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    10 Ways To Work Through A Business Slowdown
    In running any kind of business, it's inevitable that sometimes business will slow down. This might occur due to an upcoming holiday, seasonal variations, or uncontrollable circumstances. As a small-business owner, you have a choice in terms of how you view the slowdown - it can either be a time of increased stress, frustration, worry - or you can view it as an opportunity to upgrade your business processes or improve the quality of your life.Here are ten strategies you can use to work through a business slowdown:1) Market more concertedly. Statistics suggest that new businesses spend (or should spend) about 40-60% of time in marketing and related activities. If you are experiencing a business slowdown, it's always a good time to create and launch another marketing initiative. It is important to continue to promote your business creativel
    eriously by exhibitors at the International Amusement Park and Attractions show. Since many of the exhibitors sell rides aimed at children, they want the opportunity to observe reactions and ask for their opinions.

    Flip Your Perspective

    If you spend most of your time directing a booth team, spend one show actually working the booth. However, if you're usually the one shaking hands and asking questions, devote one show to walking the aisles as an attendee.

    Changing your role helps you see the show in an entirely new way. It's easy to forget what your booth staffers go through in a day when you're not doing it yourself. If you're trapped in a booth for the entire show, you lose your sense of what the attendees experience. Give it a try. Look and listen and you’ll be surprised at what comes into view from either side of the aisle.

    Baby Eyes at the End of the Day

    After you've viewed the show with baby eyes, it's time to look at your own exhibit with this new found tool. This is difficult -- often impossible to be critical or even objective of something you've worked so hard on. I recommend recruiting baby eyes for this -- and recruit them from someone who has the freedom to speak openly and objectively without fear

    Cross Cultural Training
    As economic and political spaces between nations become smaller and international trade continues to increase, the movement of people between countries is becoming more fluid. With competition for talented global workers increasing, companies are becoming increasingly aware that creating a cross cultural environment in the workplace is critical for long-term success.Cross cultural training is now becoming an integral part of staff training as managers and HR staff want to ensure that effective communication is developed between employees. By educating staff through cross cultural training courses, such as cross cultural team building and communication programs, companies and organizations are becoming more competitive in the global marketplace as cross cultural synergy in the workplace grows.Cross cultural training is a fairly broad term
    They say, “you can't teach an old dog new tricks” -- but if that old dog is an experienced exhibitor, he'd better learn some new tricks to stay alive in today's competitive trade show environment!

    Recently, I had a range of experiences that brought home the importance of going to every trade show with 'baby eyes' -- with an open mind and willingness to consider everything about your exhibit from a number of different angles.

    What are 'baby eyes'?

    If you've ever spent any amount of time with a baby, you can't help but notice the way they view the world. Every single thing around them -- every object, every person, even every shadow on the wall -- is not only worthy of attention, they're downright fascinating.

    Babies are fascinated by everything because it’s all new. They've never seen it before -- and they lack discernment. Without a frame of reference, babies have no way to tell if they should pay attention to the fuzzy stuffed animal or the crinkly wrapping paper it came in.

    That's true, but there's another aspect that's well worth considering. When a baby looks at something for the first time, they really see it as it is: free from any preconceived notions, and without any baggage. Additionally, babies are blissfully unaware of what other people think. They view new things not only free from their own expectations but free from the expectations of everyone they know.

    What does this mean for trade shows?

    Eventually babies stop viewing everything as new, exciting and wonderful since this is a survival mechanism. After all, if we were constantly stopping to admire everything that caught our fancy, we'd never manage to do those tasks necessary for survival. Focus is imperative, especially for people who want to Get Things Done.

    This is especially true at trade shows. There are so many stimuli -- bright colors, attention grabbing signs, loud noises, crowds, vivid displays, interesting people -- that it's easy to get overwhelmed and find yourself unable to function. To be an effective, efficient exhibitor, you have to 'tune things out' and focus on your own exhibit. It's a defense mechanism.

    This defense mechanism comes with a cost. Closing your eyes to the more stimulating aspects of the trade show may allow you to function -- but you lose some of the wonder of the show.

