From Adversity Come Success and Wealth
with Hundreds of ideas to implement immediately
Straight to the Point!
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16 February 2010

Motivate them, train them, care about them, and make winners out of them... they'll treat the customers right. And if customers are treated right, they'll come back.
- J. Marriott Jr

More at... About.com

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posted by Wayne Mansfield @ Tuesday, February 16, 2010   0 comments
Inspirational Quote of the Week
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2 February 2010

The winners in life think constantly in terms of I can, I will, and I am. Losers, on the other hand, concentrate their waking thoughts on what they should have or would have done, or what they can’t do. – Dennis Waitley

Read more...

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posted by Wayne Mansfield @ Tuesday, February 02, 2010   0 comments
Quotes from Chris Corrigan
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21 January 2010
Chris Corrigan is an Australian Businessman famous for growing logistics company 'Patrick Corporation' into one of Australia's most successful companies, for owning part of Richard Branson's Virgin Blue airline & taking on the Maritime Union in the 1998 Waterfront dispute. Here are some of Chris' wise words:

  • You can't overestimate the need to plan and prepare. In most of the mistakes I've made, there has been this common theme of inadequate planning beforehand. You really can't over-prepare in business!

  • I'm a firm believer that to really understand a business takes years, not months. As an investment analyst you think you understand a business from the outside, but the reality is that, once you are inside, you can go on learning for five or ten years.

  • I'd always had a childhood ambition to go into the investment capital business, and spent twenty-odd years in it. But the thought of spending the second half of my career in the same business was boring, so I looked around for other opportunities.

Source: Woopidoo!

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posted by Wayne Mansfield @ Thursday, January 21, 2010   0 comments
Did you pay taxes?
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12 January 2010
A nervous taxpayer was unhappily conversing with the IRS Tax auditor who had come to review his records.

At one point the auditor exclaimed, "Mr. Carelton, we feel it is a great privilege to be allowed to live and work in the USA. As a citizen you have an obligation to pay taxes, and we expect you to eagerly pay them with a smile."

"Thank goodness," returned Mr. Carelton, with a giant grin on his face, "I thought you were going to want me to pay with cash."

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posted by Wayne Mansfield @ Tuesday, January 12, 2010   0 comments
Imagination?
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7 December 2009

Several weeks after a young man had been hired, he was called into the personnel director’s office. “What is the meaning of this?” the director asked. “When you applied for this job, you told us you had five years experience. Now we discovered this is the first job you’ve ever held.” “Well,” the young man replied, “in your advertisement you said you wanted somebody with imagination.”

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posted by Wayne Mansfield @ Monday, December 07, 2009   0 comments
Get Motivated
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18 October 2009

Look well to this day. Yesterday is but a dream and tomorrow is only a vision. But today well lived makes every yesterday a dream of happiness and every tomorrow a vision of hope. Look well therefore to this day.

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posted by Wayne Mansfield @ Sunday, October 18, 2009   0 comments
Do you know what financial pain is?
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16 September 2009
Do you know what financial and emotional pain is? What would happen if you lost all your life savings? How would you react?

This is the story of one man who lost his life savings to Bernie Madoff's notorious scam. I invite you to watch his response to his disaster and to learn from his attitude.

He is a personal and corporate coach.

He leads customized keynotes and workshops with infectious enthusiasm and humor, Weinstein aims to teach the workforce -- from top-paid executives to first-year employees -- to learn to manage stress, feelings, anxiety, build effective teams and improvise innovation.

His organization also brings workshops to college campuses.

Matt Weinstein was elected to the Professional Speaker's Hall of Fame by the National Speaker's Association, and was honored by Successful Meetings Magazine as one of the "21 Top Speakers for the 21st Century." His TV special Fun Works! was broadcast nationally on PBS. His book, Dogs Don't Bite When A Growl Will Do was bestseller on the "What CEOs Are Reading" list.

He's best known book is Managing To Have Fun. His latest is Gently Down The Stream: Four Unforgettable Keys To Success.

Now here a famous quote by Matt, "Some genuine "wealth" in our lives is always created when we reach out to each other, when we make connections with each other, when we form a community together in times of crisis."

Source: motivational-story.com

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posted by Wayne Mansfield @ Wednesday, September 16, 2009   0 comments
The Power of Social Networks
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12 August 2009
What's happening with social networks?

What does the rising usefulness of decentralized technologies such as peer-to-peer, wireless networks, social software and open-source development have on our lives?

The story today is about a man who believes in the power of Facebook, Twitter and cell phone messages and videos that can help citizens all over the world.

