Home Wealth Project
Extensive Research On How To Build Wealth From The Comfort Of Your Own Home.
Extensive Research On How To Build Wealth From The Comfort Of Your Own Home.
Nov 16th
Gain Unlimited Confidence With Women Using A Simple Mind Reprogramming Hypnosis Download And Accompanying Ebook. Overcome Social Anxiety And Approach Anxiety With This Exciting New Mind Reprogramming Product.
Gain Confidence With Women Using The Power Of Hypnosis Pua
Jul 9th
Chris Zane, founder and president of Zane Cycles, offers a brilliant look at customer service and business growth through the tactics at a scrappy and innovative bicycle retailer. Reinventing the Wheel: The Science of Creating Lifetime Customers sounds a little more technically researched than it actually is. Yet Zane provides the right clues to the puzzle of building a retail organization and selecting the perfect elements to satisfy customers. The book caught my eye while browsing a Barnes & Noble shop, so I asked the publisher for a review copy.
Great Service Begins the Moment a Person Enters Your Store
To get into Reinventing The Wheel you have to understand the author. Chris Zane loved bikes and business at a young age. He has owned Zane’s bicycle shop since his teen years, and has grown it into one of the largest bicycle shops in the United States (it is also the largest Trek bike retailer in the world). He has won awards and has been featured in Harvard Business Review and Inc., among other publications.
How did he attain this visibility and success – over $15 million in annual revenue? Zane illustrates how providing unexpected service builds customer loyalty with a metaphor about a bowl of 400 quarters representing how much he’d spend on service to a customer. In his standard presentations he encourages the audience to take quarters from the bowl, watching the various amounts the audience members would take. Yet no one “takes the whole bowl”:
“The point is that when you as a customer are presented with more than what seems reasonable, like a bowl of 400 quarters, you will self-regulate …. By providing more service than what folks consider reasonable we can build trust and loyalty and remind them how hard we’re working on their behalf.”
Zane goes on to note how giveaways that cost his shop just $86 brought about 450 one-on-one interactions that “alleviated a bit of pain for customers and created a lasting memory while doing it.” He also notes what at stake for businesses that don’t live and die by the “quarter mantra:”
“As hard as it is to win a customer’s loyalty, and regardless of how big your bowl of quarters is, you can also lose that customer in a heartbeat if you and your employees ever turn on your autopilot.”
Retail Insights and Guerilla Marketing Muscle
Much as Bob Taylor gets into the fine points of guitar manufacturing in Guitar Lessons, Zane describe growth challenges he faced along the way, such as gaining corporate approval to sell Trek bicycles into the premium market. These stories provide useful insight into how a business owner transitions from a small operation to an advantageously organized provider of niche services and make moves beyond the hustle mode. Zane notes to a Trek rep how his job is easier, selling 100 bicycles in one call, where Zane must find 100 buyers for those bikes.
Zane explains how he upsets the competition in segments like “drive up the price tag on competition” in which he tried to recruit a competitor’s manager. He gives several examples of strategically outwitting the competition through guerrilla marketing to acquire new customers:
“My competitors didn’t understand that I had changed the rules of the game on them and that every time they thought they were matching me, they were actually falling further behind.”
Some of the game-changing tactics will sound overly competitive if you operate in an industry where “frenemy” relationships among service providers are the norm. But there’s understandable science behind the madness, like not competing on price. Zane makes much-touted concepts like customer service as a profit driver more real than any white paper could.
The last chapters touch upon people-oriented subjects such as employee selection and embracing customer diversity as good business. The last chapter, “Think Nationally, Act Locally,” sums up the previous chapters well and serves as a reminder of how working with customers locally can make a difference.
Who Will Benefit From Reinventing the Wheel?
The book contents best aids service businesses. The most prescriptive text will benefit thoughtful, aspirational business owners who know that a hustle mode is not sustainable beyond specific moments of sales growth. There is a lot of bravado mixed in with Zane’s suggestions, but daring to offer your customers the best is Zane’s overall point. I found the book a stimulating concoction of aggressive competition and customer-oriented focus that distinguishes it from other memoir/business books.
Reinventing the Wheel will show how reinventing your business for growth can be easy.
Learn How to Gain Retail Customers for Life With “Reinventing The Wheel”
View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
May 31st
Natural Bodybuilders – Your Training is Different! Training and nutritional information for the most neglected group of bodybuilders: drug-free hard gainers. Methods and techniques specifically tailored to drug-free trainers.
Gain Muscle Mass & Size!
Mar 21st
In February 2011, more microbusiness owners were planning to hire than were planning to lay people off. The Discover Card Small Business Watch, a monthly survey of owners of businesses with 1 to 5 employees, found that 3% more business owners were planning to hire than to cut staff when asked about their employment plans last month.
