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Tuesday, 26 October 2010

Top 10 bling football players

The footy boots top 10 bling list shows the players who may be like your football boots, their cars, watches and women: striking, shiney and bling-tastic!


The who wears his bling like a badge honor and who was the original Godfather of bling? you can say only our list, their boots rays decadence and wealth-so let the bling begin!




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10. Lee Dixon - what was that the bling?


Arsenal Defender Dixon picked up a handsome fee for Brook's-soccer shoes (technically called "Wellington") wear, but in his first game turn, scored an own goal of exceptional quality, when he keeper seaman threw his back by 30 metres channel.We hope that the bling gelohnt.Dixon proves that sometimes players since precede bling bling everything!


9. Lionel Messi-the next big bling


Widely touted as the next Maradona, Messi plays for Barcelona but Inter Milan have rumour spreading, offered by 71 million pounds for a transfer, his bling level up to the bling of the world could see!


8. Stan Bowles Mr of the Blings


Take player seventies, trying cheeky two secure twice take the sponsorship money through A Gola football boot and An adidas football boot for an England match against the Netherlands in 1978.Die England star me a rock star lifestyle, one blows upwards of a quarter million pounds over gambling still remains in the eyes of the public as football-Pandit and bling-tastic role model.


7. Alan ball vintage bling


Sixties players who wear first player two white football at the beginning of season 1970 / 71 boots.Were of Hummel, but you liked ball..."honest guys be that crap like cardboard, you were so I got the young trainee, my adidas to paint, football boots, white." It was great, until one day it was raining and the black came through. (A) not too happy watching Hummel Rep saw what I had done so I two grand farewell."


6. Frank Lampard bling King!


Bears personalized adidas Predator boots with his name and team number into stitched.Unconfirmed reports claim this sow Lampard know what football boots belongs to him.We can confirm that stories that Lampard also has a "L" and "R" in his soccer shoes sewn definitely positive, are absolutely untrue as Frank has now announced his right links to Alton.


5. Djibril Cissé A bling of many colors


MIS lowering striker Dieppe, when playing for Liverpool, came once out in Oddr, colored Stiefel.Er changed after half an hour in a matching pair in lime green football boots.Known that to his hair color as easily as his football-boat color to change.Saves the lobster on the field bling with his H2 with Louis Vuitton Interior.


4. Francesco Totti signor bling


Produced after the football World Cup, Diadora the Maximus Italia Gold Special Limited Edition boot, an all - gold football boot for the World Cup winner, if worn behind sunglasses, excessive glare and shine to avoid must appear.


3. George best-the godfather of bling


Best was the largest players of his generation and the first football-millionaire, set the standard for modern players in many Hinsicht.Die Stylo 'George Best' football boot looked how a few Bowling shoes with a white stripe from head to foot on each Seite.Sein champagne lifestyle and his love for the bling took over from football, cut his career short.


2. Ronaldinho Prince


Ronaldinho hate two special couple soccer shoes, contains eight ounces 24 K Gold genuine 24 K Gold on the Nike logo applied .the football-letter "R" embroidered boots feature a gold and five golden stars honor Brazil five World Championship WINS shaped paragraph 10 that is Ronaldinho for Barcelona, while the heel of the boot wears shirt.


1. David Beckham, King of bling


Cost him around £ 600 per couple and it enters only 723 couples have made new pair of each Spiel.Adidas and only in its size. He has sewn even hate Feng-Shui symbols in his boots in a bid to improve his football performance.


The theme that helped it depends heavily on David's interest in the Eastern mystic culture with, say: "I am very proud to wear this football boot because they represent the idea of yin and Yang."


You are personalized, named by his three children, his initials, his preferred number 23 and Beckham's printed signature for the ultimate bling factor seams.


Beckham set the bling-bling in soccer shoes as nobody has done before and he reigns supreme as the King of bling.


All hail the King of bling: David Beckham.


Article is published right on football-Boots


Alan is a writer on the football boots to http://www.footy-boots.com

Marketing lessons from the business of football

People don't go to football games to watch football. Oh, a few people do, but not enough to come close to filling the stadium. To find out who the pure fans are, you'd have to do away with the video screens, the mascots, the cheerleaders, the halftime shows, any foods more exotic than hot dogs, soft drinks and peanuts, and then see who's left in the stands. Would you still buy a ticket?


Football is more than a game; it's also a business. The business of football has grown because the promise included with each ticket has grown to appeal to more than just the pure fans. Does your business cater solely to your pure fans? If so, you're sitting on a tremendous growth opportunity.


No One Wants Your Product


We forget that people don't really want our product; they want what they can do with our product. Take coffee as an example. If we focus on the coffee itself, it's easy to get caught up in the price per pound or per cup, and the qualities that make coffee taste good or bad. Yet when we think about what we can do with the coffee, those factors become almost insignificant.


