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    Thinking About Sourcing Products From Overseas?
    If you have been thinking about sourcing products from overseas and selling them through the shops or the Internet, then look no further than turning to wholesale suppliers from China. Doing business with Chinese wholesale suppliers has many benefits and advantages both for small and large traders. Not only you will enjoy high quality products at reduced prices, but the higher margins will lift your profits higher, enabling you to lead your niche market.Such a tremendous growth in manufacturing and production in China has been heavily influenced by the rapid development of major industrial centres and cities,
    huge ego or a fragile ego can easily get smashed. Defending your ego saps you of energy, distorts your perception, and will eventually destroy your business.

    If your self-esteem is connected to your trading and investing choices, if it goes up and down with the results of your activities, you and your business are in trouble. Your self-image needs to be strong, not at the mercy of the outcome of your trading or investment choices.

    To succeed in the markets, you have to have confidence in what you are doing and confidence in yourself. But self-confidence must not become confused with self-image. Remember not to marry a market or a trade. If you see you are not right, be quick to get out. Run your trading or investing as a business. Practice self-discipline. You'll be glad you did.

    All the best in your trading,

    Joe Ross
    Trading Educators Inc.
    http://www.tradingeducators

    The Value Of A Brand
    Brand name of a product has certain value to a company. How do we value a brand and how does it affect the fair value of a common stock? There is no definite way of doing it since a brand is worth more to some than to other people.Brand is valued in the balance sheet under 'Intangible Assets' or 'Goodwill'.. Each company values their brand differently but they all agree that brand name has certain value.What is the best way to value a brand? Nobody knows for sure. One can only give his reasoning and then value the brand accordingly. Here, I will explore the possibility of valuing a brand based on asset
    The one thing I can think of that most affects both trading and investing has to be self-discipline.

    Being disciplined is fully 50% of the job of trading or of investing. I don't care how good your trading system is, without the discipline needed to follow the system you don't have much of a chance for success in meeting your goals.

    It doesn't matter how great a planner or organizer you are, without discipline your plans will most likely fail to bear fruit. Discipline involves self-control, and self-control involves your ego. If you want to succeed, you must learn to trade without your ego getting in the way.

    Don't be fooled. A person's self image must be separated from his trading or his investing. When personal self-worth gets tangled up with your business activities, it not only wrecks your best trading or investing intentions, but it also damages your self-esteem.

    You hear and read about great traders and investors who have done amazing things. They tell about how great they are. They talk about "The Big" trades they made. They talk about "Big" numbers. It all derives from their oversized egos.

    Don't be misled. Sooner or later, there are "Big Downfalls." It goes with the territory.

    For a moment, let's look at the results of what a huge ego can do. Due to his oversized ego, Nick Leeson brought down the Barings Bank. Victor Niederhoffer ran his fund into deficit. John Merriweather was so sure his strategies would work that he ended up threatening the health of the entire banking system by betting more than fifty times his capital that he could forecast, without any chance of a loss, the direction of various bond markets.

    As we study the examples of these three men, there seems to be a pattern of temporary real success followed by a collapse for themselves and for those caught up in blindly following them.

    Here are the kinds of problems that arise from putting your ego into the mix.

    - Not putting in stops: You don't want to be proven wrong.

    - Hesitation before entry: You want reassurance before you act.

    - Overtrading: You want to prove how really big you are.

    - Not getting out when you should: You have married your trade and just don't want to get a divorce. Getting out would mean you were wrong.

    - Adding to a losing trade: You are making a massive effort to prove you were originally right.

    - Grabbing a profit too soon: You want affirmation that you did the right thing.

    - Missing an opportunity because you can't pull the trigger on a trade: You are still living with past mistakes.

    In my 47 years of trading, I have seen great traders and investors come and go. All too many of them lost everything they had ever made. The great W.D. Gann died a pauper. The legendary Jess Livermore was flat broke when he committed suicide.

    I have known dozens of traders who lost money because their egos got in the way.

    I agree 100% with the following statement by Marty Schwartz, the great S&P 500 daytrader.

    "I've said it before, and I'm going to say it again, because it cannot be overemphasized - the most important change in my trading career occurred when I learned to DIVORCE MY EGO FROM THE TRADE. Trading is a psychological game. Most people think that they're playing against the market, but the market doesn't care. You're really playing against yourself. You have to stop trying to will things to happen in order to prove that you're right. Listen only to what the market is telling you now. Forget what you thought it was telling you five minutes ago. The sole objective of trading is not to prove you're right, but to hear the cash register ring."

    To that I would add, "trade what you see, not what you think." You cannot afford to get your ego or your opinion involved in your trading activities. Because both trading and investing are uncertain businesses of probabilities filled with uncertain outcomes, a huge ego or a fragile ego can easily get smashed. Defending your ego saps you of energy, distorts your perception, and will eventually destroy your business.

