You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
None
How to increase market share by positioning your company to the buying public, from the best-selling author of Marketing on a Shoestring. Presents practical approaches, backed up by examples and case histories. Describes how businesses can create and maintain a ``position'' in the public mind, without having to continuously devise new marketing strategies. Based on the author's work with over 250 small- to medium-sized companies.
Updated and even weirder, this new edition boasts more than 400 unique destinations for tourists looking for attractions off the beaten path. Bizarre locations and landmarks include Chainsaw Gordy’s Garden of Saws, Smokey Bear’s head, the World’s Largest Soup Kettle, the Toilet Bowl Parade, and the world’s only upside-down White House. This book offers fascinating and little-known historical tidbits and answers burning questions such as Where was Liberace born? What is a hodag, and how do you catch one? Who invented the hamburger? and Will a Polka Hall of Fame ever be built? This is the real guide to Wisconsin, birthplace of the snowmobile, the typewriter, and the ice cream sundae. The address, phone number, hours, cost, directions, and website of each oddity accompany its description.
None
Taking a leap and making the choice to start a business can be hard, but all that comes after—the planning, loans, marketing—can be even harder. Every new business owner needs an easy, clear, and useful guide to follow when embarking on this venture, and Minding My Business will make the process as simple as possible. With no previous business experience, Adeena Mignogna decided to open up her own retail store, a paint-your-own pottery studio. In this part memoir, part handbook, she details all the things she did right, and wrong, so that anyone following in her footsteps won’t make the same mistakes. Minding My Business explains how to: Deal with leasing and landlords Obtain loans and...
Joachim Wendt (1790-1850) married Dorothea Wilk in 1814, and in 1841 the family immigrated from Germany to Freisadt, Wisconsin. Descen- dants lived in Wisconsin, Iowa, Missouri, Alabama and elsewhere.