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    Report: Combined Consumer Education and Increased Security Measures Equal Reduced Identity Fraud
    While surfing the 'net, I came across a report about the reduction of identity theft and identity fraud. Obviously, it caught my attention. Following, in part, is that report which was produced by Javelin Strategy & Research, and co-sponsored by CheckFree Corporation, Visa Card, and Wells Fargo & Co.While identity theft remains a multi-billion-dollar problem for businesses, organizations, and individuals, incidents of the fraud dropped significantly last year, according to a report.Identity fraud occurring in the United States declined in 2006 by 12 percent over the year before, from $55.7 billion to $49.3 billion, according to the third-annual survey by J
    m: for example, InglebrookHomes.com or WestlakeHeightsCondos.com. If you serve a specific niche based upon a profession or a specific market segment, use that as your web address. Examples include LakesideSeniorHomes.com or DenverHomes4Teachers.com. Also, remember to use your print advertising to direct people to your website or to call your 800 Call Capture system.

    5. Your email address
    One of the most irritating and costly mistakes an agent can make on a business card is having a difficult-to-remember and/or difficult-to-type email address. When existing or potential clients make errors in typing your email address, important communications may not reach you. Furthermore, people lose business cards all the time. (Since the first of the year, how many business cards have you tossed or been unable to find when you needed them?) Having an easy-to-remember email address is critical. This means keeping it simple with no dashes, strange numbers, or d

    Business Printing and Marketing - Strategies to Crush Your Competition
    Printers offer a complete line-up of printing products and services to cater to every printing need. Be it small scale or large scale enterprise, commercial or corporate, there are numerous printing materials that will prove invaluable to your business operations.Business printing products can be seen almost everywhere and does not limit itself to office spaces. Business printing can pertain beyond business cards, stationery such as letterheads and envelopes, folders and the like. Business printing materials also operates in investing on materials for promotions and advertisingYes, business printing’s presence is made more apparent in marketing and adverti
    If you have bought into the practice of "image or personal marketing," it's time to take a fresh look at what today's consumer really wants. The 80's and 90's were the decades of image and personal marketing. Marketing experts advised Realtors® to prospect using a personal brochure. "Tell the consumer about how many houses you sold. Use your glamour shot that illustrates how professional you look and don't forget to include it on your business card as well." What seemed like a good idea ten years ago can be the kiss of death in today's consumer oriented environment. Increasing your business in this environment may call for a quantum shift in your approach. A simple place to begin is by changing your business card. If you want a business card that actually attracts business, follow the five tips listed below.

    1. Is there a picture on the card?
    Can you name one other profession outside the real estate industry that places pictures of its sales force on its business cards? I've asked this question at numerous seminars and the answers are the same—insurance agents and used car salespeople. If our industry wants to break away from the "one-step-above-a-used-car-salesman" image, we should follow the lead set by Fortune 500 businesses. Their business cards provide the name of the company, the individual's name, and their contact information. There are NO pictures. To illustrate why your picture is not that important, can you name the person who won the academy award for best actress three years ago? Even when the person's name and picture has been in front of you repeatedly, most people still have a hard time remembering. The same is true with your business card. The people you meet will decide whether they want to work with you while you are face-to-face. If you didn't make a great impression in person, how is your card going to make any difference? A better approach is to print separate business cards for each of your listings. Use a picture of the listing on one side, a brief property description, and your website and phone number on the back. Sellers will love the idea and it makes you stand out from other agents who still use their own photos to market their services. Most importantly, people who see your card will understand immediately that you're about helping people market their property rather than marketing you.

    2. Is the contact information readable?
    As an agent, you have access to business cards from other Realtors®. For the next two weeks, collect as many as possible and/or check the ones you may already have on file. Now look at the cards. How many have such a small font that you can barely read the print, even with your glasses (if you wear glasses)? Because the agent’s picture takes up so much space, a small font is necessary in order to cram in the agent's contact information. One agent summed it up like this: "Our prices are so high that almost anyone who can afford to buy properties in our area is wearing bifocals." With up to 40 percent of today's listing market composed of the 55+ crowd, making your phone number and email address easy to read is critical.

    3. How many phone numbers are on the cards you collected?
    In most cases, the agents will have a cell phone, home phone, office phone, and fax number. How do you know which number you're supposed to call? Instead of listing multiple numbers, include your fax number and one primary number where clients can reach you. Remember, if someone is calling you from your business card, most people will have little patience trying to track down which number is correct.

    4. Your website address
    If you're using your name as your website address, consider shifting your primary web address to a function. For example, if you work a geographical farm, create a web address that incorporates the name of the area you farm: for example, InglebrookHomes.com or WestlakeHeightsCondos.com. If you serve a specific niche based upon a profession or a specific market segment, use that as your web address. Examples include LakesideSeniorHomes.com or DenverHomes4Teachers.com. Also, remember to use your print advertising to direct people to your website or to call your 800 Call Capture system.

