Showing posts with label Networking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Networking. Show all posts

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Networking to Make a Sale

· 25 comments

Networking to Make a Sale: "The buzzword, these days, is networking. Social networking via sites such as Facebook, Twitter and MySpace are no longer simply ways for college friends to keep in touch or post photos. They are how businesses attract fans and patrons, how celebrities maintain a coveted position of fame (think Ashton Kutcher and Twitter), and how bands get their music heard often for the first time. As a real estate agent, you can use social networking sites to keep in contact with other realtors and keep a pulse on the market/competition. But will Facebook help you sell a home? Probably not; to do that, you may need to rely on a different form of networking - face-to-face.

Face-to-face networking is a tool you should rely on regularly to help get the word out about a home you have recently put on the market or a business about to go up for sale. It will work much faster and more efficiently than depending solely on the sign in the front yard and a fervent hope that someone driving past notices the balloons you've bought for an open house. However, networking can also be tricky. There is more to it than smiling at an average Joe on the street, so here are three tips for how to network and make the sale.

1. Know your target audience - if you are selling a small commercial building ideal for a boutique or café, you do not want to network with CEOs and big business executives with little to no interest in starting their own small, unique company. If you are selling a home perfect for a young couple just starting out, don't network with well-established families working on their third or fourth child. They won't fit in the house. They'll know it, and your sale will be lost. Find the people who will make and can make the purchase.

2. Go to a networking event - Networking events are common and frequent. You can actually take advantage of almost any event within Austin to advertise your name, face and product. But again, know who you are targeting. Do the research to see what is happening when and where, and be selective. You don't want to waste your time trying to interest prospective buyers at an all day beer fest. It's likely they won't pay a moment of attention, and if they do, they may not remember it in the morning.

3. Follow up - it is not enough to go to an event, shake hands, pass out cards and mention briefly the home two blocks from Austin's Sixth Street you just put on the market. You have to continue the conversation. Get the person's information and make a call the next day or, at the latest, the next business day. Show that you are committed to the product - the house - you are selling and that person will likely call you back, meet with you and settle down to discuss the intricacies of purchasing and taking out a mortgage on the home.

There are many other ways to maximize the outcome of your networking efforts. Above are three basic. But don't be afraid to discover and adopt more rules of networking. The more you know, the better you'll be and the more houses you'll sell.

--
About the Author:

Joe Cline writes articles for Treemont real estate. Other articles written by the author related to Austin Texas real estate and Rollingwood real estate can be found on the net.

Source: http://www.articletrader.com"
-->Read more...

Read More......

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Widgets Explained

· 2 comments

Widgets Explained: "Widget is an extremely portable mass of codes, which are easily installable as well as executed in any individual HTML based website. These codes can be installed by users devoid of the need of additional applications. Widgets are basically derived from the code rescue idea. The web widgets generally use JavaScript, Adobe Flash or DHTML.

Widgets usually acquire the form of on screen tools, such as clocks, auction tickers, event countdown, fight arrival information, stock market tickers and daily weathers and many more.

Today widgets are the commonplace and exercised via a vast majority of the social network users, auction sites, and bloggers in addition to the possessors of personal sites. Widgets currently exist on the home page websites, such as Netvibes, Pageflakes or iGoogle.

The browser-based tools for making as well as hosting widgets incorporate Widgetbox, Zembly and Microsoft Popfly. The widgets distribution source, including the Gigya and Clearspring are now been used to distribute and seed widgets as the rich media advertising units. Apart, the entertainment and media companies are greatly using widgets for running Ad campaigns as well.

In addition, widgets are also been used as the distribution method by numerous ad networks like AdSense and Goggle among the most famous one. Several other media sites that are using widgets advertising for their expansion constitutes Flickr and also by the video site like YouTube and other hundreds of organizations.

The expansion usage of widgets is been dramatically proposed as the marketing channel, which can replace the least effectual targeted banner ads and avail benefits of viral distribution in the social networks.

Besides, the web widgets, the mobile widgets like the desktop widgets can increase the screen space and is helpful in positioning the live data rich applications over the device home screen or phone top. Different mobile widgets engines include BluePulse, Zumobi, Bling Software, Webwag and WidSets.



