goodwill is the most common and effective way to diffuse negative perceptions. Reach out to those who are concerned about who will go or how their job will get done or done well: “I respect your views. We’ll face it and get through it together. We have the same goals.” Goodwill gives you permission to articulate the needs and goals of your alliance. Keep in mind that your business goodwill may b Your Greatest Marketing Assets transition in a merger, joint venture or other alliance types,
quickly identify and address potential stakeholder resistance…and treat it with
respect. Approaching others with respect is not a sign of compromise or weakness.
It is a sign of strength. No matter how it may be characterized by opponents, your
willingness to extend a hand of friendship can never be leveraged to your detriment,
nor can it be used to silence your views. Express your goodwill to create an
interpersonal zone where the exchange of common interests can be presented for
the benefit of all concerned. Finding common ground on the basis of mutual respect
allows partnerships to take shape.You might not think that you are a marketing and sales person, but if you own or work in a small business think again. When you're in business for yourself - whether you like it or not, feel like you're good at it or not - you are a marketing and sales person.I tell my marketing clients and those that attend my various marketing presentations all the time that the two greatest assets you posses are your Attitude and Belief. When these are positive and show through your marketing and sales efforts, your results will increase dramatically.Attitude: Be enthusiastic and passionate about your value proposition to the marketplace. You know that what you offer can make a difference and have an impact on your clients. When it comes to your own marketing, if you feel good about yourself and you have self-confidence because you are doing everything for Second, use your goodwill to diffuse resistance. Your goodwill is the most common and effective way to diffuse negative perceptions. Reach out to those who are concerned about who will go or how their job will get done or done well: “I respect your views. We’ll face it and get through it together. We have the same goals.” Goodwill gives you permission to articulate the needs and goals of your alliance. Keep in mind that your business goodwill may be damaged if this step is not handled well. Avoid this step altogether and it may return to bite you later. Use your current goodwill assets to protect your future goodwill. Third, use your goodwill to invigorate your partnering strategy. Your next partnership will build its own goodwill. At the starting gate its goodwill is inherited from its partners. Good or bad, this asset has a limited shelf life. Your collaborative enterprise -– an innovation development strategy, sales and distribution alliance, or marketing partnership initiative -- will soon forge its own goodwill as it builds a bridge to its own identity. On the other side of the goodwill bridge is profit, innovation, synergy, productivity, mutual understanding and constructive relationships. Walk across it every day. Look for ways to express it. Aretha Franklin sang R-E-S-P-E-C-T in 1967 — an anthem for respect and recognition between men and women. At the time her call was a plea. Today, it’s a requirement. Individually and collectively the path of mutual respect promotes goodwill. Use it to embrace compatible differences and reduce incompatible ones. Develop a goodwill practice for building alliances, near and far, for today and tomorrow. Shake here.
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