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    Get A Better Salary Deal: More To Start ... More Later
    The only time to talk about salary with a prospective employer is after they’ve told you, in clear, unmistakable terms, that they want to hire you.Once you’re certain they're offering you the job, it’s time to talk money. The most basic principle in your salary negotiation should be: get them to propose a number first. Unless the company is unwilling to negotiate on salary at all, you’re in a better position to obtain the highest possible figure if you find out what the company is willing to pay before you disclose what you want.Here’s why:• The company’s offer may be for more than you were going to ask. You end up with a better salary just by accepting their initial offer.• If you disclose your number first and you’re very low in relation to the prevailing market, they may think you lack confidence, and begin to have second thoughts about you.• If you disclose your number first and you’re far too high, they may think your price is out of the question and break off the discussion.• If you talk first, the company knows the figure is the maximum they’ll have to pay to get you. You set a ceiling on your price tag, because once you quote a number you can adjust it downward, but not upward. They’
    offer what you want… It is your job to ask, clearly and precisely.

    So, what do you want? Most would probably answer that you want to turn your prospect into your customer. You want your prospect to buy your product or service. That’s all true, but that comes later. What you want now is to get your “foot in the door.” You want to introduce yourself, your product and/or your company, so that later, the prospect can be induced to buy. If your prospect does not know you, is not familiar with your product or service, they will never buy it. They have to know you exist before they will even consider making that purchase! Therefore what you want now is an appointment. At this moment, you are not selling your product or your service, you are selling an appointment and only an appointment. You want the prospect to give you 10 to15 minutes of their time, so that you can introduce yourself, your company, your product, your service—that is it! You are not asking her to buy anything or change anything that she does—only to meet with you.

    If you think about the appointment in this manner, you will also realize that almost any objection to a meeting that your prospect may voice is then largely irrelevant. Perhaps your prospect already has a vendor that provides a similar product or service. So what. None of us can predict the future. The situation could change. Besides, you’re not asking that she buy anything; you want to meet with her and introduce yourself. Period! Perhaps your p

    The Format of Cover Letter Example for Resume
    There are many graduates year after year, they come from different fields of specialization, and are all looking for jobs. If you are among this crowd of applicants, are you sure, that you will stand out and immediately catch the employer's attention?Every time you apply for a job, you need to submit a resume. But your resume alone is not enough; it is a must that you have a cover letter. By now, you should be familiar with this type of letter. Cover letters introduces you and plainly explains your extreme desire for a certain position or job, and that you can make yourself available when the need arises. A few of your key points are typically highlighted in a cover letter, and it is a way to effectively present your resume.Your cover letter will speak for you, and spell out to the employer the reason why you sent the resume. Also included in the letter are your qualifications. If the letter is made in an appealing format, it is much easier to make the necessary impression with the right hiring authority.If you send your resume without the proper cover letter, it will likely end on the trash. The letter itself is some sort of introduction; it entices the receiver, making him/her want to read more. Once you make a goo
    In general conversation, many people think they can just “wing it” or they “know what they want to say.” On the telephone, however, you have 10 seconds to grab and hold your prospect’s attention, and frequently, you don’t get a second chance. Ten seconds goes by very quickly. Your first impression has to be strong enough to carry you through the rest of your pitch. “Winging it” is risky and generally doesn’t work, and “knowing what you want to say” without having actually crafted your message and practiced it can easily turn into “Gee, I didn’t say that very well…”

    Like the Girl Scouts, it is better to be prepared. A good script, a well-thought-out presentation that says what you want to say, precisely and succinctly, yet that still gives you room to maneuver, is one of the keys to a successful telephone pitch. This is about communication and about being prepared. In writing your script, you are crafting a message and focusing your message to your prospect. Your goal with your script is for your prospect to hear you and for your prospect to get “hooked.”

    So, what makes a good script? Write your script the way you talk—and get to the point! Written language and spoken language are very different. If your script is in written language, you will sound phony. Real people do not speak with capital letters at the start of sentences and periods at the end. People actually speak more in phrases or fragments, with pauses, sometimes improper grammar and the occasional “ah” or “um…” It is imperative that you sound real, so if you are having a difficult time with this, try talking into a tape recorder, then playing it back and writing down what you say.

