Planning A Slow Season Calendar

Written by Catherine Franz


Every business experiences slower periods. For some, they sell more duringrepparttar Christmas season while others move at a snail pace. Some sell more duringrepparttar 120461 summer and others less. The key is being aware of your seasons and alternatives available to solverepparttar 120462 challenge and changerepparttar 120463 results.

All businesses need down time, breathing room to re-evaluate where we’re going, and where we’ve been. What’s working and what’s not? What changes need to occur and where we want to go inrepparttar 120464 future?

Have you planned your breathing room time into your calendar year?

As a coach and independent professional, I know by personal experience and throughrepparttar 120465 feedback of my clients, that duringrepparttar 120466 slow times, stress, fears, and challenges on how to payrepparttar 120467 bills increases. Sometimes, stress increases without any money factors because we’re not used to having additional time on our hands, so our brain manifests things to fillrepparttar 120468 void. So, what arerepparttar 120469 alternatives? Good question. Let’s explorerepparttar 120470 possibilities...

You can userepparttar 120471 "save for a rainy day" philosophy by moving a certain percentage from a regular account to a money market or savings account for those rainy time periods.

You can plan out, on a paper calendar your seasonal periods. Look at your Income Statement forrepparttar 120472 past few years and you will see a pattern appearing. If that history isn’t available, ask others in your field area. As a coach, I’m inrepparttar 120473 personal development field. I would contact others in this field, like speakers, trainers, who have experience and history and interview them onrepparttar 120474 question.

After you review your historical financial information, keep in mind that future economic conditions will influence your seasonal plans. This requires a strategy on who and what you are going to use for economic indicator flags. This may require a financial planner, economist, or other professional on your support team. Readingrepparttar 120475 paper or watchingrepparttar 120476 news is all well and good, however, it can also add to confusion. Too many cooks inrepparttar 120477 kitchen syndrome. Choose one or two cooks and askrepparttar 120478 others to leaverepparttar 120479 kitchen.

Tales of the Touareg....

Written by Charles Warnock


Tales ofrepparttar Touareg and other adventures in branding

By Charles Warnock

You’re not likely to see a Volkswagen inrepparttar 120460 winner’s circle at Daytona or Indianapolis. But if there were a competition calledrepparttar 120461 Brand-Building 500, you would find a VW inrepparttar 120462 winner’s circle, year after year. Everyone knowsrepparttar 120463 touchstones of branding – visibility, value, consistency and loyalty. But few companies are more skilled than VW at putting these pieces together.

VW owners become emotionally invested in their cars, invent pet names for them and treat them like extended family members. In addition to automobile enthusiasts, many marketing professionals are fans ofrepparttar 120464 brand. VW’s irreverent image and clever television ad campaigns speak to young buyers today with a message that’s consistent withrepparttar 120465 one that spoke to their parents 30 years ago. If you’re a free-spirited kind of person who wants a car with personality, come join us. Among marketers,repparttar 120466 company’s promotional prowess is legendary:

The final VW Bug, forerunner of today’s Beetle, rolled offrepparttar 120467 production line in 2003 –repparttar 120468 last of more than 21 million sold worldwide sincerepparttar 120469 1930s. In addition to dozens of books aboutrepparttar 120470 Bug, several compilations of VW’s award-winning print ad campaigns have been published.

A “Transparent Factory” in Dresden, Germany features glass walls that enable residents to see firsthand how VW luxury sedans are manufactured. Finished vehicles are displayed in a glass tower before being delivered to their new owners.

In 1973-74,repparttar 120471 company sold 30,000 VW “Things” – a re-badged German military vehicle that looks very much likerepparttar 120472 love child of a jeep and a dumpster – to enthusiastic U.S. buyers.

And now comesrepparttar 120473 Touareg, VW’s entry intorepparttar 120474 luxury SUV market. The Touareg is apparently a first-rate SUV with what USA Today calls “style, grace and growl.” But Touareg? Come on. Passat is an odd name, but “Touareg” sounds like something that needs calamine lotion.

Worship me or die

Perhaps Americans will appreciate thatrepparttar 120475 Touareg gets its name from colorful bands of Saharan nomads known for their endurance and striking appearance. Onrepparttar 120476 plus side, it’s a pretty safe bet that Touareg doesn’t mean “won’t go” in Spanish. Perhaps Volkswagen thought that allrepparttar 120477 rugged-sounding regional names, like Tahoe andrepparttar 120478 Santa Fe, were taken. The VW “Peoria” or “Levittowner” just doesn’t haverepparttar 120479 same caché.

It’s a good bet that if you looked through enough sci-fi novels, you would encounter an evil warlord called Touaregrepparttar 120480 Terrible who aims to enslave a galaxy or kidnap a lovely Empress. What’s next? Mingrepparttar 120481 Mercury? The Plymouth Vader? Onrepparttar 120482 other hand, a “Worship Me or Die!” ad campaign forrepparttar 120483 Touareg would be a refreshing change of pace from those friendly, self-deprecating Beetle commercials.

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