Posts filed under 'Survival Skills'

Survival Guide For Holiday Parties (Survival equipment)

Tip! In this article, I want to share eight survival tactics with you, the affiliate marketer. These eight tactics do not just sound great on paper.

If you have been watching your weight all year, you certainly won’t want to add back the pounds during the holiday season! By making a commitment to yourself and your health, with these tips it will be possible to enjoy the holiday celebrations without adding extra pounds.

1. Don’t think diet, rather think about eating smarter.

2. Before attending a party, have a small high quality, nutritionally balanced meal. That way you will be less likely to be hungry and fill up on snack foods served with drinks.

Add comment July 31st, 2008

Economic Survival In Uncertain Times With Retirement Looming Ahead (Survival tips)

Tip! The more positive bodily changes that occur, the better your ability to perform and the more you satisfy the survival of the fittest instinct..

Will it be inflation or deflation as the major trend for the coming decade? What about Peak Oil and the skyrocketing cost of energy? Will the Dollar continue to do well, or will it finally collapse under the weight of the twin deficits?

Better yet, how is one to plan for financial security in the declining years of one’s life in an age of economic uncertainty?

That seems to be the major question facing many Americans right now.

Add comment July 24th, 2008

Lung Cancer Survival (Small business survival) Rate

Tip! Instinctually we all know that the quality of our lives is governed by the law of survival of the fittest.

Several factors influence lung cancer survival rates. The type of cancer, the stage it is at when diagnosed, and the overall condition of the patient all play a role in determining survival. Cancer survival is usually expressed in terms of a five-year survival rate, which is the percentage of patients with cancer who survive at least five years after their cancer is diagnosed.

Add comment June 30th, 2008

Survival gear - Small Business Survival Tips

Tip! In this article, I want to share eight survival tactics with you, the affiliate marketer. These eight tactics do not just sound great on paper.

No matter what kind of small business you have, you need read these “small business survival tips” which will help you to succeed.

You may be in Internet business, traditional business, or you may be a local merchant with 150 employees; whichever, however or whatever–you’ve got to know how to keep your business alive during economic recessions. Anytime the cash flow in a business, large or small, starts to tighten up, the money management of that business has to be run as a “tight ship.”

Add comment June 23rd, 2008

Small Business Survival in Business Cycle (Cold weather survival)

Tip! Studies have shown that five-year survival rates among non-small cell lung cancer patients vary by stage. Stage 0 patients have the best survival, of close to 50 percent at five years.

Small businesses have it rough in America, as they do not have the huge lobbying monies that large corporations do. When the economy gets tight, large companies reign in credit and slow their out going payments. If you own a small business with corporate accounts this means they string you out as long as possible and you will notice invoices conveniently lost and checks 180 days out? Basically you become a bank for the big corporations, isn’t that the silliest underhanded bunch of bull you ever heard? They slow your checks down when you need them the most. More than one small business owner has said to me; “Those Bastards!”

Add comment June 5th, 2008

Small business survival - Managers: A Key to Your Survival

Tip! From this point on, proper physical training that satisfies the survival of the fittest instinct will be referred to as..

Most business, non-profit and association managers live to tell about it only IF they achieve their operating objectives. Very little wriggle room there.

But among such managers are those who fail to do anything about the behaviors of those outside audiences that most affect their business, non-profit or association.

On top of that omission, they risk their careers by choosing to pursue their operating objectives without using the fundamental premise of public relations. Thus, they fail to produce external stakeholder behavior change leading directly to achieving those very same managerial objectives.

Add comment May 29th, 2008

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