    Don’t bother asking your prospect, “How are you today?” or “May I have a moment of your time?” or anything else. Start by asking for your prospect by name. Then, greet your prospect by name. Next, introduce yourself. “My name is (your name goes here), my company is (your company name goes here)” or “My name is (your name goes here), I’m with (your company name goes here).”

    Then, you want a sound bite to further introduce yourself. A sound bite is one sentence that expresses simply and succinctly what you do (or what is your product or service). Example: “Wendy Weiss teaches people to get what they want over the telephone.”

    Your sound bite, or the following line, should position you as the expert—someone (company, product or service) who stands out from the pack. If you do this well, you will preempt the objection: “I can’t meet with every salesperson who calls.” You will not be “every salesperson who calls.” To do this, you cannot say the same things that everyone else is saying—so be creative! . When I started my business, there were many others providing similar services representing companies, making calls and setting new business appointments for sales representatives. Generally, these people worked in-house, were not particularly well paid and were called telemarketers. Even this early in my career, I knew I was not a telemarketer. I decided I was a Marketing Consultant Specializing in New Business Development. This put me in a different category altogether. I was the expert, the outside consultant hired to help develop new business.

    Find a way to set yourself up as the expert. You can use phrases like “ We specialize in…” or “Our reputation is…” or “We are known for…” You can also name-drop credentials to help this positioning. Mention clients or customerspreferably in similar businesses as your prospect. This does two things: it lets your prospect know that you are familiar with their industry, and it will also make your prospect feel safer if they have not heard of you before. In addition, if someone has referred you, this is a good place to drop his or her name.

    Next is the heart of the script. Describe your product or service, pointing out relevant benefits. Remember—your prospects are interested in benefits. Remember also, your prospects will buy for their reasons, not yours. That is why it is important to do your research and have a sense of what your prospect may need and may be interested in.

    Focus your message to your prospect, and speak in their language. If your industry has a particular jargon—don’t they all?—use it. You cannot be the expert if you do not know the language. If, however, you are in an industry that has a jargon—but your prospect doesn’t know or use that jargon—speak plainly! Your intent here is communication. You want to be understood!

    This part of your script does not need to be long and unwieldy—a few salient points will do. You can bolster this section with a success story—something you, your company or product did for a customer. How you saved them money, or saved them time, or saved the day when they were in a tight spot. By inference, this will mean that you will do the same for your prospect. It is a terrific way of pointing out customer benefits without actually having to say “and the benefit to you, Ms. Prospect, is…” You might have several different success stories that you use, depending on the type of lead on which you are working.

    Your script is fluid. How your conversation with your prospect proceeds will determine what parts of your script you will use. So, make sure to leave some maneuvering room in your script, so that if you need to change tactics—for example, tell a different success story—you can easily do it. You make sure that you have maneuvering room by being prepared, knowing your customer benefits and knowing which customer benefits may interest a particular prospect. Also, have several success stories that you can use, depending on the point you are trying to make. And please, don’t be afraid to say the unexpected or to use humor.

    Then the close. Here it is… Ask for what you want! All your hard work is worth nothing if you do not ask for what you want. Do not expect that your prospect will know what you want, or guess what you want, or offer what you want… It is your job to ask, clearly and precisely.

    So, what do you want? Most would probably answer that you want to turn your prospect into your customer. You want your prospect to buy your product or service. That’s all true, but that comes later. What you want now is to get your “foot in the door.” You want to introduce yourself, your product and/or your company, so that later, the prospect can be induced to buy. If your prospect does not know you, is not familiar with your product or service, they will never buy it. They have to know you exist before they will even consider making that purchase! Therefore what you want now is an appointment. At this moment, you are not selling your product or your service, you are selling an appointment and only an appointment. You want the prospect to give you 10 to15 minutes of their time, so that you can introduce yourself, your company, your product, your service—that is it! You are not asking her to buy anything or change anything that she does—only to meet with you.

