Friday, January 29, 2016

Sterling by Cressey – Kerrisdale Living at its Finest

Sterling VNC 3 Sterling VNC 2

Kerrisdale has long been the neighborhood of stately single family homes but the city is beginning to open the neighborhood up to new developments that cater largely to downsizers looking for the ease of condo living without sacrificing space. Sterling by Cressey is the latest, offering luxurious boutique living in one of Vancouver’s most desirable locations.

 

The post Sterling by Cressey – Kerrisdale Living at its Finest appeared first on Vancouver New Condos.



from Buildings – Vancouver New Condos http://ift.tt/1nUhdLI

Under the Table Contract

An early and somewhat crooked player contract will go up for auction. The document belongs to the grandson of Andrew Leonard:

It was signed at a time when there was a societal rift over whether baseball should pay its top players or remain amateur. Written on U.S. Treasury Department letterhead and signed by the acting Treasury secretary, the 40-word contract promises Leonard $720 for one year to be a department messenger.

“That contract sheds light on what’s long been believed but not proven, which was that there were professional baseball players posing as amateurs who were getting paid under the table for no-show jobs, and this is tangible evidence that the government was involved,” Ivy said.

The $720 was about twice what a government messenger made annually in the 1870s.

“Andy didn’t do a lick of work for the Treasury,” McCarty said.

Your tax dollars at work! The contract would be worth about $14,000 today, which is a nice example of how owners and players grew the game in a century and a half.



from baseballmusings.com http://ift.tt/1PJr4jF

War Hog WIP Part 2


Let's check back in and see how my little pig is coming on with 3 weeks left until Smogcon 2016!



First I wanted to take a little step back and get some work done on the base. Previously I had built up the volume with Milliput and was happy with that, but it didn't have much texture and was all too uniform. So the first step was to fix that. Unfortunately I forgot to take a photo before undercoating, but I used a huge variety of things on the base, the roots are mostly wires from a wire brush. There is also soil/bits of crushed up rock and bark on there as well as modelling sand.

I then undercoated in black and grey to give myself a start on the contrast..


Monochrome Basing!
From this I glazed in a few colours, I really enjoy this step, I find it very freeing to just play with colour and experiment. In this case I'm planning on putting some muddy water on the bottom left area. So I wanted to set the tone for that and since the pig is mostly warm/browns/reds, I wanted the main colour on the base to be greens to contrast with the model. I also glazed in a bit of variation for fun, including purples.


When I base, I always use protection!



You may have noticed I've got some paper around the outside of the base, in the past I've struggled to get the finish as good as i'd want on the outside of bases like this, so once I had something I was happy with I wanted to protect it. Unfortunately my grey priming early on had somewhat ruined it, so i'll need to repaint the black outside anyway. I carry on with drybrushing layers and also some little highlights..


Subtle but it's getting there

For now I think that'll do me, I'll come back to it and of course still need to do the resin water, but for now it's back to the pig!

I carry on blending the NMM and add a couple of glazes to the skin..


Pipey pig!



I'm really focussed on trying to get much of the metals sorted out at this stage, so I can get on and focus on the detail and textures, especially the skin. 
 
Progress Pig picks up the pace!

 Overall I'm happy with how things are going I think, though I still feel like I have a lot to do until things are where I want them to be. 3 weeks left!




from Noobs and their paintbrush http://ift.tt/1JKQo6F

Thursday, January 28, 2016

Customer Stuck? Not Moving Forward?

It’s a common lament among sales people,  “I’m trying to close the customer, I can’t get them to move forward!  They’re dragging their feet, they just won’t order!”

Last week, with several clients, I was doing pipeline reviews.  Too many sales people were saying this, slipping their forecasts, slipping their target close dates another month (one becomes suspicious when you see 11 sequential monthly slips on a deal–but I’ll leave that for another post).

How do we get them to move forward?

Recently, I saw some horribly bad advice on this.  Frankly, I thought these techniques had gone out with the old “foot in the door” trick.  Apparently, it’s alive and kicking.  The tips offered to move the customer forward were:

  1. Shorten the time the offer is available.
  2. Limit the quantity available.
  3. Announce a price increase.
  4. Offer a smaller amount to make the initial decision to buy less stressful.
  5. Walk away.

In complex B2B sales, these tactics are both manipulative and foolish.  They don’t get to the real issues of why customers drag their feet, instead focusing on the sales person’s needs.

Using these tactics is an indication of major sales errors far earlier in the buying cycle.

Why do customers drag their feet?  Why do they delay a purchase decision?

