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    How To Become A Millionaire Online
    10 Things you want to know on How to become a millionaire online.1. All the money in your life comes from you.We always think that everything that happens in our lives, comes from outside our selves, and many people blame everything else but them selves for their life, it is the governments fault, or it is my wife or husbands fault, and so on. Your reality stems from you, you are the creator of your life, and if you think back I am sure you will find a situation where there was something you really wanted and not long after you had it. Everything comes from you of what you call good and bad, you are the creator, and the sooner you realize that, the sooner you can take the power back to your self instead of giving it away all the time.2 .It is all in the mind.Everything we create starts in the mind, just look around you, all the things you use everyday started as a thought in somebody’s mind. Many people all over the world get the same idea at the same time, but only a few do something about it, and again only a few follows through, and make the idea a reality and make money on it. So the first thing you need to do is open your mind, and realize that maybe all you have to do is to think outside the box, everything is possible, but first you have to create it in your mind.3.It is all in the feelings.Through out the day you have many random thoughts, and some become your reality, but most does not, the reason for this is that the thoughts that you put your feelings into those are the ones you really believe in, and again those are the ones that you manifest into your reality, we have all meet the person that burns for a course, and how much they can do because they think it and they truly believes in it with all their emotions, when you combine mind and feelings in your creations then the magic begins.4. It is all in the right intuitive action.Well now I used my mind and my f
    tition.

    Stage Three: Deliver

    With agreements complete, your ‘deliver’ stage begins.

    Here you take all necessary action to fulfill your promises and thoroughly execute your agreements. You serve, develop, customize, manufacture, test, ship, install, modify, upgrade, provide promised training and support.

    At this stage you need people who understand what to do and who have the necessary resources to get the job done. This means your delivery team must have a crystal-clear understanding of the promises made in your agreement. It also means they must have the tools, time and training to completely and successfully deliver.

    Throughout the delivery stage, it is essential to track progress and keep appropriate parties well informed. If everything goes according to plan, frequent updates can further reinforce confidence among your customers and colleagues. And if the unexpected occurs, the sooner you communicate this to others, the sooner your contingency plans can be launched and put into place.

    This willingness and ability to quickly declare ‘breakdowns’ is an important area where world-class companies differentiate themselves from the rest. While some organizations try to hide bad news and discreetly ‘put out the fire’, others pride themselves on rapidly alerting all parties so that new actions can be quickly and effectively taken – even capitalizing on unexpected or unintended opportunities.

    Stage Four: Assure

    In many industries, the ability to deliver on budget and on time has been honed to a fine art with ‘six sigma’ quality control and cycle-time reduction. But effective delivery does not complete the cycle – not if you are interested in continuing or expanding your involvement over time.

    The final stage is ‘assure’ and is one of the most fertile areas for generating new possibilities in business. In the assure quadrant, you accomplish three vital tasks:

    1. Check to see if the promises made on both sides have been fulfilled. If they have, then acknowledge, recognize and reward. If they have not, immediately return to deliver and complete the job.

    2. Confirm that the needs of your customer have been truly satisfied by the actions you have taken. You may discover that you have faithfully completed all the terms of the agreement, but the original concerns of your customer remain unfulfilled. This is

    Websense Web Filtering - Does It Really Increase Productivity?
    Companies like Websense sell their web filtering software to corporate clients. Their marketing material is pointing out how much productivity is lost due to employees casually surfing the web while at work. With Websense software corporations are able to restrict web surfing to certain websites and put monitoring in place. This allows to protect the corporations from malicious viruses entering the network from untrusted websites and to limit the overall Internet activity of employees to business related websites or to restrict the time a user spends surfing the web to a certain amount of time.But do very strict Websense rules really increase productivity? How much restricting web usage is really good or when does it actually make the opposite come true?Everyone does it. We all surf the web at work to take care of ordering a late Christmas present or to check the news real quick. Everyone needs to take a break every once in a while to get the head cleared out and to go back to work with a fresh start. And that kind of web surfing is Ok.But what would happen if you can no longer visit Amazon.com or your local news site to check the weather forecast? It would be very frustrating. The more restrictive web filtering becomes the more can it cause grief for an employee. Some of us employees work 10-12 hours (or more) a day to get the job done. You love to work and you love the company you work for. The people are great and the office is nice. But now you can no longer take care of those small things like ordering flowers for your wife or girlfriend on the last minute because you forgot the anniversary or order a present with next day delivery for Uncle Joe. You had forgotten his 70th birthday until your wife called you this morning at work. What do you do now?You can opt for letting things slip and place the order when you come home but then it might be too late for the order to be delivered the next day. O
    In the beginning, great products were enough to guarantee your business success. With product sophistication, ‘six sigma’ manufacturing and zero defects you could consistently beat the competition.

    But benchmarking, product imitation and reverse engineering came on the scene, and now everyone can make great products.

