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Member You - Eighty Percent of Success is Showing Up
The Art Business: A Great Opportunity
Searching for a legitimate business opportunity takes time and research. There is no business opportunity that you should ever get into that makes unrealistic demands. If there is a sense of urgency, a one time only offer that ends tomorrow, or an extremely reduced price offer, you should know that there is something wrong. There are other things to look for as well.d selling: Show up. Most sales are made between the 7th and 12th contact with a prospect. Most sales people stop at about three to four contacts. All you have to do to sell more is show up a few more times! Want to build trust and rapport? Show up. Keep showing up. Do what you say you’re going to do when you say you’re going to do it. No excuses. Prospects and customers like and trust people who do what they say they’re going to do, when they say they’re going to do it! Want to close the sale? Show up and ask fo Legal Nurse Consultant The above quote, “Eighty percent of success is showing up.” is from Woody Allen. It was particularly appropriate this past weekend.
Nurses with an interest for both emergency room trauma and courtroom drama may want to pursue a nursing degree in legal nurse consulting. Legal nurse consultants use their healthcare know-how in conjunction with an interest in the legal system to have a rewarding career in this combined profession.Legal nurse consultants are commonly called by defense attorneys a I went to take a dance class. My favorite teacher was back in town for a short time. I was thrilled and ready to dance! This teacher is incredibly talented, an excellent dancer, good choreographer and her class is high energy and fun! I had often wondered why she was not more successful as a teacher or why she never got into a decent dance company. I rearranged my entire schedule to be there. So did a number of her students. One cut short her holiday weekend with her parents to get on a plane and fly back in time for the class. Another rearranged her work schedule, going in to work at 4:00 a.m. in order to be done in time for the afternoon class. The class never happened. My favorite teacher called in “sick” at the last minute. When she taught regularly in New York City this teacher had a habit of canceling classes at the last minute. She’d been gone for six months and was scheduled to teach only four classes over the holidays. So far she’s only made it to the first class. She called in sick for the second. Was she sick? Perhaps and who cares? I’ll never again rearrange my day to take her class. I know several other dancers who also will never again rearrange their days for her and even more dancers who will simply never take her class again! Now I understand why this teacher never got very far in the dance world. I was raised on the old show business adage, “The show must go on.” It has served me well. As a young dancer it was drilled into my head that the audience didn’t care how I felt. They were there to see me dance. They’d paid a lot of money to see me dance and it was my responsibility to be at my best, no matter how I felt. While that “nobody cares how you feel” message may not be the best message for a child, in business and in sales it’s the truth. Your prospects and customers want what they want when they want it. It is your job to deliver. If you do not, they will find another source. The first rule of prospecting and selling: Show up. Most sales are made between the 7th and 12th contact with a prospect. Most sales people stop at about three to four contacts. All you have to do to sell more is show up a few more times! Want to build trust and rapport? Show up. Keep showing up. Do what you say you’re going to do when you say you’re going to do it. No excuses. Prospects and customers like and trust people who do what they say they’re going to do, when they say they’re going to do it! Want to close the sale? Show up and ask for Lanyards Explained! e. So did a number of her students. One cut short her holiday weekend with her parents to get on a plane and fly back in time for the class. Another rearranged her work schedule, going in to work at 4:00 a.m. in order to be done in time for the afternoon class.
I’ve been in the supply/retail industry for some 15 years now, however until recently had never heard the term Lanyard. During the process of setting up my company, and still occasionally today when discussing my company’s business activities, I’m still asked “what’s a lanyard?”Now, everyone knows what a lanyard is, they just don’t know it by name. Described as The class never happened. My favorite teacher called in “sick” at the last minute. When she taught regularly in New York City this teacher had a habit of canceling classes at the last minute. She’d been gone for six months and was scheduled to teach only four classes over the holidays. So far she’s only made it to the first class. She called in sick for the second. Was she sick? Perhaps and who cares? I’ll never again rearrange my day to take her class. I know several other dancers who also will never again rearrange their days for her and even more dancers who will simply never take her class again! Now I understand why this teacher never got very far in the dance world. I was raised on the old show business adage, “The show must go on.” It has served me well. As a young dancer it was drilled into my head that the audience didn’t care how I felt. They were there to see me dance. They’d paid a lot of money to see me dance and it was my responsibility to be at my best, no matter how I felt. While that “nobody cares how you feel” message may not be the best message for a child, in business and in sales it’s the truth. Your prospects and customers want what they want when they want it. It is your job to deliver. If you do not, they will find another source. The first rule of prospecting and selling: Show up. Most sales are made between the 7th and 12th contact with a prospect. Most sales people stop at about three to four contacts. All you have to do to sell more is show up a few more times! Want to build trust and rapport? Show up. Keep showing up. Do what you say you’re going to do when you say you’re going to do it. No excuses. Prospects and customers like and trust people who do what they say they’re going to do, when they say they’re going to do it! Want to close the sale? Show up and ask fo How to Know What You Know (1) ses over the holidays. So far she’s only made it to the first class. She called in sick for the second. Was she sick? Perhaps and who cares?
