Tuesday, February 28, 2017

End of Mud?

Rawlings is working on a ball with more tackiness, which might put the company that supplies rubbing mud out of business. The progress might be worth it however:

Major League Baseball would prefer that pitchers not blatantly cheat, but they also don’t want pitchers throwing slippery balls. For years, the New Jersey mud has been used by umpires to rub down baseballs before every game, but this still hasn’t stopped pitchers from using a foreign substance at times. Rather than enforce the rules, MLB is considering a different idea: using baseballs that allow for a better grip. This is where the bright white baseballs come in.

The bright white baseballs used last fall were an experiment. The official ball manufacturer of Major League Baseball, Rawlings, was asked by the league to produce a baseball with a natural tackiness on the leather. If they find the right substance to give the ball more tack, they could enforce the rule against using a foreign substance. New “better grip” Rawlings balls were used in workouts and during two days of games last fall.

So the rule is not enforced because baseball doesn’t want a slippery ball to seriously injure or kill a batter. This would be similar to the take-out rule at second. The runners have to slide properly now, and the fielders have to touch the bag. Both seem like good trade-offs.



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3 Tips for Buying Bathroom Faucets

Content originally published and Shared from http://perfectbath.com

Having a hard time looking for faucets that best match your bathroom style? Luckily, we have some tips for buying bathroom faucets, such as: knowing the different styles, choosing the quality and matching with the number of mounting holes.

Below are 3 tips for buying bathroom faucets:

Knowing the Different Styles
Widespread: Most commonly found on pedestal sinks, widespread faucets are made for sinks with three pre-drilled holes that are 8″ apart. When purchasing a widespread faucet you’ll receive three individual components: two handles and one spout.
Vessel/Single-hole: On single hole faucets, the handle is attached to the spout and is for use on a sink with 1 pre-drilled hole. If you are in the market for a vessel style faucet but have a sink with 3 pre-drilled holes, it’s sometimes an option to purchase an additional deck plate to cover the existing holes on the sink. Contact the faucets manufacturer to see if that is an option before buying.
Wall-mounted: Ready for it? Wall-mounted faucets are mounted to …the wall! Normally, your water supply lines come up from the sink, but in this case they’ll need to be installed into the wall. One thing to be aware of when purchasing these types of faucets is that the spout is actually long enough to reach from the wall over the sink basin.
4″ Centerset: These faucets are found on sinks with 3 holes set at 4″ apart. The components sit on a deck plate that connect the handles with the spout body, and can also be found with single handle components.
4″ Minispread: Similar to centerset, these faucets fit 4″ configurations on sinks with 3 pre-drilled holes. But instead of purchasing a faucet with a 4″ deck plate, a minispread faucet looks more like a widespread faucet with three individual components: two handles and one spout. Source: ApartmentTherapy

Choosing the Quality
You’ll have to pay for it up front, but buying quality now means you won’t be paying during the life (or lack thereof) of your faucet. Look for an all-brass body, as opposed to brass- or chrome-plated. And keep in mind that the tub faucet has a larger flow rate than other household faucets, which means you can’t use a kitchen faucet or your tub. Bathtub faucets should have a 3/4-inch supply line, as opposed to 1/2-inch for the rest of the house. Some tubs hold up to 60 gallons of water, so you’ll want a faucet that can get the job done in a timely manner. Source: HGTV

Matching with the Number of Mounting Holes
Most sinks come with mounting holes pre-drilled for faucets and accessories such as side sprays or soap dispensers. If you’re keeping your original sink, you’ll need to match what you have or get a base plate to cover any extra holes. The base plate sold with your new faucet can be used to cover holes in your countertop, but don’t buy a faucet that requires more sink holes than your sink has; it’s not a good idea to try to drill additional holes in an existing sink or countertop. Get additional information on how to best match sinks and faucets.  Source: ConsumerReports

 

Contact:
Perfect Bath
Phone: Toll Free 1-866-843-1641
Calgary, Alberta
Email: info@perfectbath.com

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Parc East – by Trillium Development

Coming soon to Port Coquitlam is Park East by Trillium Developments. Park East will be centrally located on the corner of Atkins and Shaughnessy, a short walk to the Main Village with its all it shops and services, as well as the West Coast Express.

Park East will be consist of 57 condos consisting of one bedroom, one bedroom plus den, two bedroom, or two bedroom plus den, with size ranging from 446 square feet to 1077 square feet. Each suite at Parc East will be designed with quartz counters, stainless steel appliances, and large islands in the Kitchen, with laminate flooring throughout.

Amenities include a gym, furnished amenity room that includes a lounge area with kitchenette, and an outdoor entertaining space, as well as outdoor play area for the kids (little kids, not the big kids, thats what the lounge is for 🙂

Sales expected to start in the late winter of 2017 or early Spring with price to starting the mid 200’s. Register with us to be kept up to date with floor plans, and vip sales.

 

 

 

 

 

E. & O. E. This is not an offering for sale. An offering for sale may only be made after filing a Disclosure Statement under the Real Estate Development Marketing Act

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The Arden

 

The Arden is coming soon to Port Coquitlam  The Arden will be a boutique building with just 22 executive size suites with Quartz countertop, stainless steel appliances and laminate flooring.  The Arden will sure be a great spot for first timers or down-sizers.

Pricing is expected to be:

1 bedroom from high $200’s

1 bedroom + dens from Low $300’s

2 bedroom 1 bathrooms from Mid to high $300’s

2 bedroom 2 bathroom over $400,000

Completion anticipated to be Fall of 2017.  Previews start soon, register with us today to get access to this development and many others

 

 

 

E. & O. E. This is not an offering for sale. An offering for sale may only be made after filing a Disclosure Statement under the Real Estate Development Marketing Act

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Wright Still Wrong

David Wright is already doubtful for opening day:

General manager Sandy Alderson told reporters Tuesday that the third baseman flew back to New York to have his sore right shoulder examined Monday and was diagnosed with an impingement on Tuesday.

Count me as not surprised. The Mets did the right thing this winter, refusing to put voice to the probability of Wright not playing in 2017. He is their long term star, and the team said nothing negative about his health. So it would appear Jose Reyes will get another chance at third, with the early prime Matt Reynolds maybe getting a shot, or even Asdrubal Cabrera. The Mets were prepared for this likely contingency.



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Sales People Change The World!

Recently, I was privileged to observe a series of training sessions at Microchip.  My friend, Mitch Little, kicked off the session with some introductory comments.  One sentence captivated me, “We change the world…”

That has been occupying my thinking since I heard Mitch make the statement.

Sales people have the opportunity to change the world!

Think about that for a moment, what we do impacts our customers, organizationally and individually.  It changes them, even if in a very small way.

