I know how you feel. A couple years ago, I went into a local convenience store where they were doing those little ‘put your name on the thing on the wall’ for charity. You buy your gas and your coffee and your Mike ‘n Ike’s, and they say, “Umm, yeah, would you like to give a dollar for autism treatment and research?”
Poor fella. He caught me on a bad day. I said, “Sir, I’ve given a couple hundred thousand bucks to autism treatment and research. Can I have a dollar?”
He didn’t give a dollar. But I hope that won’t dissuade you today.
I’m going to ask you for money for charity. I’m going to give you something very valuable in return.
There – drop the cat in the punchbowl right out of the chute. I have a strong dislike for only three things:
- Self-Promotion
- Asking people for stuff
- Pulled groin muscles
I’m about to break the seal on two of three.
In early February, we published an eBook about Shareworthy Customer Service. For a minimum donation of a whopping 99 cents, you can learn many, many wonderful secrets of the great giants and the hidden gems.
We are raising money for Touchpoint Autism’s Central Missouri Project – the small not-for-profit organization that first taught us to learn to help our son – and taught our son to learn to help us.
Monday, April 2nd, is International Autism Awareness Day.
So far, we’ve raised more than $1,000, and we’d like to raise some more before we take the check to them on Monday.
Can you help?
Will you consider spreading the word? We would be so grateful. I’m promise to pull a groin muscle before asking again.
Your Customers Like This: The Whats, Whos, Whys & Hows of Shareworthy Customer Service is available now.
For a minimum donation of $0.99 to Touchpoint’s Central Missouri Autism Project, this eBook will:
- Show you why shareworthy customer service is so important
- Deconstruct down to the 14 building blocks of shareworthy customer service
- Give you great stories of examples of shareworthy customer service
- Spell out a plan of how to implement this program in your company
- Make you feel like you just got one of the 37 biggest bangs-for-your-buck in recorded history
- Make you a rockstar in your own company when you’re the catalyst for positive change
Not bad for a buck, huh?
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JoeyH says
The book is worth way more than the .99 minimum. Highly recommend.
David Abramson says
Nice, I’ll share this on my page for resources for people with autism 🙂