Sunday, April 26, 2020

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Recharge Card Printing Business - Here's How You Can Start


       How To Start A Recharge Card Printing Business In Nigeria

This information is for people who are interested in starting a recharge card printing business in Nigeria but don't know how to get started.

Before now, selling of GSM vouchers and printing of recharge cards have been a business reserved exclusively for the big distributors.

But now, all that has changed. It’s now all about who is interested and getting to know that you can actually control your market (no matter how small) by printing recharge cards and vouchers on your own and distributing them to a clique of outlets, makes the business even more interesting.

If you need a comprehensive and step by step guide on how to start the recharge card printing business from the comfort of your home legally in Nigeria, please click the link below to get started.
This information is highly dedicated to people who are willing to go into a profitable recharge card business in Nigeria but do not know how to go about it.
I would advise you take advantage of this eye opening report because this is a rare and golden opportunity for you to start your own recharge card business.

We all know before now, printing and selling of GSM vouchers has been a business reserved exclusively for the big distributors. But now, all that have changed.

It's now all about who is interested and getting to know that you can actually control your market (no matter how small) by printing cards and vouchers on your own and distributing them to clique of outlets, makes the business even more interesting.

The recharge card market is so lucrative that banks are jostling for market share. According to a survey conducted in 2012, recharge cards are the fastest selling products in the country second to pure water.

Imagine how lucrative investing in the business could be with an insatiable demand for more and more cards.
Provided you have enough money to start and run it.

Recharge card printing business is a very lucrative business that has changed the financial status of many poor Nigerians incuding myself because selling of recharge cards b0th in wholesale and retail has proven to be very profitable due to the high demands from the public everyday.
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Saturday, April 25, 2020

If You Have Been Using Onions To Cook, This Message Is For You

Onion is a very common ingredient in most recipes because of the flavour it provides.The onion may not be everyone’s favorite vegetable, but it sure is beneficial. The next time you peel onions and start crying, just think of all the great health benefits you are getting.
For the health’s benefit, it’s important to try and consume at least one-half of a medium onion every day.


Here are ways onions can be beneficial to your health.
Boosts sexual drive
Onions are said to increase the urge for a healthy sex life.
One tablespoon of onion juice along with one spoonful of ginger juice, taken three times a day, can boost the libido and sex drive.
Cough treatment
Consuming an equal mixture of onion juice and honey can relieve sore throats and coughing symptoms.
Treatment of Anemia
Even anemic conditions can be improved by eating onions along with jaggery and water, because this adds to the mineral content of the body, especially iron, which is an essential part of producing new red blood cells.
Therefore, anemia, also known as iron deficiency, can be prevented by having a healthy amount of onions in your diet.
Prevents cancer spread
Onions are rich in active compounds that successfully inhibit the development and spread of cancerous cells.
Quercetin is a very powerful antioxidant compound that has been consistently linked to the prevention or reduction of the spread of cancer.
Manage diabetes
Onions contain chromium, which is a relatively unusual mineral to find naturally in food.
Chromium helps the body manage blood sugar levels and ensure a slow, gradual release of glucose to the muscles and the body cells.
Heart ailments
Onions act as anticoagulants, also known as blood thinners, which in turn prevents the red blood cells from forming clumps.
These blocks and clots can lead to heart disorders or cardiovascular diseases.
Oral health
Onions are often used to prevent tooth decay and oral infections.
Chewing raw onions for 2 to 3 minutes can potentially kill all the germs present in the oral area and surrounding places like the throat lip.minutes
Share it to others if you find impotant us.

