Skip Navigation.

How to Get Discount Homeowners Insurance

July 31st, 2008

Your house is your biggest asset and your largest financial investment all rolled into one and insuring it against as
many possibilities as possible is vital to protecting that investment. That doesn’t mean, though, that you should have to pay over the odds for an insurance policy that might be cheaper with another company. There are a number of factors
that some companies consider and if you pass the test then you will be eligible for discount homeowners insurance. These factors make it very important that you shop around before making the final decision on exactly which policy you should
choose.

Organisations and clubs.

Some companies, organisations and alumni will negotiate a discounted deal on insurance and just by being a member of these groups you will be given discount homeowners insurance on an annual basis. Check with any clubs you are a member
of to see if this is one of the advantages they have to offer you. The discounts may not always be massive but if they have been arranged for home and car insurance and you put both with the same company you may find you are saving a reasonable amount of money by getting a pre arranged discount homeowners
insurance.

Security and safety.

Check with a few insurance providers because some will offer you a discount for having pre approved dead bolts, locks and smoke alarms installed. Further offers are given to people who live within a certain distance of a fire hydrant or
better still a fire station and if you are willing to pay to have a modern, state of the art alarm system fitted then you could find even better discount homeowners insurance is available to you. It’s always worth asking your insurance company if these are offers they would consider because you might find that the discount offered far outweighs the cost of having the items installed.

Loyalty bonuses.

Again, this is one to check with your own insurance company, especially if you have already been using their services for a couple of years and you aren’t sure whether to stay or to shop around for a better price from a different company. A
number of insurers will offer you discount homeowners insurance once you have been with them for a number of years. There are usually a couple of levels of discount offered; two to five percent after approximately there years and double the amount after a further 3 years. You could end up with 10% off your renewal quote for not shopping around.

Stacey Zimmerman is the owner and webmaster of Free Insurance Quotes. His site offers free online insurance quotes for homeowners, auto, life, health, car and long term care insurance. Be sure to visit his site for free Insurance Quotes, the latest articles, news and tips on all types of insurance.

Discover your Broadband Download Transfer Rate with the Super Easy Internet Test

July 31st, 2008

One thing that everyone needs during this day in age is a rapid broadband connection so that each one of us may easily chatter to colleagues via your e-mail and also MSN Messenger and also transfer your chosen content rapidly from around the entire web. Compare Broadband UK permits each one of us to realise how fast ones internet connection is by allowing each of us to undergo the entire Broadband Speed Test and should perhaps every body believe that your link to the web is not good enough then you can effortlessly change your broad brand connection so that it better fits precisely where each one of us live. Compare Broadband UK does this for clients hassle free. We are living during an astounding time in history aren’t we.

On the quick Compare Broadband UK website you yourself have the whole chance to experience a Broadband speed test. The quick and easy speed check produce reports about the actual web rate for all uploads and downloads available via your current broad band. From all that everybody will be able to determine the pace of a broad band connection and from there you will realise if you yourself want to alter your current web package. Get the lowdown on your internet download speeds, Click Here.

The speed test will effortlessly determine your download speed, this service is the rate your internet connection can then download info from the whole of the web, it is useful to have a good connection speed for all this as it is what you will then use when you transfer images, midi files and e-mails along with big attachments. The public then enjoy the broad band upload speed this is the pace with which your present connection send information back to the internet, this is primarily important for all online games and internet telephone calls. This is when Compare Broadband UK comes in very helpful. The only thing required is to simply just pop your information onto the system & make clear what it is exactly you are looking for and it will prop up a collection of the cheapest & best broad band offers available for you. The prices can range from 4 pounds per month to 50 pounds depending on exactly what it is customers are looking for. Compare Broadband UK uses your post code to find out what exactly is the most rapid connection speed aimed at your specific post code.

What Every Student Ought to Know Apropos of Online Sports Competition Gambling

July 30th, 2008

Tie together two of men’s predominant interests and you’re assured to disclose a mania that’s known as a sportsbook. What could be more inventive… If you picture a set of enthusiasts applauding a preferred local sports club, and always lays are assured to be established to complement the tumult. Aiming to get their piece of the exhilaration, onlookers will routinely aspire to figure out who will win in the running race. At the end of the day, this eventually turns into a nice and amicable race called sportsbook.

