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Knowing what resources you have on hand before you get in too deep can provide peace of mind that you’ll either have the funds you need to support your startup phase or that you need to save more before you order those new businesscards and call yourself CEO. You should consult your own tax, legal, and accounting advisors.
Bring businesscards to an event or IAAP meeting, and set a goal to get or give a certain number before or after the meeting. Nancy Fraze works at Chevron Corporation as a Legal Assistant. Some stand-out, fun, little-known detail that will help people remember and place you, quickly: [Speak eight languages? Awesome wordsmith?
Bring businesscards to an event or IAAP meeting, and set a goal to get or give a certain number before or after the meeting. Nancy Fraze works at Chevron Corporation as a Legal Assistant. Some stand-out, fun, little-known detail that will help people remember and place you, quickly: [Speak eight languages? Awesome wordsmith?
When in doubt, always seek advice from a legal professional. ]. Spend money on good businesscards and make sure you put information that doesn’t regularly change, i.e., phone number, email, and website. No need to put your home business address unless you need people to know where you live.
That makes sense, but can this system be applied to other information, like monthly bills, tax returns, staff, legal issues, normal company information? B eing able to retrieve the data is more important than an organized alphabetized file drawer. I remember going to a walk-in clinic (doctors office) for an ailment at the time.
For me, the trigger to declutter is when I have trouble finding something in there because a mass of receipts, tissues, gum wrappers, businesscards and whatnot has built up. If it doesn’t, then ask if you truly need to have it for practical or legal reasons, not just because it might come in handy someday.
Ask for businesscards and have a stack of businesscards for yourself at hand as well. I am not a legal expert and do not claim to give any legal advice. Make a mental note of what you hear and ask more questions that are leading and open-ended to continue the conversation.
It is too easy to press Send and then regret what you have written or find yourself in some legal trouble. If your message is an answer to the sender then just pressing Reply is appropriate or if you are only copied, do you need to reply at all? Be Angry but Send not! If you need to vent, try sending yourself the e-mail you wanted to send.
You can also attach a file from Word, Excel or PowerPoint or a businesscard from your Contacts if it is someone you need to remember to call and want that information available. I am not a legal expert and do not claim to give any legal advice.
In the US it’s legal to sign someone up to your email list without asking their permission. It might be legal, but is it right? Is it best practice for your business? I’m getting fed up with marketers who tell me it’s legal, as if that makes it morally and ethically correct.
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