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BIZNESS! Newsletter Issue 115

BIZNESS! Newsletter

 

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Cover Story

HitchSafe Secure

The HitchSafe slides into your current standard Hitch Receiver on your Truck, SUV or Van and is secured inside the Receiver Hitch via two bolt retaining bars inside the HitchSafe. The Hitch Receiver itself is a solid steel vault that combined with the HitchSafe provides the most secure location on your vehicle to store spare keys, credit cards….

Continued in BIZNESS! Newsletter Issue 115 >>>

 

Top Stories From CoolBusinessIdeas.com

– Butt Printing
– Giftskins Personalized Wrapping Paper
– Rainbow Bank
– Bread Spoon
– GiftFinder on a Hunch
– FeeFighters
– Posigrip Business Opportunity & Franchise Review

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Top Stories From GetEntrepreneurial.com

– Networking as Your Sole Marketing Vehicle
– Avactis Shopping Cart
– From One Entrepreneur to Another
– Gut Check Time
– Words Not Body Language Are the Foundation of Successful Communication
– What Small Business Owners Need to Know About Attracting Funding
– Bio Basics – How Much Is Too Much?

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Categories
Operations

The Big Picture of Shipping

The big picture of customer service is simple: businesses are supposed to make their customers happy. Businesses small and large employ numerous strategies so that their customers get the best possible experience and walk away happy. Ensuring client satisfaction boils down to the details and some things your business might be overlooking could in the long run lead to higher customer satisfaction and conversion. Shipping, for example, can be a speed bump for many small businesses that don’t properly assess the options available to them before sending products to their clients.

Developing a well-thought out plan for shipping can make things easier on both ends of doing business. The fact is that there are several high-quality delivery services available that all make concessions to facilitate small businesses. The choice between United Parcel Service (UPS), the US Postal Service (USPS) and Federal Express (FedEx) is a quandary faced by small business owners every day, and each has redeeming features that could potentially make it the best bet for your company.

The ultimate choice is for the small business to make, as each of the three is a competent and reliable delivery service. Depending on your budget and the speed of delivery service you require, each of the three offer sensible options for the small business owner. Careful consideration of the options available could in the long run lead to a more satisfied customer and less frequent headaches while dealing with shipping logistics.

FedEx has a solid reputation and a variety of services. FedEx locations also offer printing options, making FedEx a good idea for document printing and shipping. FedEx offers a myriad of services catering to small business owners’ demands for convenience and efficiency including a pickup service. Their shipping rates are competitive with UPS and USPS. Fedex can schedule package pickups from your company location and simply bill your account for the service. All the business is required to do is fill out pre-printed labels for the packages it is sending depending on the carriage method required.

USPS is the longest-established of the options available. USPS was the first of the group to introduce flat-rate shipping on a large scale, meaning that any piece of postage you send will cost the same regardless of distance to destination or package weight. Flat-rate shipping costs are consistently very similar to the cost of shipping an identical package conventionally and usually cheaper for heavier packages and the ability to instantly print labels online can be very convenient for prompt shipments. USPS ground shipping or standard mail is also the most affordable of the group, making lower-priority shipments less of a nuisance.

UPS has risen to power in the parcel delivery industry due in large part to their reliability in shipping. UPS offers a similar suite of features to small business owners with one significant bonus: regular package pickup from your place of business. UPS offers reliable ground shipping and is beginning to introduce a flat-rate shipping service of its own to compete with USPS.

Categories
Online Business

Avactis Shopping Cart

Avactis has always strived to create easy-to-use e-commerce software. Since those solutions have achieved good results in simplicity for developers, Avactis is now bringing the software up to a new level. The new release turns to non-programmer users.

Those who intend to open an online store often encounter the problem that buying a software license is not the only expense that needs to be considered. Apart from hosting services, out-of-the-box software requires designers to create a template, and programmers who can implement the project. To create a unique website design, a store owner will have to pay from $1,000 to $3,000. To change design elements, a store owner has to hire a programmer. Therefore the $200 to $400 spent for the license grows to at least 7 to 10 times the original cost.

To resolve this situation, Avactis is offering a solution that helps owners, who are not programmers, easily change default templates without having to resort to web-developers. The Avactis built-in visual CSS editor allows the changing of backgrounds and block sizes, font styles, logos, etc. The Avactis visual layout editor allows the showing and hiding of blocks and also changing their locations. These tools can help design a unique storefront from a standard Avactis template and save the store owners thousands of dollars.