So it might easily seem to be dependency forming though sports betting is, in reality, only entertaining and of forging a bond with fellow sports admirers. You can wager a a minor quantity of gold and nevertheless have a incredible time. Below, you’ll find many basic hints to get you going sports betting. To wager, I would advise you go to a sportsbook, i.e. a place that tenders sportsbook. In America, there’s currently no less than four states to do sports betting lawfully, but inofficially you may attempt it essentially anywhere providing you can hunt out a bookie *and* you happen to be a legal adult. Included among the sporting contests you can bet your money on are pro including, to boot, college football + college league basketball, pro hockey and baseball, including, to boot, wagers on both dog and horse racing. You’ll have a choice of risking some money on the overall tally of a game or fight, when the contestant will be knocked out, and even whether a given tossed coin in a game or fight will come down heads or tails.

Kentucky Derby 134 Update – Monday, March 31

The bookies bank on number crunching to help you venture a guess which sports club you suppose will win. First, we have the spread, that is to say advantage given to a a trailing lineup that is assumed to go under by a given number points. Obviously, this describes the betting establishment’s formal fashion of making objective lays possible for a sports book. Thus we might choose to risk some money on a lineup that is assumed to go under and and nevertheless profit from the bet providing the lineup is defeated by a given number of points. We can select so many different sorts of lays- straight, parlays, i.e. combined stakes on sundry games, and many more, the straight bets being the best known in sports betting.

So, why not give it a go and enjoy the fun while you’re at it… But make sure that you won’t get seized and kill your entire retirement income on a bee! Else, you’re certain to end up lamenting it till the end of your days!

A Mom's Getaway

July 30th, 2008

Destination: Block Island

Accomplices: 6 High School Girlfriends (Yes, we’ve been friends for 5 years now ha ha)

The time is 6:15 am on a Sunday. I’ve been up since 4:30 am. Am I a little eager? Of course, it is my annual girlfrrend getaway and I’m late to arrive. Why you say? Let’s just say I have not completely embraced the “put mom on the top of the to do list” philosophy but I am getting there!

The other girls have already enjoyed 1 day on the beach and 1 night on the town (if you can call it a town). They have assured me that they did not have that much fun but I suspect they are lying.

The commuting time is approximately 3 hours but it is three hours of heavenly solitude. No children whining no husband questioning me on my packing abilities (Did you pack my underwear?) Nope, it’s just me – and yes I did forget to pack my underwear but I don’t care.

During the hour long ferry ride I see families heading over for vacations and I think “This would be a nice family destination but THANK GOD I don’t have them with me.” My cell phone rings I look at my caller ID. It’s my husband, ALREADY!!! He just calls to wish my well and he says he misses me already. Strangely, I do not miss him as much as I do when he is away on his annual golf weekend (3 days, 2 night but I am not keeping track).

The boat docks and I have arrived. I walk to our cottage and find the girls awake and waiting for me to go to breakfast. We are staying at the Blue Dorry Inn, a very quaint inn that provides a wonderful homemade breakfast in their dining room. The girls spend the breakfast filling me in on what happened the day/night before. It consists of drinks on the beach, appetizers for dinner, and drinks and dancing to a not very good band. They would have gone to bed early but one of the girls threatened bodily injury to anyone going to bed early.

After my de-briefing, we break down into groups. Four of the girls went for a long walk on the beach and 3 of us decide to take in the scenery with a bike ride to the breathtaking Mohegan Bluffs. We rented bikes for 1 hours (no need to kill ourselves) and road straight uphill to our destination. After oohing and aahing over the views we returned our bikes, donned our bathing suits and hit the beach.

The afternoon passed quickly at a beachside bar called Ballards. With cocktail service to our chairs and a band playing great music there is no need to move. We drink Caronas, read trashy magazines, talk about kids, husbands, having crushes, trying to have more children, trying not to have more children, our bodies, other women’s bodies, the guy throwing the footballs’ body. Most importantly we talk about how lucky we are that we have all remained friends over the years and can get together like this annually.

