Saturday, April 11, 2009

The key things to Know for CFD Trading

By cfd

In today's trading world there are many different options of where to trade, from stocks, commodities, bonds and CFD. What is growing in popularity is the trading stocks using Contracts For Difference or CFD's it allows you leverage up, and gives the full facilities where you can go long or short in the market. What most traders are now finding is the CFD Trading is the most lucrative of them all, mainly due to the fact that you can trade for 24 hours a day 6 days per week and it is the most liquid market in the world, as you can also trade Forex. So with all the hype around CFD Market, what do you need to know before you start trading CFD.

What we will do now is go through and reveal the four most important things you need to know before starting to trade. The Four Things you must Know before you start CFD Trading:

1. Obviously you need to know what is CFD Trading, Contracts for difference, how to trade them, where you can trade them, what countries you can trade CFD's. This is one of the fastest trading tools in the world. For more information on the market, and which Broker to use visit the CFD FX REPORTthey specialize in free education and helping people find the best CFD Broker.

2. The CFD Trading Terminology, such as contracts, short, long, mini contracts, full contracts. So make sure that you educate yourself on these terms before jumping into the market.

3. Finding a Broker, finding the right CFD Broker is important as selecting a winning trade. So make sure you do your research, find one that offers a Free Demo Account so that you can practice with pretend money as opposed to real money. When selecting a CFD Broker you are looking for the spread they offer, who and how they are regulated, what level of service whether it is online or over the phone, what charting packages they offer. To assist you in find the best CFD broker, the CFD FX REPORTrecently researched all the CFD Brokers and have come up with who they believe is the best.

4. Are you going to trade yourself or are you going to use a robot to help you trade. CFD trading robots have disadvantages and advantages, it does depend on your risk profile, so feel free to investigate the CFD Robots in the market.

So this has given you the key things you need to know before starting to CFD Trade, remember the educated trader is normally the more successful trader. So educate yourself first, which doesn't necessarily mean spending thousands on courses, there are great educational sites which give you lots of information for Free. Happy Trading - 15790

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Learning Forex Fast- Massive Money

By fxreport

What are the real secrets that you need to learn to become a successful trader? Not everyone is successful in Forex Trading, in fact 95% of Forex Traders will lose, so read on to see who wins

An excellent example of Forex Education is with the most famous trading experiment which will show you exactly what you need to win.

The legendary trader Richard Dennis took a group of people that have never traded before and taught them how to trade in just 2 weeks. This group then went continued on with trading and made millions dollars from this.

What did this group do so well, that the other 95% of traders that fail don't do?

Where the majority of these traders fail is because they believe that Forex Robot can give them instant success and in fact all that happens is they lose. There is so much education available today that does work, so one of the most important things you can learn is to have the discipline and desire to want to learn to Trade Forex.

What the 5% group was taught was a very simple long term, trend system. As the strategy was so simple Dennis knew that anyone could learn what he was teaching and that it had proven over time that it would work over and over again. The key to this is SIMPLE. If you find a simple trading strategy that works, stick to it, it doesn't have to be complicated to make money. In order to help the group stay on track and become ultra successful he also taught them the other great trading lesson of money management.

No matter what the system you have in place you have to understand that you will go through losing periods, no one, no robot can pick the market 100% of the time so you need to have the discipline to stick to your trading system and ride out the loses. If you can't take a loss when trading, you will fail.

What you have to understand that it takes time and education, so make sure you are prepared to educated yourself. For more trading lessons feel free to visit the CFD FX REPORT more free education lessons or they can help you find the Best Forex Broker.

You can easily learn to trade in a few weeks, if you get the right Forex education and if you understand that mindset is the key, you can prepare yourself to trade with discipline and enjoy currency trading success. - 15790

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Tapestry Basics

By Bobbie McKee

Tapestry is art. It can be considered as it is a unique form of art. To put it simply, Tapestry making is an art made out of textile. It is quite different from your typical ordinary rug, Tapestries are textiles woven by hand using a special type of loom. A tapestry is specially woven and depicts a colorful pattern or image with the warp threads, the horizontal ones, are usually hidden. This allows the tapestry to have a smoother surface. This makes it different from other types of conventional cloth weaving where the warp and weft threads of the textile are usually visible.

A decorative tapestry is usually woven and created with a decorative function in mind. They aim to make the any vacant space look better and brighter than it usually is. Its function can also be considered as a valuable painting that adorns a room, worthy of one's appreciation. It adds a certain level of elegance and style to any room that also a tapestry might be able to do.

