Honor

Written by Chris Taylor


What does this word mean to you?

What does it mean to ‘your’ web business and how do you ‘honor’ your customers?

Has your online business moved so far from this word that it now has little meaning?

Or more torepparttar point, have you removed this word from your business vocabulary in search of online fame and fortune?

There is no simple answer to this question for it is one that only you as an individual can answer within your own heart.

I simply ask this question as I see too many online businesses relinquishing there own personal honor and business morals to obtainrepparttar 140252 quick almighty $.

Some examples are.

1. Use of Google Adsense on all pages just to make a few extra bucks.

2. The addition of ‘bonuses’ which have no real value but to getrepparttar 140253 sale.

3. Over pricing of books, services and software just because it is ‘online’

4. Advertising of any product you do not use or believe in forrepparttar 140254 sake of profits only.

5. Not helping customers as promised in your ‘sales copy’, even if they are difficult to handle or not as ‘smart’ as you would wish them.

5. Not helping customers to understand all they need to know in building there businesses successfully.

6. Sticking by your word and doingrepparttar 140255 right thing even when it means extra time and effort.

Marketing To Hispanics/latinos

Written by Bill Willard


A powerful consumer market with annual spending power exceeding $350 billion, Hispanics—or should that be Latinos?—have becomerepparttar largest minority group inrepparttar 140092 United States, and a marketplace well-worth looking into and with plenty to see--once you getrepparttar 140093 labels straight.

So which is it, “Hispanics” or “Latinos”?

Hispanics and Latinos have hotly debated that question for years, and apparently, picking one answer overrepparttar 140094 other means drawing political, social, and generational lines inrepparttar 140095 sand.

I’ll explain later, but for now let’s get some numbers onrepparttar 140096 table.

Hispanic Database – The Numbers Tellrepparttar 140097 Story

It made headlines! Hispanics are nowrepparttar 140098 largest minority group inrepparttar 140099 U.S., outnumbering blacks by nearly 1 million (37 million v. 36.2 million).

That may have been news, but demographers and advocacy groups saw it coming; those population estimates merely confirmed it. With extensive immigration from economic basket case, Latin America--and a robust birthrate among predominantly Catholic Hispanics--this gap is expected to grow. By 2020,repparttar 140100 Hispanic population could easily double to 70 million, or 21% ofrepparttar 140101 U.S. population; by 2050 expect people of Hispanic origin to number more than 100 million. Hispanics are 11.4% of today’s work force, a figure that could easily double in a ten years.

• Over 7.6 million Hispanic households inrepparttar 140102 U.S. average 3.6 people per household.

• U.S. Hispanic households have 2 or more people employed full time; 58% of Hispanics over 18 are employed full time.

• About 1 million Hispanic households inrepparttar 140103 United States have incomes of $50,000 or more

• The average Hispanic household spends $31,013 annually.

• Hispanics are a young population. The median age of U.S. Hispanics is 26.5 compared to a median age of 32.2 for non-Hispanics

• 12.8 million Hispanics were foreign-born; of this number, 1 in 4 were naturalized citizens.

• Among foreign-born Hispanics, 43% enteredrepparttar 140104 U.S. inrepparttar 140105 1990s, while 27% entered before 1980.

• Although 74% of those who enteredrepparttar 140106 country before 1970 had obtained citizenship by 2000, only 7% of those who entered between 1990 and 2000 had become citizens. (Becoming a naturalized citizen requires five years of residence inrepparttar 140107 U.S.)

Sources: U.S. Census Bureau 2000 Census of Population and The Hispanic Population inrepparttar 140108 United States, March 2000, Roberto Ramirez and Melissa Therrien.

Flexing Economic and Political Muscle

Today,repparttar 140109 7.6 million-plus Hispanic households inrepparttar 140110 U.S. boast higher educational levels, greater access to credit and capital, and more finely tuned technological skills than ever. Consequently, with buying power exceeding $350 billion,repparttar 140111 current generation of Hispanics is an economic powerhouse.

That Adds up to Prime Marketing Potential

More than half of all Hispanics inrepparttar 140112 U.S. are between ages 18-49, which means most of them are getting married, buying homes, starting families, launching careers, and in many cases, opening their own businesses.

A strong entrepreneurial streak runs through this market, with Hispanic-owned businesses inrepparttar 140113 U.S. totaling 1.2 million firms employing over 1.3 million people and generating $186.3 billion in revenues in 1997, according to a report released this year byrepparttar 140114 Commerce Department's Census Bureau. Indeed, Hispanic-owned companies made up 6% ofrepparttar 140115 20.8 million non-farm businesses inrepparttar 140116 nation and 1% ofrepparttar 140117 $18.6 trillion in receipts for all businesses.

Market Positioning Pays (As Always)

The longer Hispanics live in an area andrepparttar 140118 more prosperous they arerepparttar 140119 more invisible they become, and many school districts are having marked success with “immersion” English-language training among Hispanic grade school students. Yet assimilation may never be complete. In most Hispanic communities inrepparttar 140120 U.S., strong cultural identity persists, and that can affect how you market to them. So thoughrepparttar 140121 times are indeed a-changing (to borrow a phrase), you’ll still find that a fundamental understanding of Hispanic culture and working knowledge of Spanish are assets in this market—make that markets, since Hispanic communities are no more homogeneous than others.

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