Tuesday, 17 May 2011

Tricia Guild's top tips for inside your home


The top designer Tricia Guild tells Christopher Middleton how an inspired interior can sell your home

It’s official. Never in British property history has it been harder to sell your house at the price that you’re asking.

According to the latest report from the National Institute of Economic and Social Research, property values are set to fall by 4.5 per cent this year, and 10.5 per cent in real terms by the end of 2015. This could be the longest period of falling house prices ever seen in this country.

Clearly then, over the coming months, it’s going to need a lot more than the waft of freshly brewed coffee and baking bread to persuade purchasers to part with their money. So what’s the average vendor to do, in order to persuade buyers to view their property not through cold, hard, logical lenses, but through rose-tinted glasses?

Tricia takes on large-scale redesign projects, working her makeover magic on everything from City penthouses to lakeside pavilions. And the secret of getting buyers’ hearts to beat a little faster, she says, is not to go for demureness and inoffensive colours, but to pull out the stops when it comes to expressing your personality.

Tricia takes on large-scale redesign projects, working her makeover magic on everything from City penthouses to lakeside pavilions. And the secret of getting buyers’ hearts to beat a little faster, she says, is not to go for demureness and inoffensive colours, but to pull out the stops when it comes to expressing your personality.

SOurce http://www.telegraph.co.uk/



Make Money Online with Affiliate Marketing


Many people would like a way to make money online, we read about home businesses opportunities and wonder if they sound too good to be true. There is one sure fire way to make money online – with affiliate marketing, where you sell other people’s products either through social media, SEO, or Pay Per Click. You then take commission on each resulting lead or sale.

Affiliate marketing is popular because the start up costs are extremely low, the barrier to entry is low, and the potential for profits is massive.

You can literally become a salesman or saleswoman overnight, in any industry the world and that includes multibillion-dollar industries such as hosting, anti aging, weight loss and fitness, loans, credit cards, dating and all sorts of other high-paying industries. There is definitely a lot of money to be made in these industries if you are capable of selling and getting leads, so put your business acumen to the test and give affiliate marketing a try for the potential to make money.

Source http://www.clickthrough-marketing.com/

Monday, 16 May 2011

Action Line: 'Work at home' ads are a scam

This is the oldest and most heinous of scams: taking advantage of people down on their luck by tricking money from them.

The Federal Trade Commission recently announced that marketers targeting financially strapped Americans by selling supposed work-at-home and other money-making opportunities will be giving up their ill-gotten gains under a settlement agreement with the Commission. The agency's complaint against the defendants stemmed from "Operation Bottom Dollar," a broader crackdown in 2010 on work-at-home scams resulting in law enforcement actions against seven operations targeting job seekers.
The FTC filed its "complaint for permanent injunction and other equitable relief" Feb. 2, 2010, in the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey, and a "proposed consent judgment" was signed by the judge April 11. "A consent judgment is for settlement purposes only and does not constitute an admission by the defendant that the law has been violated. Consent judgments have the force of law when approved and signed by the District Court judge," states an FTC press release.

The settlement order is against Independent Marketing Exchange, Inc., and its principal, Wayne Verderber II. It imposes a $919,000 judgment and this "will be suspended when the defendants turn over three rental properties, a Mercedes Benz, precious metals and other assets. If it is determined that the financial information the defendants gave the FTC was untruthful, the full amount of the judgment will become due. The order bans defendants marketing work-at-home and mystery shopping offers or assisting others in doing so. They are also barred from making deceptive claims about goods and services and are required to provide proof for earnings claims they make," states the release.

The complaint tulsaworld.com/FTCbagsscammers alleged defendants falsely represented that consumers were likely to make substantial income from work-at-home opportunities, and made other misrepresentations. Defendants also did business as National Data Management; N.D.M.; Global Mailing Services; G.M.S.; Independent Mailing Services; Independent Mailing Services, Inc.; I.M.S.; Independent Shoppers Network; Independent Shoppers; Success At Home; Success-At-Home Mailing; IMEX; IMEX, Inc.; and Continental Publishing Company; according to the complaint.
Operation Bottom Dollar defendants held out false promises that consumers would get help finding federal government jobs, work as movie extras or mystery shoppers; or that they could make money from home by stuffing envelopes or assembling ornaments.

