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Hub You - Communications Problems and How to Stop Them Ruining Your eBay Business
Sales Organization Strategies reproduction postcards which has generated double figure bidding for something worth pennies which can be printed millions of times from the owner's computer. That term 'second strike' was confusing even to me and I've been in the postcard business for years; it's a term best avoided. It's dishonest to use words just to confuse bidders into thinking your product is something it isn't, so exercise caution choosing words to dress up your listings. That 'Second Strike' example is acceptable where a definition is provided alongside so bidders know exactly what it means.Sales Organization Strategies It was 3000 BC. Tribal club seller Og ran into stone knife salesperson Ur down at the local watering hole. After the mandatory exchange of grunts and dinosaur claws, talk turned to the best way to set up a sales group. Five thousand years later, CEOs are still debating. Everyone has an opinion, very few people get to start off with a clean slate, and often things “just happen” rather than result as part of a long term strategy.Companies struggle with the right strategy for their sales department. The internet, cell phones, instant connectivity, and massive blasts of technology change the landscape – yet, the strong personalities within the sales organization resist change or (at best) put their own personal spin on the issue.Let’s explore the pluses and minuses of the most common of business-to-business sales organizations. Warning - consultants are famous for providing just the right answer, but in this equatio Let these ideas be your guide: - 'Vintage' sounds better than 'Old'. - 'Pristine' beats 'Perfect'. * Descriptions are subjective. My idea of 'good condition' may be different from yours. Today, a postcard I listed as 'good condition' fetched a complaint from the buyer that the card was a little faded. That was true, but the card was 104 years old and a little fading on a real photographic postcard, to my mind, is not a major problem. I explained this, offered a refund, the card is now on its way back to me. Face it, your opinion will not always match the buyer's and it's better to offer a money back guarantee in all of your listings, as long as the product is returned in 'as posted' condition. For argumentative buyers, explain that descriptions are subjective, you stand by your original wording, and offer a ref Sales Management Techniques That Can Bring Results And Keep A Sales Manager Focused Nasty problems often occur from misunderstandings, very often where an innocent comment, intended to help, is misconstrued by the recipient. Make sure it does not happen to you ….The position of sales manager often comes with multiple responsibilities. Each of which has a direct affect on the success of the organization.The sales manager is frequently an active sales person, as well as an administrator. He or she must make sure quotas are being met, margins are in line, pipelines are full, salespersons are making their calls and individuals are realistically matched to their positions and territories.An effective sales manager realizes that a person’s behavior is the key to success.How a salesperson behaves towards his or her responsibilities has a direct link to results. The individual who constantly complains about the state of the market, lack of leads and referrals, inability to get to the decision maker, etc. is usually better at making excuses than making sales.The quandary for the sales manager is…how long should he or she put up with ineffective behavior?In order to answer that question, the sales manager must Someone emailed me today: ‘Is that the email box where I’ll find Avril Harper? I have a query.’ I replied: ‘Yes. What is the Query?’ Seconds later this appeared in my mailbox: ‘Thanks for your brusque reply. In view of your attitude I no longer want to bid on your items.’ I tend to ignore most letters like that, they’re not worth wasting time over, but this one stumped me, just what had I done to offend him? It transpired he was querying my book about getting started on eBay and he considered my reply: ‘Yes. What is the query?’ to be ‘Short, rude and inconsiderate’. My answer to that was: ‘If you’re so easily hurt and take umbrage when someone is trying to be helpful, you will never succeed on eBay. You will upset buyers and sellers alike, and quite frankly I don’t want my book to help you on course to upsetting so many people. Go buy elsewhere’. Then I quickly removed him from my bidding list in case he bought later and left nasty feedback. My main point here isn’t to prove how difficult people can be, but to show how an innocent comment, intended to help, can be misconstrued by the recipient. I’m told it’s something to do with body language, or lack of it, and the experts say because the other person has just words to guide him and no facial or body gestures to determine the other person’s mood, it’s very easy to assume insult where none was intended. So what happened to me by email is just as likely to happen by letter, or telephone. The following tips should help you avoid problems like this and show how even words used in your eBay listings can cause confusion and reduce your selling chances: * Let’s face it, my disgruntled associate could have provided more information in his own first email, both allowing me to provide a longer more meaningful response and meaning I would not end up answering his question with a question of my own. But he didn’t, he just asked if he’d reached the correct email box and he obviously did not want to waste his own time writing a question that no one might see. He was the brusque one, not me, and many people are just as lazy and expect you to do all of the work. The bigger