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    7 Common-Sense Tips for Managing People
    “Example is not the main thing in influencing others. It is the only thing.” Albert Schweitzer1.You set the standard: Work as hard, or harder, than your employees. Be a role model when managing people. Strive to know more than your best employee (or best sales rep) about your product line, industry, and their jobs. This doesn’t mean you have to know everything. Still, educate yourself. I frequently hear in my seminars, “My boss has no idea what I really do in my job. The challenges, the pressures I face, and the time constraints.”2. Be an effective communicator: Communicate the good, the bad, and the ugly at least weekly. In study after study, employees and business leaders overwhelmingly want a leader who is “straightforward.” I hear this over and over in my leadership seminars and workshops worldwide. Good interpersonal skills are crucial in managing people.3. Be authentic, be real: The #1 trait people want to see, to willingly follow their leader is honesty. How can you expect them to look up to you if they don’t trust you? Leadership is all about honesty and integrity.4. The top 5 things: Ask your people point blank, “What are the top 5 things I can do to help you succeed?” For example, if they are salespeople
    years, since Apple’s iTunes Music Store was launched, broadband Internet users worldwide are now spending more than $1bn a year on song downloads. Apple has sold more than 600 million songs in two and a half years, and in the US iTunes ranks as one of the leading music stores alongside major bricks-and-mortar retailers. It has also added Podcasts and Video downloads to its offering.

    Industry analysts reckon that iPod and iTunes have not only added to Apple’s bottom line, they have also given a significant boost to the company’s computer brand. In short, Apple’s fortunes have been turned around by music, yet music wasn’t mentioned in any of the 101 ways to save Apple in 1997. There are few magazines more switched on than Wired magazine yet nobody there suggested music as a route to salvation – it was down to the insight of the Apple management and their ability to size up an opportunity and deliver a solution which saved the day.

    Before iTunes and the iPod, the music industry had been fighting a rearguard action against illegal file sharing – millions of people copying each other’s music for free through peer-to-peer systems such as Napster and Kazaa. For many analysts, the music industry was “broken” with no prospect of fixing itself. Its only recourse was to track down and prosecute file-sharers. Then along came Apple, a complete outsider, to show the way forward and put together the first site to offer a really wide range of legal music

    Is Buying Franchise Rights Worth the High Cost?
    Many people wish to become an entrepreneur and own their own business. While buying franchise has many upsides to it, there are also the downsides and risks that you take. It is extremely expensive to get a franchise up and running, so there are many things that you must consider before purchasing a franchise. There are many positives to owning your own business, but it is important to be cautious with a large investment such as buying franchise.Buying franchise can reduce your investment risk by allowing you to work with an established company, but it does not come free by any means. One of the costs that are put on the bill is the initial franchise fee, which may be non-refundable and cost thousands to hundreds of thousands of dollars. That is why it is important to make sure you know what you are getting into before you make anything official.Other costs that you may run into include costs to rent, build and equip the building, along with the initial inventory to get running. While the list goes on and on including operating licenses and insurance, you get the gist of it that it is expensive to starting a business and buying franchise rights.It is important before investing in a franchise that you know how much
    Product life-cycles are shortening, with new products hitting the market faster and faster. At the same time, consumers are spending more time on the Internet looking for products and services, and seeking out suppliers who can deliver them with maximum value at a competitive price. This is a tough, challenging situation that should scare complacent businesses. But it offers exciting opportunities for smart business people who recognize the need to understand the external business environment and have the internal processes to enable them to quickly turn changes in the market into new products and services.

    Rapid History of Rapid Growth

    Back in the 1980s the notion of an Information Superhighway was touted around the mainstream media. Over the next few years this mind-boggling notion went from a science fiction scenario to a slow but functioning reality.

    A few far-sighted manufacturing businesses installed fast always-on connections and some created websites, although most of them were little more than online brochures. A few also saw the benefits of e-mail but most dismissed the flexibility of the Internet as irrelevant to their business. Many invested significant amounts in alternative ‘fixed’ technology that quickly became outdated such as EDI (Electronic Data Interchange) networks that connected two companies through a single dedicated line. Even the mighty Microsoft seemed to regard the Internet as a sideshow; it allowed Netscape to become the dominant Internet browser of the early Internet and well into the mid 1990s before realizing that it was missing a trick.

