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Open Mic 7pm Chgo Time: Let’s Talk About Art!

April 17, 2007 by Liz

Yes the Mic Will Be on Tonight

Join Us Tonight for Tues. Open Comments

We’re Talking About Art!

Let’s talk about ART. What makes it art? How do you know it’s art? Graphic design, photography, ceramics, weaving, welding, spin art, calligraphy, graffiti, concrete, flower arranging, art therapy, music, cinema, theatre, architecture, poetry, dance, modern, renaissance, gothic, folk, fine, painting, drawing, sculpture, stained glass, blown glass, calligraphy, art history, art fairs, art galleries, art in the park, and anything else that comes up.

Art isn’t what you hang on a refrigerator.

Don’t drink and draw.

Oh, and bring a link about art to share, if you have one.

The rules are simple — be nice.

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Related article
What is Tuesday Open Comment Night?

Filed Under: Blog Comments, Community, Links, Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Outside the Box, SOB Business, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, blog_promotion, discussion, letting_off_steam, living-social-media, Open_Comment_Night

A Day of Silence — April 30

April 17, 2007 by Liz


Virginia Tech

The doctor remarked it was unusual — a 5-day old boy circumsized, who only gave a shout and then stayed silent all day . . . But lucky for us, he was never silent about his joy or his laughter. Lucky for all of us, he learned that not to be silent mattered.

My son graduates in May, just down the road from Virginia Tech. Just a few miles away, some silence that some other parents hear now won’t go away ever. . . . It’s silence that follows a noise — a despicable human act. It’s the pain of silence from all who died and heard by all who knew them. It’s the silence of thoughts of what might have been.

It’s the deep, piercing sadness of taking children from their parents and from the world they lived in. . . . it’s the deep, screaming hurt that made some poor soul do what no young child ever aspires to doing.

All of space is infinitely silent.

One Day of Silence

Silence can say more then a thousand words.

This day shall unite us all about this unbelievable painful & shocking event and show some respect and love to those who lost their loved ones.

On April 30th 2007, the Blogosphere will hold a One-Day Blog Silence in honor towards the victims of Virginia. 33 died at the US college massacre.

The Blogosphere is in deep mourning.

All you have to do is spread the word about it and post the graphic on your blog on 30th April 2007. No words and no comments. Just respect and empathy.

You can copy a badge, big or small for your blog at OneDayBlogSilence.com

One Day Blog Silence


One Day Blog Silence

For every child in pain,
for every child that we cherish,
for everyone on the planet,
sometimes the conversation should be

silent.

Liz's Signature

Filed Under: SOB Business, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, OneDayBlogSilence.com

Bloggy Question 45: Take a Long Look

April 16, 2007 by Liz

In what way might this represent a blog?

Ocean Shore

Do you even think that it does?

–ME “Liz” Strauss
Are you going to SOBCon 07?

Related articles
Bloggy Question 44: Stay Out of My Life!
Bloggy Question 43: Love or Money?
Bloggy Question 42: Responding to Comments
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Bloggy Question 40: Um er . . . Your Enthusiasm Is Killing Our Ebook

Filed Under: Bloggy Questions, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, blog-promotion, blogging-hypothetical-question, blogging-life, Bloggy-Questions, personal-branding, problems

Black Belt Business Intuition

April 16, 2007 by Liz

Adam Kayce Has Something on His Mind

Adam Kayce at Monk At Work is teaching a workshop that starts next week. It’s unique and interesting.

Great Find: Black Belt Business Intuition workshop at Monk At Work

Great Find: Black Belt Business Intuition workshop at Monk At Work

Permalink: http://www.monkatwork.com

Target Audience: Small business folks wanting to develop their intuitive abilities

Content: Adam, a professional intuitive for the past ten years, is teaching a tele-workshop to help you grow your intuition, so you can use it in your work. Everything from decision-making to understanding your clients’ needs to strategizing… you name it. And it’s not just about hunches or quick flashes, but asking detailed questions and getting detailed answers in return. Click the title to go the the workshop page.

Black Belt Business Intuition

If you want a chance to see what it’s about check out the free webinar on Wednesday.– The Key to Knowing Your Purpose

Thanks, Adam.

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Filed Under: SOB Business, Successful Blog Tagged With: Adam-Kayce, bc, Black-Belt-Business-Intuition, The-Key-to-Knowing-Your-Purpose

10 Great Traits to Look for in Managers and Clients

April 16, 2007 by Liz

What to Look for Before You Start

Business Rules Logo

So we meet for the first time, and we think we want this job or project. Sometimes we get so involved in proving ourselves worthy, we forget to look at the person we might be working with (or for) until after the project has started.

