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Bridger

I don’t think New Year’s resolutions can’t technically be expected to begin on New Year’s Day, don’t you?  Since, because it’s an extension of New Year’s Eve, smokers are already on a smoking roll and cannot be expected to stop abruptly on the stroke of midnight with so much nicotine in the system.  Also dieting on New Year’s Day isn’t a good idea as you can’t eat rationally but really need to be free to consume whatever is necessary, moment by moment, in order to ease your hangover.  I think it would be much more sensible if resolutions began generally on January the second.

 

Helen Fielding, Bridget Jones Diary

 

Last year my resolution was to keep a blog of What I Learnt Each Day.

WILT had 350 posts in 2012!

Thanks for your comments and support.

What is your resolution for 2012?

Lifehacker has these “Top Ten Easy to Keep Recommendations

  • 10. Create and Stick to a Realistic Budget
  • 9. Get a Better Education
  • 8. Make New Friends
  • 7. Keep Your Home Cleaner
  • 6. Start Working Out
  • 5. Learn a New Skill
  • 4. Get That Promotion (or New Job)
  • 3. Reboot Your Sleep Cycle
  • 2.Eat Healthier
  • 1.Back Up Your Data

If it was easy, everyone would do it.

However, there are plenty of tips on how to achieve each of these recommendations on the LifeHacker site.

“Be at war with your vices, at peace with your neighbors, and let every New Year find you a better man.”

Benjamin Franklin

Is there a difference between a goal and a resolution?

Blogger Gretchin Rubin spent a year “test-driving the wisdom of the ages, current scientific studies, and lessons from popular culture about how to be happier. Plutarch, Samuel Johnson, Benjamin Franklin, St. Thérèse, the Dalai Lama, Oprah, Martin Seligman…I cover it all.”. As part of ‘The Happiness Project” she started a daily blog.

She makes this distinction.

“You hit a goal, you achieve a goal. You keep a resolution.

I think that some objectives are better characterized as resolutions, others, as goals.

“Run in a marathon” or “Become fluent in Spanish” is a good goal. It’s specific. It’s easy to tell when it has been achieved. Once you’ve done it, you’ve done it!

“Eat more vegetables” or “Stop gossiping,” or “Exercise” is better cast as a resolution. You won’t wake up one morning and find that you’ve achieved it. It’s something that you have to resolve to do, every day, forever. You’ll never be done with it.

But it can be easy to get discouraged when you’re trying to hit a goal. What if it takes longer than you expected? What if it’s harder than you expected? And what happens once you’ve reached your goal? Say you’ve run the marathon. What now – do you stop exercising? Do you set a new goal?

With resolutions, the expectations are different. Each day, I try to live up to my resolutions. Sometimes I succeed, sometimes I fail, but every day is a clean slate and a fresh opportunity. I never expect to be done with my resolutions, so I don’t get discouraged when they stay challenging. Which they do.”

Good luck with your resolutions in 2012.

 

 

 

 

What I Learnt On 1st January in other years

1st January 2011 1000 Awesome Things1000 Awesome Things
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Media_httpcachegawker_ijmxf

Who is listening in to your phone messages?

Image the state secrets that would be revealed is News of The World hacked into my voicemail.

You have three new messages…..

  1. “Don’t forget to bring home some milk”
  2. “Grrrrrr. What’s the point in having a phone if you never answer it”
  3. Random background from accidental dial.

Gizmodo this year gave details on how it was done.

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Tangmalangaloo

“Good King Wenceslas looked out, on the Feast of Stephen,

When the snow lay round about, deep and crisp and even;

Brightly shone the moon that night, tho’ the frost was cruel,

When a poor man came in sight, gath’ring winter fuel.”

John Mason Neale, 1853

 

Why is Boxing Day called Boxing Day?

Good question.

Although the day after Christmas has been as an official holiday in the United Kingdom (and most of Australia) since 1871, no one is sure why it is called Boxing Day.

What I thought I knew about this turned out to be a myth. It is not because it is the day when brothers test out their new boxing gloves on each other, nor because it is the day when we box up our decorations and presents.

Dccember 26th is St Stephen’s Day – St Stephen was one of the first century martyrs. It has been a tradition since medieval times to give to the the poor on the feast day of St Stephen. (Good King Wenceslas helped the poor man gathering winter fuel about the year 1000).

There are two major theories about the use of the term Boxing Day for December 26th

The ‘Poor Box’ Theory

“King Wenceslas didn’t start Boxing Day, but the Church of England might have. During Advent, Anglican parishes displayed a box into which churchgoers put their monetary donations. On the day after Christmas, the boxes were broken open and their contents distributed among the poor, thus giving rise to the term Boxing Day. Maybe.” <a href=" http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1868711,00.html#ixzz1hb2I0S5D“>Time Magazine

 

The ‘Gift Box’ Theory

Did you give your servants the day off yesterday. Of course not. However, to encourage them to work hard on Christmas Day, it is traditional to give them one day leave for Boxing Day. To show your generosity, it is traditional give them a box of goodies to take home to their familites.Hence, Boxing Day.