    In many respects consumers were quicker to embrace the Internet, even with the limitations of dial-up access. In 1990 there were around 2.6 million people using the Internet, with 2 million of them in the United States . By the end of 1997, there were 99.96 million Internet users worldwide . Two years later there were 280 million worldwide, and within another two years it almost doubled to 530 million, with 16% of those accessing the Internet wirelessly. In 2005 global Internet users tipped over the magic billion to reach 1,080,000,000 users . It’s largely thanks to consumer uptake that companies have been forced to recognize how the Internet can be used as both a marketing and a sales channel to reach huge markets

    Because of the speed of this change, many businesses, and not just manufacturers, have not been able to keep up with developments – missing out on opportunities to find new collaborative partners, actively market their products or develop new services for customers. A wide range of business have seen market share (and profits) slump as products become outdated faster than new products and services are introduced. They have seen costs slashed by competitors producing in lower-cost countries and buying low cost technologies, as well as the introduction of alternative products and technologies.

    According to one e-manufacturing site, the critical issues that need to be faced up to include:

    • Reduced consumer switching costs with the Internet making it easier for an existing customer to find, contact and collaborate with competitors

    • Rapid comparison of prices, particularly low value or commodity items, allowing customers to drive costs down faster than companies can improve performance

    • An increasing number of customers are placing their requirements and posting tender opportunities via the Internet, making it likely that organisations who are not linked to portals relevant to their industry will miss out on sales opportunities

    • The Internet provides opportunities for enhanced customer service (such as online updates for delivery etc) which in turn allows for organisations to differentiate themselves more easily

    • Recognising that there will be a need to invest as much in developing brand and services as there will be in leading edge production technology to enable businesses to ‘stand out’

    • Lastly, the Internet is driving the desire for consumers to place smaller orders, in shorter timescales whilst expecting a greater number of options – something which manufacturers with inefficient systems will find significantly increases their production costs and reduces profits

    Opportunity Bites

    However, for other businesses, the rapid change in technologies has offered significant opportunities to turn things around. Take the case of Apple.

    In 1997, when it was already clear that the Internet was here to stay, Wired magazine ran an alarming cover story about Apple Corporation, asking readers to “Pray” under the headline “101 Ways to Save Apple - An assessment of what can be done to fix a once-great company.” In little over a decade Apple had gone from being a pioneer of mass personal computing to being a niche player serving a dwindling band of loyal users.

    And now, just eight years or so after the call to rally round the iconic company, Apple is alive and very well. Its amazing recovery owes a lot to its out-of-the-blue dominance of portable digital music players, a product category that barely existed in 1997. In the first quarter of 2006 Apple shipped 8.5 million iPods, some 60% more than in the same quarter of 2005, taking total iPod sales to 50 million worldwide since 2001. With iPod sales bringing in $1.7 billion in Apple’s second quarter, the iconic music player now generates more money than Mac computers at $1.57 million. And now that it has started producing Macs with an Intel CPU, Apple is expecting the “halo effect” of the iPod to lure Windows users into buying Macintosh computers.

    That’s not all. Apple, who’s product dominates the market through their approach to partnering and brand development, also dominate another category that didn’t exist in 1997 – downloadable music. In the space of just over two years, since Apple’s iTunes Music Store was launched, broadband Internet users worldwide are now spending more than $1bn a year on song downloads. Apple has sold more than 600 million songs in two and a half years, and in the US iTunes ranks as one of the leading music stores alongside major bricks-and-mortar retailers. It has also added Podcasts and Video downloads to its offering.

    Industry analysts reckon that iPod and iTunes have not only added to Apple’s bottom line, they have also given a significant boost to the company’s computer brand. In short, Apple’s fortunes have been turned around by music, yet music wasn’t mentioned in any of the 101 ways to save Apple in 1997. There are few magazines more switched on than Wired magazine yet nobody there suggested music as a route to salvation – it was down to the insight of the Apple management and their ability to size up an opportunity and deliver a solution which saved the day.