    Then super-fast delivery appeared. Those who produced and shipped products and served their customers quicker were rewarded with growing market share and higher profits. Digital delivery, cycle-time reduction and 24-hour access (by phone and internet) all accelerated commerce – and competition. But now everyone’s got a terrific website and courier services cross the planet overnight.

    To stay ahead of the competition, excellent-service mindset is coming back into vogue. Being polite, competent and concerned is once again as important as it was in your grandmother’s era. And while not every company has mastered this field, competition at the top is intense. Whether you stay at the Sheraton Towers or the Shangri-La, dine at the Rainbow Room or the Hard Rock Caf?, fly British Airways or Singapore Airlines, the service you receive today will often be quite good.

    With competition so intense, winning companies are now growing in still another vital dimension. In addition to great products, rapid delivery and excellent service mindset, market leaders are building stronger partnerships with their most valuable clients, suppliers and employees.

    What does it mean to build strong partnerships? Why do you need to master this vital skill? What practical steps can you take to achieve it right now?

    First, let’s put partnership in perspective. There are four different styles of interaction in business (and in life) and three of them are not partnerships at all!

    The One-Shot Deal

    The first style of interaction is characterized by a short-term focus between the parties. Beyond completing the exchange of the moment, no lasting commitment is intended or implied. Asking someone for directions, buying goods at a close-out sale or picking up a paper from the corner newsstand are all clear examples of the ‘one-shot deal’.

    Many familiar phrases are associated with this kind of brief and immediate interaction: ‘Take it or leave it’; ‘What you see is what you get’; ‘Here today, gone tomorrow.’ With no promise of future involvement between the parties, one more sentence certainly applies: ‘Caveat emptor’ in Latin. In English: ‘Let the buyer beware.’

    Transaction Satisfaction

    The second style of interaction takes more time than a ‘one-shot’ deal. More moments of contact are involved in these transactions, and additional effort is required to meet or exceed customer expectations.

    Taking a flight from one city to another is an example that includes telephone reservations, airport check-in, on-time departure, drinks, entertainment and service onboard, timely arrival and speedy delivery of checked baggage.

    If all of these perception points are well managed, then customers are usually satisfied and a state of affairs called ‘transaction satisfaction’ exists.

    Although no future involvement is promised or required in these transactions, customers often return to vendors and suppliers who consistently meet their transactional needs.

    Reliable Relationships

    The third style of interaction extends ‘transaction satisfaction’ into the future. Consistency and dependability are essential, as customers and suppliers count on each other in more frequent business dealings. When done well, this can evolve into a ‘reliable relationship’ – and both parties benefit over time.

    Examples of ‘reliable relationships’ include daily newspaper delivery, purchases of office supplies on a store credit account, maintenance contracts for essential equipment, and annual checkups with your family doctor.

    Powerful Partnerships

    The fourth style of interaction also extends into the future, but the value and importance of each interaction grows significantly over time. In a ‘powerful partnership’ both parties find that working well together brings new possibilities, unique opportunities and otherwise unachievable growth.

    A powerful partnership does not grow unattended. Substantial effort and ongoing investments of time, creativity and resources are required to keep a powerful partnership going – and growing.

    Examples of powerful partnerships may include research joint ventures, marketing, manufacturing and distribution alliances, excellent manager and secretary combinations and many successful marriages.

    Key questions to consider

    Which of these four styles of interaction describes your current situation with customers, suppliers, colleagues, managers and employees? Among the four, where are you right now? Where do you want to be?

    Four Stages of Improvement

    Leaving the ‘one-shot’ deal aside (it’s too short-term for any long-term improvement), let’s focus on how to make your transactions more satisfying, your relationships more reliable and your partnerships increasingly powerful.

    In each of these styles of interaction, four stages can be identified. Each stage is fertile territory for self-assessment, competitive evaluation and focused action toward improvement. The four stages are Explore, Agree, Deliver and Assure.

    Stage One: Explore

    This first stage is the domain of exploration, discovery and open-minded speculation. Both parties must share a commitment to honesty, full disclosure and the desire to create new possibilities together.

    Robust exploration can uncover wants, needs, concerns, good and bad past experiences, present constraints, future interests, current priorities and a wide range of competitive and collaborative considerations.

    Traditionally this is the domain of marketing, research and strategic visionaries. But the ‘explore’ quadrant actually plays an essential role in launching most successful interactions, and should be engaged in vigorously by everyone.

    This is the time to build rapport, develop an open dialogue and listen carefully for spoken ambitions and unspoken concerns.

    Contingency planning begins here with your willingness to discuss the upside and possible downside of the future. Here is where you look together into what can go right – and what might unavoidably go wrong.

    How well do you explore? Do you regularly meet with your prospects and customers ‘just to share ideas’? Or do you contact them only after they call you, or after something has broken down?

    Do you survey your market? Do you conduct interviews, customer focus groups and on-site visits? Do you have a method for doing this consistently or is it an ad hoc process ‘as and when required’?

    How easy is it for your customers to explore and learn about you? Is your history and philosophy conveniently presented in print and on your website? Can prospects learn quickly about your products, competencies and directions for the future? Do you share stories of how you helped other clients, offering testimonials and references upon request?

