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    19 Reasons Why Every Business Needs a Web Site!
    19 Reasons Why Every Business Needs a Web Site!1. It is the most cost-effective way to advertise.2. Your customers expect it.3. You will sell more products and services.4. You will be able to provide information to your customers more cost effectively.5. You can receive feedback via your Web site.6. It is much easier to stay in contact with distributors and sales reps.7. You can provide better customer service.8. It's the best way to stay competitive -- considering that most of your rivals already own their own Web sites or are looking into getting one.9. Your business will grow immediately. Any small, local business has the ability to be an instant international sensa
    what it should be, based on the actual facts of the matter. At the same time, your message must be written persuasively and believably, thus imparting credibility to the message. No small challenge!

    Now, with the message in hand, it’s time to select the communications tactics you will use to effectively carry your message to members of your target audience.

    And there is no shortage of communications tactics. You can choose from among brochures, press releases, community briefings and one-on-one meetings with thoughtleaders. Or, letters-to-the-editor, radio interviews, speeches and emails. And dozens more, although your choices here will be influenced by budgetary reality.

    Inevitably, you will want to know if your public relations program is making any progress. Other than spending big bucks with a professional public opinion sampling firm,

    For Nonprofit Communicators - 5 Easy Steps to Creating a Great Annual Report
    You can create a concise Nonprofit Annual Report by following these 5 easy steps.Include an interesting executive messagePerhaps you have read an executive message that fails to keep your attention. Spice your own message up by making an emotional connection with your readers; reminding them of the good work you are doing. Summarize the annual report while setting the tone or theme of what you are sharing in the rest of the report.Concentrate on accomplishments instead of everyday happeningsTell what you did, but more importantly, tell why you did it. Explain the results of a project and the difference the project made in the community or your organization. Connect the projects and everyday activities
    Should it be measured in “publicity by the pound,” or by how well external audience behaviors help achieve the organization’s key objectives?

    I opt for holding public relations responsible, first, for recognizing that people act on their perception of the facts leading to behaviors about which something can be done. And second, for how well its practitioners create, change or reinforce that opinion by reaching, persuading and moving-to-desired-action those people whose behaviors affect the organization.

    Only then would I agree that a strategic public relations mission has been accomplished, not simply completion of a tactical assignment.

    Now this presumes that our practitioner knows the next step, and the one after that, as s/he pursues increased productivity.

    But initially, such gains in public relations must begin by efficiently prioritizing the organization’s most important outside audiences. Those whose behaviors have the greatest impact on the enterprise.

    With that chore completed, you now want to learn what members of your #1external audience think and feel about you and your organization. Important because we know that what people perceive usually leads to a predictable behavior about which, usually, something can be done.

    So, discovering that valuable information demands that you find out precisely how those target audience members perceive your operation. Which means you must now interact with those people, and ask a lot of questions such as “do you have an opinion about our organization?” Or, “what do you think of our products or services?”

    Listen carefully for signs of negative attitudes, false assumptions, misconceptions, inaccuracies and, especially, dangerous rumors.

    The responses to your questions, and the explanations people give for why they feel or believe as they do, will lead you directly to your public relations goal. For example, straighten out that misconception, correct that inaccuracy, or spike that rumor, fast.

    By the way, as you efficiently move through the public relations problem solving sequence, you accumulate the productivity gains promised by the fundamental premise of public relations outlined in the opening paragraphs.

    Now, you set your public relations goal, one that aims squarely at correcting the problem you identified during your perception monitoring activity.

    And that might well include clarifying a misconception, correcting an inaccuracy, informing a misunderstanding or stopping a rumor dead in its tracks. What you’ve just done, is set a public relations goal towards which you will strive by altering specific perceptions held by that target audience, usually leading to the desired behavior.

    But hold on. What strategy will you employ in your pursuit of that altered perception and changed behavior? Your choice of strategies is limited, but powerful. You can shoot for creating opinion (perception) where there really isn’t any. You can focus your efforts on changing existing opinion, or you may be quite happy to simply reinforce those existing perceptions.

    This is a key decision because your strategy will influence the selection, direction, content and tone of all of your subsequent communications.

    Which brings us to the question of just how you are going to structure the message to be sent to your target audience. Above all, your message must state clearly what the perception problem is, AND what it should be, based on the actual facts of the matter. At the same time, your message must be written persuasively and believably, thus imparting credibility to the message. No small challenge!

    Now, with the message in hand, it’s time to select the communications tactics you will use to effectively carry your message to members of your target audience.

    And there is no shortage of communications tactics. You can choose from among brochures, press releases, community briefings and one-on-one meetings with thoughtleaders. Or, letters-to-the-editor, radio interviews, speeches and emails. And dozens more, although your choices here will be influenced by budgetary reality.