  • We help customers solve problems, improving what they do and the results they produce.
  • We help them discover opportunities they might never have discovered otherwise.
  • We help them drive dramatic improvements in their businesses, ultimately enabling them to help their customers.
  • We incite them to change, where they may not have recognized the need, or the opportunity to change.
  • We help them individually, whether it’s helping them get sanity in their lives, get a promotion/bonus, spend more time with their families, or even keep their jobs.
  • With each engagement, we have the opportunity to change the world through what we help our customers achieve.

We help our own companies change.

  • It may be the competitive insights we discover and share internally.
  • It may be the intimate knowledge of our customers businesses and changing markets that enable us to help drive our companies’ strategies.

Collectively, more than any other group in our organizations, we have the opportunity to change the world.  However small it is, it’s through what we do in helping our customers and companies grow and thrive that drives changes in them, changes with their customers, changes in the markets, changes in competition.

Every day, we have the opportunity to change the world.

Yet too often, we fail to recognize that we are changing the world.  Instead we focus on our products, leaving the customer the challenge to figure things out.  Or we fail to provide feedback within our own organizations, to help them change.

In doing so, we don’t create the value we can and should create.  We don’t take the opportunity to change the world, albeit, one step at a time.

What we do is important!  We have a huge impact on our customers and our companies!  We can never lose site of this!

Great sales people have the opportunity and obligation to change the world!  Mitch, thanks for reminding me 😉

 

 



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Stems or Scalpels?

Garret Richards and Andrew Heaney of the Angels both tore elbow ligaments last season, and both underwent stem cell treatment to try to repair the injury. It appears to have worked for Richards, but not for Heaney:

Even with less-favorable odds than reconstructive surgery, which has an 80% success rate for returning to action and 67% for pitching 10 games or more, stem cell therapy is gaining acceptance as an option for pitchers with partial UCL tears. The recovery time is shorter – 3-5 months instead of 12-18 – and the treatment less invasive.

There are limitations. Biological approaches based on stem cells or platelet-rich plasma (PRP) won’t repair a complete tear of the ligament. The location of the injury and its extent factor into the chances of success. And players whose ligament doesn’t recover, then have to undergo surgery, extend their window of time for returning to action.

So the expected recovery time is four months versus 15 months. So if all partial tears undergo stem cell treatment, the average man months lost would be 11 versus 15 for every going under the knife. I suspect as time goes on, doctors will better predict which tears respond better to cells, and which need surgery.

I also wonder if pitchers might opt for early stem cell treatment as a preventive measure. Could a stem cell injection every two years keep the ligament healthy, fixing micro tears that eventually become bigger? Maybe that’s the way to greatly eliminate the injury.



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Monday, February 27, 2017

Brooklynn

Much like Maplewood Village and Lions Gate Village, Lynn Creek/Seylynn is undergoing a transformation into a walkable, transit oriented hub.  Brooklynn by Wanson Developments will be the next development to come up in the Lynn Creek/Seymour Village centre. Brooklynn will be a mixed use building consisting of ground floor retail and 63 1, 2 & 3 Bedroom condos.

More information and sales are expected to be released in March of 2017, register with us today to be kept up to date on this development and may others like it coming to the North Shore.

 

 

 

E. & O. E. This is not an offering for sale. An offering for sale may only be made after filing a Disclosure Statement under the Real Estate Development Marketing Act

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Cedar Reach at Maplewood

After the very successful development of Loden Green by Guildford Developments and Maplewood Place by Anthem, as well as the Northwood Estates Rental suite and shopping centre,  Maplewood Villages is rapidly becoming a hot spot in North Vancouver. Cedar Reach is the newest development coming soon to the area.  Cedar Reach will be modern collection of homes featuring 163 One, Two, and Three bedroom homes in the heart of Maplewood Village.  Within a short stroll to Northwood Shopping centre, including Strong’s Market, Deep Cove Brewing. banking and liquor store, Cedar Reach will be designed with West Coast architecture and storage space for all your gear to fully enjoy the outdoors its surrounded by.

If you’d like to receive more information on this development or any other coming to the North Shore, register with us today to be kept up to date.

 

 

 

E. & O. E. This is not an offering for sale. An offering for sale may only be made after filing a Disclosure Statement under the Real Estate Development Marketing Act

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Belle Isle by Citimark Developments

Lions Gate Village was approved under the new OCP a couple years ago, we are now seeing the changes coming with Park West slated to begin sales in the coming months, as well as Larco’s rental community, but Belle Isle will be the first ground oriented townhome development, when all phases are completed will include 164, 1, 2

, and 3 bedroom townhomes and garden flats.

Belle Isle will be centrally located in a new community within walking distance of Park Royal, a 15 minute drive to downtown and quick access to bus routes directly downtown, or anywhere on the North Shore

To be kept up to date on this development or any on the North Shore register with us today.

E. & O. E. This is not an offering for sale. An offering for sale may only be made after filing a Disclosure Statement under the Real Estate Development Marketing Act

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Life and Baseball

Johnny Cueto‘s personal life is starting to intrude on his baseball life:

Cueto is still in the Dominican Republic while tending to his 71-year-old father, whose health challenges have improved to the point where he can travel but was awaiting final documentation.

Giants GM Bobby Evans said Monday he received indications that the visa and passport issues were close to being resolved, and that Cueto would be in Scottsdale sometime during the middle of this week. Of course, Evans had the same indications a few days earlier, when the club believed that Cueto would arrive over the past weekend.

This much is clear: the Giants would not be cool with Cueto going straight to Miami to join the Dominican Republic team for the World Baseball Classic. Cueto was supposed to report to the Giants on Feb. 13 and train with them before leaving March 6 for the WBC.

I would do the same thing in Cueto’s shoes. It looks to me that he’ll need to skip the WBC, however, which will be a tough loss for the team from the Dominican Republic.



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Molina’s Value

Ken Rosenthal discusses the difficulties the Cardinals face trying to extend the contract of Yadier Molina:

Molina needs to recognize that his age works against him, even if (and perhaps partly because) he played in a career-high 147 games last season. He also needs to recognize that if he wishes to remain a Cardinal, he likely will not surpass Buster Posey’s $18.56 million average salary, the highest of any current catcher.

The Cardinals, meanwhile, need to recognize that Molina isn’t simply another aging veteran to whom they can bid farewell, the way they did with Albert Pujols and Matt Holliday. Molina’s career accomplishments, intense conditioning and enduring importance to the team’s pitching staff make him a special case.

Surely the Cardinals do recognize all of that, but other factors will complicate the negotiation.

Molina, who batted .307 with a .787 OPS last season, is coming off his best offensive performance since 2013, but his overall defensive metrics are in decline. At some point the Cardinals will want to mix in catcher Carson Kelly, their top position prospect. Yet, the club also would find it difficult to justify a reduction in Molina’s $15 million salary.

If the team has a good relationship with Molina, this shouldn’t be that difficult. The Red Sox had no problem keeping David Ortiz in the fold with a series of short term contracts. The Yankees did the same with Mariano Rivera at the end of his career. The Cardinals need to pay him less than he’s worth on the free-agent marker, but more than the Cardinals think they should pay. Sometimes it’s worth a few extra dollars to keep the fans and the great players happy.

