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Top 25 Tips for Grant Writers scope of their duties and you will be pleasantly surprised. I sat on a department staff under a general manager. His secretary attended all staff meetings and she wasn’t there to take minutes. The general manager considered her an equal to the rest of his staff members and she participated fully in all of our deliberations.1. Before your search even begins, you must have a project that you wish to fund. What is it that you want to accomplish? Any project you support must align with the needs of your beneficiaries. Grant providers want to clearly see the necessity of your program.2. Start by searching for grants online and library resources.3. Start the process early. It can take months, in some instances a year or more, before you receive any funds.4. Investigate local government agencies, educational and civic organizations, and businesses as possible sources of funding.5. Look for funding sources whose philosophy and focus are consistent with your project’s goals and objectives.6. Don’t limit yourself to a single funding source. Contact those funders who are the best matches based on your research.7. Speak personally with a contact person involved with the funding who ca My favorite group is the factory workers. Many do menial tasks, day in and day out, which don’t require a great deal of brain power. I guess management doesn’t think they have much brain power or they would be doing something else for a living. That way of thinking is foolish. I can’t tell you about all the factory people I’ve known that use their brains far more after work and are highly successful in their endeavors. I knew a mechanic who set up a silk-screen machine in his garage to decorate T-shirts with catchy sayings he made up. He literally bought the T-shirts for pennies, fixed them up, and sold them for dollars at local flea markets on the weekends. A machine operator customized hot rods in his garage in the evenings and sold one to a magazine publisher for a huge amount of money. It graced the cover of a national hot rod magazine a few months later. There are many success stories of factory workers who became entrepre Event Management Many years ago, a CEO off a major conglomerate was visiting one of his businesses for a periodic business review. As the meeting was ending, he innocently asked the leader of the business to tell him again how many employees were in that business. The answer was 14,015 people.Event management is comprised of the study of the complexities of brands, identifying target audience, creating event concepts, and planning the logistics. It also includes coordination of technical aspects before getting down to truly implementing the modalities of the planned event. Event management implies the application of management science to the creation and development of festivals and events.Event management is one of the strategic advertising and communication tools used by businesses of all sizes. Right from product launches to press conferences, businesses develop promotional events so that they can communicate with clients as well as potential clients. They may target their audience by using the news media, wishing to generate media coverage, which will reach thousands or millions of people. They can also invite their audience to their events and reach them at the actual eve The CEO was silent for a minute or two and was clearly pondering the answer. No one in the room could have imagined where he was ultimately heading with his question. Finally he said, “Since you have 14,000 people, you obviously have 14,000 brains available for use in this business. What a tremendous resource you have at your disposal. The average human brain weighs about three pounds. That means you have about 42,000 pounds of human brains in your business. That’s 21 tons of human brains. That is absolutely mind boggling.” “I am curious,” he continued, “how many of those 14,000 brains are you using to help you run your business? How many of those 14,000 brains do you utilize to help you solve the business problems you encounter? How many of those 14,000 brains are you utilizing to the maximum of their capacity?” Regardless of how the executive answered the question, he wasn’t utilizing those brains as best he could. He was instructed to put together a plan to maximize the benefit of those 14,000 brains. How many of us concentrate on the total brain power in our businesses? How many of us try to utilize every brain in our business? How many of us are satisfied that the suggestion box we mounted on the wall adequately taps into the total brain power in our organization? Very few people put ideas into the suggestion box. Most don’t take the time to offer a suggestion. Many feel that no one pays attention to their suggestions anyway. As a manager, you must be pro-active in utilizing all the brain power in your organization. Once you decide to do so, there are probably a number of ways to maximize the benefit. One of my favorite ways to get people involved and to use their brains is to conduct meetings with every person in the organization each month. And I mean every last person in the organization. My meetings are billed as business reviews and usually last about a half-hour. I share the previous