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Soulati-'TUDE!

The Happy Friday Series: Being Happy Is A Choice

08/02/2013 By Jayme Soulati

heart-candy.jpgWith conviction, courage, and creativity here is my being happy story:

I have learned that being aware in the present moment is the key to being happy!

Bottom line: being happy, healthy, and safe is the only way to live.

Growing up in a family struggling between being happy, being sad, and safe was not comfortable or easy. Growing up was a condition from hell; always living in high gear and on high-alert!

Uncertainty was everywhere. All that mattered was being loved and being safe.

My eye-opener on being happy began and came into my life when I left home to find the meaning and purpose of my life. I also set out to understand who I am.

How I Found Happy

As a child I was deprived of life’s magical moments. Fear (False Expectations Appearing Real) and worry surrounded my being and the living of my life.

After having raised three children and losing my only daughter to cancer, I began writing my book-in-progress, “What Makes Your Heart Sing?” It’s dedicated to my children and to their children.

Each day I learn to let go of my guilt, my pain and my shame.

As a survivor, I recently began to focus, with the help of Byron Katie, on life happening for me rather than to me.

When my focus changed, and I began to find that being happy was the cornerstone of my life, opportunities emerged. The purpose of my life became clearer.

My being happy comes from within. I no longer wait for people to make me happy. I have come to realize being happy is up to me. The choice is mine!

My journey has taken me through many obstacles I have learned to turn into opportunities using the creativity, encouragement, enthusiasm, inspiration, and support I receive from others. For that I am appreciative and grateful.

As a lifelong learner, learning about life’s purpose and who I am before advising, coaching, or educating others has been and is of utmost importance to me.

Being present in the moment I find topics and currently share them off-line. I also share them in the online, viral world throughout a variety of social media platforms.

I write from my heart, and you, Jayme, are among those who are my inspiration.

Thank you Jayme for this opportunity to join, and share with you and your community. Two thumbs up to my collaborators, family, fans, followers, friends, and supporters.

You know who you are! Be sure to look for your names in my book-in-progress, “What Makes Your Heart Sing,” when published.

Now it is your turn to share, and engage with me and others about what makes you happy and what makes your heart sing in the comment section below.

About The Author

rae-baum.jpgRae Baum, PhD is founder and CEO of The Baum Group.  Dr. Rae is a bioenergetic analyst, stress educator and entrepreneur. As an author, consultant, and speaker, Dr. Rae has been changing the world with care by empowering businesses, families, and individuals to live on purpose since 1972 off-line and since 1995 on-line.

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Filed Under: Happy Friday Series Tagged With: Byron Katie, happiness, Happy Friday, stress, surviving cancer

11 Inspired Nudges to Fuel Your Business Book

08/01/2013 By Jayme Soulati

jayme-soulati-blogging-book-cover.jpg

Photo Credit: Jayme Soulati via iPhone 4S on AA flight to LA

Ever thought of writing a book? Don’t tell me you haven’t! Everyone is writing a book, and that either makes you feel left out or jazzed up.

If you have a bucket list, writing a book may be one of your yet-to-achieve items. Because self-publishing is the latest trend to hit the book world, there’s no better time than the present to jump on board and self-publish already.

Self-publish? How did that word hit you?

Some have a negative reaction to we who self-publish our first tome. My first business book has been out a few weeks, Writing with Verve on the Blogging Journey. The concern is that bloggers who write books are not legitimate authors. (I know this to be true, as I heard it from someone directly.)

Bah-humbug!

When you have an archive full of content hardly seeing the light of day, then why not compile these posts into a collection of insights?

Bloggers have keen opinions and are usually remarkable teachers. They offer vibrant thought, lead perspective and showcase talent from years of writing and perusing others’ writings. Check into your archives and see if a book is ready to pop from under the covers. Maybe you need a nudge of inspiration to help push your book into reality?