 

Which theory do of believe is correct? Or do you have another explanation?

Whatever the origin, Boxing Day is a traditional day of rest.

In more recent days, it is also the first day of the post-Christmas sales. Boxing Day is not celebrated in the USA – the day after Thansksgiving fills this role.

Sport and Boxing Day

In Australia, the major activity on Boxing Day is watching sport. 

The Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race has started at 1pm on December 26th since the first race in 1945. Therefore, this year will be the 66th race.

The ‘traditional’ Boxing Day Test has been a fixture at the MCG only since 1980. It is in fact more traditional for  the NSW vs Victoria Sheffiled Shield Match to be held over Christmas, much to the annoyance of the players from NSW who had to miss the festivities at home every year.

But undoubtably the major sporting event that takes place in Australia is the annual race meeting at Tangmalangaloo. This event is immortalized in this poem by Narrandera’s favourite parish priest, Fr Patrick Joseph Hartigan (John O’Brien)

Tangmalangaloo

The bishop sat in lordly state and purple cap sublime,

And galvanized the old bush church at Confirmation time.

And all the kids were mustered up from fifty miles around,

With Sunday clothes, and staring eyes, and ignorance profound.

Now was it fate, or was it grace, whereby they yarded too

An overgrown two-storey lad from Tangmalangaloo?

 

A hefty son of virgin soil, where nature has her fling,

And grows the trefoil three feet high and mats it in the spring;

Where mighty hills uplift their heads to pierce the welkin’s rim,

And trees sprout up a hundred feet before they shoot a limb;

There everything is big and grand, and men are giants too –

But Christian Knowledge wilts, alas, at Tangmalangaloo.

 

The bishop summed the youngsters up, as bishops only can;

He cast a searching glance around, then fixed upon his man.

But glum and dumb and undismayed through every bout he sat;

He seemed to think that he was there, but wasn’t sure of that.

The bishop gave a scornful look, as bishops sometimes do,

And glared right through the pagan in from Tangmalangaloo.

 

“Come, tell me, boy,” his lordship said in crushing tones severe,

“Come, tell me why is Christmas Day the greatest of the year?

“How is it that around the world we celebrate that day

“And send a name upon a card to those who’re far away?

“Why is it wandering ones return with smiles and greetings, too?”

A squall of knowledge hit the lad from Tangmalangaloo.

 

He gave a lurch which set a-shake the vases on the shelf,

He knocked the benches all askew, up-ending of himself.

And so, how pleased his lordship was, and how he smiled to say,

“That’s good, my boy.  Come, tell me now; and what is Christmas Day?”

The ready answer bared a fact no bishop ever knew –

“It’s the day before the races out at Tangmalangaloo.

 

 

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Hermie-and-rudolph

For Rosi and I, Christmas wasn’t Christmas without Rudolph or Frosty on TV .

1000 Awesome Things also thinks its Awesome to be flipping through the TV channels and come across an old favourite christmas special.

Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer, a stop motion classic, came out in 1964.

The character Rudolph was created in 1939. The story, written by Robert May, was given away as a colouring book by a large department store chain. His brother-in-law wrote a song about the red nosed reindeer, and Gene Autrey sold 2.5 million copies in 1949. Until the 1980s it was the second biggest song of all time.

Little-drummer-boy2

The song the Little Drummer Boy was written in 1941, and popularised by the Von Trapp family singers (The Sound of Music) in 1955. The stop motion Christmas story was made in1968,

Rudfro11

The song Frosty the Snowman was written to follow up on the success of theRudolph song for Gene Autry, and was a hit the following Xmas (1950). The stop motion Christmas special was made in 1969

Santa-claus-coming-town4

and Santa Claus is Coming to Town, made in 1970, was also based on a Xmas song (1934)

Maybe you preferred Peanuts?

Charlie-brown-christmas

Or a Very Brady Christmas?

Brady

What is your favourite Christmas special?

Happy Christmas to all!

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Dec 23 2011

Santa Tracker

The North American Aerospace Defence Command goes on high alert at this time each year so that it can track Santa’s progress around the world.

The ymake their radar signal availabe so that you too can watch Santa at http://www.noradsanta.org/en/track3d.html

Whil eyou are waiting you might like to watch Santa’s progress from last year

 

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This time of year is an opportune time to revisit Millie’s 2008 classic “Nativity One – Revenge of The Cow.”