The end of top-down control of news is changing the nature of politics... and businesses.

What does this mean to newspapers, radio and television?

New technologies are enabling new kinds of cooperative structures to flourish as a way of getting things done in business, science, the arts and elsewhere, as an alternative to centralized and institutional structures, which Clay Shirky sees as self-limiting.

In his writings and speeches he has argued that "a group is its own worst enemy." His clients have included Nokia, the Library of Congress and the BBC. Shirky is an adjunct professor in New York University's graduate Interactive Telecommunications Program, where he teaches a course named "Social Weather."

Shirky is the author of Here Comes Everybody.

This is what Wired magazine say, "Shirky is one of the handful of people with justifiable claim to the digerati moniker. He's become a consistently prescient voice on networks, social software, and technology's effects on society."

Source: motivational-story.com

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posted by Wayne Mansfield @ Wednesday, August 12, 2009   0 comments
Gain Confidence when Speaking
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20 July 2009
For most of us, effective public speaking requires a bit of discipline, preparation, and practice. These suggestions will help you develop your delivery skills and overcome presentation jitters.

When you're called upon to deliver a presentation--whether it's for a small group of your peers or a large gathering at a major event--you need to be well prepared, self-assured, and connected with the audience. These tips from Seattle-based writer and Web professional D. Keith Robinson promote a realistic approach to building a more relaxed and effective presentation style. His suggestions cover mental preparation, presentation guidelines, and delivery techniques:

* Visualize a positive outcome.
* Hang out with the other speakers (if there are any) and ask them for advice.
* Avoid complicated charts and graphs; they're hard for your audience to follow.
* Check the resolution of your presentation. Maybe go with 800×600 to be safe. You never know for sure how it's going to work out if you don't have full control over the environment.
* Prepare more than you can speak to, but also be prepared to get cut short.
* Don't read your slides. They should support what you are saying, not be what you are saying.
* Pause to let strong ideas sink in. This can be hard to remember, but your audience needs time to absorb and take breaks too.

More @ ZDNet

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posted by Wayne Mansfield @ Monday, July 20, 2009   0 comments
Weakness?
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15 June 2009

“One of the main weaknesses of mankind is the average person’s familiarity with the word ‘impossible.’ He knows all the rules that will not work. He knows all the things that cannot be done.”
- Napoleon Hill

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posted by Wayne Mansfield @ Monday, June 15, 2009   0 comments
Make Your First Million
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10 May 2009
Are you working to get your business to hit the coveted $1 million mark in sales? If so, then heed the following advice from people who have either pulled off the feat or are experts in the field.

Take Randy Horn, who toiled for six years before his board game business hit the $1 million mark--a milestone that came and went without much pomp and circumstance.

"I don't remember throwing a party," said Horn, the owner of Los Angeles-based Zobmondo!! Entertainment and creator of the Would You Rather …? board games. "It felt satisfying to have grown to that size, but I quickly moved on to planning for the next year."

Horn, whose firm now generates $6 million in annual sales, worked out of the bedroom in his apartment for eight years, still has just one employee, and has been all about growing slowly and methodically. "It was always a priority for me to maximize my profit, never a priority to get huge quickly," he stressed. "My goal was simply to create a good business, be my own boss and make a good, solid living." READ MORE...

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posted by Wayne Mansfield @ Sunday, May 10, 2009   0 comments
If At First You Do Succeed
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20 April 2009
Serial entrepreneur Michael Paolucci learned three valuable lessons while hunting for funding for his new venture, temporary tech-help 2.0 company Solvate: Never neglect your contact database, don't be afraid to go up to bat again where you've previously struck out, and be ready to start on the farm team.

When he went on the stump for Solvate's Series A funding round with co-founders Julie Ruvolo and Rick Lamb last summer, Paolucci first looked up a couple of old contacts. More than a decade back, he had pitched his previous startup, ad network 24/7 Media, to RRE Ventures partners Stuart Ellman and James Robinson IV. But they passed.24/7 went public in 1998 and sold in 2007 to communications services giant WPP Group for nearly $650 million. Although Ellman and Robinson hadn't backed him, Paolucci says he'd stayed friendly and in touch with the RRE partners over the years, often running into them at New York City venture-capital events.

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posted by Wayne Mansfield @ Monday, April 20, 2009   0 comments
Joke of the Week
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16 March 2009

Ed was in trouble. He forgot his wedding anniversary and his wife was really angry. She told him: 'Tomorrow morning, I expect to find a gift in the driveway that goes from 0 to 200 in less than six seconds - and it better be there!'