    Inevitably, you will want to know if your public relations program is making any progress. Other than spending big bucks with a professional public opinion sampling firm,

    The 9 Biggest Mistakes Every Medical Billing Office Should Avoid
    The following information is crucial to the success of any medical billing office. Doctors simply do not pay enough attention to the admission/information gathering process. Receiving maximum reimbursement for your procedures is important; however one mistake in any of the following nine areas could result in NO payment whatsoever!The biggest mistake I have experienced in over 15 years as the owner of a successful medical billing service, is the almost blind assumption by some physicians that their office manager ,”walks on water” and that billing staffers work hard and truly care about the practice. Assume the contrary or at a minimum look upon your staff with guarded optimism and you'll make a lot more money!The
    rioritizing the organization’s most important outside audiences. Those whose behaviors have the greatest impact on the enterprise.

    With that chore completed, you now want to learn what members of your #1external audience think and feel about you and your organization. Important because we know that what people perceive usually leads to a predictable behavior about which, usually, something can be done.

    So, discovering that valuable information demands that you find out precisely how those target audience members perceive your operation. Which means you must now interact with those people, and ask a lot of questions such as “do you have an opinion about our organization?” Or, “what do you think of our products or services?”

    Listen carefully for signs of negative attitudes, false assumptions, misconceptions, inaccuracies and, especially, dangerous rumors.

    The responses to your questions, and the explanations people give for why they feel or believe as they do, will lead you directly to your public relations goal. For example, straighten out that misconception, correct that inaccuracy, or spike that rumor, fast.

    By the way, as you efficiently move through the public relations problem solving sequence, you accumulate the productivity gains promised by the fundamental premise of public relations outlined in the opening paragraphs.

    Now, you set your public relations goal, one that aims squarely at correcting the problem you identified during your perception monitoring activity.

    And that might well include clarifying a misconception, correcting an inaccuracy, informing a misunderstanding or stopping a rumor dead in its tracks. What you’ve just done, is set a public relations goal towards which you will strive by altering specific perceptions held by that target audience, usually leading to the desired behavior.

    But hold on. What strategy will you employ in your pursuit of that altered perception and changed behavior? Your choice of strategies is limited, but powerful. You can shoot for creating opinion (perception) where there really isn’t any. You can focus your efforts on changing existing opinion, or you may be quite happy to simply reinforce those existing perceptions.

    This is a key decision because your strategy will influence the selection, direction, content and tone of all of your subsequent communications.

    Which brings us to the question of just how you are going to structure the message to be sent to your target audience. Above all, your message must state clearly what the perception problem is, AND what it should be, based on the actual facts of the matter. At the same time, your message must be written persuasively and believably, thus imparting credibility to the message. No small challenge!

    Now, with the message in hand, it’s time to select the communications tactics you will use to effectively carry your message to members of your target audience.

    And there is no shortage of communications tactics. You can choose from among brochures, press releases, community briefings and one-on-one meetings with thoughtleaders. Or, letters-to-the-editor, radio interviews, speeches and emails. And dozens more, although your choices here will be influenced by budgetary reality.

    Inevitably, you will want to know if your public relations program is making any progress. Other than spending big bucks with a professional public opinion sampling firm,

    How To Change The Unconscious Organizational Culture
    As an executive you clearly recognize that the organization within which you spend your time has a psychological and emotional culture that is the synergistic sum of all of the beliefs as well as psychological dynamics that all of the people in that organization bring in the door with them.Such cultures often take on a life of their own despite the efforts of many to modify, change or manipulate them. The reason is that these organizational cultures often replay the early family dynamics of the individuals in them.Such family patterns are not only not well understood by HR departments they are also very difficult to shift once they become entrenched in an organization.What's more a given individual can have
    gerous rumors.

    The responses to your questions, and the explanations people give for why they feel or believe as they do, will lead you directly to your public relations goal. For example, straighten out that misconception, correct that inaccuracy, or spike that rumor, fast.

    By the way, as you efficiently move through the public relations problem solving sequence, you accumulate the productivity gains promised by the fundamental premise of public relations outlined in the opening paragraphs.

    Now, you set your public relations goal, one that aims squarely at correcting the problem you identified during your perception monitoring activity.

    And that might well include clarifying a misconception, correcting an inaccuracy, informing a misunderstanding or stopping a rumor dead in its tracks. What you’ve just done, is set a public relations goal towards which you will strive by altering specific perceptions held by that target audience, usually leading to the desired behavior.

    But hold on. What strategy will you employ in your pursuit of that altered perception and changed behavior? Your choice of strategies is limited, but powerful. You can shoot for creating opinion (perception) where there really isn’t any. You can focus your efforts on changing existing opinion, or you may be quite happy to simply reinforce those existing perceptions.

    This is a key decision because your strategy will influence the selection, direction, content and tone of all of your subsequent communications.

