Welcome to the Samenmais Corporation!™

"Samenmais"is a word that means seed corn (or grain). In the past, farmers saved a choice portion of their crop each year to replant in the following season. Thus, farmers "reinvested" a portion of this year's crop in next year's harvest. The same applies for business. Wise business owners and managers invest a portion of this year's profit in next year's income by using some of the profits for teaching and training their staff.

The articles found on our website are provided free of charge and are designed to stimulate your thinking and sharpen your business skills. In a few short weeks, we will begin to offer affordable interactive training packages that combine audio, video and animation. Our first package is Truly Outstanding Customer Service.

Our full-course internet-based business training packages are presented in an easygoing coffee shop setting. Our coffee shop proprietor's name is Sam. We call him "the Sam Dude." Each week Sam welcomes dozens of knowledge-hungry customers into his coffee shop to meet with his business-savvy friends. Sam's friends are eager and happy to help teach and train anyone who wants to learn from their vast business experiences and education.

Come join us, won't you? You'll find that this training is unlike any other you've experienced. We expect you'll be educated, informed, enlightened, and perhaps a bit amused. And don't forget to tell your friends and co-workers about us...the great training company with the funny name.

Samenmais Corporation
(pronounced Zah-men-mize)

Call 1-877-SAM-DUDE [1-877-726-3833] or contact us for corporate bulk-rate discounts.


 

Featured Article:


Why Customers Leave

Each year businesses spend a significant part of their budget to attract and acquire new customers. At the same time, these same companies spend little to maintain the relationships they already have with their existing customers. Research shows that it can cost five to six times more to attract new customers than to keep existing customer. The result looks something like the back door of the office or store being left perpetually open. Customers come into the business, stay a short while, then leave.


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