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Open_all_hours

Seemed like a simple enough question.

Reddit user ‘expiredcheese’ had recently purchased a new TV.

I was in Best Buy looking at the televisions when I noticed the cheaper models were on non-HD channels while the larger more expensive televisions were on HD channels making the unaware customers lean more towards spending the extra hundred bucks…

They even gave me a hard time when I asked to see the cheaper TV on an HD channel! I got them to change it, I purchased the TV because of course it looked amazing on HD, but when I walked by that same section later, it was back on the non-HD channel!

So he asked this question on the Reddit Question site – 

“Store Owners – What tricks do you use to  get your customers to spend more money?”

Must have hit a nerve, as there has been a flood of responses from retailers and employees, fessing up to the tactics that they use to make us hand over more of our hard-earned than we intended. At last count there were more than 7000 replies!

Just in case you’re planning to open a shop, we at WILT have collated the 10 tricks of the trade you will need to know if you are to make your customers spend more money.


1. Take advantage of  ‘the anchoring effect‘ – create a high price as the customer’s point of reference. Everything’s relative.

“Put a big ticket expensive item right at the front of the store. When your customers resist that temptation  they will be subconsciously convinced they can “reward” themselves by buying  less expensive discretionary items.”

“When I worked at Costco, I discovered that the reason we put big-ticket items (especially TVs) right at the entrance to the store was to activate a reward-response in the customers. They’d look at the TVs but quickly realize they weren’t going to buy them. By not buying a big-ticket item, the customer would be subconsciously convinced they could “reward” themselves by buying larger quantities of regular items.”

“During the presentation we’d always say we had 3 products. Average, agressive, and conservative(and always in that order). The average program would be just at the edge of what they could afford, the agressive would be WAY out of their price range, and the conservative program would be what we’re actually going to try and sell them on.”

“As the salesman, always start with luxury, then the quality, then the ‘affordable’. After seeing a mattress for $7000, being told that the actual most comfortable in the shop is the $16000 one, none will try and knock $100 of the price of the $800 model (even though there are cheaper ones)”


2. Guarantee you have the best price by having your own line.

Nearly every retailer can advertise “Find the same mattress for less and we’ll take 25% off”. Why? Because the manufacturer gives every major retailer their own specifically named “lines”.

I did some checking on this. Harvey Normans’s Enchant looks strikingly similar to Snooze’s Embrace, and they both are similar to Forty Wink’s Eclipse.


 

3. The price is just a number

Leave the “$” sign off price tags because the “$” sign reminds you it’s costing something, and not just the numbers.

Upmarket restaurants are prime examples. “Chardonay 54”

Menu


 

4. Finesse your store layout.

Ikea

(image from Mizozo)

“At Ikea, you have to walk through the entire store before you find your way out. No windows, no working clocks, anything to keep the passing of time a secret to the customers.”

(Video – Ikea’s designs to make us buy more)

“I work for a grocery store, but I am not in any way in charge of these things.

When you enter, you are in produce. All the fresh fruit and vegetables laid out, and arranged to send you past the deli and into the bakery. That is where you encounter all the smells of the freshly baked bread and cookies. Then you are at the fresh seafood and meat counters, and only then do you get into the less appealing grocery items. You need to walk by all the fresh things before you get to the packaged goods.

The milk is in one corner of the store, the bread in the other, and the cash on the other side. You would no believe how many people I have seen at the cash who said they were just in for bread and milk, and wound up with a whole cart full of things that they had to walk past to get at the things they wanted.

Children’s cereal is placed next to the end of the aisle, where it is easily seen while walking past. Encourages children to ask for it, because they will see it even if their parents don’t turn down that aisle. Likewise, chocolate marketed to adults in on the higher shelves (about 5 feet off the ground), while that marketed to children is on the lower shelves.”

 


5. Make your products special.

“A friend of my girlfriend runs a pretty popular deli/eatery in Auckland, New Zealand. They’re famous for their pies, which are made fresh right there every day.

After being open for around 6 months, they noticed that the worst-selling pie was the Mexican one. They always had at least 2 or 3 left over at the end of the day.

So, for no other reason than a social experiment to see how easy people were to influence, he renamed the pie “The Lady Gaga”. Exactly the same ingredients, same location on the menu and the pie rack, just a different name.

The Lady Gaga pie now sells out first, every single day. They rarely have any left by 1pm, let alone by the time they close. He told me that when people come there for the first time, the pie they usually have is invariably the Lady Gaga.”


6.Use the word “free”. 

If price reflects quality, what would you rather have – Two $6 pizzas, or a $12 pizza that comes with a bonus free $12 pizza.

“Seriously, it’s unbelievable what that word can achieve.

