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It is important that you understand the following information.

Information provided here is based on our research and personal day to day market experience. It was designed to aid and assist you in internet money making ideas, Global Stock, CFDs, Financial Spreads Bettings and Forex Trading. Any views expressed on the site are the opinions of the author and should not be taken as a specific recommendation to either buy or sell. If appropriate, you should seek advice that will help you and your specific financial situation from a competent professional before making any monetary commitment.




How Close Is the Euro Crisis to Being Solved? Reuters - Nov 7 2011

European Central Bank policymaker Juergen Stark sees the euro zone crisis over in the next year or so as politicians have started to realize the need for painful action. Will investors agree? More »How Close Is the Euro Crisis to Being Solved?

SEC Seeks ‘Structural Reform’ of Money Funds
Bloomberg - Nov 7 2011

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission will soon propose revamping rules for money-market mutual funds, pushing the options of a floating net asset value and capital buffers..

Why Bad News Is the Best News for Investors
@ TheStreet.com - Mon, Nov 7, 2011

Dozens of fund managers and strategists say Americans ought to get in touch with their greedy sides.
Daily Ticker : Hot Topics
Daily Ticker : Picks and Strategies
Gold Shares May (Finally) Begin to Lead MarketWatch - Nov 7 2011

Key gold bugs, and a few other observers, think maybe the precious metal is ready to head back to the upside, Peter Brimelow reports..

How to Rest Easy in a Crazy Market
The Wall Street Journal - Nov 7 2011

With the stock market tumbling and gyrating again, some investors want nothing to do with it. But there might be a solution for them.

Find Investment Quality in the Income Statement
Investopedia -Nov 7 2011

Using a few key attributes may help you learn how to uncover top-level investments.
Play Defense Against Volatility in Your Portfolio US News - Nov 7 2011

In August, watching the markets was like watching a waterfall, and it was not until early October that the market hit a low. Here's how you can be better prepared for what happens next..


Is the Euro Experiment Nearing its End?
ETFguide - Nov 7 2011

For whatever it's worth, here's Europe's very clear and very final bailout terms: You can definitely count Greece in -- or maybe not..



Understanding What Makes a Company Great
Investopedia - Nov 7 2011

To understand the qualities that make for a great company, investors must dig deep into 'soft' metrics..
Daily Ticker : Education
Qualitative Analysis: What Makes A Company Great?

InvestopediaBy Will Ashworth | Investopedia – Mon, Nov 7, 2011


Evaluating stocks involves two types of analysis: fundamental and technical. The former is all about number crunching while the latter uses up-and-down squiggly lines to chart a stock's course. In the end, it's all about being right more often than wrong. Investment professionals are constantly looking for that slight edge over the competition. One place they might easily overlook (but shouldn't) is within the realm of qualitative analysis, a subjective area that is sometimes referred to as soft metrics. This refers to aspects of a public company that aren't quantifiable or easily explained by numbers. In general, it's an underappreciated and underutilized side of fundamental analysis.

The Usual Suspects
When conducting qualitative analysis of a company, most investment professionals look at the business model, competitive advantage in the industry, management and corporate governance. This helps to determine how a company makes money, its uniqueness versus the competition, which people are making the decisions and how they treat ordinary shareholders. Gathering all of this data can provide a better idea of how a company intends to grow its business while rewarding shareholders. However, it isn't the entire picture. Touchy-feely subjects like satisfying the customer, rewarding employees and maintaining excellent supplier relationships matters as well.


The Unheralded
Understanding the qualities that make a company great involve more than a simple SWOT analysis (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats) - that's business school 101 stuff. To evaluate a company's intangibles, one must dig below the surface and beyond the 10-K. Satisfaction is the key here and successful businesses have it in abundance.

If a company fails to satisfy employees, suppliers and customers, in this order, it's only a matter of time before its stock price implodes. Arguments exist for both sides of the discussion. Some academics believe that customer satisfaction and employee satisfaction aren't mutually exclusive. Just because employees are happy doesn't guarantee customer loyalty. That might be so, however, Tony Hsieh, CEO of Zappos.com, the world's biggest online shoe retailer, and winner of countless customer service awards, said in a May 2010 article in SUCCESS magazine that "... Customer service is about making customers happy, and the culture is about making employees happy. So, really, we're about trying to deliver happiness, whether it's to customers or employees, and we apply that same philosophy to vendors as well." This winning attitude may have contributed to Amazon.com's (Nasdaq:AMZN - News) acquisition of the business for $1.2 billion in 2009.