There is a long history behind the art of tapestry making. Its early origin dates back during the Hellenistic times where it was already being used to decorate homes of nobility during ancient times. There have been samples of Greek tapestry, very well preserved and found in parts of the Tarim Basin which dates back as early as 3rd Century BC.

The art of tapestry eventually spread to other parts of Europe. The art became popular in region sometime during 14th Century AD where it enjoyed a surge in production because of increasing demand popularity among the ancient elite. The spread started from Germany and Switzerland and then eventually reached France and the Netherlands as the demand for this form of textile art became even more popular.

The popularity of tapestry as an accepted artwork grew mainly due to its function as well as the potential of it becoming quite a piece of art. Tapestry artwork uniquely combines both its use as a common commodity dressed elegantly in art to be appreciated. But the rapid popularity of tapestry art may also have grown from the convenience that it provides for people, especially from the wealthy set during ancient times who travel a lot.

Many of those who belong to the wealthy and nobility during the ancient times usually wanted to bring along their type of lavish lifestyle along with them even during their travels. This includes a show of their wealth everywhere they go. And when it comes to ringing artwork along with them, paintings seem to pose a challenge in terms of transport. Utmost care has to be followed to make sure that valuable paintings are well protected.

With the development of tapestry, the wealthy and the nobility of ancient times found a way of bringing artwork with them with their travels without having to worry about their upkeep and care. Most tapestry can easily just be rolled up and store appropriately in a safe place, making it even more convenient.

And it may also because of this fact that the popularity of tapestry considered as art considerably increased and the industry flourished. - 15790

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Coaching for Behavioral Change

By Marshall Goldsmith

My mission is to help successful leaders achieve positive, long-term, measurable change in behavior. The following process is being used by coaches around the world for this same purpose. When the steps in the process are followed, leaders almost always achieve positive behavioral change - not as judged by themselves, but as judged by pre-selected, key co-workers. This process has been used with great success by both external coaches and internal coaches.

Our "Pay for Results" Behavioral Coaching Approach

Our coaching network (Marshall Goldsmith Partners and collaboration with Hewitt Associates) provides coaches for leaders around the world. All of the behavioral coaches that work with us use the same general approach. We first get an agreement with our coaching clients and their managers on two key variables: 1) what are the key behaviors that will make the biggest positive change in increased leadership effectiveness and 2) who are the key stakeholders that can determine (six to eighteen months later) if this change has occurred.

We then get paid only after our coaching clients have achieved a positive change in key leadership behaviors as determined by key stakeholders.

I believe that many behavioral coaches are paid for the wrong reasons. Their income is a largely a function of "How much do my clients like me?" and "How much time did I spend in coaching?" Neither of these is a good metric for achieving a positive, long-term change in behavior.

In terms of liking the coach - I have never seen a study that showed that clients love of a coach was highly correlated with their change in behavior. In fact, if coaches become too concerned with being loved by their clients - they may not provide honest feedback when it is needed.

In terms of spending clients time - my clients are all executives whose decisions often impact billions of dollars. Their time is more valuable than mine. I try to spend as little of their time as necessary to achieve the desired results. The last thing they need is for me to waste their time!

Qualifying the Coaching Client: Knowing When Behavioral Coaching Wont Help

Since we use a "pay only for results" process in behavioral coaching, we have had to learn to qualify our coaching clients. This means that we only work with clients that we believe will benefit from our coaching process.

We refuse to work with leaders who dont care. Have you ever tried to change the behavior of a successful adult that had no interest in changing? How much luck did you have? Probably none! We only work with executives who are willing to make a sincere effort to change and who believe that this change will help them become better leaders. Our most successful coaching clients are committed to being role models for leadership development and their companys values.

Some large corporations "write people off". Rather than just fire them, they engage in a pseudo behavioral coaching process that is more "seek and destroy" than "help people get better". We only work with leaders that are seen as potentially having a great future in the corporation. We only work with people who will be given a fair chance by their management. We refuse to work with leaders who have been "written off".

There are several different types of coaching. We only do behavioral coaching for successful executives - not strategic coaching, life planning or organizational change. I have the highest respect for the coaches that do this kind of work. That is just not what our network does. Therefore, we only focus on changing leadership behavior. If our clients have other needs, we refer them to other coaches.

Finally, I would never choose to work with a client that has an integrity violation. We believe that people with integrity violations should be fired, not coached.

When will our approach to behavioral coaching work? If the issue is behavioral, the coaching client is given a fair chance and they are motivated to improve, the process described in this article will almost always work. If these conditions do not exist, this process should not be used.

