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Archive for the ‘making things’ Category

Business: Fulfilling a Need or Creating a Want?

30 Jul

I think the hardest aspects of a business are deciding whether to answer a need, such as food, shelter and clothing, or creating a want for something people don’t necessarily need bottled water (if you already have clean, filtered tap water), gym membership, nail salons and the like. Now, people will say the gym and nail salon have some beneficial qualitites that could improve someone’s life, but they are not necessities.

Our needs are rather basic. Food, shelter, clothes, companionship (with or without sex) and mental / physical stimulation. We need friction to survive. Life without stress is worse than one with a wee bit too much stress. Extremes are not good for us.

Most of today’s businesses look to create a want to drive an increase in sales. We are bombarded with ads that will show us humor or humiliation for not selecting their product. A company has to look for enough resources to drive the demand for their product be it TV, radio, Internet social media, and print media.

I believe companies that make a dent into Internet social media, when they launch a successful campaign, have several things going for them: media connections (TV exposure), money, much much money, and reporters eager to pretend that their “news story” is not a PR campaign. For an individual to pierce this wall they have to be incredibly savvy in exposing their material, have lots of energy, patience, and an ability to follow through with their initial message or offering.

Follow-up is key.

I think the second most important aspect of a business in getting this message across to generate a want, which may fulfill a need, is to have the infrastructure in place to answer the demand. If people want your product or service, there better be the means to answer this demand.

 

New Challenges to Tackle

13 Apr

I’m not a sales person. Don’t have a clue. But I want to dig deep into the psychology of getting marketing and sales done right. Or at least be successful at it.

There are deadlines I have for myself. Especially since it is tax time. Oh, I hate doing taxes. I simply loathe it. Such a waste of $$%$^# time. Really.

I’m in a hurry now, and I’m hoping I don’t do anything in haste in that I may end up repenting for in leisure. Not a good thing. But time is of essence here.

I still remember those plans about working overseas. I haven’t forgotten that. I certainly will be looking into that as well as other plans I have in the fire currently.

It’s going to a hectic couple of weeks. I want to keep the goals simple: there are 4 things I want to accomplish and that’s it. No long lists here.

  1. healthy relationships
  2. make more than enough money (there’s a specific amount in mind)
  3. travel (I’ve got New Zealand and Germany on the brain)
  4. good health (I’m working out now, and have a weight loss goal within a time period)
  • there are things I have no control over, but i still wish the best for everyone around me.
 

Making Things: Ladder Shelves

26 Nov


Every blue moon I have to give into my urges. This past August, I gave into the strong urge to make something.

The last time I felt such an urgency to create, it was a couple of years ago. I bought material, patterns, and went to work on sewing a couple of pants and skirts. I didn’t need the clothes; I needed to make the clothes.

When the feeling moves me to build, I feel like I could build a house. Oftentimes, I draw my dream houses. One day I may complete that project. As a kid I built a make-do desk for myself. I replaced the legs on an old coffee table, so I could have someplace to study.

I have no actual carpentry skills. I learn by observing, reading, drawing mock-ups, visualization, measuring and re-measuring.

Following are pictures of some of the shelves I’ve made. Over a three month period, starting in late August, I spent roughly $450+ at Home Depot (love those guys there!), and Lowes. I bought: an electric miter saw, nails, screws, corner braces, and lots and lots of pinewood. I created 7 shelves / cabinets, with one going to my Mom. Pinewood is easy to stain. I didn’t do it, since I don’t like the strong smell of that stuff.

Shelves: most of the wood was 6-8 feet, which I had cut into pieces ranging from 16-23 1/2 inches.
Sides: wood of 6-8 feet, a majority of which was 6 feet, only two shelves are 8 feet high.

Chaos. 1 for bathroom. 1 for Mom. My first effort. For the plants.