Rosenthal puts Molina’s value at $50 million over three years. Given his recent performance, I think that’s a little high. I’d go two years at $30 million with an option, and keep extending like that as long as possible.



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Sunday, February 26, 2017

The Play’s The Thing

The White Sox are team-building by having the young players make presentations:

What goes on in the clubhouse stays in the clubhouse but the walls of the White Sox’ locker room at Camelback Ranch can’t hold the laughter inside.

Team meetings have featured a variety of “presentations’’ from mostly younger players, arranged by first-year manager Rick Renteria to keep things loose, get prospects to bond with veterans and, in general, to promote a tight bond.

This sure beats hazing. Teams are being very creative in trying to form a close-knit clubhouse.



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Money Changes Everything

Phil Mushnick doesn’t like the results of supply and quantity demanded. On May 14th:

Derek Jeter will return. When last regularly seen in the Stadium, he and business partner Steiner Collectibles were in the latter stages of selling everything Jeter might’ve touched or brushed against while he continued to be blindly heralded as the classiest of Yankees captains.

Only those with money to burn and choose to be bludgeoned can claim to be a genuine I-was-there Jeter fan.

And everyone who is not a sap gets to watch it on TV, hear everything clearer, see everything clearer, and watch the Yankees use the extra money to build a better team. Why is this a problem?



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Saturday, February 25, 2017

Sub Continent Rounders

India now has a baseball field:

India has constructed its first baseball field, six acres of green that will host five international trainers to improve the Indians baseball skills. The Co-founder of Grand Slam Baseball Raunag Sahni helped support the development of the field along with major league baseball and Play Global.

India, like China, could be a world powerhouse in baseball some day due to its large population. That gives the country a great talent pool. Even if baseball does not replace cricket, I suspect MLB could develop a great deal of talent from players who don’t make the cricket team. MLB also has the money to draw cricketers away from the sport, as the top Indian cricketers make about $200,000 a year.



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Team Building

The 2016 Cardinals had clubhouse trouble, and the team is trying to correct that this spring by forcing players out of cliques:

A bus was ordered, and Matheny incorporated two trips to Legends of Xscape into Thursday’s workout.

With that trip, the Cardinals broke down important barriers by forming groups between men who probably wouldn’t associate away from the field because of their ages, positions, language skills or veteran status.

Working in small groups that linked veterans with younger players and minor-league prospects, the players worked together to uncover clues that would free them from their rooms.

“I think it brings the team together more,” Grichuk said. “I think it just translates to everything on the field. Just guys being able to communicate with each other more and just being friends more and interact more is going to help.”

This reminds me of the opening scene of Four Weddings and a Funeral, where guests at a wedding are forced to sit with people they don’t know to stimulate conversation.

I have seen enough teams with dysfunctional clubhouses win to not put a lot of stock in this kind of team building. Winning tends to solve clubhouse problems. That said, I think this is a good idea, because it may prevent losing from causing rifts in the clubhouse to expand into something worse.



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Friday, February 24, 2017

Harper Fatigued?

Bryce Harper talks about his post-MVP off season contributing to his poor 2016 regular season:

“There were certain times when I hit a ball to the track last year, and I think back and I’m like, ‘That should have been like three rows deep,’ ” Harper said. He remembered a ball he hit to dead center in Milwaukee. In his head: Gone. In reality: Caught.

“I’m like, ‘What the heck?’ ” Harper said. “I’m walking back, and I’m like, ‘Maybe if I had about 10 more pounds on me, or had worked out another day in the offseason, that might have been a homer.’ And it might not have been. But the thought was there for me.”

What emerged over the course of Thursday’s conversation was something Nationals fans might find encouraging for the 162 games ahead. Harper said, after winning the National League MVP in 2015, he ran himself ragged that offseason: a trip here, a sponsor’s appearance there, Jimmy Kimmel and the Super Bowl and whatever else he could experience. He was a kid. The candy store was expansive.

“I mean, that’s my choice,” he said. “And it’s on me. There’s certain things, it’s like, ‘Man, that’d be cool. I can’t pass that up. That’s a once-in-a-lifetime thing.’ But this offseason, I really sat down and was like, ‘You know, that’s probably not a good idea.’ ”

Harper started 2016 gangbusters, then faded quickly. One of many things I like about Harper is that he appears to learn from his mistakes. Back in May, 2012, Harper faced Livan Hernandez in a game. Hernandez came on in relief in the sixth inning, and struck out Harper on a slow, big breaking pitch. Harper got back to the dugout and took a ribbing from his teammates. Harper faced Hernandez again in the eighth, and tried to throw the same pitch past Harper. Harper crushed the ball for a home run.

We’ll see if 2016 was a winter mistake, and if Harper indeed corrected that one as well.



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Thursday, February 23, 2017

Strikeouts are not Diamonds

Don Matting believes game times can be lowered by devaluing strikeouts:

“Analytically, a few years back nobody cared about the strikeout, so it’s OK to strike out 150, 160, 170 times, and that guy’s still valued in a big way,” Mattingly said. “Well, as soon as we start causing that to be a bad value — the strikeouts — guys will put the ball in play more. So once we say strikeouts are bad and it’s going to cost you money the more you strike out, then the strikeouts will go away. Guys will start making adjustments and putting the ball in play more.”

Strikeouts have set records in recent seasons, with teams averaging 8.03 per game last year. A career .307 hitter with 222 homers over 14 seasons, Mattingly never struck out more than 43 times in a single year.

The basic idea is good, the problem is that strikeouts are not something you can easily devalue. To me, it’s the difference between gold and diamonds. Both gold and diamonds have value due to their beauty. Gold, however, is extremely useful outside of the aesthetic:

Use Gold has unique physical chemical characteristics that made it very valuable. Gold is the most maleable and ductile of all the metals. One ounce of gold can be drawn into more than 80 Km of thin gold wire. One ounce of gold can be beaten into a sheet covering 9 square meters and 0.000018 cm thick. Gold has an electrical resistivity of 0.022 micro-ohm and a thermal conductivity of 310 W m-1. Hence, it is very efficient for the transmission of heat and electricity. Gold has the highest corrosion resistance of all the metals and it is corroded only by a mixture of nitric and hydrocloric acid. Gold is a noble metal because it does not oxidize.

If suddenly out tastes changed, and we no longer valued gold for its beauty, the metal would remain valuable for its other uses.

Diamonds, on the other hand, are simply valuable for their beauty. Their high price also seems to come from an artificially created shortage. If people no longer wanted to decorate themselves with diamonds, the value would drop. Manufactured diamonds can accomplish the non-aesthetic uses of mined diamonds. In other words, we can think away the value of diamonds.