Valerie McDermott is a mother of 2 and co founder of http:///www.million-dollar-mama.com a website devoted to mothers who wish to rediscover their past indulgences like travel, get-togethers, fitness and spa treatments. Look like a million — feel like a million.

val@million-dollar-mama.com

On Writing and Poetry: Harry Calhoun in Conversation

July 27th, 2008

“This is just brilliant. The whole interview is incredible… I’m… REALLY appreciative of some seriously good advice from a fellow writer.” Mark Howell, Senior Writer, Solares Hill

Harry Calhoun’s picture could appear beside the dictionary definition for “journeyman.” Living proof that not all writers have to be famous or stick to one type of writing to be successful, Calhoun has found frequent editorial favor as a poet since 1980 and was a widely published freelance article and literary essay writer in the 80s and 90s. In addition, he has edited a poetry magazine and a trade magazine for the housing industry and placed poetry and fiction pieces in magazines such as Thunder Sandwich and The Islander. He has been an award-winning marketing writer for multinational companies such as GE and IBM for the past twenty years.

Trina Allen is a freelance writer and editor who has read and enjoyed much of Calhoun’s work.

Trina Allen: Your poetry has gotten you the most recognition in publications. To what do you attribute your success?

Harry Calhoun: Absolutely no doubt, three words three words, short attention span! That’s why I like my job now. Marketing writing is a lot like poetry. It’s frequently very short. It’s trying to express something in the fewest amounts of words and say it with the kind of spin that sticks with the person who’s reading it. It certainly isn’t poetry, but it’s the same mentality, just trying to say things really quickly and crisply. People think that poetry is flowery language or something that goes on and on, but usually it’s quite the opposite, it’s succinct and quick… trying to nail it in as few words as possible.

Allen: Is there any one poem that you consider your most successful piece?

Calhoun: Yeah, there’s a poem ironically, a very short one called “Leaving.” I always look at that as a success because I feel like it captured the feeling and the moment concisely and with compact verbiage.

Allen: I understand that a reviewer once surprised you with his take on your poem, “The Day after Christmas.” Can you tell me about that?

Calhoun: Oh yea. It was a really funny moment. I had the poem published in a little magazine, Taurus, where I was published pretty frequently when I was starting out. The poem was called “The Day after Christmas,” and I wrote it to compare the feeling of let down you get after Christmas to the loss of a love relationship we had something great, like Christmas, and now you’re gone and it’s all mundane again. The reviewer said that he liked the poem, which was cool, but he said it was a scathing indictment of the commercialism of the Christmas season. He apparently didn’t get the idea that I was trying to tie it into a love relationship at all. And it surprised me, but it also showed me that poems and fiction are open to interpretation. Just because I wrote it doesn’t mean that he can’t interpret it the way he wants to. His interpretation is as valid as mine.

Allen: You have over 500 publications in magazines including Writer’s Digest, Private Clubs, Gargoyle, Mississippi Arts & Letters, and The National Enquirer and you have won awards for your promotional materials including an Addy award for best direct mail. What are your feelings about your success?

Calhoun: It’s kind of like looking at your resume and saying, “Gee, did I do all that stuff.” You realize that somewhere along the line you did it, but it almost doesn’t seem real. I feel some remorse for not having done more, particularly in fiction and poetry, but I also feel that it’s been a good, full career and I’m basically at peace with it.

Allen: Would you expand on your greatest success?

Calhoun: Yeah, actually I’ve bounced around enough that I’ve had some successes in different areas. I can’t really point at any one great success. Things that come immediately to mind were in my most fertile poetic period, which was back in the late 80s when I had a few chapbooks of my poetry published by small presses. That was really fulfilling for me. I was also having a lot of my poems published in magazines around that time and even after that and I hosted a poetry reading and music series with my friend Mark Howell in Key West. That was a really great time in my life… but so is right now, being a marketing writer, which is obviously totally out of the publication realm. I’m still finding a lot of happiness doing that because its nice being at this stage in my career where I feel like I’m fairly good at what I do.

Allen: What advice would you give novice writers regarding a career in writing?

Calhoun: The first prerequisite is to have talent. You have no control over that. But beyond that, there are several things within your control. Here’s my top five list for writers, in reverse order David Letterman style:

CALHOUN’S FIVE SIMPLE RULES FOR WRITING SUCCESS

5. Read voraciously, especially in the genres you’re most interested in. One thing that amazed me as a poetry editor is that people who didn’t read poetry would send me poems. It’s like trying to walk before your legs develop. Reading gives styles to copy, styles that will help form your own personal style.

4. Remember that it’s all writing. Whether you’re writing a novel or an e-mail or a poem, it’s all writing and it all helps. Plus, if you’re like me and a lot of writers I’ve known, the very act of writing feels good no matter what kind of writing it is. Writing this response to your interview question feels good, for example!

3. Work, work, work. Don’t let anything get in the way of your writing. Make it your job, even if you’re already working another job to support yourself.

