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    Six Sigma Jobs
    The demand for people with Six Sigma expertise is constantly increasing. More and more organizations are discovering the many ways that the Six Sigma methodology can help them grow and improve. As Six Sigma spreads to many different industries beyond its genesis in manufacturing, you can now find many service and government organizations advertising for Six Sigma help. Plus, it is no longer the largest corporations looking for Six Sigma help. Smaller companies also are taking on Six Sigma projects and hiring people as consultants or permanent staff. The need for full-time Six Sigma professionals will only increase.Types of Six Sigma JobsThere are many Six Sigma jobs in many industries at junior and senior levels. The positions have descriptions and requirements unique to that organization and its requirements. It is true that many Six Sigma positions are filled internally as organizations train their own people already familiar with the organization’s culture in Six Sigma skills. However, organizations frequently reach outside to add personnel with Six Sigma expertise to lead Six Sigma projects
    information and more contact with you and move them from a prospect to a customer.

    Proven methods include building trust, what others say about you, what you stand for and say about yourself as a business owner. What contribution are you making to your own community? Which of your prospect's problems can you solve better than your competition? Why? Think about these questions and let them form the basis for your marketing plan for next year.

    6. DELIVERING YOUR SERVICE WITH CARE

    Once you have your prospects attention and interest, the next step is to build desire. First they have to trust you know what you're talking about. They have to believe you walk your walk and talk your talk, that your service and quality is as you say it is. Sometimes this requires showing a prospect with a free trial or testimonial from a satisfied customer.

    It is often said that your reputation as a company is determined by the value of your lowest paid employee. If that employee has a positive attitude, loves coming to work every day, loves what he or she is doing, this enthusiasm will spread like wildfire through the plant, the front counter and on to customers. But if the employee is negative, has a chip on their shoulder, looks at their job as a necessary evil, you've got a "turkey" on your hands and need to think about next Thanksgiving, if you get my drift.

    I recently heard a national speaker talk about great customer service. She

    Are Hidden Beliefs Creating a Lackluster Career?
    If you could redesign your lifestyle just the way you want it, what would it look like? How would it feel? What’s in your way? Limiting thoughts, beliefs and feelings can impede your progress. Give voice to your dreams and enhance your ability to identify opportunities that move you closer to your ideal.If you want to change the outcome or results, you have to change your thinking. Conflicts between your conscious and unconscious thoughts or beliefs affect what you experience. Here are some guidelines regarding career actions a person can explore no matter where they are to have a more fulfilling career.How close are you at creating your dream career? What is holding you back? Are you afraid of success or failure? Have you lost your career passion and don’t know why?Laura is self-employed real estate investor. She recalled that she once felt passionate about her work, but she lost it. She feels bored, apathetic, uninspired and unable to take any action. After working together on her limiting beliefs and stuck energy patterns, Laura learned that she needs to remind herself that she is grat
    Many small businesses have a natural aversion to marketing. That’s understandable because marketing can be intimidating if you don’t know what makes marketing work.

    In my marketing blueprint there are eight steps to successfully generating productive, response driven marketing results.

    1. MINDSET

    Marketing is a mindset. A mindset based on your own integrity and belief in your service. When someone asks you what you do for a living, instead of telling them your profession, begin to think in terms of being a “problem solver.” Say something like, “I help people who enjoy quality keep themselves looking terrific.” Or incorporate this problem solving mentality into your advertising messages.

    Don’t use jargon or technical terms. Just speak in terms of solving your target market’s problems. Stress benefits, not features and show your customers you value results, not hype.

    2. POSITIONING YOURSELF IN THE MARKETPLACE

    You must finally decide, do you offer full service or are you a discounter. Either way your business, inside and out must reflect this decision. Your personnel, advertising and quality must reflect this positioning statement.

    Here’s a 5 point checklist to help you decide if you’re reaching the right market. Ask yourself.