Strikeouts are more like gold. They are the best way for a pitcher to record an out, since they take away much of the randomness of allowing a ball in play. For batters, high strikeout rates tend to go hand-in-hand with high power, and that is a very valuable commodity. That paradox, that strikeouts are good for both batters and pitchers, is why the rate keeps climbing.

If teams pay less for batters who strike out often, some team like the Athletics are going to take advantage of that market inefficiency.

I suppose a rule that states a batter is removed from the game after striking out twice, and a pitcher is removed from the game if he strikes out a certain number of batters after a certain number of innings. (If after five innings he records six K, he comes out, seven after six innings, etc.) Relief pitchers are allowed two strikeouts. In those cases, a pitcher might want to save his K pitches for dire situations, and a batter might not swing for the fences in every plate appearance. Paying players less by itself will not lower the K rate.



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WW2 US BAR Gunner Pt 1.

Are You So Busy Selling Your Product, That You Won’t Win The Deal?

Don Mulhern published a brilliant post in LinkedIn the other day.  I thought I’d expand on his ideas.

I spend innumerable hours doing deal reviews.  95% go the same way, they focus on the product the sales person is selling, not what the customer is trying to achieve and how we can help the customer do that.

Sales people spend endless hours talking about:

  • This is what they like in our product, this is what they like in the competition.
  • We showed them these things in the demo, they really liked it!
  • We just need to overcome these perceptions of the product, then we can win.
  • If we could do these things with our product, it’s a slam dunk.
  • The customer wants it in “torchlight red,” can we paint it?  (OK, I made this one up, but you’d be amazed at some of the things I hear.)

Inevitably, I get impatient, I may ask something, like, “What are they buying this for?”  The sales people look at me, inevitably thinking, “Haven’t you been paying attention, they want to buy my product and I have to tell them how great our product is!!!”

The fixation sales people have on selling their products blinds them to what the customer is trying to achieve.  Customers aren’t buying our products just to be buying, they are buying our products to solve a problem, to address and opportunity, to achieve something they can’t otherwise do.

Inevitably, the product is just a component of what they are trying to do, but there are many other challenges they struggle with.  This is where they need help and this is where sales people create the greatest value.

Customers are concerned with implementation, they are concerned with risk, they are concerned with their ability to be successful with their customers or beating their competition.  They are concerned with improving quality, reducing cost, reducing cycle time.  They want to drive growth and revenues, they want to drive profitability.

They want to be successful, they want some level of sanity in their otherwise insane lives, they want their bosses off their backs, they want to get a promotion or a bonus or keep their jobs.  They want to get home at a reasonable hour to spend time with their families and friends.  They want to free up time to do other things, some that may be more important than this specific issue.

These are the things our customers are interested in.  These are the reasons our customers are buying, but buying is just a small part of what they are trying to achieve.

When sales people lose site of this, focusing instead on their products, they are no longer being helpful to the customer.  They are no longer focusing on the issues that are most important to the customer, and which create the greatest differentiated value.

Our products are just a small part of what our customers care about.  In the end, they will have several alternatives that meet their “product needs.”  But what our customers really want is a supplier that understands what the customer is trying to do and is helping them achieve that.  It goes far beyond the product.



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Desmond has a Barrow in the Marketplace

Ken Rosenthal delves deep into the Rockies move to put Ian Desmond at first base. He notes that many thought this was a poor way to fill a hole at first, but the Rockies disagree:

The Rockies targeted Desmond as a first baseman from the start of free agency. That is where they had an opening, and general manager Jeff Bridich said he viewed the potential addition of Desmond as enhancing a strength — the athleticism of the Rockies’ defenders, which is especially critical at the offensive incubator known as Coors Field.

Most of the available first basemen were below-average defenders. None was as capable as Desmond of playing other positions, either in an emergency or in the future. And Rockies manager Bud Black says that when critics of the signing focus solely on position, they miss the point.

“We thought about, ‘baseball player,’ ” Black said. “Let’s get as many good baseball players as we can. We didn’t think, ‘We need a right fielder. We need a center fielder. We need a second baseman.’ We said, ‘Let’s go get a baseball player who is good.’ ”

Desmond appears to have done everything possible to prepare for the switch, from watching film of the Rockies middle infielders to picking the brains of first base friends. People do disagree on the ability to make the transition.

What bothers me more is that Desmond is simply not that good a hitter. First base is where teams get their power, in general. The Rockies have plenty of good Coors hitters, so maybe they think good defense at the position is what they need. It’s the Tampa Bay Rays way of thinking. The team was not very good on the road in 2016, so I doubt Desmond will help there. I probably would have gone for someone who could slug at Coors and in other ballparks as well.



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Wednesday, February 22, 2017

3 Things to Consider When Choosing a Vanity

Content originally published and Shared from http://perfectbath.com

The vanity is one of the first things you notice when you enter a bathroom. In addition to its aesthetic value, what’s also important is how the vanity will fit your needs. There are also many other factors to consider as you choose which one to buy. Check out these 3 tips to help you in your decision-making.

Determine the Number of Sinks
You’ll need to find a vanity style that can accommodate the number of sinks you want.
If they had their choice, most homeowners would prefer double sinks. Unfortunately, there often are space restrictions.
Vanities smaller than 60 inches wide usually have only one sink. The sink can be in the center, to the right or to the left. Your sink cabinet can have drawers or standard cabinet doors.
Vanities more than 60 inches wide can comfortably accommodate two sinks. However, if one sink is enough, you can use the extra room for additional counter space. Source: Forbes

Which mounting options are available?

  1. Free Standing:Also known as standard, this is the most common bathroom vanity. It resembles a chest or buffet, and is your best option for maximum storage space.
  2. Wall-Mounted: Most wall-mounted vanities hang or float on the wall without legs touching the ground. This modern style opens up floor space in a small bathroom.
  3. Corner-Mounted: If you need to save space, this is the best option. Corner-mounted bathroom vanities have a 90-degree angle at the back so that they fit perfectly into a corner. Source: Wayfair

Plumbing
If you need to change your bathroom’s plumbing to install your new vanity, it’s going to account for a chunk of your budget. Even switching from a traditional floor-mounted vanity to a wall-mounted version will mean rerouting pipes and drains.
“Locating the vanity far from other bath fixtures requires a higher cost for rough plumbing,” says contractor David Lawson of Ironwood Builders. Source: Houzz

 

Contact:
Perfect Bath
Phone: Toll Free 1-866-843-1641
Calgary, Alberta
Email: info@perfectbath.com

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IBB Unintended Consequences

MLB and the MLBPA agreed on eliminating four pitches for an intentional walk.

My question to Baseball Musings readers is this: What will be the unintended consequences of this rule? The rule removes the small risk associated with an IBB, that the pitcher or catcher causes a ball to go by, allowing a runner or runners to score. It also eliminates the chance of the pitcher leaving a ball over the plate for the batter to smash. Less risk associated with the IBB says to me that intentional walks should be more frequent this season.