    If you do not explore well, you may develop the reputation of a mere order taker – responding when required, but only fulfilling direct and straightforward requests.

    When you do explore well, you can build a very different public identity: a person who listens well, is interested in the future and who cares about other people’s possibilities and concerns. This identity opens up a vast horizon for collaboration, commitment and extended agreements.

    Stage Two: Agree

    Robust exploration can lead to new opportunities for building the future together. Initial requests and offers become the first steps toward mutually fulfilling agreements.

    In business, excellent agreements are clearly documented with a detailed list of specifications and expectations, including quantities, schedules, prices, service levels and warranties (among other things).

    In a simple transaction, negotiations toward agreement may be conducted in an atmosphere that is competitive and highly charged. But when you are working toward a relationship or partnership, negotiations should be infused with a different spirit: a shared commitment to win-win agreement and mutual, long-term satisfaction.

    Contingency planning is essential at this stage. By carefully thinking through what might go wrong, detailed back-up plans can be agreed to long before they are needed.

    Finally, in world-class organizations, the very process of coming to an agreement is itself world-class, with easy-to-understand documentation, user-friendly procedures, around-the-clock access and flexible terms and conditions.

    How smoothly and thoroughly do you forge your agreements? Do customers marvel at how easy it is to do business with you, or do they complain bitterly about your bureaucratic systems? Do they thank you for your flexibility and understanding, or are they left cold by your rigid ‘one-size-fits-all’ conditions, products and pricing?

    Clear agreements enable effective delivery. Lack of clarity breeds suspicion, uncertainty and misunderstanding. Vague promises may get you started, but if things don’t turn out as expected, misunderstanding can lead to disagreement and even escalate to a legal dispute.

    In a world that prizes ease of use, saving time and maximum convenience, improving the way you make agreements can give your organization a powerful step up on the competition.

    Stage Three: Deliver

    With agreements complete, your ‘deliver’ stage begins.

    Here you take all necessary action to fulfill your promises and thoroughly execute your agreements. You serve, develop, customize, manufacture, test, ship, install, modify, upgrade, provide promised training and support.

    At this stage you need people who understand what to do and who have the necessary resources to get the job done. This means your delivery team must have a crystal-clear understanding of the promises made in your agreement. It also means they must have the tools, time and training to completely and successfully deliver.

    Throughout the delivery stage, it is essential to track progress and keep appropriate parties well informed. If everything goes according to plan, frequent updates can further reinforce confidence among your customers and colleagues. And if the unexpected occurs, the sooner you communicate this to others, the sooner your contingency plans can be launched and put into place.

    This willingness and ability to quickly declare ‘breakdowns’ is an important area where world-class companies differentiate themselves from the rest. While some organizations try to hide bad news and discreetly ‘put out the fire’, others pride themselves on rapidly alerting all parties so that new actions can be quickly and effectively taken – even capitalizing on unexpected or unintended opportunities.

    Stage Four: Assure

    In many industries, the ability to deliver on budget and on time has been honed to a fine art with ‘six sigma’ quality control and cycle-time reduction. But effective delivery does not complete the cycle – not if you are interested in continuing or expanding your involvement over time.

    The final stage is ‘assure’ and is one of the most fertile areas for generating new possibilities in business. In the assure quadrant, you accomplish three vital tasks:

    1. Check to see if the promises made on both sides have been fulfilled. If they have, then acknowledge, recognize and reward. If they have not, immediately return to deliver and complete the job.

    2. Confirm that the needs of your customer have been truly satisfied by the actions you have taken. You may discover that you have faithfully completed all the terms of the agreement, but the original concerns of your customer remain unfulfilled. This is

    Defining Your Brand
    Brands can become the de facto standard but you need to make sure that you define your brand in your own terms in a positive way. Everyone has heard of Kleenex or even Aspirin. These are both brands of a product that have become a word for the product itself. You can likely think of others that fall into this category. The products these companies produce are used by so many people that the brand name and product become like one. It is unlikely that most companies will achieve this high a level of brand recognition but you can use some of their techniques to create your own brand. Before you begin branding your product or service, you need to identify what it is that you are trying to brand. If it is you, then all the communications and information must relate back to you. If it is a product, then things like packaging, logo, design, and text all need to point to the product in a consistent manner. You can also make a brand out of a service. A company that simply services the consumer in some manner such as carpet cleaning can create a brand. Have you ever heard of COIT? They have carved out a brand name for themselves in the cleaning industry. They did this through quality service, customer focus, and a consistent message. They also are relentless in the marketing and PR programs that support the brand. Even though they have spent a fortune on branding themselves, you do not need to go that far unless you want to have more than a local or regional recognition. Branding and keeping up with the brand is a lot of hard work. It means keeping on top of all communications to customers, making sure that service is top notch, and bending over backwards to keep a good name for yourself.
    volvement between the parties, one more sentence certainly applies: ‘Caveat emptor’ in Latin. In English: ‘Let the buyer beware.’