The next morning Ed got up early and left for work. When his wife woke up she looked out the window and sure enough there was a box, gift-wrapped, in the driveway. Confused, the wife ran out and brought it in. On opening it, she found a set of bathroom scales. Ed's been missing since Friday.

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posted by Wayne Mansfield @ Monday, March 16, 2009   0 comments
Marketing
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10 February 2009

New businesses often get their marketing wrong. They spend too much, too soon – and on the wrong things. Then, when they have their act together, there is no money left to invest in promotional activities which will drive business growth. The net result is inconsistent promotion of the wrong message to the wrong people. You need to avoid this, rather expensive, trap.

Two recent examples struck me. One, a classic car restoration business, emailed the area organisers of the national club which was holding its AGM within three miles of their premises inviting everybody for coffee and doughnuts and a look round to see the quality of their work. The other, a hair and beauty salon, spent a fortune on printing and entertainment for a celebrity hosted launch event but ran out of marketing funds immediately the event was over and were unable to afford low key advertising and promotions to keep new people coming through their doors. The hair salon went out of business within six months of launch...


Source: Business Opportunities and Ideas.

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posted by Wayne Mansfield @ Tuesday, February 10, 2009   0 comments
Adversity is unavoidable.
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12 January 2009
So, dont fight it, accept it. Develop the proper attitude, for as Havelock Ellis wrote, Pain and death are part of life. To reject them is to reject life itself. Although pain is inevitable, suffering is optional. We can choose to be strong. It is not misfortune that produces suffering, but an improper reaction to it.

Even under the worst circumstances, we can choose to focus on the positive rather than the negative. Thomas A. Edison is an example. In 1914, a fire almost destroyed his New Jersey laboratories. Valuable records of his experiments and two million dollars worth of equipment were lost. When surveying the damage, the sixty-seven year old Edison said, There is great value in disaster. All our mistakes are burned up. Thank God we can start anew.

When Hurricane Mitch swept across Central America and parts of the U.S., it left a path of destroyed homes, dashed dreams, and broken hearts. After the storm subsided, birds returned to uprooted trees and began to sing. Isnt it true, as Rose F. Kennedy says, Birds sing after a storm; why shouldnt people feel as free to delight in whatever remains to them?

Source: personal-development.com

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posted by Wayne Mansfield @ Monday, January 12, 2009   0 comments
Adversity: Here to Break Us or Make Us?
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14 December 2008
Pain, suffering, stress, and other difficulties are the admission tickets to the game of life. But, at times, we cannot help suspecting that life would be much more pleasant without the hassles. Is that what you think? Before answering, ponder the following. In a world without hurdles, there are no champions; without suffering, there are no saints; without battles, there are no victories; without rain, no rainbows. Doesnt it appear that a world that includes pain is more rewarding than one that doesnt? Isnt heat necessary to produce gold, pressure and polishing necessary to produce diamonds, and adversity necessary to produce character?

Heres how Henry Ford expressed the same sentiment: Life is a series of experiences, each one of which makes us bigger, even though sometimes it is hard to realize this. For the world was built to develop character, and we must learn that the setbacks and grieves which we endure help us in our marching onward.

Source: personal-development.com

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posted by Wayne Mansfield @ Sunday, December 14, 2008   0 comments
the gap of silence
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10 November 2008

When you and your team are talking with your prospects and customers, be sure to drop a small gap of silence in between what they say... and your response – just an extra second or two.

Do this when you're asking your questions about their challenges and needs and during general conversation. Not only will it improve your rapport, but in many cases, you'll also enjoy the extra information you learn when the other person continues to talk.

This is thoughtful listening and one of the surest ways to make a better connection with your prospects and customers.

Practice it with your team in your daily discussions. Practice it with your friends and family in your personal discussions.

In your sales efforts, make it your habit.

You’ll be amazed at what you learn.

"The right word may be effective, but no word was ever as effective as a rightly timed pause."

Mark Twain

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posted by Wayne Mansfield @ Monday, November 10, 2008   6 comments
Teaching Gmail About Spam
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22 October 2008

Spam filtering is about striking a balance. It's better to receive all the e-mail you should receive with the occasional spam arriving in your inbox than to have your e-mails filtered to such an aggressive extent that messages from clients and family are tagged erroneously as "spam."

Gmail's spam filtering uses heuristic algorithms to help identify spam. It "learns" what to consider spam when you mark e-mails as "spam"... or when you mark legitimate e-mails tagged as spam as "not spam."

