Posts Tagged ‘webinar’

Holiday Health Tips for Leaders to Live By

Friday, December 19th, 2008

An essential consideration for any leader is their current state of health. Do you recall the last meeting you lead where you had a head cold, fever, sleep deprivation, worked an all-nighter, and just plain didn’t feel well? Most likely, it was much harder to make your meeting productive and get people fully engaged. It is time to add a new category here to deal directly with Leader Self-Care!

My twitter name is @headset and I’ve been posting tweets around cooking. Hardly seems like an appropriate business topic yet it plays a huge role in my self-care. Not only do I like to cook (and clean), I get to nourish my body with great food. Given that it is the Holiday Season (Merry Christmas all!), I send out a number of tweets (see below) on how to navigate the holiday parties without overloading on food, etc.

How do you take care of yourself to insure you are at the best of your mental and physical abilities when you lead meetings? Are you eating right? How about exercise? It is way to easy to neglect “important yet not urgent” things like eating, exercise, etc. How would your leadership in meetings be different if eating, proper exercise, etc. were “important and urgent”?

Here are the tweets I sent:

Healthy Holiday Tip #1: Conduct ALL food consumption negotiations BEFORE arriving. “I’ll just have one” = RED FLAG Hat tip to @pamfr (note: I gave Pam credit yet she reminded me it was not her who sparked this idea!)

Holiday Health Tip #2: RT: Join @annfry on her free holiday teleclass noon EST Dec 9, Tues

Healthy Holiday Tip #3: Cream OR sugar. Put the two together and you add weight quickly. Bummer if you love egg nog!

Healthy Holiday Tip #4: Environment is stronger than will (Bucky Fuller). Steer clear of high calorie locations and ignore testing yourself!

Healthy Holiday Tip #5: Eat a solid meal before you go to the holiday party. Fill up on the food that supports you. Do NOT go hungry!!

Healthy Holiday Tip #6: Walk for 15 minutes before you arrive at the party. Light exercise decreases appetite!

Healthy Holiday Tip #7: Alcohol gives immediate spike in blood sugar. Sweet treats look better by the minute! Dilute drinks or just water.

Were these helpful? Did they spark any ideas on how you can take better care of yourself? Any tips or suggestions you’d like to pass on to other readers? Thanks!

Posted by Byron Van Arsdale
Twitter: @headset
Author – 21 Ways to Screw Up a Teleclass
ConferenceCallTraining.com

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

Is it Time to be a Purist?

Monday, December 15th, 2008

In the effort to “break it if it isn’t broken” we sometimes roll past best practices as we experiment with new ways of doing things. The advance in technology has given us high speed downloads, iPhones, Blackberry’s, smart phones, cell phones, iPods and other mp3 players, laptops, 24/7 access to Solitaire, PDAs, email, text messages, RSS feeds, blogs, and of course, tweets! When leading a conference call or presenting your product via webinar, you might ask yourself:

“How will this (fill in the blank) piece of technology support my ability to communicate AND engage with my participants?”

People praise athletes for their ability to accomplish amazing results when they are  “in the zone.” We are not talking about consuming high quantities of Mountain Dew or Red Bull and playing Grand Theft Auto 4 for 10 hours straight! Picture Tiger Woods in competition or the Dali Lama in meditation. Your focus is only on one thing. There is no multi-tasking.

Question:

If you approached your conference call or webinar with the same single-minded focus as Tiger Woods and all of your technology was disconnected, what could you accomplish?

It would be easy to dismiss this question as a nice theoretical exercise and go right back to the status quo. So let’s make it a bit more competitive just to see who has the guts to give it a go? I challenge you to lead one call or webinar where you have no distraction from technology.

Step One: lead a conference call (or webinar, teleclass, etc.), as you would normally do so. This is to establish a firm status quo in your mind as to how you divide your attention between technology, participants, IM or text messages, and your presentation. Write down your observations including any feelings you had during the presentation.

Step Two: lead a conference call (or webinar, teleclass, etc.), with all technology off other than essentials. If you are on a conference call, put your computer to sleep, turn off cell/smart phones, and even clear your desk of everything except what is needed for the call. If you are leading a webinar, have someone else drive the presentation so you can completely focus on the participants. Again, write down your observations and feelings.

Step Three: compare and contrast your experiences from Step One and Two. What was the difference? Did cutting out all other distractions improve your ability to lead and obtain results? Was your level of self-confidence higher or lower in Step 2?

Rarely do we change our behaviors or try something new in the absence of pain or frustration. This is the silver lining of the current financial mess – status quo is completely disrupted and we have the chance to review our strategies, assumptions, and behaviors. In 2009, your ability to confidently lead great meetings via conference calls, webinars, teleclasses, and virtually is more important than ever. Congratulations for taking on any part of this exercise. Testing your skills and then growing them to meet your expectations will see you experiencing more success in leading any type of meeting.

Would a model help you understand how to lead effective phone, face-to-face, and virtual meetings? You’d be surprised at how easy it is to run great meetings.

Posted by Byron Van Arsdale
Twitter: @headset
Author – 6 Principles of Powerful Conference Calls
ConferenceCallTraining.com

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

What Conference Call Leaders Can Learn from Michael Phelps #1

Tuesday, August 26th, 2008

Congratulations to Michael Phelps for his amazing success at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. As millions watched this young man redefine both the sport of swimming and what it means to be an Olympic Athlete, trends and strategies emerged that would benefit conference call leaders. Here are two strategies to help you go for the gold when leading your conference calls, webinars, and virtual meetings.

