Archive for sell quick
Jan
15
On animal crosing, wild world, on the DS, where do you get turnips from to sell to the shop?
so you dont dig them up from anywhere then?
Rent Back Fast
Jan
01
Business Lawyers Hampshire, Commercial Lawyer Hampshire
Posted by: | CommentsChoosing the right lawyer and getting the right legal advice is essential to solving the crisis at hand. Legal problems can be complicated and need expert guidance so that they can be solved satisfactorily. For people living in Hampshire there is no cause for concern as one can find ample number of reliable business lawyers ,commercial lawyers, divorce solicitors, moving house as well as conveyance lawyers.
Commercial law is the body of law, which governs business and commerce. It is often considered to be a division of civil law and treats with both issues of private and public law. Commercial law regulates corporate contracts, hiring practices and the manufacture and sales of consumer goods. And commercial lawyers deal with issues like property development, landlord and tenant, secured lending, buying and selling investment portfolios etc. Commercial property lawyers Hampshire emphasize on speedy achievements, protecting the interests of clients, and giving them a quick and satisfactory result.
Business law consists of several different areas typically taught in school curricula that include the law of corporations and other business organizations, securities law and etc. Business lawyers Hampshire deals and advises regarding partnerships, franchises, sole traders and start ups. They help to grow in business with their effective commercial experience, negotiable skills and eye to minor details. This helps in achieving the objective of the business and maximizing the profit margins.
Hampshire also has reliable civil lawyers along with the commercial experts. A relationship is one of the most important things that human beings cherish. But when it breaks due to some unavoidable circumstances one needs the right guidance and counseling to go through the trauma. Your woes can be perfectly taken care of by the well-known divorce solicitors Hampshire is known for. They deal with clients sympathetically in order to decrease their burden and offer a positive, optimistic, affirmative advice so that they could feel better in future.
Entertainment law or media law is a term for a mix of more traditional categories of law with a focus on providing legal services to the entertainment industry. Entertainment lawyer Hampshire helps to protect the ability of the expertise in the fields of TV, radio, film, and theater production and licensing. They also provide proper professional guidance so that the experts could make the most of their creativity.
Real Estate Proffessionals
Dec
18
Is a quick sale the same thing as a short sale?
Posted by: | CommentsI saw a home listing with the words “quick sale” so I wasn’t sure if it’s an actual term that has the same meaning as a short sale.
Quick House Sale
Dec
11
Q&a: Tim Cummins, International Association for Contract & Commercial Management
Posted by: | CommentsThe International Association for Contract & Commercial Management is a non-profit foundation providing research and innovative learning techniques, and working with corporations, public and academic bodies to provide thought-leadership and understanding of ‘best practice’ contracting and relationship standards. SSON spoke with IACCM President and CEO Tim Cummins about how the Association is working with shared services and outsourcing organisations to establish best practice - and how old business models are simply unable to cater for today’s rapidly changing commercial requirements.
SSON: Tim, tell us a little about the work that IACCM is doing in the shared services space.
Tim Cummins: When I talk about shared services I’m really talking and thinking about the creation of shared services groups within an organisation, which is in a sense how do functions –especially some of the business support functions - interoperate into a more effective and more cohesive group. So in terms of our role, interestingly – and unusually for any association – we’ve already undertaken the amalgamation through our membership of three of those groups, being the commercial sales contracts organisation, the legal organisation, and the procurement/sourcing/supply chain organisation.
These are already well embraced within our umbrella, and of course a lot of our mission and motivation of that is to really try to help them to understand where their synergies are, from the point of view of their business contribution and of their skill-sets, and their procedures. And we’re really trying to get them to look far more holistically at how through collaboration and cooperation they can bring greater value to the organisation. In that itself I suppose we’ve got a fairly patent start point, and obviously within that we’ve been exploring a lot of ideas around what best-practice service-delivery models will look like. I was highlighting, for example, one such model – one to which my mind is one of the leading ones, being that at Procter & Gamble – you may have noticed quite extensively in my blog recently.
I think the broader point is also however that we understand that shared service activity doesn’t stop at the boundaries of our particular group; in that collaborative spirit, we as an association recognise that we really need to try to set an example to our members by our own focus on collaboration. So for example we’ve signed formal alliance agreements with the International Project Management Association (IPMA) because we clearly see project managers as another component of that overall shared services mix, so we want to work with them as a community to say “OK, what’s the cross-learning? How do we empower your people to be more effective? How do we in our area of expertise equip you and provide you with on-demand capability?” We have a similar relationship with the Institute of Business Development (IBD). For example at our last major conference we actually had six partner associations representing other different groups that would usually fit in within the overall shared service model.
