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    Advantages of a Branded House or a House of Brands
    If you want to win by growing your market share — there is a better way, a smarter way, than the traditional advertising and marketing strategy and tactics. However, it requires looking at your business and brand from a very different point of view. This different point of view is hard to grasp because old myths die-hard and old expensive myths seem to die hardest of all.If you need to steal share, it does not require underhandedness (as the name might sugge
    salespeople.”

    “Who’s in charge of recruiting salespeople?”

    “I am!”

    Roland didn’t have a clue what role a CEO should play. He had graduated from college, but with a meaningless degree. When he rejoined the family business, he received no preparation for taking over the reins; he had grown up working with his hands and that is still what he enjoyed most. When he was made president, it was in name only.

    I interviewed a couple of salespeople whom Roland had been unable to hire. They told me that they didn’t want t

    Put On Your Leaders Hat And Watch Their Attitude Change
    People are the biggest cost to any organisation and their performance has a direct impact on your bottom line. The most successful organisations are the ones that can get the people right and in turn get the culture right. It’s not enough to have the right products or services you need the right people with the right attitude!Let’s face it, not all staff have attitudes that are productive. So how do you change their attitude? You start by changing yours. If
    I first met Roland (not his real name) in 1972. He was a high school student working a summer job in his father’s business.

    “We’re teaching him the business from the ground up,” his father told me proudly as he introduced me to the tall good looking kid. We shook hands, exchanged a few words, then Roland jumped on a fork lift and was off to stage another delivery.

    The next time I saw Roland, he was approaching 40 years of age and had served four years as company president.

    The business was located in a fast-growing metro market, but under Roland’s leadership, sales had not kept pace with the growth of the market. His father, now retired, suggested that he bring in a consultant to take a look at the business.

    We met at my hotel for breakfast. In many ways, he had not changed all that much. He was wearing jeans, a red flannel shirt, and a pair of cowboy boots. His image was far from that of a company president.

    Roland got immediately to the point, “What do you need from me to get this project started?”

    “Let me begin by asking a couple of questions,” I answered, “What is your vision for this business?”

    “How do you mean?” Roland asked.

    “What are you trying to make happen here? When December 31st rolls around, what evidence do you look for to determine if you’ve had a satisfactory year?” I said, trying to clarify my question.

    “Well, if you’re talking about strategic planning or budgeting, things like that, I don’t do any of that,” he responded bluntly.

    “How do you personally spend you time every day,” I asked, trying a different approach.

    “It depends on where I’m needed,” he said. “Sometimes I’m doing the buying, but other times, like when the warehouse foreman doesn’t show up, I’m working out back.”

    “How much time do you spend in the office?” I probed.

    “As little as possible,” he fired back with the hint of a smile.

    “Sounds as if you don’t like office work,” I asked in a feeble attempt at humor.

    “You got that right.”

    “Your dad says that sales haven’t kept pace with the market. Do you have an explanation?”

    “Yeah, I can’t find decent salespeople.”

    “Who’s in charge of recruiting salespeople?”

    “I am!”

    Roland didn’t have a clue what role a CEO should play. He had graduated from college, but with a meaningless degree. When he rejoined the family business, he received no preparation for taking over the reins; he had grown up working with his hands and that is still what he enjoyed most. When he was made president, it was in name only.

    I interviewed a couple of salespeople whom Roland had been unable to hire. They told me that they didn’t want to

    My Boogers Itch - Good Marketing or Not?
    If you've driven through Atlanta - or perhaps throughout the South - you've seen large, attention-getting signs proclaiming (among other things) that someone has gas. ???My husband was the first to observe this sign. As he drove along 285, he picked up his cell phone and reported, "I pooted.""That's nice," I told him, once again rolling my eyes at his childish behavior. He called back five minutes later, heading north on Peachtree Industrial, to infor
    tro market, but under Roland’s leadership, sales had not kept pace with the growth of the market. His father, now retired, suggested that he bring in a consultant to take a look at the business.

    We met at my hotel for breakfast. In many ways, he had not changed all that much. He was wearing jeans, a red flannel shirt, and a pair of cowboy boots. His image was far from that of a company president.

    Roland got immediately to the point, “What do you need from me to get this project started?”

    “Let me begin by asking a couple of questions,” I answered, “What is your vision for this business?”

    “How do you mean?” Roland asked.

    “What are you trying to make happen here? When December 31st rolls around, what evidence do you look for to determine if you’ve had a satisfactory year?” I said, trying to clarify my question.

    “Well, if you’re talking about strategic planning or budgeting, things like that, I don’t do any of that,” he responded bluntly.

    “How do you personally spend you time every day,” I asked, trying a different approach.

    “It depends on where I’m needed,” he said. “Sometimes I’m doing the buying, but other times, like when the warehouse foreman doesn’t show up, I’m working out back.”

    “How much time do you spend in the office?” I probed.

    “As little as possible,” he fired back with the hint of a smile.

    “Sounds as if you don’t like office work,” I asked in a feeble attempt at humor.

    “You got that right.”

    “Your dad says that sales haven’t kept pace with the market. Do you have an explanation?”

