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Why Ambit Energy ??……….
Jun 3rd, 2010 by Anthony Cappello

Young Company Focus

Software and Innovation Lead Ambit to Early Success

By Barbara Seale

Innovative, recession-proof and profitable in just two years. That describes electric and natural gas service provider Ambit. Its executives give much of the credit to an unusually robust, custom-developed information-technology system.

Entrepreneur Jere Thompson Jr. had successfully navigated telecommunications regulation, building the fastest-growing private company in Dallas a few years before. As that market matured, he wanted to take advantage of the deregulation of electric energy in Texas. He quickly realized that his company already had many of the fundamentals that would let it manage the process of switching and billing a new electric company’s customers. His big, unanswered question: How do you find customers at attractive costs to loyally pay their bills?

The answer came from one of his collaborators, who explained that the kind of customers he wanted were exactly the kind he would find through direct selling. His friend also strongly advised him that if he were serious about direct selling, he really needed to meet with Chris Chambless, who had been one of the top managers at a telecom direct seller.

“I set up a meeting with Chris on a Friday, and he told me about the things I needed to consider,” Thompson recalls. “On Sunday I called him and said, let’s do it! When all the stars line up, things can move quickly. Right away, we started the process of building Ambit Energy.”

Bits, Bytes and Brains

Thompson became the new enterprise’s Chief Executive Officer, with Chambless as Chief Marketing Officer. Having been part of fast-growing startups, both understood the problems caused when a back office can’t keep up with demand. They committed immediately to build the finest, most-respected company in America.

“That was bold for a company with two people at that time,” Thompson says, only half joking. “But we knew that we had to be able to support what this channel is capable of generating. We had to be able to handle 10,000 new customers a day with nothing ever falling through the cracks. That’s a lot of data processing.”

They also brought in an experienced management team that had successfully launched fast-growing startups. Together, they laid the groundwork, built the compensation system, developed attractive power products and recruited their first salespeople. They invested in must-haves, such as a world-class IT system. Less important trappings, such as office furniture, literally came from Wal-Mart.

“We knew right away that it all had to do with systems and people and having the right combination of both early on,” Thompson says. “But it didn’t come without angst. We hoped we could buy great off-the-shelf systems. But we quickly found that the time required to modify the systems and the cost of modifications were unacceptable. We had to build our own from scratch. That was painful, long and exasperating. But ultimately, it has enabled us to do things that no one else in the marketplace can do. We can innovate where others can’t.”

He explains that telecommunications company MCI built its reputation on its Friends and Family program.

“That program was all software,” he says. “They developed it internally and in doing so set themselves apart from every competitor. Coming up with innovative products in our industry is all about software development.”

 

Free Energy

Ambit’s powerful software does such tasks as provide replicated, task-specific Internet sites for each customer. Yes, not only consultants, but customers, too. The sites allow existing customers to refer their friends to Ambit. When the customer refers a minimum of 15 customers who pay their bills, the original customer receives a credit on his Ambit Energy bill equal to the average amount of their payments. If the average is equal to or more than the referring customer’s bill for the month, he pays nothing. What’s more, the credit applies every month as long as the customer maintains a minimum of 15 customers who pay their bills. Quick translation: Ambit customers can get free energy.

The same software that makes the free energy possible also enables the Ambit independent consultant who enrolled that first customer to be paid on all the customers. That creates a deep layer of recurring monthly income. Some 8 to 10 percent of Ambit sales are referred by existing customers.

But Ambit wanted its customers to have an immediate positive experience with the company. It also wanted to arm its independent consultants with a strong initial “sales” point. So Ambit offers a welcome gift to customers just for enrolling. Currently, the gift is a travel voucher good for a free three-day/two-night stay at a three-star hotel. Ambit also tracks the kilowatt hours that customers use and credits customers with points toward discount travel. Cruises, airline tickets, travel packages—Ambit customers can earn points toward them every time they turn on the lights or fire up their gas cook top.

“I’ve seen a lot of companies struggle to do the basics right,” Chambless says. “That’s because they didn’t have software systems that were as fine-tuned as ours. Our systems all work flawlessly, so we can think about developing new features.”

Thompson adds, “Startups look at things a different way. They make the most innovation. They say ‘why not’ as opposed to ‘why.’ Innovation will change the way power deregulation will take place and the way consumers will use electricity.”

