Atlantaevent.com NewsFlash - Is Integrity Down the Drain?
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Series
Y2K+5
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Integrity is not
a word, it is a lifestyle.
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May 03 ,
2005
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Intro From Jeff
Glaze

Jeff Glaze
Editor

"Buy my
eye-opening ebook!" from Jeff Glaze, The editor of
AtlantaEvent.com
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If you are visually impaired and would like a larger
font, Click
Here!
Greetings from
Jeff,
It is computer virus time again! Not that viruses are
not always there, but I started getting a lot of email last night
around 6 PM that had attachments - viruses from all kinds of strange
email addresses. Each of them appeared to be from a source of
authority, as if from a web site or internet service of importance.
Problem is, I never use those services.
It reminds me of a saying. "I am not as stupid as I think you
look".
I am not saying that people who would be fooled by such a tactic are
stupid. I am saying that it is evident that the run-of-the-mill virus
hacker thinks we are really stupid that at this point we would actually
believe that these are legitimate emails.
Let me add here, if you are not using virus protection yet, it is time
to get some. Not all of the viruses out there require you to launch a
program or open a file before they attack your computer. Virus
protection is a lot cheaper than losing ALL of the data on your hard
drive, that is for sure.
So at this point, my frustration lies in the task of having to delete
email after email. One strange thing though. Today was the day that my
subscription to Norton Anti virus expired! Of course I renewed it, but
it seems a bit strange that the night before it expired, I was
inundated with virus emails. A coincidence?
OK do not confuse me with conspiracy fanatics but is it not strange
that it would happen that way? What about the grassy knoll, are there
really ufos and the government is trying to cover it up? Is Osama Bin
Laden really living in a secret government bunker in Washington
DC?
WAIT A MINUTE! I am not losing it.
I just wanted to send a warning to all of you. The virus attacks are
back. Be prepared or be sorry.
Be sure to plan to attend the Atlanta Business Mixer this month. (see
below). The day has been moved to the third Thursday because of the
Memorial Day holiday. We had over 150 people attend in April, it is
time for you to stop in and meet the crowd.
These
Sections Of AtlantaEvent.com Have Been Updated Recently:
New listings are signified by this symbol:
>
New listings this week can be found on these pages:
Daily Event Calendar
Networking Groups
Community Groups
Special
Interest Groups
If your business event or organization is not listed, add it by clicking on the
links .
Submit articles here and feedback here.
Thanks for
subscribing and be sure to tell others about AtlantaEvent.com!
Jeff Glaze - Editor
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Mix, Mingle and Make Business
Contacts
AtlantaEvent.com &
AtlantaBusinessCalendar.com present
The Atlanta Business
Mixer
Mark Your Calendar!
Thursday May 19 ~ 5 to 8
p.m.
Click Here For Complete
Details
Copeland's
3365 Piedmont Rd. ( just west of Peachtree St.)
Complimentary hors
d'oeuvres ~ Cash Bar
Admission: $5 at the door ~ No Reservations Required
Membership not required
Free Validated Parking (three hours)
Display Tables & Sponsorships Available ~ Call (678)
508-5975
Bring plenty of Business
Cards!
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Feature Article
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The Lean, Mean Profit
Machine
By Susan Friedmann, CSP
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That’s what every
company wants to be, especially now when stock markets worldwide are
falling and threats of recession loom large on every horizon.
Management is being urged to ‘cut the fat’. Many
times the powers that be interpret this to mean eliminating staff
training programs and drastically cutting marketing. But
they’re making a mistake. Instead of trimming fat,
they’re amputating the very muscles a company needs to stay
competitive in today’s global marketplace.
Now is the time to make sure that you’re exercising your
marketing muscles efficiently and enough. Regular workouts are
important when times are flush and sales brisk, but they become vital
during economic downturns. Let’s take a look at five
strategies to exercise your marketing muscle, how they relate to your
trade show participation, and how all are vital to your
company’s physical fitness.