Friday, April 24, 2020

Seven Powerfully Effective Ways to Market a Product

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Marketing Ideas

1. Tell a (True) Story About Your Product

Many product marketers fall into the trap of “selling the product, not the experience.” No one wants your product. No one wants any product. They want a solution to their problem.
Only talk about the benefits, features, and facts, and you’re missing out on glaring opportunities for engagement. When you discuss these, you only engage Broca’s and Wernicke’s area of the brain. These areas simply decode words into meaning. That’s it.
broca's area
Tell a story, and the game changes. When you do, and especially when your story features a character and intense emotions, you engage much more of the brain. In fact, you can put the whole brain to work.
For example, the limbic system bustles with activity when you describe emotions like love, hate, joy, anger, or sadness. When you discuss a lavender or cinnamon smell, the olfactory cortex goes to work.
It’s easiest to communicate your product’s value in memorable ways through storytelling. A 2012 New York Times article sums up research by cognitive scientist Veronique Boulenger (and many others) which concludes the brain:
“…[D]oes not make much of a distinction between reading about an experience and encountering it in real life; in each case, the same neurological regions are stimulated.”

How do stories work in product marketing?

In the early 1900s, prospects didn’t look good for Milwaukee brewer Schlitz. They ranked eighth among American brewers, and had little hope for growth.
They eventually hired Claude Hopkins (now one of the fathers of modern advertising), from Racine, Wisconsin’s J.L. Stack agency.
Every brewer at the time screamed about their beer’s “purity.” With no clarification of what “pure” meant, no brewer could top the other.
Hopkins wouldn’t do a thing to help Schlitz until he intimately understood their product and market. So, Schlitz gave him a tour of their brewery.
He was shown plate-glass rooms that dripped beer over pipes, which filtered air to purify the beer. Every pump and pipe got cleaned twice daily. And Schlitz sterilized each beer bottle at least four times. Finally, Hopkins saw 4,000-foot deep (wow!) artesian wells that provided the water. Schlitz tried 1,200 experiments to produce the mother yeast cell used for brewing.
So Hopkins’ first question was, ”Why in the heck don’t you tell your market you do this?”
Schlitz’s reply: “Every brewer does this. It’s no big deal.”
They were right. But Hopkins strongly advised Schlitz to advertise stories about this because no other brewer did. The stories would clarify “pure” for consumers.
So Hopkins created ads like these:
schlitz ad

vintage schlitz ad
Oh…and Schlitz?
All they did was go from the eighth to number one American beer in just a few months.
The takeaway: Tell a story about your products, but don’t just make one up – involve your potential customers by taking them behind the scenes.

2. Don’t Work Against Your Brand Perception (or Product Category)

Many product marketing campaigns fail. Some catastrophically.
Big brands sometimes go too far outside their market’s perception. For example:
Life Savers once marketed soda in the 1980s. It actually did well in taste tests.
lifesavers soda
But once sold nationally, it tanked. It turns out, consumers thought they’d be drinking liquid candy. Sounds delicious to me, but the market as a whole didn’t like the idea.
touch of yogurt shampoo
Clairol’s “Herbal Essences” shampoos have enjoyed massive success because of their provocative advertising. But in 1979, their “Touch of Yogurt” shampoo bombed in an epic way.
Some confused customers even ate it and got sick!
Mmmmmm…hairy yogurt anyone?
To cap it off, Clairol actually used some real yogurt (not an artificial scent) in this shampoo. Being dairy, it rotted. And reeked.
…How about you cap that off with a multi-million-dollar class-action lawsuit while you’re at it?
Finally, McDonald’s took a big swing and a miss with the Arch Deluxe. They aimed the burger at a more sophisticated customer – adults. At the time, McDonald’s was known mostly as a restaurant for kids.
Have you ever thought about fine dining downtown…and had McDonald’s pop into your mind?
Their market didn’t either. Guess they weren’t “lovin’ it.”
McDonald’s dropped $300 million on the research, production, and marketing of the Arch Deluxe, “the burger with the grown-up taste.” And it’s now one of the biggest product flops in history. But strangely enough, you can still get it in France and Russia.
arch deluxe marketing campaign
The takeaway: Consider your core audience carefully before you launch a product that might (really) not resonate.