11 Book-Writing Tips and Nudges

1. Showcase Confidence. Overcome what’s challenging you about writing a business book. Business development, building your list, power for the brand, and achievement for the soul are significant reasons why authorship works. Understand that a book builds your cred; it’s an opportunity you’ll never regret.
2. Got topic? As mentioned above, start with your blog. Comb your archives and see what strikes you. There are topics you’ve tackled more frequently than others, and these posts become book fodder.
3. A blog is owned media! You own your blog and you write your posts. Owning all this content means you can re-purpose it into a business book easy enough. Add them to a document, sort, update, tweak, and off you go!
4. Do self-publish the first title. There’s nothing wrong with self-publishing; it enables a faster go-to-market strategy. It eliminates time on the front end and provides more time to market the title. Now that budding authors have the opportunity to self-publish, carpe diem! Did you know that Mark W. Schaefer self-published The Tao of Twitter?
5. Is an e-Book a book? If you prefer to launch a book online only, stop worrying that people won’t consider your e-book legit. It’s a common emotion, but guess what? You are writing the book for YOU. If people read and like it, that’s another discussion.
6. Invest in you. Write for you, write to achieve, write to invest in your future and your credibility. Printing a book on your own will require a financial investment; however, plan for it. Money is required to publish a book; but, it won’t break the bank.
7. Time is of the essence. As a professional blogger, you are familiar with time commitment. Your growth is along an ever-steepening path. Add your book project into the blogging queue. Instead of posting four times weekly, then only post two for awhile and use that writing time for your book. You learn to manage time better when it’s time spent building your brand.
8. What will peers and critics say? Ignore the naysayers. There will be people who don’t regard your work with value; others will say you’re not a “true” author. Put on the ear buds and listen to happy music! Perhaps you’re a blogger who wrote a book (like me), or you’re a bona fide writer who wrote a book…pray tell…what’s the difference?
9. Writing a book is necessary. Are you trying to monetize and earn money online? A book provides so many opportunities to help monetize from building a list, earning authority, speaking engagements, and business development.
10. Will anyone buy it?  An investment in time, talent and thought to craft your first title is NOT about making a profit. You are writing a business book to accomplish so much more for your growth professionally. If people buy it, then that’s a bonus. Lower your expectation about selling hundreds of books. You can be surprised later.
11. After the first title, more follow. Mark Schaefer does not recall this email to me about three years ago. I asked him where his book was, and he said, “Why should I write a book, everyone is!” Now look at him with three highly successful business books under his belt. Once you sit down to write the first, there’s a second title just beneath the surface. I know this from experience. My first title is just published, and my second is being written in my head right now.

The experience of the experience is the biggest reward you’ll have when you allow these inspirational nudges to push you into authorship. My bookshelf and Kindle always have room for one more title, and I bet yours do, too!

This post originally appeared on Mark W. Schaefer’s blog, Businesses Grow, on July 3, 2013.

Please Buy Jayme’s Book!

The e-book and soft cover are available via Amazon, right here!

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Filed Under: Business Tagged With: Author, Blog, E-book, Investment, Mark Schaefer, Mark W. Schaefer, Self-publishing, Twitter

50 Small Business Blogs To Watch: Infusionsoft Infographic

07/31/2013 By Jayme Soulati

Soulati-Media-logo.jpgThis is the coolest thing since sliced bread! An accolade that needs sharing.

Soulati-‘TUDE! is included as a 50 Small Business  Blogs to Watch! 

Scroll on down this so very well-done infographic from Infusionsoft, and you will find a PR section with mention of this blog in esteemed company with Spin Sucks!

THANK YOU, INFUSIONSOFT!!

50 Small Business Blogs Inforaphic Infusionsoft 570px 50 Small Business Blogs to Watch [INFOGRAPHIC]
50 Small Business Blogs to Watch by Infusionsoft

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Filed Under: Blogging 101 Tagged With: Business, Goldman Sachs, Infusionsoft, marketing, Public Relations, Scroll, small business, Spin (magazine)

Big Brands, Consumers And The Festering Sea

07/30/2013 By Jayme Soulati

multitasking-toilet.jpgWe’re on the verge of a massive sea change; it’s festering. Companies are scrambling to find the next money maker to compete, to retain earnings, to be profitable, to stay clean and away from the eagle eye of Uncle Sam litigation and taxes.

Everyone is trying to make a buck; yet, the lowliest of low is regarded as the fall guy. Who is at greatest risk of toppling and never recovering? It’s not big business, that’s for sure.

It’s you, me, we, us – the consumer.

Brands Are In Bed With Investors

They have to be; that’s how the bread and butter get served at breakfast. To make investors happy and to finance struggling business units, corporations are de-volumizing everything possible.

For years now, we consumers have noted smaller cereal boxes, candy bars, beverages and personal hygiene products. Now, even Kimberly-Clark and Proctor & Gamble are desheeting.