SSON: Why do you think it would be appropriate for an SSO, or individuals within an SSO, to become involved with the IACCM? And would there be a certain level of maturity or of scope at which that would become appropriate?
TC: Certainly in terms of the leadership of many of the shared services groups as I’ve just outlined we represent some leading-edge thinking in how you can actually get groups that traditionally perhaps have not cooperated well, have not really seen themselves as contributing well to a common business process, to rethink a lot of that. Certainly our view of the future of organisational design is that it is likely to be driven much more by the alignment of business process than by the alignment of business functions. The stovepipe model doesn’t really work any longer, and I’ll expand on that for just a moment.
In the 20th-century business model we had the alignment of people within areas of specialism. And within a highly standardised, typically manufacturing process, where your goal was to deliver high volume and high quality, then having the rigour supplied by highly disciplined professionals and experts in a particular field was very much like the way that you would design a production line. So you saw everything as being something that passed through in a relatively unchanging process, where actually your issue was more about quality and consistency than about creativity or innovation.
That as you’ll appreciate has changed dramatically as we’ve moved to a networked world, with all the forces of competition, the forces of change, the forces of moving into new markets and having to handle them with far greater consistency – you can’t really allow any longer the levels of variation that the old country model used to create, yet at the same time you also need to be able to be creative around the differences that are really required. Businesses are having to become far more responsive yet at the same time, of course, the affordability of that old infrastructure has been proven not to be - affordable. So at the same time as organisations are facing all these new challenges, they’re having to rip their guts out by outsourcing large chunks of that activity. So we’ve now suddenly got these broken enterprise models where they’re still trying essentially to manage it through the old functional organisations.
That’s a lot of what our agenda is about really, how do you reengineer business process to manage a portfolio of trading relationships and how do you also coordinate internal resources – the retained resource – to actually ensure that the performance is not only sustained but differentiated from the competition.
SSON: It’s the internal bit obviously that’s of most interest to the shared services aspect of our network, so with what you’ve just said in mind, how do you go about establishing, for example, best practices in such a rapidly changing dynamic environment? And to what extent do you think best practice is actually being hit at all?
TC: Good question. Taking the first bit: I think the key to this of course is to understand that that same power of network technology that is causing such disruption is also something that can cause great enablement. And the organisations that are rising to the top are those that understand the capabilities – the unique capabilities – that network technologies have now produced. So to give an example, at our association we have abandoned old models of things like country-based chapters and moved instead to global communities of interest. We know that it’s going to be more relevant for somebody to be able to talk to a fellow expert in risk management, or performance management, or in service-level agreements – obviously being connected into a global network of experts in that field is going to be a lot more relevant than turning up at a local chapter meeting. So we need to adjust and adapt. And I think that’s proving very very tough for many individuals.
Many of our us are from an older generation: we’re not brought up in that world, we were brought up in a world where things were much more about personal connectivity. There are some big shifts in behaviour. At the moment we see many of our community as being victims of technology rather than beneficiaries of technology.
So who has become leading-edge? Well, I go back to companies like Procter & Gamble which clearly understood the dynamic impact that network technologies could have on their abilities to cooperate, share information, build knowledge, and therefore drive change and innovation rather than finish up spending all their time fighting internal contention, or handling crises that occur because somebody over-committed, or under-committed, or failed to meet a deadline, or whatever.
So how can you use technology to develop better early-warning systems, how can you use technology to accumulate knowledge which becomes a driver and a force for change and update so you’re actually staying ahead of the curve, rather than behind it? That’s clearly a message that a number of top corporations have understood – at people like IBM you’ll hear that sort of conversation all the time. I think there are many in the UK who’ve probably understood it at board-level but are probably struggling with what that means from an implementation point of view.
SSON: It’s almost as if the logical consequence of what you’re saying is that geography per se is getting less and less relevant, and individual national and regional idiosyncrasies are also getting less relevant – the way you’ve moved to a more global sphere-of-relevance model, rather than locality, is an example. Do you think we’re looking at a true homogenisation of business or do you think there will always be the need to cater for local differences? I’m thinking in particular of China, and the way that it’s assumed that in order to do business in China you need to cater for Chinese customs, guanxi etc – that doesn’t seem to be something that’s going to be easily overcome through any power of networking or communicative advances.
