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Added for You - Is Your Marketing Missing The Cookie Factor
The Best Inventory Management Practice For Office Furniture ld be so stupid to fall for what seems to be a quite obvious bait. Yet look around you, the cookie factor is well and alive and bouncing off the walls!In the office furniture world, an Inventory Management System and an Asset Management System are basically the same thing. If you are responsible for maintaining excess office furniture, an effective method of managing this inventory can be beneficial for your company. It can be cost effective when you reuse furniture instead of purchasing new furniture. Furniture can be readily available for new employees. If you have need to rent furniture on occasion, you may have what you need in your inventory. Inventory management software saves both money and time when tracking your inventory. Excess furniture can be bar-coded and inventoried before put into storage. The condition of each piece of furniture can be noted. Or this furniture can be cleaned, repainted, touched up, or reupholstered first so it's readily available when needed.Warehouses that are experienced in asset manag Lookie Mommie, There Are Cookies Everywhere! Look at air points and points that you collect every time you fill gas. Why on earth would you fly the same airline, despite those crazy timetables? Why fill gas at that grotty gas station? Or buy pizza from the same pizza shop every time? It’s all thanks to the cookie factor. It’s greed kicking in and wanting something for nothing. You can see the cookie factor in different dimensions. Here are three main avatars. 1) As An Inducement: Get That Vacuum Cleaner Moving! People b Entrepreneurs, Fear of Success and the Myth of Commonality Is your marketing pouring some serious money down the drain, because you don’t have a cookie factor? "You are testing my patience."I had just shared an article with my husband on "Secret Dining", a hip new trend making its way from Chicago to New York. Essentially these underground "restaurants" offer gourmet dinners at invitation-only parties in exchange for "donations". Sometimes dinners are combined with salon-type discussions, art showings or other events. Cool, exclusive, hip. All the fun of running an upscale restaurant without all the health department hassles.I am a woman with a many interests. In one recent lunch conversation a friend and I managed to touch on a mind-boggling array of topics including martial arts, knitting and crocheting, gourmet cooking, Tarot cards, dream interpretation, massage/bodywork, marriage, writing, photography, tea ceremonies, pottery, journalling, and what she plans on doing when she becomes an empty nester a year from now. This was before I read the Secret Dining articl Just what the heck is a cookie factor anyway? And, how can you apply this simple marketing strategy and psychological principle to rake in some big bucks? You Buy $30 Takeaway, You Get Free Coke and Wontons My smile was bigger than the Great Wall of China the first time this happened. We were regulars at this Chinese food takeaway, but this time there was something unusual. When we paid our bill, out popped a 2-litre bottle of Coke and 6 wontons. Confusion reigned and dollar signs kicked in. Was I paying for something I hadn’t ordered? Was there some communication gap here? My knotted eyebrows must have revealed my bewilderment quite clearly. Before I could go blah, the little Chinese lady behind the counter held up her hand, smiled and said the words that entranced me forever. "You buy $30 takeaway, you get free Coke and wontons" She Had Us Trained Like Lab Rats… Before that day, we’d never bought Chinese takeaways for more than $25. Yet magically as we crossed the $30 mark, this entrepreneurial woman made sure we knew the value of instant gratification. Every time we hit the $30 mark, out came the goodies. Every time we didn’t, we got our order and big smiles, but little else. Now we had a choice. We could have our usual, or order just a little more and be rewarded with all the extra goodies that came with it. What do you think we did? Yes, just like you and every one else, our greed took over and our purchases hit the $30 mark like sunshine hits the Caribbean. Say Hello To The Cookie Factor! This in short is the cookie factor. You create a demand for the product with something so alluring that the customer forgets the product itself and concentrates mainly on the cookies. Psychologists call this the psychology of second interest. This effectively means that people shift focus onto the goodies and end up buying the main product based on this tiny inducement. How Far Can You Take $5? Pretty far, I’d say judging from Marie’s success. Marie, a friend of ours, is a freelancer and gets called in when there are specific jobs to be done at various design firms. Like clockwork, she