Employee Satisfaction
Any company that's truly interested in customer satisfaction must first meet the needs of its employees; otherwise, it's putting the cart before the horse. JetBlue (Nasdaq:JBLU - News) came to realize, in 2007, that it wasn't doing a good job satisfying employees when it stranded thousands of its passengers because of a New York City ice storm. Employee morale dropped, and, with it, customer satisfaction. Up to that point, the company surveyed employees once a year looking for feedback. It needed to do more, and so it implemented "Net Promoter," a scoring system that calculates how many employees are actively promoting the company, both as a place to work and as a place to do business. Once it began to look at employee satisfaction, department by department, it was able to deliver programs that put everyone on the same page, and results followed.

Employees are the face of any brand. The quickest way to destroy brand equity is to disrespect them. Once you've lost trust, it's only a matter of time before you lose the customer. Without customers, you have no business! It's a slippery slope that, privately owned software firm, SAS knows well. CEO and founder Jim Goodnight has been in charge for all 34 years, in business, and from the beginning, he's emphasized employee benefits leading to 13 straight years on Fortune's "100 Best Companies To Work For" list. In its 2008 corporate social responsibility report, the company states, "If you treat employees as if they make a difference to the company, they will make a difference to the company ... At the heart of this unique business model is a simple idea: Satisfied employees create satisfied customers." Public companies are no different.


Supplier Satisfaction
No matter how vertically integrated your company is, you will always have suppliers of one kind, or another, and those relationships can positively or negatively impact the quality of your final product, or service. One of Whole Foods' (Nasdaq:WFMI) seven core values is its commitment to its suppliers. By creating a true partnership with the companies it buys from, it is able to provide its customers with a fabulous shopping experience. It's not enough, however, to have great customer service - the food has to match. Whole Foods tends to score high on this front as well, and by doing so is able to maintain price points that are higher than in most regular grocery stores, delivering greater profits.

Customer Satisfaction
The marketing profession has tried for years to quantify customer satisfaction in a way that lends itself to clarifying a brand's equity, or worth. Annual studies like the American Customer Satisfaction Index, Prophet's Reputation Management Index and Forrester Research's Customer Experience Index are just three examples. For instance, the American Customer Satisfaction Index has shown that the stock prices of companies ranking higher in the index tend to do better than those lower down. In fact, between 1994 and 2007, companies ranking in the top 25% of the index created $420 billion in wealth for shareholders, versus $111 billion for those in the bottom 25% -in other words, companies that please their customers are shown to create four times the wealth.

Most analysts would agree that market capitalization is greatly influenced by brand power. In a study by marketing gurus David Aaker and Robert Jacobson, 34 companies examined between 1989 and 1992 and found that those with the largest increase in brand equity averaged stock returns of 30% while the ones losing the most brand equity dropped 10% on average. If you're not quite sold on the idea of customer satisfaction affecting stock prices, Forrester Research's annual Customer Experience Index ranks the best and worst in customer service. Companies in the top 10 routinely outperform the S&P 500. If the findings are altered slightly to consider operating profits, the results are even more pronounced.

Satisfaction Guaranteed
Investors tend to spend most of their time worrying about quantitative analysis. Ratios like price-to-earnings and price-to-book get all the attention while numberless intangibles, like customer satisfaction, are left to annual surveys that are quickly swept under the carpet, never to be seen again. Let's face it: we live in a quantitative world. Everything we do revolves around top 10 lists of one kind or another. We want a shortcut, and lists meet this need. Qualitative analysis, on the other hand, is tricky stuff, and most Warren Buffett wannabes find it too subjective. However, any business whose stock price has risen consistently over time has surely satisfied all its stakeholders. As Warren Buffett has been quoted saying many times in the past: "Beware of geeks bearing formulas."
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