Just imagine a thunder crash over your pc followed by the magic disappearance of all your mail information ever received or sent. Considering the fact that this sort of nightmare is the most usual catastrophe that cruelly interrupts the continuous flow of your day after day life, it is highly possible that it has already happened to you.
One crash could delete your history! We know how lamentable it could be.
Being eager to prevent the irreversible loss, you might try to save your mail manually, letter by letter.
What happens? Right! Great difficulties and even greater waste of precious time.
Supposing that the support machinery (meaning personal computers) does not exactly represent the field of your interest or knowledge, it is still very likely that you depend on a pc as the most important tool for your work. That is why you are not primarily interested in the cause of “universal” crash (that might be a hardware failure, viruses, windows crash etc.) but you want to keep yourself away from wastage.
Once you have installed your most convenient tool of communication, like the Outlook Express program, you are ready to enjoy all the advantages of being a part of the net and to face the few drawbacks of the high technology state.
Why do you have to save your electronic letters? Well, because you cannot proceed as you did in bygone times of paper mailing.
You cannot keep a virtual mail in a real drawer!
The first step to be undertaken is to get informed in virtual order issues. There are several programs ready to propose their help in making your life easier. Outlook Express contains a suite of tools given to your use.
In addition, you would need a way to save your writing history (private and business mails) from computer crashes by easily clicking around - a program able to save your entire data to a single, compressed protected file so that it can be restored easily. This is what we call high performance.
There is no need to mention the deep necessity to have all your information contained in mails kept in order and safe from loss, as well as there is no need to mention the importance of communication. Get convinced, get informed, and get your business improved.
How To Back Up Mail
Analysts believe this will help boost Dell's customer relations but not necessarily its sales. Dell, the world's largest personal computer maker said that product prices will stay the same.
Dell's sales have been down in recent quarters with tougher competition from their number one competitor Hewlett-Packard. Dell which sells directly to customers through the internet and via phone has had complaints of their poor after-sale performance. In the early 90's Dell's percentage growth was much higher and analysts wonder if Dell can once again reach these numbers.
An analyst with Cross Research says, "Dell is facing a lot of challenges. HP is just reinvigorated, which is one of their biggest problems. Their competitor is back."
Dell shares ended down 68 cents, or 3 percent, at $21.70, more than the Merrill Lynch Tech 100 index's (^MLO - news) 1.6 percent fall.
Dell anticipated a reduction of approximately 70 percent per product line in the number of promotions for U.S. consumers and small businesses. Promotions connected to a single product line would decline by 80 percent.
Reductions will take affect in the next 12 to 18 months, starting with the Inspiron notebook computers and Dell monitors.
Moors and Cabot analyst Cindy Shaw said, “People hate rebates” and she believes this is a positive move for Dell.
Some analysts thought Dell would introduce price cuts to contend with competitors Hewlett-Packard and Acer Inc. They continue to diminish Dell's long-established price advantage thanks to cheaper components and more competent manufacturing.
In May, Dell publicized its plans to lower prices and is spending $100 million to improve customer service by hiring over 2,000 sales and support staff.
Dell's senior vice president of home and small business groups, Ro Parra said the cutback in promotions will not affect the “net price” that customers pay but make the process of buying a computer easier.
Parra commented to reporters that customers don't like rebates and only about 80 percent redeem them. He also said "They are problematic, and our intent is to reduce them over time."
Dell as well as other retailers like Best Buy Co are cutting back mail-in rebates. They are not much of an incentive to customers because they must fill out forms, send product codes and then wait several months to receive a check.
Dell's new focus on existing promotions will be paperless rebates which make analysts wonder if this will motivate consumers to take advantage of the offers.
Research analyst Cross said "My biggest question is, what the financial impact of this is? If you don't get a lot of hits on mail-in rebates, and now you're just going to go to instant rebates or price cuts, then that hits everyone."
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