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Will You Add? - The Ultimate Survival Skill for The Information Age
Which Incorporation Services You Need And Which You Can Do Without oreseeable future.If you’re reading this post, you’ve probably decided two things:1. Hiring an attorney to form your LLC (at $1,500 - $3,500) is too expensive; and2. You’re not going to do it yourself--filling out government forms gives you hives.The only option left is to choose an online incorporation company to form your LLC for you.The only problem is that there are hundreds of online incorporation companies ready to sell you a dizzying array of services and a confusing pricing structure.Which services do you need?Probably the biggest factor in determining the cost of forming an LLC are all the add-ons offered. In the marketing world these are called “upsells”. Understand that your plain-vanilla LLC formation is relatively simple. The company pays someone (or more likely has software auto-populate the form) to fill out an Articles of Organization form from the state where you’re forming your LLC. Then they mail that form with a check to the Secretary of State. Some time later, usually a few days or weeks at most, you have a legal LLC. There’s only so much that a company can charge for simple paper-shuffling of that kind.So the real profit for online incorporation companies are the add-ons. I’m not begrudging them that—everyone needs to make a profit. The only question is which services do you really need, and which can you live without.Essential Services1. Regist The most skilled employees, therefore, will be the ones who can continually access the changing facts and growing complexity of their jobs, and then change appropriately. That's "self-directed learning." "We understand that the only competitive advantage the company of the future will have is its managers? ability to learn faster than their competitors." Arie P. DeGeus. In a world that is rapidly changing, today's hot new product is tomorrow's obsolete dinosaur. More important than any one product is the ability to continually create new products. Today's strongest employee could very well be tomorrow's employment problem. More important than any one employee is the ability to find and maintain employees who are constantly growing. Today's closest customers could be out of business tomorrow. More important than any one customer is the ability to attract and retain customers. All of these are applications of the ultimate competitive advantage -- the ability to learn faster than your competitors. "In fact, I would argue that the rate at which individuals and organizations learn may become the onl Close Protecting Celebrities, Is It All It's Cracked Up To Be We're living in incredibly turbulent times.Lots of people want to be in close protection to famous people. The truth is, Celebrity Details are probably the most coveted positions, but represent only one small sector of Close Protection.Details can range from accompanying a company MD to a shareholders meeting, to acting as a close protection/personal assistant to a celebrity, to the most dangerous work–protecting Diplomats from terrorist attacks.Most people who desire careers as close Protection have glamorous thoughts about the work. Well. First, if you are a big fan of a particular celebrity–do NOT seek employment as his or her CPO, the Chances are shortly after you begin to work for them you will no longer be a fan.Secondly, you must be willing to sacrifice your personal life, since all your time and attention will be focused on taking care of your principal.And by “taking care” I don’t mean just wearing a dark suit and hanging around backstage, on the red carpet, at trendy watering holes, restaurants and clubs.Your Body Guard duties will often require you to act more as a Personal Assistant.For CPO’s your own personal life and needs will pretty much take a back seat, while the principal’s life and needs are paramount.The money you earn can be superb, But when you take into account the number of hours in the day that are not your own, and the time that you are away from family–well, let’s just say it’s ideally a jo The well spring of this uncertainty lies in one of the characteristics of the newly-arrived Information Age. Business people are being buffeted by an increasingly rapid rate of change. Consider this. In 1900, the total amount of knowledge available to mankind was doubling about every 500 years. In 1990, it was doubling about every two years. Imagine the implications of that kind of increase in the rate of change! It means new products, new regulations, new market configurations, new customers, and new technology in almost every industry. It's no wonder that we're confused and uncertain about what to do. And the growth of that knowledge continues at an expanding rate. One futurist predicts that today's high school students will have to absorb more information in their senior year alone than their grandparents did in their entire lifetime. And Nesbitt is on record as predicting that in the year 2020, the rate of knowledge will double every 35 days! That incredibly rapid pace of new knowledge is driving the forces of change at an unprecedented rate. And that rate of change is continuing to accelerate. The effect of that snowballing rate of change on our businesses and our jobs can be cataclysmic. It's almost as if a malevolent spirit were stalking our economy, rendering all the wisdom of the past useless, and casting a spell of confusion and uncertainty over the land. The indications are that this rapid state of change will not be a temporary phenomena we all must live through. Rather, it will be the permanent condition we must accept for the foreseeable future. Rapid change is not a phase we're passing through, it's a process we're entering into. That means it is likely that the conclusions, paradigms and core beliefs upon which we based our decisions just two or three years ago are likely to be obsolete today. Even more sobering, the conclusions and strategies which we develop today will be obsolete in a couple of years. We can count on this continuing obsolescence of our best ideas and strategies to be the constant state of affairs. One of my clients recently told his