3. Do What Your Competitors Won’t Do

Back in the heyday of Nike’s first explosion in growth, they fearlessly tried what other companies wouldn’t do. They failed. Sometimes, in big ways.
In the 1980s, they attempted to enter the casual shoe market. And it caused them to fall behind Britain’s Reebok, America’s athletic sneaker leader.
But Nike didn’t let that stop them. In the 1970s and early 1980s, they used a then-unknown, and sometimes scoffed at, marketing tactic: celebrity athlete endorsements.
Romanian tennis player Ilie Nastase, affectionately known as “the Bucharest Buffoon” for his on-court antics, was Nike’s first celebrity athlete endorsement in 1972. He ranked number one in the world in 1973 and 1974. Steve Prefontaine, a middle-distance track star, was another key signing in the mid-1970s. By 1980, this strategy catapulted Nike’s IPO and revenue growth to $270 million.
…And then they convinced someone named “Michael Jeffrey Jordan” to endorse their shoes in 1985. Fascinatingly, Jordan was a lifelong lover of Adidas. But Adidas didn’t offer him a deal. At the time of the signing, he wasn’t a superstar. But by 1990, Nike’s revenue hit $2.2 billion. And as of last year, it sits at nearly $32.4 billion.
Today, Adidas is about 1/3 the size of Nike. And Reebok about 1/45.
Check out one of Nike’s early commercials with Spike Lee and Michael Jordan:

4. Market to Your Existing Customers

In the early 1990s, Pepsi and Coke dominated the beverage market. Both spent more than $100 million to advertise just one of their brands. At the same time, milk consumption was on the decline in California.
And what was so special about milk anyway? It was white. That’s it. Boring. Not much to say about milk. So, things didn’t look good for California’s dairy farmers.
Nonetheless, the National Dairy Board and California Advisory Board had to try something with their miniscule $23 million advertising budget. Eventually, they approached ad agency Goodby, Silverstein and Partners (GS&P).
Previous campaigns attempted to draw in people who didn’t drink milk. But research by GS&P led it to believe it would work to advertise to current milk fans. Through focus groups, they found consumers only drink milk with something else. Also, they never think about it until they run out of it.
So that led to the creation of the first commercial:




 










5. New Product? Try a New Brand Name  

Think of the Life Savers soda again. Say you have a product that’s perfectly within your ability to produce. And you’re confident your market will like it.
However, your product rests on the fringes of your market’s perception of your brand. They might think you rock at making the product (but they might not either). You don’t want to waste time and money creating a product no one uses.
What do you do?
Just look at Procter & Gamble. As of 2015, these P&G brands generated more than $1 billion each for the now $230 billion company:
  1. Always
  2. Ariel
  3. Bounty, “The Quilted Quicker-Picker-Upper”
  4. Charmin
  5. Crest
  6. Dawn
  7. Febreze
  8. Gain
  9. Gillette, “The Best a Man Can Get”
  10. Head & Shoulders
  11. Olay
  12. Oral-B
  13. Pampers
  14. Pantene
  15. SK-II
  16. Tide
  17. Vicks
…And P&G has 55 total product lines:
P&G brands
The takeaway: If you have multiple products, create a completely new brand. Yes, you won’t have the built-in name recognition. But you’ll overcome the barrier that causes your market to think you can’t possibly do different products well.

