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The Mic Is On: We’re Talking Fiction Books . . .

February 13, 2007 by Liz

It’s Like Open Mic Only Different

The Mic Is On

Here’s how it works.

It’s like any rambling conversation. Don’t try to read it all. Jump in whenever you get here. Just go to the end and start talking. EVERYONE is WELCOME.
The rules are simple — be nice.

There are always first timers and new things to talk about. It’s sort of half “Cheers” part “Friends” and part video game. You don’t know how much fun it is until you try it.

We’re Talking About Books . . . What’s Your Favorite Piece of Fiction?

Fiction

We might also talk about

  • favorite authors
  • What we’re reading now
  • What we read on vacation
  • What we read as a kid
  • Whether we like mysteries, detective stories, romance, suspense, science fiction, or westerns
  • How many books we read last year
  • And, whatever else comes up,

including THE EVER POPULAR,
Basil the code-writing donkey.

–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

Open Mic 7pm Chgo Time: Let’s Talk About Fiction . . .

February 13, 2007 by Liz

Yes the Mic Will Be on Tonight

Join Us Tonight for Tues. Open Comments

The Topic is: Fiction

What is your favorite fictional book? Who is your favorite author? We can also talk about what we’re reading now, what we used to read as a kid, and everything in between. Do we like mysteries, detective stories, romance, suspense, science fiction, or westerns? Do we prefer to read online, in print, or listen to audio books? How often we read, and whatever else comes up.

Oh, and bring a link to your favorite author of fiction books.

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 Relationship Bloggers’ Conference and Networking Event

February 13, 2007 by SOBCon Authors

Join members of one of the blogosphere’s most dynamic communities as they demonstrate how you can take your blog to the next level!

Festivities start Friday, May 11th at 6:00pm with a live performance from popular songwriter, performer (and blogger!) Christine Kane.

That’s followed by the Open Mic Night Cocktail Party – a live community event, where we’ll take the conversation out of the comment box!

Saturday, May 12th starts at 8:00am. A day full of interactive presentations on publishing, design and branding, tools, analytics, social networking, marketing, and coaching — all from the perspectives of the relationship blogger and the audience.

Speakers include:

Phil Gerbyshak
Make It Great! Relationship Geek
Liz Strauss
Successful-Blog, SOB and BAD Blogger

Check out the full schedule.


Why You Should Attend!

  • LEARN how to write compelling posts that draw readers in
  • SEE how great blog design can make a difference
  • DISCOVER how analytics and other tools can help you maximize your blog’s potential
  • HEAR innovative and useful blog marketing techniques that will expand your reach and viewership
  • GAIN valuable insights on ways to use blogging as a coaching tool
  • CONNECT with other bloggers through our pre-launch activities and interactive presentations

Limited Spots Available. Sign-Up Today!

Filed Under: Blog Conference Tagged With: bc

Money Strategy, a Dead Horse, and Folks

February 13, 2007 by Liz

Three Absolutes that Belong Together

Strategic Plans logo

On every performance appraisal form I have worked with, a question has been asked about the use of financial resources. That question was an opportunity to talk about money strategy with my team of employees.

Whether we work in an office, work at home, or don’t work at all, most of us have never been formally taught how to make strategic decisions about money.

My experience is that many folks tend to make one of three global assumptions, and their choice of assumptions becomes their de facto strategy for financial decisions both at work and at home. The three global assumptions are these:

  1. Money is meant to be spent. You have to spend money to make money.
  2. Money is meant to be saved. The more you save, the more you earn.
  3. The best bet is to ask someone else — get advice, or “persmission,” from someone who knows.

All three assumptions are useful — but only when taken together.

Taken individually, the three assumptions above become absolutes without balance. When we rely on only one of three, that assumption often works the opposite from the way a strategy should. We tend to use our chosen one of the three to avoid having to think through a decision. We turn the above assumptions into rationalizations. Each one of the three keeps us tied to the belief that only some people know how to deal with money decisions, and we’re not in that group.

If we look at a decision and at each assumption, we can develop a framework for how to approach money decisions.

Sample Decision: Do I need the latest upgrade for my computer?

Money is meant to be spent.

That’s a nice thought. It’s also a nice way to empty a bank account. Fast adopters tend to favor this assumption.

Money is meant to be spent when it will give us a greater return than not spending it will.

The key here is whether the new upgrade will pay for itself in productivity, quality of life, or other tangible or intangible benefits. In circumstances such as this, here are some of the “go or no go” questions.

  • What benefits will this purchase bring me, my clients, my family? Are these benefits worth more than the purchase price?
  • Will this purchase bring me more time, more productivity, more ability to serve my clients, more efficiency, more quality of life? In other words, can I turn this purchase into money; use it to lighten my workload; or to improve or better balance my life?
  • If I wait to buy this item later, what will I lose while I wait? What opportunity am I giving up by buying this item now?
  • Do I have the cash flow to pay for this? If I’m putting this on charge card or increasing my debt, what is the real cost of what I’m buying when I include the interest and finance charges? — Are the benefits still a good return at that price?

Money is meant to be saved.