    1. Do they have the money?
    2. Will they’ll pay a premium for better service and quality if necessary?
    3. Where is the competition weak in my trading area?
    4. Which influential people or companies in my community can I service that will give me credibility and great references?
    5. How can I make sure my prospects know they need what we offer?

    3. BUILDING PERCEPTIONS

    If you asked your best, most trusted customer, and I encourage you to do this.
    “What is it that makes your company so good?”
    “What do you value about the way your company gets the job done?”
    “What do you value about the way your company treats you?”

    What makes marketing work is perception. There is very little difference in most products and services. Companies claim they offer great service and deliver on their promises. To do marketing right you have to consistently build a perception in the mind of the consumer about what makes you different.

    Is it that you’re more trustworthy than your competition? More knowledgeable about solving difficult problem situations? Does your plant have more modern resources or respond quicker to customer’s requests? What innovative marketing ideas have you implemented recently? Do you have the capacity to service larger corporate clients or the small business market?

    4. WRITING A WINNING MARKETING MESSAGE

    When you sit down to craft a persuasive results oriented marketing message, keep your problem solving mindset and target market in mind and think about what is the reason people need you, specifically to solve your prospect’s problem. How do you know you’ve written the right message? When your prospect reads your message and says, “That’s Me!”

    For example, if you were a dry cleaner, to position yourself as the “tough stain remover” a headline like this would command immediate attention, don’t you think? “Are you constantly switching dry cleaners because of hard to remove stains?” See the difference?

    Use the benefit of your service from your client’s point of view. Ask yourself, what is the problem most of my customers face? How can my unique talents, resources, people and services best meet and solve these challenges?

    This is why non-intrusive marketing vehicles like newsletters, e-zines and community based sponsorships are so persuasive and powerful. You can deliver this message in the form of articles, samples, case studies and educational materials in a way that your customers and prospects will appreciate.

    As you craft your marketing message make sure to incorporate the winning AIDA formula. Get the attention with a problem solving headline that makes them say “That’s’ Me! Grab their interest next by telling them why you’re different and what your service can do that others cannot or will not. Sweeten the deal by attracting desire. Whet their appetitive with an offer so enticing they cannot possibly refuse. Then top it off with a sincere call to action. What should they do now to begin to build a loyal relationship with you? Subscribe to your ezine or newsletter, visit your store for a special in store offer, sign up for pick up and delivery.

    5. SENDING OUT YOUR MESSAGES

    Many small business think every person in their city or town is a prospect for their service. While this sounds like a great concept, it can be disastrous emotionally when you consider your expectations. If you expect 100% and only 5% become customers you may feel like you're not really accomplishing your goals.

    So when you're sending out your messages, keep your target market in mind and hone in on those people who match your perfect customer profile. It is far better to send out a series of messages to fewer prospects than one message to everyone that falls on deaf ears.

    The purpose of your marketing messages should be to grab the attention of the prospect. If your ad or direct mail pieces looks like every other small business in your area, you don't have a chance. If your store sign just says RETAILER or XYZ SERVICE without a name, logo, tag line, color scheme, or something to set you apart, you're just wasting your time and hard earned money.

    Marketing should be a consistent message generator to a highly targeted audience that attracts attention and breeds familiarity. This marketing process should deliver value in terms of educating the public about your industry in general and about your service in particular. It should lead prospects by the hand, whet their appetites for more information and more contact with you and move them from a prospect to a customer.

    Proven methods include building trust, what others say about you, what you stand for and say about yourself as a business owner. What contribution are you making to your own community? Which of your prospect's problems can you solve better than your competition? Why? Think about these questions and let them form the basis for your marketing plan for next year.

    6. DELIVERING YOUR SERVICE WITH CARE

    Once you have your prospects attention and interest, the next step is to build desire. First they have to trust you know what you're talking about. They have to believe you walk your walk and talk your talk, that your service and quality is as you say it is. Sometimes this requires showing a prospect with a free trial or testimonial from a satisfied customer.