Fraudulent promoters often use classified ads and the Internet to tout work-at-home offers: medical billing, envelope stuffing and assembly and craft work. Too often, these ads make promises about earnings, merchandise or marketability that sound great, but aren't truthful. They result in consumers who can least afford it being ripped off.
Source http://www.tulsaworld.com/

Monday, 9 May 2011

How Much is a Mother Worth?

The average pay for a stay-at-home mother's job in Livingston is $135,632!
Most stay-at-home moms are awesome. The ones I admire show more resourcefulness, are more organized, and have more patience than any executive I’ve ever known.
In their former lives they were lawyers, accountants, teachers, computer programmers, nurses, personnel managers, corporate trainers, and in my case, a marketing manager. We readily gave up our careers in the belief that staying at home with our kids is an investment in their lives as well as precious time for us. Our children are only going to be little once: we don’t want to miss that. We’ve given up the benefits of a salary and the status that goes with it, because people in our society who do not make money have virtually NO status, to remain at home raising our children. And we’d gladly do it again.
(Note: I think working moms often have it even harder because not only do you function in a workplace all day, but you come home and deal with the issues of a house and your family. Plus many of you deal with the guilt of not being at home).
Still, every once in a while, it would be nice to see a dollar figure given for what I do during the day.
Here's a site that does that. Say hello to the website Salary.com Through the Mom Salary Wizard, you can calculate what your ”worth” based on: number of kids and their age ranges, where you live, and how many hours you spend doing various jobs.
Now, I actually disagree with that list because the number of things I do as a stay-at-home mom far exceeds what the website’s designers think a typical stay-at-homer does. The website allows you to personalize that list depending on how many hours per week you spend at each job title (i.e. “Facilities Manager,” “Psychologist,” “Janitor,” etc.). You can also prompt the site to generate a “check” which you can send to family and friends, presumably to let them know what your dollar net worth really is.
Salary.com’s national salary range for a stay-at-home mom goes from $64,990 to $167,296 with the national median being $116,431. Their local range for a Livingston mom is from $114,660 to $163,714 with the median at $135,632. I clocked in at $193,883. Sweet!
Now, I know that figure means nothing to the world at large. But there was something refreshing about seeing a check in that amount, even it was made out to the generic “Mom.” It means that someone in the website’s design team had to take a moment or two to really think about what a stay-at-home mother does before assigning that task a number. It means that every trip I make to Shop-Rite, the Little League Field, CVS, and the Mall, conceivably has value.
And for those of us who choose to raise our children while not being members of the “paid” workforce, it means we’re more than “just” stay-at-home moms.
Source http://livingston.patch.com/

