Jan
31
Spread Like Wildfire
Filed Under Wildfire Protection | Comments Off
Gihan Perera asked:
Every message has three components:
1. An idea you want to convey;
2. An audience you would like to reach;
3. The delivery of that idea to that audience.
This is obvious, right? In marketing, you’d call this product / market / medium; in a presentation, you’d call this content / audience / delivery; and so on.
But it’s one thing to understand these things exist; it’s another to use them whenever you deliver a message.
How do you turn your message into something they listen to, act on, and remember long after you’ve gone?
In high school physics, I learned that the gravitational attraction between two planets depends on three things: the size of the first planet, the size of the second planet, and how close they are to each other. The bigger they are, the greater the gravitational force between them; and the closer they are, the greater the force.
The same applies to your messages. Your success depends on three things:
1. The quality of your idea
2. Your understanding of your audience
3. How well you deliver that message to that audience.
How good is your message?
Think about an idea, product, service or concept you’d like to deliver - whether it’s in a one-to-one sales meeting, a group presentation, a marketing flyer, or your Web site.
How well are you doing these three things?
1. How well have you developed the idea?
2. How well do you know your audience?
3. How good are you at connecting with your audience?
Use these specific questions to evaluate your message …
Your Idea:
1. Solutions: How well do you provide solutions to your audience’s problems?
2. Expertise: How much expertise do you already have?
3. Packaging: What’s your experience with creating messages in this format?
4. Margin: What’s your profit margin?
5. Leverage: How can you use it in other ways?
Your Audience
1. Niche: Are you aiming this message at a small, clearly defined, niche group?
2. Problems: How well do you know the audience’s problems, questions, concerns, challenges, and worries?
3. Demand: How well do you know the demand for your message?
4. Price: If you’re selling a product, have you tested the price people are willing to pay?
5. Relationship: What is your existing relationship with your target audience?
Your Delivery
1. Strategy: Do you have a strategy for rolling out this message?
2. Reach: How easily can you reach them?
3. Tactics: Do you have experience already with the specific delivery techniques you’re planning to use?
4. Interest: How interested are you about your audience?
5. Commitment: Are you really committed to the process?
Use these 15 questions to evaluate every message before you deliver it.
Nathaniel
Every message has three components:
1. An idea you want to convey;
2. An audience you would like to reach;
3. The delivery of that idea to that audience.
This is obvious, right? In marketing, you’d call this product / market / medium; in a presentation, you’d call this content / audience / delivery; and so on.
But it’s one thing to understand these things exist; it’s another to use them whenever you deliver a message.
How do you turn your message into something they listen to, act on, and remember long after you’ve gone?
In high school physics, I learned that the gravitational attraction between two planets depends on three things: the size of the first planet, the size of the second planet, and how close they are to each other. The bigger they are, the greater the gravitational force between them; and the closer they are, the greater the force.
The same applies to your messages. Your success depends on three things:
1. The quality of your idea
2. Your understanding of your audience
3. How well you deliver that message to that audience.
How good is your message?
Think about an idea, product, service or concept you’d like to deliver - whether it’s in a one-to-one sales meeting, a group presentation, a marketing flyer, or your Web site.
How well are you doing these three things?
1. How well have you developed the idea?
2. How well do you know your audience?
3. How good are you at connecting with your audience?
Use these specific questions to evaluate your message …
Your Idea:
1. Solutions: How well do you provide solutions to your audience’s problems?
2. Expertise: How much expertise do you already have?
3. Packaging: What’s your experience with creating messages in this format?
4. Margin: What’s your profit margin?
5. Leverage: How can you use it in other ways?
Your Audience
1. Niche: Are you aiming this message at a small, clearly defined, niche group?
2. Problems: How well do you know the audience’s problems, questions, concerns, challenges, and worries?
3. Demand: How well do you know the demand for your message?
4. Price: If you’re selling a product, have you tested the price people are willing to pay?
5. Relationship: What is your existing relationship with your target audience?
Your Delivery
1. Strategy: Do you have a strategy for rolling out this message?
2. Reach: How easily can you reach them?
3. Tactics: Do you have experience already with the specific delivery techniques you’re planning to use?
4. Interest: How interested are you about your audience?
5. Commitment: Are you really committed to the process?
Use these 15 questions to evaluate every message before you deliver it.