    If you think about the appointment in this manner, you will also realize that almost any objection to a meeting that your prospect may voice is then largely irrelevant. Perhaps your prospect already has a vendor that provides a similar product or service. So what. None of us can predict the future. The situation could change. Besides, you’re not asking that she buy anything; you want to meet with her and introduce yourself. Period! Perhaps your pr

    Follow Up - Key To Networking Success
    For all our interest in networking, following up is just as important. Many one-person business owners find they either don't follow up because they don't know what to do, or develop such an elaborate system for keeping in touch that it quickly breaks down and becomes unworkable. Typical downfalls include:--Using the same personally intensive strategy and activities for everyone they meet, finding they have no time for service delivery--Flooding new contacts with electronic information, but don't check in to see if there is a real fit--Letting months go between contacts and then being dismayed with few responses to offersNetworking Maven Kristy Rogers, is not only well known for her prowess in networking, having received three major networking awards just this year alone, but also conducts great seminars on following up. (http://www.KristyRogersConnects.com)Following up, says Kristy, is crucial. Especially for people who are in their first three years of running their businesses or those who need to grow their businesses. Yet most people, even those who know they 'should,' don't follow up after meeting new potential clients.Kristy identified the three most common follow-up mistakes one-person
    “um…” It is imperative that you sound real, so if you are having a difficult time with this, try talking into a tape recorder, then playing it back and writing down what you say.

    Don’t bother asking your prospect, “How are you today?” or “May I have a moment of your time?” or anything else. Start by asking for your prospect by name. Then, greet your prospect by name. Next, introduce yourself. “My name is (your name goes here), my company is (your company name goes here)” or “My name is (your name goes here), I’m with (your company name goes here).”

    Then, you want a sound bite to further introduce yourself. A sound bite is one sentence that expresses simply and succinctly what you do (or what is your product or service). Example: “Wendy Weiss teaches people to get what they want over the telephone.”

    Your sound bite, or the following line, should position you as the expert—someone (company, product or service) who stands out from the pack. If you do this well, you will preempt the objection: “I can’t meet with every salesperson who calls.” You will not be “every salesperson who calls.” To do this, you cannot say the same things that everyone else is saying—so be creative! . When I started my business, there were many others providing similar services representing companies, making calls and setting new business appointments for sales representatives. Generally, these people worked in-house, were not particularly well paid and were called telemarketers. Even this early in my career, I knew I was not a telemarketer. I decided I was a Marketing Consultant Specializing in New Business Development. This put me in a different category altogether. I was the expert, the outside consultant hired to help develop new business.

    Find a way to set yourself up as the expert. You can use phrases like “ We specialize in…” or “Our reputation is…” or “We are known for…” You can also name-drop credentials to help this positioning. Mention clients or customerspreferably in similar businesses as your prospect. This does two things: it lets your prospect know that you are familiar with their industry, and it will also make your prospect feel safer if they have not heard of you before. In addition, if someone has referred you, this is a good place to drop his or her name.

    Next is the heart of the script. Describe your product or service, pointing out relevant benefits. Remember—your prospects are interested in benefits. Remember also, your prospects will buy for their reasons, not yours. That is why it is important to do your research and have a sense of what your prospect may need and may be interested in.

    Focus your message to your prospect, and speak in their language. If your industry has a particular jargon—don’t they all?—use it. You cannot be the expert if you do not know the language. If, however, you are in an industry that has a jargon—but your prospect doesn’t know or use that jargon—speak plainly! Your intent here is communication. You want to be understood!

    This part of your script does not need to be long and unwieldy—a few salient points will do. You can bolster this section with a success story—something you, your company or product did for a customer. How you saved them money, or saved them time, or saved the day when they were in a tight spot. By inference, this will mean that you will do the same for your prospect. It is a terrific way of pointing out customer benefits without actually having to say “and the benefit to you, Ms. Prospect, is…” You might have several different success stories that you use, depending on the type of lead on which you are working.

    Your script is fluid. How your conversation with your prospect proceeds will determine what parts of your script you will use. So, make sure to leave some maneuvering room in your script, so that if you need to change tactics—for example, tell a different success story—you can easily do it. You make sure that you have maneuvering room by being prepared, knowing your customer benefits and knowing which customer benefits may interest a particular prospect. Also, have several success stories that you can use, depending on the point you are trying to make. And please, don’t be afraid to say the unexpected or to use humor.

    Then the close. Here it is… Ask for what you want! All your hard work is worth nothing if you do not ask for what you want. Do not expect that your prospect will know what you want, or guess what you want, or offer what you want… It is your job to ask, clearly and precisely.