Sunday, 8 May 2011

Tweet! Too many opinions, not enough quality

Do you think Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, Alexander Hamilton and the boys would have had second thoughts about the First Amendment if they had been able to look 222 years into the future and see Twitter?
Would the whole free speech thing have seemed like a good idea?
Rashard Mendenhall of the Steelers got a good lesson in free speech and the power of the Internet last week. He made some moronic, ill-informed comments about the death of Osama Bin Laden.
But, it's time to let the guy up.
He wasn't accused of sexually assaulting anyone.
He wasn't accused of beating his wife or girlfriend, and he didn't even get pulled over and charged with a DUI.
He punched some keys on his computer or smart phone and proved - or at least should have - that there's no reason to listen to him talk about anything other than football.
There's no reason to run him out of town.
Yet.
One of the more disturbing aspects of the story was/is the number of people on talk radio who think the First Amendment protects Mendenhall from the Rooney family's wrath. I heard more than one talk-show host say that Art Rooney II couldn't cut Mendenhall because it was a free-speech issue. The First Amendment prevents the government from abridging your right of free speech. It doesn't protect you from getting fired for posting stupidity on Twitter.
If I owned an NFL team, I would make sure that all my players understood the concept of free speech, and I would make it clear that I wouldn't tolerate any of their speech that costs me money.
Here's what I would say to Mendenhall: "We pay you a boatload of money to be a running back. That money doesn't fall from the sky. We get it by selling tickets and by selling sponsorships. The sponsors pay us big bucks because they want to be associated with the Steelers brand. If you make stupid statements on your Twitter page, they don't just show your ignorance, they reflect on us. They cost us money. We're not in the football business just to have fun. We're in it to make money. No more stupid political commentary or we'll cut you so fast your head will spin."
• You have to wonder about the future of the country if there are people who can't get through a day without knowing what Rashard Mendenhall is thinking.
• Don Banks of SI.com compiled a nice list of NFL tweets. Here's Antrel Rolle of the New York Giants, reacting to the home fans booing: "We risk ourselves out there on the field each and every day. Also, when soldiers come home from Iraq, you don't boo them. I look at it the same way."
Then there's the Buffalo Bills' Steve Johnson, who dropped what would have been the game-winning touchdown against the Steelers. Afterward, he tweeted God: "I PRAISE YOU 24/7!!! AND THIS IS HOW YOU DO ME!!! YOU EXPECT ME TO LEARN FROM THIS???!!! HOW???!!! I'LL NEVER FORGET THIS!! EVER!! THX THO...."
The founders never would have given us free speech if they had known that someone, some day, would abuse question marks and exclamation points like that.
• It used to be that, unless it was a letter to the editor, a press credential was usually required for a person to have the ability to express his opinions to the masses. The press pass doesn't make you smarter, but it gives you access to sources that can help you develop an informed opinion.
The freedom and power of the Internet is a wonderful thing, but it has resulted in opinion inflation. There are millions more opinions being disseminated, but quantity doesn't equal quality. Considering the source has never been more important.
• Jamie Dixon's name was being mentioned as the next coach at the University of Maryland before the lights were turned out at coach Gary Williams' retirement party. What - other than money, of course - could possibly make Maryland a better job than Pitt for a head basketball coach?
• Now that the Washington Capitals have been swept by Tampa Bay, in a series in which they went 1-for-19 on the power play and 0-for-18 on the one-man advantage, should we consider the possibility that what happened to the Penguins had a lot more to do with the Lightning than it had to do with the Penguins?
• Baseball attendance continues to be an issue. Last week, the Detroit Tigers had their two smallest announced crowds for games against the New York Yankees in more than 10 years at Comerica Park.
• Here's something for you and the Penguins to ponder between now and the next time Sidney Crosby plays a game: Justin Morneau is a 25-30 home-run hitting first baseman for the Minnesota Twins. His season ended last year on July 7 because of a concussion. He had 18 home runs when he had to shut it down. He's back on the field again and hitting .201 with one home run.
Source http://www.observer-reporter.com/