    If you've lost the wonder, if you can no longer see the magic and the glitz, if the entire exhibiting experience has become everyday and blas? for you, how in the world can you create an exhibit that will engage, entice, and enthrall attendees? Remember, you have to entertain as much as inform! Eventually, you will find that you can't. You've become a mechanic instead of a magician.

    That's when your exhibits will start to fail. Not good for you, not good for your company.

    What can you do?

    Wonder and magic can be recaptured. If they couldn't, there would be no such thing as mid-life crisises or second honeymoons. To bring the wonder back to the trade show arena, you need to capture those baby eyes that reside in a grown up body. Here are three ways to do this:

    Take Your Own Eyes Traveling

    Open yourself up to the wonder of trade shows by attending a show that is wholly outside of your industry. If you're in heavy equipment, for example, attend a food and beverage show. If you're in high tech, go to a craft and hobby show. Pick something that is in no way connects with your everyday responsibilities.

    This frees you to observe the show objectively. If you have no interest in the products and services being offered, you can then judge each exhibit on its merits. You have just been handed a set of baby eyes -- use them to discover what attracts your attention, what catches your eye, what makes you laugh, smile, and want to learn more. Also, pay attention to what makes you cranky, what makes your head hurt, and what makes you long for a 'time out'.

    When you get back, consider what you've learned. What positive elements can you emulate in your exhibit? What negative elements are you doing, perhaps unconsciously, that you need to eliminate?

    Recruit Someone Else

    Another method of acquiring baby eyes involves bringing someone to a trade show who has never attended one before. Ideally, this should be someone who has never attended any kind of industry event -- perhaps a new employee or someone from your company who doesn't get out of the office much. Even better – a child! Let them loose on the floor, either accompanying them while they wander, or alone.

    Take note of their observations. Remember, someone with baby eyes might be amazed by something you've seen a million times -- don't discount their experience. You're looking for their objective opinion. If you've seen something a million times and it still has the power to amaze and entice a new viewer, that something is an effective marketing tool. Is it one that you’re using?

    Bringing children onto the show floor is a specific tactic taken very seriously by exhibitors at the International Amusement Park and Attractions show. Since many of the exhibitors sell rides aimed at children, they want the opportunity to observe reactions and ask for their opinions.

    Flip Your Perspective

    If you spend most of your time directing a booth team, spend one show actually working the booth. However, if you're usually the one shaking hands and asking questions, devote one show to walking the aisles as an attendee.

    Changing your role helps you see the show in an entirely new way. It's easy to forget what your booth staffers go through in a day when you're not doing it yourself. If you're trapped in a booth for the entire show, you lose your sense of what the attendees experience. Give it a try. Look and listen and you’ll be surprised at what comes into view from either side of the aisle.

    Baby Eyes at the End of the Day

    After you've viewed the show with baby eyes, it's time to look at your own exhibit with this new found tool. This is difficult -- often impossible to be critical or even objective of something you've worked so hard on. I recommend recruiting baby eyes for this -- and recruit them from someone who has the freedom to speak openly and objectively without fear o

    Facts About FACTA, Or What Does FACTA Mean To You And Your Company
    FACTA stands for Fair and Accurate Credit Transaction Act. The law went into effect Jan. 1, 2005. FACTA is the law which allows all Americans access to their credit report once per year. So what does that have to do with you?On June 1, 2005, a new provision of FACTA went into effect. It says that any employer (even if you only employ one person) whose action or inaction results in the loss of employee information, can be fined by federal and state government, and sued in civil court. Bet you didn't know that. But you need to know, and need to know what you can do to protect yourself.Small Businesses will be affected the most.‘"A small businessman who makes a mistake could bear the brunt of a regulation like this," says James Plummer, policy analyst at Consumer Alert, a non-profit group that focuses on a free-market approach to co
    unaware of what other people think. They view new things not only free from their own expectations but free from the expectations of everyone they know.

    What does this mean for trade shows?