TC: I think that’s a very interesting question and it’s one of course where the answer is very mixed. The forces of globalisation and network technology on the one hand are clearly seen by many of those who are currently in power as a very real threat. And so there may be controls based on limited access to the internet through to, obviously, other forms of control. When you look at governmental actions in response to the forces of globalisation, even those who are supposedly enlightened and are going to benefit from it are in fact instituting a lot of fairly restrictive practices.
We’ve seen for example a dramatic increase in the complexity of export-import regulations, in direct response really to these forces of international trade and the wish of governments to try to protect particular industries or markets; the US – supposedly the bastion of free trade – is one of the worst. So it isn’t an unblemished field where everybody’s moving forwards on a gradual mission. In fact I’ve written quite a lot on the blog on this and we’ve had very active debate in our board about this: the question of “was globalisation inevitable?”.
And it’s very interesting because there’s a study on this we came across, a fairly large research study of that question among CEOs – which is what sparked our own debate. I think 89 per cent of CEOs said that yes, globalisation was inevitable – and I presume the other 11 per cent said “no” rather than “don’t know”! But that’s a pretty damning statistic if that’s truly what CEOs believed, in the way that they expressed it; it certainly implies that they’re not particularly proficient risk managers. Because there are many, many things that could really derail globalisation. There are very real cultural issues; there are clearly threats – you know, what is global terrorism and why and how is it being driven? There are many communities out there that feel very threatened by all this and many of the people who are currently in power – including many of our own politicians – obviously on one level embrace it where it’s bringing benefits to their countries but then fight it where it isn’t. So I think it’s far from a foregone conclusion.
On another point, we at this very moment are doing a very interesting piece of research on exactly the point you were just raising – although actually we’re doing it more generically around Asia-Pacific; we went out with a question to our Asia-Pacific members earlier this week on exactly this: how much of an effect is globalisation having on your local approaches to business relationships, trading relationships etc etc. To date we’ve had somewhere in excess of 100 replies. From those I’ve read so far the message is very loud and clear that it is having an effect, a substantial impact; that certainly the principles of contracting and the involvement of the legal elements of the contracting process has been driven up very substantially towards what we would typically think of as the western model.
So to your point about China, the Chinese input suggests that in fact there is a very real change coming round more to the model that we would be familiar with. Having said that, will there be some counterbalancing influences? I think there will be some; certainly I think the traditional strong transactional focus of many western buyers – particularly procurement organisations – is getting shifted. I think people are realising that actually relationships do have importance, and that perhaps at the global level they have even more importance than they did nationally.
We used to have a common set of values and principles that we could broadly presume, so if I was doing trade with someone in the UK I knew they were going to care about their local reputation, I knew that when I spoke to them they would understand what I was saying – so we didn’t have to put the same disciplines into communication and management of the relationship which are absolutely critical to success in the global market. So one of the things that we’re all learning from the east, in a way, is some of the importance of taking a bit more time, being a bit more precise, having more tolerance of building some degree of relationship and concern for each other that goes beyond just “OK, I’ve got a deal for you: what’s your price?”
SSON: Well, that sounds nice… But is that genuinely a shift you’re noticing? Particularly in the face of the current slowdown, is there enough time for time, as it were; is there enough space for that kind of civility?
TC: Again, some very interesting components to the answer to that. One is of course that again because of technologies and other things we can be increasingly sophisticated in our relationship segmentations. Is this a one-size-fits-all? Of course it isn’t. There are some transactions that are transactions, and there are some relationships that are relationships, and if you get the two confused you’re going to mess up.
Our research shows that cycle-times for more complex relationships have in any case been increasing, not decreasing; that the complexity – and I would put that in part down to some of these shared services issues – the inefficiencies of organisations, their inability to coordinate across the various stakeholders (particularly as many of those stakeholders are now outsource providers) is actually debilitating business from making decisions quickly. Again this is a real driver for a fundamental change in the way they organise – and we’ve seen dramatic variation in the cycle-time between best-practice organisations as they look at for example entering into complex relationships, outsource deals etc – tremendous variations in the cycle-times depending on whether they’ve really understood these dynamics or not.
To return to your question, I would say that yes, there is absolutely evidence of it occurring. We’re dealing with a number of major corporations at the moment and one of the key issues for them at the moment – buy-side and sell-side – is “how do I become easier to do business with?” We’re preparing an article right now on this, on the ease of doing business. “How do I make myself a customer of choice?” “How do I make myself a supplier of choice?” That’s one of the commonest questions I’m getting right now. And that clearly indicates to me that yes, there is executive management concern about this: does it flow down? Do they have definitive answers? Well, that’s where IACCM works, and one of the biggest research projects we’re doing at the moment through a series of interviews with best-practice organisations is an understanding of what are the components that make up best practice post-award contract and relationship management.