employees, "The only thing you can count on is that you won't be doing this job in three years." His point was that the job will change in that period of time to such a degree that it'll be a different job. The technology used will likely change, as will the customers, the systems and the focus of the job. The insightful person will accept that rapid change is now a defining characteristic of our economy, and plan to deal with it effectively on an on-going basis. Instead of thinking we should just persevere until it's behind us, we should prepare for rapid change to be a way of life. What's the best way to go forward in the light of this rapid change? What mind sets can we adopt that will equip us to survive and prosper in turbulent times? What skills do we need to survive and prosper in the information age? I believe there is one core skill which will define the most successful individuals. It's the ability and propensity to engage in self-directed learning. The only sustainable effective response to a rapidly changing world is cultivating the ability to positively transform ourselves and our organizations. And that's the definition of self-directed learning. In the face of a world that is different one week to the next, our most powerful positive response is to cultivate the ability to learn. By "learning," I don't mean just the acquisition of new information, although that is a necessary prerequisite. Rather, I mean the kind of "learning" that requires one to change behavior on the basis of an ever changing understanding of the world. Learning without behavior change is impotent. The individuals who become disciplined, systematic self-directed learners will be the success stories of the information age. Likewise, those organizations that become learning organizations will have the best chance of surviving and prospering. Read what other have said about it: "...the key thing as we go forward is the ability to learn. You can not arrest the pace of development in the marketplace, in the world, socially and technologically. It is coming at an increasing rate. You've got to be able to learn and adapt..." Beale. Because of the forces surging through our economy, it's safe to say that tomorrow will be significantly different from today. It will be more complex and somehow significantly changed. And that will be true of all the tomorrows in the foreseeable future. The most skilled employees, therefore, will be the ones who can continually access the changing facts and growing complexity of their jobs, and then change appropriately. That's "self-directed learning." "We understand that the only competitive advantage the company of the future will have is its managers? ability to learn faster than their competitors." Arie P. DeGeus. In a world that is rapidly changing, today's hot new product is tomorrow's obsolete dinosaur. More important than any one product is the ability to continually create new products. Today's strongest employee could very well be tomorrow's employment problem. More important than any one employee is the ability to find and maintain employees who are constantly growing. Today's closest customers could be out of business tomorrow. More important than any one customer is the ability to attract and retain customers. All of these are applications of the ultimate competitive advantage -- the ability to learn faster than your competitors. "In fact, I would argue that the rate at which individuals and organizations learn may become the only Fruit Baskets Make Great Corporate Gifts is continuing to accelerate. The effect of that snowballing rate of change on our businesses and our jobs can be cataclysmic. It's almost as if a malevolent spirit were stalking our economy, rendering all the wisdom of the past useless, and casting a spell of confusion and uncertainty over the land.It might seem like an easy chore on the surface, but picking out gifts to give corporate clients is actually never as simple as it appears. The things to consider can be mind-boggling and considering the wrong choice might just offend a client, the need to be cautious is always present. This is where a fruit basket can come into play.Finding the right fruit basket for corporate clients, fortunately, isn't as difficult as coming up with a gift idea in the first place. There are a number of companies all over the world that specialize in some pretty creative baskets and many of them can be accessed right over the Internet. Some companies will even allow their clients to custom order baskets with special requests included.Here are some ideas for great fruit baskets to give corporate clients:* Tropical baskets. If your clients are from colder climates in particular, these little tastes of the tropics are generally quite appreciated. Fruits inside can include such things as kiwi, bananas, strawberries, oranges, mangoes and more. These baskets can be jazzed up even more with the addition of tropical drink mixes, if appropriate, tropical flavored candies, flowers and so on.* Northern fruit. Grapes, apples, cranberries, blueberries and more are the signature fruits of northern climates. Tastes of fall that are much appreciated the world over, these baskets can even include such favorites as maple syrup, The indications are that this rapid state of change will not be a temporary phenomena we all must live through. Rather, it will be the permanent condition we must accept for the foreseeable future. Rapid change is not a phase we're passing through, it's a process we're entering into. That means it is likely that the conclusions, paradigms and core beliefs upon which we based our decisions just two or three years ago are likely to be obsolete today. Even more sobering, the conclusions and strategies which we develop today will be obsolete in a couple of years. We can count on this continuing obsolescence of our best ideas and strategies to be the constant state of affairs. One of my clients recently told his employees, "The only thing you can count on is that you won't be doing this job in three years." His point was that the job will change in that period of time to such a degree that it'll be a different job. The technology used will likely change, as will the customers, the systems and the focus of the job. The