    Eventually babies stop viewing everything as new, exciting and wonderful since this is a survival mechanism. After all, if we were constantly stopping to admire everything that caught our fancy, we'd never manage to do those tasks necessary for survival. Focus is imperative, especially for people who want to Get Things Done.

    This is especially true at trade shows. There are so many stimuli -- bright colors, attention grabbing signs, loud noises, crowds, vivid displays, interesting people -- that it's easy to get overwhelmed and find yourself unable to function. To be an effective, efficient exhibitor, you have to 'tune things out' and focus on your own exhibit. It's a defense mechanism.

    This defense mechanism comes with a cost. Closing your eyes to the more stimulating aspects of the trade show may allow you to function -- but you lose some of the wonder of the show.

    If you've lost the wonder, if you can no longer see the magic and the glitz, if the entire exhibiting experience has become everyday and blas? for you, how in the world can you create an exhibit that will engage, entice, and enthrall attendees? Remember, you have to entertain as much as inform! Eventually, you will find that you can't. You've become a mechanic instead of a magician.

    That's when your exhibits will start to fail. Not good for you, not good for your company.

    What can you do?

    Wonder and magic can be recaptured. If they couldn't, there would be no such thing as mid-life crisises or second honeymoons. To bring the wonder back to the trade show arena, you need to capture those baby eyes that reside in a grown up body. Here are three ways to do this:

    Take Your Own Eyes Traveling

    Open yourself up to the wonder of trade shows by attending a show that is wholly outside of your industry. If you're in heavy equipment, for example, attend a food and beverage show. If you're in high tech, go to a craft and hobby show. Pick something that is in no way connects with your everyday responsibilities.

    This frees you to observe the show objectively. If you have no interest in the products and services being offered, you can then judge each exhibit on its merits. You have just been handed a set of baby eyes -- use them to discover what attracts your attention, what catches your eye, what makes you laugh, smile, and want to learn more. Also, pay attention to what makes you cranky, what makes your head hurt, and what makes you long for a 'time out'.

    When you get back, consider what you've learned. What positive elements can you emulate in your exhibit? What negative elements are you doing, perhaps unconsciously, that you need to eliminate?

    Recruit Someone Else

    Another method of acquiring baby eyes involves bringing someone to a trade show who has never attended one before. Ideally, this should be someone who has never attended any kind of industry event -- perhaps a new employee or someone from your company who doesn't get out of the office much. Even better – a child! Let them loose on the floor, either accompanying them while they wander, or alone.

    Take note of their observations. Remember, someone with baby eyes might be amazed by something you've seen a million times -- don't discount their experience. You're looking for their objective opinion. If you've seen something a million times and it still has the power to amaze and entice a new viewer, that something is an effective marketing tool. Is it one that you’re using?

    Bringing children onto the show floor is a specific tactic taken very seriously by exhibitors at the International Amusement Park and Attractions show. Since many of the exhibitors sell rides aimed at children, they want the opportunity to observe reactions and ask for their opinions.

    Flip Your Perspective

    If you spend most of your time directing a booth team, spend one show actually working the booth. However, if you're usually the one shaking hands and asking questions, devote one show to walking the aisles as an attendee.

    Changing your role helps you see the show in an entirely new way. It's easy to forget what your booth staffers go through in a day when you're not doing it yourself. If you're trapped in a booth for the entire show, you lose your sense of what the attendees experience. Give it a try. Look and listen and you’ll be surprised at what comes into view from either side of the aisle.

    Baby Eyes at the End of the Day

    After you've viewed the show with baby eyes, it's time to look at your own exhibit with this new found tool. This is difficult -- often impossible to be critical or even objective of something you've worked so hard on. I recommend recruiting baby eyes for this -- and recruit them from someone who has the freedom to speak openly and objectively without fear

    Great Tips To Help You Find Products To Sell
    Finding products to sell is fundamental to those who have Internet stores, auction sites, or sell through stores such as Amazon or Ebay. However, it may be difficult to determine where you will find those products to sell.There are a number of different ways to find products to sell as well as many scam artists who like nothing more than to prey upon unsuspecting but well-meaning storeowners. Whether selling online or in your hometown, you need to check out every wholesale company or drop shipper with the Better Business Bureau and Rip Off Report to make sure you are only dealing with reputable companies.Drop shippers are invaluable to those who sell products over the Internet. Drop shippers are companies that store product inventory and then mail them to your customers, without you needing to first purchase and store the products. To
    can you create an exhibit that will engage, entice, and enthrall attendees? Remember, you have to entertain as much as inform! Eventually, you will find that you can't. You've become a mechanic instead of a magician.