Making More Money By Becoming More Responsible

The fundamental shift from a single-minded focus on making money to a broader focus on the values that will sustain an organization over time is an essential component of the ongoing reinvention of management and the transition to customer capitalism. The empowerment of self-organizing teams focused on meeting the needs of customers and buyers plays a key role. Paradoxically, a tight focus on understanding and meeting the needs of customers and buyers ends up making more money for the company.
I talked recently with Carol Sanford about how companies are making this happen and her exciting new book, The Responsible Business: Reimagining Sustainability and Success (Jossey-Bass, 2011).
Steve: You have worked with teams that have no supervision, which you call “buyer node teams”. What are they?
Carol: Buyer node teams are champions for a set of customers or consumers. In a responsible business, every person is a member of a buyer node team in addition to their regular functional role— including the CEO. Every team is cross-functional and multi-level. No team is task focused, functionally aligned, or goal focused. Every team is buyer-focused and responsible for the buyer’s success in the buyer’s endeavors.
Buyer node teams meet roughly twice a month to develop strategies, plan for execution of them, and reflect on progress and learning. Execution is deployed across the organization quickly because there are team members everywhere who understand what’s needed when a new pursuit is launched.
For example, DuPont of Canada Peroxide has teams that follow particular markets. In one case, the team that follows the forestry business helped invent a new bleaching process that is much friendly to watersheds and also produces paper with better printing characteristics. They also collaborated in the development of a new variety of tree that makes soil healthier as it grows trees and, because they grows quickly, shortens time to market.
Steve: What’s different about the way buyer node teams think and work?
Carol: Championing buyers—advocating back into your own business for them—builds what I call external considering. For example, a business’s champion teams use only those measures that assess the effects and effectiveness for the customer buyer at the point when they use the business’s product or service. They do not measure internally or report on internal production “successes,” such as the number of cases shipped or “happy customer” surveys based on meeting customer expectations. This is too low a level of aspiration for The Responsible Business..
Instead, champion teams become the research and development teams for improving the lives and work of customers and consumers in all of their functions.. Colgate, Europe set up cross-functional teams that were responsible for the success of mom-and-pop stores that carried Colgate brands. Success for these teams was measured in terms of their ability to deliver profits and innovativeness on a very small scale. Colgate established another team to champion big-box stores like Carrefour. They create results for each that they would not even think to ask for and went beyond the usually way of enchanting them.
In all of their decisions they were considering the effects of their work on what was external to their businesses rather than on what was internal. As part of their work they also accounted for their effects on co-creators (their own workers and the workers and businesses of their suppliers), Earth, communities and the larger society, and all of their investors (including shareholders and Colgate’s effect on taxpayer monies).
Steve: How does work get determined in this kind of team system?
Carol: Teams define their own work and ways of working based on the idea that they are each to improve the process every time they work. In general, teams do not adopt fixed standards and procedures except for matters like safety. In those cases, they create them only for set time periods or limit them with sunset clauses.
Every individual also develops what I call a promise beyond ableness (PBA) to contribute something unique to their championed buyer that is also in pursuit and support of the company’s business strategy. They gain alignment on their promised efforts with all other affected players, both inside and outside the company. These promises require individuals to go beyond their current capabilities, develop plans to grow themselves as a people and professionals, and engage a team to work with them on assessing their progress.
This is all self-directed. It includes no performance appraisal processes uniformly directed by management or human resources. People make much higher demands on themselves when they create and deliver on a PBA than they do when their work is delegated or assigned. PBAs grow a company’s capability rapidly because they grow all of its people rapidly and continuously in service of strategy and stakeholder success. With a PBA plan, no one is ever “outside” the process of taking on something that contributes uniquely. The PBA approach calls for enabling in conjunction with empowering all stakeholders.
Steve: Do champion teams and PBAs rely on rewards and incentives to increase motivation?
Carol: All PBAs are self-generated. Motivation is 100 percent intrinsic. There are no rewards, recognition, or incentives from management or any other outsider. Pay is increased based on a plan, when a promise beyond ableness has been fully accomplished and when assessment shows that it has enriched stakeholders’ lives and Life as a whole. Assessments also include improvements in earnings, margins, and cash flow for the business.
Teams create self-initiated celebrations when they reach benchmarks or targets achievements, or when individual team members do with a PBA. They bring their celebrations to the entire system and share their success stories in the process. No one is ever separated out as “employee of the month” or “salesperson for the quarter” or by any other recognition that ignores the team nature of all accomplishments. No incentives are provided except the intrinsic ones people experience in contributing to the successes of stakeholders.
In this way appreciation becomes increasingly immediate and authentic. People don’t nominate a few among them for recognition later; instead they find ways to acknowledge their appreciation for one another as it arises. More often than in traditional work systems, recognition is unrelated to function and directed “upward” in the organization.
Steve: What’s key to making this system work?
Carol: Individuals, teams, and organizations must build capability continuously. This is not the same as continuous training, although usually PBAs does including some training, it is based on extensive education in science, technology, human behavior, and sometimes leave for higher education. Businesses conduct business-wide monthly or bi-monthly sessions to build both critical thinking skills and the ability of individuals to manage themselves. Everyone learns to be responsible for their professional capability and to make themselves accountable for higher and/or more complex pursuits. They also learn to manage personal interactions and growth for the sake of improving the effectiveness of teamwork and stakeholder effectiveness.
Steve: How does this way of working relate to The Responsible Business?
Carol: In two ways. First, humans have a strong basic nature to exercise personal agency. To be fully realized, they have to learn to see themselves as part of a system and recognize how they are affected by and causing effects on the system and others within it, as they exercise agency. The processes I have developed here channel and grow the capacity for human agency. They also give people a living-systems context, which allows them to become increasingly aware and responsible for the effects they initiate. As they develop their own unique capabilities, they become more innovative and contributory. Being part of a buyer node team tends to compels a person to grow. This connection to a system context, and desire to contribute to it, is the essential foundation of a responsibility as a concept.
The second way is related to democracy and capitalism. Capitalism works well in conjunction with our drive for personal agency, the desire to exercise will and change things as we do so. Without an understanding of how systems work and a systems-based practice of external considering, the drive for agency can become greed and capitalism loses its highest potential, which is to grow the wealth and well-being of all Life.
In addition, democracy flourishes when citizens are able to think critically and choose good leaders and ways of governing. External considering makes us aware that, in the end, we are all one planet, one living being, and one Life. We cannot keep making the kind of tradeoff that happen when we do not exercise critical thinking in running our democracy. We won’t sustain Life and self-governance if we do. We must develop Purposeful Capitalism and a Thoughtful Democracy.
Work systems based on buyer node teams build that kind of capacity and understanding. Many of the stories in The Responsible Business demonstrate ways that people take the ableness they develop at work home to their families and communities. Colgate employees helped build the New South Africa’s ability to govern, many of them leading Mandela’s new township councils. Kingsford Charcoal built strong local economies and pervasive literacy with the same processes that created innovative offerings and took their business global.
Responsibility means including all stakeholders from the beginning, not assuming that you will be ready and capable of giving back after profits have been gathered and distributed.
Source http://blogs.forbes.com/

