Advanced Six Sigma in Small Business Six Sigma is a business management strategy that can be effectively used in many ways by small businesses to improve the overall quality of business operations to achieve faster growth. For people who may be less familiar, Six Sigma may be simplistically defined as a form of business management strategy, or more appropriately, a type of business improvement methodology. This methodology was first successfully tried by Motorola during the penultimate decade of the previous century and today has become immensely popular and finds widespread application across many types of industries – not excluding small businesses. Six Sigma Methodology for Small Businesses. Details Here http://afreeopinion.blogspot.com/2009/06/advanced-six-sigma-in-small-... A New Service For Free: If you don’t have time to read the Article, hear or download an “mp3 File” of the whole article from our download center: S.B.T.'s Download Center Also if You Like My Articles, Pleas Support Me By Subscribe To My Rss : http://feeds2.feedburner.com/blogspot/hmKB?format=xml
abcareno1 <smartstart2...@gmail.com> wrote: > Advanced Six Sigma in Small Business
Well, it would have helped had you shown any signs of applying a SixSigma approach to your advertising. As it is you fail on several counts.
Firstly you appear to dave done (0) research before posting your ad. Had you bothered you would have discoverd that advertising is generally frowned upon in Usenet groups. Hit and run advertising perpetrated via Google groups has even less validity than the normal level of spam. All it can do is to reflect badly upon your experience and your business.
Secondly you don't seem to understand SixSigma at all, or you can't explain it to an audience. Either failure is significant for someone who wishes to be a SixSigma consultant.
The article itself is long on puff, short on information and actually omits the key features of SixSigma. It's a waste of electrons. No doubt you're simply trying to attract more hits to your blog, but would do better focussing your energy on writing something worth reading. As it is, there's nothing there to attract anyone back. Regurgitating other people's blogs in a slightly warmed over fashion indicating that you failed to understand and cannot communicate is absolutely pointless.
It is more than generally useless, I never follow-up clearly commercial postings, even if they are in a relavent newsgroup.
I might follow a recomendation embeded in a known posters entry. I also find most TV adverts counter productive through over presentation to the level of annoyance. The only one that does not bore is the Meercat one, very tempted to buy a Meercat, but I suspect they bite.
On Fri, 03 Jul 2009 16:14:13 +0100, Buddenbrooks wrote: > "Steve Firth" <%ste...@malloc.co.uk> wrote in message > news:1j2a7vn.1dc3goue8dg1sN%%steve%@malloc.co.uk... >> abcareno1 <smartstart2...@gmail.com> wrote: > >that advertising is generally >> frowned upon in Usenet groups.
> It is more than generally useless, I never follow-up clearly > commercial > postings, even if they are in a relavent newsgroup.
> I might follow a recomendation embeded in a known posters entry. I > also > find most TV adverts counter productive through over presentation to the > level of annoyance. > The only one that does not bore is the Meercat one, very tempted to > buy a > Meercat, but I suspect they bite.
These intelligent animals are extremely communicative and posses a large vocabulary. (from meerkats.net)
despite the refined presence they bring to the social ambiance, it is not advisable to keep them as pets. For starters, they are seriously into burrowing, producing a maze of tunnels and sleeping quarters with something like seventy entrances. Depths of 2 meters have been mentioned. (ok, I'll admit there was a gang of them. Being a social creature, they are best kept as a colony). I suppose a small field with a fence to a depth of 2 meters (at least) might be suitable - soil and drainage permitting. Would make a nice attraction on a themed farm tho'.
I think the big end or something has gone in my old laptop. Software problem, I suspect. At present I'm running Ubuntu on an even older machine and the action certainly seems to be a lot crisper.