Because Gmail filters spam based on how you tag your e-mails, you should not mark as "spam" e-mail from senders you DO wish to receive e-mail from. And instead of simply deleting spam from your inbox, check the box next to the e-mail and click the "Report Spam" button at the top of your inbox.

It helps if you receive a large volume of legitimate e-mail. This gives the spam filter a good-sized sample to work with and compare to the spam you're receiving. If you receive only a handful of legitimate e-mails a day, plus up to 500 spams a day, it will take a long time for any filtering system to build up enough data to accurately separate the wheat from the chaff.

No spam filtering system will ever be 100 percent accurate.

According to David Cross of Agora Learning: "In my Gmail account, I receive about the same amount of spam each day as you do. Only 10 to 15 spam messages make it into my inbox each week. And one legitimate e-mail a week (like my sister's holiday photos) gets erroneously marked as spam. That's about 3,000 e-mails a week with less than 15 that should have been tagged as spam that weren't and 1 that was tagged as spam that shouldn't have been. That's a 99.995 percent rate of accuracy."
posted by Wayne Mansfield @ Wednesday, October 22, 2008   0 comments
Bloody User Names taken... what now?
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19 October 2008
I saw this great article on todays Early to Rise newsletter "Never Be Stuck With a Wacky Username Again."

Many websites, from social networking sites to eBay, require you to register before you can get started. But picking out a username that's not already in use by someone else - and is easy for people to remember - can be tricky.

For a one-stop solution, go to UserNameCheck.com. This free service will check a variety of registration sites to see if your desired username is available.

Source: Lifehacker
posted by Wayne Mansfield @ Sunday, October 19, 2008   0 comments
Like Awesome You Know Actually
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18 September 2008

"And please, please, do what you can to cure the verbal virus that seems increasingly rampant among your generation. I'm talking about the relentless, wearisome use of the words, 'like,' and 'you know,' and 'awesome,' and 'actually.'

Listen to yourselves as you speak."

David McCullough (1933 – )
American author, lecturer, two-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize
posted by Wayne Mansfield @ Thursday, September 18, 2008   0 comments
Too Many Politicans
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16 September 2008

Politicians per head of populations:


Australia: 1 politician for every 2,900 people

United Kingdom: 1 politician for every 2,600 people

United States: 1 politician for every 600 people
posted by Wayne Mansfield @ Tuesday, September 16, 2008   0 comments
FaceBook
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15 September 2008
“About 2/3rds of all North American youth use it daily, and about 1/3rd of adults use it as least once a month –data From Forrester Research, Q4, 2007”
posted by Wayne Mansfield @ Monday, September 15, 2008   0 comments
Operation Scheduled Departure
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14 September 2008
Operation Scheduled Departure, a pilot program by the Homeland Security Department's Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, was launched in five cities in hopes that some of the estimated 11 million illegal immigrants would deport themselves. An estimated 457,000 illegals were targeted: those who had been ordered to leave, but had not done so.

If they volunteered to self-deport under the new program, they wouldn't be prosecuted for staying.

During the three-week pilot phase, only eight people volunteered to be deported.

"I don't consider the program a failure," said Jim Hayes, in charge of ICE's deportation unit, since the $41,000 effort proved that such programs are ineffective.

New York Times ...

Yes, you got it in one...it's a government program all right.
posted by Wayne Mansfield @ Sunday, September 14, 2008   0 comments
The Elephant Trunk Snorkel
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3 June 2008
New fossil finds have lent credence to the theory that elephant trunks evolved to work as snorkels. The fossils, from a purported elephant ancestor the size of a large pig, were found in an area of Egypt that was made up of swamps and rivers in prehistoric times. Chemical analysis of the fossil teeth showed that the animal lived in fresh water and ate freshwater plants.

A competing theory holds that elephant trunks evolved to serve as a fifth appendage that could reach beyond the animal's tusks.

Source: New Scientist
posted by Wayne Mansfield @ Tuesday, June 03, 2008   0 comments
34 Rules for Maverick Entrepreneurs
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29 May 2008

Yanik Silver recently visited with Richard Branson and here is what he wrote:

Branson has always been one of my business heroes from the way he lives his life to the fullest to his business success. I've been fortunate to have the chance to meet many of my mentors/heroes and most of them left me feeling uninspired.


With Branson - it's the opposite. I'm even more impressed and inspired.

In fact, while flying home from Necker I was so jazzed with our time there that I started creating my rules for successful entrepreneurial endeavors. I thought it would be top 10 list but I kept writing and writing in my journal and it came to 34 tenets that I'm calling...

