Write an article based on this "Ask your customers that they refer your business to friends and family. Offer incentives. Make the process simple.  Consider running a promotion to ask for referrals."
article: This is particularly important when you know you have made the customer extremely happy. Make it a part of your follow-up routine to ask customers for referrals. Call, email or send a postcard to customers to ask about their experience with your business and, if they are satisfied, ask that they refer your business to a friend. A great way to get your customers to give your business referrals is by giving them an incentive to do so. This could be a discount off their next purchase, a freebie item, or a small cash refund. For example: If you own a nail salon, you may offer a deal where if a customer tells her friend to go to your business, and the friend tells you the customers name, the customer who gave the referral will get her next manicure for free. The less you require the customer to do in order to send you a referral, the more referrals you will get. Try handing out tickets that customers can fill out with their name and contact information and give to the people they are referring, who will then return them to you. Approach the  referral promotion like a sales campaign. Advertise the referral promotion, specify a time period and offer advanced incentives during that time period. Make sure that all of your current customers know about the promotion by putting posts up on social media pages, hanging posters in the windows, and passing out flyers.

Write an article based on this "Identify areas of exaggeration or caricature. Pay attention to how stereotypes are used. Read all dialogue and captions and see how they work with the imagery."
article: Cartoonists will often exaggerate or distort certain people, places, or other elements of the drawing, either to make something easily recognizable or to make a point. First, identify what aspects have been exaggerated or distorted. Then, ask yourself why the artist might have made that decision. Many political cartoonists will include caricatures of well-known politicians, which means they’ll exaggerate their features or bodies for humor, easy identification, or to emphasize a point. For example, an artist might make an overweight politician even larger to emphasize their greed or power. A cartoonist might use recognizable stereotypes in the cartoon, either to help the reader identify them or to call them out as offensive and outdated. Try to look at these stereotypes from an academic standpoint, even if they feel hurtful or offensive. How is the artist using or playing off of the stereotype? Why did they choose to use it in this way? For example, the stereotype of a fat man in a suit often stands for business interests. If you’re analyzing a historical political cartoon, take its time period into account. Was this kind of stereotype the norm for this time? How is the artist challenging or supporting it? There won’t be much text in a political cartoon, but what is there can really help you decipher the issue and message. Read the text carefully and ask yourself how it clarifies or complicates the images you see.

Write an article based on this "Select and prepare a food to spiralize. Choose your blade. Insert the blade into your spiralizer. Put in your food to be spiralized. Spin the crank to spiralize your food."
article:
You can spiralize nearly any vegetable or fruit that will fit in the food attachment of your spiralizer. Pick the food you wish to spiralize, clean it thoroughly under cool running water, and pat dry the food with a paper towel or a clean dishrag. Some food you might consider spiralizing:  Vegetables: zucchini, sweet potatoes, cucumbers, squash, onions, cabbage, and more. Fruits: apple, pear, plantain, and more. Most spiralizers come with three different blades, each of which spiralize your food differently. More advanced spiralizers may have more blades, and less advanced ones may only have a single blade. Generally, you can expect to find:  A noodle blade. This will cut the food in your spiralizer to the thickness of a normal sized spaghetti noodle. A spiral blade. This attachment is excellent for curly fires and will cut your food at about the thickness of bucatini noodles. A ribbon blade. This blade creates a delicate ribbon spiral out of your food. If you're planning on using veggies in a salad, this attachment works well. To correctly and safely insert your blade into your spiralizer, you should follow its usage instructions. However, for most models, this involves sliding your chosen blade attachment into a slot until it locks into place.  Some models may click when the blade is locked in place. Even if you don't feel a click, be sure the blade is firmly in place. Use care whenever handling your blades or whenever a blade is in your spiralizer. These are very sharp, and can cut you easily. Depending on the model of spiralizer you own, the food attachment may be oriented up and down or side to side. In most cases, the food attachment will consist of a plastic arm, with the blade side of the arm having spikes to hold your food in place and the opposite side of the arm having a crank. At this point, your food should be held between the blade side of the arm and the blades. You may need to cut the ends off your food to make it fit better in the attachment. As you turn the crank and wind your food, the blades of your spiralizer will shave ribbons or noodles of the food free. Some models may emit the noodles into a storage container, but if yours lacks this feature, you may want to set out a bowl or container to catch and store your spiralized food.