insightful person will accept that rapid change is now a defining characteristic of our economy, and plan to deal with it effectively on an on-going basis. Instead of thinking we should just persevere until it's behind us, we should prepare for rapid change to be a way of life. What's the best way to go forward in the light of this rapid change? What mind sets can we adopt that will equip us to survive and prosper in turbulent times? What skills do we need to survive and prosper in the information age? I believe there is one core skill which will define the most successful individuals. It's the ability and propensity to engage in self-directed learning. The only sustainable effective response to a rapidly changing world is cultivating the ability to positively transform ourselves and our organizations. And that's the definition of self-directed learning. In the face of a world that is different one week to the next, our most powerful positive response is to cultivate the ability to learn. By "learning," I don't mean just the acquisition of new information, although that is a necessary prerequisite. Rather, I mean the kind of "learning" that requires one to change behavior on the basis of an ever changing understanding of the world. Learning without behavior change is impotent. The individuals who become disciplined, systematic self-directed learners will be the success stories of the information age. Likewise, those organizations that become learning organizations will have the best chance of surviving and prospering. Read what other have said about it: "...the key thing as we go forward is the ability to learn. You can not arrest the pace of development in the marketplace, in the world, socially and technologically. It is coming at an increasing rate. You've got to be able to learn and adapt..." Beale. Because of the forces surging through our economy, it's safe to say that tomorrow will be significantly different from today. It will be more complex and somehow significantly changed. And that will be true of all the tomorrows in the foreseeable future. The most skilled employees, therefore, will be the ones who can continually access the changing facts and growing complexity of their jobs, and then change appropriately. That's "self-directed learning." "We understand that the only competitive advantage the company of the future will have is its managers? ability to learn faster than their competitors." Arie P. DeGeus. In a world that is rapidly changing, today's hot new product is tomorrow's obsolete dinosaur. More important than any one product is the ability to continually create new products. Today's strongest employee could very well be tomorrow's employment problem. More important than any one employee is the ability to find and maintain employees who are constantly growing. Today's closest customers could be out of business tomorrow. More important than any one customer is the ability to attract and retain customers. All of these are applications of the ultimate competitive advantage -- the ability to learn faster than your competitors. "In fact, I would argue that the rate at which individuals and organizations learn may become the onl Cruising to Care for Customers with Comparable Competitive Customer Service Considered e job will change in that period of time to such a degree that it'll be a different job. The technology used will likely change, as will the customers, the systems and the focus of the job.As a young man I ran a company, which cleaned and detailed cars at office buildings, homes and government agencies. Each morning I would get in my pick-up truck and go to all the job sites to make sure every thing was working fine and all the units were at all the pre-assigned scheduled route locations. Often I would get out of my vehicle across the street and walk into the parking lots as a regular citizen to see how things were going.I would look for trash around the work site and make sure everyone was working and doing a good job without causing any problems. Usually I would also see customers and I knew who many of them were because I had built each route myself before turning it over to someone I had trained. I would ask the customers how things were and they would tell me everything I needed to know; the good, bad and sometimes the ugly.Then I was off again to the next location. Each day I would visit all my competitors locations too. I knew their routes, times and crews, probably better than they did. I would also talk with their customers and they would tell me; the ugly, bad and sometimes good too. If they told me the ugly, I would hand them a business card. If they told me the bad, I would tell them perhaps they would talk with the company to fix that problem.Nevertheless, you can make a lot of money Cruising around to find out about the Care for Customers and pick up customers from companies The insightful person will accept that rapid change is now a defining characteristic of our economy, and plan to deal with it effectively on an on-going basis. Instead of thinking we should just persevere until it's behind us, we should prepare for rapid change to be a way of life. What's the best way to go forward in the light of this rapid change? What mind sets can we adopt that will equip us to survive and prosper in turbulent times? What skills do we need to survive and prosper in the information age? I believe there is one core skill which will define the most successful individuals. It's the ability and propensity to engage in self-directed learning. The only sustainable effective response to a rapidly changing world is cultivating the ability to positively transform ourselves and our organizations. And that's the definition of self-directed learning. In the face of a world that is different one week to the next, our most powerful positive response is to cultivate the ability to learn. By "learning," I don't mean just the acquisition of new information, although that is a necessary prerequisite. Rather, I mean the kind of "learning" that requires one to change behavior on the basis of an ever changing understanding of the world. Learning without behavior change is impotent. The individuals who become disciplined, systematic self-directed learners will be the success