    It is often said that your reputation as a company is determined by the value of your lowest paid employee. If that employee has a positive attitude, loves coming to work every day, loves what he or she is doing, this enthusiasm will spread like wildfire through the plant, the front counter and on to customers. But if the employee is negative, has a chip on their shoulder, looks at their job as a necessary evil, you've got a "turkey" on your hands and need to think about next Thanksgiving, if you get my drift.

    I recently heard a national speaker talk about great customer service. She

    Finding A Career In Architecture
    Anyone who is talented in design, imagining how a house or building could be constructed or who likes to draw may have the talent to find a successful career in architecture. An architect is responsible for designing and planning the interior workings and foundation of a home or building. Architects are responsible for drawing up plans and blueprints for towering city buildings, small country homes and luxurious mansions. A successful architect must be versatile and imaginative while maintaining respect for the customer’s wishes.There are a number of jobs available in the world of architecture and designing homes may be a career in itself. A qualified individual may produce a blueprint, which consists of both interior and exterior elevations, foundation and floor plans, roof details, electrical layouts, cross sections and other general instructions.In order to find a career in architecture, an individual must become licensed through an accrediting agency. In addition, an architect must become familiar with building codes, local laws and regulations and must be skilled in their craft. In or
    br> 4. Which influential people or companies in my community can I service that will give me credibility and great references?
    5. How can I make sure my prospects know they need what we offer?

    3. BUILDING PERCEPTIONS

    If you asked your best, most trusted customer, and I encourage you to do this.
    “What is it that makes your company so good?”
    “What do you value about the way your company gets the job done?”
    “What do you value about the way your company treats you?”

    What makes marketing work is perception. There is very little difference in most products and services. Companies claim they offer great service and deliver on their promises. To do marketing right you have to consistently build a perception in the mind of the consumer about what makes you different.

    Is it that you’re more trustworthy than your competition? More knowledgeable about solving difficult problem situations? Does your plant have more modern resources or respond quicker to customer’s requests? What innovative marketing ideas have you implemented recently? Do you have the capacity to service larger corporate clients or the small business market?

    4. WRITING A WINNING MARKETING MESSAGE

    When you sit down to craft a persuasive results oriented marketing message, keep your problem solving mindset and target market in mind and think about what is the reason people need you, specifically to solve your prospect’s problem. How do you know you’ve written the right message? When your prospect reads your message and says, “That’s Me!”

    For example, if you were a dry cleaner, to position yourself as the “tough stain remover” a headline like this would command immediate attention, don’t you think? “Are you constantly switching dry cleaners because of hard to remove stains?” See the difference?

    Use the benefit of your service from your client’s point of view. Ask yourself, what is the problem most of my customers face? How can my unique talents, resources, people and services best meet and solve these challenges?

    This is why non-intrusive marketing vehicles like newsletters, e-zines and community based sponsorships are so persuasive and powerful. You can deliver this message in the form of articles, samples, case studies and educational materials in a way that your customers and prospects will appreciate.

    As you craft your marketing message make sure to incorporate the winning AIDA formula. Get the attention with a problem solving headline that makes them say “That’s’ Me! Grab their interest next by telling them why you’re different and what your service can do that others cannot or will not. Sweeten the deal by attracting desire. Whet their appetitive with an offer so enticing they cannot possibly refuse. Then top it off with a sincere call to action. What should they do now to begin to build a loyal relationship with you? Subscribe to your ezine or newsletter, visit your store for a special in store offer, sign up for pick up and delivery.

    5. SENDING OUT YOUR MESSAGES

    Many small business think every person in their city or town is a prospect for their service. While this sounds like a great concept, it can be disastrous emotionally when you consider your expectations. If you expect 100% and only 5% become customers you may feel like you're not really accomplishing your goals.

    So when you're sending out your messages, keep your target market in mind and hone in on those people who match your perfect customer profile. It is far better to send out a series of messages to fewer prospects than one message to everyone that falls on deaf ears.