    Transaction Satisfaction

    The second style of interaction takes more time than a ‘one-shot’ deal. More moments of contact are involved in these transactions, and additional effort is required to meet or exceed customer expectations.

    Taking a flight from one city to another is an example that includes telephone reservations, airport check-in, on-time departure, drinks, entertainment and service onboard, timely arrival and speedy delivery of checked baggage.

    If all of these perception points are well managed, then customers are usually satisfied and a state of affairs called ‘transaction satisfaction’ exists.

    Although no future involvement is promised or required in these transactions, customers often return to vendors and suppliers who consistently meet their transactional needs.

    Reliable Relationships

    The third style of interaction extends ‘transaction satisfaction’ into the future. Consistency and dependability are essential, as customers and suppliers count on each other in more frequent business dealings. When done well, this can evolve into a ‘reliable relationship’ – and both parties benefit over time.

    Examples of ‘reliable relationships’ include daily newspaper delivery, purchases of office supplies on a store credit account, maintenance contracts for essential equipment, and annual checkups with your family doctor.

    Powerful Partnerships

    The fourth style of interaction also extends into the future, but the value and importance of each interaction grows significantly over time. In a ‘powerful partnership’ both parties find that working well together brings new possibilities, unique opportunities and otherwise unachievable growth.

    A powerful partnership does not grow unattended. Substantial effort and ongoing investments of time, creativity and resources are required to keep a powerful partnership going – and growing.

    Examples of powerful partnerships may include research joint ventures, marketing, manufacturing and distribution alliances, excellent manager and secretary combinations and many successful marriages.

    Key questions to consider

    Which of these four styles of interaction describes your current situation with customers, suppliers, colleagues, managers and employees? Among the four, where are you right now? Where do you want to be?

    Four Stages of Improvement

    Leaving the ‘one-shot’ deal aside (it’s too short-term for any long-term improvement), let’s focus on how to make your transactions more satisfying, your relationships more reliable and your partnerships increasingly powerful.

    In each of these styles of interaction, four stages can be identified. Each stage is fertile territory for self-assessment, competitive evaluation and focused action toward improvement. The four stages are Explore, Agree, Deliver and Assure.

    Stage One: Explore

    This first stage is the domain of exploration, discovery and open-minded speculation. Both parties must share a commitment to honesty, full disclosure and the desire to create new possibilities together.

    Robust exploration can uncover wants, needs, concerns, good and bad past experiences, present constraints, future interests, current priorities and a wide range of competitive and collaborative considerations.

    Traditionally this is the domain of marketing, research and strategic visionaries. But the ‘explore’ quadrant actually plays an essential role in launching most successful interactions, and should be engaged in vigorously by everyone.

    This is the time to build rapport, develop an open dialogue and listen carefully for spoken ambitions and unspoken concerns.

    Contingency planning begins here with your willingness to discuss the upside and possible downside of the future. Here is where you look together into what can go right – and what might unavoidably go wrong.

    How well do you explore? Do you regularly meet with your prospects and customers ‘just to share ideas’? Or do you contact them only after they call you, or after something has broken down?

    Do you survey your market? Do you conduct interviews, customer focus groups and on-site visits? Do you have a method for doing this consistently or is it an ad hoc process ‘as and when required’?

    How easy is it for your customers to explore and learn about you? Is your history and philosophy conveniently presented in print and on your website? Can prospects learn quickly about your products, competencies and directions for the future? Do you share stories of how you helped other clients, offering testimonials and references upon request?

    If you do not explore well, you may develop the reputation of a mere order taker – responding when required, but only fulfilling direct and straightforward requests.

    When you do explore well, you can build a very different public identity: a person who listens well, is interested in the future and who cares about other people’s possibilities and concerns. This identity opens up a vast horizon for collaboration, commitment and extended agreements.

    Stage Two: Agree

    Robust exploration can lead to new opportunities for building the future together. Initial requests and offers become the first steps toward mutually fulfilling agreements.

    In business, excellent agreements are clearly documented with a detailed list of specifications and expectations, including quantities, schedules, prices, service levels and warranties (among other things).

    In a simple transaction, negotiations toward agreement may be conducted in an atmosphere that is competitive and highly charged. But when you are working toward a relationship or partnership, negotiations should be infused with a different spirit: a shared commitment to win-win agreement and mutual, long-term satisfaction.

    Contingency planning is essential at this stage. By carefully thinking through what might go wrong, detailed back-up plans can be agreed to long before they are needed.

    Finally, in world-class organizations, the very process of coming to an agreement is itself world-class, with easy-to-understand documentation, user-friendly procedures, around-the-clock access and flexible terms and conditions.

    How smoothly and thoroughly do you forge your agreements? Do customers marvel at how easy it is to do business with you, or do they complain bitterly about your bureaucratic systems? Do they thank you for your flexibility and understanding, or are they left cold by your rigid ‘one-size-fits-all’ conditions, products and pricing?