    That's when your exhibits will start to fail. Not good for you, not good for your company.

    What can you do?

    Wonder and magic can be recaptured. If they couldn't, there would be no such thing as mid-life crisises or second honeymoons. To bring the wonder back to the trade show arena, you need to capture those baby eyes that reside in a grown up body. Here are three ways to do this:

    Take Your Own Eyes Traveling

    Open yourself up to the wonder of trade shows by attending a show that is wholly outside of your industry. If you're in heavy equipment, for example, attend a food and beverage show. If you're in high tech, go to a craft and hobby show. Pick something that is in no way connects with your everyday responsibilities.

    This frees you to observe the show objectively. If you have no interest in the products and services being offered, you can then judge each exhibit on its merits. You have just been handed a set of baby eyes -- use them to discover what attracts your attention, what catches your eye, what makes you laugh, smile, and want to learn more. Also, pay attention to what makes you cranky, what makes your head hurt, and what makes you long for a 'time out'.

    When you get back, consider what you've learned. What positive elements can you emulate in your exhibit? What negative elements are you doing, perhaps unconsciously, that you need to eliminate?

    Recruit Someone Else

    Another method of acquiring baby eyes involves bringing someone to a trade show who has never attended one before. Ideally, this should be someone who has never attended any kind of industry event -- perhaps a new employee or someone from your company who doesn't get out of the office much. Even better – a child! Let them loose on the floor, either accompanying them while they wander, or alone.

    Take note of their observations. Remember, someone with baby eyes might be amazed by something you've seen a million times -- don't discount their experience. You're looking for their objective opinion. If you've seen something a million times and it still has the power to amaze and entice a new viewer, that something is an effective marketing tool. Is it one that you’re using?

    Bringing children onto the show floor is a specific tactic taken very seriously by exhibitors at the International Amusement Park and Attractions show. Since many of the exhibitors sell rides aimed at children, they want the opportunity to observe reactions and ask for their opinions.

    Flip Your Perspective

    If you spend most of your time directing a booth team, spend one show actually working the booth. However, if you're usually the one shaking hands and asking questions, devote one show to walking the aisles as an attendee.

    Changing your role helps you see the show in an entirely new way. It's easy to forget what your booth staffers go through in a day when you're not doing it yourself. If you're trapped in a booth for the entire show, you lose your sense of what the attendees experience. Give it a try. Look and listen and you’ll be surprised at what comes into view from either side of the aisle.

    Baby Eyes at the End of the Day

    After you've viewed the show with baby eyes, it's time to look at your own exhibit with this new found tool. This is difficult -- often impossible to be critical or even objective of something you've worked so hard on. I recommend recruiting baby eyes for this -- and recruit them from someone who has the freedom to speak openly and objectively without fear

    Internet Business - Do's and Don'ts of Picking a Domain Name
    If you’re setting up an Internet business—whether for part-time income or a full-time living—you’ll need to choose a domain name for your site. Choosing the right domain name is a very important decision for your business—it could make or break your web traffic and, ultimately, your website’s success. Here are a few tips to help you navigate the domain name minefield, pick the right name, and hopefully turn your part-time income into a booming Internet business.Do make it memorable. You don’t necessarily have to pick a domain name that’s the same as your business name. For example, if your business name is Torimatsu Sushi, it won’t translate well on the web—it’ll be misspelled often. Instead of calling your website Torimatsusushi.com, call it “Ilovesushi.com” or something else catchy, straightforward, and easy to spell.Don’t use doub
    eye, what makes you laugh, smile, and want to learn more. Also, pay attention to what makes you cranky, what makes your head hurt, and what makes you long for a 'time out'.