lands at the job with a box of yummy, scrumptious chocolate chip cookies. (Makes my mouth water, just writing this out!) It’s bizarre I know, but clients earning in excess of a hundred grand a year, drool like little puppies over the prospect of free cookies. $5 worth of cookies was getting Marie a red carpet treatment and more work than she could imagine. Without doubt, her work was exceptional, but then so was the work of her competition. The only tipping point in the game was the cookie factor. You may not believe that grown, sensible people would be so stupid to fall for what seems to be a quite obvious bait. Yet look around you, the cookie factor is well and alive and bouncing off the walls! Lookie Mommie, There Are Cookies Everywhere! Look at air points and points that you collect every time you fill gas. Why on earth would you fly the same airline, despite those crazy timetables? Why fill gas at that grotty gas station? Or buy pizza from the same pizza shop every time? It’s all thanks to the cookie factor. It’s greed kicking in and wanting something for nothing. You can see the cookie factor in different dimensions. Here are three main avatars. 1) As An Inducement: Get That Vacuum Cleaner Moving! People bu Business Mail Services That Can Help Your Business ws must have revealed my bewilderment quite clearly. Before I could go blah, the little Chinese lady behind the counter held up her hand, smiled and said the words that entranced me forever.Are you a small to medium sized business owner? If so, are all of your duties and tasks performed by your own employees, under your own roof? If so, you may want to consider outsourcing a number of your business services. This doesn’t necessarily mean that you have to eliminate a portion of your staff, but it does mean that you can give them additional, more important tasks to focus on.One of the many services that you may want to consider outsourcing to another individual or company is your business mail. If you choose to do this, you will likely be seeking a business mail service. A business mail service specializes in handling your business mail for you. Depending on the type of business you run, this may help to eliminate a good portion of your work or the work of your employees.One of the most common business mail services offered, from a business mail forwarding service, is mail forwarding. Mail fo "You buy $30 takeaway, you get free Coke and wontons" She Had Us Trained Like Lab Rats… Before that day, we’d never bought Chinese takeaways for more than $25. Yet magically as we crossed the $30 mark, this entrepreneurial woman made sure we knew the value of instant gratification. Every time we hit the $30 mark, out came the goodies. Every time we didn’t, we got our order and big smiles, but little else. Now we had a choice. We could have our usual, or order just a little more and be rewarded with all the extra goodies that came with it. What do you think we did? Yes, just like you and every one else, our greed took over and our purchases hit the $30 mark like sunshine hits the Caribbean. Say Hello To The Cookie Factor! This in short is the cookie factor. You create a demand for the product with something so alluring that the customer forgets the product itself and concentrates mainly on the cookies. Psychologists call this the psychology of second interest. This effectively means that people shift focus onto the goodies and end up buying the main product based on this tiny inducement. How Far Can You Take $5? Pretty far, I’d say judging from Marie’s success. Marie, a friend of ours, is a freelancer and gets called in when there are specific jobs to be done at various design firms. Like clockwork, she lands at the job with a box of yummy, scrumptious chocolate chip cookies. (Makes my mouth water, just writing this out!) It’s bizarre I know, but clients earning in excess of a hundred grand a year, drool like little puppies over the prospect of free cookies. $5 worth of cookies was getting Marie a red carpet treatment and more work than she could imagine. Without doubt, her work was exceptional, but then so was the work of her competition. The only tipping point in the game was the cookie factor. You may not believe that grown, sensible people would be so stupid to fall for what seems to be a quite obvious bait. Yet look around you, the cookie factor is well and alive and bouncing off the walls! Lookie Mommie, There Are Cookies Everywhere! Look at air points and points that you collect every time you fill gas. Why on earth would you fly the same airline, despite those crazy timetables? Why fill gas at that grotty gas station? Or buy pizza from the same pizza shop every time? It’s all thanks to the cookie factor. It’s greed kicking in and wanting something for nothing. You can see the cookie factor in different dimensions. Here are three main avatars. 