2. Have goals but don’t be afraid to change them. Not everyone’s career is like mine, and some people start out wanting to write fiction and end up doing just that. But if you find other genres that you’re good at, don’t be afraid to change your goals. The corollary to this is: Don’t have preconceived notions about where your writing will take you. I started out trying to write fiction, took a detour into poetry and then magazine editing and ended up as a marketing writer. My goal was always to be a successful writer but the form that success took changed several times during my career.

1. And my number one rule for writers: Want it more than you want anything else in the world. Passion is everything. I’d recommend Ray Bradbury’s Zen and the Art of Writing for advice about writing for love rather than money. I honestly think that any success I’ve had is because I wanted to earn the title of writer wanted to do it for a living more than anything. I wanted it more passionately than anyone else I knew.

You’ll notice that I left off two of the usual tips for writers: Keeping a journal and setting a daily time or page limit for your writing. That’s because neither one was particularly effective for me. I think that if I had stuck with fiction I would find a journal more useful, but as a nonfiction writer and poet it just got in the way of my “real” writing … it was more efficient to get my job done than to bother with a journal.

As for setting a goal to write for an hour a day or one page a day, I find that having an assignment is more of a motivator than an artificially set limit. Don’t have any freelance assignments? Make them up! In my poetry heyday, I would often set myself the task of completing x number of poems so that I would be able to submit them to a given magazine. No daily time limit, just the “assignment” to have the submission ready in a week or two weeks.

Allen: Would you like to share any additional thoughts on the topic of writing?

Calhoun: Writing is writing… (It’s) a tactical thing… that takes passion. Some lucky people start out writing fiction and can do it for them the linear path is best. Personally my career has been organic, which is a good way of saying I’ve been all over the place. I certainly didn’t start out thinking I’d be writing marketing copy and nobody could have told me I’d enjoy it as much as I do. I got my first marketing position because I’d written a lot of freelance articles and parlayed that into marketing. I wanted to find work in a more metropolitan area and the owner of a small ad agency in Pittsburgh was very impressed with some of my freelance writing and hired me as a marketing writer. I’ve been doing it ever sense.

I’ve had to change gears a lot. I’ve had to say, what are my goals now? Do I want to make some money? How can I make some money? Do I want to get published? How can I do that? As much of an emotional thing as writing is, it’s also a tactical thing. I found opportunities to parlay one type of writing into another or into the next step in my career.

I can’t subscribe to the idea that you’re a sellout if you don’t write fiction or poetry… Writing is just writing. If you’re accomplished at it and you’re good enough to get paid for it then there’s a certain amount of satisfaction to that, even if it’s a nine-to-five job like my marketing writing. It’s less bohemian than I though I’d ever be, having lived for a long time in a classic third-floor “writer’s garret” attic apartment. But whatever I do, if I don’t have passion about it then I don’t think I’d want to do it.

Allen: Some of your activities have included poetry readings, book reviews, articles in newspapers and magazines, and poetry, fiction, marketing writing. Which gave you the most satisfaction? The least?

Calhoun: I can look at myself as a journeyman or say I’ve had an incredibly varied life, however you want to look at it. I’ve gotten satisfaction out of the different phases of my writing. I’m considered one of the best writers for the major technology company where I work now. I get a lot of thrills of seeing my work on the Internet for audiences around the world. That’s exciting and I really enjoy that. I enjoyed seeing my poetry published and loved doing the poetry readings, including dabbling in performance poetry. That was a lot of fun.

There’ve been a lot of high points. I still remember getting my first article published and that of course was a huge thrill. It was back in the days when you still wrote on a typewriter and cut and pasted your stuff until you were happy with it and then typed it up on good paper to get it published. Fond memories.

Allen: It sounds like seeing your writing in print was one of the most thrilling things for you as a writer.

Calhoun: Definitely, those first publications were just great. The first thing I had published was a poem, followed by book reviews and my first article. It was nice to see my name out there.

Allen: What gave you the least satisfaction, or was the most frustrating early in your writing career?

Calhoun: I’m glad I made the decision to go away from fiction. I started out in the mid 70s writing it. I read tons of fiction, of course, but fiction was hard for me and continues to be difficult for me to this day. I guess my biggest regret is that I never had a major fiction work published. I had a few short stories published, but it’s not my strong point. That’s the thing I regret most and like least about my career. I have to give myself credit for making the decision to let go of this and do other things.