    When you get back, consider what you've learned. What positive elements can you emulate in your exhibit? What negative elements are you doing, perhaps unconsciously, that you need to eliminate?

    Recruit Someone Else

    Another method of acquiring baby eyes involves bringing someone to a trade show who has never attended one before. Ideally, this should be someone who has never attended any kind of industry event -- perhaps a new employee or someone from your company who doesn't get out of the office much. Even better – a child! Let them loose on the floor, either accompanying them while they wander, or alone.

    Take note of their observations. Remember, someone with baby eyes might be amazed by something you've seen a million times -- don't discount their experience. You're looking for their objective opinion. If you've seen something a million times and it still has the power to amaze and entice a new viewer, that something is an effective marketing tool. Is it one that you’re using?

    Bringing children onto the show floor is a specific tactic taken very seriously by exhibitors at the International Amusement Park and Attractions show. Since many of the exhibitors sell rides aimed at children, they want the opportunity to observe reactions and ask for their opinions.

    Flip Your Perspective

    If you spend most of your time directing a booth team, spend one show actually working the booth. However, if you're usually the one shaking hands and asking questions, devote one show to walking the aisles as an attendee.

    Changing your role helps you see the show in an entirely new way. It's easy to forget what your booth staffers go through in a day when you're not doing it yourself. If you're trapped in a booth for the entire show, you lose your sense of what the attendees experience. Give it a try. Look and listen and you’ll be surprised at what comes into view from either side of the aisle.

    Baby Eyes at the End of the Day

    After you've viewed the show with baby eyes, it's time to look at your own exhibit with this new found tool. This is difficult -- often impossible to be critical or even objective of something you've worked so hard on. I recommend recruiting baby eyes for this -- and recruit them from someone who has the freedom to speak openly and objectively without fear

    Improve the Quality of Your Franchise Business with Multi-Unit and Multi-Concept Franchises
    Multi-unit and multi-concept franchising both provide opportunities for fast, efficient growth. Franchising is an obvious consideration for individuals who naturally have that entrepreneurial spirit. You might be wondering what is means to have an entrepreneurial spirit.Are you self-motivated? Do you dream of building a business with your two hands? Do you struggle as an employee, constantly feeling like you could improve the company if someone would hand over the reins? If one or more of these questions provokes an affirmative answer, you are an entrepreneur who is ready to find a track into the business world, possibly with a business franchise.Most importantly, you do not need a college degree or years of experience to take advantage of this increasingly emergent business prospect. And, with the right information, you can successfully
    eriously by exhibitors at the International Amusement Park and Attractions show. Since many of the exhibitors sell rides aimed at children, they want the opportunity to observe reactions and ask for their opinions.

    Flip Your Perspective

    If you spend most of your time directing a booth team, spend one show actually working the booth. However, if you're usually the one shaking hands and asking questions, devote one show to walking the aisles as an attendee.

    Changing your role helps you see the show in an entirely new way. It's easy to forget what your booth staffers go through in a day when you're not doing it yourself. If you're trapped in a booth for the entire show, you lose your sense of what the attendees experience. Give it a try. Look and listen and you’ll be surprised at what comes into view from either side of the aisle.

    Baby Eyes at the End of the Day

    After you've viewed the show with baby eyes, it's time to look at your own exhibit with this new found tool. This is difficult -- often impossible to be critical or even objective of something you've worked so hard on. I recommend recruiting baby eyes for this -- and recruit them from someone who has the freedom to speak openly and objectively without fear of consequences.

    Remember, baby eyes will allow you to discover many things. You don't have to give them all equal weight. At the end of the day, you'll have this mass of observations. Assess them carefully. Some will be eye-openers, while others will cause your eyes to roll. Integrate those eye-opening thoughts into your planning process, doing what you can to bring some of the magic and wonder back to your exhibit. You’ll be pleased you did as your next show participation should demonstrate some new and improved results.

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