One of the major advantages of Avactis, compared to other e-commerce solutions, is fast and easy integration of an online store into an existing website without any programmer’s knowledge or skills. In addition, the complexity of design does not matter. It’s equally easy to integrate Avactis into websites with simple design and into highly structured websites with complicated design and Flash intros. For this purpose we use a unique tag-based technology, which greatly facilitates the integration process.

Unlike other shopping cart software, Avactis is integrated into your website, instead of integrating your website into the online store.

Categories
Entrepreneurs

From One Entrepreneur to Another

Article Contributed by Sylvia Rosen

The poor job market and frail economy have created a type of panic throughout college campuses. College seniors who have worked very hard for the past four years are starting to realize that it might not pay off. Good grades, a high GPA and great recommendations won’t get their feet in the door –because there aren’t enough doors open.

According to the National Association of Colleges and Employers, only 24.4 percent of 2010 graduates who applied for a job had one waiting for them after graduation. Nevertheless, these challenging times have forced college students to evolve into something more than young professionals; it has forced them to become young entrepreneurs.

Today, college seniors are taking bigger risks sooner rather than later. Such was the case for Joe Shartzer, who made the risky decision to start his own business after graduation. Looking back today, Shartzer can highlight what steps he took that lead him to where he is now, a young entrepreneur who has already worked on projects for The New York Times, Williams-Sonoma and Food & Wine Magazine.

The secret ingredient to starting out

The saying you’ve been hearing throughout your education and work experience is in fact true: it’s not what you know, it’s who you know.

“It’s all about connections,” says Shartzer. “When I wanted to get involved in consulting and starting my own business, I leaned heavily on people I’d met from internships and from my education.”

Shartzer explains that although it’s important to acquire good grades, it’s more important to acquire strong relationships with the professors. One of the professors Shartzer never fails to recognize as someone who inspired him is Chuck Martin, CEO of The Mobile Future Institute and Director of the Center of Media Research.

“Chuck Martin gave me my first shot working with his company. That’s the biggest value I think a lot of students miss; the business potential from professors and others at your university,” Shartzer says.

The one area where Shartzer did want to rely heavily on himself was funding:

“I’d rather work hard, grow my business and keep complete control versus selling off partial ownership for an immediate increase in resources.”

Although funding your own business is the riskier option, Shartzer explains that a lot of small businesses start out bootstrapping their first company as a way to maintain focus and control.

The big challenge for young entrepreneurs

Being your own boss has its perks: you control what you want to do, when you want to do it, and who you want to do it with. The big challenge with this work ethic, however, is maintaining the focus needed to make these decisions.

“The focus always has to be on your bottom line,” says Shartzer. “I think there’s a tendency to work on a venture until it’s perfect but that’s a great way to exhaust all your startup resources and fail. The balance between day-to-day focus and strategic planning is one of the most interesting aspects of being an entrepreneur,” he explains.

This is likely to be the toughest challenge young entrepreneurs will face because they are just coming out of a college environment. In college, students are told what assignments they need to do and when they need to do it by. When you are your own boss, you are responsible for assigning yourself the work and the deadline; this requires a lot of discipline. However, if done successfully, the payoff is great.

“It’s the truest form of commission out there,” Shartzer explains. “Complete control of strategic vision and being able to take ideas in a direction that only you might see.”

The tools behind success

Shartzer considers himself reasonably successful and in a good place with his first project. The resources and tools that he said helped him and that recommends include:

If you are a college senior and thinking about starting your own business, know that it will take hard work, discipline and the right connections. The first year might not be the best year but it should definitely be the year when you take the most chances.

For more information about Joe Shartzer and his business venture, you can go to his site: http://joeshartzer.com/

About the author:
Sylvia Rosen is a web content writer with a background in newspaper journalism. She connects with business professionals to write articles on a variety of industry topics such as small business phone systems, business software and online management tools.

Categories
Communication Skills

Words Not Body Language Are the Foundation of Successful Communication

Whoever spent time as a child on a school playground and been the victim of name calling knows the deflective phrase used to counter those slurs, “sticks and stones may break my bones but names can never hurt me,” isn’t enough to overcome the impact of those bullying communications to youthful, developing ears.