Some of the reasons I’ve encountered:

  1. They were never committed to changing in the first place!  Too often, we engage the customer in a “selling cycle.”  We go through all our pitches, the customer has an interest in learning, they may be thinking about changing.  Just because we are going through our selling cycle doesn’t mean the customer is going through a buying cycle.  Perhaps they are exploring, learning, trying to keep up to date with new solutions.  Too often, we and customers focus on the future and “how wonderful things could be.”  The very first thing we need to accomplish with customers, in qualifying them, is to get them to declare:  “Our current state is absolutely unacceptable.  We can no longer be doing things as we have, we must change!”  Until the customer makes this commitment, inertia or the fear/hassle of change will probably overcome the vision of “how wonderful things can be.”
  2. The customer hasn’t established a goal of when they want the change in place and when they want to start seeing results.  This is closely tied to the previous point.  Once the customer has committed to change, the next thing we need to work on is, “When do you want to start seeing the results from the change initiative.”  There may be deadlines  or compelling events that force customers to make changes by a certain deadline.  There may be legal, compliance, or other issues.  One of the most famous one’s from the distant past was Y2K.  This caused every organization to re-look at their financial, accounting, ERP and related systems.  There can be others, HIPAA drives changes for people in the healthcare segments.  Environmental regulations may drive deadlines for energy, manufacturing, and other organizations.  A product launch date may drive deadlines for decisions in design/development, manufacturing, and other areas.  Sometimes, we need the customer just to set a date, a deadline when they want to see results.  Often, we can leverage opportunity costs, lack of competitiveness, unacceptable spending, customer retention/acquisition threats to drive the sense of urgency and help them set the date by which they need to start seeing results.  Without this target, things will slip and slip and slip—100% of the time.  It’s our responsibility as sales people and to our customers to get them to understand this and commit to a “go-live.”
  3. They haven’t finished their buying process!  Too often, our selling process is not aligned with our customers’ buying processes.  This is just bad salesmanship.  Research indicates that for every stage of misalignment (say the customer is in their Problem Definition Stage and we are in our Proposal/Closing Stage), the probability of winning a deal declines by 15-20%.  So if we are trying to close the order, thinking the customer is dragging their feet, but they still haven’t finished their buying process and are ready to make a decision, then they aren’t ready to order–and the more we manipulate them into trying to get an order, the less likely we’ll get it.
  4. They haven’t finished their buying process!  In previous articles, I’ve introduced the concepts of Project Management in the buying/selling process.  Sometimes things will slip, the customer will get behind.  This threatens slipping the “close date.”  But more importantly it threatens to slip the “Go-Live” mentioned in 2 above.  That’s why having that Go-Live is so critical.  The customer doesn’t and shouldn’t care that you get the order when you need/want it.  But they are really concerned about missing dates, opportunities critical to achieving the results they want.  If the customer is slipping, and we are working in guiding them through their buying process, continuing to focus on the objective of when they want to produce results keeps both of us moving forward and minimizes the potential of dragging their feet.
  5. They don’t know how to buy!  By now, we all know the consensus decision and the 5.4.  We also know the high likelihood of the group failing to align, resulting in no decision made.  None of this has anything to do with vendor or solution selection, but with their own internal buying process and ability to collaborate as a buying group.  If we can’t help them solve this challenge, then they will never buy–regardless of the enticement we might offer.  Helping the customer with their buying process, helping recognize and align diverse interests, agendas, and priorities is critical to removing any roadblocks at the end or the process.
  6. They have failed to develop a strategy to sell what they want to their management!  Decisions and approvals are being forced higher in the organization.  Too often we can get the customer to make a decision, choosing us.  But when they go to management to get approval, they get turned down—even with fantastic business cases.  Our customers have to “sell” what they want to do to management.  For most of them, the concept of “selling” is the furthest thing in their minds and often very distasteful.  But if they aren’t aligned with the priorities and goals of top management, if they can’t connect the dots to show how their initiative contributes to the strategies and priorities of the organization, they won’t get approval.  Funding may get diverted into other unrelated areas.  We need to help our customers do this–perhaps co-presenting with them, but in the least helping them build their “sales pitch” to their management teams.
  7. We have failed to demonstrate our compelling value!  This is related to many of the previous points.  Customers may not go forward, simply because they don’t see the value in going forward—at least with us.  If we’ve gotten to the end of the buying process with the customer not recognizing and owning the value we’ve created through the process, as well as the return they get through implementation, then we have failed.  No artificial deadline, pricing manipulation, scarcity threat, or anything else will overcome that.  We have to go back to basics, making sure we understand what the customer values, communicate how we deliver on that, and gaining their agreement on the value total value of what we are suggesting.

Finding ourselves in the closing stages of a buying process with the customer continuing to drag their feet means something has been missed much earlier in the buying/sales process.  We may have made errors in execution, the customer may have missed some critical things in their buying process.  We can’t ignore these things with manipulative closing tactics.  We have to understand what’s happened, go back and address those root issues.  Sometimes it means starting all over (we may decide it’s not worth it–and walk away–but think of the wasted opportunity!).  Sometimes, it’s just identifying these things with the customer, quickly working to address them.