Kimberly-Clark Corp. is now selling “bulkier” yet “stingier” Kleenex tissue, says this story in the Wall Street Journal July 25, 2013, “Desheeting” Shrinks Rolls, Plumps Profits. Each box of Kleenex has 13% fewer sheets with higher or the same retail prices.  Taken from the story, “Kimberly-Clark executives told analysts that they expect the practice to benefit the company’s consumer-tissue unit in the second half of the year.”

Several weeks ago, I bought a 12-pack of Stella Artois. When I popped a coldie, the bottle was 11.2 ounces rather than the customary 12 ounces with the same or higher price for this premium beer. I wonder how much the manufacturing expense was to retool all the factories to make the green bottles smaller?  How about that packaging? Did they save two inches of cardboard on the carton?

When a consumer gets disgusted and turns to brand B to find a better price point with more volume, the quality sucks. We either pay more for less to get the quality we’ve been spoiled with, or we pay the same for more and poor quality. What’s it going to be?
[Read more…]

Filed Under: Branding, Business Tagged With: brands, Business, consumer branding, Cottonelle, desheeting, Kimberly-Clark, Kleenex, Microsoft, Procter & Gamble, shale gas, Toilet paper, Wall Street, Wall Street Journal

Why Mobile Apps Make Sense For Your Business

07/29/2013 By Jayme Soulati

mobiletechIf you are in two minds about getting a mobile app to support and promote your business, it is perhaps the lack of proper knowledge responsible for your confusion.

There is a variety of broad questions about app development probably running through your head:

  • Does your business need a mobile app?
  • Why should apps use smartphone technology and nothing else?
  • How should we plan and implement app development?
  • How much should we invest?

Well, here are some answers to some of these questions.

Why Your Business Needs a Mobile App

According to analysts, there are more than a billion smart phones being operated worldwide. Of these, 1.2 billion devices are being used to operate mobile applications at the end of 2013. The usage of applications is expected to grow by 29.8 percent each year and thus amount to 4.4 billion users by the end of 2017.

What is evident from these statistics and general patterns of mobile application usage is:

  • Mobile app technology is here to stay. Creating an app would thus be a long-term investment and not short-term marketing measure.
  • If designed intelligently, mobile applications can help boost brand awareness and affinity.
  • Mobile applications can integrate several business objectives including business marketing, consumer engagement, customer service, promotional activity and more.

Thus, theoretically speaking, mobile applications are, amongst other things, effective business tools that can help an enterprise expand and grow. Having said that, it is also important to highlight that there is a lot which goes into creating an application, which succeeds in its business objectives.

So, unless you are prepared to invest much time, effort and funds into developing a well-functioning mobile application, the probability of obtaining the desired results is fairly low.

How to Go About Mobile App Development

Once you decide to give mobile app technology a shot, you must settle on the platform(s) you’ll be targeting – iOS, Android, Windows or Symbian. The next set of decisions would concern the design and development of the application. To this effect, you’ll have several options:

  • Hire a technical development partner who will provide you with inputs from content experts to create a successful ass pitch.
  • You can contract a technical expert, freelance app developer or an established development agency to make your app.
  • Consider developing the app yourself using Do-It-Yourself development tools that can be used by people who are tech-savvy but not experts.
  • If you want to take things slow, you can enter into the world of mobile apps through advertising on free apps which redirect traffic to your mobile website. Depending upon the consumer response, you can then decide whether to make an app or not.

Budget/Time Required

Clearly, creating an application for your business is a time and money consuming process, that is, if you want to create a good app that is capable of generating the desired result.

In terms of budgeting, there are two cost-cutting measures you may consider

  • One, do not try and implement too many elements of your mobile strategy all at once. Go one at a time based on the outcome and experience of each element that you put into place.
  • Two, consider creating the app yourself or employing amateur app developers instead of hiring costly app development agencies. If the latter option appeals to you more, make sure to have a look at the amateur’s profile and portfolio before employing – you don’t want any ugly surprises later!

With regard to timing, do not look for shortcuts. Expend as much time as required for developing and implementing your mobile strategy; anything done in a hurry is hardly going to bear good results.

About The Author

Vishal Gumber is the founder of Appsquare—an app development company based in Sydney that creates innovative apps, provides part funding for selected app ideas and also helps app developers get funding through its network of Venture Capitalists and Angel Investors.

Image source: https://designbeep.designbeep.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/mobile-business-app.jpg

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Filed Under: Technology Tagged With: Android, Angel investor, IOS, Mobile app, Mobile application development, Mobile Web

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