stories of the information age. Likewise, those organizations that become learning organizations will have the best chance of surviving and prospering. Read what other have said about it: "...the key thing as we go forward is the ability to learn. You can not arrest the pace of development in the marketplace, in the world, socially and technologically. It is coming at an increasing rate. You've got to be able to learn and adapt..." Beale. Because of the forces surging through our economy, it's safe to say that tomorrow will be significantly different from today. It will be more complex and somehow significantly changed. And that will be true of all the tomorrows in the foreseeable future. The most skilled employees, therefore, will be the ones who can continually access the changing facts and growing complexity of their jobs, and then change appropriately. That's "self-directed learning." "We understand that the only competitive advantage the company of the future will have is its managers? ability to learn faster than their competitors." Arie P. DeGeus. In a world that is rapidly changing, today's hot new product is tomorrow's obsolete dinosaur. More important than any one product is the ability to continually create new products. Today's strongest employee could very well be tomorrow's employment problem. More important than any one employee is the ability to find and maintain employees who are constantly growing. Today's closest customers could be out of business tomorrow. More important than any one customer is the ability to attract and retain customers. All of these are applications of the ultimate competitive advantage -- the ability to learn faster than your competitors. "In fact, I would argue that the rate at which individuals and organizations learn may become the onl Five Lethal Job-Hunting Mistakes st powerful positive response is to cultivate the ability to learn. By "learning," I don't mean just the acquisition of new information, although that is a necessary prerequisite. Rather, I mean the kind of "learning" that requires one to change behavior on the basis of an ever changing understanding of the world. Learning without behavior change is impotent.Job-hunting takes enthusiasm, concentration and a great attention to detail - not to mention an effervescent manner (even if that's not your usual nature) and infinite patience. As long as you're expending so much energy on getting a new job, you'd hate to think any of that exertion might be wasted. But these five job-search missteps can knock you out of the game - watch out for them!1) Using a juvenile email address or phone message.Now is the time to ditch that "partygirl109" or "buffdudexx7" email address, immediately. Get a free email account from hotmail, and come up with an adult-sounding handle. Same goes for your voicemail: get rid of the cute kids'-voice messages and funny Groucho Marx tapes. This is for real.2) Using an electronically challenged resume.Get your resume in shape, in three versions: hardcopy (looking professional, fitting the page, and printed on decent paper); plain text, to be sent in the body of an email message; and a Word document, likewise printable and readable and formatted to the page. A junky resume leaves a terrible impression.3) Skipping the research.As soon as you apply for a job online or via a print ad - or a friend, for that matter - do at least enough research to know what business the company is in, who its competitors are and where it does business. If the phone rings and you're clueless as to the company's business priorities, don't expect The individuals who become disciplined, systematic self-directed learners will be the success stories of the information age. Likewise, those organizations that become learning organizations will have the best chance of surviving and prospering. Read what other have said about it: "...the key thing as we go forward is the ability to learn. You can not arrest the pace of development in the marketplace, in the world, socially and technologically. It is coming at an increasing rate. You've got to be able to learn and adapt..." Beale. Because of the forces surging through our economy, it's safe to say that tomorrow will be significantly different from today. It will be more complex and somehow significantly changed. And that will be true of all the tomorrows in the foreseeable future. The most skilled employees, therefore, will be the ones who can continually access the changing facts and growing complexity of their jobs, and then change appropriately. That's "self-directed learning." "We understand that the only competitive advantage the company of the future will have is its managers? ability to learn faster than their competitors." Arie P. DeGeus. In a world that is rapidly changing, today's hot new product is tomorrow's obsolete dinosaur. More important than any one product is the ability to continually create new products. Today's strongest employee could very well be tomorrow's employment problem. More important than any one employee is the ability to find and maintain employees who are constantly growing. Today's closest customers could be out of business tomorrow. More important than any one customer is the ability to attract and retain customers. All of these are applications of the ultimate competitive advantage -- the ability to learn faster than your competitors. "In fact, I would argue that the rate at which individuals and organizations learn may become the onl Are You Marketing Backwards? oreseeable future.Marketing is like rowing a boat. When you know how the pointed bow moves smoothly forward through the water encountering the least amount of resistance. Rowing backwards, the square stern of the boat pushes against the water, requiring more effort and increases the risk of having a wave come over the transom (back) and swamping it. Yet most people market backwards, trying to grow their business while pushing against the greatest level of resistance.Wouldn’t you like to market your business so that it moved easily forward?What’s the first thing most people do to increase sales of their products, services? They put together a description of their credentials. Then they pick up the phone, run an ad campaign, send out a brochure and or