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Added for You - Loyalty - I Spell it With 3 R's
Make Money as a Wholesale Distributor ful companies are training for soft skills. Founded in rural Iowa in 1930 as a small neighborhood grocery store, Hy-Vee has grown to a $4.6 Billion and 49,000 employees. With a unique employee owner approach to business, Consumer Reports ranked Hy-Vee among the top five supermarket chains in the nation in terms of service and customer satisfaction. Hy-Vee provides soft skills training to every employee in their organization. Their jingle “A helpful smile in every isle” is backed up with intensive training. New employees (often teenagers) are taught to make eye contact, and smile whenever they encounter customers. Even the small things are covered in the employee’s training. For instance, when a customer asks where to find a specific product, the answer could easily be, “In the middle of isle two.” Hy-Vee employees are trained to stop their current activity and personally lead the customer to the specific location of the desired product.We hear this many times. We might now what it is but might not now how they make money or how you can make money doing the same thing. This article will show you what a wholesale distributor is and how you can make money as a wholesale distributor.A wholesale distributor is a person or business that delivers product to retailers or other wholesalers for resale. It might be an importer or manufacturer, a reseller or an inventor.Wholesale Distribution has evolved from just delivering goods in your van or fleet of trucks from store to store. You can sell product in different ways and deliver them in many other ways. You could sell in person, by phone or the internet. You could deliver in person using your trucks or drop ship products by the case or by the truckload. There is even the addition of new type of stores like large Cash and Carry and superstores line Costco and Sam’s Club.For example, the person selling to your local convenience store or local supermarket is for sure a wholesaler. They might sell soda, candy, sunglasses, cookies, milk, janitorial products, soap, and more. Th This training pays a big dividend when customers comment, “The kids who work at Hy-Vee all seem to be so clean-cut and personable.” The great kids who work at Hy-Vee are a slice of teena To Get Paid What You Are Worth - Don't Say a Word Company Loyalty – I spell it with an R “The most widely requested trade mark tattoo is the Harley- Davidson.. Tattooed trademarks are more than symbols of extreme brand loyalty….. This could be why we do not see more TIDE, DELL or VERIZON tattoos.” From International Trademark Association website With the possible exception of Harley-Davidson, developing strong (or stronger) loyalty finds its way into the hearts and minds of company leaders throughout all sectors of business. Increasingly experts are telling us loyalty in today’s business environment goes beyond product and zooms by massive customer satisfaction surveys. Marketing experts talk about brands and dream of building powerful images in the minds of customers. Despite dozens of books touting the power of Harley-Davidson, Coca Cola and Google in the market, for most businesses loyalty is spelled with an R: Retention, Retraining, and Research.If you're like most freelance copywriters and other solo entrepreneurs, you get rattled when it’s time to talk about money with your clients. You may feel like you are being greedy or sleazy, or you might worry that your fees are too high or too low. Inevitably, though, you must state a price for your service or product. And if you’re serious about making a good living in your solo enterprise, you must command a reasonably healthy price.After 20 years as a freelance copywriter, I feel very comfortable stating my fees. In fact, I even enjoy it. With some practice, you may grow to enjoy it, too. And you’ll certainly reap economic rewards if you do it right.Stating a good fee for a project is a skill you can learn. I can’t teach you everything you need to know about it in one brief article. But I can give you what I think is the number one rule for successful fee-stating:After you tell a client your desired fee, stop talking. The first one who talks loses.Preferably, the last word you say should be the dollar figure. So try to explain everything you will provide RetentionIn their book, First Break all the Rules, Marcus Buckingham and Curt Coffman state the secret to good business is retention. Herb Kellher, Southwest Airline Chairman says, “You have to treat your employees like customers. When you treat them right, then they will treat your outside customers right.” I grew up in a family business. I spent my summers working with my father. On the way to work each day, he made sure I was well indoctrinated to his way of doing business. His customers were his sense of purpose. And, he was there to make certain the customer was always treated right. The unfortunate part was he couldn’t be there 100% of the time. Most of the time customers were treated “right” but sometimes they were not. And, typically it was an inexperienced mechanic or a new part time night guy whose misguided actions lead to trouble. I came to believe:
These employees also had the longest tenure with the organizations. Retention, loyalty and profits come together under a single roof. Loss of employees with valuable relationships to customers leads to loss of customers. Retraining I believe a corollary to retention is retraining. Retrain employees to build better relationships and your customers will be further (and faster) attracted to your organization. Far too often organizations spend all of their efforts training employees on the “hard skills” of their business. Receptionists are taught to manage a 14 line phone system. Customer Service Reps are taught to better use Excel and other Microsoft applications, but very few companies are taking time to teach the soft skills that build relationships. Some very successful companies are training for soft skills. Founded in rural Iowa in 1930 as a small neighborhood grocery store, Hy-Vee has grown to a $4.6 Billion and 49,000 employees. With a unique employee owner approach to business, Consumer Reports ranked Hy-Vee among the top five supermarket chains in the nation in terms of service and customer satisfaction. Hy-Vee provides soft skills training to every employee in their organization. Their jingle “A helpful smile in every isle” is backed up with intensive training. New employees (often teenagers) are taught to make eye contact, and smile whenever they encounter customers. Even the small things are covered in the employee’s training. For instance, when a customer asks where to find a specific product, the answer could easily be, “In the middle of isle two.” Hy-Vee employees are trained to stop their current activity and personally lead the customer to the specific location of the desired product. This training pays a big dividend when customers comment, “The kids who work at Hy-Vee all seem to be so clean-cut and personable.” The great kids who work at Hy-Vee are a slice of teenag 10 Strategies For Managing Workplace Culture Coffman state the secret to good business is retention. Herb Kellher, Southwest Airline Chairman says, “You have to treat your employees like customers. When you treat them right, then they will treat your outside customers right.” I grew up in a family business. I spent my summers working with my father. On the way to work each day, he made sure I was well indoctrinated to his way of doing business. His customers were his sense of purpose. And, he was there to make certain the customer was always treated right. The unfortunate part was he couldn’t be there 100% of the time. Most of the time customers were treated “right” but sometimes they were not. And, typically it was an inexperienced mechanic or a new part time night guy whose misguided actions lead to trouble. I came to believe:One of the not so good things in your career can be managing workplace politics. The challenge can be trying to understand the corporate culture first and trying to manage the workplace politics and knowing the culture of the company you worked for.So what it corporate culture? This is basically your companies’ personality, this boils down to a couple of things.1. Who the company is 2. What the company stands for 3. How things are done in your companyIf you know what the culture is this can tell you what the company believes in. As you move in you career and change job (or maybe not) it's sometimes hard and unclear as to what the companies culture is, which in turn can leave toy unable to manage workplace politics.The following list of strategies for managing workplace politics may help you.Strategies For Managing Workplace Culture1. Know the company culture 2. Identify the people with power 3. Be a straight shooter 4. Never be afraid to admit you are not perfect 5. Learn to say yes 6. Try to handle criticism constructively 7. Don
These employees also had the longest tenure with the organizations. Retention, loyalty and profits come together under a single roof. Loss of employees with valuable relationships to customers leads to loss of customers. Retraining I believe a corollary to retention is retraining. Retrain employees to build better relationships and your customers will be further (and faster) attracted to your organization. Far too often organizations spend all of their efforts training employees on the “hard skills” of their business. Receptionists are taught to manage a 14 line phone system. Customer Service Reps are taught to better use Excel and other Microsoft applications, but very few companies are taking time to teach the soft skills that build relationships. Some very successful companies are training for soft skills. Founded in rural Iowa in 1930 as a small neighborhood grocery store, Hy-Vee has grown to a $4.6 Billion and 49,000 employees. With a unique employee owner approach to business, Consumer Reports ranked Hy-Vee among the top five supermarket chains in the nation in terms of service and customer satisfaction. Hy-Vee provides soft skills training to every employee in their organization. Their jingle “A helpful smile in every isle” is backed up with intensive training. New employees (often teenagers) are taught to make eye contact, and smile whenever they encounter customers. Even the small things are covered in the employee’s training. For instance, when a customer asks where to find a specific product, the answer could easily be, “In the middle of isle two.” Hy-Vee employees are trained to stop their current activity and personally lead the customer to the specific location of the desired product. This training pays a big dividend when customers comment, “The kids who work at Hy-Vee all seem to be so clean-cut and personable.” The great kids who work at Hy-Vee are a slice of teena Dental Hygienist: Hot Career Path a negative issue came up, they had the experience and know how to bend rules, fix problems, and smooth over misunderstandings before they really became permanent. In research leading to First Break all the Rules, Buckingham and Coffman interviewed 105,000 employees of 2,500 separate business units using the following twelve questions:The field of dentistry is growing by leaps and bounds. This is primarily due to the fact that dental care, like other medical care fields, is currently seeing a rise in the number of patients accessing treatment. The dental hygienist plays a key role in providing this treatment. A hygienist can now expect a good salary, has flexible working hours and is able to access numerous benefits. So what does a dental hygienist do and what kind of training do they need?Anyone, regardless of race, gender or ethnic background can become a dental hygienist. The education required includes a high school diploma, followed by at least two years of college education that blends clinical instruction and classroom studies. A dental hygienist can work in a number of environments, including dental offices, orthodontic offices, county health departments, and school districts.A dental hygienist provides true hands-on care for both adults and children as patients, and is one of the most important members of a dental office team. He or she can educate, while providing certain levels of dental care to patients. It is ofte