Whether this proves to be a lasting trend or not remains an open question. Back in June 2010 four percent more microbusinesses were planning to add rather than drop employees, but the pattern then reversed itself for several months. In fact, the six month moving average of this measure –- the thin black line in the chart below –- has deteriorated after improving several times since the Great Recession began.
Microbusiness Hiring Plans (Aug 2006 to Feb 2011)
CHART OF THE WEEK: Modest Gain in Microbusiness Hiring Plans
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View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Dec 4th
Funny how some ideas can stare businesses in the face, but the response from leaders never truly changes over time.
In 2004 and 2005, Anita Campbell wrote briefly on Latin American immigrants sending money to their home countries - “In 2004, immigrants to the United States sent home US $30 billion (yes, that’s billion with a “b”).” A year later she wrote that banks that had at first left this market to mom-and-pop outfits decided to court Latino customers again.
Fast forward to today. I learned about another pan-regional opportunity, this time from Joe Kutchera (@joekutchera ) through his new book Latino Link: Building Brands Online With Hispanic Communities and Content. The book, which delivers vital guidance, is distinctive not only because of its insights about Hispanic consumers, but also because of its tips containing nuanced analytic implications for how a business evaluates its online opportunities. I reached out for a review copy from the publisher, Paramount Market Publishing, a small business press based in Ithaca, New York.
Learn what it means to say “Bienvenidos, estamos abiertos para negocios”
One thing you will learn is whether universal or local Spanish should be used for your site content. That choice is not trivial. Latino Link focuses on Mexican and U.S. Hispanic consumers, and explains how an imbalance in Internet infrastructure investment has inadvertently created a pan-regional effect for Latinos online consumers.
“Spain…invested $960 million in online advertising. For U.S. Latinos or Mexicans online, it means when they search in Spanish, many sites from Spain appear in their results…Spain invests four or five times more in content than other Spanish-language markets.”
This impacts online behavior analysis and can lead to a missed opportunity to encourage customer visits to physical stores. For an example, read the polarizing tale of two Spanish-language e-commerce sites from Best Buy and Home Depot.
An enlightening fact Kutchera details — Mexicans shop at U.S. retailers to the tune of $10 billion annually (yes, that’s billion with a “b”). That figure “does not include capital expenditures such as cars, houses or even computers.” Another sobering fact: Mexico’s middle class is larger than the population of Spain, re-emphasizing the irony that “search engines can send your potential U.S. Hispanic customers to businesses overseas … Thus a U.S. company may reach customers from other countries that they would otherwise not attract.” The pan-regional effect is a startling contrast to widespread posts encouraging businesses to gain customers locally through location-based social media.
Furthering his point about infrastructure and demographics, Kutchera shows that while Spanish-speaking users are among the fastest-growing Internet segment, Spain is not the largest within the Latin segment; the Dominican Republic is. Kutchera predicts, “By the time computers, smartphones or tablets cost $100 or less, the Internet will much more resemble the list of top spoken languages in the world.”
Gain guidance that leads to action and connects with the community
One important cultural point: Much of the featured research centers on a US Hispanic-Mexico consumer perspective. But Latino Link does provide nuanced commentary to guide small business owners and marketers in attracting and serving a diversity of Hispanic customers. For example, you’ll read about the contrast between one global site with language settings & IP specific pages (globalization) vs a series of country-specific sites (localization).
“If you sell an intangible service, like airplane tickets, music or consulting, the global .com approach might work better for you…If you offer country-specific information, or sell products via distributors…a country-specific website would be best.”
Case studies cover a helpful gamut of the ways localization and globalization can give your business an advantage, such as geo-marketing with online maps and how Hispanics use social networking sites. One chapter is dedicated to attracting Latina customers online, while other chapters cover developing content communities, launching a website in Spanish and organizing teams.
The points raised are enhanced by personal perspectives from contributors such as Elizabeth Perez, Digital Insights Analyst, regarding the in-language vs. in-culture concept of pushing a birthday person into a cake as they bite it, chanting “Que le muerda! Que le muerda!”:
“A non-Hispanic might wonder why we would do that or think that we ruined the person’s party by doing this. However, in reality, that is part of our tradition and one very much looked forward to … For reasons such as this, when I have the option to obtain news coverage about Hispanics from non-Hispanic or Hispanic media outlets, you will more likely see me turn to the Hispanic outlet, as it will be the one I will relate to the most.”
What’s truly cool about Latino Link is that some analytics perspective peppers its comparison between online behavior and respect for the intended audience — companies that combine acumen and data reach the insights that truly indications the needed business decision. Kutchera also mentions some Latin American companies alongside US-based companies, so that readers can broadly envision the best applications while discovering long established successful companies in Latin countries.