    So, what do you want? Most would probably answer that you want to turn your prospect into your customer. You want your prospect to buy your product or service. That’s all true, but that comes later. What you want now is to get your “foot in the door.” You want to introduce yourself, your product and/or your company, so that later, the prospect can be induced to buy. If your prospect does not know you, is not familiar with your product or service, they will never buy it. They have to know you exist before they will even consider making that purchase! Therefore what you want now is an appointment. At this moment, you are not selling your product or your service, you are selling an appointment and only an appointment. You want the prospect to give you 10 to15 minutes of their time, so that you can introduce yourself, your company, your product, your service—that is it! You are not asking her to buy anything or change anything that she does—only to meet with you.

    If you think about the appointment in this manner, you will also realize that almost any objection to a meeting that your prospect may voice is then largely irrelevant. Perhaps your prospect already has a vendor that provides a similar product or service. So what. None of us can predict the future. The situation could change. Besides, you’re not asking that she buy anything; you want to meet with her and introduce yourself. Period! Perhaps your p

    Irresistible Event Registrations: How to Overcome Objections About Relevancy
    Your prospects want to know that your program is tailored to the problems they are experiencing today. Then they want to know that you have the most cutting-edge solutions to solve their problems. How can you express to them that your event will meet their needs fully?Provide a Complete Agenda Help your prospects understand that your program will address the problems they are experiencing today by including a detailed blow-by-blow agenda. The more depth you show in your agenda, the more likely your prospects are to feel they will get the value they need.Tailor-made Answers Show your prospect they will get all the answers they need from you. You can tell your prospects that as they register online, they will be asked to supply their specific questions which will be addressed during the program. To overcome other prospects' hesitations you can also add the "Common questions that will be answered" to your marketing materials as well.Cutting edge You will attract more people to register for your event if they feel they will get the latest and greatest information from you. To give your prospects that feeling, use up-to-date terminology such as "cutting edge", "new", "adva
    early in my career, I knew I was not a telemarketer. I decided I was a Marketing Consultant Specializing in New Business Development. This put me in a different category altogether. I was the expert, the outside consultant hired to help develop new business.

    Find a way to set yourself up as the expert. You can use phrases like “ We specialize in…” or “Our reputation is…” or “We are known for…” You can also name-drop credentials to help this positioning. Mention clients or customerspreferably in similar businesses as your prospect. This does two things: it lets your prospect know that you are familiar with their industry, and it will also make your prospect feel safer if they have not heard of you before. In addition, if someone has referred you, this is a good place to drop his or her name.

    Next is the heart of the script. Describe your product or service, pointing out relevant benefits. Remember—your prospects are interested in benefits. Remember also, your prospects will buy for their reasons, not yours. That is why it is important to do your research and have a sense of what your prospect may need and may be interested in.

    Focus your message to your prospect, and speak in their language. If your industry has a particular jargon—don’t they all?—use it. You cannot be the expert if you do not know the language. If, however, you are in an industry that has a jargon—but your prospect doesn’t know or use that jargon—speak plainly! Your intent here is communication. You want to be understood!

    This part of your script does not need to be long and unwieldy—a few salient points will do. You can bolster this section with a success story—something you, your company or product did for a customer. How you saved them money, or saved them time, or saved the day when they were in a tight spot. By inference, this will mean that you will do the same for your prospect. It is a terrific way of pointing out customer benefits without actually having to say “and the benefit to you, Ms. Prospect, is…” You might have several different success stories that you use, depending on the type of lead on which you are working.

    Your script is fluid. How your conversation with your prospect proceeds will determine what parts of your script you will use. So, make sure to leave some maneuvering room in your script, so that if you need to change tactics—for example, tell a different success story—you can easily do it. You make sure that you have maneuvering room by being prepared, knowing your customer benefits and knowing which customer benefits may interest a particular prospect. Also, have several success stories that you can use, depending on the point you are trying to make. And please, don’t be afraid to say the unexpected or to use humor.

    Then the close. Here it is… Ask for what you want! All your hard work is worth nothing if you do not ask for what you want. Do not expect that your prospect will know what you want, or guess what you want, or offer what you want… It is your job to ask, clearly and precisely.