    Before iTunes and the iPod, the music industry had been fighting a rearguard action against illegal file sharing – millions of people copying each other’s music for free through peer-to-peer systems such as Napster and Kazaa. For many analysts, the music industry was “broken” with no prospect of fixing itself. Its only recourse was to track down and prosecute file-sharers. Then along came Apple, a complete outsider, to show the way forward and put together the first site to offer a really wide range of legal music

    Rasberries and Problem Solving
    6 steps to a new understanding of old problems.A Gardner I am not, but a few years ago some Raspberries were transplanted and took over the North side of my house. As I was taking my evening stroll in my yard, I noticed that they were loaded with sweet red berries. I decided to spend the time picking several quarts of the elusive red berries. Red raspberries and a cup of ice cream sure sounded good to me.The raspberries were elusive because every time I thought all were picked, more would appear when a leaf or bush was moved and another angle of view was used. After going over the entire growth in one direction, more missed berries were noted on the way back. So a simple task of picking the berries turns into a hunting mission!As a manager, supervisor or salesperson we often take a situation we face, quickly evaluate and then act. My question is, “How many berries have we missed?” “Could there be other information or solutions that are hidden under another leaf?” “Was the elusive right answer missed?”This is where Outcome Based Thinking comes in. If we follow the steps and actually dig into the steps deep enough, it can change our view and solution to the situation we face. After all our purpose in most situations
    etscape to become the dominant Internet browser of the early Internet and well into the mid 1990s before realizing that it was missing a trick.

    In many respects consumers were quicker to embrace the Internet, even with the limitations of dial-up access. In 1990 there were around 2.6 million people using the Internet, with 2 million of them in the United States . By the end of 1997, there were 99.96 million Internet users worldwide . Two years later there were 280 million worldwide, and within another two years it almost doubled to 530 million, with 16% of those accessing the Internet wirelessly. In 2005 global Internet users tipped over the magic billion to reach 1,080,000,000 users . It’s largely thanks to consumer uptake that companies have been forced to recognize how the Internet can be used as both a marketing and a sales channel to reach huge markets

    Because of the speed of this change, many businesses, and not just manufacturers, have not been able to keep up with developments – missing out on opportunities to find new collaborative partners, actively market their products or develop new services for customers. A wide range of business have seen market share (and profits) slump as products become outdated faster than new products and services are introduced. They have seen costs slashed by competitors producing in lower-cost countries and buying low cost technologies, as well as the introduction of alternative products and technologies.

    According to one e-manufacturing site, the critical issues that need to be faced up to include:

    • Reduced consumer switching costs with the Internet making it easier for an existing customer to find, contact and collaborate with competitors

    • Rapid comparison of prices, particularly low value or commodity items, allowing customers to drive costs down faster than companies can improve performance

    • An increasing number of customers are placing their requirements and posting tender opportunities via the Internet, making it likely that organisations who are not linked to portals relevant to their industry will miss out on sales opportunities

    • The Internet provides opportunities for enhanced customer service (such as online updates for delivery etc) which in turn allows for organisations to differentiate themselves more easily

    • Recognising that there will be a need to invest as much in developing brand and services as there will be in leading edge production technology to enable businesses to ‘stand out’

    • Lastly, the Internet is driving the desire for consumers to place smaller orders, in shorter timescales whilst expecting a greater number of options – something which manufacturers with inefficient systems will find significantly increases their production costs and reduces profits

    Opportunity Bites

    However, for other businesses, the rapid change in technologies has offered significant opportunities to turn things around. Take the case of Apple.

    In 1997, when it was already clear that the Internet was here to stay, Wired magazine ran an alarming cover story about Apple Corporation, asking readers to “Pray” under the headline “101 Ways to Save Apple - An assessment of what can be done to fix a once-great company.” In little over a decade Apple had gone from being a pioneer of mass personal computing to being a niche player serving a dwindling band of loyal users.

    And now, just eight years or so after the call to rally round the iconic company, Apple is alive and very well. Its amazing recovery owes a lot to its out-of-the-blue dominance of portable digital music players, a product category that barely existed in 1997. In the first quarter of 2006 Apple shipped 8.5 million iPods, some 60% more than in the same quarter of 2005, taking total iPod sales to 50 million worldwide since 2001. With iPod sales bringing in $1.7 billion in Apple’s second quarter, the iconic music player now generates more money than Mac computers at $1.57 million. And now that it has started producing Macs with an Intel CPU, Apple is expecting the “halo effect” of the iPod to lure Windows users into buying Macintosh computers.

