Recent posts related to

I started life at 20

Recent posts related to

I started life at 20

Taking All the Right Supplements, but Still in Pain

By James B. LaValle | 05/26/2008

You may have heard that glucosamine HCL and chondroitin can help rebuild damaged cartilage in your joints. But what if you’re taking supplements to relieve your aching joints, and you just aren’t feeling better?

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Lower the Bar

By Noah St. John | 05/24/2008

To succeed in business and your personal life, you often hear that you need to be more competitive – that you need to keep “raising the bar.” But is that really necessary… or even a good idea?

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The Best Bread for a Healthy Diet

By Mark Morgan Ford | 05/24/2008

When you’re trying to get healthy, fiber is a super-substance that you can’t get enough of. That’s why I try to include 100 grams or more of fiber in my daily diet.

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7 Sizzling Business “Discoveries” From Stanford’s Facebook Project

By Charlie Byrne | 05/23/2008

Combing back through the longstanding principles you’ve come to know and love by reading ETR and Michael Masterson’s new blockbuster book, Ready, Fire, Aim, I found at least seven “power principles” with fascinating parallels to the Stanford project.

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Vending Business

The Truth About the Vending Business

By Paul Lawrence | 05/23/2008

So one of the first “insider secrets” I learned about the vending business is that your written agreement with the distributor must describe the kind of locations you will be getting.

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2 Eggs or a Pop Tart?

By James B. LaValle | 05/23/2008

An egg has approximately 200 mg of cholesterol, and frying or scrambling it can up the cholesterol to approximately 245 mg. According to Kellogg’s, a Blueberry Pop Tart contains no cholesterol, but it does have 39.8 g of carbohydrates – almost half of them from pure sugar. So which is a healthier breakfast – an egg or a Pop Tart?

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Why Most Expensive Stocks Are Rip-Offs

By Andrew Gordon | 05/22/2008

Many investors swear by the “efficient market theory.” All it means is that through the magic of millions of investors buying and selling stock every day, you get what you pay for. If a company is cheap, it’s cheap for a reason. If it’s expensive, it’s expensive for a reason.

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A Lesson in Service From a Detroit Airport Waitress

By Suzanne Richardson | 05/22/2008

Just anticipate what your customers want, and deliver.

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Anti-Aging Strategies From the Longest-Lived People in the World

By Dr. Jonny Bowden | 05/22/2008

Recently, I interviewed Dan Buettner, whose latest book, The Blue Zones, is a veritable treasure trove of tips for living longer. Buettner is an explorer whose work for National Geographic led to the book. He investigated four parts of the world where there are more healthy centenarians than anywhere else – Sardinia, Italy; Loma Linda, CA; Okinawa, Japan; and Costa Rica’s Nicoya Peninsula. Here’s what we can learn from the folks who’ve done “anti-aging” better than anyone else on the planet.

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Getting Smarter

By Rich Schefren | 05/22/2008

…even though the brain is an organ, in many ways it behaves like a muscle. What I mean is, your brain, unlike other physical organs, doesn’t wear out. In fact, the more you use your brain, and the more you challenge it, the stronger it gets.

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Why Good Prospects Don’t Return Your Phone Call

By Bob Bly | 05/21/2008

If you sell a professional, creative, consultative, or technical service, the following “Triple Play” Follow-Up System can help you increase your closing rate of leads to sales by 50 percent or more.

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All-Weather Investing

By Andrew Gordon | 05/21/2008

Guess what? What with the recession… the subprime crisis… foreclosures… inflation… and more, your portfolio is very likely flying into uncharted weather.

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