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    Entrepreneurial Success
    How to become an instant entrepreneurThe 5 Parts of innovation:1) Understand: The ability to study and understand people of different likes, needs, characteristics, and demographics is priceless in marketing and innovation. Most companies don't understand that to make better products and services, you absolutely have to care about the person using it. This is known as having empathy for the consumer. It is imperative to have a genuine interest in the needs of those you are serving for innov
    ular corporate partnerships. The co-owners will be adversarial but objective. The couples are too close and pick on the weaknesses they already know how to exploit. So, do I regret being married to my business partner? No, I am luck because we rarely fight and seem to agree on most things. But I feel we are the exception and therefore I do have a word of warning. If you already have a so-so marital relationship, don’t expect running a business together to make it any better. If anything, the additional strain and stress will push it to the limit. Try to separate the two when back at home. Talk as little as possible about the company when on vacation or just relaxing. The business will still be there with all it’s troubles and benefits alike. And perhaps you’ll still have a chance to be successful at bot
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    During my 25 years as an advertising consultant, I had many husband and wife business teams as clients. In my mind, it was the good, the bad, and the ugly. I wasn’t necessarily referring to their physical attributes. But it usually did not lead to a positive outcome. Not that all of these type of partnerships are doomed, but the majority were less than successful. The reasons are varied and easy to enumerate here:

    • You have a vested interest in the spouse, first, before work.
    • It’s hard to separate business and leisure.
    • How can you tell your spouse they made a bad business decision?
    • If you have an argument at work, do you bring it home?
    • You have no chance to escape talking about the job or company.
    • Even if you say it’s work-related, it’s always personal.
    • If you divorce, how do you divide the company?
    • Can you fire your spouse if they are bad for business?
    • What if one ends up doing all the work?
    • Your personal issues, like adultery, carry over into the business.
    • Who will make most of the big decisions and why?
    • Who gets paid the most and why?
    Now, in a good relationship, both people should share all the burdens and rewards. They need not bring work home, but that’s somewhat impossible. If the two of you are the top executives, then discussing the company at home will be a common occurrence. Even going out to a restaurant may eventually lead the dinner conversation back to work-related discussions. How do I know so much? My wife is the CEO of our family business. I am the lowly Marketing Director, albeit, by choice I might add.

    We formed the business a few years ago when I retired from my previous job. She then retired the following year and we began designing a website to provide health information. She had been an RN and I was an advertising consultant. We had been married just a year when all this happened, although we had both already raised our separate families. So children was not an issue. But I was a bit apprehensive about a home-based business where we would be living and breathing this new venture together, without a break from one another.

    It had been my prior experience with other business couples that gave me that negative implication. I had seen the bitter feuds and arguments that resulted from power struggles and bickering, common in marriages. But this was over advertising, budgets, and the future of a business. It often reached a whole new level of ugliness. Most of the time, the husband was the president and the wife the VP or accountant. But the lines blurred when money was the topic and the wife would take charge of the finances, as if I were stealing from their retirement fund. It’s very awkward standing there while a couple fight in a personal manner. It’s more like witnessing a social war than a company dispute. The words turn to an attack on character and qualifications rather than business savvy. They might even bring up non-business issues that I prefer not to know. But that’s what couples do, when their emotions take over.

    That’s also the main difference between a couple running a business and regular corporate partnerships. The co-owners will be adversarial but objective. The couples are too close and pick on the weaknesses they already know how to exploit. So, do I regret being married to my business partner? No, I am luck because we rarely fight and seem to agree on most things. But I feel we are the exception and therefore I do have a word of warning. If you already have a so-so marital relationship, don’t expect running a business together to make it any better. If anything, the additional strain and stress will push it to the limit. Try to separate the two when back at home. Talk as little as possible about the company when on vacation or just relaxing. The business will still be there with all it’s troubles and benefits alike. And perhaps you’ll still have a chance to be successful at both

    How To Xplode Your Earnings
    In your business to really create wealth, you need to work at something that you really have a passion for. You need to be an independant thinker and have the drive to thrive in the business world. Practice visualization, clearly visualize your goals and dreams. Many atheletes use visualization in there chosen fields. Especially golfers, they visualize a putt going into the hole, before actually putting. There have been numerous studies done, and people that visualize outperform people that don't. Design
    ated, it’s always personal.
  • If you divorce, how do you divide the company?
  • Can you fire your spouse if they are bad for business?
  • What if one ends up doing all the work?
  • Your personal issues, like adultery, carry over into the business.
  • Who will make most of the big decisions and why?
  • Who gets paid the most and why?
  • Now, in a good relationship, both people should share all the burdens and rewards. They need not bring work home, but that’s somewhat impossible. If the two of you are the top executives, then discussing the company at home will be a common occurrence. Even going out to a restaurant may eventually lead the dinner conversation back to work-related discussions. How do I know so much? My wife is the CEO of our family business. I am the lowly Marketing Director, albeit, by choice I might add.

    We formed the business a few years ago when I retired from my previous job. She then retired the following year and we began designing a website to provide health information. She had been an RN and I was an advertising consultant. We had been married just a year when all this happened, although we had both already raised our separate families. So children was not an issue. But I was a bit apprehensive about a home-based business where we would be living and breathing this new venture together, without a break from one another.

    It had been my prior experience with other business couples that gave me that negative implication. I had seen the bitter feuds and arguments that resulted from power struggles and bickering, common in marriages. But this was over advertising, budgets, and the future of a business. It often reached a whole new level of ugliness. Most of the time, the husband was the president and the wife the VP or accountant. But the lines blurred when money was the topic and the wife would take charge of the finances, as if I were stealing from their retirement fund. It’s very awkward standing there while a couple fight in a personal manner. It’s more like witnessing a social war than a company dispute. The words turn to an attack on character and qualifications rather than business savvy. They might even bring up non-business issues that I prefer not to know. But that’s what couples do, when their emotions take over.