But the best way to avoid this happening is to do things right from the very start.  Make sure there is a commitment to change!  Make sure the customer has established a goal of when they want to see results!  Help the customer with their buying process and keep your sales process in lockstep with them.  Make sure they are selling to the needs and priorities of upper management.  Make sure the customer values what you are doing with them and the outcomes they will achieve with your solution.

Will customers get stuck?  Sure, but less frequently if you do things right from the start.  And if they do, you don’t have to resort to shabby and self centered manipulations.  All you have to do is remind them why they decided they must change (re-read 1), what they are missing by not moving forward (re-read 2), and revalidate your compelling value (re-read 7.)  Leverage what’s important to them to get them moving forward.

If you find yourself having to resort the horrible tactics at the beginning of the article, something’s gone terribly wrong.  B2B buyers are sophisticated, they recognize these manipulations.  Save you and them the time.  Perhaps, the only valid thing, if you can’t correct what’s been missed in the process is to walk away–making sure you don’t repeat the same mistakes in future deals.



from Partners in EXCELLENCE Blog — Making A Difference http://ift.tt/20wIly6

3 Tips For a Flawless Complexion

Wondering how to have a flawless complexion? Below you will find 3 tips on how to have a flawless complexion. … Continue reading

from signaturemobilespa http://ift.tt/209Nqji

Player Dump

The Rockies got rid of Corey Dickerson for a pretty good relief pitcher:

This trade is a little difficult to figure out: The Tampa Bay Rays are sending hard-throwing lefty reliever Jake McGee to the Colorado Rockies for outfielder Corey Dickerson. There is also one minor leaguer on each side involved.

On the surface it makes some sense. The Rockies had the worst bullpen ERA in the majors last season at 4.70; even by Coors Field standards that’s awful and unacceptable. But the Rockies are also unlikely contenders in 2016, so using valuable current resources for a relief pitcher seems strange, especially considering McGee has just two seasons of team control versus four for Dickerson.

The trade makes more sense if you don’t see Dickerson as valuable. Look at his career home/road split. A .249/.286/.410 slash line is nothing to write home about. He has some power, but at the cost of a lot of outs. Away from Coors Field, he doesn’t have much to offer.



from baseballmusings.com http://ift.tt/1lYEdaE

Inexpensive Ways to Modernize Your Outdated Bathroom

Everyone likes to have nice things and this is possibly even truer for bathrooms than for any other room in the house. Bathrooms have a certain power of relaxation and rejuvenation in ways that not many other rooms in a home can provide. Most people enjoy a good trip to the day spa and usually leave feeling much more relaxed and refreshed than when they first arrive, but household bathrooms are often built for bare functionality, and it can be a quick in-and-out experience. However, the modern home is placing increasing emphasis on the luxury and opulence. The bathroom should be a place where you can soak in the tub, enjoy a nice steam shower, and simply unwind from the chaotic and stressful tensions of everyday life. If you’re looking to create this kind of atmosphere for your old, outdated bathroom, but are worried about budgetary restrictions, check out this list of easy ways to modernize your bathroom without breaking the bank.

Tile the Countertop

If your countertop is old and water-damaged, it could have a detrimental effect on the rest of your bathroom. One easy way of updating your vanity countertop is by covering it with tile. This way your counter is safe from water damage, and it’s an easy-to-do task that doesn’t require outsourced installation work.

Photo Credit: bathandgranite.com

Paint the Floor

If you have wood floors in your bathroom, giving the boards a new paint job is a great, low-cost way to update your bathroom and make the whole room feel like it received a first-class makeover. Rather than ripping out the floorboards and dealing with material fees, labor, and construction, you can just repaint the floor and enjoy the feeling of a brand new room.

Soaker bathtubPhoto Credit: velvix.com

Create Your Own Wallpaper

If you live in a home with papered walls, chances are it’s becoming older and may even start pealing. Think about something that is important to you. That may be the morning paper, graphics and comics, a certain type of books, art, etc. Pick whatever it is, and create your own wall paper. Give your bathroom a makeover that is creative, artsy, and definitely a conversation starter.

Photo Credit: messynessychic.com

Frame a Mirror
It sounds too simple and easy to be effective, but take the measurements of your bathroom mirror and find a high-quality elegant-looking frame to enclose it. The effect will be a boosted appearance that makes your entire bathroom seem more sophisticated and luxurious.

These are just a few examples to help you start generating ideas for how to renovate your outdated bathroom. Have you recently renovated your bathroom space with an easy DIY or low-cost alternative? Do you have questions about a specific area/appliance in your bathroom that you’ve wanted to update? Leave your feedback and questions in the comments below and let’s get the ideas rolling!

Contributed by: Perfectbath

The post Inexpensive Ways to Modernize Your Outdated Bathroom appeared first on Perfect Bath Canada.



from Perfect Bath Canada http://ift.tt/1PWwzWq