As good, talented insurance sales trainers, you can easily and effectively incorporate both of these sales techniques in your ongoing insurance sales training<a href="http://www.fujihd.net/">Passenger Elevator</a>. It isn't so much a question of which sales technique is most effective. Rather, it's a question of taking some of the more powerful elements of the elevator pitch and integrating them with the three key components of the staircase pitch. Use the goal and real-life scenario of the staircase pitch. Blend in some of the more powerful elements of the elevator pitch, but let the key components of the staircase pitch be the driving force of the presentation. That way, you create for yourselves a new and innovative insurance sales technique and sales strategy that will, without question, make your agents better salespeople and improve and strengthen your insurance sales training efforts for years to come.
Fact 1: Elevated chicken huts help deter predators. Chicken huts that are sitting on the ground can be really tempting for hungry predators - all they have to do is scratch or burrow with enough persistence and they are soon in for a tasty chicken dinner! However, if you give your chicken runs and coops a bit of lift (remember that you will need at least one foot of elevation up to 2-3), you will be making it considerably harder for those rats and raccoons to burrow holes into your chicken huts. They will be more likely to move on to "easier pickin's."
Fact 2: Elevated chicken runs and coops can provide more protection against the elements. It's HOT (or COLD) out there. Do you think your hens really want to be sitting on the ground in the full heat of the summer or the crippling cold of the winter? Chicken sheds that are elevated provide better heat regulation during the dog-days of summer (think of how hens in the wild or on old traditional farms roost in the trees on hot days). When Old Man Winter stirs up those wintry storms, elevated runs and coops also prevent snow and ice build-up around your chicken huts. And, what about when those downpours and floods? Here, again, elevated chicken sheds can offer some protection against rotting floors or even drowned chickens.
Fact 3: Elevated chicken runs and coops make for a smaller footprint. Let's face it: if you're like most urban chicken farmers, you have limited space to house your chickens. Many of you would prefer to have a chicken coop or ark to house your flock, as well as a chicken run or tractor for your birds to run around outside. If you choose chicken huts designed to lift all or much of the hut directly over the chicken runs, then you, my friend, have just accomplished both of your goals while saving yourself a lot of space!
Fact 4: Elevated chicken huts promote better ventilation and air circulation. Who doesn't want the air to smell a bit sweeter in their chicken coops? Lifting your chicken huts off the ground helps provide some nice cross-breezes that can air out your chicken coops and keep any ammonia smells from building up.
Fact 5: Elevated chicken huts provide portability. If it is important to you to have the flexibility to move your hens around your yard - to spread that "natural chicken fertilizer" around your yard a bit, and so that your chickens don't peck one area of your yard into a barren patch of dust! - then elevated chicken huts make for portable chicken housing, as well.
After we decided to adopt a puppy, my husband and I spent a considerable amount of time trying to figure out what types of supplies we needed. This was particularly challenging for us, especially since we were both first-time dog owners.
We knew that a food and water bowl were essential items, but after doing some more research, we landed on elevated dog bowls, which are basically food and water bowls that are just elevated, or raised off the ground.
There were - and are - several compelling reasons to purchase <a href="http://www.fujihd.net/">Escalator Manufacturer</a> dog bowls:
I'm a neat freak and I hate having things spill onto the floor. I know that's next to impossible when you have a dog in the house, but with an elevated dog bowl, food and water are less likely to drop onto the floor. When a dog eats out of a regular bowl, he has to lift his head up to help swallow his food or water, but with an elevated dog bowl, he has to lift his head up less - which means less spillage.
I hate mold and bacteria. But really, who loves this stuff? With a regular dog food or water bowl that sits on the ground, there's a higher likelihood for nasty germs to breed under the bowl - things you definitely don't want your dog to ingest.
Elevated dog bowlsreduce neck and back strain since your dog doesn't have to bend his neck down as much to reach his food and water. This is especially relevant to senior dogs, or those who suffer from arthritis or other neck and back pain.
My husband and I couldn't be more pleased with the elevated dog bowls we purchased - things are neat and clean around our dog's bowls, just the way we like it.
After we decided to adopt a puppy, my husband and I spent a considerable amount of time trying to figure out what types of supplies we needed. This was particularly challenging for us, especially since we were both first-time dog owners.
We knew that a food and water bowl were essential items, but after doing some more research, we landed on elevated dog bowls, which are basically food and water bowls that are just elevated, or raised off the ground.