Allen: Was there a writer or poet that you admired and hoped to emulate in your early writing career?
Calhoun: Actually, there were several. When you asked the question I immediately thought of three or four writers: Dylan Thomas, the Welsh poet, and W. S. Merwin, an American poet who I really admired. I definitely was influenced in my poetry by both. I also thought about Ernest Hemingway because I really like the conciseness and crispness of his writing I definitely tried to emulate him for a while.

And then I finally realized there was one writer that influenced my style more than any other: Harlan Ellison, best known as a science fiction and fantasy writer. Besides writing entertaining stories, he would do these really interesting introductions to his stories, and they were always written so conversationally this really drew you into them. A lot of times today, even as a marketing writer, people say that my style is breezy and conversational, and I think I owe a lot of that style to Harlan Ellison because I was deliberately trying to copy his style. I liked the way it sounded and what he was doing.

And Charles Bukowski, the German poet and fiction writer who adopted LA as his home, definitely influenced me. I started out reading him in the 70s and quickly became a fan of his gritty, no-nonsense style, his humor and his accessibility. In the 80s, I got his contact information from a fellow fan and began a correspondence with him that lasted from 1983 until just before his death in 1994. I published his work in Pig in a Poke, a little poetry magazine that I edited for most of the 80s and even put out a small pamphlet of his work. He was an inspiration because he was a well-known writer who still kept in touch with his small-press roots.

Allen: You started a critically acclaimed magazine in the 80s called Pig in a Poke, which you published from 1982 to 1989. What gave you the idea for the magazine and why did you stop production?

Calhoun: It’s interesting. I still see online references occasionally to Pig in a Poke and other magazines from around that time. Some of them, like Thunder Sandwich and Black Bear Review, are still going right now. What gave me the idea for it? At that time I had only been published as a poet for a couple years. I was working as a book reviewer, and when I say working I mean I was being paid in copies of the books I reviewed. I wasn’t making any money. I was working another job and trying to find my success as a writer.

There were a lot of small-press poetry magazines at that time. I really liked the way their editors did business. They were usually really fast in replying. They gave advice. They were more conversational in their letters. It was a kind approach and I really liked it because as every writer knows those rejection slips can be impersonal and pretty tough to handle. I thought I would be good at editing a magazine and I also thought it would expose me to a lot more poetry, which it did, most of it really bad poetry. Definitely I got to know a lot of poets in the scene.

I published Pig in a Poke out of my own pocket for a number of years, which is why basically I stopped production because it got to be too much of a drain on my finances. But also its time had passed with me. I started to work in marketing and get real-world jobs. I didn’t have as much time for it as I had had before. It makes me think that possibly I could revive it on the Internet because that’s more of an immediate medium that printing it myself on paper.

Over the course of the years from 1982 to 88, I held a series of Pig in a Poke poetry readings at Hemingway’s in Pittsburgh every year. They were successful and a lot of fun.

Allen: Do you believe such magazines and chapbooks are a good way to get work published today?

Calhoun: If your goal is to make money, they’re a terrible idea. But my goal was not at all to make money. It was to get my poetry exposure, to get people to read my stuff and respond to it and tell me how to improve and to connect to it in some emotional way. In that sense, the little magazines are good because it is a bit easier to get published in them than the mainstream magazines. Some of them are of surprisingly high quality, though. Usually what you get from them is editors that are quick to respond and respond with a lot more empathy they actually will give you advice or tell you what they like or don’t like about your poetry. And that’s really valuable, especially for a young writer or someone who hasn’t done it for that long. Plus, because they are fast to respond and cheap to produce there was the thrill of getting to see your work fairly quickly. It is not quite as immediate as the Internet is today, but you could get a poem accepted and within a few months you could see it in print. And you got to share your thoughts with others. It was fun.

Excerpt from the interview in Thunder Sandwich #25, January 1, 2005.

To read the interview in its entirety go to http://www.thundersandwich.com/ts25/index.html.

Leaving
By Harry Calhoun

It’s like a door closing.
I want it to be gentle, noiseless,

Japanese. Reopen it and apologize
to the wood if it slams.

But humidity swells this
beyond what it should be

and the squeak and push
to close it sounds

as if I beg
to be let back in.

