6 Ways to Get Better Customer Service

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Sometimes New Yorkers do live up to the “they are so rude” stereotype and usually I can let it roll off my back. But sometimes it’s really irritating — especially when I’m paying for a service or asking for help in a store. Well guess what — there are ways to ensure that you won’t have to deal with such “service” again — in this town or any other! My guest blogger today is my best friend Danielle Freni who has started a Customer Service Revolution. Of which I gladly ride on the coattails of so I can get free drinks, better service and more bang for my buck! Now you can too. Read more

Checklist for Finding A Personal Trainer

Checklist for Finding a Personal Trainer

by Laura DeAngelis, NASM CPT, AFAA Group Exercise Instructor

If you’ve joined a gym and haven’t been to one in awhile – or ever – I highly recommend spending some time with Personal Trainers who can help you get familiarized with the equipment and start a safe routine. Many gyms offer one or more free sessions to welcome you to the facility. If that’s the case, take advantage of the opportunity to get some guidance. Alternatively, you might want to check out an online personal trainer such as Nathan Fitness as they can help you reach your fitness goals through custom training schedules at an affordable price.

In order to create a safe and effective exercise program, a good trainer will conduct a fitness assessment and collect the following information before your first stretch, step on a stair machine or set of squats.

Readiness for Exercise: Be prepared to answer questions about whether you experience things like chest pain, dizziness or balance problems and if you’re on certain medications. These questions are part of the PAR-Q, which stands for The Physical Activity Readiness Questionnaire. It helps trainers identify people who are clear for activity and those who may need medical attention. However, DON’T expect a trainer to make a medical diagnosis or prescribe treatment for a condition you haven’t discussed with your health care provider.

Medical History: Whether you’ve suffered from bad ankle sprains or had back surgery, injuries and surgical procedures can alter how the body moves and cause muscle imbalances. When these imbalances aren’t addressed, your body makes compensations through altered joint motion which can ultimately lead to injury.

Occupation: Wear heels to work everyday? There’s a good chance your calves are tight. Spend long hours sitting at a computer? Your hip flexors are probably screaming (as mine do) to be stretched. Perform repetitive movements all day like painting or construction work? Your lats may need a little TLC.

Hobbies: Do you spend your days off chasing a tennis ball and/or the kids or vegging out on the couch? Having information about all your daily activities will help your trainer develop a better customized exercise program.

Measurable Data: Your personal trainer should also collect objective information through movement assessments, one of the most important being the overhead squat assessment. As I learned through my NASM instruction, this dynamic postural assessment is key when creating a safe and effective exercise program. Observing a person’s feet, knees, lumbo-pelvic-hip complex and shoulder complex while he or she performs an overhead squat shows which overactive muscles need to be stretched and which under-active muscles need to be strengthened.

Additional Objective Information: Along with the postural and movement assessments, your trainer can collect other data including body-composition measurements and physiologic assessments such as heart rate.

It’s also important to find someone who you listens to you and helps you understand the strategy toward reaching your goals. Finding the right personal trainer is one tool that can help you get a jump start on the path to have fun, be fit and feel fabulous!

Laura DeAngelis is an independent personal trainer in New York City who received her certification through the National Academy of Sports Medicine (NASM). She’s also a certified Group Exercise Instructor through the Aerobics & Fitness Association of America (AFAA) and a Licensed Zumba® Instructor. When she’s not training, Laura currently works as the Director of Production at West Glen Communications, Inc. where she also hosts “Health & Home Report.” For more of Laura’s health and fitness tips, check out her blog at LauraLovesFitness.com

Must-Have Baking Tool List

My mother has always been the cook in the family. I’m not just saying this because she’s my mom — but she really is a fabulous cook. So for most of my life I had the “why bother” mentality when it came to cooking. My mom had it covered…so I didn’t need to.

With the help of Food Network, my husband and I have slowly become foodies! Now we love trying to make new dishes — even if they don’t always turn out right. But baking is something that my mother doesn’t do and still I haven’t jumped into that arena quite yet. Baking is a skill that even the best cooks can’t master a lot of the time, but can be a fantastic hobby to get into.  But it’s on my “to-learn” list so I’ve reached out to pastry chef Marnely Rodriguez for some help on what tools I might need before I start.

Must-Have Baking Tool List

by Marnely Rodriguez

Tools of the trade are thousands, but the following list is of the top 5 baking tools every person that bakes or wants to start baking should have. They are great tools that, when used correctly, will have you baking cakes and cookies on a weekly basis!

1. Digital Scale

Nothing is more important to a baker than their scale. Baking is a science and differentiates from cooking because you can’t really throw in random, unmeasured ingredients in a pan and magically have a chocolate cake.

A scale will let you precisely weigh your ingredients and develop a sense of awareness when baking. Just be sure to never convert volume measures (cups) to metric measures (ounces/grams). Stick to the metric system and you’ll be a step ahead of the crowd. Read more

6 Steps to Simplifying Your Daily Routine

I have a problem getting out of the house in the morning. I do a lot of things like make lunch and pick out my clothes the night before.  So that’s helpful.  But in the morning I check emails, I tweak my blog, I post to Facebook, I poke around Twitter…all while I’m trying to get ready.  It drives my husband crazy.  I suppose even I could use a list for getting out the door in the morning.

I actually wrote one in my ebook called “The Top 10 Lists Every Mom Needs.” Download it and check it out.  But I could always use some fresh ideas so that’s why I asked organizing goddess, Tracy McCubbin, for a little insight.

6 Steps to Simplifying Your Daily Routine

by Tracy McCubbin

Most of us know the benefits of de-cluttering, especially if you’re reading this blog, but what we don’t realize is that clutter causes stress in our everyday lives. How many times have you scrambled in the morning to find your keys, a matching shoe or even your purse?

It’s my goal to help everyone, whether you’re a mom of quints or a single 20-something, develop livable systems of organization they can incorporate into their daily lives to make it more enjoyable and less stressful.

Here are six simple steps you can take to give your daily routine a makeover. Learn it, live it, love it. Read more

5 Relationship Lists You Must Make

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BONUS FREEBIE: Want even more ways to stay organized, productive and less stressed? Click here to get access to my List-Making Starter Kit. It will boost your efficiency and get you back to doing more of the things you love.

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I’m a hopeless romantic — what can I say? I love Valentine’s Day! (I didn’t mean for that to rhyme.) I really think it’s sweet to have a day dedicated to love. However — I know many of you will say — why not be sweet all year long. Well…true. So for those people — I resisted the urge to be extra sappy with this post and instead decided to be realistic.

I enlisted the help of Susanne Alexander — she’s a relationship and marriage coach. Her guest post is all about how list making will help you have a much better relationship. Here’s her take on lists for love: Read more