month’s business results and the challenges facing the business. For each challenge or problem I discuss I ask for ideas about how to solve the problem. Some are offered, but I never close the meetings with enough ideas. So I challenge the people to keep thinking about the issues and tell them I will walk the halls and factory floor and will stop to see if someone has come up with any additional ideas. If anyone thinks of something and sees me, grab me to discuss your thoughts. A number of people will follow up. They are happy to be involved and feel more strongly that they are part of the team as a result. I will also carry this one step further when I conduct brainstorming sessions, strategy meetings, or problem solving meetings. They usually involve key staff members and sometimes the engineers. I have found that it does not hurt to include a few people who wouldn’t normally participate in such meetings. Perhaps I will invite a secretary, an intern, and someone from the rank and file to join us. They may just have some ideas that the “experts” haven’t thought about. Try it at your next meeting and you might be surprised. I have found three groups of people whose brains are not tapped as much as they could be. You never seem to see young people, clerical, support, and factory people in strategy sessions, problem solving meetings, and other business meetings. Yet all have brains and can use those brains as well as everyone else. Young people don’t participate because they don’t have many years of experience to bring to the table. Yet they have some of the sharpest brains in your organization. Are you aware that most significant inventions were invented by young people? Alexander Graham Bell was 29 when he invented the telephone. Thomas Edison was 30 when he invented the phonograph and 32 when he invented the incandescent light bulb. All three of these inventions were accomplished between 1876 and 1879. My guess is that, in today’s business world, these two geniuses would not participate in strategy development meetings or problem solving meetings at the age of 30 because they wouldn’t have enough experience to significantly contribute to the meetings. I believe the lack of experience is not necessarily bad because the young person doesn’t yet know many things are not possible. You need some of that silly thinking in your meetings. The next group of underutilized brains resides in the heads of clerical people and support staff such as technicians. I really don’t know why this group is underutilized. I think management just feels that these people can’t contribute much more than they are doing. These people understand the business far better than you think. And each has a brain or you wouldn’t entrust them with the things you do. Invite them to participate in activities beyond the scope of their duties and you will be pleasantly surprised. I sat on a department staff under a general manager. His secretary attended all staff meetings and she wasn’t there to take minutes. The general manager considered her an equal to the rest of his staff members and she participated fully in all of our deliberations. My favorite group is the factory workers. Many do menial tasks, day in and day out, which don’t require a great deal of brain power. I guess management doesn’t think they have much brain power or they would be doing something else for a living. That way of thinking is foolish. I can’t tell you about all the factory people I’ve known that use their brains far more after work and are highly successful in their endeavors. I knew a mechanic who set up a silk-screen machine in his garage to decorate T-shirts with catchy sayings he made up. He literally bought the T-shirts for pennies, fixed them up, and sold them for dollars at local flea markets on the weekends. A machine operator customized hot rods in his garage in the evenings and sold one to a magazine publisher for a huge amount of money. It graced the cover of a national hot rod magazine a few months later. There are many success stories of factory workers who became entrepre Ex-Yankee Pitcher Pitches Barter As Powerful Business Tool aximize the benefit of those 14,000 brains.Mission Viejo, CA - June 14, 2005 - Bob Meyer, a former major league pitcher in the 1960s who signed four-consecutive major league contracts with the New York Yankees, is now the most visible spokesman for the worldwide commercial barter industry.Meyer is the publisher of BarterNews, which he founded 25 years ago. The magazine reports on the many ways barter can be used to leverage one’s business, as well as up-to-date information on the happenings within the commercial barter industry.