Posts Tagged ‘business success’

Marketing An Event? Tip #1, Include Time and Location

Wednesday, April 25th, 2007

I received an email last week from a very well known marketing guru.

He’s been around for many years; a best-selling author, world renowned speaker, and adviser to some of America’s biggest brands. (I’m tempted to reveal his name, for my own selfish impact, but I can’t bring myself to do that! Hint: His name is not Seth)

The email invited me, “…to attend a special teleconference for business owners, entrepreneurs and people with start-up business ideas.”

Just the type of thing I like to investigate. So I registered.

Here is a part of the confirmation email I received on the morning of the teleconference. Read it carefully and see if you can find the key missing components:

You are confirmed to participate in the 90 minute special Business
Building Teleconference workshop for business owners, entrepreneurs,
professionals and people with start-up business ideas.

Mark your calendar.  The call takes place on Saturday, April 21, 2007
at   Please check your local time differences, to make certain you don’t
miss the correct start time.

To review: the call will last 90 minutes.  It’s broken down into two
integrated, progressive parts.  The call will begin promptly at the exact
start time.  We recommend you have a thick pad and more than one pencil
ready.

The special dial in number to use is:

The pass-code to get in/on is:

Needless to say, I have a feeling the attendance was low. I doubt they made much money on whatever the special offer was going to be at the end of the call.

There is a surprising amount of planning, preparation and thought that goes into any successful event. You can’t afford to blow it.

Here’s our obvious advice: You can avoid disaster by simply checking, double checking, and triple checking the vital elements like date, time, location, phone number, and website address.

Now, I have to be honest here, our team has made our share of communication errors with a few of our launches, so my simple advice does not come from a platform of perfection, but from experience.

Apparently, even great, experienced marketers like the one mentioned above can rush past the details. So, don’t underestimate the obvious.

Remember that old adage: “Measure Twice, Cut Once.”

Final note on this; I admit to watching “The Apprentice” (sigh); and you might recall a few weeks ago that “The Donald” fired a candidate for including the wrong number on a marketing brochure.

Need I say more?

Check out these great posts for more information about this topic:

Gross Writing Errors Found on the Web

5 Common Mistakes that Make You Look Dumb

8 Proofreading Tips and Techniques

Make it Big (to Proofread)

How to Proofread

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The New Speed of Internet Marketing

Wednesday, April 4th, 2007

Information has always moved pretty quickly on the Internet. But the new technology allowing information to move in an organized, highly targeted way is changing everything about Internet marketing.

Entrepreneurs and small businesses who understand how to tap into the online world of community and customization will be able to reach buyers in ways we never dreamed before.

Take a moment and watch this powerful video below (over 2 million views), The Machine is Us/ing Us but before you do, if you’re not a “techie”, don’t focus on that aspect of this clip because you might glaze-over in the first 20 seconds. Instead, stick with it through the end and focus on what this video illustrates about the future of customized online information. What does it indicate to you about where the internet is going? What does it indicate about your need to understand the new speed of the Internet?

Brad Fallon, a search engine optimization expert had some interesting thought on this video:

“It’s a very cool combination of screen capture and video which makes some really salient points about the future of web technology and the effects it will have on how people interact and express themselves…This piece, “The Machine is Us/ing Us,” covers the changes occurring online that are democratizing and socializing the shared online spaces we occupy.

It’s got me thinking not just about what this means for “community” online, but what it can mean for business and commerce. In a lot of ways this kind of interactive development has brought the web full circle. Rather than having global mega-stores that sell everything, we see more and more mom-and-pop corner shops appearing, albeit with a potentially global customer base.”

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Steve Jobs’ Billion Dollar Mindset

Wednesday, March 21st, 2007

The entrepreneurial bug bites everyone at some point in life. And who among us wouldn’t be lying if we said that the idea of unlimited earnings potential wasn’t part of the draw? In the United States, we’re assaulted daily by the credible-sounding testimony of people who claim that getting rich was as easy as, well, quitting their day jobs.

As alluring as the idea of instant wealth can be, get-rich-quick schemes rarely work. How does a hopeful entrepreneur, then, parlay his or her ambition into profits? How did the high-profile, successful businesspeople we read about every day get to the top?

Let’s use one especially prolific entrepreneur as an example. Steve Jobs is a co-founder of Apple Computers and the CEO of both Apple and Pixar Animation Studios. Disney recently purchased Pixar bringing Jobs’ net worth to a whopping $7.8 billion.

Jobs’ stunning career has had its ups and downs (most notably, he faced public humiliation when Apple fired him in 1985), but any would-be entrepreneur can learn much from him. In fact, we can pick apart his strategy to learn what has worked for this man with the billion-dollar touch.

1. Work:  There is no substitute for hard work.
Building any business from scratch-whether a restaurant or Silicon Valley powerhouse-demands an extraordinary amount of work and discipline. Jobs, a self-proclaimed workaholic, recalls 100-hour workweeks at Apple. Success will not come overnight; it’s important to have both patience and an acceptance that breakeven might take years to achieve.

2.  Desire:  Intense desire and vision are the underpinnings of great companies.
The small-business owner who opens a florist shop in a town with eight other florist shops and aspires to be no better than her competitors may survive but is unlikely to thrive. On its own, a me-too strategy or yearning to be rich cannot support an exceptional business. There has to be a viable concept-an idea for a new product or service or a better way of doing things. Steve Jobs and his partner, 22-year-old computer geeks when they began Apple, truly had something to offer:  In an era of mainframe monsters, they knew that desktop computers were technologically feasible. Just as important, they were determined to see their vision realized.