Involving Key Stakeholders

In my work as a behavioral coach, I have gone through three distinct phases.

In phase one - I believed that my clients would become better because of me. I thought that the coach was the key variable in behavioral change. I was wrong. We have recently completed research with over 86,000 respondents on changing leadership behavior2. We have learned that the key variable for successful change is not the coach, teacher or advisor. The key variables that will determine long-term progress are the people being coached and their co-workers.

In phase two - I spent most of my time focusing on my coaching clients. I slowly learned that a motivated, hard-working client was more important than a brilliant coach! I learned that their ongoing efforts meant more than my clever ideas. My results improved!

In phase three (where I am now) - I spend most of my time not with my coaching client but with the key stakeholders around my client. By doing this, my clients results have dramatically improved3.

How do I involve key stakeholders? I ask them to help the person that I am coaching in four critically important ways:

1) Let go of the past. When we continually bring up the past, we demoralize people who are trying to change. Whatever happened in the past happened. It cannot be changed. By focusing on a future that can get better (as opposed to a past that cannot), the key stakeholders can help my clients improve. (We call this process feedforward, instead of feedback4).

2) Be helpful and supportive, not cynical, sarcastic or judgmental. As part of our coaching process, my clients involve key co-workers and ask them for help. If my clients reach out to key stakeholders and feel punished for trying to improve, they will generally quit trying. I dont blame them! Why should any of us work hard to build relationships with people who wont give us a chance? If my clients co-workers are helpful and supportive, my client experience increased motivation and are much more likely to improve.

3) Tell the truth. I do not want to work with a client, have them get a glowing report from key stakeholders and later hear that one of the stakeholders said, "He didnt really get better, we just said that". This is not fair to my client, to the company or to me.

4) Pick something to improve yourself. My clients are very open with key stakeholders about what they are going to change. As part of our process, our clients ask for ongoing suggestions. I also ask the stakeholders to pick something to improve and to ask my client for suggestions. This makes the entire process "two-way" instead of "one way". It helps the stakeholders act as "fellow travelers" who are trying to improve, not "judges" who are pointing their fingers at my client. It also greatly expands the value gained by the corporation in the entire process5.

Steps in the Behavioral Coaching Process

The following steps outline our behavioral coaching process. Every coach in our network has to agree to implement the following steps. If the coach will follow these basic steps, our clients almost always get better!

1) Involve the leaders being coached in determining the desired behavior in their leadership roles. Leaders cannot be expected to change behavior if they dont have a clear understanding of what desired behavior looks like. The people that we coach (in agreement with their managers) work with us to determine desired leadership behavior.

2) Involve the leaders being coached in determining key stakeholders. Not only do clients need to be clear on desired behaviors, they need to be clear (again in agreement with their managers) on key stakeholders. There are two major reasons why people deny the validity of feedback, wrong items or wrong raters. By having our clients and their managers agree on the desired behaviors and key stakeholders in advance, we help ensure their "buy in" to the process.

3) Collect feedback. In my coaching practice, I personally interview all key stakeholders. The people that I am coaching are all potential CEOs, and the company is making a real investment in their development. However, at lower levels in the organization (that are more price sensitive), traditional 360 feedback can work very well. In either case, feedback is critical. It is impossible to get evaluated on changed behavior is there is not agreement on what behavior to change!

4) Reach agreement on key behaviors for change. As I have become more experienced, my approach has become simpler and more focused. I generally recommend picking only 1-2 key areas for behavioral change with each client. This helps ensure maximum attention to the most important behavior. My clients and their managers (unless my client is the CEO) agree upon the desired behavior for change. This ensures that I wont spend a year working with my clients and have their managers determine that we have worked on the wrong thing!

5) Have the coaching clients respond to key stakeholders. The person being reviewed should talk with each key stakeholder and collect additional "feedforward" suggestions on how to improve on the key areas targeted for improvement. In responding, the person being coached should keep the conversation positive, simple and focused. When mistakes have been made in the past, it is generally a good idea to apologize and ask for help in changing the future. I suggest that my clients listen to stakeholder suggestions and not judge the suggestions.

6) Review what has been learned with clients and help them develop an action plan. As was stated earlier, my clients have to agree to the basic steps in our process. On the other hand, outside of the basic steps, all of the other ideas that I share with my clients are suggestions. I just ask them to listen to my ideas in the same way they are listening to the ideas from their key stakeholders. I then ask them to come back with a plan of what they want to do. These plans need to come from them, not me. After reviewing their plans, I almost always encourage them to live up to their own commitments. I am much more of a facilitator than a judge. I usually just help my clients do what they know is the right thing to do.

