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    Plastic Pen Collections
    Some people collect stamps, others show off their shot glasses from around the world. There are a few people that enjoy collecting plastic pens of all types. A few collectors even have websites that show off their plastic pen collections. Just a few collections are outlined below.Suzanne’s Pen Collection, Alabama. Well over a thousand pens, this collection is primarily made up of printed plastic pens, mostly ballpoint. She is particularly fond of plastic pens that advertise a particular business, event or place. Her favorites aren’t
    /P>

    $450.00 / 4 = $112.50

    Your marketing cost per sale is $112.50.

    Depending on your products and profit margin both of these ads may be performing well enough to merit continuation.  However, based on this information we would want to look for other opportunities to expand our use of the classified ad first.

    This may seem a little basic but this information is extremely valuable and often overlooked. 

    The outcome of most athletic contests is normally decided by a very small margin,  sometimes by as little as tenths of an inch or hundredths of a second, missing that pass completion by half a step or missing one basket. 

    One would suspect that most winners and losers in business are also determined by very small margins.

    Why You Should Ignore a Publisher's Offer for FREE Advert Design
    I visited with a client today and during the conversation it became apparent they were having issues with their advertising – print advertising to be precise. They showed me the original advert and told me it cost them a little more than $1,700 to place the ad.When I asked them who created the concept, the copy and the design – the client smiled and said the publisher had included it for free! Free is fabulous in marketing, but not when it comes to the design and production of your advertising materials.It never ceases to ama
    You may be aware that in a basketball game the assistant coaches keep an almost unending list of personal statistics for each player.  Rebounds, assists, points, minutes played, etc.

    Why is that?

    Because they know that these individual statistics all add up to the bottom line. 

    The final score

    If they can achieve even a small incremental improvement in these individual statistics for each player this will have a compound affect on the final score. 

    And of course, it helps them know which players to give the most playing time too. 

    In marketing your business you should be just as disciplined. Which products and which ads and which media should you give the most playing time?  Do you know?

    What’s the point of designing and implementing an advertising campaign if you don’t know if it worked or if it was better than the last one? 

    What a waste.

    How do you know where the best place is to spend your advertising dollars? 

    By tracking everything

    Incoming calls, emails, walk-ins, website visitors, etc. 

    Train yourself and your staff to always ask these questions.  Where did they come from?  How did they hear about you?  Which ad did they call on? 

    Here is an example:  Let’s say you place a classified ad in the newspaper at a cost of $135.00 offering a free report on your product.  You could track the incoming calls in many ways (for instance by directing them to a free recorded message with a unique extension number or simply by asking them where they heard about the offer when they call). 

    Let’s say you receive 12 calls on this ad and 2 of them end up as completed  sales.

    What is your cost per prospect?

    (Cost of Ad) / (Number of Calls) = Cost Per Prospect

    $135.00 / 12 = $11.25

    Your cost per prospect is $11.25


    What is your conversion rate of prospects to sold clients?

    (Number of Sold Clients) / (Number of Prospects)  = Conversion Rate

    2 / 12 = .17 (or 17%)

    Your conversion rate of prospects to sold clients is 17%


    What is your cost per sold client?

    (Cost of Ad) / (Number of Sold Clients) = Cost Per Sale

    $135.00 / 2 = $67.50

    Your marketing cost per sale is $67.50.


    Now let’s say you place a display ad in a large local corporate newsletter and it costs you $450.  You get 27 calls which turn into 4 sales. 

    Which ad is performing better?

    What is your cost per prospect for this ad?

    (Cost of Ad) / (Number of Calls) = Cost Per Prospect

    $450.00 / 27 = $16.67

    Your cost per prospect is $16.67


    What is your conversion rate of prospects to sold clients?

    (Number of Sold Clients) / (Number of Prospects)  = Conversion Rate

    4 / 27 = .15 (or 15%)

    Your conversion rate of prospects to sold clients is 15%


    What is your cost per sold client?

    (Cost of Ad ) / (Number of Sold Clients) = Cost Per Sale

    $450.00 / 4 = $112.50

    Your marketing cost per sale is $112.50.

    Depending on your products and profit margin both of these ads may be performing well enough to merit continuation.  However, based on this information we would want to look for other opportunities to expand our use of the classified ad first.

    This may seem a little basic but this information is extremely valuable and often overlooked. 