I am a freelance writer and editor who gave up a career as a successful middle school teacher to write full time. I started the Storm of Thought Writing Center for writing and editing help and advice. I am currently working on a children’s novel and several short stories. My publications include Dana Literary Society, and Thunder Sandwich. My articles about teaching, curricular materials and presentations have appeared in educational magazines such as Science Scope.

To learn more about my writing or the Storm of Thought Writing Center, visit http://www.trinaallen.com or http://spaces.msn.com/members/stormofthought/.

I Want to Start a Window Washing Business

July 27th, 2008

Many people would like to start their own business but they do not have a lot of money. There are some businesses, which do not cost very much money to start such as a window cleaning or window washing business. Obviously, it does not take very much to start a window washing business because there’s not a lot of equipment to buy.

For instance you need a really good squeaky, which cost in the neighborhood of $40-60 or a couple of them and a dual hole bucket. Also it makes sense to use distilled water or have some type of water softener at your home to make ultra-purified water to use and some good soap.

Of course it takes time to develop the finesse that you often a witness as you watch veteran window cleaners move the squeegee very rapidly across the window but that will come in time.

The most important thing in starting a window washing business is getting a good set of clientele and believe it or not many small-business retailers, which work in strip centers or small shopping centers or constantly bombarded by people selling window washing services trying to get their accounts and thus it is highly competitive. Residential customers are also quite good and that is less competitive, but it is mostly referral based.

Once you get in good with customers in a gated community or higher-end clientele and do excellent work you will find yourself with the full schedule. Perhaps you might consider getting into the window washing business. The risk is low and the costs are much less than other businesses and you can run the business from your home. Consider this in 2006.

Lance Winslow - EzineArticles Expert Author

“Lance Winslow” – Online Think Tank forum board. If you have innovative thoughts and unique perspectives, come think with Lance; http://www.WorldThinkTank.net/wttbbs/

Your Special Wedding Day

July 24th, 2008

First, you will need to go to a skincare specialist and have facials few months before your wedding day. Nothing looks more beautiful than a clean healthy skin. Your makeup application will look radiant.

Your basic makeup that you will need to create a glowing look, is your foundation, powder, mascara, blush, lipstick and concealer.

Since you will be taking a lot of pictures you need a matte look. It is crucial for your photographs because the shine on your face will show through your photos. Use a slightly heavier foundation than you normally use and a minute later apply your loose powder. This way you will have a smooth complexion and a finish matte look. As for your blush, it should look natural so choose a color that complements your skin tone and blend well. Avoid products that has too much frost in them. As for lipsticks, you can use a little gloss on your lips to bring out life to the lipstick you are wearing. Last wear a waterproof mascara, and eyeliner because you never know when those tears of happiness will come running down your face.

Tip of the Day:If you are getting married in the summer, for hot humid weather I would recommed to do an airbrush foundation application. It will make your makeup last longer and it makes your skin look flawless.

Mina is a professional licensed makeup artist,skincare specialist and author of many beauty articles.

8 Tips for Excellence as You Start a Cleaning Business

July 23rd, 2008

After initially starting a house cleaning business, far too many house cleaners neglect their duties over time, and as a result their job security suffers. My partner and I know this because we’ve “stolen” many jobs away from other people who started a house cleaning business when they failed to meet their clients’ expectations. They were poorly prepared. When you start a cleaning business, as in any other business, you will do your best work if you have good mentors. We hear complaints about these “flakes,” over the phone time after time, when our new clients are calling us because they’re disappointed in their current service.

When you’ve started your house cleaning business and it’s running smoothly, it pays
to think ahead and give yourself an extra edge of job security by delivering little
extras that will make your clients glad to write those checks out to you, month after
month. We’ve experienced the job security that comes from applying ourselves with
integrity to meet each client’s needs – not just meet them, but exceed them. When
you start a cleaning business, you can too. What’s more, you can keep your clients
for as long as you choose. If you are starting a cleaning business, delivering
excellence will help you build job security, because your clients will be praising your
name.

The good news is, delivering excellence is not all that difficult to do. How do you do
it? Here are eight tips:

1. Show up on time and be consistent. Being punctual shows your client that you
respect their schedule and that you can be counted on. Don’t vary the time you both
agreed on unless you must. While starting your cleaning business, create or develop
systems that provide a structure within which you can work efficiently and
consistently. Developing consistent systems also provides a way for you to check off
your mental”to do” list while working, reducing the likelihood that you’ll forget
something.