    Clear agreements enable effective delivery. Lack of clarity breeds suspicion, uncertainty and misunderstanding. Vague promises may get you started, but if things don’t turn out as expected, misunderstanding can lead to disagreement and even escalate to a legal dispute.

    In a world that prizes ease of use, saving time and maximum convenience, improving the way you make agreements can give your organization a powerful step up on the competition.

    Stage Three: Deliver

    With agreements complete, your ‘deliver’ stage begins.

    Here you take all necessary action to fulfill your promises and thoroughly execute your agreements. You serve, develop, customize, manufacture, test, ship, install, modify, upgrade, provide promised training and support.

    At this stage you need people who understand what to do and who have the necessary resources to get the job done. This means your delivery team must have a crystal-clear understanding of the promises made in your agreement. It also means they must have the tools, time and training to completely and successfully deliver.

    Throughout the delivery stage, it is essential to track progress and keep appropriate parties well informed. If everything goes according to plan, frequent updates can further reinforce confidence among your customers and colleagues. And if the unexpected occurs, the sooner you communicate this to others, the sooner your contingency plans can be launched and put into place.

    This willingness and ability to quickly declare ‘breakdowns’ is an important area where world-class companies differentiate themselves from the rest. While some organizations try to hide bad news and discreetly ‘put out the fire’, others pride themselves on rapidly alerting all parties so that new actions can be quickly and effectively taken – even capitalizing on unexpected or unintended opportunities.

    Stage Four: Assure

    In many industries, the ability to deliver on budget and on time has been honed to a fine art with ‘six sigma’ quality control and cycle-time reduction. But effective delivery does not complete the cycle – not if you are interested in continuing or expanding your involvement over time.

    The final stage is ‘assure’ and is one of the most fertile areas for generating new possibilities in business. In the assure quadrant, you accomplish three vital tasks:

    1. Check to see if the promises made on both sides have been fulfilled. If they have, then acknowledge, recognize and reward. If they have not, immediately return to deliver and complete the job.

    2. Confirm that the needs of your customer have been truly satisfied by the actions you have taken. You may discover that you have faithfully completed all the terms of the agreement, but the original concerns of your customer remain unfulfilled. This is

    Sacks of Money to Burn on Marketing and Advertising
    Do you have sacks of money to burn on your marketing and advertising? All of the small businesses that I’ve come across say they don’t. Yet there are a good number of small businesses that have held their own marketing and advertising budget bonfires.How does this happen? A conclusion I’ve come to is that many small businesses burn sacks full of money in advertising with miserable results because they just don’t understand the core basics of how advertising works.A common mistake made by many small businesses is doing "a little bit here, and a little bit there". Here’s an analogy to think about. Have you ever been around someone who never finishes a full soda or drink before opening another one? You know the ones. The people who have several partly empty/full bottles or cans scattered around their work area or home. If we could visualize the small business that advertises “a little bit here, and a little bit there”, that's what they would look like.When a business does “a little bit here, and a little bit there” they are ignoring a basic rule of advertising which is to have a concentrated message in an area, medium, or market that’s most important to them. The small business owners who fall into this trap usually are the ones who become the most discouraged about advertising. I’ve heard them say, “Well, I’ve tried everything, but nothing seems to work. From here on out, I’m going to rely on my sign out front, and word-of-mouth advertising”. By doing so they’ve made the problem worse by making another mistake of removing themselves from the market and allowing their competition to have it all to themselves. The solution isn’t to withdraw. The solution is to dominate or concentrate the message in one area, medium, or market that’s the most important to the business with what can be afforded. And you don't add another medium until you can afford another "full one".Another full one? Yes,
    ues, managers and employees? Among the four, where are you right now? Where do you want to be?

    Four Stages of Improvement

    Leaving the ‘one-shot’ deal aside (it’s too short-term for any long-term improvement), let’s focus on how to make your transactions more satisfying, your relationships more reliable and your partnerships increasingly powerful.

    In each of these styles of interaction, four stages can be identified. Each stage is fertile territory for self-assessment, competitive evaluation and focused action toward improvement. The four stages are Explore, Agree, Deliver and Assure.

    Stage One: Explore

    This first stage is the domain of exploration, discovery and open-minded speculation. Both parties must share a commitment to honesty, full disclosure and the desire to create new possibilities together.

    Robust exploration can uncover wants, needs, concerns, good and bad past experiences, present constraints, future interests, current priorities and a wide range of competitive and collaborative considerations.

    Traditionally this is the domain of marketing, research and strategic visionaries. But the ‘explore’ quadrant actually plays an essential role in launching most successful interactions, and should be engaged in vigorously by everyone.

    This is the time to build rapport, develop an open dialogue and listen carefully for spoken ambitions and unspoken concerns.

    Contingency planning begins here with your willingness to discuss the upside and possible downside of the future. Here is where you look together into what can go right – and what might unavoidably go wrong.

    How well do you explore? Do you regularly meet with your prospects and customers ‘just to share ideas’? Or do you contact them only after they call you, or after something has broken down?