"34 Rules for Maverick Entrepreneurs"

Here is the list:

1. It’s got to be a BIG idea that you, your team and your customers can “get” in seconds.

2. Strive to create 10x – 100x in value for any price you charge. Your rewards are always proportionate to the value you provide.
3. You must charge a premium price so you have a large margin to provide an extraordinary value & experience.
4. Provide a ‘Reason Why’ customers should do business with you and pay you a premium.
5. Get paid before you deliver your product or service.
6. You get to make the rules for your business. Don’t let industry norms dictate how you’ll work or who you’ll work with.
7. Create your business around your life instead of settling for your life around your business.
8. Consistently and constantly force yourself to focus on the ‘critically few’ proactive activities that produce exponential results. Don’t get caught up in minutia & bullshit.
9. Seek to minimize start-up risk but have maximum upside potential.
10. Get your idea out there as fast as possible even if it’s not quite ready by setting must-hit deadlines. Let the market tell you if you have a winner or not. If not – move on and fail forward fast! If it’s got potential – then you can make it better.
11. Find partners and team members who are strong where you are weak and appreciate being paid on results.
12. Your reputation always counts. Honor your obligations and agreements.
13. Never, ever get paid based on hours worked.
14. Leverage your marketing activities exponentially by using direct response methods and testing.
15. Measure and track your marketing so you know what’s working and what’s not.
16. Bootstrap. Having too much capital leads to incredible waste and doing things using conventional means.
17. Your partners and employees actions are their true core – not what they tell you.
18. Keep asking the right questions to come up with innovative solutions. “How?”, “What?”, “Where?”, “Who Else?” & “Why?” open up possibilities.
19. You’ll never have a perfect business and you’ll never be totally “done”. Deal with it.
20. Focus most of your time on your core strengths and less time working in areas you suck at.
21. Make it easier for customers to buy by taking away the risk of the transaction by guaranteeing what you do in a meaningful way.
22. Always have something else to sell (via upsell, cross-sell, follow-up offer, etc) whenever a transaction takes place. The hottest buyer in the world is one who just gave you money.
23. Always go back to your existing customers with exceptional offers and reasons they should give you more money. It’s 5x less expensive to sell to happy customers than go find new ones.
24. However the flip side is - fire your most annoying customers. They’ll be replaced with the right ones.
25. The marketplace and competitors are always trying to beat you down to a commodity. Don’t let that happen.
26. Develop and build your business’s personality that stands out. People want to buy from people.
27. Create your own category so you can be first in the consumer’s mind.
28. Go the opposite direction competitors are headed – you’ll stand out.
29. Mastermind and collaborate with other smart entrepreneurs if they have futures that are even bigger than their present.
30. Celebrate your victories. It’s too easy to simply move on to your next goal without acknowledging and appreciating the ‘win’.
31. Make your business AND doing business with you FUN!
32. Do the unexpected before and after anything goes wrong so customers are compelled to ‘share your story’.
33. Get a life! Business and making money are important but your life is the sum total of your experiences. Go out and create experiences & adventures so you can come back renewed and inspired for your next big thing.
34. Give back! Commit to taking a % of your company’s sales and make a difference. It this becomes a habit like brushing your teeth pretty soon the big checks with lots of zeros won’t be scary to write. If you think you can’t donate a percentage of your sales simply raise your price.

Side note on #34: Now after meeting and brainstorming with the team at VirginUnite – I’d strongly recommend them as a candidate because of the way they are creating entrepreneurial solutions to significant problems and a force for good. As entrepreneurs we know we can foster innovative solutions to business problems – this is the same force being tapped for the greater good. I’m really excited about some of their projects and what us, as entrepreneurs, can do together.


Yanil finishes off: You’ll be hearing more about this soon.


posted by Wayne Mansfield @ Thursday, May 29, 2008   2 comments
Brand Names So Good, We Use Them All the Time
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28 May 2008
Do you hoover or vacuum??




Recently, Google has been up in arms because people are using "google" as a verb. That's all well and good when you're talking about using Google to google something. But when "google" applies to searching on any search engine, they get a little testy. And no wonder. It IS possible for a brand name to become so popular that it slips into the common vernacular... and loses all traces of its corporate identity in the process.

Do you use facial tissue... or Kleenex? And if you blow your nose with Puffs or Scott, do you still call it kleenex?

When you use the copy machine, are you photocopying or xeroxing?

Kleenex and Xerox aren't alone. Zipper, elevator, cellophane, thermos, and escalator are other examples of brand names turned generic.

This great articel was in Early to Rise by Suzanne Richardson

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posted by Wayne Mansfield @ Wednesday, May 28, 2008   1 comments

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