Nathaniel
Jan
24
Drought and Wildfires: the Myth Exposed
Filed Under Wildfire Protection | Comments Off
Jeff Popick asked:
If you live in California, perhaps the wildfires are getting dangerously close to your home. You realize that, at any moment, you could lose everything - or maybe you already have. If you get any news at all, you’ve been hearing about the dry conditions, which provide fertile ground for the fires, and the ever-worsening drought that leaves little water to fight them. The government tells you to stop washing your car and to take shorter showers. Then, your friend from across the continent - in Georgia - called to say that their governor just issued an urgent message saying “Georgia will have no more water in 90 days.” Your kids are really terrified and can’t be thoroughly comforted, because you can’t hide YOUR fearful face. It all seems like a surreal horror movie, but this is reality.
Water is the elixir of life, so what happens when it’s gone? Well, the good news is there is a real solution, but first you have to understand the real problem and how you contribute to it.
If you want to do nothing other than wish these problems would go away, or if you just want to continue pretending they don’t exist, then stop reading this right now. Still reading? Good, I am about to show you one of the chief culprits of our water problems and, in so doing, offer the real solution.
There are some statistics originally published by John Robbins in his book, Diet For A New America, showing where all the water is going. While it takes about 23 gallons of water to grow one pound of tomatoes and 25 gallons of water to produce one pound of wheat, it takes over 5,200 gallons of water to produce one pound of beef.
The world’s fresh water is getting ****** up by “meatism,” i.e., the production and consumption of meat and dairy. What’s worse, of the water that’s left, virtually all of it is being contaminated in the process. It is a blatant myth that fire, desertification (dust bowls) and drought are caused (or would be helped) by short showers and dirty cars. We would have no water problems if we were all vegan and took long showers.
That is certainly not to say that anybody should be wasteful of our resources, but let’s understand the real problem. Also understand that it doesn’t take an action on the part of the government to fix our water woes, because this is one problem the government didn’t cause (at least not at this level). Look on your breakfast, lunch and dinner plate and if you see anything related to meatism, you are contributing to the problem. Abundant clean water and meatism are mutually exclusive.
The terrific and all-empowering news is if we all turned to a plant-based diet, a vegan diet, the ever-increasing parched earth would once again have plentiful water.
Your call.
James
If you live in California, perhaps the wildfires are getting dangerously close to your home. You realize that, at any moment, you could lose everything - or maybe you already have. If you get any news at all, you’ve been hearing about the dry conditions, which provide fertile ground for the fires, and the ever-worsening drought that leaves little water to fight them. The government tells you to stop washing your car and to take shorter showers. Then, your friend from across the continent - in Georgia - called to say that their governor just issued an urgent message saying “Georgia will have no more water in 90 days.” Your kids are really terrified and can’t be thoroughly comforted, because you can’t hide YOUR fearful face. It all seems like a surreal horror movie, but this is reality.
Water is the elixir of life, so what happens when it’s gone? Well, the good news is there is a real solution, but first you have to understand the real problem and how you contribute to it.
If you want to do nothing other than wish these problems would go away, or if you just want to continue pretending they don’t exist, then stop reading this right now. Still reading? Good, I am about to show you one of the chief culprits of our water problems and, in so doing, offer the real solution.
There are some statistics originally published by John Robbins in his book, Diet For A New America, showing where all the water is going. While it takes about 23 gallons of water to grow one pound of tomatoes and 25 gallons of water to produce one pound of wheat, it takes over 5,200 gallons of water to produce one pound of beef.
The world’s fresh water is getting ****** up by “meatism,” i.e., the production and consumption of meat and dairy. What’s worse, of the water that’s left, virtually all of it is being contaminated in the process. It is a blatant myth that fire, desertification (dust bowls) and drought are caused (or would be helped) by short showers and dirty cars. We would have no water problems if we were all vegan and took long showers.
That is certainly not to say that anybody should be wasteful of our resources, but let’s understand the real problem. Also understand that it doesn’t take an action on the part of the government to fix our water woes, because this is one problem the government didn’t cause (at least not at this level). Look on your breakfast, lunch and dinner plate and if you see anything related to meatism, you are contributing to the problem. Abundant clean water and meatism are mutually exclusive.
The terrific and all-empowering news is if we all turned to a plant-based diet, a vegan diet, the ever-increasing parched earth would once again have plentiful water.
Your call.
James
Jan
23
Can a outdoor glass elevator be perform as a fire safety elevator?
Filed Under Fire Safety | 1 Comment
Mbs03 asked:
Example, the Reina Sofia Muzeum glass elevator, can it be used as fire safety lift?