1. Go to the Gym:
You can do your workout anywhere, but it’s better in the
gym with the proper workout equipment. In the same way, you can be a
contender in the global marketplace without attending trade shows
– but how effective will you be if no one sees you in the
global marketplace? Companies can not buy your goods or services if
they don’t know you exist! Trade shows signify an essential
marketing strategy when it comes to visibility. Exhibiting
demonstrates that you are a serious player in the industry. Staying
in the public eye is imperative if you want that public to remember
who you are! Make the commitment to keep trade shows one of your
major promotional tools.
If financial circumstances make this difficult, consider down-sizing
your booth – but don’t abandon the show
completely! Doing so creates the public impression that your firm is
in financial trouble – the kind of bad
‘buzz’ no one wants – and that your
competitors will happily spread!
2. Set long-term goals:
It takes more than one spin class to shed twenty pounds, and you
wouldn’t expect bulging biceps after an hour of free
weights. But that’s exactly what many companies expect from
their marketing and training routines. Neither will provide a miracle
quick fix, but as part of a regular, planned, organized campaign,
training and marketing will, in time, produce impressive
results.
If on the other hand, you only concentrate your energies on training
and marketing when things are good, and discontinue those exercises
during down times, your results are likely to mirror your actions.
Developing a consistent marketing and training strategy that you can
stick to, no matter what the economic circumstances, will help you
keep an optimal operational equilibrium.
3. Critique your workout routine:
We all get into ruts, in the gym and in business. How often do you
stop to take the time to examine what your companies is doing
– and more importantly, why? Upon examination, many of your
corporate actions may be done out of habit rather than because they
are productive and profitable.
This applies to trade shows in two ways. First, take a close look at
the shows you attend. How do they really fit into your marketing
strategy? Ideally, attending a show should attract large amounts of
consumers from your target audience. If you’re at a show
that doesn’t do this, ask yourself why. Are you there just
because “We’ve always gone to ABC
show”? Are you attending just because your competitors do?
If your target audience is not attending, you and your competitor are
both wasting money at that show – let them throw their
money away alone! Cut non-producing shows out of your exhibiting
schedule. Instead, put all your energy and resources into exhibiting
at more profitable events that attract your target audience.
Employees who are normally careful with company resources tend to go
a little crazy at trade shows. Excessive employee spending is a
seldom-discussed problem, but one of the most common ways for a
company to bleed green at a show. Combating this can be as simple as
reserving rooms at a moderately-priced hotel, setting per diem
expense allowances, and enforcing employee accountability for
expenses. Watch out for the ‘entitlement’ mindset
– “I’m entitled to a steak and lobster
dinner at the most expensive restaurant in town because I’m
at the trade show.” If employees know they’ll
have to explain any questionable purchases after the fact,
they’ll be less likely to splurge on your dime.
4. Find good workout buddies:
Spending time in the gym can be infinitely more productive if you
exercise with a motivated, skilled partner. The same is true for
marketing. Here, you are counting on your employees to be the
skilled, motivated partner.
When the employee-employer relationship is truly a partnership, both
sides will have common goals and ideals. Everyone will be working
together to achieve these goals – and what better place to
showcase this than the trade show floor? Your booth staff represent
your internal customer-service team. They act as your company
ambassadors, representing the entire company with everything that
they do. Their attitude, body language, appearance, and knowledge
help create a lasting impression that attendees will take away with
them. Make sure your employees are prepared by providing excellent
training and making sure they clearly understand what is expected of
them. Training shows your employees that you value their
contributions, and demonstrates to the world at large that you care
about what image your company is presenting.
5. Keep good workout buddies:
We’re a mobile society. People move an average of seven
times in their lives, oftentimes great distances. Therefore,
companies are often hesitant to spend money on training.
What’s the sense, they ask, of making this investment when
the staff are likely to leave, taking their skills with them?
Life is full of risks. When you go jogging the first time,
there’s the risk you might stumble and skin your knee. You
might wrench an ankle. You might fall into a sudden sinkhole and wind
up in traction. But when you weigh the rewards of physical fitness
– the increased sense of well-being, the health benefits,
and the trimmer physique – and the relative likeliness of
the risks – you see it is clearly worth it to go
jogging.