you grow, the more awkward and indecipherable questions you’ll receive, and the more ill-considered negative feedback you’ll get. You’ll avoid most by sending an auto-responder reply to pacify all but the most difficult people. Most email accounts allow you to add a signature file to all your outgoing emails which is every bit as good as a costly professional auto-responder service. Try something like: ‘Thank you for your email. I am not at my desk at the moment but I will answer your email immediately I return. In the meantime you might find answers to your queries at a site set up especially for my customers at: www.mysite.com If your question is not answered within 24 hours please email again at myemail@address.com.' If you don’t have a web page for Frequently Asked Questions, include the information in your ‘About Me’ page and give the appropriate web address in the auto-responder/signature file message. Information most often asked by potential bidders concerns delivery times, postage costs, return policy, so be sure to cover these on your FAQs page and continue adding information according to commonly asked questions. * Colloquialisms and slang terms might be understood by people within ten miles radius of your computer but could be meaningless or even appear rude to others not quite so familiar with strictly local terminology. You've probably grown up with words you think everyone else uses and understands and it can be hard to know what is universally understood and what isn't. In the North East of England, for example, 'bairns' means 'children', and 'brown' is a kind of beer and pronounced 'Broon'. They're far-fetched examples, but unless you're careful you could pack your eBay listings with terms only local bidders will understand which will limit your market considerably. A good spellchecker will locate most of these words, since most do not appear in dictionaries, and you can subsequently alter them to suit. * On a wider scale, remember spelling varies between countries, particularly America and the UK. So if you're selling Jewellery and you promote mainly on eBay.com you'll need to remember the American word is 'jewelry' and this is the term you must use in title and description or your products won't appear on eBay's USA search engine. Much the same goes for colour (UK) and color (USA), favourite/favorite, grey/gray (sometimes), humour/humor. Here's a great tip: create your listings - title and description - in ‘Microsoft Word’ or other international editor - set your spellchecker to UK format and you'll spot all words not spelled correctly for eBay.co.uk listings. For eBay.com, use the same listing, but set the spellchecker to US, and you should see lots of words thrown out as misspelled. Change them as indicated to US format and load this into your listings on eBay.com. * Some words just sound better than others meaning much the same thing and can create an air of mystery and excitement for your products. - 'Gold Plated' for example, sounds cheap; 'Vermeil' and 'Gold Overlay' sound just that little bit more expensive! - 'Reprint' means a copy of something else, often an old item in the public domain, and most people know what it means. 'Second strike' is a term I've seen applied to reproduction postcards which has generated double figure bidding for something worth pennies which can be printed millions of times from the owner's computer. That term 'second strike' was confusing even to me and I've been in the postcard business for years; it's a term best avoided. It's dishonest to use words just to confuse bidders into thinking your product is something it isn't, so exercise caution choosing words to dress up your listings. That 'Second Strike' example is acceptable where a definition is provided alongside so bidders know exactly what it means. Let these ideas be your guide: - 'Vintage' sounds better than 'Old'. - 'Pristine' beats 'Perfect'. * Descriptions are subjective. My idea of 'good condition' may be different from yours. Today, a postcard I listed as 'good condition' fetched a complaint from the buyer that the card was a little faded. That was true, but the card was 104 years old and a little fading on a real photographic postcard, to my mind, is not a major problem. I explained this, offered a refund, the card is now on its way back to me. Face it, your opinion will not always match the buyer's and it's better to offer a money back guarantee in all of your listings, as long as the product is returned in 'as posted' condition. For argumentative buyers, explain that descriptions are subjective, you stand by your original wording, and offer a refu Effective Professional Branding – The Transition From What You Know to Who You Are say because the other person has just words to guide him and no facial or body gestures to determine the other person’s mood, it’s very easy to assume insult where none was intended. So what happened to me by email is just as likely to happen by letter, or telephone."Building professional branding which communicates that you are x with y years of experience in industry Z and that you know to do A,B,C.D and have knowledge in E ,F , G is boring and won’t bring you career and business success".Building professional branding is essential for one’s career and business success. Tom Peters talked about professional branding almost ten years ago. However, economic changes, globalization, new technologies, job market trends, and outsourcing have changed the meaning of the concept and it’s implementation. How can you brand yourself to be successful in the current markets? What changes do you have to make in order to establish effective professional branding which will demonstrate your career and business success?The evolution of the professional branding concept. Tom Peters wrote “ Big companies understand the importance of