Sell House Quick
Oct
30
Oct
09
I want sell my forniture which is best place for quick sale?
Posted by: | Commentshi,I want sell my forniture which is the quick place for sale these staff?
thanks
Rent Back Fast
Sep
04
Your 30-Second Commercial and What To Say Next
Posted by: | CommentsIs your 30-second commercial or elevator speech powerful? Does it invite others to want to know more? Do you even have a 30-second commercial? How do you know if someone’s really interested and wants to get more information? And what do you say next?
A 30-second commercial or elevator speech is a brief introduction of what you do. This is the start of a conversation to find out if someone wants to know more about what you do.
Whether you sell products in your home business, or whether you are looking for other distributors, it’s important to take the time to create an interesting, but brief intro to your business.
So how do you create an effective 30-second commercial? First, realize that most people are dissatisfied with one or more of these areas:
1. Their finances 2. Amount of free time they have 3. Their job or current business 4. Their health
Taylor your 30-second commercial to hit one of those areas. Start with a question that addresses one of those key areas. “Do you know how concerned people are about making ends meet?” “Do you know how disappointed people are with never having enough time with their family?” “Do you know how people just don’t have enough energy?”
Find a hot button that you know people struggle with. Then show them how you solve that problem. “Well, what I do is to help/show/work with people to….”
Let’s say you meet Jane at a business mixer. The first thing to remember is to forget about YOU and learn about Jane. Ask her questions about her family, her job or business, how long she’s been in that job, etc. Be sincerely interested in Jane, who she is and what she does. If you are, then in almost every situation, Jane will ask you what you do.
Instead of answering Jane in just one or two words, start by asking a question. “Do you know how frustrated people are with their jobs?…Well, what I do is to show people how to get out of the rat race and start their own fun, simple and profitable home business with a product people already love.”
You can design your 30-second commercial around your product or service, or around your business opportunity. Either way, you are stating a common problem and then offering a solution through what you do.
Now, if Jane has no interest in what you do, she might say. “Oh.” If she doesn’t ask any questions, then either she has no interest in what you do, or your 30-second commercial wasn’t powerful enough. If someone doesn’t ask any other questions, that’s your clue to move on to another topic of conversation.
However, if Jane can relate to what you’ve said, she’ll probably say something like, “Really? What’s your product?” or “Hmmm, how do you do that?” What you do next is critically important.
Do NOT start rattling off all the facts about how great your product, service or business is. Avoid getting so excited about your product and business that you start talking non-stop. At this stage, if you start giving detailed facts about every aspect of your product or business, you will turn people off very quickly.
Answer the questions directly but also ask Jane another question to learn more of her situation. By asking Jane questions you’ll learn more about how you could really help her. If Jane asks you more questions, then the door is open to have a true conversation with her about your business.
Make sure that you keep the focus on HER and if your product or business could help her. Do not focus on “selling” her on your product or business. Just relax and listen for a way you can sincerely help. After talking for a few minutes, if there appears to be a genuine interest, ask if you can get together for about 30 minutes (by phone or in person) to give her all the details. That’s the time for a complete presentation.
This all starts with an interesting 30-second commercial. Perfect yours and be able to say this in your sleep. Ask questions, listen more than you talk and keep the focus on how your product or business can solve an area of dissatisfaction for the other person.
Passive Income
Aug
14
Foreclosure on my credit report, but quick sale occurred?
Posted by: | CommentsAfter divorce, ex-husband moved back into house. He never made a house payment. I moved out of town. My name is only on the mortgage. (did a quick claim deed) with his. Foreclosure is on my credit report however quick sale occurred. How do I get this off of my credit report. I otherwise have good credit.
Quick Property Sale
Jul
31
Decide Commercial Property Market Value Before Investing
Posted by: | CommentsCommercial property is often used as a source of profit for investors. It can provide great returns with a minimal amount of work. If you are interested in buying commercial real estate, it is important to determine how much the property is worth in terms of market value. This way you will know whether a certain piece of land will be a profitable investment or not.
What is a Commercial Property?
Commercial property consists of buildings and land that is specifically zoned for business uses, and not for residential living. This includes all sorts of establishments like industrial buildings, offices and hotels. Things like hospitals, malls, golf courses, self-storage units, and independent retail stores are all meant for commercial purposes. They generate profit for investors either through rental income or from capital gains, when resold at a higher price.
