A gardener and a chef team up to show you how to grow beets and then use them in a delicious salad.
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A gardener and a chef team up to show you how to grow beets and then use them in a delicious salad.
View full post on Education Stories
Donovan McNabb will try to get the Redskins back in the win column Monday night against the Eagles. Washington, behind a Donovan McNabb touchdown pass and his solid quarterback play, beat Philadelphia back in Week 4.
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Los Angeles, CA, United States (AHN) – Celebrity couple Kelly Ripa and Mark Consuelos are set to team up for a scripted comedy for ABC. The former “All My Children” co-stars will co-write, executive produce, and star in the new project.
According to TV Guide, Kelly has entered into a script deal with the alphabet network to develop “Port Love,” a comedy which focuses on the backstage drama of a TV series.
She and Mark won’t just star in it, they will also executive produce and co-write the script along with Jeffrey Hodes and Nastaran Dibai.
This isn’t the first time Kelly pulled double duty on TV. She was still in “All My Children” when she replaced Kathy Lee Gifford in “Live…” She also starred in “Hope & Faith” from 2003 to 2006.
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Economies do not exist until somebody BUYS something! And economies cease to exist when a sale is not made. Management then decides “customers aren’t buying anything so let’s just cut heads, slash budgets, hunker down and shrink our way to greatness!”
Prospecting, Interviewing customers to properly identify problems and opportunities and then collaborating with them to find appropriate solutions seems to be a skill set lost to an entire generation. How did this happen?
Two major shifts drove this change. In the 50’s, 60’s and 70’s, virtually every company had a sales force that were required and depended on things like; prospecting- the creation of customers, product knowledge, application knowledge and selling skills. <strong>Great companies were built on great sales teams who were responsible for creating opportunities not for just selling them. </strong>The sales team was the engine, leading the charge, driving the revenues of the company! In the 90′s sales teams were deemed to expensive to maintain, inefficient, difficult to manage and the responsibility for driving revenues shifted to the marketing department. The theory was that the company could create demand for products and services through advertising, promotion and gimmicks then the company could merely harvest the flood of incoming orders with call centers or order desks. The second major shift currently taking place is from traditional marketing to internet marketing.
But, what happens when customers stop looking and searching the net and the phone stops ringing? Because selling is a lost art the solutions are limited to- increase the advertising, make even bigger claims of the importance of customer satisfaction, lower prices (again) and increase gimmicks like no money down, rebates, zero percent interest and free trips. Companies started spending more money on ad campaigns and google search then the entire sales force makes in salaries and commissions. While these marketing shifts created breakthroughs in the ability to reach greater numbers of potential customers, the fact is it failed! You don’t have to look far to see the corpses of companies who relied on marketing and disregarded the sales team; Circuit City, Heard Automotive, Dilliards, Sears, Washington Mutual, Wachovia and Merrill Lynch. These companies failed because of their dependence upon their marketing campaigns and their inability to sell their products! Marketing without a trained sales team is a “one way” vehicle, causing the company to only activate at the point of marketing and then become passive at the point of creating an opportunity or even closing on those created.
These marketing methods virtually eliminated management’s expectation of the sales team and their abilities. This is a critical problem in a recession, maybe event the cause of it, whereby the customers stop looking for new products and services, and therefore are immune to the wiles of marketing and promotion. The consumers’ focus in now also on cutting expenses and unless your product or service can help them save money without any investment, they simply won’t pay attention. Search engine optimization is useless when potential customers stop searching.
Companies <strong>must </strong>return to the creation of true sales skills and sales teams because without them nothing happens! Management, marketing and customer satisfaction does not sell product. Sales people sell products and you must have effectively trained salespeople that can (1) generate a prospect and (2) know how to determine what is needed, (3) how your product or service can satisfy that need and (4) how to justify a purchase decision. The lost art of real salesmanship must be restored in order to create the revenue a company desires.
A well trained sales team, not management, not the internet, not customer satisfaction and not marketing is the only thing that can cost effectively create customers in this economy. Economies exist only when someone finds a prospect and then sells that prospect a product or service at which point they exchange money with your company. Sales people drive entire economies and without them we have no economy.
Grant Cardone, Author of Sell to Survive
Grant Cardone is an author, entrepreneur and CEO of three very successful companies. He speaks to companies and individuals about how to create and maximize opportunities.
http://www.aboutgrantcardone.com/
There are considerable educational benefits to children’s teamwork exercises – but don’t tell them that! The reality is, by providing a group of children with a challenge to work with, they may improve communication, leadership and problem solving skills – but as far as they know, they’ll just be having a whole lot of fun.
A great way to get children working as a team is to involve them in school fundraising. In addition to promoting cohesiveness among a group, this will give the children a shared sense of purpose, as they work together to help raise funds for the improvement of their school. By having fun together in a challenging atmosphere, children learn to apply themselves, and become incredibly motivated.
The team aspect also ensures there is no ‘hiding place’, so all children become involved and have something to contribute. This can be hugely beneficial for quieter children, who will have the opportunity to find their special skill, and gain recognition which they may previously have shied away from. Similarly, natural extroverts will have a positive platform for their personality, where leadership skills and creative input is very important. Teamwork among children dramatically improves communication, and as a result, empathy. The result can be old breaking down of barriers, new friendships are formed and children are naturally encouraged to work with others perhaps outside their day-to-day clique of friends.
This improved communication, productivity and group dynamic will have a lasting impact on a class setting. There are many schools fundraising ideas which promote team building among kids as well as helping to generate cash for school trips, equipment and improved facilities. Another good fundraising idea is producing your own school Christmas cards. The team can draw on each child’s talents to design, produce and sell schools Christmas cards.
This can include ideas for themes, painting and drawing, writing of messages, marketing and selling the cards. By involving the various skills and contributions of children, each child is celebrated individually while gaining a sense of belonging to a team. Children benefit from an immense sense of pride in their school if they feel involved in its overall improvements. It’s also a guaranteed winner as a schools fundraising idea – every parent will want to buy their child’s school Christmas card.
My name is Ben Camelas, and I love to write about diets. Article Source:http://www.articlesbase.com/childhood-education-articles/educational-benefits-of-childrens-teamwork-exercises-1728013.html
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