The same thing holds true with employee training. The benefits of a
fully-trained, top-notch staff clearly outweigh the chance that one
or two may leave. Employees leave for a number of reasons, and it is
in your power to minimize some of them. For example, employees may
leave because of frustration, stress, or a feeling of being
under-valued. Perhaps they don’t feel they have enough
authority, growth opportunities, or direction. Providing training can
remedy some, if not all, of these reasons, and help you retain
quality employees.
These five strategies will help you transform your company into a
lean, mean profit machine. Keep those marketing muscles working and
they’ll be less likely to be trimmed away as
“excess fat”.
Written by Susan A. Friedmann,CSP, The Tradeshow Coach, Lake Placid,
NY, author: “Meeting & Event Planning for
Dummies,” working with companies to improve their meeting
and event success through coaching, consulting and training. For a
free copy of ExhibitSmart Tips of the Week, e-mail:
susan@thetradeshowcoach.com; website: thetradeshowcoach.com
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EVENT!
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The First Event of It's Kind! Ever
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Feature Article
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Your
Direction
By Devin Robinson
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Ever notice
that trees grow straight up towards the sky even if they are planted on
a hill? This is because trees [and plants] grow towards the light. So
actually from the ground’s perspective it would seem like the
tree is growing crooked.
No matter what angle the roots are planted, the tree remains focused at
the light (sun) and goes in that direction growing as much as possible
thinking that the sky is the limit. Storms may come and temporarily
cause the tree to lean, but after weathering the storm, the tree gets
back on track. The tree doesn’t focus on where it came from,
but instead where it wants to go.
What are you focusing on?
Are you busy looking at what is going on around you? Are you expecting
to not reach the light? Are you growing in the same direction as your
roots or are you focused and growing towards the light?
Sometimes people are caught between a rock and a hard place. Some find
themselves conducting their behavior according to where they came from
and not where they want to go. They sometimes do this even if they know
better. This is not the wisest choice.
Most people in society try to remain loyal to relationships, family
heritages and more. Sometimes people never step out of the routine and
expose themselves to unfamiliar territory. The downside to this is it
can also keep future generations and oneself from making the progress
they can make and reaching the full potential that lies dormant within
them.
Life teaches a lot of lessons and for us not to take heed of them is an
injustice to us and those who come in contact with us. If you have an
idea that may seem foolish, write it down and save it for a later date.
You may just not have all of the details put together to make it seem
not foolish.
Many prolific inventors of the past seemed foolish with their concepts.
Today, we have planes, trains and automobiles that were thought to be
inconceivable many years before their existence.
It may seem foolish for the tree to actually believe that it will reach
the sun but that doesn’t change the attempt. The light that
the tree attempts to reach is like the goal that we have to set for
ourselves. No matter what obstacles or interferences may come, we must
remain headstrong and press on towards the goal.
Resources are available all around us at our disposal. It can be done!
You can do it and the tree feels the exact same way. Why? Because it is
a law of nature. It is natural for us to feel we can conquer more but
quite often painful experiences cloud our judgment and hinders our
motivation.
Don’t be blinded by what you can physically see, instead
envision what you cannot and achieve it. Trees can do this with no
brain, so we have no excuse. Don’t feel ashamed to go against
the grain…
Devin Robinson is an
acclaimed Motivational Speaker, Author and Columnist. You can find out
more about his products and services on his web site by clicking
here
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Get Noticed Or
Die!
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noticed to be successful!
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Mostcool Media, Inc. do for you?
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Feature Article
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You
said you would make it happen, what happened?
An Opinion Piece by Jeff Glaze

Read Chapter 12 In "Guerrilla Marketing in 30 days" about
AtlantaEvent.com
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Hang on a
moment while I pull up my soap box and step up on it and:
Good evening ladies and gentlemen, gather round while I tell you about
the runaway bride and how four days before her wedding, she caught a bus
to Las Vegas and was the major focus of a nationwide search!
Sound familiar? This person had made plans with 600 or so people to
appear in a church and get married, but when it came time to do what she
said she would, she didn't. This event got national if not worldwide
coverage because of the nature of the act and the social status of the
people involved. It is not an isolated incident, but a glaring example of
an epidemic that is sweeping our country. It is an epidemic of people
making promises that they do not keep.