6. Make an Exciting Promise – that You Actually Deliver On

2009 Consumer Reports press release debunks myths about three high-priced ab muscle machines:
  • Ab Rocket ($100), which promises the body you’ve always wanted
  • Rock-N-Go Exerciser ($230), which barely feels like a workout
  • Red Exerciser DX ($175), which helps users “lose 4 inches off their midsection in 2 weeks”
In all cases, each machine engaged ab muscles the same or less effectively than working your abs without the machine.
A “big promise” makes all the difference to your customers. But you must deliver on it. Because today’s consumers will read reviews at Amazon and other websites to see how well your product actually works. Making a promise, without delivering, means you’ll only survive until your market figures that out.
You don’t have to come through on your exact promise. However, you do have to provide sensational value.
For example, Tim Ferris’ “4-Hour Work Week” sounds unbelievable. But the content of the book doesn’t boil your work week down to just four hours. However, it does give you a plan for “escaping the 9-5 workday, living anywhere, and joining the new rich.”
product marketing strategies
And Tim’s market finds that pretty cool.
The takeaway: Product marketers have to make promises to get people excited about trying new things. But if your promise is a lie, you’ll be in trouble.

7. Fail Fast and Move On

If you build it, they will come. Kinda. Sorta. Well…not really.
Trying to find a market for your product, before you know the market exists, is a practically guaranteed recipe for failure. Many new product marketers fall for this because they believe their product rocks. Unfortunately, they never checked with the market.
One such product bombed in the national spotlight. Code-named “Ginger,” renowned inventor Dean Kamen (now worth $500 million in spite of this product’s catastrophic failure) was the genius behind it. The rumors were that Kamen “was coming up with nothing less than an alternative to the automobile.”
He triumphantly predicted selling 10,000 units per week. And this product carried a hefty price tag of $5,000.
Instead, the product horrified both consumers and investors. It sold about 24,000 units in its first five years. Or, about 38 units per week.
Know the product?
Today, it helps mall cops like Paul Blart protect American shoppers:
segway product marketing
It’s the Segway.
Yes, Segway has been one of the most epic product marketing failures of our time. Now, police departments, urban tour guides, and warehouses buy it for far less than $5,000.
Well, at least it has a market, right?

The importance of a culture of innovation

If you want to succeed as a product company, consider constructing your culture like 3M. Founded in 1902, it’s now a $114 billion company.
3M product marketing
If you don’t already know, 3M holds more than 100,000 patents and has created:
  • Cellophane tape (late 1920s)
  • Waterproof sandpaper (early 1920s)
  • Masking tape (1925)
  • The first magnetic tape for recording audio (late 1940s/early 1950s)
  • Post-It Notes (1980)
  • Post-It Super Sticky Notes (late 1990s/early 2000s)
  • Scotch Transparent Duct Tape (late 1990s/early 2000s)
  • Optical films for LCD televisions (late 1990s/early 2000s)
  • Scotch-Brite, the first disposable toilet scrubber with built-in bleach (2007)
  • Respirators for general public use (2009)
  • 3M Solar Mirror Film 1100, the world’s largest aperture for concentrated solar power
Jon Ruppel, VP of Global HR Business Operations presiding over 90,000 employees in 70 countries, said, ”We automatically share our discoveries and technologies across the company. No one business owns a particular technology and it's natural to work across business lines in support of the broader 3M goal.”
He said the company also:
  • Listens to any new product idea, regardless of the employee or their position or the seeming absurdity of their idea
  • Gives each employee 15% free time to explore new ideas
  • Keeps a diverse workforce regarding thinking, culture, gender, ethnicity, and experience
The company also embraces failure. Employees do not get fired for failed product launches. In fact, they actually celebrate it.
Kurt Beinlich, technical director at 3M, said this about a failed heat-repelling cover designed to protect car paint from welding sparks:
“When we found that out, we celebrated that we had found something that was innovative and had its place. But we said OK; let’s move on.”
Wow.
The takeaway: How can you ingrain innovation in your company’s culture? If you’re always trying new things, it’s OK if some of them fail.

In Product Marketing, Big Risks Can Mean Big Rewards

Doing anything outside the norm terrifies most companies. What if it results in failure?
What happens then?
But product companies that take risks not only recover, they often become enduring cultural icons.
And it’s due in large part to their willingness to integrate these secrets into their operations.
Which of these lessons inspires you most? Which will you use in your own product marketing? .stay tune for more

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