Example, the Reina Sofia Muzeum glass elevator, can it be used as fire safety elevator?
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Example, the Reina Sofia Muzeum glass elevator, can it be used as fire safety lift?
Example, the Reina Sofia Muzeum glass elevator, can it be used as fire safety elevator?
Powered by Yahoo Answers
Jan
21
Greek Wildfires: Terrorism or Lack of Firefighting Resources?
Filed Under Wildfire Protection | Comments Off
Lou Angeli asked:
Tuesday morning, firefighters said 89 new fires broke out overnigjht and dozens of others were burning throughout the country unchecked.
The firefight is difficult as poorly- equipped municipal firefighters muster citizens to serve on hand-to-hand bucket brigades in some places. France, Italy, Cyprus and Israel have sent firefighters, with aircraft coming from France and Italy, sources reported. As of this writing another 12 countries were sending reinforcements.
Blazes came within inches of destroying the museum at Olympia, housing famous classical sculptures such as Praxiteles’ Hermes. But air tankers, helicopters and scores of firefighters beat it back. 60 Firefighters and 6 engines remain on the scene in case the blaze flares up again.
“The destruction is of biblical proportions,” Nicholas Orphanos, a volunteer firefighter in the Peloponnese, told Reuters. “There are villages we want to go to (but) cannot because the roads are blocked. In 30 years, I have never seen such destruction.”
According to conservative estimates, 110 villages have been razed to the ground, six and a half million acres of farmland consumed, and countless acres of pine forest and olive groves reduced to cinders. “Much of Arcadia, in the central Peloponnese, a prime tourist attraction, is reminiscent of moonscape and thousands of rural Greeks fear financial ruin.” reported The Guardian.
On Monday, Prosecutor Dimitris Papangelopoulos ordered an investigation into whether the fires could have been the work of terrorists. 33 people have already been arrested on suspicion of arson, including an elderly woman who was cooking outside her home.
With all of the unrelated, spontaneous outbreaks, one can accept the fact that these fires are arson in nature. But the real problem here isn’t terrorism, it is Greece’s inability to deal with large scale fires of this nature and magnitude. In a country whose landscape is much like that of California, there is no Forest Firefighting service, no incident command system and nothing even close to hot shot teams. Without the ability to build and maintain firebreaks, these massive blazes simply roll across the landscape, fed by hot, dry winds from the Middle Eastern deserts.
In 2003, the government appropriated 18 million Euros to revamp the Greek Fire Service. There were to be 735 new firefighting vehicles, new protective gear for firefighters, in addition to helicopters and fireboats. The idea was to place the Greek Fire Service on equal footing with the USA, UK, Sweden and Germany. But somehow that procurement came up short, and only 50 apparatus were actually delivered, all to Athens. Some claim that government’s investment was a ruse, simply to impress foreign visitors who attended the 2004 Summer Olympic Games.
In recent months, there have been complaints of inefficiency of the fire service in Greece. Average response times by fire units serving rural areas is 35 minutes – and remember, that’s the average. This is compounded by the fact that Greek government recently prohibited the use helicopters for the firefighting for fear that such operations would create additional power cuts, a common occurrence in rural Greece.
The problem of controlling the huge fires is a general lack of investment in firefighting equipment and personnel, reports the popular UK-based blog EU Referendum. “ In Greece,’ the blog reports, ‘investments happen only after the horse has bolted”.
And then there are the politics of natural disasters. In a move reminiscent of FEMA’s response to Katrina, government in Greece has firmly placed the blame on someone else – in this case the unseen terrorist. That’s understandable — if you’re an idiot. National elections are in 3 weeks, and Greek Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis would prefer to be viewed as a hero – not the one responsible for cutting funding for firefighters and firefighting.
###
Tiffany
Tuesday morning, firefighters said 89 new fires broke out overnigjht and dozens of others were burning throughout the country unchecked.
The firefight is difficult as poorly- equipped municipal firefighters muster citizens to serve on hand-to-hand bucket brigades in some places. France, Italy, Cyprus and Israel have sent firefighters, with aircraft coming from France and Italy, sources reported. As of this writing another 12 countries were sending reinforcements.
Blazes came within inches of destroying the museum at Olympia, housing famous classical sculptures such as Praxiteles’ Hermes. But air tankers, helicopters and scores of firefighters beat it back. 60 Firefighters and 6 engines remain on the scene in case the blaze flares up again.