These promises range from something as simple as I'll call you later, to
as complex an item as not showing up for your own wedding.
Last week a client of mine was producing his newsletter for distribution.
It was all but complete except for an article that was promised to him by
a business associate. The newsletter was to go out on Wednesday however
as Tuesday evening approached, the article was not yet submitted. Come
Wednesday, the newsletter did not go out. As of this writing, the article
has yet to materialize.
In business, the most important attribute that we have is the ability to
win the trust of our prospects and clients. Without that we find that no
one wants to buy from us. So to maintain trust in the business
relationship we have to do whatever it takes to follow through when we
tell someone that we are going to do something. This extends right down
to "I'll call you later".
Integrity is as important today as it was 200 years ago. The problem is
that as we watch people who hold positions of power and authority allow
integrity to slip through the cracks, we are learning from their
examples. Excuses begin to take the place of follow through and as an
excuse is accepted, it becomes the norm.
If I drive 80 miles an hour in a 25 MPH zone and a cop catches me, can I
explain it away by saying I forgot that the speed limit was 25 miles an
hour? Will that get me out of a ticket? Probably not. But that is the
financial economic lifeblood of local political systems, or shall I say
the law, where ignorance and mistakes are no excuse.
In the business world we are at peril for our very success when we try to
shrug our shoulders and treat business relationships in the same manner
as personal ones. Our spouse may forgive us if we are running late and
forget to call, but be late for that proposal meeting and forget to call
and I can nearly guarantee that you will lose the business.
In our society it is more and more difficult to find people who really do
what they say they are going to do. We as a group can affect that dynamic
if we approach our business and personal lives in a manner which makes
our word or our promise have meaning again.
Until we make a conscious effort to do that and to expect the same
treatment from others, our society is destined to collapse on the empty
promises which will become it's foundation. Let us not be a part of the
problem, but part of the solution. (Stepping down from the
soapbox) "Thanks, I'll be here all
week!"
Jeff Glaze is the editor of AtlantaEvent.com and President of
Mostcool Media, Inc.
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Feature Article
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Podcasting for Non
Techies
By DeAnna Spencer
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What
is podcasting and why should you care?
I have been reading
a lot about podcasting. I even attended a teleclass on the subject,
Podcasting for Coaches given by Ramon Williamson. I learned so much
about podcasting from that one class, that I decided to write an
article about it for this week's ezine. So here goes...
First of all, what
is podcasting?
According to
wikipedia, podcasting is "the practice of making audio files available
online in such a way that allows software to automatically detect new
files and download them." In English that means that you put audio
files on the Internet for people to save to their computer or ipod or
mp3 player. The way I look at podcasting is that it is the audio
equivalent of blogging.
So now you know what
podcasting is. I know you are wondering, so why should I care about
podcasting. Simple, podcasting is in its early stages now. It's where
blogging was 4 years ago. If you get in on podcasting now, you will be
light years ahead of your competitors in your niche.
You don't have to be
a techie geek to know how to podcast either. If you can talk on the
phone then you can record a podcast. Blogger.com has a service that
allows you to call a number and record your post instead of typing it.
You do have to be registered with them, but it's free to register with
them. Another way to get your podcast set up is to use audioblog.com
There is a fee associated with this service, but you can record longer
posts with this service. Blogger’s service only allows you to
record a 5 minute post. Audioblog’s service allows you to
record a 60 minute post. Of course you could always do some digging and
find sophisticated equipment, but that is beyond the scope of this
article.
Here's what you need
to do next. Go to blogger and sign up for an account. Once you have
your blog set up, go to audioblogger.com and follow the directions they
give you. The site is very user-friendly. Do it Now.
Copyright 2005 by
DeAnna Spencer
DeAnna
Spencer is the webmaster for Learn Small Business, learnsmallbusiness.com Visit
her blog at learnsmallbusiness.blogspot.com
to download her podcast.
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Message Added: May 3rd, 2005 at 5:20 pm
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