    If your self-esteem is connected to your trading and investing choices, if it goes up and down with the results of your activities, you and your business are in trouble. Your self-image needs to be strong, not at the mercy of the outcome of your trading or investment choices.

    To succeed in the markets, you have to have confidence in what you are doing and confidence in yourself. But self-confidence must not become confused with self-image. Remember not to marry a market or a trade. If you see you are not right, be quick to get out. Run your trading or investing as a business. Practice self-discipline. You'll be glad you did.

    All the best in your trading,

    Joe Ross
    Trading Educators Inc.
    http://www.tradingeducators.

    Get Your Emails To Work For You - 3
    Some 93% of communication is in body language and tone. So with the written word as in this text, emails are words on a screen, or on paper if printed.With the written word, there are none of the other hints at meaning which we receive in verbal communication to give the email congruence. E.g. there is no tone, pitch, warmth, no facial expression or body language. So, it is amazingly easy to mis-communicate using email.Whilst email is designed to make our working lives easier, it totally messes things up if used inappropriately.Email is entirely appropriate for normal simple communication,
    tell about how great they are. They talk about "The Big" trades they made. They talk about "Big" numbers. It all derives from their oversized egos.

    Don't be misled. Sooner or later, there are "Big Downfalls." It goes with the territory.

    For a moment, let's look at the results of what a huge ego can do. Due to his oversized ego, Nick Leeson brought down the Barings Bank. Victor Niederhoffer ran his fund into deficit. John Merriweather was so sure his strategies would work that he ended up threatening the health of the entire banking system by betting more than fifty times his capital that he could forecast, without any chance of a loss, the direction of various bond markets.

    As we study the examples of these three men, there seems to be a pattern of temporary real success followed by a collapse for themselves and for those caught up in blindly following them.

    Here are the kinds of problems that arise from putting your ego into the mix.

    - Not putting in stops: You don't want to be proven wrong.

    - Hesitation before entry: You want reassurance before you act.

    - Overtrading: You want to prove how really big you are.

    - Not getting out when you should: You have married your trade and just don't want to get a divorce. Getting out would mean you were wrong.

    - Adding to a losing trade: You are making a massive effort to prove you were originally right.

    - Grabbing a profit too soon: You want affirmation that you did the right thing.

    - Missing an opportunity because you can't pull the trigger on a trade: You are still living with past mistakes.

    In my 47 years of trading, I have seen great traders and investors come and go. All too many of them lost everything they had ever made. The great W.D. Gann died a pauper. The legendary Jess Livermore was flat broke when he committed suicide.

    I have known dozens of traders who lost money because their egos got in the way.

    I agree 100% with the following statement by Marty Schwartz, the great S&P 500 daytrader.

    "I've said it before, and I'm going to say it again, because it cannot be overemphasized - the most important change in my trading career occurred when I learned to DIVORCE MY EGO FROM THE TRADE. Trading is a psychological game. Most people think that they're playing against the market, but the market doesn't care. You're really playing against yourself. You have to stop trying to will things to happen in order to prove that you're right. Listen only to what the market is telling you now. Forget what you thought it was telling you five minutes ago. The sole objective of trading is not to prove you're right, but to hear the cash register ring."

    To that I would add, "trade what you see, not what you think." You cannot afford to get your ego or your opinion involved in your trading activities. Because both trading and investing are uncertain businesses of probabilities filled with uncertain outcomes, a huge ego or a fragile ego can easily get smashed. Defending your ego saps you of energy, distorts your perception, and will eventually destroy your business.

    If your self-esteem is connected to your trading and investing choices, if it goes up and down with the results of your activities, you and your business are in trouble. Your self-image needs to be strong, not at the mercy of the outcome of your trading or investment choices.

    To succeed in the markets, you have to have confidence in what you are doing and confidence in yourself. But self-confidence must not become confused with self-image. Remember not to marry a market or a trade. If you see you are not right, be quick to get out. Run your trading or investing as a business. Practice self-discipline. You'll be glad you did.

    All the best in your trading,

    Joe Ross
    Trading Educators Inc.
    http://www.tradingeducators

    A Small Business Approach To Computer Downtime
    The muscle of a modern small businessIf it’s true that the backbone of any small business is its employees, then I believe it’s fair to say that the muscle of many small businesses would have to be their computers. Plain and simple, business today is performed electronically. Whether it’s a day-trader trading stocks over the internet, a lawyer, physician or other professional looking up data, or a shopkeeper tracking prices and sales, computers are often an essential “tool of their trades”.In fact, in the majority of professions where a computer is used, it is often not possible to effectively perfo
    n stops: You don't want to be proven wrong.

    - Hesitation before entry: You want reassurance before you act.

    - Overtrading: You want to prove how really big you are.

    - Not getting out when you should: You have married your trade and just don't want to get a divorce. Getting out would mean you were wrong.

    - Adding to a losing trade: You are making a massive effort to prove you were originally right.

    - Grabbing a profit too soon: You want affirmation that you did the right thing.