    So, what do you want? Most would probably answer that you want to turn your prospect into your customer. You want your prospect to buy your product or service. That’s all true, but that comes later. What you want now is to get your “foot in the door.” You want to introduce yourself, your product and/or your company, so that later, the prospect can be induced to buy. If your prospect does not know you, is not familiar with your product or service, they will never buy it. They have to know you exist before they will even consider making that purchase! Therefore what you want now is an appointment. At this moment, you are not selling your product or your service, you are selling an appointment and only an appointment. You want the prospect to give you 10 to15 minutes of their time, so that you can introduce yourself, your company, your product, your service—that is it! You are not asking her to buy anything or change anything that she does—only to meet with you.

    If you think about the appointment in this manner, you will also realize that almost any objection to a meeting that your prospect may voice is then largely irrelevant. Perhaps your prospect already has a vendor that provides a similar product or service. So what. None of us can predict the future. The situation could change. Besides, you’re not asking that she buy anything; you want to meet with her and introduce yourself. Period! Perhaps your p

    Medical Billing - XA0 Record Fields 18 Through 23
    Trailer records are a subtle animal. They don't seem to do much, but in the world of medical billing and the electronic transmission of claims, trailer records can mean the difference between a whole claim file going through or being rejected like a bad virus. In this installment of our series on medical billing and electronic claims submission, we'll be continuing our review of the XA0 record, picking up with field number 18.XA0 field 18, positions 120 - 126, is the total payer paid amount. This is the total amount of all claims being billed that have already been paid by the primary payer. For those wondering how this can even be possible, it is not uncommon for a claim to be partially paid by a payer and then rebilled by the provider in an attempt to get the outstanding balance paid off. In some cases, given the proper documentation, the remaining balance may be paid, but not often and certainly not always.XA0 field 19, positions 127 - 133, is the total patient paid amount. This is the total amount of all claims being billed where the patient has made payments towards the claims themselves. This is mostly for the purpose of reimbursing the patient back on any claims where the services are covered. If they are not
    n. You want to be understood!

    This part of your script does not need to be long and unwieldy—a few salient points will do. You can bolster this section with a success story—something you, your company or product did for a customer. How you saved them money, or saved them time, or saved the day when they were in a tight spot. By inference, this will mean that you will do the same for your prospect. It is a terrific way of pointing out customer benefits without actually having to say “and the benefit to you, Ms. Prospect, is…” You might have several different success stories that you use, depending on the type of lead on which you are working.

    Your script is fluid. How your conversation with your prospect proceeds will determine what parts of your script you will use. So, make sure to leave some maneuvering room in your script, so that if you need to change tactics—for example, tell a different success story—you can easily do it. You make sure that you have maneuvering room by being prepared, knowing your customer benefits and knowing which customer benefits may interest a particular prospect. Also, have several success stories that you can use, depending on the point you are trying to make. And please, don’t be afraid to say the unexpected or to use humor.

    Then the close. Here it is… Ask for what you want! All your hard work is worth nothing if you do not ask for what you want. Do not expect that your prospect will know what you want, or guess what you want, or offer what you want… It is your job to ask, clearly and precisely.

    So, what do you want? Most would probably answer that you want to turn your prospect into your customer. You want your prospect to buy your product or service. That’s all true, but that comes later. What you want now is to get your “foot in the door.” You want to introduce yourself, your product and/or your company, so that later, the prospect can be induced to buy. If your prospect does not know you, is not familiar with your product or service, they will never buy it. They have to know you exist before they will even consider making that purchase! Therefore what you want now is an appointment. At this moment, you are not selling your product or your service, you are selling an appointment and only an appointment. You want the prospect to give you 10 to15 minutes of their time, so that you can introduce yourself, your company, your product, your service—that is it! You are not asking her to buy anything or change anything that she does—only to meet with you.