2. Be thorough. Focus on one task at a time, while keeping in mind the whole
picture. Know where you are going next, not just as you start your cleaning
business, but as you clean at each of your jobs. If possible, fully complete one task
or room before beginning the next. Move your cleaning equipment along with you
instead of spreading out all over the house.

3. Do your job to the best of your ability. Clean as if their place were your own.
Show that you care. Do what you would like to have done in your own house or
place of business. Work quickly but never rush or take risks with their belongings.

4. Return your clients’ phone calls as soon as you possibly can. Don’t give them
even one reason to think of you as less than professional. Make it easy for your
clients to keep you on and refer you and your service to others.

5. Make it smell yummy. Reduce the smell of “man’s best friend,” by applying
lavender or orange essential oil to the vacuum bag or filter before using. Essential
oils not only clean the air of bacteria and make things smell fantastic, they will lift
your spirits while you work! This is a subtle and magical trick. Your clients may
never figure out why, but they’ll just know that every time you clean their home,
everything smells so darn good.

6. Keep up to date. Continue learning and educating yourself about your business.
Don’t assume that you always know the best way to handle new situations. We can
all afford to step back periodically, get a fresh perspective, and reinvigorate
ourselves and our approach.

7. Say thank you. We send our holiday cards just before Thanksgiving, when they
won’t be lost in the sea of Christmas cards. This is a nice time to thank your clients
for giving you the opportunity to serve them. But don’t wait for the holidays.
Whenever the urge to say thanks strikes, do it. When we first started a cleaning
business, we sent a round of thanks to all our clients. Now one of them, a real
estate agent, consistently refers new clients to us. We like surprising her by leaving
behind a single stem flower once in a while.

8. We’re all human. Mistakes can and probably will happen every once in a blue
moon. Especially when you first start a cleaning business. Apologize and make
amends if you need to.

These little extras are not much more than common sense, but we all know how
uncommon that can be. As you start a house cleaning business, work to consistently
fulfill your clients’ expectations, and then go one step further and give them more
than they bargained for. You will have job security for as long as you choose.

This article was adapted from the newly revised and improved edition of Suzanne
Arthur’s ebook, Start Your Own House Cleaning Business. Two of Suzanne’s other
business ebooks, featuring the Suze & Ev Method, are Start Your Own Window
Cleaning Business, and Start Your Own Office Cleaning Business. These ebooks, as
well as a handy dandy cleaning tips ebooklet, can be found at http://www.start-cleaning-business.com

Suze & Ev’s further adventures in cleaning and beyond are
posted on their blog, Cleaning Business Insider

Weight Loss NOW! The Soft Drink Diet

July 20th, 2008

In the early nineties doctors were beginning to see the growing trend in American’s waistlines. So for a very short period of time they came out on the offense by promoting better foods to eat. An easy one was endorsing pasta meals. What they failed to mention was the best time to eat pasta and what other things to not eat with it. Thus, fifteen years later, you are twenty percent fatter, and more confused than ever. Pasta by itself is not necessarily the problem, but combine that with soft drinks or wine, then you have the Venus fly trap.

Remember years ago, the sticky strip you hung out in your back yard. Flies would fly
by and stick to the strap. Well, that is what soft drinks do in your system. While you
may be eating half way descent food groups (not to mention your portions) the
sugar drinks act as the sticky fly trap. This hinders the digestive process.

In plain English: the longer the food stays in your system the more of a chance you
have of getting fatter. The soft drinks act as barriers. In many cases when it comes
to weight loss, the food combinations really get you. The biggest no-no is starchy
foods with sugary foods.

If you have wine, cut down on the breads.

If you have pasta’s cut down on the wines.

If you have soft drinks, cut back on the starchy complex foods.

No matter the combination, combining pasta meals with sugary drinks is eating you
up from the inside out. If you want to lose a few pounds, lose a few ounces of soft
drinks in your daily diet.

LOSE WEIGHT NOW! FREE Mini course Click Here==> http://www.resolutions.bz

Discover the five step common sense way to
lose weight, more energy, in less time. The formula the medical
and fitness industry DON’T want you to know about! Greg Ryan is the best selling author of Changing from the
“INSIDE OUT”, former Kathy Smith
employee and high profile fitness trainer to the stars.

Stop Searching – Joint Ventures are the Solution to Doubling Your Business

July 20th, 2008

First, define the end user (or ideal client) of your product. Many times when I ask people who their ideal client is they will tell me “oh everyone can use my product!”. Actually the only two things that EVERYONE uses are air and water, SO narrow your focus – really key into WHO your customers are. What are their age, gender, hobbies, interests, etc. By refining your focus you can better serve your customer and become “THE” supplier of choice in your market.