“Barter is an underutilized and under appreciated business tool that virtually every business owner should be using, whether on a direct or indirect basis,” Meyer emphasized. “Globally, it is a $600 billion-a-year way of doing business that enables companies of every size to secure needed products and services. Barter is a proven business tool used by firms for marketing, financing, and purchasing ef How many of us concentrate on the total brain power in our businesses? How many of us try to utilize every brain in our business? How many of us are satisfied that the suggestion box we mounted on the wall adequately taps into the total brain power in our organization? Very few people put ideas into the suggestion box. Most don’t take the time to offer a suggestion. Many feel that no one pays attention to their suggestions anyway. As a manager, you must be pro-active in utilizing all the brain power in your organization. Once you decide to do so, there are probably a number of ways to maximize the benefit. One of my favorite ways to get people involved and to use their brains is to conduct meetings with every person in the organization each month. And I mean every last person in the organization. My meetings are billed as business reviews and usually last about a half-hour. I share the previous month’s business results and the challenges facing the business. For each challenge or problem I discuss I ask for ideas about how to solve the problem. Some are offered, but I never close the meetings with enough ideas. So I challenge the people to keep thinking about the issues and tell them I will walk the halls and factory floor and will stop to see if someone has come up with any additional ideas. If anyone thinks of something and sees me, grab me to discuss your thoughts. A number of people will follow up. They are happy to be involved and feel more strongly that they are part of the team as a result. I will also carry this one step further when I conduct brainstorming sessions, strategy meetings, or problem solving meetings. They usually involve key staff members and sometimes the engineers. I have found that it does not hurt to include a few people who wouldn’t normally participate in such meetings. Perhaps I will invite a secretary, an intern, and someone from the rank and file to join us. They may just have some ideas that the “experts” haven’t thought about. Try it at your next meeting and you might be surprised. I have found three groups of people whose brains are not tapped as much as they could be. You never seem to see young people, clerical, support, and factory people in strategy sessions, problem solving meetings, and other business meetings. Yet all have brains and can use those brains as well as everyone else. Young people don’t participate because they don’t have many years of experience to bring to the table. Yet they have some of the sharpest brains in your organization. Are you aware that most significant inventions were invented by young people? Alexander Graham Bell was 29 when he invented the telephone. Thomas Edison was 30 when he invented the phonograph and 32 when he invented the incandescent light bulb. All three of these inventions were accomplished between 1876 and 1879. My guess is that, in today’s business world, these two geniuses would not participate in strategy development meetings or problem solving meetings at the age of 30 because they wouldn’t have enough experience to significantly contribute to the meetings. I believe the lack of experience is not necessarily bad because the young person doesn’t yet know many things are not possible. You need some of that silly thinking in your meetings. The next group of underutilized brains resides in the heads of clerical people and support staff such as technicians. I really don’t know why this group is underutilized. I think management just feels that these people can’t contribute much more than they are doing. These people understand the business far better than you think. And each has a brain or you wouldn’t entrust them with the things you do. Invite them to participate in activities beyond the scope of their duties and you will be pleasantly surprised. I sat on a department staff under a general manager. His secretary attended all staff meetings and she wasn’t there to take minutes. The general manager considered her an equal to the rest of his staff members and she participated fully in all of our deliberations. My favorite group is the factory workers. Many do menial tasks, day in and day out, which don’t require a great deal of brain power. I guess management doesn’t think they have much brain power or they would be doing something else for a living. That way of thinking is foolish. I can’t tell you about all the factory people I’ve known that use their brains far more after work and are highly successful in their endeavors. I knew a mechanic who set up a silk-screen machine in his garage to decorate T-shirts with catchy sayings he made up. He literally bought the T-shirts for pennies, fixed them up, and sold them for dollars at local flea markets on the weekends. A machine operator customized hot rods in his garage in the evenings and sold one to a magazine publisher for a huge amount of money. It graced the cover of a national hot rod magazine a few months later. There are many success stories of factory workers who became entrepre The Latest Wrinkle in Customer Service - Blame the Customer! will walk the halls and factory floor and will stop to see if someone has come up with any additional ideas. If anyone thinks of something and sees me, grab me to discuss your thoughts. A number of people will follow up. They are happy to be involved and feel more strongly that they are part of the team as a result.Recently, I needed to get a brand new clothes dryer repaired that refused to generate hot air.I phoned the warranty folks and they told me, because it was Christmas time, I’d have to wait about a week and a half before I could dry my clothes.When the guy arrived, he scoped out the machine and said I bought the wrong model, they’ve had a lot of trouble with that one, and if I begged the manufacturer, it might replace the unit, altogether.I told him that wasn't what I needed. I'd settle for some dry clothes, today.