    That’s not all. Apple, who’s product dominates the market through their approach to partnering and brand development, also dominate another category that didn’t exist in 1997 – downloadable music. In the space of just over two years, since Apple’s iTunes Music Store was launched, broadband Internet users worldwide are now spending more than $1bn a year on song downloads. Apple has sold more than 600 million songs in two and a half years, and in the US iTunes ranks as one of the leading music stores alongside major bricks-and-mortar retailers. It has also added Podcasts and Video downloads to its offering.

    Industry analysts reckon that iPod and iTunes have not only added to Apple’s bottom line, they have also given a significant boost to the company’s computer brand. In short, Apple’s fortunes have been turned around by music, yet music wasn’t mentioned in any of the 101 ways to save Apple in 1997. There are few magazines more switched on than Wired magazine yet nobody there suggested music as a route to salvation – it was down to the insight of the Apple management and their ability to size up an opportunity and deliver a solution which saved the day.

    Before iTunes and the iPod, the music industry had been fighting a rearguard action against illegal file sharing – millions of people copying each other’s music for free through peer-to-peer systems such as Napster and Kazaa. For many analysts, the music industry was “broken” with no prospect of fixing itself. Its only recourse was to track down and prosecute file-sharers. Then along came Apple, a complete outsider, to show the way forward and put together the first site to offer a really wide range of legal music

    Make Room for New Ideas - Encouraging Creativity in the Workplace
    Managing productivity, profits and people is not always easy. While successful corporations adopt a whole range of strategies to become successful, almost all of them focus on their employees. Managers attempt to build practical skills covering all areas of operation. What employees basically need is a core skill that will enable them to manage and succeed in the very diverse work situations and challenges of the 21st century workplace. They need to learn to THINK. The smart and creative thinking is critical to bring out new and innovative products and services. Managers should 'Make Room for New Ideas'. Managers need to create the right work environment to 'Make Room for New Ideas'. Why is it some employees are able to come up with new and innovative ideas, while majority is unable to think even one idea to improve the work practices. The problem does not lie only with employees alone. Their colleagues and their supervisors have significant effect on the creative and innovative behaviors of the employees.It is true to say that individual personality and attitude play a dominant role in creating innovative ideas. That is not the only component in the creativity and innovation process at work. The colleagues (peer) and the supervisor w
    .

    According to one e-manufacturing site, the critical issues that need to be faced up to include:

    • Reduced consumer switching costs with the Internet making it easier for an existing customer to find, contact and collaborate with competitors

    • Rapid comparison of prices, particularly low value or commodity items, allowing customers to drive costs down faster than companies can improve performance

    • An increasing number of customers are placing their requirements and posting tender opportunities via the Internet, making it likely that organisations who are not linked to portals relevant to their industry will miss out on sales opportunities

    • The Internet provides opportunities for enhanced customer service (such as online updates for delivery etc) which in turn allows for organisations to differentiate themselves more easily

    • Recognising that there will be a need to invest as much in developing brand and services as there will be in leading edge production technology to enable businesses to ‘stand out’

    • Lastly, the Internet is driving the desire for consumers to place smaller orders, in shorter timescales whilst expecting a greater number of options – something which manufacturers with inefficient systems will find significantly increases their production costs and reduces profits

    Opportunity Bites

    However, for other businesses, the rapid change in technologies has offered significant opportunities to turn things around. Take the case of Apple.

    In 1997, when it was already clear that the Internet was here to stay, Wired magazine ran an alarming cover story about Apple Corporation, asking readers to “Pray” under the headline “101 Ways to Save Apple - An assessment of what can be done to fix a once-great company.” In little over a decade Apple had gone from being a pioneer of mass personal computing to being a niche player serving a dwindling band of loyal users.

    And now, just eight years or so after the call to rally round the iconic company, Apple is alive and very well. Its amazing recovery owes a lot to its out-of-the-blue dominance of portable digital music players, a product category that barely existed in 1997. In the first quarter of 2006 Apple shipped 8.5 million iPods, some 60% more than in the same quarter of 2005, taking total iPod sales to 50 million worldwide since 2001. With iPod sales bringing in $1.7 billion in Apple’s second quarter, the iconic music player now generates more money than Mac computers at $1.57 million. And now that it has started producing Macs with an Intel CPU, Apple is expecting the “halo effect” of the iPod to lure Windows users into buying Macintosh computers.