build a web site and ask people to buy.Do you know anyone who has used this approach?Have you tried it yourself?Were you happy with the number of new clients and customers you attracted?It’s a common misperception that the fastest way to attract more clients and customers is to focus on asking people to buy. It looks like the obvious route, but in most cases it generates only a trickle of new clients for small business owners. It can work if you’re a large company with millions of dollars to spend building your brand. Why doesn’t this selling approach work for service professionals and small business owners?A sale is the end The most skilled employees, therefore, will be the ones who can continually access the changing facts and growing complexity of their jobs, and then change appropriately. That's "self-directed learning." "We understand that the only competitive advantage the company of the future will have is its managers? ability to learn faster than their competitors." Arie P. DeGeus. In a world that is rapidly changing, today's hot new product is tomorrow's obsolete dinosaur. More important than any one product is the ability to continually create new products. Today's strongest employee could very well be tomorrow's employment problem. More important than any one employee is the ability to find and maintain employees who are constantly growing. Today's closest customers could be out of business tomorrow. More important than any one customer is the ability to attract and retain customers. All of these are applications of the ultimate competitive advantage -- the ability to learn faster than your competitors. "In fact, I would argue that the rate at which individuals and organizations learn may become the only sustainable competitive advantage." Ray Stata. As the economy becomes more and more global, competition will increase. Few businesses will enjoy a secure market position. The quality of competition will also improve as competitors strive to out do one another in providing customer service and value added products and services. In this new economy, those who survive and prosper will be those who know how to learn, and who do so faster and more systematically than their competitors. And those organizations that become learning organizations will be those who fill themselves with people who regularly engage in self-directed learning. How, then, do you instill this "self-directed learning" in your organization? Here are three tactics to begin the process. 1. Wipe the Slate Clean. Imagine that you have written the history of your company or your career on a blackboard. You have every decision, every strategy, every success and every failure noted in detail. The sum of this experience provides the rationale for why and how you do everything that you now do. Now, take a wet towel, and wipe the board clean. Erase the past. As you do so, you eliminate the unspoken acceptance of the way things are, and replace it with the new understanding that things may not be the way they should be. Just because something is, doesn't mean it should be. The reason you started doing something may no longer exist. Remember, with a world turning over more or less completely every two to three years, any decision or procedure which had its roots in a situation that three or more years old may not be justified today. This little exercise provides a mental image for a change in thinking that needs to take place if you're going to become a learning organization. You must begin to think about things that you do, not on the basis of the past (three or more years ago), but rather on the basis of the present and the future. It's a way of eliminating one of the biggest barriers to learning and changing. That barrier is the mental obstacles that we put in our own way. Here's an example. One of my clients was frustrated with his continuing inability to motivate his sales force. He spent much of his mental energy and financial resources attempting to get his force of largely independent agents to spend more time with his product. Yet he never thought about going to market in ways other than through his traditional methods. When we broke down that barrier of relying on the past and wiped the slate clean, we discovered a marketing method which holds tremendous potential for his business. However, it took a change in thinking, a thought process that wasn't tied to his past in order to look at the situation on the basis of the present and the future rather than the past. That principle can be applied in every area of your business, from something so fundamental and important as your method of reaching your customers, to something as mundane as the way you answer the phone, or fill out a receiving document. 2. Give Learning a Strategic Emphasis. Build in the need to become a learning organization in the most fundamental building blocks of your business. Write it into your mission statement. Get the board to pass a resolution advocating it. Display your commitment to it predominantly in your personnel manual. Talk about it at your employee meetings. Make it an agenda item in your executive meetings. Articulate it as an initiative in your strategic planning sessions. And, begin to model learning behavior yourself. 3. Make self-directed learning a part of everyone's job description. Begin to create learning expectations for yourself and all your employees. Talk about their need to learn and grow. Include it as an item on every job description. Then encourage, develop and support learning opportunities throughout your organization. Here's some things other organizations have done: ONE: Require every employee to attend a certain number of outside seminars per year. TWO: Create "Learning Groups" within your company. These are temporary groups of people who come together for a short period of time to learn from and with one another. One of my clients, for example, has a weekly manager's lunch where everyone brown bags lunch and discusses one chapter of Steven Covey's book, Seven Habits of Highly Successful People. The principle of short term, small group meetings conducted around the free-flowing discussion of some body of content, can be used throughout your organizat
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