A welcome and much-needed guide to digital Latino marketing
Latino Link is a convincing application of social media, marketing, and analytic concepts to real cultural and customer behavior dynamics. I closed the book feeling that readers will quickly think how to best create a solid strategy. They will invest in Latino Link again and again as an actionable guide to serve Hispanic customers with genuine care.
Note: For Spanish speakers, please check out the Spanish version of this review, translated by Augusto Ellacuriaga of Spanish Translation.
Latino Link Uncovers Great Ways to Gain Hispanic Customers Online
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View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Oct 11th
| Keyword research has been and likely will always be the foundation of successful internet marketing. Having a quality keyword tool critical to finding… |
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View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!
Sep 3rd
| Oil prices lingered near $75 a barrel Friday in Asia, largely holding onto a big gain the… spin on U.S. economic reports and Asian stock markets rose. |
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View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!
Aug 21st
Having a problem determining how to deliver your services in a way that consistently satisfies your customers? Maybe the trouble lies in how the solution is framed. A suggestion from Lance Bettencourt, author of Service Innovation: How to Go From Customer Needs to Breakthrough Services, explains an enticing framework of opportunity:
“When conflicts arise in satisfying customers’ outcomes, they should be viewed as opportunities to take a new service delivery approach that challenges conventional industry wisdom.”
Bettencourt has crafted a fine book for service business owners seeking steps to address those opportunities. An experienced strategy adviser for Strategyn who has consulted for Microsoft, TD Bank and Abbott Medical Optics, Bettencourt provides a strategy development framework that business owners can easily understand and use to implement new services and operational ideas.
The Truth About How Your Customers View Your Services
Bettencourt approaches service innovation by declaring the four truths of services. These truths describes the kinds of existing services from the point of view of the customers’ benefit:
These approaches, assert Bettencourt, mean that “a company is forced to think about service innovation from multiple valuable perspectives,”adding that the approaches can overlap yet still yield economic results. He cites IBM’s revenue growth from $10 billion in 1990 to $50 billion as an example of benefiting from innovation discovery.
From there, Bettencourt identifies the four approaches to service innovation that a company can pursue to develop opportunities:
To help readers further understand, he treats the first three approaches in their own separate chapters. This allows readers to understand the supporting steps to defining the opportunities. Chapter Three, for example, examines a core job through formal questions such as “What must the customer do to successfully conclude the job?” and “What problems related to getting the job done must be resolved on occasion?” These questions are asked in a formal job map, a means to discover opportunities to improve service delivery.
I liked the book’s readability, and I particularly liked the job map processes. There is a map for each kind of service opportunity outlined, and the aforementioned formal questions appear for each step outline. Supporting comments are ready to offer “ah-has!” such as the following comment on the question, “What service needs or inputs must the customer define or communicate to ensure success obtaining service or benefits?”:
“Even for simple services, a service provider can add value by helping customers to define their needs. To be successful, the customer wants to have the right inputs available for making decisions, not overlook any relevant needs, limit the costs of defining needs, and define the needs in a manner that can translate into decisions concerning service options. To ensure that its customers get an optimized treatment plan for their lawn, for example, Scotts LawnService uncover a lawn’s unique challenges through a detailed analysis of soil types, shade and sun exposure, types of weeds and varying levels of grass density.”
Tables and charts also summarize the suggestions well. Figure 1-2 shows the flow chart for developing a successful service strategy, for example, while Table 7-1 lays out options for service delivery. You do not need to be the scale of IBM to use this methodology.
I thoroughly enjoyed Service Innovation because its concepts allow readers to take actions that can increase customer value and identify the opportunities for results. Service Innovation broadened my view of what I can look for to improve service to my customers.
An Outstanding Service Book You May Not Want to Share
Why, you ask?
It’s that good of an idea generator.
And given the number of small service businesses (they contribute 80 percent of the national GDP, according to Bettencourt), developing new ways to service customers is a worthwhile endeavor. This book flies in the face of those who cry out that customers are important yet never show exactly the way to really deliver. Service Innovation has the right framework to execute innovative ways to deliver services. The book quotes strategy guru Michael Porter, “…trade-offs are the essence of strategy. You just want to make the right ones.” Service Innovation will show the way.
Grow Your Sales and Gain Satisfied Customers Through “Service Innovation”
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View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Aug 1st
| Microsoft’s Internet Explorer browser, seems to be reversing its misfortunes and showing microscopic gains in browser market share. it grew 0.42%… |
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View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!
Jun 25th
| A new course is causing quite a buzz in the Internet Marketing community and you can find more information about this on the health diet showcase. |
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View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!