The approach has allowed the company to offer a customer satisfaction guarantee that it has never needed to use. It guarantees that if the customer’s transition to Ambit Energy isn’t flawless, Ambit will pay the customer’s  first bill.

Rapid Results

The bold, innovative approach is attracting both independent consultants and consumers. Although Ambit hasn’t yet celebrated its third birthday, it already has more than 200,000 energy customers, 50,000 independent consultants and 230 employees. In 2008 the company earned $197 million in revenue. It forecasts almost $400 million this year. Ambit now offers electric and natural gas services in deregulated markets of Texas, Illinois and New York.

With such rapid growth, consultant income has skyrocketed, too. The company has already paid more than $1 million to four consultants, and two of them earn more than $1 million annually. Those top earners join Ambit’s exclusive Millionaire’s Club. At the company’s annual convention, Ambition, they are recognized with a custom-tailored, gold blazer embellished with a special crest. Whether or not consultants make it into the Millionaire’s Club, all take advantage of a virtually recession-proof product: energy. After all, many people pay their electricity and gas bills even before their mortgage.

High-earning consultants who want to turn their Ambit Energy business into a full-time enterprise even have the option to say goodbye to their J-O-B without giving up their surefire health insurance. Ambit takes advantage of its Direct Selling Association membership to let consultants purchase health insurance.

“We wanted to give people who want to do the business full time an opportunity to do it,” Chambless explains. “People get in on a part-time basis because of our great compensation plan, and many get into the position where they want to work their Ambit business full time. Healthcare insurance holds them back. We were able to partner with one of the DSA-endorsed companies to make healthcare insurance available. That gives people another reason to have confidence in the company. We’ve had a favorable response.”

Doing the Right Thing

With so many features that attract consultants and customers, Ambit executives look forward to the future. The energy industry is an exciting place for a direct selling company, Thompson and Chambless believe. They’re convinced that Ambit’s innovative approach will create more millionaires, and that its impact can be significant even beyond saving customers cash and helping consultants earn extra income.

“In the energy industry we’ll eventually see electricity priced as long distance used to be priced,” Thompson predicts. “In the foreseeable future we’ll offer time-of-day pricing. That will allow people to shift their use of electricity from a high-cost time of day to a low-cost time at night. We’ll still help people save money, and as a country, we’ll be able to build fewer power plants and take advantage of our existing capacity throughout the 24-hour cycle. Old, inefficient, more polluting plants can be replaced with more modern, cleaner plants. And we’ll be right at the front of it. That will change the way the industry has operated for the last 100 years.”

Chambless says that such innovation would have far more environmental impact than carbon credits could produce. And the company’s “green” service offerings, called Ambit Certified Green plans, are certified by the Green-e Energy™ Program to reduce the environmental impact of the energy used by Ambit customers.

“We’re one of only two companies that are e-certified green,” he says. “We promote these real green products for those who are environmentally focused. Time-of-day plans work hand-in-glove with green energy. People concerned about the environment, the country’s use of natural resources and our overall use of energy will be looking for companies that can offer products that match their concerns. We’ll be one of the first to offer them. Companies that don’t have the financial stability that we have can’t make that kind of investment.”

Making the right early investments in the right things positions the company for future innovation and growth. Though Ambit is already profitable and growing, its leaders still ensure that every expenditure is the right one. Thompson jokes that it’s hard to get arrogant when you’re sitting at a $19 Wal-Mart desk.

Circling back to the early goal he established with Thompson, Chambless says, “We never said we wanted to be the biggest company. We just said we wanted to be the finest and most respected. We’re making investments that will allow us to do that. Our decisions with employees and customers are focused on that goal, too. If your actions let you be among the finest and most respected companies, you may have a chance to be one of the biggest, too.” DSN

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Daddy, the Bank Wouldn’t Cash my Paycheck
May 16th, 2010 by Anthony Cappello

Every time I speak to a prospect about my business I speak with passion about every aspect of it, both positive and negative. Yes, negative, more on that later on. But my passion comes (and yours should too) from my deep rooted reason for dedicating myself to the success of whatever it is I’m doing. You see, as a 30 plus year self employed veteran in the food business there have been many, many struggles and sacrifices that just come with the territory. One of those struggles, and unfortunately the most common, is the battle with the checkbook.

