A Nebraska woman named Rebekah Speights is auctioning a Chicken McNugget that resembles George Washington, according to Yahoo! News.
Ah, capitalism at its finest.
In a letter to Benjamin Harrison, Washington wrote, "A people who are possessed of the spirit of commerce, who see and who will pursue their advantages, may achieve almost anything."
Blogger Joyce McKee, whose Let's Talk Trade Shows is one of my favorite reads, contributed the following post. Thanks, Joyce!
It seems we are so caught up in our routines that there may be great opportunities presented to us, and we just do not see them.
Last week I watched this video in amazement.It is about the age-old topic, money does not grow on trees.
How often as a child did you hear that statement when you wanted something and your parents did not have the cash to buy it and used that as an excuse?I know I was told that many a time.
The video is created and filmed in Chicago in the summer of 2010. The majority of the people walking by this tree with money on it never saw it! They did not look up or around as they walked by the tree.Would you have noticed the money on the tree?
Just for today, start the process of observing.With a sense of expectation, what will you see or hear?Where is that great opportunity lurking?Do you need to pick up the phone and call someone?Or send a letter, email or card to someone?Should you invite someone to join you for lunch or dinner?
Opportunities, with money associated with them, are all around you.
The top managers of some top brands "have forgotten (or never knew) what every junior brand manager surely knows," write Carol Phillips and Judy Hopelain in Branding Strategy Insider.
Ask customers how they might feel about your decision before you announce it.
In recent months, Bank of America, Netflix and Hewlett-Packard have all reversed major decisions after suffering consumers' wrath.
"Senior leaders are acting like bulls in a china shop, awkwardly and prematurely broadcasting their strategic decisions in ways that destroy their company's (and their own) reputation and value," the authors say.
"What has happened to the instincts of corporate America? Have the leaders of these companies become so insular, so arrogant, or so detached from reality that they don't bother developing a customer-focused plan to communicate their decisions effectively?"
When e-research tools have made concept-testing as easy as spell-checking a memo, these folks have no excuse.
The Marine Corps' commandant has decided he won't discipline the men who posed before a banner displaying the insignia of Hitler's Schutzstaffel.
The gyrenes' use of the heinous symbol was just a mistake.
"The Marines in the photo were ignorant of the connection of this symbol to the Holocaust and monumental atrocities associated with Nazi Germany," General James Amos announced in a written statement.
Spokesmarine Major Gabrielle Chapin told the Associated Press the boys thought the symbol stood for "Sniper Scouts."
"I don't believe that the Marines involved would have ever used any type of symbol associated the Nazi Germany military criminal organization," she said.
Wisely, the Corp will use the incident as a "teachable moment."
It's a shame more teachable moments don't take place in fifth grade.
Novelist Gustave Flaubert once wrote, "Our ignorance of history causes us to slander our own times."
One of my all-time favorite songs is Elvis' rendition of Joe South's Walk a Mile in My Shoes.
That's good advice to anyone, but especially association marketers.
This week, Association Trends honored the best of association marketing in its 2011 "All Media Contest."
The 22 categories in the annual competition ranged from advertising kits to Websites.
"As in previous years," Trends reported, "judges found that content is king. Clear, crisp, rich, strong content catapulted some publications from unranked to gold."
The judges rejected content that was "dense," instead warming to writing and design that followed a "magazine-style format."
They also fled from jargon-heavy copy, cluttered pages and "content that is simply straightforward" (in other words, dull).
Steven Cline, marketing and communications director for the Property Casualty Insurers of America took home more awards for his work than anyone else.
"Look at whatever you are working on from your audience’s perspective. For a few moments, be a reader, not a communicator. Aspects that are crystal clear to you may be indecipherable to your audience."