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Cool Tool Review: GiveForward & ChipIn

May 6, 2010 by Guest Author

Todd Hoskins Reviews Tools for Small Business

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Todd Hoskins chooses and uses tools and products that could belong in a small business toolkit. He’ll be checking out how useful they are to folks who would be their customers in a form that’s consistent and relevant.

Cool Tool Review: GiveForward & ChipIn
A Review by Todd Hoskins

It’s difficult to ask for money. Whether it’s making a pitch to an investor, raising funds for a cause, or getting through a personal financial crisis, it’s uncomfortable and humbling to look someone in the eye with open hands and say, “Please.”

I missed out on a class trip to England years ago because I couldn’t sell enough pizza discount cards. Door-to-door pleading was not as effective as I hoped, so I went to school while my schoolmates went to Buckingham Palace. Lesson learned. Money is more easily earned.

Thank you, Tim Berners-Lee for the Internet, which in addition to providing knowledge, community, and a living for many of us, the WWW makes fundraising a whole lot simpler.

There are two primary reasons a business would want to raise funds online. First, as an alternative to sourcing angel investments. Grandpa and your rich friend Gretchen could indeed be angels, giving you the head start to get a business up and running, or reach the next phase of growth. In the world of peer-to-peer financing, Prosper has been democratizing business investments for over four years now. If you have friends and family who support your initiative, why not avoid the cost and hassle of interest rates and term sheets?

The second reason a business would get into fundraising is to bring awareness and money to a cause. It’s a good business practice (and human practice) to be charitable. Donating time and/or funds to a community development project, for example, ties a business to the community. It’s also appropriate to announce, “We care about this. Want to help?”

There are two tools I recommend that can help you ask for help. GiveForward and ChipIn are both simple and inexpensive, serving slightly different purposes.

GiveForward features a page. ChipIn features a widget. If you need to tell a story, make a case, provide some background, and allow comments, then GiveForward is the right choice. If you’re hoping to receive single donations in the hundreds or thousands of dollars, GiveForward is going to provide more peace of mind to the donor.

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ChipIn is better used for “crowdfunding,” encouraging your reader base or network to chip in a few dollars. It works with PayPal. The widget is not pretty, but it’s very visible on your blog or site.

Summing Up – Is it worth it?

Enterprise Value: 2/5 – some custom development would be appropriate for larger businesses

Entrepreneur Value: 3/5 – show your passion, whether it’s for your business or a cause

Personal Value: 4/5 – for soliciting or researching donations, sites like GlobalGiving and GiveForward are important

Filed Under: Tools Tagged With: bc, ChipIn, GiveForward, LinkedIn, Todd Hoskins

My Fear-Less Thank You to the Real Heroes of SOBCon

May 5, 2010 by Liz

It’s Only Started

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SOBCon2011 (April 28-May1, 2011) has started already started. Wow! Never too soon to get good things going toward the sky.

Sometimes I get things in the wrong order.

So many wonderful comments exchanged on Twitter, so many hugs and handshakes, so many requests for “When do we get to do this again?” that I didn’t breathe long enough to say a proper “thank you.”

I’m sorry.

I personally thank you.

As I stop to breathe and reflect, the overwhelming feeling is gratitude. Tears fill my eyes thinking of you and the barn we raised this year.

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Sending a peaceful beach and bottle of champagne to you.

You see, Terry and I both agree that it’s really you — all of you — sponsors, speakers, panelists, and participants who make it all work. It’s in the way you believe in us and believe in each other.

It’s in your eyes, your smiles, and in the way you refuse to let anyone fail.

Every year, we all find ourselves wondering, just a little stunned at how it all came together to be something bigger than all of us.

We learned, we lead, we inspired each other.

I wasn’t the same person before I started connecting with you. I marvel at the ways you all have improved me, bring the best out of me, and choose to see the best in me. … kind of like Terry, Lorelle, and my family.

You’ve softened my rougher edges to make me a little more like you.

I’m proud of what we’ve made.
But don’t think for a second that it could have been done without you.