The place where coffee is served (the coffee shop) becomes the backdrop for a social event with friends or business acquaintances; the price of the coffee becomes insignificant. Perhaps coffee is the warm, comforting friend that accompanies us on our journey into the new book we just picked up at a Barnes and Noble book store. Whenever we buy coffee or football tickets or your product or service, we are buying much more than what the label on the package indicates.


Get a Feel for the Game


Football organizations discovered long ago they can enjoy significant boosts in business by looking at all the ways to serve their customers during a football game. By expanding the core product -- the game on the field -- to appeal to a larger audience, their market grows beyond the pure fans to include their spouses, other family members and their friends. In the process, football organizations enjoy multiple up-sell opportunities while engendering customer loyalty that keeps fans coming back. You don't have to love football to love going to a football game.


While your product or service may not be as flashy and exciting as football, you can apply football's marketing lessons to improve your market share, revenues and profits. If you don't, you risk seeing your sales fall flat and watching business go to your competition. If companies can apply these marketing principles to a product as simple as coffee, you can win using these strategies, too.


Unfortunately, we may be too close to our product to successfully apply these principles. We likely know the features and benefits of our product inside and out, and understand all the things our customers can do with our product. What's more important is that we step back and work to understand how people feel while using our product. Find out the feelings your customers associate with using your product or service, and then think of ways to give them more of those feelings. Here are three ways you can do that.


1. Ain't I Social!


Many people use a product or service as an excuse to get together with other people. Football tickets, coffee shops, birthday cakes, bowling leagues - people may buy these products solely to enjoy the feelings they get when they're experiencing them with other people.


Think of ways to get people who share a common interest in your product or service to socialize around it. Consider:


*** Conferences


*** Online chat rooms


*** Reunions


*** Rallies


*** User groups


*** Advanced training sessions


*** Charitable work


Any event, really, can be the perfect excuse for your customers to gather and experience the great positive feelings that will generate customer loyalty and keep them coming back for more.


2. Make it Memorable


When customers have a good experience with your product, they'll want to repeat it so they can recreate those good feelings. Ideally our customers will talk about their experience with their friends and associates long after the experience is over. You can extend the power of this word of mouth effect. Help your customers remember their positive feelings long after the experience that created them is over.


Memories are heightened when emotions are involved. The stronger the emotions, the stronger the feelings, the longer and more powerfully we remember them. At football games we watch instant replays of key moments; the turning points and dazzling plays worth remembering. We buy programs that allow us to engage at a deeper level with the personal aspects of the players. Sometimes we're provided with heart-stopping opportunities to win prizes. Souvenirs allow us to take the football game home with us; we can relive the feelings we had at the game simply by looking at or holding our souvenir.


Get your customers emotionally involved so they'll long remember the positive experiences they have with your product or service.


*** Provide mementos.


*** Give them a chance to win something.


*** Deliver a nice surprise they don't expect.


*** Give them moments with industry celebrities.


*** Take pictures, especially of them, to give them vivid reminders of the great experience they had.


Do these things, and they'll do business with you over and over again.


3. Include the Fringe


Around your core customers -- the pure fans -- is a fringe of secondary customers you can easily access. These secondary customers may be spouses or friends of your core customers who are easily reached through viral marketing. Give thought as to how to provide for their social needs and create positive, memorable feelings that will encourage them to try you once and then come back again and again.


The football business has this figured out. The football lovers in a household have an easier time getting to games when their non-football-loving spouse is eager to go with them. That's why a football ticket provides so much more than the game these days. While marketing the game to pure fans is a simple endeavor, football becomes a much better business when the offer is expanded to include the social and emotional aspects that appeal to the secondary market. For example, the Super Bowl has become more of a party than a game. People plan for and look forward to the huge social event that engulfs this championship game. Millions watch the Super Bowl on TV, yet few watch it alone.


Get in touch with your market and work to understand who your secondary customers are. Coffee shops gladly sell tea and soft drinks so their "regulars" can easily bring along their non-coffee drinking friends. Expand your marketing to include these secondary customers and you can boost your sales revenues by 50% and more.


The Game of Change


Football as a game hasn't changed much over the decades. The proposal to permit challenge flags supported by video review was carefully debated by National Football League (NFL) officials before its adoption, all because the League knows this; never alienate your pure fans. They are the bedrock of your business. Keep delivering the solid, consistent product that keeps them coming back for more.


Don't focus on improving your product. Instead, focus on improving the product experience. Once you understand the positive feelings your customers experience by using your product or service, look for ways to extend that experience. Sure, cream and sugar go with coffee. But so does a soft chair and soothing music. So does a well-written book of fiction. So does a table surrounded by family or friends.


Football is a game and it is a business. Look at your business like a game. How does it feel to do business with you today? Make your business social. Make it memorable. Make your business the game your customers are eager to play.


Paul Johnson the Trouble Breaker works with organizations to convert trouble into double and triple digit performance breakthroughs. Discover concepts for marketing breakthroughs at http://ShortcutsToResults.com.