    Do you survey your market? Do you conduct interviews, customer focus groups and on-site visits? Do you have a method for doing this consistently or is it an ad hoc process ‘as and when required’?

    How easy is it for your customers to explore and learn about you? Is your history and philosophy conveniently presented in print and on your website? Can prospects learn quickly about your products, competencies and directions for the future? Do you share stories of how you helped other clients, offering testimonials and references upon request?

    If you do not explore well, you may develop the reputation of a mere order taker – responding when required, but only fulfilling direct and straightforward requests.

    When you do explore well, you can build a very different public identity: a person who listens well, is interested in the future and who cares about other people’s possibilities and concerns. This identity opens up a vast horizon for collaboration, commitment and extended agreements.

    Stage Two: Agree

    Robust exploration can lead to new opportunities for building the future together. Initial requests and offers become the first steps toward mutually fulfilling agreements.

    In business, excellent agreements are clearly documented with a detailed list of specifications and expectations, including quantities, schedules, prices, service levels and warranties (among other things).

    In a simple transaction, negotiations toward agreement may be conducted in an atmosphere that is competitive and highly charged. But when you are working toward a relationship or partnership, negotiations should be infused with a different spirit: a shared commitment to win-win agreement and mutual, long-term satisfaction.

    Contingency planning is essential at this stage. By carefully thinking through what might go wrong, detailed back-up plans can be agreed to long before they are needed.

    Finally, in world-class organizations, the very process of coming to an agreement is itself world-class, with easy-to-understand documentation, user-friendly procedures, around-the-clock access and flexible terms and conditions.

    How smoothly and thoroughly do you forge your agreements? Do customers marvel at how easy it is to do business with you, or do they complain bitterly about your bureaucratic systems? Do they thank you for your flexibility and understanding, or are they left cold by your rigid ‘one-size-fits-all’ conditions, products and pricing?

    Clear agreements enable effective delivery. Lack of clarity breeds suspicion, uncertainty and misunderstanding. Vague promises may get you started, but if things don’t turn out as expected, misunderstanding can lead to disagreement and even escalate to a legal dispute.

    In a world that prizes ease of use, saving time and maximum convenience, improving the way you make agreements can give your organization a powerful step up on the competition.

    Stage Three: Deliver

    With agreements complete, your ‘deliver’ stage begins.

    Here you take all necessary action to fulfill your promises and thoroughly execute your agreements. You serve, develop, customize, manufacture, test, ship, install, modify, upgrade, provide promised training and support.

    At this stage you need people who understand what to do and who have the necessary resources to get the job done. This means your delivery team must have a crystal-clear understanding of the promises made in your agreement. It also means they must have the tools, time and training to completely and successfully deliver.

    Throughout the delivery stage, it is essential to track progress and keep appropriate parties well informed. If everything goes according to plan, frequent updates can further reinforce confidence among your customers and colleagues. And if the unexpected occurs, the sooner you communicate this to others, the sooner your contingency plans can be launched and put into place.

    This willingness and ability to quickly declare ‘breakdowns’ is an important area where world-class companies differentiate themselves from the rest. While some organizations try to hide bad news and discreetly ‘put out the fire’, others pride themselves on rapidly alerting all parties so that new actions can be quickly and effectively taken – even capitalizing on unexpected or unintended opportunities.

    Stage Four: Assure

    In many industries, the ability to deliver on budget and on time has been honed to a fine art with ‘six sigma’ quality control and cycle-time reduction. But effective delivery does not complete the cycle – not if you are interested in continuing or expanding your involvement over time.

    The final stage is ‘assure’ and is one of the most fertile areas for generating new possibilities in business. In the assure quadrant, you accomplish three vital tasks:

    1. Check to see if the promises made on both sides have been fulfilled. If they have, then acknowledge, recognize and reward. If they have not, immediately return to deliver and complete the job.

    2. Confirm that the needs of your customer have been truly satisfied by the actions you have taken. You may discover that you have faithfully completed all the terms of the agreement, but the original concerns of your customer remain unfulfilled. This is

    Preparing Your Business for a Bird Flu Pandemic
    How would your business operate if half your work force were out sick? Would your business continue to function if several of your top key employees died? How many employees are cross-trained in other positions?A recent study showed the threat that most preoccupies the world's business leaders is a global influenza pandemic. This is why you need to start asking these questions now so your business can be prepared for a possible bird flu pandemic. A bird flu pandemic will not discriminate. Everyone from the janitor to the CEO would be affected. Worst-case scenario could leave millions sick and any where from 5 million to 1.5 billion people dead around the world.The World Bank, which has estimated that a bird flu pandemic lasting a year, could cost the global economy up to $800 billion. The economic toll on the world economy will be catastrophic. There would be major economic losses due to worker absences and interruptions in supply and delivery chains. Even a ?mild? pandemic would have lasting effects on your business. Because a global flu pandemic is such a threat, current business and disaster response plans may not be adequate to deal with it. What steps should you start to take now to prepare?As with any worst-case scenario you should be aware of the risks and have a contingency plan in place before you need it. By planning now you will help keep your business running, your employees safe and head off possible legal issues. Some of the steps you may want to consider are:Establish a pandemic coordinator or team with responsibilities for preparedness and response planning. Provide current avian influenza information to all employees. Identify and make available information on community resources.Identify key essential areas and current employees responsible. Cross-train other employees in those areas so they are able to fill in for sick employees. Have written documentation for those employees
    >If you do not explore well, you may develop the reputation of a mere order taker – responding when required, but only fulfilling direct and straightforward requests.