3. Focus:  Focus on the real drivers of business and profits will follow.
It can be tempting to invest a disproportionate amount of energy in marketing and growth planning. Savvy entrepreneurs know that their focus has to rest squarely on providing a superior product or service. Steve Jobs’ guiding mission is to make best-in-class computers, electronics, and animated films. He even once pared back Apple’s product line from dozens of SKUs to just four items out of concern that the company’s product quality and reputation were suffering. Now that’s focus.

4. Tenacity:  Tenacity and toughness are indispensable.
The typical route to self-made success is filled with frustrations and setbacks. Many entrepreneurs throw in the towel before their businesses have had a chance to flourish. Those who make it are able to steel themselves against the inevitable disappointments, pushing through tough times with an unswerving tenacity. When Apple’s board of directors ousted Steve Jobs, he considered leaving the tech industry for good. Ultimately, though, he rallied by starting NeXT Inc., a company later bought out by none other than Apple Computer.

5. Risk:  Reward in business rarely comes without risk.
What rings especially hollow in those get-rich-quick infomercials are the breezy guarantees, the promises that buying this or doing that will translate into personal wealth. In reality, starting a business venture entails quite a bit of risk. The entrepreneurs who have made it did their research, carefully weighed their odds of success, and only then took intelligent risks that paid off handsomely. Steve Jobs’ leap into the animation industry was a gamble and an exercise in self-confidence. When he plunked down $10 million of his own money to buy Pixar, observers questioned the wisdom of his move. But Jobs had bought into the idea that computers could be used to create animation so lifelike that moviegoers would forget that what they were watching wasn’t real. A string of box-office hits, and now Disney’s purchase of Pixar, has proved him right again.

Are these five qualities unique to Steve Jobs? Before answering, take a moment to think about, and perhaps research, the career histories of several entrepreneurs you most admire. Chances are, it wasn’t just luck that got them on their way. It wasn’t being in the right place at the right time. And it almost certainly wasn’t a belief in a get-rich-quick scheme. Like Jobs, the individuals you analyze have probably had deep reserves of the qualities we reviewed; 1. Work, 2. Desire, 3. Focus, 4. Tenacity, 5. Risk.

For some, letting go of dreams of instant success will require a major shift in mindset. Realistic expectations might even altogether dissuade some people from breaking out on their own. But if you found that you could identify with the five points above, you are already one step closer to a successful career as an entrepreneur.

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Check out these great posts for more information about this topic:

How To Become a Successful Entrepreneur

13 Rules for Entrepreneurial Success

The Key to Entrepreneurial Success is Balancing Business and Creativity

The World’s Best Vodka?

Thursday, March 8th, 2007

Many people argue that “Tito’s Vodka”, from of a small distillery in Austin, TX, is one of the best new Vodka’s in the world.

Personally, I couldn’t tell you; I don’t drink. What matters is that the industry experts and consumers all seem to agree that it’s one of the best in the world.

But I do know Tito Beveridge. And what I can tell you is that Tito’s story of entrepreneurial success is a classic story that should motivate any hopeful entrepreneur. (I’ve provided a link below to a video profile of Tito’s Vodka featured recently on CNBC)

Tito is a regular contributor to the Northstar Thinktank training programs. He provides our team with incredible insight. He has so much to offer our clients because he has been through an intense business building journey.

As you’ll see in the video clip, all of the odds were stacked against him; government regulations, an unlikely background and a highly competitive spirit’s market just to name a few.

Ultimately, Tito’s tenacity, creativity, street smarts and willingness to take risks pushed him past the obstacles and he now enjoys an extremely enviable position as a successful entrepreneur.

Take a look at his featured profile on CNBC

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Check out this great post for more information about this topic:

7 Keys to Startup Success

Passion and David Letterman

Wednesday, February 7th, 2007

So much of your ability to succeed in business comes from your passion.

If you don’t have a burning, passionate desire to get your business off the ground, or to take your existing business to the next level, then don’t invest another ounce of effort!

Passion is behind every great success story.

Six years ago my office assistant introduced me to her soft-spoken fiance, Dustin. He was in a local band. They were trying to make it big.

My first glance told me he might be just another dreamy musician.

When I finally saw him actually perform, I was blown away by his passion. It was overwhelming and contagious. I knew immediately that he would go a very long way in the music business.

Over the last 6 years he has traveled the world playing sold out shows to rabid fans over and over again as the lead singer of “Thrice”.

Last night I sat at home and was proud to watch David Letterman introduce my friend Dustin Kensrue as “…an accomplished musician and songwriter”. He did a phenomenal job on Letterman and is climbing the Billboard Charts.

Passion. You’ve gotta have it!

Speaking of passion…The entire Northstar Thinktank team is scouring the world of business information and you’ll want to be one of the first to visit our new Thinktank Business Content Site. This is where we compile relevant, focused resources from the entire world of entrepreneurship.

We’re almost ready to release the new site. All of us are excited and Passionate about it here at the Northstar Thinktank.

You’ll get an update very soon.

Until then, be passionate about your entrepreneurship!

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(Link to Video, “Pistol”)

Check out this great post for more information about this topic:

When Building a Business, Work your Talent

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