“The destruction is of biblical proportions,” Nicholas Orphanos, a volunteer firefighter in the Peloponnese, told Reuters. “There are villages we want to go to (but) cannot because the roads are blocked. In 30 years, I have never seen such destruction.”
According to conservative estimates, 110 villages have been razed to the ground, six and a half million acres of farmland consumed, and countless acres of pine forest and olive groves reduced to cinders. “Much of Arcadia, in the central Peloponnese, a prime tourist attraction, is reminiscent of moonscape and thousands of rural Greeks fear financial ruin.” reported The Guardian.
On Monday, Prosecutor Dimitris Papangelopoulos ordered an investigation into whether the fires could have been the work of terrorists. 33 people have already been arrested on suspicion of arson, including an elderly woman who was cooking outside her home.
With all of the unrelated, spontaneous outbreaks, one can accept the fact that these fires are arson in nature. But the real problem here isn’t terrorism, it is Greece’s inability to deal with large scale fires of this nature and magnitude. In a country whose landscape is much like that of California, there is no Forest Firefighting service, no incident command system and nothing even close to hot shot teams. Without the ability to build and maintain firebreaks, these massive blazes simply roll across the landscape, fed by hot, dry winds from the Middle Eastern deserts.
In 2003, the government appropriated 18 million Euros to revamp the Greek Fire Service. There were to be 735 new firefighting vehicles, new protective gear for firefighters, in addition to helicopters and fireboats. The idea was to place the Greek Fire Service on equal footing with the USA, UK, Sweden and Germany. But somehow that procurement came up short, and only 50 apparatus were actually delivered, all to Athens. Some claim that government’s investment was a ruse, simply to impress foreign visitors who attended the 2004 Summer Olympic Games.
In recent months, there have been complaints of inefficiency of the fire service in Greece. Average response times by fire units serving rural areas is 35 minutes – and remember, that’s the average. This is compounded by the fact that Greek government recently prohibited the use helicopters for the firefighting for fear that such operations would create additional power cuts, a common occurrence in rural Greece.
The problem of controlling the huge fires is a general lack of investment in firefighting equipment and personnel, reports the popular UK-based blog EU Referendum. “ In Greece,’ the blog reports, ‘investments happen only after the horse has bolted”.
And then there are the politics of natural disasters. In a move reminiscent of FEMA’s response to Katrina, government in Greece has firmly placed the blame on someone else – in this case the unseen terrorist. That’s understandable — if you’re an idiot. National elections are in 3 weeks, and Greek Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis would prefer to be viewed as a hero – not the one responsible for cutting funding for firefighters and firefighting.
###
Tiffany
Jan
21
California Wildfires Lingering Effects on your Car’s Air Filter
Filed Under Wildfire Protection | Comments Off
Mike Rosania asked:
If you’ve ever smoked a cigarette you know how nasty the filter gets. Even after just a few puffs, the recently white tip will turn a disgusting orange-brown. The Southern California Wildfires have burned up hundreds, make that thousands, of acres filling the air with ash, smoke and dust.
During the fires, you could actually see the particles floating through the air. As the fires died down, you could still see their presence on your car. I would walk out of my house in the morning to find a thin layer of debris coving my car every morning. It was disgusting; and not only because my car was dirty, but because we were breathing that air.
The news advised the residents of San Diego, who weren’t evacuated, to close their windows, shut off their air conditioning and stay indoors. Basically, people should avoid the poor air quality as much as possible.
After a week or so, the presence of tiny ash particles started to disappear and people slowly started to spend more time outdoors. But the air quality was still really bad. Even though the dirty air wasn’t visible, we are still breathing. Not only is this bad for your lungs, but this air can really take a toll on your car’s air filter. People can deal with having bad health, but when car starts problems start to cost money, they aren’t happy. Thankfully, a few car companies have been very understanding and have provided customers with free services during these tough times.
For example, Goodwrench is currently running a promotion for the month of November where they will replace all air filters for GM cars. Their website states,
“Due to the recent wildfires, ash and other particles in the air could impact your vehicle’s engine air filter. To help, starting November 1, 2007 - November 30, 2007 GM Goodwrench will offer to residents of the eight affected southern California counties an engine air filter replacement free of charge on your GM car or truck.*
The offer is available at participating dealers only and to residents of the following counties: Los Angeles, Orange, San Diego, San Bernardino, Santa Barbara, Ventura, Riverside and Imperial.”