    The outcome of most athletic contests is normally decided by a very small margin,  sometimes by as little as tenths of an inch or hundredths of a second, missing that pass completion by half a step or missing one basket. 

    One would suspect that most winners and losers in business are also determined by very small margins. 

    Feeling FICA
    What does FICA stand for?FICA stands for the Federal Insurance Contributions Act. The history of the act reverts back to the year 1935, when the government implemented the social security program. A provision to include social security taxes was included in this act. However, due to concerns over the constitutionality of the 1935 act, there were amendments made and the provision for collecting social security taxes was moved to the Internal Revenue Code in 1939. At this time it was renamed the Federal Insurance Contributions Ac
    you know?

    What’s the point of designing and implementing an advertising campaign if you don’t know if it worked or if it was better than the last one? 

    What a waste.

    How do you know where the best place is to spend your advertising dollars? 

    By tracking everything

    Incoming calls, emails, walk-ins, website visitors, etc. 

    Train yourself and your staff to always ask these questions.  Where did they come from?  How did they hear about you?  Which ad did they call on? 

    Here is an example:  Let’s say you place a classified ad in the newspaper at a cost of $135.00 offering a free report on your product.  You could track the incoming calls in many ways (for instance by directing them to a free recorded message with a unique extension number or simply by asking them where they heard about the offer when they call). 

    Let’s say you receive 12 calls on this ad and 2 of them end up as completed  sales.

    What is your cost per prospect?

    (Cost of Ad) / (Number of Calls) = Cost Per Prospect

    $135.00 / 12 = $11.25

    Your cost per prospect is $11.25


    What is your conversion rate of prospects to sold clients?

    (Number of Sold Clients) / (Number of Prospects)  = Conversion Rate

    2 / 12 = .17 (or 17%)

    Your conversion rate of prospects to sold clients is 17%


    What is your cost per sold client?

    (Cost of Ad) / (Number of Sold Clients) = Cost Per Sale

    $135.00 / 2 = $67.50

    Your marketing cost per sale is $67.50.


    Now let’s say you place a display ad in a large local corporate newsletter and it costs you $450.  You get 27 calls which turn into 4 sales. 

    Which ad is performing better?

    What is your cost per prospect for this ad?

    (Cost of Ad) / (Number of Calls) = Cost Per Prospect

    $450.00 / 27 = $16.67

    Your cost per prospect is $16.67


    What is your conversion rate of prospects to sold clients?

    (Number of Sold Clients) / (Number of Prospects)  = Conversion Rate

    4 / 27 = .15 (or 15%)

    Your conversion rate of prospects to sold clients is 15%


    What is your cost per sold client?

    (Cost of Ad ) / (Number of Sold Clients) = Cost Per Sale

    $450.00 / 4 = $112.50

    Your marketing cost per sale is $112.50.

    Depending on your products and profit margin both of these ads may be performing well enough to merit continuation.  However, based on this information we would want to look for other opportunities to expand our use of the classified ad first.

    This may seem a little basic but this information is extremely valuable and often overlooked. 

    The outcome of most athletic contests is normally decided by a very small margin,  sometimes by as little as tenths of an inch or hundredths of a second, missing that pass completion by half a step or missing one basket. 

    One would suspect that most winners and losers in business are also determined by very small margins.

    Certified Business Broker
    Are you planning to sell your business? Or are you looking for a new business opportunity you can invest in? If you are, then you should use a business broker to help you search for a buyer or a seller, as well as facilitate the transfer and purchase of a business.Business brokers, also known as business transfer agents, are persons or firms that facilitate the buying and selling of other businesses. The job of a business broker usually involves determining the value of a business, advertising it to prospective buyers, and facilitat
    recorded message with a unique extension number or simply by asking them where they heard about the offer when they call). 

    Let’s say you receive 12 calls on this ad and 2 of them end up as completed  sales.

    What is your cost per prospect?

    (Cost of Ad) / (Number of Calls) = Cost Per Prospect

    $135.00 / 12 = $11.25

    Your cost per prospect is $11.25


    What is your conversion rate of prospects to sold clients?

    (Number of Sold Clients) / (Number of Prospects)  = Conversion Rate

    2 / 12 = .17 (or 17%)

    Your conversion rate of prospects to sold clients is 17%


    What is your cost per sold client?

    (Cost of Ad) / (Number of Sold Clients) = Cost Per Sale

    $135.00 / 2 = $67.50

    Your marketing cost per sale is $67.50.