These employees also had the longest tenure with the organizations. Retention, loyalty and profits come together under a single roof. Loss of employees with valuable relationships to customers leads to loss of customers. Retraining I believe a corollary to retention is retraining. Retrain employees to build better relationships and your customers will be further (and faster) attracted to your organization. Far too often organizations spend all of their efforts training employees on the “hard skills” of their business. Receptionists are taught to manage a 14 line phone system. Customer Service Reps are taught to better use Excel and other Microsoft applications, but very few companies are taking time to teach the soft skills that build relationships. Some very successful companies are training for soft skills. Founded in rural Iowa in 1930 as a small neighborhood grocery store, Hy-Vee has grown to a $4.6 Billion and 49,000 employees. With a unique employee owner approach to business, Consumer Reports ranked Hy-Vee among the top five supermarket chains in the nation in terms of service and customer satisfaction. Hy-Vee provides soft skills training to every employee in their organization. Their jingle “A helpful smile in every isle” is backed up with intensive training. New employees (often teenagers) are taught to make eye contact, and smile whenever they encounter customers. Even the small things are covered in the employee’s training. For instance, when a customer asks where to find a specific product, the answer could easily be, “In the middle of isle two.” Hy-Vee employees are trained to stop their current activity and personally lead the customer to the specific location of the desired product. This training pays a big dividend when customers comment, “The kids who work at Hy-Vee all seem to be so clean-cut and personable.” The great kids who work at Hy-Vee are a slice of teena Workflow 101: The Art Of Automation unity at work to learn and grow? After developing a random score based on the answers to the questions, they cross compiled the data with the specific business unit performance. Employees with the highest affirmative scores on the 12 questions worked for the best performing and most profitable business units.Workflow refers to the operational portion of a work procedure. It has several aspects: how tasks are structured, who performs them, what their relative order is, how they are synchronized, how information flows to support the tasks and how tasks are being tracked.In business, particularly, workflow is concerned with scheduling task executions, ensuring dependencies.In traditional terms this means moving the paper, processing the order, issuing the invoice. It could also mean filling the order from the warehouse, assembling documents, parts, tools, and people to repair a complex system, or manufacturing the complex device.In the last 15 years, tools that manage workflow have been developed. More than just procedural documents, workflow process is defined formally in a workflow computer system. The process is managed by a computer program that assigns the work, passes it on, and tracks its progress.That’s why today, workflow also refers to the automation of a business process, in whole or part, during which documents, information or tasks are passed from one worker to another for acti These employees also had the longest tenure with the organizations. Retention, loyalty and profits come together under a single roof. Loss of employees with valuable relationships to customers leads to loss of customers. Retraining I believe a corollary to retention is retraining. Retrain employees to build better relationships and your customers will be further (and faster) attracted to your organization. Far too often organizations spend all of their efforts training employees on the “hard skills” of their business. Receptionists are taught to manage a 14 line phone system. Customer Service Reps are taught to better use Excel and other Microsoft applications, but very few companies are taking time to teach the soft skills that build relationships. Some very successful companies are training for soft skills. Founded in rural Iowa in 1930 as a small neighborhood grocery store, Hy-Vee has grown to a $4.6 Billion and 49,000 employees. With a unique employee owner approach to business, Consumer Reports ranked Hy-Vee among the top five supermarket chains in the nation in terms of service and customer satisfaction. Hy-Vee provides soft skills training to every employee in their organization. Their jingle “A helpful smile in every isle” is backed up with intensive training. New employees (often teenagers) are taught to make eye contact, and smile whenever they encounter customers. Even the small things are covered in the employee’s training. For instance, when a customer asks where to find a specific product, the answer could easily be, “In the middle of isle