One summer day (this time of the year usually brings a little bit of checkbook relief but not in this story), on payday, my lovely teenage daughter walks into my very hot office cautiously and almost apologetically. I was sweating terribly, not so much from the heat but from trying to figure out what bills to pay first and how to cover them. It was at this moment that my daughter, at her young age still not aware of how banks work, says to me that the bank wouldn’t cash her payroll check. I would have preferred someone taking a baseball bat and hitting me across my back because it wouldn’t have hurt as much. It killed me to know that my daughter became witness to the ugly side of running a business. Being overdrawn was not an uncommon incident, but this was My Daughter !! When this occured I had been in the mlm business a few times but it wasn’t until that moment that my “why” had truly been defined. My other “why’s” were always about just the money, but this day I had discovered a much deeper “why”.

I now look back on that day, very often, as the day that my true reason for succeeding in network marketing emerged. I don’t ever want to experience that feeling in my office again. That feeling of frustration and despair, not knowing if things were ever going to change for the better.

If your considering going into this or any other business that could change your life for the better, clearly define the reasons for joining. Doing that seemingly very simple task will pay you back handsomely in the future ’for that will be the foundation on which you will build your business. Use your “why” as the fuel to feed your I-will-not-be-denied engine. A deep rooted ”why’ will also serve as your armor and shield against those who will try to destroy your dreams. 

Ambit Energy not only offers residual income, it offers generational income. How cool would it be for my daughter (and son) to one day cash All my checks from Ambit Energy long after I’m gone. Yeah, real cool. PowerOn.

Anthony Cappello

732 691 7320

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What are You Doing ?……….
Apr 21st, 2010 by Anthony Cappello

How many times have you found yourself  immersed in a conversation about how bad things are ? Could be with your spouse, your neighbor, your coworker or just a friendly chit chat on line at the supermarket or bus stop. Now if your someone who’s never had a negative philosophical moment about finances or the personal state of your own economy, then pat yourself on the back and move on for this post is not for you.

However, I’m inclined to think that just about everyone else has had many conversations about how their lives would be better or less frantic if they just had a little more of something called money. But you know what conversations get you? Right, nothing ! Oh, it could lead to more converstaions about how much you wish you had a better job, or how your kids are sucking the monetary life out of you, or something far worse like how your going to possibly save your house and credit.

What I’ve found most interesting over the years is that people LOVE to talk about their problems, but very few people actually DO something about it. Surely, lots of people get second jobs and that IS doing something. But do second jobs last forever? People get burned out quickly because they’re always reminded that in order to get ahead or stay even, they have to exhaust themselves with two jobs. And at what cost ? Personal relationships suffer. Family time dwindles.

Which brings me to my point today. What are you doing TODAY that will enhance your life in, say, 3 to 5 years from now ? What plan are you putting in place that will advance your personal and family financial situation. “Anthony, 3 years is too long to wait to start making some real money” Oh, really?? All you have to do is to think back 3 years ago and ask yourself what it was that you started back then to make your life better today. Chances are your answer is “nothing” And look what happened. 3 years just passed !!

Now don’t assume that everyone is giddy after 3 years in business. Some never make it, some make it in less time. Point is, this post isn’t about anyone but YOU. What are YOU doing today to make tomorrow better ? Is Ambit Energy your answer ? I don’t know. Reach out to me and let’s have that conversation about YOU !!

732 691 7320

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Postponing Your Future
Feb 27th, 2010 by Anthony Cappello