You are the heroes.

Congratulations!
And thank you.

Please value you what you’ve made and make it even more now.

I love you,

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Filed Under: Community, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, LinkedIn, thank-you

Your Blog Is Your Stage, But Who’s In The Audience?

May 5, 2010 by Guest Author

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By Terez Howard

You’ve rehearsed your lines. You’ve completed the finishing touches on your costume. The curtain rises, and you see an audience anticipating a five-star performance. Do you recognize the faces looking back at you?

Bloggers have a reason for blogging. They blog to share what’s going on in their personal and professional lives. They blog to promote their products or a service. They blog to express their opinions. Most often, bloggers write in the hopes of creating a reaction.

Who has a ticket to your show?

Here are some general groups of people that take a ticket to blogs:

  • Relatives
  • Friends
  • Potential customers
  • Returning customers
  • Business associates
  • Yourself (You write for you)

Have you chosen a group to write for? I don’t care who holds the ticket, as long as someone is reading what I write. Getting readers to follow your blog can be challenging, and in a state of desperation, you might say that you’d be satisfied with any human being capable of discerning the English reading your blog. If you want a follower to stay for the duration of the show, then not any Tom, Dick or Harry will do.

Look at it this way. You blog for a reason. Let’s say that you blog in the hopes that visitors will click on a link to buy your book on potty training boys under 2. You might be happy to see a comment from your grandmother’s Bingo partner or your son’s 10-year-old buddy. Yes, they might spread the word, but these people are not going to buy your book.

You don’t hand out tax advice or Xbox cheat codes on your potty training blog, even though that Bingo player would love to know how she can get more money back and that pre-teen wants to defeat Tomb Raider. You must stick to topic.

Know your audience

You must establish who your audience is and what they want. Returning to the previous example, you are writing to parents, and not just any parents. You specifically write for parents who have boys under the age of 2 and want to start potty training them.

You blog potty training tips that may or may not be included in your book, how to handle temper tantrums, spirited toddler boys, how to raise a happy toddler boy and throw in your personal stories. These parents will be interested in what you have to say and possibly interested in purchasing your book.

Notice that not all the topics I listed are directly related to potty training. They would, however, be subjects of interests to your audience.

Hone in on a specific group. In my example, I used parents of boys under the age of 2. One blogging professional markets to females ages 21 to 45 looking to start a small business. Another blogger writes to relatives on her mother’s side to post updates on annual family reunions. The better you know exactly who you’re writing for, the better chance you will have at retaining readers.

Sit in the front row of your show

Take a moment to get off the stage and sit yourself in one of those cushy theater chairs. Think about what your audience wants to take away from your blog. What would you want to know if you were them?

You’re audience will applaud your blog if it fills a need, satisfies a want or just pleases curiosity. Who knows? Your words could merit a standing ovation.

Who sits in your blog’s audience?

—
Terez Howard operates TheWriteBloggers, a professional blogging service which builds clients’ authority status and net visibility. She regularly blogs at Freelance Writing Mamas . You’ll find her on Twitter @thewriteblogger

Thanks, Terez!

–ME “Liz” Strauss
Work with Liz on your business!!

Filed Under: Successful Blog, Writing Tagged With: bc, blogging, LinkedIn, Terez Howard

The 3 Most Compelling Strategies for Starting a Community

May 4, 2010 by Liz

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When we discover new tools, new ideas, and new people, our first inclination is to notice the differences and look for patterns there. We notice the people who dress differently from us, but the same as each other and try to figure out what they have in common. That’s how we learn the difference between all of the shades of blue and green, it’s called constructivism. It’s about “constructing” our understanding of the world.

Each of us generates our own “rules” and “mental models,” which we use to make sense of our experiences. Learning, therefore, is simply the process of adjusting our mental models to accommodate new experiences. –Constructivism

We do it well as a child, because our brains are wired to be constantly constructing and reconstructing. Once we’ve accumulated a database of knowledge, though, we’re not as good. Too often we construct new models without reflecting on the models and experiences that already serve us.