Use the Gross Rent Multiplier (GRM) to Determine Value
The value of a commercial property is based on several factors. For instance, more the building generates rental income the more valuable it is in general. This is affected by the location, whether it is in a busy popular area of a business district or whether it is on the outskirts of a town, easily accessible or just out of the way. The property’s worth is also determined by the value of neighboring buildings as well as how much of the similar type of real estate is available in a given area.
Certainly you can find out the market value of the commercial property by hiring a real estate professional, but you can make your own quick calculations to get a rough idea about the worth of a particular estate. This can be done by using this formula:
Market Value= Annual Gross Rent * Gross Rent Multiplier
To use this formula you will obviously need to find out some basic information about the land from the seller or from real estate agent listing the building. You will need to find out how much revenue the property brings in each year in rental income. That is the annual gross income.
The GRM is a ratio of a property’s sales price divided by its annual gross rents. To determine the GRM on your own, you need to get hold of a several listings for properties that are similar to the one you are considering. You find the GRM or each one and average them all together.
Once you have the GRM you will be able to figure out the approximate market value of an investment property. For example, if you know that the its rental incomes total is $100,000 for the year and the average GRM for similar properties is 8, than the value of your prospective investment land is $800,000. Using this formula is pretty accurate, and it will help you as you try to narrow down your selection of buildings to buy. Yet when it’s time to actually buy the building, you will need a professional appraiser to satisfy the requirements of your investment loan.
Real Estate Proffessionals
Jul
24
Every Sales and Marketing Campaign a Winner!
Posted by: | CommentsThe best advice I can give you at this point is to tell you to read right to the end of this article to find the gold dust.
Commercial managers sometimes forget how important the sales and marketing elements are to their success in business. They become so hide-bound by administration that they overlook this vital element of commercial life. It is always an after thought, or they just can’t or won’t find the time to manage it properly. And yet, if there are product and services to be sold, they should be doing so in the most cost effective and profitable way, maximizing the market exposure and the returns on investment. This holds true for small single owner business as much as for huge corporations.
Without customer knowledge or awareness, there can be no purchase, and where no one is buying there can be no profit. Marketing is the science of bringing the right product to the market, at the right price, in the right way, at a Nett profit. Responsibility for the effectiveness of this falls to the sales and marketing department.
Everyone has their own preferred emphasis. For some it is search engine marketing, for others it is email marketing, for many it is direct marketing. However one chooses, identifying the correct marketing strategies as part of the overall campaign is imperative. It is the very root of the success you desire for yourself and your employer.
Training seminars and events should be attended often by all those operating in the sales and marketing arena. Selling is a skill that comes naturally to some, but not to most. Yet it is possible to master these skills so they become more like drills. With the right training and strategies in place, the appropriate successful selling responses should kick in automatically. With marketing too, the responses should be creative and limitless.
There is such a choice of media now that for the marketers it can be overwhelming. The widespread use of the Internet and the increasing availability of high speed connections, along with TV,results in vast numbers of potential customers being introduced to a product or service in no time at all. A quick review of what people enter into the search engines also helps paint a picture of the market psychology. It is amazing how people type words in an almost random order. For example, one of the most searched terms is engine marketing search. It’s a funny way to do it, but more than 1 million searches do so each month. Why do they reverse the words? I can’t tell you- but I do know that it is important commercial intelligence that might be able to be used in some way when reflecting on the strategy and the campaign.
Some managers will opt to delegate everything to a marketing agency. The difficulty here is that many would like to seize the opportunity to do their own thing at your expense. They can be like architects who do the same. The point is that for an agency marketing campaign, there must be a tightly detailed and described brief and a contract that while not limiting the ideas or creative juices of the agents and their staff, keeps them firmly bound to what you require. All this of course should be underpinned by solid market research.
At its most basic level, both selling and marketing are about the art of communications and the best choice of media for the markets to be targeted. Not all potential customers require the same approach. For example, wholesale and retail markets will attract different methods of communication by the sales team. Again, if a product is to be sold in a store or shop, it is not the same approach as advertising an article to be sold at auction. The advertisements for each will appear in different magazines and other media, and the ads will vary too in design, presentation and language.
The real secret of success here is to start to do things differently. The old maxim about being surprised when there is no change in circumstances while you continue to do things in the same way stands as an eternal truth. I would encourage anyone to go and see, hear and / or read what Dan Kennedy has to say on this subject. A quick Google search will reveal a wealth of material. My best counsel is that you should note well what he has to say. Dan is one of the foremost sales and marketing consultants in America.
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