    Which brings us to the question of just how you are going to structure the message to be sent to your target audience. Above all, your message must state clearly what the perception problem is, AND what it should be, based on the actual facts of the matter. At the same time, your message must be written persuasively and believably, thus imparting credibility to the message. No small challenge!

    Now, with the message in hand, it’s time to select the communications tactics you will use to effectively carry your message to members of your target audience.

    And there is no shortage of communications tactics. You can choose from among brochures, press releases, community briefings and one-on-one meetings with thoughtleaders. Or, letters-to-the-editor, radio interviews, speeches and emails. And dozens more, although your choices here will be influenced by budgetary reality.

    Inevitably, you will want to know if your public relations program is making any progress. Other than spending big bucks with a professional public opinion sampling firm,

    Termination: Have You Suffered Retaliation at Work?
    Termination is one of the most obvious forms of retaliation at work. Other obvious forms of retaliation include refusal to hire, denial of job benefits, denial of promotion, demotion, and suspension. Other kinds of adverse actions include: threats, reprimands, harassment, negative evaluations, or other adverse treatment of employees.Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, [FN1] the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, [FN2] the Americans with Disabilities Act, [FN3] and the Equal Pay Act [FN4] prohibit retaliation by an employer, employment agency, or labor organization because an individual has engaged in protected activity. [FN5]Protected activity, as defined, consists of the following:(1) opposing a
    goal towards which you will strive by altering specific perceptions held by that target audience, usually leading to the desired behavior.

    But hold on. What strategy will you employ in your pursuit of that altered perception and changed behavior? Your choice of strategies is limited, but powerful. You can shoot for creating opinion (perception) where there really isn’t any. You can focus your efforts on changing existing opinion, or you may be quite happy to simply reinforce those existing perceptions.

    This is a key decision because your strategy will influence the selection, direction, content and tone of all of your subsequent communications.

    Which brings us to the question of just how you are going to structure the message to be sent to your target audience. Above all, your message must state clearly what the perception problem is, AND what it should be, based on the actual facts of the matter. At the same time, your message must be written persuasively and believably, thus imparting credibility to the message. No small challenge!

    Now, with the message in hand, it’s time to select the communications tactics you will use to effectively carry your message to members of your target audience.

    And there is no shortage of communications tactics. You can choose from among brochures, press releases, community briefings and one-on-one meetings with thoughtleaders. Or, letters-to-the-editor, radio interviews, speeches and emails. And dozens more, although your choices here will be influenced by budgetary reality.

    Inevitably, you will want to know if your public relations program is making any progress. Other than spending big bucks with a professional public opinion sampling firm,

    How Hot is Our Service?
    A large bank came to me for the first time seeking a big improvement in their retail counter service. They asked me for ‘customer service training’ but also complained about the shallow impact of classroom training efforts from other providers. I was hesitant. Classroom training is only a partial solution, especially for a high-traffic, face-to-face service environment. To make it more effective, creativity is needed. So I invented a novel approach involving customers and staff, immediate feedback, and clear targets and objectives. Perhaps you can use this, too.1. Set up a large colorful ‘Service Quality Thermometer’ in the lobby. Place it where customers can use it easily.2. Place three ‘voting buttons’ next to the
    what it should be, based on the actual facts of the matter. At the same time, your message must be written persuasively and believably, thus imparting credibility to the message. No small challenge!

    Now, with the message in hand, it’s time to select the communications tactics you will use to effectively carry your message to members of your target audience.

    And there is no shortage of communications tactics. You can choose from among brochures, press releases, community briefings and one-on-one meetings with thoughtleaders. Or, letters-to-the-editor, radio interviews, speeches and emails. And dozens more, although your choices here will be influenced by budgetary reality.

    Inevitably, you will want to know if your public relations program is making any progress. Other than spending big bucks with a professional public opinion sampling firm, there’s really only one way to do that quickly and accurately. And that is to get out there among members of your target audience, interact with a number of them and ask the same questions you did during your first perception monitoring session.

    The difference now is that you are looking for movement in perceptions towards the views expressed in your message. In other words, you want to see some perceptions altered in your direction because that gives you a better chance to achieve your real objective, modified target audience behaviors.

    Your first go at this may indicate that more work is needed to effectively influence opinion among your key target audience. If this is the case, you will need to reevaluate the mix of communications tactics you originally selected, as well as the frequency with which you aimed them at your target audience. Also advisable, would be another accuracy check of the facts and figures you used in your message.

    As your public relations program takes hold, you will notice that key points in your message have been internalized, and are now being played back to you by members of your target audience. This will result in a general increase in target audience awareness of your organization and its role in the communities, industry sectors and geographies where it operates.

    Another way of putting it is, when enough members of your key target audience are persuaded to your way of thinking, and their behaviors begin to reflect that change, your public relations effort is showing unmistakable signs of success.

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