    That’s not all. Apple, who’s product dominates the market through their approach to partnering and brand development, also dominate another category that didn’t exist in 1997 – downloadable music. In the space of just over two years, since Apple’s iTunes Music Store was launched, broadband Internet users worldwide are now spending more than $1bn a year on song downloads. Apple has sold more than 600 million songs in two and a half years, and in the US iTunes ranks as one of the leading music stores alongside major bricks-and-mortar retailers. It has also added Podcasts and Video downloads to its offering.

    Industry analysts reckon that iPod and iTunes have not only added to Apple’s bottom line, they have also given a significant boost to the company’s computer brand. In short, Apple’s fortunes have been turned around by music, yet music wasn’t mentioned in any of the 101 ways to save Apple in 1997. There are few magazines more switched on than Wired magazine yet nobody there suggested music as a route to salvation – it was down to the insight of the Apple management and their ability to size up an opportunity and deliver a solution which saved the day.

    Before iTunes and the iPod, the music industry had been fighting a rearguard action against illegal file sharing – millions of people copying each other’s music for free through peer-to-peer systems such as Napster and Kazaa. For many analysts, the music industry was “broken” with no prospect of fixing itself. Its only recourse was to track down and prosecute file-sharers. Then along came Apple, a complete outsider, to show the way forward and put together the first site to offer a really wide range of legal music

    Where Succession Planning Fails
    I am often hired to coach someone who has moved from a technical role to one of leadership. When I use the term "technical" I mean in the broadest sense of a functional expert, whether it be in the field of technology, accounting, legal, sales or other specialised role. The call from the HR Department usually comes after the event, when things have started to go wrong.So why do so many companies promote people into leadership roles who are unprepared for leading a team? Is it simply that there is no formal succession plan? Not at all. An individual may be earmarked for promotion for what on the surface appear good, logical reasons. He or she has received consistently good performance appraisals, feedback from colleagues is positive on their expertise in the job and they regularly meet or exceed their KPIs. All the right reasons for a well deserved promotion, one might think.It seems quite logical to promote someone who is an expert in their field to head up a functional team. Surely a team with an expert at the head can only benefit from that wisdom and experience. The team will consider themselves lucky to have someone as their boss whose technical skills are highly regarded, won't they?Promotions of technical
    ies to turn things around. Take the case of Apple.

    In 1997, when it was already clear that the Internet was here to stay, Wired magazine ran an alarming cover story about Apple Corporation, asking readers to “Pray” under the headline “101 Ways to Save Apple - An assessment of what can be done to fix a once-great company.” In little over a decade Apple had gone from being a pioneer of mass personal computing to being a niche player serving a dwindling band of loyal users.

    And now, just eight years or so after the call to rally round the iconic company, Apple is alive and very well. Its amazing recovery owes a lot to its out-of-the-blue dominance of portable digital music players, a product category that barely existed in 1997. In the first quarter of 2006 Apple shipped 8.5 million iPods, some 60% more than in the same quarter of 2005, taking total iPod sales to 50 million worldwide since 2001. With iPod sales bringing in $1.7 billion in Apple’s second quarter, the iconic music player now generates more money than Mac computers at $1.57 million. And now that it has started producing Macs with an Intel CPU, Apple is expecting the “halo effect” of the iPod to lure Windows users into buying Macintosh computers.

    That’s not all. Apple, who’s product dominates the market through their approach to partnering and brand development, also dominate another category that didn’t exist in 1997 – downloadable music. In the space of just over two years, since Apple’s iTunes Music Store was launched, broadband Internet users worldwide are now spending more than $1bn a year on song downloads. Apple has sold more than 600 million songs in two and a half years, and in the US iTunes ranks as one of the leading music stores alongside major bricks-and-mortar retailers. It has also added Podcasts and Video downloads to its offering.

    Industry analysts reckon that iPod and iTunes have not only added to Apple’s bottom line, they have also given a significant boost to the company’s computer brand. In short, Apple’s fortunes have been turned around by music, yet music wasn’t mentioned in any of the 101 ways to save Apple in 1997. There are few magazines more switched on than Wired magazine yet nobody there suggested music as a route to salvation – it was down to the insight of the Apple management and their ability to size up an opportunity and deliver a solution which saved the day.