    If you think about the appointment in this manner, you will also realize that almost any objection to a meeting that your prospect may voice is then largely irrelevant. Perhaps your prospect already has a vendor that provides a similar product or service. So what. None of us can predict the future. The situation could change. Besides, you’re not asking that she buy anything; you want to meet with her and introduce yourself. Period! Perhaps your p

    Recycling and Reusing Waste Wash Water in Pressure Washing Applications
    What if we can wash equipment, buildings, sidewalks and reuse all the water over and over again? Why would we need to do this you ask? Well consider the muddy mess in Beijing after the mighty sand storm put a layer of sand everywhere and filled the skies making air-quality so bad no one could breath.Next consider that they had to seed clouds to get it to rain in order to clear the air. Next the ground is a muddy mess and must be power washed by thousands of pressure washers, water trucks and mobile units. But wait, we need to conserve the water too? Oh now you see the need for such a system? Well such systems capable of doing this do exist. For instance I have heard of run off water being used like this in the cleaning of Military Equipment, Trucks and Aircraft. For instance Kellogg, Brown and Root uses such a system in Kuwait to save the expensive water. I believe they are either using a "Landa Water Maze" (Landa in WA or the Karcher equivalent (German Company). There is another company in the States, which makes these too and Hydrotech in Riverside, CA has a similar unit they buy thru their vendor and modify from Coastal CA.There are many smaller companies who make such things for run off from construction sites and remed
    offer what you want… It is your job to ask, clearly and precisely.

    So, what do you want? Most would probably answer that you want to turn your prospect into your customer. You want your prospect to buy your product or service. That’s all true, but that comes later. What you want now is to get your “foot in the door.” You want to introduce yourself, your product and/or your company, so that later, the prospect can be induced to buy. If your prospect does not know you, is not familiar with your product or service, they will never buy it. They have to know you exist before they will even consider making that purchase! Therefore what you want now is an appointment. At this moment, you are not selling your product or your service, you are selling an appointment and only an appointment. You want the prospect to give you 10 to15 minutes of their time, so that you can introduce yourself, your company, your product, your service—that is it! You are not asking her to buy anything or change anything that she does—only to meet with you.

    If you think about the appointment in this manner, you will also realize that almost any objection to a meeting that your prospect may voice is then largely irrelevant. Perhaps your prospect already has a vendor that provides a similar product or service. So what. None of us can predict the future. The situation could change. Besides, you’re not asking that she buy anything; you want to meet with her and introduce yourself. Period! Perhaps your prospect doesn’t use a similar product or service and says she has no need. She doesn’t need it; she will never need it. So what. None of us can predict the future, anything is possible, and one day, perhaps she may. Now, I am not suggesting that you spend your time setting up meetings with people who do not need your product or service, but what I am saying is that the qualification is on your part. You actually need to decide if you want to meet this prospect. Is this prospect worth your time and energy?

    Ask for an appointment—ask for a meeting. I generally like the word “meeting” better than “appointment.” It has more weight and substance. Say: “I would like to meet with you,” “I would like to introduce myself, my company, my product…,” “I need 10 minutes of your time.” Be clear, be bold, be to the point. Give them some choices of times: “Is this Thursday good, or would next Thursday be better?” It is easier for your prospect to choose between options, such as different dates, than to decide whether and if to schedule.

    Once you have scheduled the meeting, make sure that you confirm the prospect’s name, title, and address. Also, make sure she has your name, your company name and telephone number! Repeat the date and time of the meeting at least twice. You want to make sure that you are both talking about the same date. In addition, as you give your prospect your name etc. and when you repeat the meeting date and time, use your voice to direct your prospect to write everything down. Speak s-l-o-w-l-y and distinctly at a pace that they can write. Your prospect will interpret this way of speaking as a direction to write. This way, they, too, will have the meeting in their calendar, and there should be no mix-ups.

    The Script Formula:

    * Ask for the prospect by name.

    * Say hello. “Hi! Ms. Prospect” or “Hi, Jane.”

    * Identify yourself and your company. “My name is ______. My company is _____.”

    * Say what you do (sound bite).

    * Position yourself as the expert. Use phrases like “We specialize in…” or “Our reputation is…” or “We are known for…” You can also do some name-dropping of credentials here

    * Articulate benefits. Success stories are a terrific way to point out benefits.

    * Ask for what you want—an introductory meeting. “I would like to meet with you…” “I would like to introduce myself, my company, my product…” “I need 10 minutes of your time.” “Is this Thursday good, or would next Thursday be better?”

    * Keep asking for what you want!

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