Saturday, 7 May 2011

WHYTE AIMS TO WIN OVER FANS

He has been dubbed the 'Whyte Knight' after emerging as the man with the millions who was set to ride to the rescue of debt-ridden Rangers and transform the fortunes of the Glasgow giants.

But, as the Sir David Murray era drew to a close on Friday after an association of more than 22 years with the club, and Rangers finally secured a new owner following a protracted six-month period of wrangling and due diligence, the question remains: who exactly is Craig Whyte?

Still, little is known of the Scots tycoon who is now the new owner of Rangers.

His was a name that was met with raised eyebrows and a shrug of the shoulders when his interest in purchasing Murray's shares first emerged in November.

Whyte has been described as both a millionaire and a billionaire, suggesting no-one actually knows exactly how substantial his fortune is.

What is clear, despite the vast wealth he has accumulated, is that the 40-year-old had successfully managed to fly below the radar for many years before going public with his plans to buy one of the most famous football clubs in Europe.

What is known about Whyte is that his interest in making money and the financial markets - and apparent talent in that area - was developed at an early age.

The most famous fact about his formative years was how he began dabbling in the stock market at the age of just 15 while still a student at Glasgow's Kelvinside Academy, using cash from a part-time job at his father's plant-hire firm.

Two years later, and with a £20,000 fortune of his own, Whyte started up his own plant-hire business, Whyte Hire, which went on to make a £150,000 profit in its first year.

He expanded his business interests to include security and contract cleaning and, by 1997, at the age of 26, Whyte was Scotland's youngest self-made millionaire.

These days, he makes his money as a venture capitalist and splits his time between London and his home in the Scottish highlands - the historic Castle Grant, near Granton-on-Spey, which he bought for £720,000 and renovated to make his family home.

The question which naturally follows on from 'who?' is 'why?'.

Born in Motherwell in 1971, Whyte is reportedly a lifelong Rangers fan. Right now, that appears to be the single, biggest reason for purchasing the club.

Rangers' financial woes have been well documented and the involvement of main creditors Lloyds Banking Group ever more significant in recent years.

Debts stood at around £20million before the takeover was completed and vastly depleted resources on the park means there will be pressure to make cash available for new boss Ally McCoist to strengthen his squad ahead of his first season at the helm.

Whyte first confirmed to the stock exchange he was considering making an offer for Rangers and was in talks with Murray International Holdings regarding a proposed takeover on November 18.

The journey since then has been a long and often frustrating one.

First convincing Murray and Lloyds of his credentials, before eventually receiving the green light from the independent committee of the Rangers board, headed by chairman Alastair Johnston.

Now he must convince the Rangers fans he is the right man for the job and really is the club's 'Whyte Knight' after all.

Source http://www.sportinglife.com/