    - Missing an opportunity because you can't pull the trigger on a trade: You are still living with past mistakes.

    In my 47 years of trading, I have seen great traders and investors come and go. All too many of them lost everything they had ever made. The great W.D. Gann died a pauper. The legendary Jess Livermore was flat broke when he committed suicide.

    I have known dozens of traders who lost money because their egos got in the way.

    I agree 100% with the following statement by Marty Schwartz, the great S&P 500 daytrader.

    "I've said it before, and I'm going to say it again, because it cannot be overemphasized - the most important change in my trading career occurred when I learned to DIVORCE MY EGO FROM THE TRADE. Trading is a psychological game. Most people think that they're playing against the market, but the market doesn't care. You're really playing against yourself. You have to stop trying to will things to happen in order to prove that you're right. Listen only to what the market is telling you now. Forget what you thought it was telling you five minutes ago. The sole objective of trading is not to prove you're right, but to hear the cash register ring."

    To that I would add, "trade what you see, not what you think." You cannot afford to get your ego or your opinion involved in your trading activities. Because both trading and investing are uncertain businesses of probabilities filled with uncertain outcomes, a huge ego or a fragile ego can easily get smashed. Defending your ego saps you of energy, distorts your perception, and will eventually destroy your business.

    If your self-esteem is connected to your trading and investing choices, if it goes up and down with the results of your activities, you and your business are in trouble. Your self-image needs to be strong, not at the mercy of the outcome of your trading or investment choices.

    To succeed in the markets, you have to have confidence in what you are doing and confidence in yourself. But self-confidence must not become confused with self-image. Remember not to marry a market or a trade. If you see you are not right, be quick to get out. Run your trading or investing as a business. Practice self-discipline. You'll be glad you did.

    All the best in your trading,

    Joe Ross
    Trading Educators Inc.
    http://www.tradingeducators

    Why Subcontracting Fails
    These days subcontracting, especially in IT, became very common. While I don’t say subcontracting is always a bad thing, it can’t be negated that sometimes it fails. Why is it so? I have several examples to share.CredibilityWe outsourced development of a piece of our proprietary application framework. Guys who took the project were considered as gurus but there were some problems with meeting deadlines by them earlier. A risk which can be managed. We made a negotiation session, agreed on functionality range, price and deadlines. Then I stated that we want to add statement saying about f
    following statement by Marty Schwartz, the great S&P 500 daytrader.

    "I've said it before, and I'm going to say it again, because it cannot be overemphasized - the most important change in my trading career occurred when I learned to DIVORCE MY EGO FROM THE TRADE. Trading is a psychological game. Most people think that they're playing against the market, but the market doesn't care. You're really playing against yourself. You have to stop trying to will things to happen in order to prove that you're right. Listen only to what the market is telling you now. Forget what you thought it was telling you five minutes ago. The sole objective of trading is not to prove you're right, but to hear the cash register ring."

    To that I would add, "trade what you see, not what you think." You cannot afford to get your ego or your opinion involved in your trading activities. Because both trading and investing are uncertain businesses of probabilities filled with uncertain outcomes, a huge ego or a fragile ego can easily get smashed. Defending your ego saps you of energy, distorts your perception, and will eventually destroy your business.

    If your self-esteem is connected to your trading and investing choices, if it goes up and down with the results of your activities, you and your business are in trouble. Your self-image needs to be strong, not at the mercy of the outcome of your trading or investment choices.

    To succeed in the markets, you have to have confidence in what you are doing and confidence in yourself. But self-confidence must not become confused with self-image. Remember not to marry a market or a trade. If you see you are not right, be quick to get out. Run your trading or investing as a business. Practice self-discipline. You'll be glad you did.

    All the best in your trading,

    Joe Ross
    Trading Educators Inc.
    http://www.tradingeducators

    Define Your Reason for Starting a Home Internet Business
    Every day Thousands of people discover new home Internet business opportunities. There are literally hundreds of different business ventures you can start from your own computer.The most popular approach is to start out part time. Just to make some extra money to pay small bills or to save up for an upcoming event or purchase.One of the biggest reason why people take on these online business adventures, is that it's possible to start up on a small budget. And the business will be managed from the comfort of their own home.Now, even if your intention, when you start, is just to make some extra mon
    huge ego or a fragile ego can easily get smashed. Defending your ego saps you of energy, distorts your perception, and will eventually destroy your business.

    If your self-esteem is connected to your trading and investing choices, if it goes up and down with the results of your activities, you and your business are in trouble. Your self-image needs to be strong, not at the mercy of the outcome of your trading or investment choices.

    To succeed in the markets, you have to have confidence in what you are doing and confidence in yourself. But self-confidence must not become confused with self-image. Remember not to marry a market or a trade. If you see you are not right, be quick to get out. Run your trading or investing as a business. Practice self-discipline. You'll be glad you did.

    All the best in your trading,

    Joe Ross
    Trading Educators Inc.
    http://www.tradingeducators.com/?source=ezinearticles

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