Wimbledon Tennis Bag
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Wimbledon Tennis Bag

GIRLS ONLY PLEASE! Help, need advise?
So, next week on Friday I am going on a school trip to London to watch the last day of Wimbledon tennis and the next day we will be going round London. We set off at half 5 in the morning and come home at 7 in the evening the next day. I am worried that I will get my period then. PLUS we are having bag searches before we go and if I have pads in it will be wayyyyy embarrassing. I really want to go but not if I get my period, I know that I will still go but how many pads would I need to take? 6? And for the night I would be scared of leaking onto the hotel bed:( I dont usually leak but I'm just worrying. Please give me some advise? <3
No need to worry hon, it is not like your classmates will be the ones searching your bags. And no one is going to shout "Oh hey this girl is carrying pads!" No one will know, and no one will care. If you are comfortable go with tampons, for one they pack easier, two they are much better at absorbing so you don't need to worry about leaking, and thirdly they are (in my opinion) more comfortable than sitting in your own blood all day. Take pads as back up. If you aren't comfortable using tampons then stick with pads, make sure you know where the restrooms are etc, and take at least one "overnight" pad, just to help ease your mind about leakage. How many you take depends on how heavy your periods are. How ever many you think you need take 2 or 3 extra so that you aren't worrying about running out. If you do run out do what someone else said & borrow from a classmate, trust me you won't be the only one on the trip carrying feminine products.
Good Luck! And have fun!
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Tennis Hospitality Tickets For Championship Club Offer Perfect Wimbledon Experience
Why Stretching Will Kill Your Sales
I'm a tennis fanatic—my whole family is. I'm a 4.0, my wife is a 3.5, (those are USTA rankings) and my daughter plays on her HS tennis team.
If a tennis match is being broadcast on the Tennis Channel, ESPN or FSN, life comes to an immediate standstill in my house. The dishes are left in the sink, laundry doesn't get done, and the dog doesn't get walked (we just put him out in the backyard).
We play tennis (lessons, matches, tournaments) 3-5 times a week, and we'll rarely schedule a vacation during the "slams" (Australian, French, US Opens and Wimbledon).
And yes, I want to have Roger Federer's baby.
Okay, you get the point.
Now recently it's been promulgated by physical trainers that tennis players, and presumably all athletes and weekend warriors, should not stretch before exercising, playing, competing, etc.
I'm not going to get into all the reasons why, or when you should actually do your stretching. Suffice it to say, stretching is detrimental to your health if it's the first thing you do before exerting yourself in any physical endeavor.
And I find it so interesting that the same prohibition also applies to, yup, marketers!
Stretching before presenting an offer will hurt a marketer's back-end (sales, that is) and...
It'll kill cash flow
Here's why...
Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD). The entire developed world has it. And I'm not slighting those who are clinically diagnosed (though there seems to be some debate as to whether it really is a true medical disorder).
Nonetheless, because of technology, ambition, opportunity, cost-of-living and a myriad of other reasons—the most valuable, transitory, easily depleted, irreplaceable resource that can be neither seen, touched, smelled or heard—is time.
No one has a wealth of time, just a constantly growing deficit.
Therefore, as a marketer, if you don't grab your prospect's and customer's attention immediately with a compelling and captivating offer—the odds of making a sale is about the same as me turning off the TV when Roger Federer is playing.
And yet, if there is one affliction most marketers suffer from—it's Speed Deficit Disorder (SDD)
They don't get to the point—quick enough!
Every communication you have with your market, even if it's not sale-related—has to be clearly discernable and understandable, online and off, "above the fold". There's no time to warm-up and stretch.
And I'm not just talking about your headline—which is a whole 'nother topic. But even your headlines have to be clear and direct; they can't be cute or obtuse. A headline must possess all or most of the 4 U's: it has to be Useful, Urgent, Ultra-specific and Unique.
What I'm talking about here though, is your first sentence, your first paragraph—after your headline.
In every promotion, right from the get-go, you've got to tell 'em what you're gonna tell 'em, before you tell 'em anything else.
No one's dying to hear from you
So don't go strutting through cyberspace and customer's mailboxes like a peacock with no sense of purpose or direction.
After all, you're asking for someone's time. Many parents will give up their children before they'll sacrifice their time—that's why there's day care centers, latch-key kids, and sociopathic, homicidal, high-school gun-slingers (don't get me started on the lack of quality family time).
Waste your target market's time often enough, and your emails and direct mail will be deleted and discarded before they're opened—same goes for your website.
I don't know how many times I've arrived at a website and wasn't sure I was in the right place—'cause I couldn't immediately see what they do, what service they provide or what products they sell—and I didn’t have the time to find out.
If you could sell time—you'd make a fortune. In the meantime, whatever you're selling will cost time—at the outset.
So don't beat about the bush. Don’t build a warm and fuzzy nest in which to lay an egg—present the bird, already cooked and ready to be eaten.
Then, if you think it will help grease the slide, you can talk about the weather, where you went to college, the boil on your uncle's butt—or whatever you think will float your market's boat.
Learn from my mistake
If this article was a sales letter, I'll bet you a tennis bag and ten tennis racquets that I couldn't give away a Brinks truck filled with 24 karat gold bricks for $1—if that's what I was offering.
Why, because who in their right mind cares about, much less has time to consider, my tennis ranking, my tennis obsession or how I walk my dog. They'd stop reading after two or three sentences—they'd never get to the part where I offer to fill their living room with 10 tons of gold bricks for a measly buck!
But it's not a sales letter... and yet, it's still won't be read by many people—especially those not interested in tennis—because I took too long to make my point.
Sheesh! What a waste of my time!
About the Author
Barry A. Densa is one of America’s top freelance direct response copywriters. Visit www.WritingWithPersonality.com and see how Barry easily and quickly converts prospects into buyers using “salesmanship in printâ€. And while there, sign up for his highly regarded FREE ezine: Marketing Wit & Wisdom!