7) Develop an ongoing follow-up process. Ongoing follow-up should be very efficient and focused. Questions like, "Based upon my behavior last month, what ideas do you have for me next month?" can keep a focus on the future. Within six months conduct a two-to-six item mini-survey with key stakeholders. They should be asked whether the person has become more or less effective in the areas targeted for improvement.

8) Review results and start again. If the person being coached has taken the process seriously, stakeholders almost invariably report improvement. Build on that success by repeating the process for the next 12 to 18 months. This type of follow-up will assure continued progress on initial goals and uncover additional areas for improvement. Stakeholders will appreciate the follow-up. No one minds filling out a focused, two-to-six-item questionnaire if they see positive results. The person being coached will benefit from ongoing, targeted steps to improve performance.

The Value of Behavioral Coaching for Executives

While behavioral coaching is only one branch in the coaching field, it is the most widely used type of coaching. Most requests for coaching involve behavioral change. While this process can be very meaningful and valuable for top executives, it can be even more useful for high-potential future leaders. These are the people who have great careers in front of them. Increasing effectiveness in leading people can have an even greater impact if it is a 20-year process, instead of a one-year program.

People often ask, "Can executives really change their behavior?" The answer is definitely yes. If they didnt change, we would never get paid (and we almost always get paid). At the top of major organizations even a small positive change in behavior can have a big impact. From an organizational perspective, the fact that the executive is trying to change anything (and is being a role model for personal development) may be even more important than what the executive is trying to change. One key message that I have given every CEO that I coach is "To help others develop - start with yourself! - 15790

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Merchant Account and the Credit Card

By Bobbie McKee

Merchant account plays a big role in the success of any credit card transaction. That is why it is very important for people-especially those who rely so much on the plastic card-to familiarize themselves about it so they will know what to expect from their credit card brands and they would know what to do when any problem arises.

Merchant account refers to a contract wherein the bank the bank that aims to acquire prolonged line of credit to a merchant that accepts payment transactions through card of a certain card association or brand. One of the things that credit card users must know about merchant accounts are the methods that involve the processing of credit cards. Nowadays, majority of the transactions that involves credit card concern electronics. These transactions are electronically-sent to the merchant processing bank subjected for authorization, deposit and card capture.

Methods of processing credit cards will mainly depend on the industry itself. Since it is already electronic, the means by which information is obtained is made possible by the magnetic strip. When this is swiped in the credit card terminal or reader-a "stand-alone" type of electronic equipment allowing an individual merchant to accept information needed to complete any credit card transaction-all the information about the credit card holder and transaction being made will automatically transferred and made available on computer and website for record purposes.

Merchant account providers advise credit card holders to swipe their cards whenever a transaction is being made to ensure that there will be reduced incidents of fraud when the card is stolen.

The right credit card as a key to avoid financial troubles

Merchant account is an inevitable part of any credit card acquisition and transaction. This is because it enables the individual to create purchase and other transaction without having to worry too much about safety. However, the advantages and benefits of having the right merchant account provider come with the wise choosing of credit card itself.

To avoid financial and debt troubles, people who rely on credit cards must be very careful in acquiring one. Choosing the right credit card will not only pave the way to finding the right merchant account provider but can also veer you away from debt problems. People who are planning to apply for a credit card must pay attention to the merchant account provider to ensure that he or she will reap benefits in the long run. Here are some considerations before applying for a credit card:

- The Merchant account provider. This is very important because it will determine how smooth-sailing your transactions would be. Most credit card providers do not usually divulge the merchant account provider thinking that this is not something that would really concern the client. If you want to ensure that there will be no problems in your future transactions, take time to know the merchant account provider behind the credit card line that you are applying for.

- Pay attention to interest rates. This can be referred to as "fixed-rate" or "adjustable rate" in most credit cards. People who are not into low APR credit cards, they would want to avail of fixed rate credit cards because even if the rate is a point or two higher than the usual, this ensures that people can pay off their loan quickly without even noticing the big difference.

- Always be aware of the credit limit. This refers to the total amount of credit that a credit card holder is authorized to use in his or her transactions. Clearly identifying the credit line, the merchant account provider, and the size of the credit line, will help the holder to decide how reliable he/she can be when it comes to paying on time and keeping him/herself under the card's limit. - 15790

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