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Articles tagged with company doesn
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If you’re in sales, you know the feeling. It’s the middle of the night about two weeks after starting a new job. You were enthusiastic and could hardly wait to get going. Now, your head is full of doubts. You try to shove them aside, but they don’t go away. “Everything is new,” you tell yourself. “I just need to give it a little more time.” However, the doubts keep coming back.
The gap between what you were told about the job and what’s actually happening grows wider by the day. After about three weeks, you finally ask yourself, “Have I made a mistake?”
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COMMUNICATING IN A CRISIS by Janine Reid Protecting your company's reputation and credibility during a crisis is a responsibility that you need to address from the get go. ...
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Finding out if someone is truthful is an art, not a science. The best truth-detecting machine on the market, the polygraph, is illegal in the hiring process. Imagine if there were an invention that could detect the truth with 100% accuracy, as predicted by futurist James Halperin in The Truth Machine.
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An effective marketing program will benefit you, your carriers, and your clients.
Unless you meet your customer’s needs, there’s no room for an insurer — let alone your agency. If the company doesn’t make money, the entire system falters.
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It’s often difficult for an agency to hire an in-house PR specialist. And assigning PR responsibilities to an existing employee has its drawbacks. This document by Henry Stimpson examines the advantages and disadvantages to hiring an out-sourced PR consultant.
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TASTED ANY GOOD LISTS LATELY? No, that's not a misspelling. 'Tasted' is what we mean-and you'll see why when we tell you what we have in mind. Think of how you go about deciding whether you like ...
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We've all heard that the essence of marketing is to find a need and fill it. Well, unless you have deep pockets or know exactly what the world needs, your marketing efforts will yield a better response if you follow this formula instead: Find a want and fill it.
Most of us have enough food, shelter, clothing, and transportation-we don't need much more. But we want more. We need food, but we want fast foods, diet foods, or gourmet foods. Most of us don't need a 2 1/2-bath home or expensive designer clothes, but we want them. We may need a car, but we want a Lexus or a BMW.