    5. Your email address
    One of the most irritating and costly mistakes an agent can make on a business card is having a difficult-to-remember and/or difficult-to-type email address. When existing or potential clients make errors in typing your email address, important communications may not reach you. Furthermore, people lose business cards all the time. (Since the first of the year, how many business cards have you tossed or been unable to find when you needed them?) Having an easy-to-remember email address is critical. This means keeping it simple with no dashes, strange numbers, or di

    CVS' Strategic Gameplan
    Industry OverviewAs the company to ever create an online pharmacy, CVS has brought a new flavor to the pharmaceutical industry. Currently, Consumer Value Store is #53 of fortune 500 companies. The company operates primarily from prescription drugs sales which accounts for 70% of its total revenues. CVS is actually one of the most pervasive drugstore chains in America; it operates nearly 4,100 facilities, placing it side by side with three of its major competitors, Eckerd, Rite Aid and Walgreens. Within the Consumer Value Store lies PharmaCare, a subsidiary that is considered key to the company’s expansion and profit margin because of diverse managerial tactics it
    force on its business cards? I've asked this question at numerous seminars and the answers are the same—insurance agents and used car salespeople. If our industry wants to break away from the "one-step-above-a-used-car-salesman" image, we should follow the lead set by Fortune 500 businesses. Their business cards provide the name of the company, the individual's name, and their contact information. There are NO pictures. To illustrate why your picture is not that important, can you name the person who won the academy award for best actress three years ago? Even when the person's name and picture has been in front of you repeatedly, most people still have a hard time remembering. The same is true with your business card. The people you meet will decide whether they want to work with you while you are face-to-face. If you didn't make a great impression in person, how is your card going to make any difference? A better approach is to print separate business cards for each of your listings. Use a picture of the listing on one side, a brief property description, and your website and phone number on the back. Sellers will love the idea and it makes you stand out from other agents who still use their own photos to market their services. Most importantly, people who see your card will understand immediately that you're about helping people market their property rather than marketing you.

    2. Is the contact information readable?
    As an agent, you have access to business cards from other Realtors®. For the next two weeks, collect as many as possible and/or check the ones you may already have on file. Now look at the cards. How many have such a small font that you can barely read the print, even with your glasses (if you wear glasses)? Because the agent’s picture takes up so much space, a small font is necessary in order to cram in the agent's contact information. One agent summed it up like this: "Our prices are so high that almost anyone who can afford to buy properties in our area is wearing bifocals." With up to 40 percent of today's listing market composed of the 55+ crowd, making your phone number and email address easy to read is critical.

    3. How many phone numbers are on the cards you collected?
    In most cases, the agents will have a cell phone, home phone, office phone, and fax number. How do you know which number you're supposed to call? Instead of listing multiple numbers, include your fax number and one primary number where clients can reach you. Remember, if someone is calling you from your business card, most people will have little patience trying to track down which number is correct.

    4. Your website address
    If you're using your name as your website address, consider shifting your primary web address to a function. For example, if you work a geographical farm, create a web address that incorporates the name of the area you farm: for example, InglebrookHomes.com or WestlakeHeightsCondos.com. If you serve a specific niche based upon a profession or a specific market segment, use that as your web address. Examples include LakesideSeniorHomes.com or DenverHomes4Teachers.com. Also, remember to use your print advertising to direct people to your website or to call your 800 Call Capture system.

    5. Your email address
    One of the most irritating and costly mistakes an agent can make on a business card is having a difficult-to-remember and/or difficult-to-type email address. When existing or potential clients make errors in typing your email address, important communications may not reach you. Furthermore, people lose business cards all the time. (Since the first of the year, how many business cards have you tossed or been unable to find when you needed them?) Having an easy-to-remember email address is critical. This means keeping it simple with no dashes, strange numbers, or d

    Opportunities Galore for the Bilingual
    The world is ever changing. We have seen fads come and go, bands come and go, and hot markets come and go. But there is one thing that has kept on getting hotter, that is the need for someone to translate. Virtually every area you can think of needs someone to translate for them. If you haven’t thought about the possibility of you translating, maybe you should start.I cant think of a college when I was looking that didn’t require atleast some foreign language in high school. Most college actually have a requirement for you to take a few semesters before you graduate. This makes a student more well rounded and can only help them out. I remember when I took
    rds for each of your listings. Use a picture of the listing on one side, a brief property description, and your website and phone number on the back. Sellers will love the idea and it makes you stand out from other agents who still use their own photos to market their services. Most importantly, people who see your card will understand immediately that you're about helping people market their property rather than marketing you.

    2. Is the contact information readable?
    As an agent, you have access to business cards from other Realtors®. For the next two weeks, collect as many as possible and/or check the ones you may already have on file. Now look at the cards. How many have such a small font that you can barely read the print, even with your glasses (if you wear glasses)? Because the agent’s picture takes up so much space, a small font is necessary in order to cram in the agent's contact information. One agent summed it up like this: "Our prices are so high that almost anyone who can afford to buy properties in our area is wearing bifocals." With up to 40 percent of today's listing market composed of the 55+ crowd, making your phone number and email address easy to read is critical.