    Before iTunes and the iPod, the music industry had been fighting a rearguard action against illegal file sharing – millions of people copying each other’s music for free through peer-to-peer systems such as Napster and Kazaa. For many analysts, the music industry was “broken” with no prospect of fixing itself. Its only recourse was to track down and prosecute file-sharers. Then along came Apple, a complete outsider, to show the way forward and put together the first site to offer a really wide range of legal music

    Advertising Headlines and How to Write Them
    1. Attract prospects with your headline Use your headline as a flag to attract readers who are interested in your product. If you are selling a solution to premature hair loss, put PREMATURE HAIR LOSS in your headline. Your headline will catch the eye of everyone who suffers from this predicament. If you want teenagers to read your ad, put TEENAGERS in your ad. Be careful that you do not put anything in your ad that excludes prospects. For example, if you are selling a cellular phone that can be used by men and women alike, do not slant your headline toward men alone. That will only cause women to think that your ad does not apply to them.2. Appeal to your reader’s self-interest with your headline Make every headline you write appeal to the interests of your prospect and not those of the company that is selling the product. Instead of saying SPIRITOL WILL CURE YOUR HEADACHE, say GOT A HEADACHE? CURE IT WITH SPIRITOL. Begin your headlines with YOU rather than WE.3. Sell your product in your headline David Ogilvy, an advertising pioneer of the 1960s and 1970s says that, on average, five times as many people read your headline as read your copy. So it follows that unless your headline sells your product, you have wa
    years, since Apple’s iTunes Music Store was launched, broadband Internet users worldwide are now spending more than $1bn a year on song downloads. Apple has sold more than 600 million songs in two and a half years, and in the US iTunes ranks as one of the leading music stores alongside major bricks-and-mortar retailers. It has also added Podcasts and Video downloads to its offering.

    Industry analysts reckon that iPod and iTunes have not only added to Apple’s bottom line, they have also given a significant boost to the company’s computer brand. In short, Apple’s fortunes have been turned around by music, yet music wasn’t mentioned in any of the 101 ways to save Apple in 1997. There are few magazines more switched on than Wired magazine yet nobody there suggested music as a route to salvation – it was down to the insight of the Apple management and their ability to size up an opportunity and deliver a solution which saved the day.

    Before iTunes and the iPod, the music industry had been fighting a rearguard action against illegal file sharing – millions of people copying each other’s music for free through peer-to-peer systems such as Napster and Kazaa. For many analysts, the music industry was “broken” with no prospect of fixing itself. Its only recourse was to track down and prosecute file-sharers. Then along came Apple, a complete outsider, to show the way forward and put together the first site to offer a really wide range of legal music downloads.

    Not bad for a company that looked ready to die in 1997.

    So What?

    At the heart of the Apple story were two new technologies – MP3 (or similar music compression systems) and broadband Internet; without them none of its success would have happened. More importantly, Apple’s management were able to recognize that their experience in developing digital technologies would enable them to rapidly break into digital music – and they used this expertise to market and launch a leading edge product before their competitors were able to recognize the change that was coming.

    Broadband and MP3 enabled Apple to go from nowhere in the music industry to become a highly-influential industry player in a few short years. The underlying technologies have existed for some time – high-speed Internet, file compression codecs and ever-higher-capacity, smaller data storage systems. Yet any industry analyst forecasting this scenario back in the late 1990s would have been dismissed as a dotcom-crazy fantasist – but that did not stop the Apple management.

    For decades big music companies dominated the music business. They looked after the promotion of the artists and their music, and the distribution of their LPs and later their CDs. It was only through them that artists could reach big audiences. But once the Internet was established and file-sharing was flourishing, the big music companies could see their grip on music distribution slipping.

    All this had serious implications for all the traditional players who are between the artists who create products, and their audiences who consume them. And beyond the music business it has serious implications for any business who can size up a change in the market. Apple’s innovation was recognizing the shift from physical to digital product would (and could) continue and that they were well placed to capitalize on it.

    The iPod+iTunes case history shows that there are probably existing technologies waiting to be configured and combined by smart entrepreneurs in such a way as to make current business models irrelevant. And it’s absolutely certain that soon-to-be-invented new technologies will be applied to leverage the Internet in ways that defy prediction today.

    So here’s a closing thought, the Apple story tells us that a key skill for manufacturing businesses in the 21st Century is the ability to spot trends early enough and to convert those trends into market-leading products and services, backed by effective marketing, as quickly as possible.

    What do you think?

    Note: This article was co-written by Mark Eaton & Stuart Harris

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