Recent posts related to

Finances

Recent posts related to

Finances

Your Constant Companion

By Early to Rise | 10/15/2009

You have a companion. One that never, ever leaves you. It sticks with you, staying even closer than your shadow. It is like a leech sucking your blood, and you cannot shake it loose. This constant companion is your mental chatter. Another name for it is your internal monologue. It…

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I Hate Sleeping In

By Early to Rise | 10/15/2009

When you are an early riser, getting up two hours later seems like you are losing half a day. My back was cramping yesterday, so I took a muscle relaxer last night. I slept fitfully and didn’t get out of bed till 8:00. That’s at least two hours “late” for…

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How Much “Envisioning” Should You Do?

By Early to Rise | 10/15/2009

BK, MN, BB, and I were talking about mergers and how companies are managed afterward. The doomed AOL/Time-Warner combo (and split earlier this year) came up. This got very quickly into the question of how much forward thinking a CEO should do.

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Keyword due diligence

By Bob Bly | 10/14/2009

Before you optimize your website or buy pay-per-click (PPC) traffic, you should perform “keyword due diligence.” That means you must check to see that Internet users are actually searching for information on your product by using the same keywords you assumed they would use. When I tell this to people,…

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Who Pays Attention to Big Business?

By Early to Rise | 10/14/2009

A recent study found that 2008’s media coverage of the financial crisis was all about big government and big business. Small-business issues merited just 5 percent of the total. Newspapers and magazines and television experts were almost entirely focused on the auto industry, bank bailouts, and stimulus plans. And most…

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How to Get Out of That Damned Rut

By Early to Rise | 10/14/2009

“How do you get out of a rut?” a good friend asked me. “Regain passion for your work? Get yourself up for each day?” “Have you thought about this?” he continued. “It happens to me often. It makes me miserable. I feel useless, because I tend to piss away the…

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Eat More… and Lose Weight?

By Early to Rise | 10/14/2009

This is a fat country. And that means Americans are prone to a long list of fat-related health problems. Heart disease and high blood pressure are two of the big ones. Dr. Al Sears, my personal physician, has helped me lose more than 25 pounds of fat, reduce my blood…

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A Classic Success-Thwarting Mistake

By Early to Rise | 10/14/2009

I sent a memo to a client last week, telling him about a clever advertising campaign that one of his competitors is using. I had inside info that the competitor is making a lot of money with it. My client’s response was to tell me what is wrong with what…

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Eighty-six

By Early to Rise | 10/14/2009

“Eighty-six” is diner slang for taking an item off the menu or canceling an order. It’s also used by bars and restaurants when they refuse to serve an unruly or drunk customer. By extension, it can mean rejecting, discarding, or getting rid of anything or anyone (especially gangster style).

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Reflecting on Freedom

By Early to Rise | 10/13/2009

Just about everyone claims to be in favor of freedom. But few seem to agree on what it means. One person’s idea of freedom can actually violate another person’s freedom. To one person, it means doing what he wants with his own life. To another, it means doing what he…

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Persuade Everybody About Anything by Adding a “Pitch”

By Early to Rise | 10/13/2009

If you want people to do as you wish, don’t tell them, sell them. This is a simple rule that applies to almost any situation. I not only use it in my advertising copy, I use it to persuade my:

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Don’t Walk Away With Nothing

By Early to Rise | 10/13/2009

Important Sales Insight: People often feel guilty about saying “no.” After you’ve spent time trying to persuade them to buy something, they feel bad about just saying “no.” They may say “no,” but there is lingering guilt for having wasted your time.

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