    3. How many phone numbers are on the cards you collected?
    In most cases, the agents will have a cell phone, home phone, office phone, and fax number. How do you know which number you're supposed to call? Instead of listing multiple numbers, include your fax number and one primary number where clients can reach you. Remember, if someone is calling you from your business card, most people will have little patience trying to track down which number is correct.

    4. Your website address
    If you're using your name as your website address, consider shifting your primary web address to a function. For example, if you work a geographical farm, create a web address that incorporates the name of the area you farm: for example, InglebrookHomes.com or WestlakeHeightsCondos.com. If you serve a specific niche based upon a profession or a specific market segment, use that as your web address. Examples include LakesideSeniorHomes.com or DenverHomes4Teachers.com. Also, remember to use your print advertising to direct people to your website or to call your 800 Call Capture system.

    5. Your email address
    One of the most irritating and costly mistakes an agent can make on a business card is having a difficult-to-remember and/or difficult-to-type email address. When existing or potential clients make errors in typing your email address, important communications may not reach you. Furthermore, people lose business cards all the time. (Since the first of the year, how many business cards have you tossed or been unable to find when you needed them?) Having an easy-to-remember email address is critical. This means keeping it simple with no dashes, strange numbers, or d

    Choosing Your E-Zine Topic - 3 Hints for Making Your Decision
    Choosing the topic of your ezine is no light decision. I have put together 3 hints to take some of the strain off your brain and get you going in the right direction.1.Share your passion.What are you passionate about? If you’re publishing an ezine for your business, then I hope it’s your company, product or service that holds your passion. But those aren’t the only motivations for ezines.Whatever your passion, writing about it will make your ezine strong. Passionate writing, whether it’s about tying flies for fishing or piecing together heirloom quilts, is powerful writing. When you write with passion it ignites the page and excites your readers, ma
    re so high that almost anyone who can afford to buy properties in our area is wearing bifocals." With up to 40 percent of today's listing market composed of the 55+ crowd, making your phone number and email address easy to read is critical.

    3. How many phone numbers are on the cards you collected?
    In most cases, the agents will have a cell phone, home phone, office phone, and fax number. How do you know which number you're supposed to call? Instead of listing multiple numbers, include your fax number and one primary number where clients can reach you. Remember, if someone is calling you from your business card, most people will have little patience trying to track down which number is correct.

    4. Your website address
    If you're using your name as your website address, consider shifting your primary web address to a function. For example, if you work a geographical farm, create a web address that incorporates the name of the area you farm: for example, InglebrookHomes.com or WestlakeHeightsCondos.com. If you serve a specific niche based upon a profession or a specific market segment, use that as your web address. Examples include LakesideSeniorHomes.com or DenverHomes4Teachers.com. Also, remember to use your print advertising to direct people to your website or to call your 800 Call Capture system.

    5. Your email address
    One of the most irritating and costly mistakes an agent can make on a business card is having a difficult-to-remember and/or difficult-to-type email address. When existing or potential clients make errors in typing your email address, important communications may not reach you. Furthermore, people lose business cards all the time. (Since the first of the year, how many business cards have you tossed or been unable to find when you needed them?) Having an easy-to-remember email address is critical. This means keeping it simple with no dashes, strange numbers, or d

    Paid Online Surveys - Cash & Carry
    When the term ‘cash paying free paid surveys' is mentioned, you are really being told that there are many different systems for finding paid surveys. Most of these systems are free, and is certainly an option when you are looking around for paying surveys.Some companies, particularly for databases, charge a membership fee, and this is okay if you don't feel like searching for them yourself. Quality paid surveys can be found through databases and companies.Additionally, many of these companies have been around for at least twenty years. It's safe to say that you are going to get the best service, from those with a built reputation.There are many free
    m: for example, InglebrookHomes.com or WestlakeHeightsCondos.com. If you serve a specific niche based upon a profession or a specific market segment, use that as your web address. Examples include LakesideSeniorHomes.com or DenverHomes4Teachers.com. Also, remember to use your print advertising to direct people to your website or to call your 800 Call Capture system.

    5. Your email address
    One of the most irritating and costly mistakes an agent can make on a business card is having a difficult-to-remember and/or difficult-to-type email address. When existing or potential clients make errors in typing your email address, important communications may not reach you. Furthermore, people lose business cards all the time. (Since the first of the year, how many business cards have you tossed or been unable to find when you needed them?) Having an easy-to-remember email address is critical. This means keeping it simple with no dashes, strange numbers, or difficult-to-spell names. In addition, instead of using Yahoo, AOL, or some other ISP in your email address, print up new cards with an email address at your website. For example, instead of using YourName@Yahoo.com, shift to YourName@YourWebsite.com. This sends a clear message to today's Internet-based consumer that you're in touch with today's marketing environment.

    Remember, making the connection is the name of the game when it comes to converting leads into closed business. Make your business cards about the consumer and watch how many more leads you generate.

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