    The purpose of your marketing messages should be to grab the attention of the prospect. If your ad or direct mail pieces looks like every other small business in your area, you don't have a chance. If your store sign just says RETAILER or XYZ SERVICE without a name, logo, tag line, color scheme, or something to set you apart, you're just wasting your time and hard earned money.

    Marketing should be a consistent message generator to a highly targeted audience that attracts attention and breeds familiarity. This marketing process should deliver value in terms of educating the public about your industry in general and about your service in particular. It should lead prospects by the hand, whet their appetites for more information and more contact with you and move them from a prospect to a customer.

    Proven methods include building trust, what others say about you, what you stand for and say about yourself as a business owner. What contribution are you making to your own community? Which of your prospect's problems can you solve better than your competition? Why? Think about these questions and let them form the basis for your marketing plan for next year.

    6. DELIVERING YOUR SERVICE WITH CARE

    Once you have your prospects attention and interest, the next step is to build desire. First they have to trust you know what you're talking about. They have to believe you walk your walk and talk your talk, that your service and quality is as you say it is. Sometimes this requires showing a prospect with a free trial or testimonial from a satisfied customer.

    It is often said that your reputation as a company is determined by the value of your lowest paid employee. If that employee has a positive attitude, loves coming to work every day, loves what he or she is doing, this enthusiasm will spread like wildfire through the plant, the front counter and on to customers. But if the employee is negative, has a chip on their shoulder, looks at their job as a necessary evil, you've got a "turkey" on your hands and need to think about next Thanksgiving, if you get my drift.

    I recently heard a national speaker talk about great customer service. She

    Auto Selling as a Career
    One of my previous careers was selling cars. I have had about 15 jobs in my lifetime and that was one of the hardest in many ways. Prior to selling cars I was in restaurant management so it was a completely new experience. One plus factor to a car sales career is that it is easy to get that kind of job. My local paper had dealer help wanted ad’s suggesting huge pay with no experience required. The first place I applied to offered me a job after a five minute interview. I went downtown for a license and started the next day. Auto dealers usually pay straight commission so they don’t have much to loose if a new hire doesn’t work out.I worked six days a week and twelve hours a day my first 2 years in the business. The first year my income was very low, even working long hours. About 1 out of 10 new salespeople lasted less than a month at this dealership!After the first year the job was easier and I made more commissions. My selling skills improved and I was getting repeat and referral business. I sent mail to all my previous customers every month, which helped stay in touch with them. After two yea
    ow do you know you’ve written the right message? When your prospect reads your message and says, “That’s Me!”

    For example, if you were a dry cleaner, to position yourself as the “tough stain remover” a headline like this would command immediate attention, don’t you think? “Are you constantly switching dry cleaners because of hard to remove stains?” See the difference?

    Use the benefit of your service from your client’s point of view. Ask yourself, what is the problem most of my customers face? How can my unique talents, resources, people and services best meet and solve these challenges?

    This is why non-intrusive marketing vehicles like newsletters, e-zines and community based sponsorships are so persuasive and powerful. You can deliver this message in the form of articles, samples, case studies and educational materials in a way that your customers and prospects will appreciate.

    As you craft your marketing message make sure to incorporate the winning AIDA formula. Get the attention with a problem solving headline that makes them say “That’s’ Me! Grab their interest next by telling them why you’re different and what your service can do that others cannot or will not. Sweeten the deal by attracting desire. Whet their appetitive with an offer so enticing they cannot possibly refuse. Then top it off with a sincere call to action. What should they do now to begin to build a loyal relationship with you? Subscribe to your ezine or newsletter, visit your store for a special in store offer, sign up for pick up and delivery.

    5. SENDING OUT YOUR MESSAGES

    Many small business think every person in their city or town is a prospect for their service. While this sounds like a great concept, it can be disastrous emotionally when you consider your expectations. If you expect 100% and only 5% become customers you may feel like you're not really accomplishing your goals.

    So when you're sending out your messages, keep your target market in mind and hone in on those people who match your perfect customer profile. It is far better to send out a series of messages to fewer prospects than one message to everyone that falls on deaf ears.