brands. Today in the age of the individual you have to b The following tips should help you avoid problems like this and show how even words used in your eBay listings can cause confusion and reduce your selling chances: * Let’s face it, my disgruntled associate could have provided more information in his own first email, both allowing me to provide a longer more meaningful response and meaning I would not end up answering his question with a question of my own. But he didn’t, he just asked if he’d reached the correct email box and he obviously did not want to waste his own time writing a question that no one might see. He was the brusque one, not me, and many people are just as lazy and expect you to do all of the work. The bigger you grow, the more awkward and indecipherable questions you’ll receive, and the more ill-considered negative feedback you’ll get. You’ll avoid most by sending an auto-responder reply to pacify all but the most difficult people. Most email accounts allow you to add a signature file to all your outgoing emails which is every bit as good as a costly professional auto-responder service. Try something like: ‘Thank you for your email. I am not at my desk at the moment but I will answer your email immediately I return. In the meantime you might find answers to your queries at a site set up especially for my customers at: www.mysite.com If your question is not answered within 24 hours please email again at myemail@address.com.' If you don’t have a web page for Frequently Asked Questions, include the information in your ‘About Me’ page and give the appropriate web address in the auto-responder/signature file message. Information most often asked by potential bidders concerns delivery times, postage costs, return policy, so be sure to cover these on your FAQs page and continue adding information according to commonly asked questions. * Colloquialisms and slang terms might be understood by people within ten miles radius of your computer but could be meaningless or even appear rude to others not quite so familiar with strictly local terminology. You've probably grown up with words you think everyone else uses and understands and it can be hard to know what is universally understood and what isn't. In the North East of England, for example, 'bairns' means 'children', and 'brown' is a kind of beer and pronounced 'Broon'. They're far-fetched examples, but unless you're careful you could pack your eBay listings with terms only local bidders will understand which will limit your market considerably. A good spellchecker will locate most of these words, since most do not appear in dictionaries, and you can subsequently alter them to suit. * On a wider scale, remember spelling varies between countries, particularly America and the UK. So if you're selling Jewellery and you promote mainly on eBay.com you'll need to remember the American word is 'jewelry' and this is the term you must use in title and description or your products won't appear on eBay's USA search engine. Much the same goes for colour (UK) and color (USA), favourite/favorite, grey/gray (sometimes), humour/humor. Here's a great tip: create your listings - title and description - in ‘Microsoft Word’ or other international editor - set your spellchecker to UK format and you'll spot all words not spelled correctly for eBay.co.uk listings. For eBay.com, use the same listing, but set the spellchecker to US, and you should see lots of words thrown out as misspelled. Change them as indicated to US format and load this into your listings on eBay.com. * Some words just sound better than others meaning much the same thing and can create an air of mystery and excitement for your products. - 'Gold Plated' for example, sounds cheap; 'Vermeil' and 'Gold Overlay' sound just that little bit more expensive! - 'Reprint' means a copy of something else, often an old item in the public domain, and most people know what it means. 'Second strike' is a term I've seen applied to reproduction postcards which has generated double figure bidding for something worth pennies which can be printed millions of times from the owner's computer. That term 'second strike' was confusing even to me and I've been in the postcard business for years; it's a term best avoided. It's dishonest to use words just to confuse bidders into thinking your product is something it isn't, so exercise caution choosing words to dress up your listings. That 'Second Strike' example is acceptable where a definition is provided alongside so bidders know exactly what it means. Let these ideas be your guide: - 'Vintage' sounds better than 'Old'. - 'Pristine' beats 'Perfect'. * Descriptions are subjective. My idea of 'good condition' may be different from yours. Today, a postcard I listed as 'good condition' fetched a complaint from the buyer that the card was a little faded. That was true, but the card was 104 years old and a little fading on a real photographic postcard, to my mind, is not a major problem. I explained this, offered a refund, the card is now on its way back to me. Face it, your opinion will not always match the buyer's and it's better to offer a money back guarantee in all of your listings, as long as the product is returned in 'as posted' condition. For argumentative buyers, explain that descriptions are subjective, you stand by your original wording, and offer a ref IT Spending: Your Clients' Purchases Require Planning desk at the moment but I will answer your email immediately I return. In the meantime you might find answers to your queries at a site set up especially for my customers at: www.mysite.com If your question is not answered within 24 hours please email again at myemail@address.com.'You need to be the voice of reason when it comes to the IT spending habits of your clients. You may encounter a "use it or lose it" mentality, or your clients