Saving money is good. So is spending it wisely. Slow adopters and folks who don’t like change — two different groups — sometimes save when they should spend. A friend of mine calls this “thinking poor.” They are often caught without the right tool for the job. This can mean more work at a lower pay rate.

I repeat, money is meant to be spent when it will give us greater return than not spending it will.

Here are some of the “go or no go” questions for folks whe are biased toward not spending.

  • If I don’t buy this now, what extra work will I be doing? What opportunity to become more efficient will I miss? Is the cash value of the opportunity greater than letting the cash stay in my account?
  • What will it cost to save the money? Would making this purchase be an investment that would gain me more time, more productivity, more ability to serve my clients, more efficiency, more quality work, more quality of life?
  • What will I lose, if I continue to put off purchasing? Am I saving money at a long-term cost?
  • Is my money just sitting in an account, when it could be working for me? If I bought new tools and equipment, would I be more efficient? If I hired part-time help, would I be able to handle more and higher-level work, or spend more time living my life?

The best bet is to ask someone else.

Actually the best advice is to be that someone else.

Money decisions are like other decisions. They require looking at options and possible outcomes. In the end, every money decision comes down to one basic premise.

Money is meant to be spent when it will give us greater return than not spending it will.

I know. I know. This is the place where you say. “Okay, Liz, the horse is dead.”

Sorry, I thought the horse was still twitching.

Truth is, if you can explain how spending money on what you want will deliver a tangible or intangible return that people care about, they will spend their money to invest in what you propose. That’s not selling, that’s helping folks reach their goals.

Solid strategy is simple and makes sense.

–ME “Liz” Strauss
If you think Liz can help with your business, your brand, or your blog, check out the Perfect Virtual Manager on the Work with Liz!! page in the sidebar.

Filed Under: Strategy/Analysis, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, Money-decisions, money-strategy, Strategic-Plans

Week of Valentines: Emmett Fox

February 13, 2007 by Liz

Enough Love

neon heart

There is no difficulty that enough love will not conquer,
no disease that enough love will not heal,
no door that enough love will not bridge,
no wall that enough love will not throw down,
no sin that enough love will not redeem . . .

It makes no difference how deeply seated may be the trouble,
how hopeless the outlook, how muddled the tangle,
how great the mistake. A sufficient realization of love will dissolve it all.

If only you could love enough, you could be the happiest and
most powerful being in the world . . .

Thanks, Stormy Weather, this has been a favorite since college.

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Filed Under: Successful Blog, Writing Tagged With: bc, Emmett-Fox, Love, Stormy-Weather, Week-of-Valentines

Business Rule 6: Who Dropped the Paddle?

February 12, 2007 by Liz

Can This Canoe Be Saved?

Business Rules Logo

The scene is an executive meeting. The characters sitting around the table are the best team of people I’ve ever worked with — they have the highest core competencies and know the business we are in, which unfortunately, is darned unusual. I “sat” on the table inside the black telephone that looked like a spaceship, patched in from Califormia. I had already learned the OZ-like power of the black box by then.

As a company we were fighting the uphill battle of trying to reverse a decline. We were determined not only to show a profit in six months, but to buy our way out of the bank covenants that were tying our hands.

The company ran on a direct mail model much like Lands™ End. The market was schools and educational institutions. The question on the table that day was whether to make one huge catalog drop for the most important fall release or to hold back some money and do a second release in January. Some of us suspected that if fall didn’t work, there wouldn’t be a January. The owners were looking for progress.

I was new to direct mail and in the spaceship on the table, so I walked around my backyard listening in. The longer I walked, the more the conversation went deeper into what had gone wrong in the past. The history was informative as background for the decision. But an hour later, the discussion was still on the history.

I was in California. I had run out of backyard to explore.

“Excuse me,” I said. They had forgotten about me in the spaceship again. I measured my words and spoke with some urgency. “When you’re in a canoe and about to go over a waterfall, NOW is NOT the time to discuss WHO DROPPED THE PADDLE.”

I still smile to think of the Director who answered with a laugh, “Is it a BIG waterfall?”

“YES, . . . and there are LIONS and TIGERS below it, WAITING at the bottom!”

That meeting became known in company folklore as “The Famous Canoe Analogy.”

The President called me an hour later to say thank you for stopping the history telling. The story still comes up when we get together.

Sometimes the obvious is the hardest thing to see, especially when we are a part of it. In this case they had forgotten Basic Business Rule # 6:

Focusing on the past can’t fix the future. Focusing on the future might.

We had decided to put all of our strength into that fall catalogue. We made that decision in 10 minutes flat. The decision paid off. We won the bet. We finished the year with 3% growth in an industry that was showing 3% growth, after our own company had suffered three years of 10% decline.

That was also the day that my favorite CFO decided that I talk best in stories and sound bytes. He still doesn’t know I write much better than I talk. (A girl has to have some secrets from a CFO.)

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

Related
Business Rule 5: Never Underestimate the Power of a Voice on the Telephone
Business Rule 4: You Know Your Truth — Listen to Yourself
Business Rule 3: In PRM, the First Test Always Outweighs the Final

Filed Under: Business Life, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, Business-Rules, focusing-on-the-future, Rules-They-Dont-Teach-in-Business-School

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