Yet if we want to build on concrete and know what we know deeply, we can’t forget what we already know.

The 3 Most Compelling Strategies for Starting a Community

Recently I’ve stepped alongside my dad’s story to look at it from the outside as a business case. In doing that I’ve come to realize that everyone — even me — has been focusing on what’s different between the online and offline cultures. Yet, to build community, it’s what’s the same that counts.

Last Friday at SOBCon, I suggested that three strategies are important to start a community that will grow. And they’re all things I learned by looking at how my dad grew his business.

  1. Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain.

    The little man behind the curtain didn’t fix Dorothy’s problem, but it wasn’t until the little man behind came out and talked to Dorothy that she started going in the right direction. A relationship happened.

    Solutions are what fuels the search engines. They’re what brings customers and keeps them. Solutions focus us and give us purpose. It used to be location, location, location, if you wanted to be found. Now it’s solution, solution, solution.

    The person who will build a thriving community online is the one who can do that offline too.

  2. Let your business have 27 surrogate parents.
    I used to say there were 27 people who thought they were my surrogate parents. When I was little, they would point to their photos on the wall in his saloon — next to mine and my brothers’ photos — and they’d tell me the stories of and the roles they played in events that happened in my father’s saloon. The walls were flickr in 3-D.

    Every dance recital and graduation, my dad would buy something like 27 tickets. After the event, those friends would meet my family at the saloon and we’d all walk over to the best restaurant in town.

    After dinner, my dad would write the name of every person who worked at the restaurant on a pad of paper and then he’s put a number by each one. When he paid, the bill he tipped all of them.

    When I got older I asked him why he did that. It had to be expensive to be so generous every time I got an A on my report card. He said, “Babydoll, they work hard. I want to acknowledge that. I’m their customer now. Some will tell their families. Some won’t. At 10pm when the restaurant closes a few will walk back over to the saloon to say “thank you” and buy a drink. That’s good too.”

    Never forget your core fans. Make them your heroes and let them see the hero in you.

  3. Raise a barn, don’t build a coliseum. Start small.

    Have you heard the story of WordPress?

    It started when Matt Mullenweg asked a simple question about a broken and neglected journaling system. He said something like, “I think we can do better than this. Does anyone want to help?”

    WordPress started in 2003 with a single bit of code to enhance the typography of everyday writing and with fewer users than you can count on your fingers and toes. Since then it has grown to be the largest self-hosted blogging tool in the world, used on millions of sites and seen by tens of millions of people every day.

    Everything you see here, from the documentation to the code itself, was created by and for the community.

    The Word Press community has become hundreds people, hundreds of WordCamps where they meet yearly, thousands of lines of code that runs tens of millions of blogs. The enterprise version of WordPress serves 21 Popular Brands and every US government agency except the TSA.

    The community that helps build WordPress learns by doing that, feels ownership, and protects what they’ve built.

    If you let them build it, bring their friends pitch in.

  4. Starting a community is as easy as 1, 2, 3 — Choose the compelling strategies and the community will feel they belong. All three add up to investing in the people you want to serve. And as Steve Farber says,

    Do what you love in service to the people who love what you do.

    What attracts you to a community?

    –ME “Liz” Strauss
    Work with Liz on your business!!

    Buy the Insider’s Guide to Online Conversation.

    I’m a proud affiliate of

    third-tribe-marketing

Filed Under: Community, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, Community, LinkedIn

How to Raise a Barn in a Weekend

May 3, 2010 by Liz

SOBCon2010

sobcon-vmc

Stunned and staring at my screen. Fingers resting on my keyboard. I walk around to find out what I’m thinking …

Last Friday morning at SOBCon2010, we looked at our hands and considered all the ways we use them to communicate — all the information and feelings that we pass through them.

Today my voice is gone and my two pairs of glasses still qualify as 1. lost and 2. broken. My head and heart are filled with meaning. Yet my fingers aren’t feeling so eloquent.

Sometimes words are inadequate. I trust you’ll read the spaces between them this time.