may want compress all of their PC-related purchases into a brief window.This usually happens when the owner of the company may be in a good mood and approachable about technology spending.Whimsical IT Spending is Not a Good Idea.Experienced computer consultants know that cost-effective use of small business technology comes about through detailed planning and execution.Heading down to the warehouse club or local office supply superstore and splurging impulsively on a $20,000 computer shopping spree with a corporate credit card may feel good.But without proper planning, these sudden tech asset IT spending binges may actually increase your clients’ computer support costs. They also run the risk of undermining a lot of the progress your consulting firm has made toward making your clients’ sy If you don’t have a web page for Frequently Asked Questions, include the information in your ‘About Me’ page and give the appropriate web address in the auto-responder/signature file message. Information most often asked by potential bidders concerns delivery times, postage costs, return policy, so be sure to cover these on your FAQs page and continue adding information according to commonly asked questions. * Colloquialisms and slang terms might be understood by people within ten miles radius of your computer but could be meaningless or even appear rude to others not quite so familiar with strictly local terminology. You've probably grown up with words you think everyone else uses and understands and it can be hard to know what is universally understood and what isn't. In the North East of England, for example, 'bairns' means 'children', and 'brown' is a kind of beer and pronounced 'Broon'. They're far-fetched examples, but unless you're careful you could pack your eBay listings with terms only local bidders will understand which will limit your market considerably. A good spellchecker will locate most of these words, since most do not appear in dictionaries, and you can subsequently alter them to suit. * On a wider scale, remember spelling varies between countries, particularly America and the UK. So if you're selling Jewellery and you promote mainly on eBay.com you'll need to remember the American word is 'jewelry' and this is the term you must use in title and description or your products won't appear on eBay's USA search engine. Much the same goes for colour (UK) and color (USA), favourite/favorite, grey/gray (sometimes), humour/humor. Here's a great tip: create your listings - title and description - in ‘Microsoft Word’ or other international editor - set your spellchecker to UK format and you'll spot all words not spelled correctly for eBay.co.uk listings. For eBay.com, use the same listing, but set the spellchecker to US, and you should see lots of words thrown out as misspelled. Change them as indicated to US format and load this into your listings on eBay.com. * Some words just sound better than others meaning much the same thing and can create an air of mystery and excitement for your products. - 'Gold Plated' for example, sounds cheap; 'Vermeil' and 'Gold Overlay' sound just that little bit more expensive! - 'Reprint' means a copy of something else, often an old item in the public domain, and most people know what it means. 'Second strike' is a term I've seen applied to reproduction postcards which has generated double figure bidding for something worth pennies which can be printed millions of times from the owner's computer. That term 'second strike' was confusing even to me and I've been in the postcard business for years; it's a term best avoided. It's dishonest to use words just to confuse bidders into thinking your product is something it isn't, so exercise caution choosing words to dress up your listings. That 'Second Strike' example is acceptable where a definition is provided alongside so bidders know exactly what it means. Let these ideas be your guide: - 'Vintage' sounds better than 'Old'. - 'Pristine' beats 'Perfect'. * Descriptions are subjective. My idea of 'good condition' may be different from yours. Today, a postcard I listed as 'good condition' fetched a complaint from the buyer that the card was a little faded. That was true, but the card was 104 years old and a little fading on a real photographic postcard, to my mind, is not a major problem. I explained this, offered a refund, the card is now on its way back to me. Face it, your opinion will not always match the buyer's and it's better to offer a money back guarantee in all of your listings, as long as the product is returned in 'as posted' condition. For argumentative buyers, explain that descriptions are subjective, you stand by your original wording, and offer a ref Psychology of Setting Prices se words, since most do not appear in dictionaries, and you can subsequently alter them to suit.Pricing is one of the four major components of marketing. Psychological pricing forms one of the key elements of demand pricing wherein the consumer demand is the main focus. The price and quality relationship that governs the central theme of the consumer market relationship is surrounded by uncertainty and gives the consumer the perception that higher the price, better the quality.The science of pricing is an art in itself. Rounding off the figures may be good for basic math but never in business. The art of setting prices for articles has been an ever challenging task in business. Keeping in mind the changing economy, heavy competition in the market and consumer affordability, the trick of pricing an article has been more on a psychological evaluation of the consumer. Pricing is usually done by keeping with industry standards. But in order to sell their products after a baseline or whole sale price has been fixed, individual business organizations have most often dealt * On a wider scale, remember spelling