Whoa! If only we would slow down. A longer look before we jump into a relationship can often save so much heartache and time — yes even money — later. Just a longer look might change our mind about how much we want this job and the manager or client who comes with it.

10 Things to Look for in Managers and Clients

Managers and clients. They’re people too — human as we are — replete with our great qualities and our great . . . ahem . . . tiny . . . things that need working on. Every one of us has ’em. Some go better together than others, that’s all.

When it comes right down to it, we can spend more time with managers and clients than we do with our family and friends. Managers and clients have an impact on the quality of our lives. So it makes sense to make sure that they are the sort of people we work well with. Here are 10 great traits to look for in managers and clients when you’re deciding whether you want that job.

  1. They already know who they are. A great manager or client is self-aware. You can talk frankly about what you do, what’s going wrong and right, without needing to preface or sugarcoat what you have to say. They look at the work. They look at you. They look at the big picture, their boss, and the market without using that information to define who they are.

  2. They listen actively. When you speak, they hear what you say and what you mean. They ask questions to be sure that they understand. They are curious about your ideas and your view point, because they know listening is one of the most powerful tools available to them.

  3. They are “the guide on the side, not the sage on the stage “ When they model or teach, it’s by telling stories or by participating with authentic curiosity and willingness to share.

  4. They don’t add too much value. They know when it’s someone else’s turn. Sometimes they don’t attend a meeting or don’t lead a discussion because they know that they can douse a fire by adding too much fuel.

  5. They respect the intuitive detail of those who do the work. Great managers know that those who live the work on a daily basis take in information and perceptions at every level. Those managers and clients realize that there’s a wealth of experience to be tapped if the right questions are asked. They also know that sweeping general decision they might make can disregard something hidden in that intuitive detail.

  6. They stand outside the process as much as they can. Great managers know that if they participate in the thinking, then there is no one outside of it to serve as a check. They have learned to hold the bigger picture to balance the folks who have the intuitive detail.

  7. They offer new perspectives and paradigms. When the going gets rough, great managers know what to say to get things back on track. They restore the vision by re-aligning the perspective that may have gone off track. They offer new paradigms when folks get stuck in problem thinking.

  8. They hold folks accountable with both head and heart. Great managers hold us all accountable for our professional behavior — in process, communication, personal, and interpersonal skills. That is a promise of a team well led and a project done well.

  9. They understand the business they are in. This may sound obvious but, if they don’t understand the business they are in, those above don’t matter, because we’ll all run out of money and have to find other jobs.

  10. Great managers understand that all people including themselves can only do what is humanly possible. They know that as long we can say that no one is going to die and we’re still going to eat tomorrow we are indeed lucky.

So the next time we go in for that job or that project, we might review this list from the bottom to the top and jot a few questions of our own. After all, a good fit saves everyone time and heartache and lots of other things you can count on a spreadsheet, that on a sunny morning don’t seem to mean nearly as much.

–ME “Liz” Strauss
Check out the Work with Liz!! page in the sidebar.

Are you coming to SOBCon 07?

Related
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Business Rule 7: Sound Bytes, Stories, and Analogies
Business Rule 6: Who Dropped the Paddle?

Filed Under: Business Book, Business Life, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, Business-Rules, Managers-and-Clients, Rules-They-Dont-Teach-in-Business-School

Bloggy Question 44: Stay Out of My Life!

April 15, 2007 by Liz

Worse than a Scraper

For those who come looking for a short, thoughtful read, a blogging life discussion, or a way to gradually ease back into the week. I offer this bloggy life question. . .


You know the problem of people stealing your content. You’ve even handled that before. Every time you found a blog with your content, you’ve managed to sleuth enough to get an address or phone number, some sort of contact where could knock the door. Then you’ve made it clear that the content question MUST come down or you will alert the authorities of the theft. And lucky you, it’s gone your way every time.

But this time it’s different, because the content is totally rewritten. Only it mirrors what you write. Even the title of the blog is Echo Your Blog. Now they’ve started picking up the same stock images and sometime even the occasional family photo or photo of you and your friends.

It’s not only creepy. It’s begun to feel like you have a stalker not a fan.

How do you respond?

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Related articles
Bloggy Question 43: Love or Money?
Bloggy Question 42: Responding to Comments
Bloggy Question 41: The Junior High Sleep Over
Bloggy Question 40: Um er . . . Your Enthusiasm Is Killing Our Ebook
Bloggy Question 39: It’s My Presentation . . . What’s the One Thing?
Bloggy Question 38: You’ve Just Won a New Design!

Filed Under: Bloggy Questions, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, blog-promotion, blogging-hypothetical-question, blogging-life, Bloggy-Questions, personal-branding, problems

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