    The purpose of your marketing messages should be to grab the attention of the prospect. If your ad or direct mail pieces looks like every other small business in your area, you don't have a chance. If your store sign just says RETAILER or XYZ SERVICE without a name, logo, tag line, color scheme, or something to set you apart, you're just wasting your time and hard earned money.

    Marketing should be a consistent message generator to a highly targeted audience that attracts attention and breeds familiarity. This marketing process should deliver value in terms of educating the public about your industry in general and about your service in particular. It should lead prospects by the hand, whet their appetites for more information and more contact with you and move them from a prospect to a customer.

    Proven methods include building trust, what others say about you, what you stand for and say about yourself as a business owner. What contribution are you making to your own community? Which of your prospect's problems can you solve better than your competition? Why? Think about these questions and let them form the basis for your marketing plan for next year.

    6. DELIVERING YOUR SERVICE WITH CARE

    Once you have your prospects attention and interest, the next step is to build desire. First they have to trust you know what you're talking about. They have to believe you walk your walk and talk your talk, that your service and quality is as you say it is. Sometimes this requires showing a prospect with a free trial or testimonial from a satisfied customer.

    It is often said that your reputation as a company is determined by the value of your lowest paid employee. If that employee has a positive attitude, loves coming to work every day, loves what he or she is doing, this enthusiasm will spread like wildfire through the plant, the front counter and on to customers. But if the employee is negative, has a chip on their shoulder, looks at their job as a necessary evil, you've got a "turkey" on your hands and need to think about next Thanksgiving, if you get my drift.

    I recently heard a national speaker talk about great customer service. She

    Dyestuff Industry In India And China
    World demand for dyes and organic pigments to touch $10.6 billion in 2008According to a study on dyes & organic pigments, the worldwide demand for organic colourants (dyes and organic pigments) is projected to increase at $10.6 billion in 2008 form 4.9 per cent annually in 2003.Generally, the dyestuff industry comprises three sub-segments, namely dyes, pigment and intermediates. The dye intermediates are petroleum downstream products which are further processed into finished dyes and pigments. These are important sources in major industries like textiles, plastics, paints, paper and printing inks, leather, packaging sector etc.Leading players in dyesTextile dyes have been used since the Bronze Age. They also constitute a prototype 21st-century specialty chemicals market. Three large manufacturers namely DyStar, Ciba Specialty Chemicals and Clariant are leaders in the dyes market. The biggest, DyStar, was established in a series of mergers of some of Europe's leading textile dye businesses in the 1990s. Worldwide excess capacity and price burden, fueled by the immediate growth of As
    r ezine or newsletter, visit your store for a special in store offer, sign up for pick up and delivery.

    5. SENDING OUT YOUR MESSAGES

    Many small business think every person in their city or town is a prospect for their service. While this sounds like a great concept, it can be disastrous emotionally when you consider your expectations. If you expect 100% and only 5% become customers you may feel like you're not really accomplishing your goals.

    So when you're sending out your messages, keep your target market in mind and hone in on those people who match your perfect customer profile. It is far better to send out a series of messages to fewer prospects than one message to everyone that falls on deaf ears.

    The purpose of your marketing messages should be to grab the attention of the prospect. If your ad or direct mail pieces looks like every other small business in your area, you don't have a chance. If your store sign just says RETAILER or XYZ SERVICE without a name, logo, tag line, color scheme, or something to set you apart, you're just wasting your time and hard earned money.

    Marketing should be a consistent message generator to a highly targeted audience that attracts attention and breeds familiarity. This marketing process should deliver value in terms of educating the public about your industry in general and about your service in particular. It should lead prospects by the hand, whet their appetites for more information and more contact with you and move them from a prospect to a customer.

    Proven methods include building trust, what others say about you, what you stand for and say about yourself as a business owner. What contribution are you making to your own community? Which of your prospect's problems can you solve better than your competition? Why? Think about these questions and let them form the basis for your marketing plan for next year.