Note that putting runners on base should lengthen games, as it takes a little longer to get the 27 outs to end the contest. I’ll also note that intentional walks keep coming down. The last five seasons saw the five lowest IBB totals of the 30-team era, and the decline has been steady:

Season Intentional Walks
2012 1055
2013 1018
2014 985
2015 951
2016 932

The IBB is a poor defensive play, and with more sabermetric minded people taking control of the game, the strategy is fading quickly. We will see if that tend wins out, or if the smaller risk associated with the play causes the number of IBBs to rise this year. It really seems to me, however, that this was a problem that was fixing itself.

The record for most IBB in a season was 1452 in 2002. That was the season Barry Bonds drew 68 IBB, the second highest total of his career. He would draw 120 IBB in 2004, a year that saw 1379 IBB in total.



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Make Buying Easier!

As sales people, we want to make it easy for our customers to buy.  We have endless amounts of data sheets, cases studies, presentations, and information about our products.  We seek to be super responsive to our customers informational needs, immediately burying them with information, conducting endless demos to respond to their questions.

Marketing helps us, both with the content and making vast arrays of information available through multiple digital and non-digital channels.  They leverage SEO, online advertising, drip campaigns and any number of techniques to make it easier for prospects and customers to find information about our products and services.

We even provide buying tools–configurators, shopping carts, and others to help make it easier for our customers to execute the buying transaction.

All done with the goal of making it easier for the customer to learn about and buy from us!

Ironically, all of this actually doesn’t make buying easier!

In a new HBR article, The New Sales Imperative, the folks at CEB

First, these activities focus on the vendor/solution selection process.  This is actually a very small part of the work customers are going through. in their buying/problem solving journey.

In fact, based on the CEB research, we are only making the easiest part of buying easier—but doing little to help them with the parts of buying that too often derail buying processes, resulting in No Decision Made!

Unless our customers are buying these solutions every day, they struggle with knowing how to buy, not what to buy.

They struggle with aligning the 6.8 + people involved in the buying process–each has different priorities and agendas.

They struggle with defining what they want to achieve, what should they be looking for, why?  They struggle with defining risks, understanding and evaluating alternative approaches, gaining internal and management support, building business justification.

More importantly, “buying” is usually just a small part of what they are doing–fundamentally, they are trying to solve business problems or address new opportunities.  These usually are far more profound, buying becomes just one component of their overall problem solving process.  This “Customer Problem Solving Journey,” is far more difficult than just the buying portion of that journey.

As the article by CEB points out, if we want to make it easier to for our customers to buy, we have to focus less on product selection but more in their buying process (and problem solving process.)

While our customers struggle with this, since they don’t buy every day, we are expert at that process, afterall, we are involved in countless similar deals.  We have worked with customers addressing these issues in the past.  We have great experience in helping them learn, what they should be doing, why, what they should be asking themselves, how they can start aligning goals/priorities, how they gain management support.

We can provide them road maps to help them be more successful with their efforts.  We can become “prescriptive,” by helping them learn from the experience of others who have gone down this path before.

We create the most value for our customers when we work with them to make the entire buying process easier, not just focusing on product selection.  We create even more value when we focus on their entire problem, not just the buying component of that problem.

Make sure you read, The New Sales Imperative, it will help you broaden your perspectives and create greater value for your customers.

 

 



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Who Rules the Rulers?

There seems to be some contention between MLB and the MLBPA on the issue of implementing more rule changes to speed the pace of play. Here’s an exchange between Rob Manfred and Tony Clark.

“I have great respect for the labor relations process, and I have a pretty good track record for getting things done with the MLBPA,” Manfred said. “I have to admit, however, that I am disappointed that we could not even get the MLBPA to agree to modest rule changes like limits on trips to the mound that have little effect on the competitive character of the game.”

Clark saw talks differently.

“Unless your definition of ‘cooperation’ is blanket approval, I don’t agree that we’ve failed to cooperate with the commissioner’s office on these issues,” he wrote in an email to The Associated Press. “Two years ago we negotiated pace of play protocols that had an immediate and positive impact. Last year we took a step backward in some ways, and this offseason we’ve been in regular contact with MLB and with our members to get a better handle on why that happened. I would be surprised if those discussions with MLB don’t continue, notwithstanding today’s comments about implementation. As I’ve said, fundamental changes to the game are going to be an uphill battle, but the lines of communication should remain open.”

The two sides worked together well this century, getting drug testing and pace of play rule changes done outside the collective bargaining process. It looks like the rule changes are going a little too far this time, however, and the players are pushing back.

Of course, the players doing their best to speed things along would be their best solution to preventing changes they don’t want.



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Jim Joyce Retires

Long time umpire Jim Joyce called it quits:

Joyce is a native of Toledo who has long been regarded as one of the game’s best umpires and has called three World Series. Many remember him for botching a call in 2010 that prevented Detroit Tigers pitcher Armando Galarraga from reaching a perfect game. He later published a book with Galarraga about the drama.

That wasn’t his only gaffe. Compared to other umpires, he was consistent, and didn’t seek attention. Those two huge gaffes, however, says to me he doesn’t deserve the “great” distinction.



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Tuesday, February 21, 2017

Buying A Steam Shower? Don’t Make These 3 Common Mistakes!

Content originally published and Shared from http://perfectbath.com

 

help with choosing a steam shower to buy

Ah yes, the life of luxury. That’s where it’s at! All you need is your very own steam shower – complete with aromatherapy dispenser and chroma lights. (Because, if you’re going to buy a steam shower, why not go all out, right?)

But, before you get to the part where you relax in your steam shower, you’re going to need to know something super important. There are 3 mistakes that can end up costing you a lot of money. Do your research now. Save some headaches and possibly money later.

  1. Measure, measure, measure. Believe it or not, many of us think we know how large our bathrooms are. We walk into a store and buy a steam shower only to discover that it’s an inch or more too large for the space. Looks can be deceiving. But so can tape measures. Give us a call, and we’ll help you figure out exactly how to ensure that your steam shower will fit along with any electrical and plumbing needs that factor in. The delays and extra work can end up adding thousands of dollars to your budget
  2. Know thyself. There really are a whole lot of different kinds of steam showers available to you. Consider whether you want it to include a whirlpool tub with a combo steam shower and bathtub. Do you want it to accommodate two people? How about accessories, like Bluetooth? Will pets or children use it, too? Once you start looking at all the possibilities, it really is easy to get carried away! Start with a firm budget. Then determine who will be using and how often. Talk with one of our experts to make sure you’ve covered all the bases.
  3. Running hot or cold. Does your existing shower valve protect you from water temperature extremes? You’ll know the answer if you’ve ever turned on the spray only to be met with ice cold or scalding hot water. If you are building your own tiled shower to Make sure you ask the plumber to install a thermostatic valve. That little device will automatically mix hot and cold until the water is the perfect temperature. All steam showers sold at Perfectbath come standard with thermostatic control valve.

