Posts Tagged ‘facebook’

Leaders or Doers?

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008

Working with Web 2.0 tools like Twitter.com, LinkedIn.com, Facebook.com, Ning.com, and wikis has been both challenging and enlightening. Seth Godin’s new book Tribes proposes that everyone is a leader and that your leadership is needed. (Note: Read Hugh MacLeod’s “tribes” – 10 Questions for Seth Godin interview – it is amazing!) Social Networks live and breathe based upon active interaction of the participants. Phone, face-to-face, and virtual meetings are the same – actively engaged participants make the event come alive. This leads to an interesting question.

In Social Media – you either participate and contribute to the conversations going on around you or you sit back passively reading them. What ever your “intention” is, you either do or do not engage in the process through sharing your comments, ideas, pictures, podcasts, and videos. In other words, you “do” or “do not”. It is quickly obvious in the Social Media world that Leaders are Doers. Literally, “talk” is cheap. You have to record/capture your thoughts AND post them.

On conference calls (and other types of meetings), is the same true? Are leaders also doers? Yes. When a leader imposes control over the participants, it stops the flow of creativity and engagement. Leaders that actively share and encourage others to take active roles in various parts of a project find the group much more active.

Do, or do not. There is no ‘try.’ by Jedi Master Yoda.

Start looking at your meetings as opportunities to encourage participants taking a leadership role through active engagement.

Posted by Byron Van Arsdale
Author – 16 Secrets to a Great Conference Call
ConferenceCallTraining.com

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How the Digital World is Unraveling the First Impression Syndrome

Thursday, July 17th, 2008

As the new president for the Greater Austin International Coach Federation Chapter, I’m making a point to get to know the ICF chapters in San Antonio, Houston, and Dallas/Fort Worth. I decided to attend the June 12th meeting of the San Antonio Chapter in part because the topic was Social Networking and the speaker was Jennifer Navarette. It is what happened before the meeting that has me buzzing.

As I read the bio, that one pesky word that grates on me popped up: guru. The local San Antonio paper dubbed Jennifer the “New Media Guru”. My first impression went from positive to immediately negative as soon as I read those words. Now, at this point, I know relatively nothing about Jennifer (who is very cool) and have a negative impression based ONLY on what I’m reading on one web entry and my own personal dislike for “guru”.

I emailed Connie, a trusted friend, to ask about the “guru”. After all, this was a 7:30am meeting which meant leaving Austin by 5:30am-ish. I definitely had skin in the game here. Would it be worth my time?

I also sent out a notice of the meeting to the local Austin coaches to see if anyone was interested in attending. Within hours, I had confirmation Jennifer was worth the trip: “good peeps” and she knows what she is talking about.

Here’s the path: interested in the presentation, read the flyer, immediately turned negative based on the “guru” quote, send digital query to a friend, got back glowing reviews. In the matter of a few hours, my first impression of Jennifer before I’d ever met her went from negative to positive. I walked into the meeting looking forward to hearing her presentation.

How does this apply to you and your business? People are connecting with others in online groups like LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, MySpace, Naymz, etc. You and your reputation are being established by what you do and do not do in the online world. For the solopreneurs and small businesses that rely upon the web and distance communication modes to deliver your services, your reputation PRECEDES you! Being proactive in establishing your credibility and trust through a wide range of contacts is more than important – it is essential for your success.

Question:
What do you do on a consistent basis to establish and maintain your online presence?

Posted by Byron Van Arsdale
Author – 16 Secrets to a Great Conference Call
ConferenceCallTraining.com

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