Once you have identified your key customer you can find out what other companies are trying to appeal to that market as well, and then see if you can do a “joint venture” or “cross promotion” with them. This means you both contribute something to the deal, and you both generate some revenue for your business. This will allow you exposure to a whole new batch of customers, without having to spend anymore money!

(EXAMPLES OF JOINT VENTURES) Are you appealing to people’s health with your product or service? Why not approach a health related support group or health food store, and offer to give an educational seminar – this does not mean a sales pitch. Explain how people with the specific condition these people have can take better care of themselves, and how possibly your product may help them. Explain the benefits of your product well but don’t “push” the product, or you will very quickly turn people off. This way you educate people and they’ll naturally want more information.

A good way to let people see that you are interested in their health and not just selling them something is to start a newsletter that you can send out via email or regular mail. It should contain good health information, maybe some recipes, tips for fitting exercise into daily life, new research into aging, and a “little” bit about the product you sell. By offering information and education you become a trusted advisor, not just a salesperson. People are more likely to buy from someone they trust.

Do you make something that could tag along well with another product. As an example if you make little girls hair bows – why not see if a hair salon will let you package them with the children’s shampoo or brushes they sell?

Do you have a great new dog food or cookie – why not check out local pet stores and offer to give away a free sample with each puppy toy that’s sold? Or team up with local dog trainers and see if you can sell your doggy treats in bulk to them. Make sure the packaging has contact information on it, so dog owners can get in touch with you once their first package is finished and they want to buy more. (SALES TIP: MAKE SURE YOU ALWAYS PUT CONTACT INFORMATION ON YOUR PACKAGING SO PEOPLE KNOW HOW TO GET IN TOUCH WITH YOU)

If you’re a make-up artist, why not put on a make-up demonstration in a bridal salon on a Saturday morning when brides looking for wedding dresses, and girls looking for prom dresses are getting fitted. Have a draw for a free makeover, and use the names from the draw as a mailing list. This is an ideal way to target your key client!

I’ve used JV’s in other ways too:

1. I will often team up with another speaker to put on a workshop. Why?

- by having two workshop leaders and different topics more potential attendees will be interested

- both workshop leaders get in front of a whole new group of clients (the clients of the other workshop leader)

- I get to find out how other people present their information and I learn as much as attendees!

2. When I wanted to get more exposure for my services I approached a local radio station and suggested a daily radio feature. They thought it was a great idea and so every weekday morning I had a feature called “Family Business”. It ran for 18 months and though I didn’t get paid for my show the benefits for BOTH the radio station and I were great! What were they?

I got a chance to be heard by thousands of people EVERY day – something that would have been impossible any other way!
I gained instant credibility by having a radio program.
I learned how to write scripts, produce and host a radio show! Great experience that I didn’t have to go to school to get. I’ve now used some of those scripts in my “51 Tips to Grow Your Business” e-book and plan to use the broadcast tapes for audio products!

The radio station got a great feature without paying for it, and they were able to advertise my show and gain new listeners!
These are just a few JOINT VENTURE IDEAS – by being creative you can come up with thousands of ideas! Think about teaming up with another business owner to:

- put on a seminar

- exchange ads in each others newsletters

- offer special deals to each other’s clients
and numerous other ideas.

I’m currently using joint ventures to create seminars and exchange ads for my workshops in another newsletter (and in exchange I put the other trainer’s ad in my newsletter).

I often work with my clients to help them find successful ways to create Joint Ventures for their business. It’s a fun and creative way to get your business moving quickly! Joint Ventures are also something I include in every Marketing Plan that I create. They are a sure fire way to grow a business!

These are just a few unique ideas that you can custom tailor to suit your business. Get excited about your business, take a look around and see what other unique ideas you can come up with, and most of all – HAVE FUN!

Wendy McClelland is a motivational speaker, marketing innovator and Certified Guerrilla Marketing Coach who specializes in teaching people to “think without boundaries!” She is a past nominee for “Canadian Entrepreneur of the Year” and her clients have included software developers, an Olympic athlete and a wide range of business organizations. She has spoken to 10,000+ conference attendees, about Marketing, Internet Business and Motivation. You can contact her through her website – http://www.thinkwithoutboundaries.com