Volkswagen has also been very helpful. “We at Volkswagen are sending our thoughts and prayers to those affected by the recent devastating southern California wildfires,” said Steve Mears. “For customers who were severely impacted with damage to or loss of their residence and/or business, Volkswagen will defer their lease payments and extend their loan payments for up to 90 days. Customers will not accrue any additional charge or loan interest for the designated period.”
In addition, they offer free air filters for any Volkswagen car in the San Diego area, all models 1998 and newer.
I know what you’re probably thinking - free air filter – Big Whoop. But hey, it’s better than nothing. What does a dirty air filter mean for you? Decreased gas mileage, worse performance and can lead to early engine failure. So sure, you may not get a free car, but a new air filter can greatly benefit your car. Act quickly because the offer is only until the end of November!
Brenda
If you’ve ever smoked a cigarette you know how nasty the filter gets. Even after just a few puffs, the recently white tip will turn a disgusting orange-brown. The Southern California Wildfires have burned up hundreds, make that thousands, of acres filling the air with ash, smoke and dust.
During the fires, you could actually see the particles floating through the air. As the fires died down, you could still see their presence on your car. I would walk out of my house in the morning to find a thin layer of debris coving my car every morning. It was disgusting; and not only because my car was dirty, but because we were breathing that air.
The news advised the residents of San Diego, who weren’t evacuated, to close their windows, shut off their air conditioning and stay indoors. Basically, people should avoid the poor air quality as much as possible.
After a week or so, the presence of tiny ash particles started to disappear and people slowly started to spend more time outdoors. But the air quality was still really bad. Even though the dirty air wasn’t visible, we are still breathing. Not only is this bad for your lungs, but this air can really take a toll on your car’s air filter. People can deal with having bad health, but when car starts problems start to cost money, they aren’t happy. Thankfully, a few car companies have been very understanding and have provided customers with free services during these tough times.
For example, Goodwrench is currently running a promotion for the month of November where they will replace all air filters for GM cars. Their website states,
“Due to the recent wildfires, ash and other particles in the air could impact your vehicle’s engine air filter. To help, starting November 1, 2007 - November 30, 2007 GM Goodwrench will offer to residents of the eight affected southern California counties an engine air filter replacement free of charge on your GM car or truck.*
The offer is available at participating dealers only and to residents of the following counties: Los Angeles, Orange, San Diego, San Bernardino, Santa Barbara, Ventura, Riverside and Imperial.”
Volkswagen has also been very helpful. “We at Volkswagen are sending our thoughts and prayers to those affected by the recent devastating southern California wildfires,” said Steve Mears. “For customers who were severely impacted with damage to or loss of their residence and/or business, Volkswagen will defer their lease payments and extend their loan payments for up to 90 days. Customers will not accrue any additional charge or loan interest for the designated period.”
In addition, they offer free air filters for any Volkswagen car in the San Diego area, all models 1998 and newer.
I know what you’re probably thinking - free air filter – Big Whoop. But hey, it’s better than nothing. What does a dirty air filter mean for you? Decreased gas mileage, worse performance and can lead to early engine failure. So sure, you may not get a free car, but a new air filter can greatly benefit your car. Act quickly because the offer is only until the end of November!
Brenda
Jan
21
Fire Safety Activities for Preschoolers?
Filed Under Fire Safety | 4 Comments
Melissa asked:
I need activities for preschoolers to do relating to fire safety. If I could get some good activities, websites, anything that will help ASAP! Thanks!
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I need activities for preschoolers to do relating to fire safety. If I could get some good activities, websites, anything that will help ASAP! Thanks!
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Jan
19
Jan
18
Who else feels like CA gov doesnt take many preventive measures for fire safety?
Filed Under Fire Safety | 6 Comments
Oompa loompa asked:
It seems like every few years we have this major problem here. Four years ago we lost so many lives let alone homes due to it, and here we are again. I lost my home to fire 3 1/2 years ago I know what these people are going through. Thank god for the firefighers and red cross.
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It seems like every few years we have this major problem here. Four years ago we lost so many lives let alone homes due to it, and here we are again. I lost my home to fire 3 1/2 years ago I know what these people are going through. Thank god for the firefighers and red cross.
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Jan
18
Help me come up with a good name for a fire safety consulting business?