    6. DELIVERING YOUR SERVICE WITH CARE

    Once you have your prospects attention and interest, the next step is to build desire. First they have to trust you know what you're talking about. They have to believe you walk your walk and talk your talk, that your service and quality is as you say it is. Sometimes this requires showing a prospect with a free trial or testimonial from a satisfied customer.

    It is often said that your reputation as a company is determined by the value of your lowest paid employee. If that employee has a positive attitude, loves coming to work every day, loves what he or she is doing, this enthusiasm will spread like wildfire through the plant, the front counter and on to customers. But if the employee is negative, has a chip on their shoulder, looks at their job as a necessary evil, you've got a "turkey" on your hands and need to think about next Thanksgiving, if you get my drift.

    I recently heard a national speaker talk about great customer service. She

    Medical Billing - DME Software Updates
    In this installment of DME software for medical billing, we're going to cover one of the most important parts of the system, updates.As much as medical billers would like the DME and medical billing industry to be stagnant, that is just not the case. Regulations are constantly changing as well as prices, diagnosis codes, procedure codes, electronic billing specifications and on and on. So what does one do when they just got the latest software and one week later Medicare pricing for wheelchairs has just changed? That's where updates are so important.In the DME system, there are a number of updates and not all of them are done at the same time. Some are done monthly, some quarterly and some are done whenever needed. For example, diagnosis codes and procedure codes are usually updated on a quarterly basis. These updates, however, are not automatically done by the system. Each DME system is different. Some have updates that you get via the mail in the form of a CD and have to install yourself. Other systems have updates that you can get via the Internet. In most cases, these updates are n
    information and more contact with you and move them from a prospect to a customer.

    Proven methods include building trust, what others say about you, what you stand for and say about yourself as a business owner. What contribution are you making to your own community? Which of your prospect's problems can you solve better than your competition? Why? Think about these questions and let them form the basis for your marketing plan for next year.

    6. DELIVERING YOUR SERVICE WITH CARE

    Once you have your prospects attention and interest, the next step is to build desire. First they have to trust you know what you're talking about. They have to believe you walk your walk and talk your talk, that your service and quality is as you say it is. Sometimes this requires showing a prospect with a free trial or testimonial from a satisfied customer.

    It is often said that your reputation as a company is determined by the value of your lowest paid employee. If that employee has a positive attitude, loves coming to work every day, loves what he or she is doing, this enthusiasm will spread like wildfire through the plant, the front counter and on to customers. But if the employee is negative, has a chip on their shoulder, looks at their job as a necessary evil, you've got a "turkey" on your hands and need to think about next Thanksgiving, if you get my drift.

    I recently heard a national speaker talk about great customer service. She said to a crowd of credit union customer service people, "Don't be just employed, be employable." This is an attitude you, as the owner of your business need to foster in your people and they in turn will foster goodwill and positive word of mouth to your customers.

    7. INFORMATION - FEEDING THE RELATIONSHIP

    We live in a world of information overload, yet people crave relationships, even with businesses. You have an opportunity with a new customer to deepen your relationship by providing a constant stream of informational resources. Use newsletters, emails, online newsletters, your website, brochures, articles, flyers and presentations to inform customers. Tell them about the environment, your equipment, your employees, how to solve a problem related to your business. Take advantage of the newsletter services in the industry and use them to your advantage - - outsmarting… not outspending the competition.

    8. SYSTEMIZING YOUR MARKETING AND YOUR LIFE

    Finally, putting all of these elements together. Begin to formalize the approach you take to marketing. If you wait until a slowdown it may be too late. With a system and plan of action that works consistently for you, not against you, you’ll be ahead of the game.

    Systemizing your marketing is merely putting a series of auto-pilot marketing tactics in place that work for you on a consistent basis in attracting new customers and building relationships with current ones. In the meantime your workers and front line staff have to be ready, willing and able to deliver your message of friendly enthusiastic service that is infectious and builds loyalty.

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