Contributed by:

Perfectbath
Calgary, AB.
Phone 1-866-843-1641
Email info@perfectbath.com

 

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Nationals Agree With Wieters

The Nationals found the asking price right for Matt Wieters, and reached an agreement with him pending a physical:

But his arrival also provides complication, because Derek Norris was set to be the Nationals’ starting catcher, and now must almost certainly move aside. The Nationals reacquired Norris for a low-level prospect earlier this winter, when it seemed like the price for Wieters would be too high. Norris once won the Nationals’ Minor League Player of the Year Award, and is a favorite among those within the organization. Now, he could become a power-hitting backup — or, perhaps, trade bait.

The Nationals have a surplus of catchers now, with Wieters, Norris, Jose Lobaton and Pedro Severino all in the big league mix. The White Sox have been hunting catching depth, according to multiple reports this winter, so perhaps the Nationals could use that surplus to acquire a proven closer like David Robertson.

Wieters is getting $10 million this season and $11 million next season if he exercises the option. That’s about what he’s worth. It’s not a bargain basement signing. Wieters might have thought he was worth more, but there is just two much uncertainty surrounding him. The Nationals now have enough talent at the position that they might be able to flip someone for a prospect or to cover a major injury.



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Naked Nevin

The Giants hired Phil Nevin to be their third base coach not only to attempt to cut down on base running mistakes, but to bring some youthful enthusiasm to the game. Nevin never thought of himself as a coach or manager, but had some success. He describes the type of player he wants to coach:

Nevin mellowed – to a point. During his first year in Reno, he was ejected along with nine players after his club brawled with the Dodgers’ Triple-A affiliate. A day later, he expressed pride in how his team responded.

“Let me just put it this way,” he told a local TV station. “It’s a lot easier for me to calm a player down than it is to kick a player in the butt. I’ll take that guy over the other guy any day of the week.”

We’ll see how this translates to the Giants on the bases. According to FanGraphs, the Giants were average in 2016 on the bases. They have room to improve, but base running probably didn’t cost them the division.



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Monday, February 20, 2017

Drilling the Twins

The Twins instituted new drills to improve outfield defense in 2017:

The Twins’ first workout Sunday included a handful of new drills, designed to help tighten the outfield defense, something that manager Paul Molitor has put new coach Jeff Pickler in charge of. There’s a first-step drill to help speed reactions toward the ball, and a footwork drill to help improve accuracy of throws.

Like this year’s new sessions to help catchers practice pitch framing, the idea, Molitor said, is that “it would be foolish not to have at least some increased focus on areas that were problematic last year.”

It’s not only the drills that are new. Molitor wants his coaches to schedule more small-group or one-on-one sessions before each morning’s regular workouts.

I would think that after nearly 150 years of professional baseball, these drills would be automatic for players. Good for the Twins that they are trying to address deficiencies, but maybe they should not have let the deficiencies develop in the first place.



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Sunday, February 19, 2017

The Fix

Ken Rosenthal suggests a fix to what he calls a broken arbitration system:

One team executive made the point Saturday that clubs develop statistical models for everything they can think of, projecting what players might accomplish, projecting what might teams might achieve, and more. So, why not develop a model to determine salaries for arbitration-eligible players, too?

The union and management could jointly determine the proper statistics to evaluate each position, adjusting the formulas perhaps every five years to account for how the game evolves (not long ago, remember, teams placed greater value on one-dimensional power hitters, less on elite setup men.)

Once again, a pundit ignores the better solution, free agency after three years. When the six year free agency period was put in place, there was a much smaller difference between the minimum salary and what a free agent could earn for a one WAR season. So there was some justification for teams needing six years to recoup their investment in training players through the minor leagues. Now, when a team saves $7 million dollars by getting one WAR from a league minimum player, that length of time under team control makes less sense.

The sooner players reach free agency, the sooner they make the money they deserve. With more free agents on the market, prices won’t grow too quickly. Also, teams are much more likely to sign youngsters to long term contracts early. Everyone benefits.



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Saturday, February 18, 2017

Fire Levine

Randy Levine put his foot in his mouth today. The Yankees beat reliever Dellin Betances in arbitration, but that wasn’t enough for the Yankees president:

Levine used a conference call with reporters who cover the Yankees to blast Betances’ agent, calling Betances a “victim” and a pawn in a “half-baked attempt” to reset the market for relief pitchers who, like Betances, are not closers.

“It’s like me saying, ‘I’m not the president of the Yankees; I’m an astronaut,’” Levine said. “No, I’m not an astronaut, and Dellin Betances is not a closer.”

Levine added: “That $5 million number? It might as well have been $50 million.”

The arbitration process is contentious enough without rubbing salt in the wound. Sportsmanship may be more important here that on the field. Here’s Betances responding. The Yankees trashed him in the hearing, but he was willing to overlook that. Not this:

“Is it selfish of me just to say now, ‘Hey, guys, I just want to come in for the eighth inning with no runners on, all the time’?” he said.

He continued: “That’s not the player I am. I try to go out there and battle for my teammates. I try to do the best I can. But now that you go in that room and you see some of the comments, do you put yourself at risk at all times?”

This is why teams and players try to avoid arbitration in the first place. Now, Levine may be right about what the agents were trying, but so what? That is their job, and if they won, they would have won a battle for all relief pitchers and might have expanded their practice. Their loss wasn’t going to impress anyone, and now Levine alienated a fine pitcher. Maybe he’s been in the president’s chair a few years too long. Levine’s rant was a huge mistake.



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ArcWorlde Ogre Trooper - Showcase

Last week I shared my Deathwatch Blackstar, something that to me was more of a battle of attrition than actual fun. To counter this, I built and painted one of the models I picked up at Vapnartak a couple of weeks ago - the Albionnican Ogre Trooper from Warploque Miniatures.

Alex Huntley hand sculpts all of the miniatures for Warploque and in doing so gives them their signature character, particularly the faces. After painting a mostly flat panelled plane for a month or so, it was a delight to be able to work on something with odd angles and folds.

This particular chap is fairly large - he's standing on a 50mm base - and would set people back £12 for the resin model.






I didn't really want to have straight up silver metallics for the armour but didn't want to add any rust or wear either, with him being a soldier in service of the Albionnican Empire, the main human faction in ArcWorlde, so I decided to play with the Scale Color Alchemy paints, adding Amethyst Alchemy into the recessed and lower portions of the silver, while I added some Emerald and Cobalt to the mixes on the raised sections. This is my first real play with adding them to other metallics rather than using them on their own and while it'll probably take me a while to get used to it, I can seen the potential in using them, perhaps for light and shade or reflections.