    When you do explore well, you can build a very different public identity: a person who listens well, is interested in the future and who cares about other people’s possibilities and concerns. This identity opens up a vast horizon for collaboration, commitment and extended agreements.

    Stage Two: Agree

    Robust exploration can lead to new opportunities for building the future together. Initial requests and offers become the first steps toward mutually fulfilling agreements.

    In business, excellent agreements are clearly documented with a detailed list of specifications and expectations, including quantities, schedules, prices, service levels and warranties (among other things).

    In a simple transaction, negotiations toward agreement may be conducted in an atmosphere that is competitive and highly charged. But when you are working toward a relationship or partnership, negotiations should be infused with a different spirit: a shared commitment to win-win agreement and mutual, long-term satisfaction.

    Contingency planning is essential at this stage. By carefully thinking through what might go wrong, detailed back-up plans can be agreed to long before they are needed.

    Finally, in world-class organizations, the very process of coming to an agreement is itself world-class, with easy-to-understand documentation, user-friendly procedures, around-the-clock access and flexible terms and conditions.

    How smoothly and thoroughly do you forge your agreements? Do customers marvel at how easy it is to do business with you, or do they complain bitterly about your bureaucratic systems? Do they thank you for your flexibility and understanding, or are they left cold by your rigid ‘one-size-fits-all’ conditions, products and pricing?

    Clear agreements enable effective delivery. Lack of clarity breeds suspicion, uncertainty and misunderstanding. Vague promises may get you started, but if things don’t turn out as expected, misunderstanding can lead to disagreement and even escalate to a legal dispute.

    In a world that prizes ease of use, saving time and maximum convenience, improving the way you make agreements can give your organization a powerful step up on the competition.

    Stage Three: Deliver

    With agreements complete, your ‘deliver’ stage begins.

    Here you take all necessary action to fulfill your promises and thoroughly execute your agreements. You serve, develop, customize, manufacture, test, ship, install, modify, upgrade, provide promised training and support.

    At this stage you need people who understand what to do and who have the necessary resources to get the job done. This means your delivery team must have a crystal-clear understanding of the promises made in your agreement. It also means they must have the tools, time and training to completely and successfully deliver.

    Throughout the delivery stage, it is essential to track progress and keep appropriate parties well informed. If everything goes according to plan, frequent updates can further reinforce confidence among your customers and colleagues. And if the unexpected occurs, the sooner you communicate this to others, the sooner your contingency plans can be launched and put into place.

    This willingness and ability to quickly declare ‘breakdowns’ is an important area where world-class companies differentiate themselves from the rest. While some organizations try to hide bad news and discreetly ‘put out the fire’, others pride themselves on rapidly alerting all parties so that new actions can be quickly and effectively taken – even capitalizing on unexpected or unintended opportunities.

    Stage Four: Assure

    In many industries, the ability to deliver on budget and on time has been honed to a fine art with ‘six sigma’ quality control and cycle-time reduction. But effective delivery does not complete the cycle – not if you are interested in continuing or expanding your involvement over time.

    The final stage is ‘assure’ and is one of the most fertile areas for generating new possibilities in business. In the assure quadrant, you accomplish three vital tasks:

    1. Check to see if the promises made on both sides have been fulfilled. If they have, then acknowledge, recognize and reward. If they have not, immediately return to deliver and complete the job.

    2. Confirm that the needs of your customer have been truly satisfied by the actions you have taken. You may discover that you have faithfully completed all the terms of the agreement, but the original concerns of your customer remain unfulfilled. This is

    Bad Answers/Good Answers: Discussing Teamwork In An Interview
    Everyone knows that they need to talk about their experiences at their former jobs and community activities in a job interview. However, what most people need work on is providing an interviewer with enough details so that they can actually picture you doing that activity. Let me give you an example:Question: Tell me about a time when you had to work with other people to pull together an assignment under a tight deadline.Here's an example of a candidate's typical response:The first thing I can think of is a time when I was working in the arts. Our House Manager was out of the office on an extended leave when one of our conductor's unexpectedly passed away. He was well known in the community, so we decided to have a memorial concert in his honor. The concert was going to be free to the public and had to be organized in only a few days. Since the House Manager was on leave, the CEO of the orchestra asked me to take the lead in coordinating the seating for the event. I decided to ask two friends of mine to help me. We decided to set up stanchions in front of the theater to help with crowd control. We also needed to count the number of people who were being let into the auditorium to make sure that everyone could find a seat. It was a big project, on short notice, but it went well. Everyone found a seat and there really weren't any problems.I'm sure your first instinct is to say-well, that LOOKS long enough. What other meaningful details could she have provided that would have helped? She described the setup, the problem, who she asked to help and how it resolved. However, can you actually picture anyone in this situation? Can you pinpoint exactly what role I played in this sound bite? Can you envision the numbers of people that were involved? Does this example look like it was tough to pull off? Read below for the "enhanced" version.The first exam
    tition.