two.” Hy-Vee employees are trained to stop their current activity and personally lead the customer to the specific location of the desired product. This training pays a big dividend when customers comment, “The kids who work at Hy-Vee all seem to be so clean-cut and personable.” The great kids who work at Hy-Vee are a slice of teena Are You Branded Yet? ful companies are training for soft skills. Founded in rural Iowa in 1930 as a small neighborhood grocery store, Hy-Vee has grown to a $4.6 Billion and 49,000 employees. With a unique employee owner approach to business, Consumer Reports ranked Hy-Vee among the top five supermarket chains in the nation in terms of service and customer satisfaction. Hy-Vee provides soft skills training to every employee in their organization. Their jingle “A helpful smile in every isle” is backed up with intensive training. New employees (often teenagers) are taught to make eye contact, and smile whenever they encounter customers. Even the small things are covered in the employee’s training. For instance, when a customer asks where to find a specific product, the answer could easily be, “In the middle of isle two.” Hy-Vee employees are trained to stop their current activity and personally lead the customer to the specific location of the desired product.One of the best ways to increase your chances of success, whether you work for someone else or have your own small business, is to find an effective way to tell people what you have to offer.You can do this by creating your own brand, according to author, consultant, movie producer and director, Tom Marcoux, who is known as America's Communication Coach. "In order to make your dreams come true you need to effectively tell the world what you offer.And, the essence of telling the world is to clearly and concisely express what you're best known for. This is your personal brand," Marcoux says. Corporations spend millions of dollars to keep their brands in people's minds and wallets.What is a brand? You see them every day -- Apple, McDonald's, Starbucks, Calvin Klein, Toyota. Brands are effective because they quickly tell consumers what they will be getting for their hard earned dollars. Perhaps more importantly, people often decide to choose one product over another one that may be equally good and better priced because of the brand name attached to it. Brands create customer loyalty. This training pays a big dividend when customers comment, “The kids who work at Hy-Vee all seem to be so clean-cut and personable.” The great kids who work at Hy-Vee are a slice of teenage America. But, they differentiate themselves because they have been taught and rehearsed in the soft skills required to develop relationships with Hy-Vee’s customer base. Other soft skills training being embraced by progressive companies are conflict resolution, team building, management / leadership skills, and “SMART” goal setting. With increasing frequency, organizations are employing Executive Coaches to provide soft skill training for top performing employees in leadership positions. Research In their new book, Competing on Analytics: The New Science of Winning, Thomas Davenport and Jeanne Harris build a case for companies who use the power of complete data analysis to drive every portion of their business. Harrah’s Casino and Hotels is singled out for their very successful use of analytics to drive customer loyalty. Harrah’s gathers extensive details on their customer base using the latest in information technology. The gaming industry has used recognition cards to boost customer loyalty for some time. Harrah's IT based strategy called Total Rewards pushes the envelope further. Harrah’s gathers information to identify its best and most loyal customers and uses that information to capture a larger share of their gaming dollars. The results speak for themselves. Harrah’s continues to increase “same store revenue” by applying the results of the data gathered. Harrah's hotel occupancy rate exceeds 90 percent versus an industry average of 60 percent. According to the Wall Street Journal, Harrah’s experiments with the 6+ Million people on whom they have gathered data. They test and tweak new promotions by sending out slightly different promotions to two similar groups of people then monitoring the near and long term results. Is this loyalty or trickery? The results are the same. Harrah’s estimates that their share of “loyal” customer gaming dollars rose from 30% to over 50% since they implemented the program in the late 1990’s. Another company that uses Analytics to drive loyalty is Amazon.com. If you are a frequent shopper at Amazon, you will receive recommendations that match and project topics of potential interest. Further, the web-retailer has built a plan called “Amazon Prime” which locks in high volume buyers through a club like “free shipping plan”. For $79 per year, members will receive an unlimited quantity of free 2 day shipping. The plan was originally panned by the financial community as a bottom line eating fiasco has been singled out as the largest driver of increased revenue through first quarter 2007. Detailed testing and predictive estimates allowed Amazon to better estimate the positive effects of the program long before it was fully implemented. Conclusions Company loyalty must be a conscious effort, a long term goal, and a continuing process. In today’s business environment, I would doubt that any organization can build long term success on any (single) one of these factors. But if a process is developed that retains the best of employees, retains them with increasing powerful skills and then provides them with the research needed to fine tune the attack – your company will be unstoppable!
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