The red with silver is the studio colour scheme for the Albionnicans and one that I quite like - it's quite regal without being overly gaudy - I kept the gold trim to a minimum. I started with P3 Sanguine Base before moving to mid tones of Scale Color Mayhem Red and highlights of SC Berehit Red and Tiamat Orange (those three SC colours are from the Creatures from Hell box)


As I said above, the faces that Alex gifts these miniatures with are full of character - plenty of canvas for creating large amounts of depth and contrast. I didn't want to highlight it too high, so instead took the shadows down to SC Sunset Purple over the Sanguine Base initial layer before moving back up with a couple of GW skin tones I've completely forgotten the name of. The hand on show allows for similar levels of shading and also has some finger nails to pick out, which I did with some GW Pallid Wych Flesh.





He was based simply with a couple of pieces of large gravel and a mix of S75 Rough Paste and Vallejo Sandy Paste and painted to match my other ArcWorlde bases.

Off the back of the slog that was the Blackstar, this guy flew by, getting finished in a few days. I think the size of him helped - there are details there, but he's a big enough model (at maybe the same size as a 54mm scale human) that they aren't obscured and so tiny as to require multiple attempts to get them right. The size of him also opened up the opportunity to try the different metalwork as there was more space to transition and move from dark to colour to light.

For a fairly speedy paint job I'm quite happy with how he came out and I'm looking forward to tackling more of the larger ArcWorlde monsters in the future.




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Friday, February 17, 2017

Can Kinsler Continue?

Paul Swydan at FanGraphs uses a number of projections systems to try to determine if Ian Kinsler can repeat his stellar 2016, including Musings Marcels.

The projections are skeptical, as is their wont, but perhaps it will be much ado about nothing. Few players have been as consistently good as Kinsler for the past decade. In discussing him with a friend the other day, he remarked that Kinsler feels like clockwork. The clock may slow a little each year, but there Kinsler is, putting up All-Star seasons, one right after the other. If he does so again this season, it will be an impressive feat indeed.

Looking at his stats for the last few years, his 2016 slugging percentage certainly seems like an outlier. I will take a .330 OBP and a .430 slugging percentage from a middle infielder any day.



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Why Do We Sell?

Some may be wondering about the “existential” nature of this title.  Some may be thinking, “Well, that’s stupid Dave, it’s our job.”  Others might say, “I’m money motivated and it’s a way I can make a lot of money!”

We choose to become sales people for a variety of reasons.  For some, it’s the only job we could get coming out of college.  For some it is a path to getting rich, though I can think of a lot of other paths to get richer, faster.

This week, I had an amazing experience.  I observed two days of training of one of the best performing sales organizations I have ever encountered.  These people are not only the top performers in their industry, by virtually every other metric, they are one of the top performing sales organizations in the world.

On the first day, they spent a lot of time discussing, “Why do we sell?”  This group sells because they want to have an impact, they want to change the world, they want to make a difference.

Sure, they want to make their numbers, they absolutely want to make a lot of money, but those are by products of their success.  Individually, and organizationally, they want to change the world!  They do it one customer and one deal at a time.

They focus on what the customer is trying to achieve and how they can help accelerate their customers’ success.  They walk away from deals where the customer doesn’t care about their ability to do these things, where all the customer values is price.  Just as they invest in their customers’ successes, they expect the customer to invest in their success by enabling profitable deals.  Without this, they can no longer afford to provide value.

Everything this sales team talked about was the customer.  Yes they loved their products, but their focus was how their products enable the customer achieve their goals.  While most sales people focus on their products, forcing the customer to figure it out, these sales people focused on the customer.

Some of you might be wondering, “Well this is a nice story, but that’s not how things really work.”  They like every other successful business are intensely goal and revenue oriented.  But they realize the secret to doing this is through changing the world.  Their record indicates it works–they are one of the top performing companies in their industry, they’ve had over 25 years of profitable growth, leading their industry–few others can make that claim.

So this mission is not some theoretical or idealist goal.  It produces hard business results.

I contrast this with many other sales people.  Those that are purely driven by making money.  Sure, one could do that, but they burn through a lot of customers doing so.  They can’t keep going back to the same customers helping them buy more.  There are those only focused on the numbers, but somehow, more often failing to achieve the numbers.

Most are too short sighted or self centered to understand the real secret to sustained sales success.

We sell to change the world.  We sell to have an impact on the success of our customers, individually and organizationally.  We sell to make a difference in each one.

There is nothing incompatible with being viciously focused on these goals, while always making our numbers, helping our company make money and making money ourselves.  Those are all outcomes of helping our customers achieve success.

Why do you sell?



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Thursday, February 16, 2017

Wait, He Doesn’t Throw a Knuckle Ball!

Max Sherzer’s injured knuckle is not 100%, putting opening day in doubt:

“I’ve dealt with aches and pains and strains. This is a whole different ballgame,” Scherzer said Thursday. “When you start dealing with a fracture, rest is really your only option to make everything heal.”

Thursday was the first day of official workouts for Washington’s pitchers and catchers at the team’s new spring training facility. While others such as Stephen Strasburg, Tanner Roark or Gio Gonzalez stood atop a mound for a 10-minute bullpen session, Scherzer threw elsewhere.

Only this week did Scherzer start throwing baseballs at all in preparation for the 2017 season, and that was “with a modified grip, but not my true grip,” he explained. Before that recent step in the right direction, the righty was sticking to tossing tennis or lacrosse balls, because they were smaller and not as painful.

I suspect at this point in his career, Scherzer won’t need much time to get himself ready to pitch in the majors once the knuckle is healed. Dusty Baker was an optimist about the injury:



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Better Pattern Recognizers

Via BBTF, Donnie Dewees talks about using NeuroScouting software to improve his pitch recognition:

The NeuroScouting software program is built to continue challenging participants as they use it.

“You graduate through levels as you use it, and it gets harder. It’s pretty fast-paced, and I have seen the difference it has made in helping me lay off of pitches.” Dewees said.

He cited improved patience at the plate as the most significant benefit from his time spent using the program, and his numbers bear this out to a degree. His walk percentage jumped from 4.6 percent with the Short-Season A Eugene Emeralds in 2015 to 7.1 percent during his time with the Class A South Bend Cubs in 2016. The trend continued after his move up to High A Myrtle Beach in late July, with a 6 percent walk rate over 167 plate appearances.

This sounded familiar to me, so I checked the archives and found this article:

With runs at a premium in the major leagues, a handful of teams are trying to help their young hitters with a high-tech program known as neuroscouting. The details are being treated as a state secret by three clubs believed to be using the product — the Cubs, Red Sox and Rays. But it involves helping players with pitch recognition in an era when 95 mph fastballs, big curveballs and wicked sliders are more prevalent than ever.

Dewees came up with the Cubs, and now plays for the Royals. Given the way the Red Sox and Cubs hit last season, this software may be the real deal.



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Customers Should Care About Your Profitability!

Too often, we succumb to price pressure–even worse, we lead with price, making pricing the center of focus of our sales efforts, then being forced to discount to “win” the business.