Do you know what you know? In many situation we act without even knowing why we act the way we do. If this is true for one person, what would this mean for an organizations?In business, the management of knowledge is not a primary business activity and therefore difficult to manage: The attention for the topic doesn’t normally last long. And than it is just anoth I’ll never again rearrange my day to take her class. I know several other dancers who also will never again rearrange their days for her and even more dancers who will simply never take her class again! Now I understand why this teacher never got very far in the dance world. I was raised on the old show business adage, “The show must go on.” It has served me well. As a young dancer it was drilled into my head that the audience didn’t care how I felt. They were there to see me dance. They’d paid a lot of money to see me dance and it was my responsibility to be at my best, no matter how I felt. While that “nobody cares how you feel” message may not be the best message for a child, in business and in sales it’s the truth. Your prospects and customers want what they want when they want it. It is your job to deliver. If you do not, they will find another source. The first rule of prospecting and selling: Show up. Most sales are made between the 7th and 12th contact with a prospect. Most sales people stop at about three to four contacts. All you have to do to sell more is show up a few more times! Want to build trust and rapport? Show up. Keep showing up. Do what you say you’re going to do when you say you’re going to do it. No excuses. Prospects and customers like and trust people who do what they say they’re going to do, when they say they’re going to do it! Want to close the sale? Show up and ask fo Kill 'Em With Kindness - Managing With A Positive Attitude it was drilled into my head that the audience didn’t care how I felt. They were there to see me dance. They’d paid a lot of money to see me dance and it was my responsibility to be at my best, no matter how I felt.
We can all tell stories about the associate, customer, or vendor from hell. Those stories make for great cocktail conversations. Many years ago when I first began work as a manager of a retail store, I had an employee who was the definition of ditsy blonde. Every day she arrived late, breathless and filled with stories of her personal life, her car and every possible While that “nobody cares how you feel” message may not be the best message for a child, in business and in sales it’s the truth. Your prospects and customers want what they want when they want it. It is your job to deliver. If you do not, they will find another source. The first rule of prospecting and selling: Show up. Most sales are made between the 7th and 12th contact with a prospect. Most sales people stop at about three to four contacts. All you have to do to sell more is show up a few more times! Want to build trust and rapport? Show up. Keep showing up. Do what you say you’re going to do when you say you’re going to do it. No excuses. Prospects and customers like and trust people who do what they say they’re going to do, when they say they’re going to do it! Want to close the sale? Show up and ask fo Please Don't Make Me Change Vendors d selling: Show up.
A frustrated business owner was grousing over lunch because a long time vendor he has depended on for a commodity service has recently had some quality issues.“Look, he said, “I live a complex life. My business is complex, my personal life is complex, I often feel pulled in many directions at once. All I ask of my long-term vendors is that they give me good ser Most sales are made between the 7th and 12th contact with a prospect. Most sales people stop at about three to four contacts. All you have to do to sell more is show up a few more times! Want to build trust and rapport? Show up. Keep showing up. Do what you say you’re going to do when you say you’re going to do it. No excuses. Prospects and customers like and trust people who do what they say they’re going to do, when they say they’re going to do it! Want to close the sale? Show up and ask for the order. If you do not get the order that time, show up and ask again. It doesn’t matter how smart you are. It doesn’t matter how talented you are. It doesn’t matter how great your product is. If you don’t show up, nothing else counts. © 2004 Wendy Weiss
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