1) As An Inducement: Get That Vacuum Cleaner Moving! People b The Office Romance: Ooh La La or Oh No No? h all the extra goodies that came with it.Connie and Joe are inseparable. They exchange knowing glances over their morning cup of coffee. They share the morning paper - he grabs the Sport section while she thumbs through Business. Connie playfully bumps Joe’s shoulder as they pass each other in the hall. Connie and Joe are coworkers. To See or Not to See According to Vault, a media consulting service, 58% of polled office workers have witnessed extramarital affairs in the workplace, 38% have dealt with unwanted sexual advances, and 20% have dated a subordinate. These numbers are up all across the board from 2005. Office relationships used to put the human resources administrator in a bind. ‘Small organizations suffer more than large companies do’, states Arlene Vernon of HRX, in Eden Prairie, MN. The office romance can turn the peace of a closely-knit little group inside out. With enough imagination and a bit of gossi What do you think we did? Yes, just like you and every one else, our greed took over and our purchases hit the $30 mark like sunshine hits the Caribbean. Say Hello To The Cookie Factor! This in short is the cookie factor. You create a demand for the product with something so alluring that the customer forgets the product itself and concentrates mainly on the cookies. Psychologists call this the psychology of second interest. This effectively means that people shift focus onto the goodies and end up buying the main product based on this tiny inducement. How Far Can You Take $5? Pretty far, I’d say judging from Marie’s success. Marie, a friend of ours, is a freelancer and gets called in when there are specific jobs to be done at various design firms. Like clockwork, she lands at the job with a box of yummy, scrumptious chocolate chip cookies. (Makes my mouth water, just writing this out!) It’s bizarre I know, but clients earning in excess of a hundred grand a year, drool like little puppies over the prospect of free cookies. $5 worth of cookies was getting Marie a red carpet treatment and more work than she could imagine. Without doubt, her work was exceptional, but then so was the work of her competition. The only tipping point in the game was the cookie factor. You may not believe that grown, sensible people would be so stupid to fall for what seems to be a quite obvious bait. Yet look around you, the cookie factor is well and alive and bouncing off the walls! Lookie Mommie, There Are Cookies Everywhere! Look at air points and points that you collect every time you fill gas. Why on earth would you fly the same airline, despite those crazy timetables? Why fill gas at that grotty gas station? Or buy pizza from the same pizza shop every time? It’s all thanks to the cookie factor. It’s greed kicking in and wanting something for nothing. You can see the cookie factor in different dimensions. Here are three main avatars. 1) As An Inducement: Get That Vacuum Cleaner Moving! People b A Real Time Case Study On How to Fail rie’s success. Marie, a friend of ours, is a freelancer and gets called in when there are specific jobs to be done at various design firms. Like clockwork, she lands at the job with a box of yummy, scrumptious chocolate chip cookies. (Makes my mouth water, just writing this out!)I am going to relate this true story out of a sense of frustration. Hopefully, my experience, and disappointment at seeing a wonderful opportunity torched by sloppiness, will enlighten others to maximize the chance to succeed in their chosen endeavor. Great ideas need to be properly fertilized, cultured and harvested. Taking shortcuts always results in failure.My consulting firm reviews hundreds of new product ideas, inventions and small business projects each and every year. We have been doing so for over two decades. Very few of the deals we review ever become commercial realities. However, many more of these have real, exciting, but unrealized potential. That is the real shame.Recently I received a new invention submission. The inventor was exceedingly secretive and I gave him a secrecy agreement to protect all parties involved in the review. As a signatory to the non-disclosure agreement, I can not reveal It’s bizarre I know, but clients earning in excess of a hundred grand a year, drool like little puppies over the prospect of free cookies. $5 worth of cookies was getting Marie a red carpet treatment and more work than she could imagine. Without doubt, her work was exceptional, but then so was the work of her competition. The only tipping point in the game was the cookie factor. You may not believe that grown, sensible people would be so stupid to fall for what seems to be a quite obvious bait. Yet look around you, the cookie factor is well and alive and bouncing off the walls! Lookie Mommie, There Are Cookies Everywhere! Look at air points and points that you collect every time you fill gas. Why on earth would you fly the same airline, despite those crazy timetables? Why fill gas at that grotty gas station? Or buy pizza from the same pizza shop every time? It’s all thanks to the cookie factor. It’s greed kicking in and wanting something for nothing. You can see the cookie factor in different dimensions. Here are three main avatars. 