Kick-Start your JuicesWritten by Mary Attard
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HAPPINESS laughter water food solitude simple sleep relaxation nature family meditation friends calm prayer heart tranquility sunshine children smile jokes quiet holidays health therapeutic alternative This can be taken further by building another keyword from this very list to start a fresh list and getting you deeper into subject. You can even challenge yourself to stick to only a predetermined number of responses you are able to come up with. As you see every word in list can provide you with a particular angle in relation to main keyword which in turn can lead you to a totally unique approach to your writing project. There are times, as everything else in life, when writing is a bit of a chore, but having right tools at hand it can be turned into an enjoyable experience and even fun to do. You can kick start your juices with right tools!
Copyright 2004. All Rights Reserved. Mary Attard is a freelance writer and photographer. For more ideas like this check this site at http://www.blastthoseblocks.com. You are free to reprint this article in your ezine or ebook, or on your website, as long as the contents in the article and the resource box are not changed.
| | The Working Case Study Written by Christine Taylor
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When NOT to Write a Case Study What are most common blocks to partnering with a customer for a case study? 1.Your customer is really unhappy. They'd do a case study all right, but you wouldn't want them to. If you're hapless individual setting up initial interview, be sure that customer really is happy and is open to talking to you. Otherwise they'll just give you an earful. Fix: promise customer that you'll pass on all of his comments to technical support team, or whoever you think will best handle it. Then do it, and forget about it. 2.Customers who fear their market will punish them. Prime example: legal firms with security issues. Sure you helped them through a security project and now they're Fort Knox, but they don't want their clients to dream that a problem ever existed in first place. Fix: Forget it. They'll never give you permission to produce study. Besides, they're probably right. 3.Your customer is an exacting IT type who is suspicious of success story format. This customer considers project a success too, but they dislike purely positive spins - and no project is perfect. Fix: If they are happy for most part, get a buy-in that project really was successful. Don't put him off about negatives, capture those comments too and promise to pass them on. (Then do it.) This is usually enough to secure interview. 4.Your customer is scared to be interviewed. This is usually IT guy who did all footwork, and prefers to stay behind scenes. He (or she) will either be too nervous to talk, or will despise you because he doesn't think you've got technical chops. Usually both. Fix: Understand technology you're interviewing about. You don't have to be an engineer, but you should understand IT pressures and issues. Ask leading questions, but if they clam up and won't talk, thank them and hang up. Tell your customer contact that you're so happy you got to talk to technician, and now could you talk to a project manager too? Christine Taylor is an expert copywriter for technology industry. Call her today for help with your white paper, trade journal article, case study, positioning document, or any other B2B marketing piece. Call 760-249-6071 or e-mail her at chris@keywordcopy.com, and start that white paper selling!
Christine Taylor is an expert copywriter for the technology industry. Call her today for help with your white paper, trade journal article, case study, positioning document, or any other B2B marketing piece. Call 760-249-6071 or e-mail her at chris@keywordcopy.com, and start that white paper selling!
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