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Building Customer Loyalty :: Women on Business

Women on Business

I do it one “D” at a time: Discover (what is important or of value to my customer), Decide (what their experience will look like), Deliver (what I set as their expectation) and Do It Again (it’s an ongoing process that changes and improves with feedback). It’s an ongoing process that is never complete.

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Gut Check — Score One for Intuition

Women on Business

I personally have been in several situations–business, relationships, dating, etc. When I was working for an employer, I knew going through the recruitment process that there was some bad “juju&# around the opportunity. 2 Laura Nozicka January 15th, 2011 at 12:16 pm Hi Henna~ Thanks for your comment. here I am!

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Can Leaders Take a Break? :: Women on Business

Women on Business

Yet, the question as I talked with women in the Purdue leadership program is still the age old one of how to balance it all; career, family, community, and time for oneself. Women Leaders and Male Partnership In any learning process, there is a tendency to go. 2 Comments 1 Jen Gresham December 13th, 2010 at 12:00 pm Interesting post.

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Living Without the “K” On Your “_eyboard” :: Women on Business

Women on Business

Related posts: The 80/20 Way to Make a Living… and a Life Have you ever found yourself working long hours, skipping lunch, How to attack the business doldrums It’s nearly mid-October and we’ve all been shuffling along in. Coming up with Creative Solutions I am fascinated by the creative process. Do you find.

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Have You Trained Your Replacement?

Persuasive Powerhouse

January 19th, 2011 | Author: Mary Jo Asmus Today’s guest post is from Mike Figliuolo at The thoughtLEADERS Blog. Gina : January 19, 2011 at 12:47 pm I have always believed that the most important job a leader has is to train his/her replacement. Mary Jo Asmus : January 19, 2011 at 9:20 pm Gina, thanks. Great post!

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5 Important Things to Remember as an Entrepreneur :: Women on Business

Women on Business

Address personal fears, listen to your own instincts and intuition, and start believing in yourself to have the tenacity and drive to see your goal of business ownership actualize. Develop a planning process that consists of setting measurable objectives. Offer support to others with similar goals of business ownership.

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What Women Leaders Bring to the New Decade :: Women on Business

Women on Business

Younger women are looking to those who have made it, have successful careers and families that thrive to give direction. Women Leaders and Male Partnership In any learning process, there is a tendency to go. We are not here to become like our men. We are here to cooperate with them in a new and more productive way.