The messages young children hear in those early years often become part of their psychological makeup for years to come, and sometimes lead to visits to therapists as adults.

Related: Hearing Aids for all ages

This is just one example of the power of words. Words are powerful, very powerful. Words are much more powerful than an old, worn out, and just plain inaccurate communication model proclaims.

What has become known as the Mehrabian Myth espouses that “words” only amount to 7% of the meaning of a communicated message, leaving tone and body language making up 93% of that message’s meaning.

If you’ve ever done any sales training or leadership communication training since 1972 you’ve probably learned the communication model about which I am writing. It’s the model that shows the three key components of any communication and the respective contribution each proclaims to bring to the meaning of any message:

Verbal (words) = 7%
Vocal (tone) = 38%
Visual (body language) = 55%

If this were to be true I could have attended Carmen at the Metropolitan Opera in New York City as I did last November, and understood 93% of the plot and the individual character’s stories without reading the subtitles on the screen in front of me. I couldn’t. Neither could you.

Words are tremendously important.

Yet this communication model, which began in 1967 with two psychological studies reported in the Journal of Consulting Psychology and the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, respectively, and was loosely reinforced in 1971 by research conducted and reported by Professor Albert Mehrabian, Ph.D. of UCLA in two books he published titled Silent Messages and Nonverbal Communications.

These studies are not the culprit of the misguided applied meaning of this research. If the research and related commentary is reviewed one learns that these studies never proclaimed their findings were to be broadly applied to general and regular communication in all situations between human beings.

It seems the more accurate meaning of this research has been usurped and twisted so often, by so many sources; it is impossible to identify the genesis of this skewed meaning. One of the big perpetrators is the NLP industry (Neuro-Linguistic Programming, a philosophy and model for personal and professional transformation effectively used in the coaching and personal development industry), of which I am a member.

I used to teach this 7%-38%-55% communication model, although never truly felt comfortable with it. Amazingly, audiences never challenged me on it and continued to buy it. Even reinforcing the model telling me how important body language is to the meaning of a message.

I’m not arguing that body language and the visual component of a communication is not important. And, based on my personal experience I truly believe that tone may even be more important that body language.

What I’m espousing is that the Mehrabian Myth model places too much importance on body language and tone. What is needed is a model that will more accurately reflect the attention that people on both sides of any communication can feel comfortable applying so there are fewer mis-communications in the world.

In my white paper titled, The 7 Deadliest Sins of Leadership & Workplace Communication, I stress the importance of specific communication. A “Lack of Specificity” is one of those 7 Deadliest Sins. One of keys to specific communication is to be certain our communication is congruent between the verbal, the vocal and the visual components.

Congruency doesn’t necessarily mean equal. Congruency means the appropriate level of each to accurately get the message across. The most important thing to remember in terms of this model is that it really all starts with “words.”

I’d like to propose a new model and a new way to look at this that is totally unscientific but comes from many years of being a human being communicating with these three components daily, and as a business coach and consultant regularly working with business leaders and their teams to improve communication every day.

That new model would look like this:

Verbal (words) = 50%
Vocal (tone) = 30%
Visual (body language) = 20%

This model gives significant and appropriate weight to words because words can inspire, words can motivate, words can de-motivate and words can destroy. It also offers appropriate emphasis to the other two key components.

Anthony Robbins, one of the most well known motivational coaches in the world offers a communication philosophy called “Transformational Vocabulary.” He teaches the power of changing the negative, hurtful words we use in our self-talk into empowering, positive words that will make us, and others, feel better and be motivating. A simple example is shifting the word “problem” to “situation,” “challenge” or even “opportunity.” He teaches this because words matter.

Tone and body language matter, too, just not as much as the Mehrabian Myth has mistakenly promised us for the past four decades.

If you’d like a practical and immediately applicable approach to improving communication in your organization at the highest levels of leadership down to your frontline customer service personnel, go to the HowToImproveOrganizationalCommunication website and download the free white paper The 7 Deadliest Sins of Leadership & Workplace Communication.

About the Author

Skip Weisman is The Leadership & Workplace Communication Expert. Skip works with the leaders and teams in small to medium sized businesses and not-for-profits to improve communication, collaboration and teamwork in a way that delivers champion level results. To get started on improving your organization’s communication download the free report “The 7 Deadliest Sins of Leadership & Workplace Communication,” available at www.HowToImproveLeadershipCommunication.com