    Now let’s say you place a display ad in a large local corporate newsletter and it costs you $450.  You get 27 calls which turn into 4 sales. 

    Which ad is performing better?

    What is your cost per prospect for this ad?

    (Cost of Ad) / (Number of Calls) = Cost Per Prospect

    $450.00 / 27 = $16.67

    Your cost per prospect is $16.67


    What is your conversion rate of prospects to sold clients?

    (Number of Sold Clients) / (Number of Prospects)  = Conversion Rate

    4 / 27 = .15 (or 15%)

    Your conversion rate of prospects to sold clients is 15%


    What is your cost per sold client?

    (Cost of Ad ) / (Number of Sold Clients) = Cost Per Sale

    $450.00 / 4 = $112.50

    Your marketing cost per sale is $112.50.

    Depending on your products and profit margin both of these ads may be performing well enough to merit continuation.  However, based on this information we would want to look for other opportunities to expand our use of the classified ad first.

    This may seem a little basic but this information is extremely valuable and often overlooked. 

    The outcome of most athletic contests is normally decided by a very small margin,  sometimes by as little as tenths of an inch or hundredths of a second, missing that pass completion by half a step or missing one basket. 

    One would suspect that most winners and losers in business are also determined by very small margins.

    Naming Your Business Newsletter For Attention
    You receive them in the mail, see them on store counters, or they are handed to your at organizational meetings. Can you think of the name of your most popular print newsletter? What do you think makes the title stick to your mind? Does it rhyme? Do the letters formulate a word? Is a phrase or logo attached to it?When making decisions about the appropriate name for your newsletter, always keep in mind the image you want to project to your reader. How do you want them to remember you, your organization, product or service? Your

    Your marketing cost per sale is $67.50.


    Now let’s say you place a display ad in a large local corporate newsletter and it costs you $450.  You get 27 calls which turn into 4 sales. 

    Which ad is performing better?

    What is your cost per prospect for this ad?

    (Cost of Ad) / (Number of Calls) = Cost Per Prospect

    $450.00 / 27 = $16.67

    Your cost per prospect is $16.67


    What is your conversion rate of prospects to sold clients?

    (Number of Sold Clients) / (Number of Prospects)  = Conversion Rate

    4 / 27 = .15 (or 15%)

    Your conversion rate of prospects to sold clients is 15%


    What is your cost per sold client?

    (Cost of Ad ) / (Number of Sold Clients) = Cost Per Sale

    $450.00 / 4 = $112.50

    Your marketing cost per sale is $112.50.

    Depending on your products and profit margin both of these ads may be performing well enough to merit continuation.  However, based on this information we would want to look for other opportunities to expand our use of the classified ad first.

    This may seem a little basic but this information is extremely valuable and often overlooked. 

    The outcome of most athletic contests is normally decided by a very small margin,  sometimes by as little as tenths of an inch or hundredths of a second, missing that pass completion by half a step or missing one basket. 

    One would suspect that most winners and losers in business are also determined by very small margins.

    Employers' Are Creating a Weather System That Forecasts a Hurricane of Discrimination Lawsuits
    California small business employers are creating a hurricane of lawsuits for themselves. With the elimination of vocational rehabilitation under California workers' compensation and after the Raine v. City of Burbank decision in January 2006, Employers' are misinterpreting the law and are refusing to accommodate employees, which is causing a massive flood of claims. Raine is an instructive opinion in that it gives the employer a step by step approach in finding whether an employee's request is reasonable in order to accommodate af
    /P>

    $450.00 / 4 = $112.50

    Your marketing cost per sale is $112.50.

    Depending on your products and profit margin both of these ads may be performing well enough to merit continuation.  However, based on this information we would want to look for other opportunities to expand our use of the classified ad first.

    This may seem a little basic but this information is extremely valuable and often overlooked. 

    The outcome of most athletic contests is normally decided by a very small margin,  sometimes by as little as tenths of an inch or hundredths of a second, missing that pass completion by half a step or missing one basket. 

    One would suspect that most winners and losers in business are also determined by very small margins. 

    Not giving that extra little bit of caring and customer service.  Not having your presentation skills honed, not including testimonials with your sales information.  Not having the most effective headline in your ad or not having a headline at all.

    And worst of all, not knowing which ads are working and which should be put on the bench.

    “If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again.  Then quit.  There’s no use being a damn fool about it.”  - W.C. Fields

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