What if we started shifting our conversations from discussions of discounting to educating them about the importance, to them, of maintaining our pricing and our profitability?

In complex B2B sales, the profitability and success of the suppliers is critical to the success of customers.  What happens to customers who focus only on hammering vendors on price?

  1. To meet price goals, suppliers start sacrificing quality or ability to meet commitments.  We’ve seen this time after time in various industries.  Quality of procured products decline, driving down the quality of the products our customers provide to their customers.  The result is their customers are upset and stop buying the products.   Returns, warranty, service costs skyrocket, their revenues and profits plummet.  But high pressure on prices has to come out of the vendors somewhere, often it’s product quality, delivery, or risk.
  2. Perhaps, customers can maintain product quality from their vendors, but what about innovation?  Their customers are always changing, forcing them (our customer) to innovate, changing business models, introducing new products and services, and growing.  In turn, they need suppliers that are on the same journey, suppliers innovating with them, looking at the end customer needs, understanding the strategies, priorities, growth opportunities of each customer and responding by creating products and services that support their own growth and innovation.  As customers start having unreasonable expectations for pricing actions from suppliers, suppliers have less to invest in product development and innovation, and become less able to support the growth of their customers.
  3. Pricing pressure reduces investment in sales and marketing.  Some customers would see this as a blessing, fewer sales and marketing people make their lives easier—or does it?  If we are doing our jobs as marketing and sales professionals, we are helping our customers find new ways to innovate, grow, and serve their customers. We are helping our customers improve their product quality, reduce expense, adapt better practices.  We are helping our customers learn and discover, growing in their careers and growing the business.  Pricing pressure reduce our ability to fund sales and marketing in helping our customers, we can no longer afford to do these things—where does the customer go to get this help, what does it cost?  If they don’t have this help, what happens to them?  What risks do they face for their future, how do they manage those without the help of trusted advisors from trusted suppliers?
  4. We need fair profits because those profits don’t sit idle, they are invested in growing the organization and it’s capabilities to better support customers.  Those profits are invested in new plants, people, acquiring other companies, all of which enable us to do more for and with our customers.  If we aren’t able to grow and invest, at all levels, our abilities to serve our customers, helping them grow and invest become limited.

What about the customer that says, “We can always find other suppliers…..”  Fundamentally, they’re playing a short game.  As suppliers choose not to play that game, dropping out of competing for business, the only ones that are left are the bad ones.  Those that compete only on price, continually cutting their investments in R&D, sales/marketing, product quality, investments in their plants.  Overtime, the number of alternative suppliers dwindles to a few–each of which since they compete only on low price, becomes very risky.  Eventually there own viability becomes questioned, or the risk to the customer skyrockets.  Sure, it works for a few years, but long term viability comes into question–first for the supplier, then to the customer.

We’ve seen examples in many industries where customers have so squeezed their supply chains that they ultimately fail, causing the customer to fail.

Our pricing and profit margins exist for a reason.  The core is to continue to allow us to grow and innovate by helping our customers grow and innovate.

We need to defend our pricing vigorously, not just for what it means to us, but for what it really means in supporting and growing our customers!

We need to make sure our customers understand this, that they understand our strategies in investing and growing so they may, in turn grow.

We need to defend proudly, our right to fair prices and fair profit margins–because it makes our customers healthier and better.

We have to be prepared to walk away from customer who don’t see the value in our success, profitability, and growth.

We as sales and marketing professionals need to be able to conduct and support these conversations with our customers, not wasting our time looking for approvals for deeper discounts.

 

 



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Huddersfield Scale Model Show.

The Davis Doctrine

With Wade Davis gone from the Royals, Lee Judge recalls what he learned from the pitcher. The short version is, do the unexpected. For example:

At times Wade would throw a first-pitch heater right at the hitter’s hot zone. When I asked how he got away with that, Wade said: “Because they don’t think you will.” The hitter assumed Davis was going to stay on the edges and he didn’t; he’d come right at them. That’s when you see a hitter look mad after taking a pitch; he got what he wanted, but didn’t really believe he’d get it.

Beginning to see the mind games being played?

The Cubs are going to like him in the bullpen.



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Reyes Needs Surgery

Following up on yesterday’s post, Alex Reyes does indeed need Tommy John surgery:

If you want reason for optimism, though, it’s important to realize that most pitchers return after undergoing ulnar collateral reconstruction surgery.

“The way (Tommy John) surgery is now … they just do such a great job with the recovery and the training stuff,” said veteran righthander Adam Wainwright, who went through the same procedure in 2011 and returned to lead the staff. “They know the recovery so well.

“It seems like it’s getting better and better. I didn’t know if that was possible, but it is. The odds of him coming back very, very strong are great.”

Forty years of practice and improvement now pretty much mean it’s one season missed.



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Wednesday, February 15, 2017

Bigger Bryce

From Chelsea Janes:

Bryce Harper is still maturing physically. It’s possible that his problem last year was he was no longer strong enough. What worked at 22 might not work at 23. Bigger and stronger is usually better.



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ChillCon 2017 - Hosted by Chilling Wargamers and Asylum Wargames, Sheffield UK

We like a good show here at Noobs and their Paintbrush, be it one that has been going for yonks or a brand new event. In this case, we have a brand new one for you!



ChillCon, as the name suggests, is the first convention from the crowd in charge of the Chilling Wargamers Facebook Group (here) and Asylum Wargaming (here). While I could probably waffle on for a bit, I'll let their memo do the talking to fill you in on all the right details.


Asylum Wargaming, co-hosts Chilling Wargamers, and chief sponsor S.L.A. Industries: CS1 will debut Sheffield’s new wargames show, Chillcon, on 27th May, 2017. Guests can not only look forward to guest speakers, tournaments and participation games, but also the cream of the UK’s independent wargames traders, manufacturers and publishers. The event’s participation and demonstration games will feature ArcWorlde and S.L.A Industries: Cannibal Sector 1 alongside Kings of War and Bolt Action tournaments, giving guests plenty to see and enjoy. They can also enjoy the event’s trademark Chillcon Carni and a free goody bag upon entry. 

Whilst confirmed traders include—amongst others—Warploque Miniatures, Daruma Productions, Dark Ops and Broken Toad, a limited number of pitches are still available. Traders or companies wishing to reserve such a pitch should email chillcontrade@gmail.com, as should potential partners or traders wishing to place their products in Chillcon’s goody bags.

Chillcon will be held at Ecclesfield School, Chapeltown Rd, Sheffield S35 9WD. Tickets will be £6.00 on the door or £5.00 in advance, with £1.00 of every ticket sold being donated to the Autistic Society, Help for Heroes and the Myasthenia Gravis Association.


Now, doesn't that sound like fun! To get yourself some tickets or to check out the traders attending, head over to the ChillCon website and to keep up to date with the very latest news about the event, join their Facebook Event Page.


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