1) As An Inducement: Get That Vacuum Cleaner Moving! People b Are You Advertising Your Company or Entertaining Viewers? ld be so stupid to fall for what seems to be a quite obvious bait. Yet look around you, the cookie factor is well and alive and bouncing off the walls!Have you ever sat by the Television and saw a very funny commercial, which made you laugh and thought that was a really good commercial? Sure we all have, and then your business mind kicked in about 10-minutes later and you could not for the life of you remember which company it was that advertised the product - only the commercial itself.Then you waited and saw it again and then 10-minutes later nothing, what the hell was the company running that advertisement. Then you saw it again and then made a conscientious effort to remember it. Oh it was Vonage, Ford, Taco Bell or some other large corporation.Now then this brings us to a point of your advertising for your company? What is your goal; Are you Advertising your Company or Entertaining Viewers? Well any marketing executive would say you really want to do a little of both.Indeed but there is a fine line and you must realize if you cannot afford to run Lookie Mommie, There Are Cookies Everywhere! Look at air points and points that you collect every time you fill gas. Why on earth would you fly the same airline, despite those crazy timetables? Why fill gas at that grotty gas station? Or buy pizza from the same pizza shop every time? It’s all thanks to the cookie factor. It’s greed kicking in and wanting something for nothing. You can see the cookie factor in different dimensions. Here are three main avatars. 1) As An Inducement: Get That Vacuum Cleaner Moving! People buy because of the added factor. They always have and always will. As long as they perceive themselves as getting something for nothing, they will be drawn to it like flies to honey. The cookie factor makes firm believers out of hesitant buyers. Deep in the human psyche is the need for justification. The bonus that they receive fills that space and gets the credit card heated up once more. 2) As a Retention Tool: Stuck Like Glue! The cookie factor is magical for retention. Imagine you had a law firm and you had these free educational training sessions for your clients on a regular basis. What you’re doing is giving away something for nothing. You’re drawing them back like the pizza parlour does every time. This is a powerful retention tool to get customers back in your airspace. The inducement and the retention factor might look and feel the same, but there is a tiny difference. Inducement is instant gratification, where as with retention, it’s a slow moving process that shows results in loyal customers. 2) As a Deterrent This is the dark side of the cookie factor-- The Darth Vader! 5-year rentals and leases come under this category. The cookie factor is used to get the client in at a low rate, but keeps them hooked into the product or service over a long period of time. When you buy a fridge or a computer, you can get an additional 5 Year Peace of mind by buying into additional guarantees. There is very little real benefit for the user here, but it exists, if only in the dark alleys of your marketing strategy. Are You Mixing Up The Cookie Factor With The Hot Spot? If you are, it’s okay. A hotspot in selling, is finding out what is of most interest to the buyer and then going after that interest, often basing the entire sale on that one factor. The cookie factor is a tiny shift away from this thought process. Let Me Give You An Example If you were selling a house, a hotspot would be the proverbial cherry tree. The buyer loves the cherry tree, has always wanted a cherry tree and the sale of the home is based on this hotspot. The cookie factor is slightly different. It is a deliberate act of placing cookies to entice the potential buyer to dip into their pockets for a brand new mortgage. I’ve known people who’ve bought houses based on the premise that they get the sofas, work desk or the artwork on the mantelpiece. I’ve known smart real estate agents that have placed this cookie factor as part of the deal and creating interest where boredom exists. This is the bait, the cookie factor! It draws the customer in and tips them over in your favour. In effect, the cookie factor becomes the hot spot and you’re on your way to a definite sale. Where’s Your Cookie Factor? If you look into your business and your marketing strategy, you will certainly find one. When tested o
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