Wish more than anything I could reach through my computer to shake a few more hands, to underscore an idea, to give one more hug or handshake while a taxi was waiting.

How to Raise a Barn in a Weekend

Raising a barn can’t be done by one person. In fact, it helps to start with a truly committed and generous partner … one who will sing if he needs to … even when an executive from a leading business website and verified platinum-selling rockstar are in the room.

At SOBCon2010, we offered an invitation, an excuse, a reminder to “raise a barn” of ideas, strategies and tactics and a 150 incredible people laid aside their self-consciousness and invested the time of their life to be there — for some it was easier, for some not so much so. It takes practice to be fear-less.

People came together in unexpected combinations.

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Barn raising is a noble investment.

If you’re wondering how you might raise a barn, it’s been my experience that raising a barn is easier if you …

  1. Show up in spades. Be there. Gather everything you might be, everything you might offer, and all you believe.
    No barn was ever raised by, for, or with someone who didn’t invest, want, and already see one.
  2. Bring a simple plan and a people-centered process. Support and encourage expression, participation, and creativity. Don’t five undue attention to nonparticipants. Some folks need to find their own way in … Instead be attractive.

    Getting started is the hardest part. Make it the easiest.

  3. Fill the quest with quality. Have the best leaders, the best tools, the best food, the best places to think, talk, work and relax.

    Live the vision. Don’t just talk about it.

  4. Know, love, and trust the people who are investing. Welcome everyone who came to contribute. Let them know they are valued. Leave room in the plan for positive mutations. Let people be smarter, than you are.

    Realize and recognize that every act of generosity goes both ways.

  5. and when the barn is almost finished …

  6. Give back, give forward. Take action that keeps the momentum. Work in full gratitude by, for, and with everyone who participated to celebrate what’s been raised. Find ways to help them pass on the experience and insights they gained to those who could use them.

    Imprint every learning by inviting every learner to be a hero and a teacher.

  7. sobcon2010-day-3-by-adrants

Thank you to every sponsor for looking acting and investing right with us. Thank you to the presenters, who delivered the content as members of the audience. Thank you to every person who helped us build more than we imagined. It will take a while to unpack the complete value of your contribution.

Without your fearless participation, we might be remembering a meeting.

Instead we built meaning. We saw, heard, and understood each other.

And

Damn it’s fun to take your brain out to play in a roomful of smart people!!

No wonder I keep staring at my screen.

You have changed my life.

Can’t wait to do it again!

–ME “Liz” Strauss
Work with Liz on your business!!

Filed Under: Community, SOB Business, Successful Blog Tagged With: barnraising, bc, LinedIn, SOBCon2010

Thanks to Week 236 SOBs

May 1, 2010 by Liz

muddy teal strip A

Successful and Outstanding Bloggers

Let me introduce the bloggers
who have earned this official badge of achievement,

Purple SOB Button Original SOB Button Red SOB Button Purple and Blue SOB Button
and the right to call themselves
Successful Blog SOBs.

I invite them to take a badge home to display on their blogs.

muddy teal strip A

both-sides-of-the-table

suite101

fitarella

the-mediation-times

reputation-defender

They take the conversation to their readers,
contribute great ideas, challenge us, make us better, and make our businesses stronger.

I thank all of our SOBs for thinking what we say is worth passing on.
Good conversation shared can only improve the blogging community.

Should anyone question this SOB button’s validity, send him or her to me. Thie award carries a “Liz said so” guarantee, is endorsed by Kings of the Hemispheres, Martin and Michael, and is backed by my brothers, Angelo and Pasquale.

deep purple strip

Want to become an SOB?

If you’re an SO-Wanna-B, you can see the whole list of SOBs and learn how to be one by visiting the SOB Hall of Fame– A-Z Directory . Click the link or visit the What IS an SOB?! page in the sidebar.

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Filed Under: SOB Business, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, blog-promotion, SOB-Directory, SOB-Hall-of-Fame, Successful and Outstanding Blogs

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