varies between countries, particularly America and the UK. So if you're selling Jewellery and you promote mainly on eBay.com you'll need to remember the American word is 'jewelry' and this is the term you must use in title and description or your products won't appear on eBay's USA search engine. Much the same goes for colour (UK) and color (USA), favourite/favorite, grey/gray (sometimes), humour/humor. Here's a great tip: create your listings - title and description - in ‘Microsoft Word’ or other international editor - set your spellchecker to UK format and you'll spot all words not spelled correctly for eBay.co.uk listings. For eBay.com, use the same listing, but set the spellchecker to US, and you should see lots of words thrown out as misspelled. Change them as indicated to US format and load this into your listings on eBay.com. * Some words just sound better than others meaning much the same thing and can create an air of mystery and excitement for your products. - 'Gold Plated' for example, sounds cheap; 'Vermeil' and 'Gold Overlay' sound just that little bit more expensive! - 'Reprint' means a copy of something else, often an old item in the public domain, and most people know what it means. 'Second strike' is a term I've seen applied to reproduction postcards which has generated double figure bidding for something worth pennies which can be printed millions of times from the owner's computer. That term 'second strike' was confusing even to me and I've been in the postcard business for years; it's a term best avoided. It's dishonest to use words just to confuse bidders into thinking your product is something it isn't, so exercise caution choosing words to dress up your listings. That 'Second Strike' example is acceptable where a definition is provided alongside so bidders know exactly what it means. Let these ideas be your guide: - 'Vintage' sounds better than 'Old'. - 'Pristine' beats 'Perfect'. * Descriptions are subjective. My idea of 'good condition' may be different from yours. Today, a postcard I listed as 'good condition' fetched a complaint from the buyer that the card was a little faded. That was true, but the card was 104 years old and a little fading on a real photographic postcard, to my mind, is not a major problem. I explained this, offered a refund, the card is now on its way back to me. Face it, your opinion will not always match the buyer's and it's better to offer a money back guarantee in all of your listings, as long as the product is returned in 'as posted' condition. For argumentative buyers, explain that descriptions are subjective, you stand by your original wording, and offer a ref Marketing Advice for House Cleaning Businesses reproduction postcards which has generated double figure bidding for something worth pennies which can be printed millions of times from the owner's computer. That term 'second strike' was confusing even to me and I've been in the postcard business for years; it's a term best avoided. It's dishonest to use words just to confuse bidders into thinking your product is something it isn't, so exercise caution choosing words to dress up your listings. That 'Second Strike' example is acceptable where a definition is provided alongside so bidders know exactly what it means.Avoid Ineffective AdvertisingLet’s examine the target market for a house cleaning business. The majority of your prospective customers will be upper-middle class, middle age professionals who do not have the time to clean, but do have the financial resources to hire a cleaning company. Other prospects will fall into either the 30 – 40 age group with younger children at home, or the 60 – 80 age group. They are looking for a professionally run cleaning business which guarantees customer satisfaction, and stands behind that guarantee.How do you advertise to such a broad age group? TV, Newspapers, Radio? Unfortunately, there is such a great variance in interests that it is impossible to reach all prospects with just one of these media. Therefore, an ongoing marketing strategy that incorporates all media sources is optimal.By keeping your company continuously in front of the consumer you become known to them. When they receive your direct mail Let these ideas be your guide: - 'Vintage' sounds better than 'Old'. - 'Pristine' beats 'Perfect'. * Descriptions are subjective. My idea of 'good condition' may be different from yours. Today, a postcard I listed as 'good condition' fetched a complaint from the buyer that the card was a little faded. That was true, but the card was 104 years old and a little fading on a real photographic postcard, to my mind, is not a major problem. I explained this, offered a refund, the card is now on its way back to me. Face it, your opinion will not always match the buyer's and it's better to offer a money back guarantee in all of your listings, as long as the product is returned in 'as posted' condition. For argumentative buyers, explain that descriptions are subjective, you stand by your original wording, and offer a refund where second chance buyers exist or just relist the item. This is the wording I use in my listings which you are free to copy. 'All items are listed to the best of my abilities and reflect my own experienced opinion. However, all items are subject to money back guarantee in the event they are inadvertently mis-described, as long as items are returned within ten days of auction ending. All returns must be by Recorded Delivery. Refund only applies to items returned in 'as posted' condition.' I'm quite certain this simple paragraph has saved some unscrupulous buyers lodging an 'Item not as described' notice to eBay. You are not obliged to return original or return postage but it's worthwhile doing so on low price items just to rid yourself of problem customers.
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