    “Yeah, I can’t find decent salespeople.”

    “Who’s in charge of recruiting salespeople?”

    “I am!”

    Roland didn’t have a clue what role a CEO should play. He had graduated from college, but with a meaningless degree. When he rejoined the family business, he received no preparation for taking over the reins; he had grown up working with his hands and that is still what he enjoyed most. When he was made president, it was in name only.

    I interviewed a couple of salespeople whom Roland had been unable to hire. They told me that they didn’t want t

    Multiple Parcel Tracking & Management
    The whole concept of parcel delivery has changed drastically over just a few generations. People send enormous quantities of goods all over the world every day.Back in the old days, people would write long letters to their friends and family overseas and then they would pass those envelopes to sailors who were heading off in the right direction. Somehow, unbelievably, some of those letters actually made it to their destinations! The journey took months or ye
    ple of questions,” I answered, “What is your vision for this business?”

    “How do you mean?” Roland asked.

    “What are you trying to make happen here? When December 31st rolls around, what evidence do you look for to determine if you’ve had a satisfactory year?” I said, trying to clarify my question.

    “Well, if you’re talking about strategic planning or budgeting, things like that, I don’t do any of that,” he responded bluntly.

    “How do you personally spend you time every day,” I asked, trying a different approach.

    “It depends on where I’m needed,” he said. “Sometimes I’m doing the buying, but other times, like when the warehouse foreman doesn’t show up, I’m working out back.”

    “How much time do you spend in the office?” I probed.

    “As little as possible,” he fired back with the hint of a smile.

    “Sounds as if you don’t like office work,” I asked in a feeble attempt at humor.

    “You got that right.”

    “Your dad says that sales haven’t kept pace with the market. Do you have an explanation?”

    “Yeah, I can’t find decent salespeople.”

    “Who’s in charge of recruiting salespeople?”

    “I am!”

    Roland didn’t have a clue what role a CEO should play. He had graduated from college, but with a meaningless degree. When he rejoined the family business, he received no preparation for taking over the reins; he had grown up working with his hands and that is still what he enjoyed most. When he was made president, it was in name only.

    I interviewed a couple of salespeople whom Roland had been unable to hire. They told me that they didn’t want t

    Business Men, Lawmakers or Prosecutors; Who is the Most Honest?
    Having been involved in business and politics and watched government attack us business folk and thus having been on all sides of this equation, it is readily apparent to me that the humans are just doing what humans do anyway. Humans are inherently problematic, often very deceptive and not such honest beings in general.If we thrust the human animal into a modern civilization and the system does not take into consideration human nature it will not be fair an
    p>“It depends on where I’m needed,” he said. “Sometimes I’m doing the buying, but other times, like when the warehouse foreman doesn’t show up, I’m working out back.”

    “How much time do you spend in the office?” I probed.

    “As little as possible,” he fired back with the hint of a smile.

    “Sounds as if you don’t like office work,” I asked in a feeble attempt at humor.

    “You got that right.”

    “Your dad says that sales haven’t kept pace with the market. Do you have an explanation?”

    “Yeah, I can’t find decent salespeople.”

    “Who’s in charge of recruiting salespeople?”

    “I am!”

    Roland didn’t have a clue what role a CEO should play. He had graduated from college, but with a meaningless degree. When he rejoined the family business, he received no preparation for taking over the reins; he had grown up working with his hands and that is still what he enjoyed most. When he was made president, it was in name only.

    I interviewed a couple of salespeople whom Roland had been unable to hire. They told me that they didn’t want t

    Work Ethics - A Paradigm Shift
    Work ethics is a hot topic in today’s business and educational worlds. Yet, how do we define this hybrid phrase with the word work meaning more than a specific outcome and the word ethics being more than the values that enhance that outcome?When we say we are going to work, work becomes the place of employment. When we say we are working, the implication is that we are engaged in a work-related activity and should be performing one or more specific tasks.
    salespeople.”

    “Who’s in charge of recruiting salespeople?”

    “I am!”

    Roland didn’t have a clue what role a CEO should play. He had graduated from college, but with a meaningless degree. When he rejoined the family business, he received no preparation for taking over the reins; he had grown up working with his hands and that is still what he enjoyed most. When he was made president, it was in name only.

    I interviewed a couple of salespeople whom Roland had been unable to hire. They told me that they didn’t want to work for a man like Roland, and referred to his lack of sophistication and his abrupt communication style. Their image of Roland was not that of a leader, so they each opted to take jobs with more progressive businesses in the area.

    At the end of my visit, I suggested that Roland hire a general manager who had the talent to perform the essential business functions that Roland hated so much. To my surprise, he didn’t resist the idea. He was not stupid; he knew full well that being a company president was not his cup of tea.

    Today, the company is growing and earning more bottom line profit than ever before. Roland is the happiest he has been in years.

    Lesson: If the owner doesn’t have the talent or the willingness to prepare a strategic marketing plan or hammer out an annual capital expenditure budget and an operations budget, hire someone who does. There is no rule in business that says the owner has to be the general manager.

    Management acumen is not always passed down to the next generation.

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