“Oh, well it seems you need some parts. I’ll order them and let’s set another appointment a week and a half from now."“What? You came out here a week late with no parts on the truck?”“We can’t be expected to stock EVERYTHING on our trucks, you know!”That is just the kind of baloney, if it goes unchallenged, that keeps people from getting t I will also carry this one step further when I conduct brainstorming sessions, strategy meetings, or problem solving meetings. They usually involve key staff members and sometimes the engineers. I have found that it does not hurt to include a few people who wouldn’t normally participate in such meetings. Perhaps I will invite a secretary, an intern, and someone from the rank and file to join us. They may just have some ideas that the “experts” haven’t thought about. Try it at your next meeting and you might be surprised. I have found three groups of people whose brains are not tapped as much as they could be. You never seem to see young people, clerical, support, and factory people in strategy sessions, problem solving meetings, and other business meetings. Yet all have brains and can use those brains as well as everyone else. Young people don’t participate because they don’t have many years of experience to bring to the table. Yet they have some of the sharpest brains in your organization. Are you aware that most significant inventions were invented by young people? Alexander Graham Bell was 29 when he invented the telephone. Thomas Edison was 30 when he invented the phonograph and 32 when he invented the incandescent light bulb. All three of these inventions were accomplished between 1876 and 1879. My guess is that, in today’s business world, these two geniuses would not participate in strategy development meetings or problem solving meetings at the age of 30 because they wouldn’t have enough experience to significantly contribute to the meetings. I believe the lack of experience is not necessarily bad because the young person doesn’t yet know many things are not possible. You need some of that silly thinking in your meetings. The next group of underutilized brains resides in the heads of clerical people and support staff such as technicians. I really don’t know why this group is underutilized. I think management just feels that these people can’t contribute much more than they are doing. These people understand the business far better than you think. And each has a brain or you wouldn’t entrust them with the things you do. Invite them to participate in activities beyond the scope of their duties and you will be pleasantly surprised. I sat on a department staff under a general manager. His secretary attended all staff meetings and she wasn’t there to take minutes. The general manager considered her an equal to the rest of his staff members and she participated fully in all of our deliberations. My favorite group is the factory workers. Many do menial tasks, day in and day out, which don’t require a great deal of brain power. I guess management doesn’t think they have much brain power or they would be doing something else for a living. That way of thinking is foolish. I can’t tell you about all the factory people I’ve known that use their brains far more after work and are highly successful in their endeavors. I knew a mechanic who set up a silk-screen machine in his garage to decorate T-shirts with catchy sayings he made up. He literally bought the T-shirts for pennies, fixed them up, and sold them for dollars at local flea markets on the weekends. A machine operator customized hot rods in his garage in the evenings and sold one to a magazine publisher for a huge amount of money. It graced the cover of a national hot rod magazine a few months later. There are many success stories of factory workers who became entrepre Increase Profits and Improve Productivity in Your Business by Using the Internet et they have some of the sharpest brains in your organization. Are you aware that most significant inventions were invented by young people? Alexander Graham Bell was 29 when he invented the telephone. Thomas Edison was 30 when he invented the phonograph and 32 when he invented the incandescent light bulb. All three of these inventions were accomplished between 1876 and 1879. My guess is that, in today’s business world, these two geniuses would not participate in strategy development meetings or problem solving meetings at the age of 30 because they wouldn’t have enough experience to significantly contribute to the meetings. I believe the lack of experience is not necessarily bad because the young person doesn’t yet know many things are not possible. You need some of that silly thinking in your meetings.Internet use is increasing rapidly and is revolutionizing the way business is done. New businesses and business models are emerging, customer behavior and expectations are changing, and more customers, suppliers and competitors are going online.This presents substantial challenges and opportunities