    Stage Three: Deliver

    With agreements complete, your ‘deliver’ stage begins.

    Here you take all necessary action to fulfill your promises and thoroughly execute your agreements. You serve, develop, customize, manufacture, test, ship, install, modify, upgrade, provide promised training and support.

    At this stage you need people who understand what to do and who have the necessary resources to get the job done. This means your delivery team must have a crystal-clear understanding of the promises made in your agreement. It also means they must have the tools, time and training to completely and successfully deliver.

    Throughout the delivery stage, it is essential to track progress and keep appropriate parties well informed. If everything goes according to plan, frequent updates can further reinforce confidence among your customers and colleagues. And if the unexpected occurs, the sooner you communicate this to others, the sooner your contingency plans can be launched and put into place.

    This willingness and ability to quickly declare ‘breakdowns’ is an important area where world-class companies differentiate themselves from the rest. While some organizations try to hide bad news and discreetly ‘put out the fire’, others pride themselves on rapidly alerting all parties so that new actions can be quickly and effectively taken – even capitalizing on unexpected or unintended opportunities.

    Stage Four: Assure

    In many industries, the ability to deliver on budget and on time has been honed to a fine art with ‘six sigma’ quality control and cycle-time reduction. But effective delivery does not complete the cycle – not if you are interested in continuing or expanding your involvement over time.

    The final stage is ‘assure’ and is one of the most fertile areas for generating new possibilities in business. In the assure quadrant, you accomplish three vital tasks:

    1. Check to see if the promises made on both sides have been fulfilled. If they have, then acknowledge, recognize and reward. If they have not, immediately return to deliver and complete the job.

    2. Confirm that the needs of your customer have been truly satisfied by the actions you have taken. You may discover that you have faithfully completed all the terms of the agreement, but the original concerns of your customer remain unfulfilled. This is not necessarily the fault of either party and may instead be the result of events that happened in the meantime.

    When this happens, promptly initiate a new round of exploration. Work together to build a more refined set of needs and expectations. Create new agreements to satisfy these needs, and then move forward once again to deliver and assure.

    3. Finally, during the assure process, find ways to work even more effectively together the next time. How could the cycle you have just completed be done more quickly or with even better results? What changes should you implement as you move forward into another round of explore, agree, deliver and assure?

    Well-planned and sincerely executed assurance can be an effective way of seeking new business. Detailed follow- through often leads to new possibilities, new agreements, new opportunities to deliver.

    How well do you and your team members assure? Do you consistently follow up with a proven plan of surveys, interviews and on-site customer visits? Or do you subscribe to the old school of ‘no news is good news’ and wait for disgruntled customers to contact you...if they ever do?

    Taking an holistic approach

    In many organizations, the four stages of improvement are handled by four different departments: exploration is the realm of marketing; agreements are completed by sales; delivery is the domain of manufacturing, operations and logistics; and assurance is provided, if required, by after-sales warranty and customer service.

    Unfortunately, this approach can leave customers with a schizophrenic experience of your organization. Your customers are told one thing by the first department but hear a different story from the next. They cry out for ‘one face’ to work with rather than an ever-expanding list of business cards, e-mail addresses and telephone numbers.

    Inside the organization, this fragmented and specialized approach can lead to mistrust – even outright conflict – between departments.

    Fortunately, the solution to this problem can be built right into the procedures and culture of your organization.

    First, connect the ‘four stages of improvement’ with frequent and detailed communication between departments.

    Second, institutionalize shared understanding with cross-training, cross-functional teams, and longer-term attachments. The more your people understand what their colleagues are doing, the better your colleagues – and your customers – will be served.

    Building a Foundation of Trust

    Each time you successfully complete a cycle of explore, agree, deliver and assure, another level of trust is reached between the parties.

    This is how humans build trust with one another. We find out what another person is concerned about: we explore. We make promises to do something on their behalf: we agree. We do what we promised to do: we deliver. And then we follow up to be sure they are truly satisfied: we assure.

    Building trust starts with promises for small items, little issues, minor concerns. After you have proven yourself to be trustworthy, then people will open up to share with you and rely on you more.

    Want a large order from your customer? Prove yourself with smaller jobs first. Want more responsibility from your boss? Demonstrate your skills and your commitment with a series of well-executed projects.

    This makes good sense in business, but it can also apply in your personal and social life. Indeed, building trust with others is the foundation for all successful relationships. Trust is the necessary glue for the partnerships we rely on today – and those we build together for the future.

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