We own a pizza shop and when we had started off we didn’t have a “buy one, get one free offer”, but our prices were a lot lower than our competition. If somebody was to buy two pizzas from us, it would have cost them less than buying one pizza from somewhere else and getting the other one for “free”. We jacked up the prices and put a buy one, get one free offer. Now it costs the customers more to get two pizzas (one “free”) than it would have cost them before, but business went up SO quickly straight after we started that offer. It’s ridiculous.”

 


7. Hide the small and cheaper options

“I worked at an ice cream store that sold Small, Medium, and Large cups, with a very small “kiddie scoop”. We got an order from Corporate one day that we were not allowed to display the Small size cup, and we were not allowed to mention the kid’s scoop unless specifically asked.

The idea was that every customer, including little kids, would believe the Medium was the smallest option.”


 

8. Create scarcity

Cheese

“I worked in sales at a store that was in liquidation. We would get a shipment of, say, 20 chairs, all the same model. When the store got busy I would carry one through the store while yelling to my coworker “we only have two left now!”. People snapped these up, thinking they were scarce.”

Have you head this salesman’s line.

“Two left, except for the two we put aside for employees, but technically if someone asks we have to sell it.” And the customer now thinks that he not only got a good deal, but also beat the system.

 


9. Increase demand for drinks – make the chips salty, the temperature hot, and the straws big

The cost of a draught been to the pub is only about 35c. You don’t need to sell many extra to increase your profits.

“I worked in a restaurant while attending college that would add extra salt to their “bar items” and would make hot entrees and apps additionally spicy during peek “bar hours”.”

“I managed a nightclub for about 2 years before I left my hometown to move closer to university. One of the things we used to do was turn off the AC to heat the place up. People packing the dancefloor would start to get really hot and decide to cool off by buying another drink.

On a slightly unrelated note but still interesting, it was a common practice to give any customer who complained at the bar what they wanted. This was because at the crowded bar the goal was to get out drinks as fast as you can. Our target was 1 drink/20 seconds at peak times. If someone came up to you and wanted to argue with you about a mistake that was made, you could easily be standing there arguing for 5 minutes. In the end, we lost less by giving away free drinks than by arguing our point.”

“My dad owns a college bar in Lincoln NE, and he uses bigger straws to get people to drink faster, and then buy more drinks. However, if youare Subway and you offer free refills, make the straws really small.”


 

 

10. The Sale You Have when you’re not having a sale.

Sale

If you pitching at the very exclusive end of the market, almost never have a sale. Otherwise, you should be having a sale all the time.

(Note that many of the strategies suggested below are against the Fair Trading act in Australia so of course would never happen here)

“I worked at a department store and we did this all the time- We’d have a sale and post signs everywhere indicating how much you are saving buying it on sale by showing the original price of the item displayed next to the sale price. However, the company had us post an inflated original price and pretend the “sale” price was a deal when it was actually what we were selling it for all along.”

“I worked at a store a couple years ago and the coupons my boss would put in the paper or in emails were actually just the orginal price. Customers would bring the coupon in thinking they were getting a deal but they weren’t. He liked to call them ‘price awareness’ coupons.”

“A good friend of mine works in a suit store, He told me how his company marks up the suits (lets say originally a suit costs 100$, they’ll bring up the price to say 300$) and then “lower” the price and say its a sale for 200$ or 250$. Another trick his store does is Buy one get one free. They mark up the price so that it’s actually 100$ more than if you were to purchase the suits individually at regular price.”


The sad thing is that even when we know all these tricks, we still fall for them every time.

Have fun doing the Christmas shopping!

 

 

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Nerdy Santa has three special ePresents for you today.

Yellow

The Blue Meanies are driving the music from Pepperland. The lord mayor sends a yellow submarine to get help. Can Paul, Ringo, George and John save the day?

Currently available free of charge, the new Yellow Submarine eBook has narration, animations, and songs. It still feels all somewhat mind altered.

Art-christmasfavourites-420x0

The Sydney Morning Herald is hosting a  ‘Christmas Countdown’, with a free eBook each day from now till Christmas. Today is a recipe book of ‘Christmas Favourites’. Visit http://smh.com.au/countdown/favourites

To find out the address of tomorrow’s gift, you’ll have to check on the SMH iPad app, or buy the actual paper.

The-flinch

Seth Godin’s Domino Project has been very successful – but nevertheless is coming to a close. The last release is an eBook called ‘Flinch’.

The idea is simple: your flinch mechanism can save your life. It shortcircuits the conscious mind and allows you to pull back and avoid danger faster than you can even imagine it’s there. But what if danger is exactly what you need? 

It is currently available for free download from the Kindle Store.

Happy Christmas from Nerdy Santa

 

 

 

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Tony Lembke

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