for all businesses. To survive and prosper in this global and competitive environment, businesses must embrace the Internet and use it to transform their business.The Internet can be used in many areas of a business to increase revenue, reduce costs and improve productivity. The Internet is not just about sending and receiving email and setting up a website. There is so much more and the capabilities increase every day.Businesses should be using the Internet to:1. ConnectThe Internet enables businesses to connect people, businesses and systems, quick The next group of underutilized brains resides in the heads of clerical people and support staff such as technicians. I really don’t know why this group is underutilized. I think management just feels that these people can’t contribute much more than they are doing. These people understand the business far better than you think. And each has a brain or you wouldn’t entrust them with the things you do. Invite them to participate in activities beyond the scope of their duties and you will be pleasantly surprised. I sat on a department staff under a general manager. His secretary attended all staff meetings and she wasn’t there to take minutes. The general manager considered her an equal to the rest of his staff members and she participated fully in all of our deliberations. My favorite group is the factory workers. Many do menial tasks, day in and day out, which don’t require a great deal of brain power. I guess management doesn’t think they have much brain power or they would be doing something else for a living. That way of thinking is foolish. I can’t tell you about all the factory people I’ve known that use their brains far more after work and are highly successful in their endeavors. I knew a mechanic who set up a silk-screen machine in his garage to decorate T-shirts with catchy sayings he made up. He literally bought the T-shirts for pennies, fixed them up, and sold them for dollars at local flea markets on the weekends. A machine operator customized hot rods in his garage in the evenings and sold one to a magazine publisher for a huge amount of money. It graced the cover of a national hot rod magazine a few months later. There are many success stories of factory workers who became entrepre Advantages & Disadvantages of Owning An Internet Business Franchise scope of their duties and you will be pleasantly surprised. I sat on a department staff under a general manager. His secretary attended all staff meetings and she wasn’t there to take minutes. The general manager considered her an equal to the rest of his staff members and she participated fully in all of our deliberations.Many people think that because they didn’t have the technical or online business experience and it seemed that it is impossible for them to own a successful internet business. However, that really isn’t the case at all. There are some internet business franchise opportunities available that do not require much technical experience and they are perfect for individuals who have that entrepreneurial spirit,and like to start an internet business fast.When considering life as an entrepreneur, it is important to understand the definitions of an internet business franchise. Of course, it does have its own advantages and disadvantage. In this article we will discuss the advantages and disadvantages of owning an internet business franchise.INTERNET BUSINESS FRANCHISE: An internet business franchise is a right granted to an individual or company to market a company’s goods or services on in My favorite group is the factory workers. Many do menial tasks, day in and day out, which don’t require a great deal of brain power. I guess management doesn’t think they have much brain power or they would be doing something else for a living. That way of thinking is foolish. I can’t tell you about all the factory people I’ve known that use their brains far more after work and are highly successful in their endeavors. I knew a mechanic who set up a silk-screen machine in his garage to decorate T-shirts with catchy sayings he made up. He literally bought the T-shirts for pennies, fixed them up, and sold them for dollars at local flea markets on the weekends. A machine operator customized hot rods in his garage in the evenings and sold one to a magazine publisher for a huge amount of money. It graced the cover of a national hot rod magazine a few months later. There are many success stories of factory workers who became entrepreneurs after work. The point is that all of these workers have brains and are highly capable of contributing to strategy sessions and problem solving meetings. If you discuss issues with these people, challenge them to come up with ideas, and follow up getting their suggestions, you will get some good ideas. You will be starting to optimize the brain power in your business. Most importantly, the people will feel as if they are important members of the team, will have ownership in the solutions, and will work harder to make things happen in your business. 14,000 human brains or 21 tons of human brain power is a horrible resource to waste! From the book “IT AIN’T OKAY TO FAIL” Visit http://www.brianstrachan.com for more information about “IT AIN’T OKAY TO FAIL”
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