Archive for February, 2008

How Much Is A Solid Appointment With A Decision Maker Worth

February 26th 2008

Jim, my now-retired State Farm Insurance agent, was the luckiest guy in the world.

I don’t say this because he had a great wife. Actually, I never met her.

But I did meet his office manager, Shirley, and she is what made Jim the luckiest guy in the world.

She was rock-solid, dependable, and she was a very, very effective communicator. She was especially good over the phone.

Jim gave her complete control of the agency’s day-to-day operations, while he labored away on every golf course he could find.

One of Shirley’s best abilities was in the area of appointment setting. She had no problem getting decision makers on the line, and her earnest and honest tones simply made prospects roll over.

I never asked Jim how much he paid Shirley, but she was worth her weight in platinum.

I can estimate that the average client Jim put on the books could be expected to deliver about $10,000 to him in commissions, over time. He closed about a third of the appointments she set for him, so my guess is that if each appointment cost him about $30 to set, he was getting back about 100 times his investment.

Not bad, right?

The other evening at a dinner at the UCLA faculty center, I was speaking to two colleagues, who double as consultants, about the value of a qualified appointment with a decision maker.

“How much would you willingly pay for one?” I asked.

The more junior of the two blurted out, “$100.”

Shaking his head in disapproval, the second said, “No, no, I’d pay $500that’s what it’s worth.”

All I know is the average appointment setter in Los Angeles is paid twelve to fifteen dollars per hour. Sometimes, they receive bonuses, based on appointments set, or deals that are closed.

That’s far too little money, if they’re good.

Wouldn’t you agree?

Dr. Gary S. Goodman, President of Customersatisfaction.com, is a popular keynote speaker, management consultant, and seminar leader and the best-selling author of 12 books, including Reach Out & Sell Someone

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Finding Work As Freelance Contractor, Some Helpful Tips

February 26th 2008

I manage a firm that handles over 1,000 contractors who specialise in providing compliance consulting and contracting support mainly in the Financial Services Sector. We work with some of the UK’s leading banks and building societies as well as small firms who need occasional compliance policy guidance. Every day we are constantly asked why a person has not been nominated for a pending project.

There are a number of does and dont’s that will help you be in the right place at the right time when the next contract arises:

Does

  • Make sure that you’ve completed your registration fully and have submitted a CV. This is the most basic error that many contractors make.
  • Call your agency / consultancy / outsourcer every 3 - 4 weeks, but not more often than this. We do like to hear from you and yes it does increase your chances of being known for the next appropriate opportunity.
  • Set the rate that you are prepared to work for at a realistic level. If you overprice then you’ll miss out on opportunities. If you price yourself too low then you’ll always be fighting to achieve what you expect for your services. It’s better to turn down positions than to not receive them at all!
  • Register with at least 4 resource providers. This way you’ll increase your employment chances.
  • Only take on a project that meets at least 70% of your own requirements.
  • Always be open with each of the companies that you are registered with. They will understand and be more helpful to you with this in mind.
  • Keep an eye on the evolving contractor market. You should be learning new skills and achieving new qualifications to remain competitive and increase your marketability.
  • If you are unsure of anything relating to the contracting process then it is always best to ask for help. You are the expert in your chosen field. We are the experts in finding you the place to perform your work.
  • Dont’s

  • Terminate an existing project early to take on a new project that you prefer. Clients are now savvy to this and many specifically request a reference from your most recent contract. You will also create a bad reputation for yourself by jumping contracts.
  • Take on a project that you believe may not be suited for you on the basis that you need to be working. Most contractors doing this either leave or find their contracts ended prematurely.
  • When You Achieve a Project:

  • Interact with your line manager and team at the client’s location. It’s likely that you’re an expensive resource and paid more than the full time employees that you are working with. This will help with your enjoyment on the project and also with references and contract extensions. Smile and even offer to make tea where possible!
  • Once a week touch base with your line manager for an informal appraisal.
  • Jonathan Curran is Managing Director of Stamper Consulting a UK based provider of compliance contractors and consultants to the UK Financial Services, Healthcare, Telecoms, Utilities and Public Sector. His firm has over 1,000 qualified professionals all who specialise in providing regulatory consulting services.

    Educated at Reading University with a BSc in Applied Economics and at The Royal Belfast Academical Institutution. He was born in Belfast in 1973.

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    The Knowledge Filter

    February 25th 2008

    “[I often get] the feeling that the very concept of objective truth is fading out of the world… I am willing to believe that history is for the most part inaccurate and biased, but what is peculiar to our age is the abandonment of the idea that history could be truthfully written. In the past people deliberately lied, or they unconsciously coloured what they wrote, or they struggled after the truth, well knowing that they must make many mistakes; but in each case they believed that ‘the facts’ existed and were more or less discoverable.” - George Orwell from Looking Back on the Spanish War

    I can argue that it isn’t just esoteric knowledge or black ops and spy rings that are keeping knowledge away from the citizens of this world. I can even go so far as to say most knowledge is kept away from people on purpose. The Family Compact in Ontario flat out admitted they did not want people to really be educated, because it makes it harder to govern them. That was in the nineteenth century when it was not so easy to fleece people for their taxes and corporations did not have their present immortal status and greater rights than people. We are experiencing something far beyond the Literary Theory that Professor Graham Good talks about or what Marshall McLuhan knew about secret societies running the world. It is more than just the Knowledge Filter than Professor Philip Johnson speaks about. Zinn, Parenti and many more know that academia is like the Emperor that has no clothes. I have experienced the matter first hand in many more ways than the nit-picking racist fundamentalists who are always trying to beat back the truth.

    A web site called Undernet has this introduction to a few books including my first book Diverse Druids after placing a number of positively portrayed normative Bible Narrative histories in various segments or genres of study. “Pseudo-Archaeology and Pseudo-Science (Buyer Beware: All of the following books have been placed in this pseudo-section because they offering alternative views of science or archaeology which irreconcilably conflict with standard scientific thought. Do not be surprised by bad science, bad sources, poor reasoning or all of the above.)” (1)

    This is my response to a person asking if I read Cremo’s masterwork which is also put under the same heading. He is in a group of open-minded people who are interested in what is called paranormal.

    I did not read Forbidden Archaeology but I read Hidden History completely - it is the shorter version. His facts are from the actual scientific record and there may be a couple that are wrong but he has a valid point of view; albeit one that is backed by Hindu propaganda.

    This Undernet place is a Euro-centric and Xian mindset.

    It has books that promote the Cradle of Civilization or Bible Narrative in all the top sections. Then it has the attack on Michael Moore mixed in - George W. Bush would be proud. I posted this on Machine Gun Politics@msn communities and explained the way psy-ops affects the herd mentality through this kind of Perception Management. The denizens of that site did the lynch mob thing to me. It is little different than what was done to people supporting emancipation ideology for blacks in recent decades. They are afraid to think for themselves or they say they don’t have time to inform themselves. Will mankind start questioning their leaders in the near future?

    Activist for ecumenicism and Brotherhood

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