    That’s also the main difference between a couple running a business and regular corporate partnerships. The co-owners will be adversarial but objective. The couples are too close and pick on the weaknesses they already know how to exploit. So, do I regret being married to my business partner? No, I am luck because we rarely fight and seem to agree on most things. But I feel we are the exception and therefore I do have a word of warning. If you already have a so-so marital relationship, don’t expect running a business together to make it any better. If anything, the additional strain and stress will push it to the limit. Try to separate the two when back at home. Talk as little as possible about the company when on vacation or just relaxing. The business will still be there with all it’s troubles and benefits alike. And perhaps you’ll still have a chance to be successful at bot

    18 Career Enhancement Caveats
    Core value investing in your careerMany people walk through their lives never, ever being better at something than anyone else. What is it that you know or do better than almost anyone else in the world? What is it that you do uniquely well? Do your core values for yourself and your family fit with what you are doing, where you are putting your energy, what you are developing, and where you are focusing/immersing yourself?In your career, as well as in your life, to achieve full capacity
    family business. I am the lowly Marketing Director, albeit, by choice I might add.

    We formed the business a few years ago when I retired from my previous job. She then retired the following year and we began designing a website to provide health information. She had been an RN and I was an advertising consultant. We had been married just a year when all this happened, although we had both already raised our separate families. So children was not an issue. But I was a bit apprehensive about a home-based business where we would be living and breathing this new venture together, without a break from one another.

    It had been my prior experience with other business couples that gave me that negative implication. I had seen the bitter feuds and arguments that resulted from power struggles and bickering, common in marriages. But this was over advertising, budgets, and the future of a business. It often reached a whole new level of ugliness. Most of the time, the husband was the president and the wife the VP or accountant. But the lines blurred when money was the topic and the wife would take charge of the finances, as if I were stealing from their retirement fund. It’s very awkward standing there while a couple fight in a personal manner. It’s more like witnessing a social war than a company dispute. The words turn to an attack on character and qualifications rather than business savvy. They might even bring up non-business issues that I prefer not to know. But that’s what couples do, when their emotions take over.

    That’s also the main difference between a couple running a business and regular corporate partnerships. The co-owners will be adversarial but objective. The couples are too close and pick on the weaknesses they already know how to exploit. So, do I regret being married to my business partner? No, I am luck because we rarely fight and seem to agree on most things. But I feel we are the exception and therefore I do have a word of warning. If you already have a so-so marital relationship, don’t expect running a business together to make it any better. If anything, the additional strain and stress will push it to the limit. Try to separate the two when back at home. Talk as little as possible about the company when on vacation or just relaxing. The business will still be there with all it’s troubles and benefits alike. And perhaps you’ll still have a chance to be successful at bot

    Legal Secretary Jobs
    There are many tools that exist now that did not in the 1990's and early 2000's for learning how to become a legal secretarial/word processor. The internet and cd-roms did not exist back then and they are some of the tools that one can use to help become a legal secretary/word processor. Before these mediums existed people would have to learn from on-the-job training only. If you were not quick and could not adapt quickly you would lose a temporary assignment or not be asked to come back or even worse
    kering, common in marriages. But this was over advertising, budgets, and the future of a business. It often reached a whole new level of ugliness. Most of the time, the husband was the president and the wife the VP or accountant. But the lines blurred when money was the topic and the wife would take charge of the finances, as if I were stealing from their retirement fund. It’s very awkward standing there while a couple fight in a personal manner. It’s more like witnessing a social war than a company dispute. The words turn to an attack on character and qualifications rather than business savvy. They might even bring up non-business issues that I prefer not to know. But that’s what couples do, when their emotions take over.

    That’s also the main difference between a couple running a business and regular corporate partnerships. The co-owners will be adversarial but objective. The couples are too close and pick on the weaknesses they already know how to exploit. So, do I regret being married to my business partner? No, I am luck because we rarely fight and seem to agree on most things. But I feel we are the exception and therefore I do have a word of warning. If you already have a so-so marital relationship, don’t expect running a business together to make it any better. If anything, the additional strain and stress will push it to the limit. Try to separate the two when back at home. Talk as little as possible about the company when on vacation or just relaxing. The business will still be there with all it’s troubles and benefits alike. And perhaps you’ll still have a chance to be successful at bot

    General Print Guidelines for Trade Show Photomurals and Removable Graphics
    We strongly recommend that you plan extra lead time into your job for the purpose of obtaining printed proofs of any job output-without proofs we cannot guarantee your satisfaction. Plan at least two full weeks from the time of art submission to receipt of final graphics for the purpose of proofing. If you don't plan time for and request a proof you have no guarantee as to the quality of the graphic meeting your expectations.Proofs push back deadlines by the total amount of time required to print,
    ular corporate partnerships. The co-owners will be adversarial but objective. The couples are too close and pick on the weaknesses they already know how to exploit. So, do I regret being married to my business partner? No, I am luck because we rarely fight and seem to agree on most things. But I feel we are the exception and therefore I do have a word of warning. If you already have a so-so marital relationship, don’t expect running a business together to make it any better. If anything, the additional strain and stress will push it to the limit. Try to separate the two when back at home. Talk as little as possible about the company when on vacation or just relaxing. The business will still be there with all it’s troubles and benefits alike. And perhaps you’ll still have a chance to be successful at both.

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