• Intention matched with Singular Focus.
Eat, sleep, and swim was the routine. Pure focus. Oh, and he came to win.

As a conference call leader, what is your intention for your call? Move the team forward? Accomplish your agenda items? Ignite the passion of your department? Exercise control over your dominion?

Where is your focus? Scattered on other projects or fully on the call? One definite outcome for the call or many possible outcomes?

• Visualization is not enough – you have to execute.
Interviews with a number of USA athletes highlighted how they spent four years seeing themselves win the gold. Interestingly, many did not succeed. I don’t recall Michael ever talk about winning the gold. He talked a lot about training, focus, and having lots of gratitude for the people in his life. And about giving 110% throughout the race until his fingers touched the wall. An extra half stroke gave him a 1/100th of a second lead to win one gold medal.

As a conference call leader, how often does the call match your visualization? Sales professionals will often picture the flow of a conference call. Yet what makes their calls successful is the high intention (close the sale) matched with flexibility to accomplishing this outcome. Visualizing a successful outcome is important as long as you are flexible, persistent, and focused.

Your ability to execute during a conference call, webinar, or virtual meeting is directly based on your intention, focus, and visualization. Oh yea, don’t forget to eat and sleep as well!

Posted by Byron Van Arsdale
Author – 6 Principles of Learner Driven Teleclasses
ConferenceCallTraining.com

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

How to Use Conference Calls for Sales, Marketing, and Customer Service

Thursday, August 21st, 2008

At noon today, I’ll be part of a small business panel presentation titled “Sales, Marketing and Customer Service: Strategies for Profits, Growth and Results”. This event is being hosted by the Austin Chamber of Commerce and my role is to talk about using conference calls effectively when conducting sales, marketing, and customer service. Here are the tips and strategies I’ll discuss today.

As preparation, each of the three panelists came up with five tips and two questions. Here are five plus one bonus tips, three questions, and two of my favorite quotes by Peter Drucker.

Three questions:
1. What is the key to an effective conference call?
Answer: Connection

2. What is one secret all conference call leaders must know?
Answer: You are a unique leader.

3. If you could only give one tip for leading a great conference call, what would it be? Answer: Have everyone say their name first during the call.

Five plus one bonus action steps/tips:
1. Communicate/confirm/confirm/confirm: teleconference number, PIN #, date, time/time zone, and duration of the call.

2. W.A.I.T.? – Why Am I Talking? Place this on a Post-it note at eye level.

3. Arrive 3 minutes early for a conference call, 10 minutes early for a webinar.

4. Have everyone say his/her name first before speaking on every conference call and webinar you lead.

5. Always use a landline for conducting your call. Avoid speaker phones, cell phones, and VoIP like the plague!

Bonus: Completely clear your desk before each call!

Two quotes by Peter Drucker:

“The purpose of business is to create and keep a customer.”

“Because its purpose is to create a customer, your business has two purposes and two purposes only: Marketing and innovation. Marketing and innovation make you money, generate sales, produce profit. Everything else is an expense…”

Special thanks to my co-panelists: Casey Leaman, Partner at OneAccord (Sales), and Amy Stevens, Managing Partner at Marketing Edge Ventures (Marketing); our emcee Thom Singer, Business Development at vcfo, inc.; and the driving force behind the event, Dustin Woodhead, Small Business Manager at Greater Austin Chamber of Commerce.
Posted by Byron Van Arsdale
Author – 16 Secrets to a Great Conference Call
ConferenceCallTraining.com

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

Connection is the New Black in Presentations

Thursday, August 7th, 2008

It is also the Original and Future Black in any type of virtual meeting and presentation you are involved in. Special thanks to my friend and social media maven, Connie Reece or @conniereece on Twitter) for her Tweet:

conniereece Retweet @Armano: @KathySierra being a good presenter is overrated. Connecting with your audience is not. [Connie sez: amen, amen] 01:55 PM August 05, 2008 from TweetDeck

My response was simple: “connecting with your audience = good presenter. New paradigm for presenters in any medium.”

Regardless of what medium you are presenting it, virtual meeting, web meeting, conference call, teleclass, training room, keynote, team meeting, webinar, teleseminar, etc., your credibility, trustworthiness, and effectiveness will depend directly upon your ability to connect with your audience.

If you want to be a good presenter, here is your biggest secret: quit thinking about you and how you are doing.

Focus 100% of your attention on your participants and help them get the information they require to accomplish their current tasks.

As usual, what sounds simple is rarely easy to accomplish. And that is the case here. The good news (or bad news!) is that your audience will remind you over and over again that it is indeed not about you. It is about them – always has been, always will be. Take a close look at a trusted mentor or role model and you’ll find this trait present.

Oh, and for those using the “fake it until you make it” strategy, it gets harder and harder to let go of the strategy the longer you use it.

Looking for something to speed you along the path to being able to connect with any virtual or in person audience? Here are three effective options to grow your skills. Subscribe for, read, and make comments to the PowerConferenceCalls.com blog. Invest in any of the three Audio training CDs covering my 6 Principle model. For personalized service, contact me directly about working with you or your team.

You can follow me on Twitter by typing @headset in the Twitter.com home page. A little business, a little personal, always an adventure!

Posted by Byron Van Arsdale
Author – 6 Principles of Powerful Conference Calls
ConferenceCallTraining.com

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post