2/3 2010 Postponing Your Future 0 By: Joshua Freedman Three different people told me the same story last week: I’m too busy keeping my head above water to make progress on my real goals. On one hand, that’s a practical and realistic way of coping. Look, we’ve all experienced that some days we can barely tread water fast enough… and some days we sink… and on those days it’s “impossible” to put time and energy into the future. How can you invest when you can’t put bread on the table? All three had practical, legitimate reasons for “treading water,” they were not making weak excuses. There just has not been time. So that’s the “practical reality.” What about the “emotional reality”? What I noticed in all three conversations was a loss of energy and momentum. There’s an emotional cost to postponing your future, and when you’re calculating the choices of your day and week, this needs to be factored in. I suspect that when you factor in the emotional cost (in the extreme, dying a little more each day), the equation might change? You’ve likely seen this framework that Stephen Covey offers in First Things First: Covey points out that we need to avoid QIII and QIV, and shift more time to QII if we want to build the future. Good! Let’s do it!!! How? Well… that’s a problem. It’s a fabulous model, though most of us already know that we need to stop fighting unimportant fires and getting sucked into distractions… but we still do that. We’re choosing to put time in QI, QIII, and QIV, and shortchanging QII. Why? Because we’re not driven by “what we know.” We’re driven by what we feel. There’s some set of feelings boiling around this pattern of behavior pushing and pulling us. There are feelings before the choice (to shortchange QII). Then there are feelings the come immediately when we do what we’re doing instead… then there are still more feelings when we end the day saying, “*(@_!_)# another day with no time for QII.” If I can indulge in a bit of prognostication, I suspect that if your pattern is “do QI &III but miss QII” you’re feeling a mix of stressed, overwhelmed, impatient, excited, and focused (even driven). If you’re getting sucked into QIV then your feelings are likely to be bored, uncertain, distracted, lonely, or lost. Then, despite the knowledge that QII is the only way out, you still go to another quadrant, and, for the moment it feels good. If you’re QI and QIII focused, you probably get great feedback, maybe overhearing, “He’s so reliable….” “You can count on her….” If you’re escaping into QIII, you get a bit of relief. In any case, there’s a feeling payoff — an emotional benefit. What is yours? The first, and perhaps most important step, to getting out of the pattern is to recognize the emotional drivers. What’s triggering your pattern, and what payoff are you getting from it? Knowing that is not enough – you need to DO something with those feelings. That’s another article… but I’d love to hear your ideas (post a comment!) I also noticed that in these conversations, and many others – including many in my own head, there’s a refrain about being busy: “I can’t do this unless I can devote a block of time…” Many a project have lingered on my “to do” list because I told myself I didn’t have the six hours or three days or whatever to complete it. Consider this: If you had a month you could devote completely to your future, what would you do with that month? How about if you had one week? What could you do if you had one day? How about if you had five minutes? We all have time, but for most of us it’s fractured — five minutes here, and hour there. While it’s extremely challenging, somehow we have to reclaim those dribs and drabs of time and turn them into a worthy contribution. As usual, I would suggest the challenge lies not so much in the technical achievement of this end, but in the emotional transition we must undertake in order to bring the A game to these momentary matches. Survive or Thrive To conclude, here is powerful reminder from Karen McCown, Six Seconds’ Chairman: If you focus on survival, then your survival is at question; if you focus on thriving, then your survival is assured – and more is possible. Each week you have but a few discretionary hours to cash in: Will you spend or invest? ♥

 

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Success Profile…. Ray Montie
Feb 17th, 2010 by Anthony Cappello

http://www.ambition09.com/Profiles_RayMontie_media.html

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boy is this business ready to explode
Nov 9th, 2009 by vito

Hi guys ..I began doing this business to keep myself a little busy. Without too much effort it has grown to a point that I now have responsibilities to help the consultants that have started their own  ambit business. This has really become more than a passtime. I honestly believe if anyone out there is considering this business,take my advice and give yourself a 3 year horizon. You will certainly be successful. For those of you who are more eager and ambitious,you can achieve greatness in half the time.

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Don’t Let Anyone Ever Steal Your Dream
Oct 23rd, 2009 by entini

When I first saw this phrase in print I couldn’t help but stare at it over and over again. Something was bothering me about it. Then it hit me. It wasn’t the phrase itself, I got the metaphor right away. Too easy. It was the word “steal”. It should read “destroy”. Because people don’t snatch away someone else’s dreams and make them their own, they destroy them by telling them they can’t do it, or they’re wasting their time and money, or that it will never lead to anything sustainable. But WHY ?? Why would a family member or friend not support someone they love and/or respect ? Perhaps they feel the need to “save them” from mistakes ?, or is it that they are expressing their own limitations and are looking for “parity” within their circle of influence ?

Dreams are not easily destroyed when the reason(s) for those dreams are so deep rooted that no amount of negativity can yank them out. The truly determined one will use that negativity as fertilizer to help grow their “why”. When our belief system is solid enough  no attempt at cracking it will work. Haven’t you ever been so hell bent on accomplishing something, your resolve so established, that you didn’t even entertain the thought of not succeeding ? The I-will-not-be-denied attitude is very powerful, but it needs to be massaged and nurtured. We all go through life with subconscious “why’s”. We need to define them and then take action. When you find something that makes you happy, that will will advance you personal or financial future, go after it, and don’t let anyone ever destroy your dream. PowerOn.

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