--
Jon Harwokey, a software developer of 15 years is an advocate of Widget Technology. Newsgator Widget offers an incredibly easy way for you to syndicate content as well as distribute it, in the form of a widget, across the social web.

Source: http://www.articletrader.com"
-->Read more...

Read More......

How good teamwork gets more work done AND saves money

· 116 comments

How good teamwork gets more work done AND saves money: "Our blue van trundles down a country lane by the coast in the springtime. We are on our way to have lunch. A warm breeze shakes the daffodils as we make our way to the water's edge. The lake glistens in the afternoon sunshine. The four of us line an old wooden bench. Apart from the unwrapping of sandwiches, and distant bird song across the lake, there is not a sound to be heard.

I used to be self-employed as a jobbing carpenter, specialising in old town and country houses. Being my own boss had always appealed to me ever since I was an apprentice. Maybe it was the way everything was down to you, and answering to nobody apart from your customers. But after 10 years of working on my own, and apart from the occasional job where I had to call in some extra help, I was offered the chance to work for a partnership of carpenters. I took it, for a range of reasons, but mostly because it was essentially what I was doing more of by taking on extra help. But this way I would be doing less of the business admin, and more of what I liked - working with wood, on some really rewarding projects.

So when I look around me at my colleagues having their lunch, I realise that it wouldn't have been just any partnership I would have entered into. I knew these carpenters fairly well, as two had been apprentices with, and the other two I had called in from time to time to help with bigger jobs.

Being in a team also means buying assets for the business is less of an impact. We're currently upgrading some of our equipment and power tools. A series of purchases like this can be a real issue for a self-employed carpenter, but when you're in a team the cost is spread out. Also, you need to take into account the fact that when you're working on your own, you may need to buy a piece of equipment that may be only rarely used. Hiring is an option of course, but this is a cost as well and it's a good idea to have as much of your gear owned as possible.

For example, we needed some new area lights the other week. Because as a team we can work into the night without tiring ourselves out by doing it in a shift pattern. The intricacies of our work mean the lights need to be up to the job. Even if I was doing the job on my own it would have taken weeks rather than days, and the cost of lighting would have made the job nonviable financially.

Hiring would have been expensive too. But now we've got the ability to buy the right equipment to do jobs efficiently. Maybe I will go back to working on my own one day, but right now, by the serenity of the lake, team work suits me perfectly.


--
David John Martin is a professional carpenter and buys all of his hammer drills and cordless drills from DeWALT.


Source: http://www.articletrader.com"
-->Read more...

Read More......

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Best Network Marketing Prospects For Your Opportunity In Three Steps-2009

· 1 comments

There are a lot of times, and very frequently on the internet that you see alot of talk about how to get endless network marketing prospects to chase after you. An awesome notion in concept, but there is little to no information as exactly how to do that. However, there are three fundamental ideas that if you understand and mimick them will get you on the path to accomplishing just that.
One key concept to understand is that the easiest way to connect with and generate network marketing prospects is to get online and do it on your own.

Don't even think about purchasing leads from a lead company, or hounding friends and family to join or buy from your business. There are lots of tasks like creating content and distributing it on the internet, purchasing advertising on the internet or related things that will get what you want.

Now, you need to take a look at what exact business you are with. The most targeted network marketing prospects for that are those are are actively investigating it already on the internet. They are simply searching for what the best team is or some little tidbit of information.

If you really sit back and think, with this approach, these kinds of people are already sold on the concept of MLM, plus are interested in your company and are just waiting to join someone. That is absolutely the perfect prospect.

The last and most critical point to consider to find network marketing prospects it to conduct your marketing where your potential leads are already looking. When you do things like pay per click advertisement on Google, visit and comment on forums unique to your business, things like that.

It is nothing more difficult than just placing yourself immediately in front of those leads who are already researching your business.

If you'd like to learn even more about how to get network marketing prospects hunting you down, read below and click on the link for more information.

By: Kurt Henninger
-->Read more...

Read More......

More Info

Investing Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directory Add to Technorati Favorites

Guest Book