Filed Under Fire Safety | 11 Comments
rachelcarolynsmith asked:
Hi all,
I’m starting a business providing consulting to private individuals and communities interested in preparing their homes/yards/communities for wildland fires and mitigating the fire losses by choosing appropriate vegetation, remodelling/constructing their homes to be fire resistant, etc. I need a business name that is short and catchy- and available as a domain name. Ideas like firesafe, firesafety, firesafeyard, firescaping, have occurred to me, but they don’t say what I’m trying to do, and they aren’t that catchy. Any thoughts? (If you have a super idea, I’d be happy to pay a modest creativity bonus- I’m a wildland firefighter, so I can’t afford to pay too much!) Thank you . . .
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Hi all,
I’m starting a business providing consulting to private individuals and communities interested in preparing their homes/yards/communities for wildland fires and mitigating the fire losses by choosing appropriate vegetation, remodelling/constructing their homes to be fire resistant, etc. I need a business name that is short and catchy- and available as a domain name. Ideas like firesafe, firesafety, firesafeyard, firescaping, have occurred to me, but they don’t say what I’m trying to do, and they aren’t that catchy. Any thoughts? (If you have a super idea, I’d be happy to pay a modest creativity bonus- I’m a wildland firefighter, so I can’t afford to pay too much!) Thank you . . .
Powered by Yahoo Answers
Jan
14
When it Comes to Online Dating, a Lot of Men Could Use Some Advice!
Filed Under Wildfire Protection | Comments Off
Wildfire Marketing Group asked:
A famous poet once wrote: “no man is an island.” Whatever the advantages of bachelorhood are, constant loneliness is not one of them. Unfortunately, in today’s hurried world, few men have the time to go out and try to meet women, which is why so many people have turned to dating websites. When it comes to online dating, a lot of men could use some advice. The saying, “You never get a second chance to make a good first impression” applies to the world of online dating just as much as it does to meeting women in person. The competition to attract a woman can be fierce. There might be hundreds of guys contending for one woman’s affection online. Learn how to stand above and beyond the rest of the pack with online dating advice from Brad Finsilver, The Date Mentor.
Brad Finsilver quickly realized that in the world of technology, offering online dating advice that actually works is a necessity. Therefore, he developed a special technique to create a high-impact profile for any man. Brad will work with you over-the-phone or in-person to develop an online profile that highlights your strengths and attributes and will stand out to members of the opposite ***. His expert advice for online dating ranges from writing an alluring profile that is custom-tailored for you to posting the perfect picture. Once your online profile has undergone an overhaul from The Date Mentor, you are guaranteed to receive more “hits” from the types of women you are most interested in.
For guys who want to save time and maximize their results, Brad also offers advice about online dating etiquette. During your consultation, you will learn how to speed up (or slow down) the virtual conversation to ensure you get a number and a date. Many men are realizing the benefits of online dating advice. Instead of keeping it secret, it’s becoming more and more popular. There’s no reason to settle or be alone anymore. Contact Brad Finsilver today to make online dating a fun, successful endeavor.
Scott
A famous poet once wrote: “no man is an island.” Whatever the advantages of bachelorhood are, constant loneliness is not one of them. Unfortunately, in today’s hurried world, few men have the time to go out and try to meet women, which is why so many people have turned to dating websites. When it comes to online dating, a lot of men could use some advice. The saying, “You never get a second chance to make a good first impression” applies to the world of online dating just as much as it does to meeting women in person. The competition to attract a woman can be fierce. There might be hundreds of guys contending for one woman’s affection online. Learn how to stand above and beyond the rest of the pack with online dating advice from Brad Finsilver, The Date Mentor.
Brad Finsilver quickly realized that in the world of technology, offering online dating advice that actually works is a necessity. Therefore, he developed a special technique to create a high-impact profile for any man. Brad will work with you over-the-phone or in-person to develop an online profile that highlights your strengths and attributes and will stand out to members of the opposite ***. His expert advice for online dating ranges from writing an alluring profile that is custom-tailored for you to posting the perfect picture. Once your online profile has undergone an overhaul from The Date Mentor, you are guaranteed to receive more “hits” from the types of women you are most interested in.
For guys who want to save time and maximize their results, Brad also offers advice about online dating etiquette. During your consultation, you will learn how to speed up (or slow down) the virtual conversation to ensure you get a number and a date. Many men are realizing the benefits of online dating advice. Instead of keeping it secret, it’s becoming more and more popular. There’s no reason to settle or be alone anymore. Contact Brad Finsilver today to make online dating a fun, successful endeavor.
Scott