Webinar: Expert Advice on Starting your Business

John Jantsch from Duct Tape Marketing is hosting a live panel webinar Wednesday, May 20th at 9am PDT/Noon EDT.

John will be joined by Ken Yancey, Jr, CEO of SCORE, Tim Berry, founder of Palo Alto Software, and Rich Sloan author of StartUpNation to talk about starting a business.

Collectively, this group has poured over thousands of business plans, seen great successes and great failures and advises many a fledgling start-up on the strategies, resources and regulations involved in going out there on your own.

Don’t pass up this unique opportunity to get first hand information from this amazing panel of experts.

More information, including a link to register, can be found on the Duct Tape Marketing Blog

‘Chelle Parmele
Social Media Marketing Manager

Truth about Small Business Branding

It’s no secret we’re big fans of John Jantsch around here. So it was exciting to read about a new webinar he’s involved in concerning something we get a lot of questions about.  Branding.

John writes:

Please join me and a very fun panel of small business branding pros on Wednesday, March 18th at 11am CDT for – The “Truth” About Small Business Branding – using your small business brand to outsmart the competition – a panel discussion featuring practical branding tips and tactics from leading small business branding experts.

Panelists:
» Karen Post – The Branding Diva & Author of Brain Tattoos
» John Moore – Creator of Brand Autopsy & Author of Tribal Knowledge
» Sam Horn – Author of Pop! – Stand out in any crowd
» Aaron Weiss – Chief Product Officer for MarketSplash

This won’t be your typical Branding 101 discussion, trust me, these guys get small business.

Register here for the Truth About Small Business Branding

Definitely a webinar to  make time for!

‘Chelle Parmele
Social Media Marketing Manager
Palo Alto Software

Tips for presenting a great webinar pt 3

The Wrap-up

So you’ve completed your webinar. You had good attendance, the subject was well received. Your slides were sharp and supported your talk in a way that left everyone excited about your topic.

Everyone has left the webinar room and returned to their regularly scheduled day.

Time to wrap it up!

Links -  More than likely, you mentioned some resources during your presentation. If you thought ahead, you had a slide dedicated to information and resources you talked about. Make sure to tell people they’ll be able to get these links or even be able to download the slides very soon. Perhaps on a special post on your blog or in a follow up email.

Special Offer – You’ve more than likely presented this webinar to conntect with customers or potential customers, so give them something worthwhile as a thank you. A special deal just for the people who signed up or attended.

Follow up -  Don’t forget them! You worked hard to find and cultivate these new leads. Don’t just leave them hanging. Keep in touch with your webinar attendee’s. Send out a survey asking what they liked and what they didn’t like. Connect with them about what they’d like more of in the future.

Mistakes will happen-   No matter how well you plan or how much effort you put into making the event the best one ever, you’re going to have some mistakes. Own up to them. Apologize for them and then move on. Learn from them so they don’t happen again.

‘Chelle Parmele
Social Media Marketing Manager
Palo Alto Software

Tips for presenting a great webinar – pt 2

So you’ve got your topic, you’ve been sending information to and inviting your customer base. You’ve advertised it on your blog and Twitter and Facebook/MySpace.

Now what?

Send a reminder – email your registered attendee’s their login information and all important information right before the event. This will make them more likely to click over and attend. You’re looking to create that “Oh yeah!” moment with them.

Prepare - Don’t try and wing it, practice your presentation – and make sure to time it. Do a walk-through. Soup to nuts, as Tim is so often saying. Make sure as many of the kinks are out of your webinar as is possible. You probably won’t catch them all, but at least you’ll be better prepared.

Presentation - The way you approach and create your slides is important. You want to make sure they’re visually appealing and offer key points to what you’re talking about. But stay away from shoving as many words as possible into your slide. Make the slides easy to read. Short and to the point. Try checking out some really great slide presentations at Guy Kawasaki’s blog.

Support- The event will go better if you have another pair of hands and eyes. Have someone there to help field questions, monitor the Q&A window and in general be a helping hand. If you Twitter, consider making a #tag for the event. For our last event the hashtag was #dtmpa. There is a great explanation of what Hashtags are and how they came into exisitance can be found on the Twitter Fan Wiki.

Bonus tip- As a presenter, you want to make sure you’re giving as professional a presentation as possible, so think of the little things before you begin. If you’re sharing your computer desktop for the presentation, check out your background image, hide icons for your favorite games or shortcuts to websites. Turn off your instant messenger, your Skype and anything that might give off an alert or “take over” your focus during the presentation. Because Murphy’s Law is never more in effect than when you’re presenting something in front of 200 potential customers.

In the final part we’ll go over follow-up tips.

‘Chelle Parmele
Social Media Marketing Manager
Palo Alto Software

Tips for presenting a great webinar

With another webinar in our “Back to the Fundamentals” series under our belts, I thought I’d speak a little to the power of offering your customers a value add of webinars.

Last Wednesday we had the fabulous John Jantsch from Duct Tape Marketing in to talk. He did a great job as usual and gave some really useful tips to the attendees. (You can listen to this webinar by going to the Back to the Fundamentals page)

Putting on a webinar is a lot of work. But if you plan right, it will go off without a hitch. Hosting free webinars or training sessions is a great way to give added value to your customers.

For instance -Palo Alto Software, in addition to the B2F series, hosts informational training sessions for all our software products every single month. The archived sessions are hosted on our website for people to watch them “on demand” and are always free.

In this first piece, let’s talk about the set-up.

Part One -Before the Event:

Create some goals- How many people would you like to register? How many people do you want to actually attend? (This number will typically be a smaller number than the number who registered). Will you push your product or service during the event or offer them a special price afterward as a thank you for attending.

Make all these decisions before hand because they will change the way you map out your webinar plan and market it.

Google Docs – If you’re working with a team of people, ie your webteam or IT person, a guest host, etc, it’s best to have your milestones and work flow written down so no one misses a deadline. Even if it’s just you, this is a great tool to keep your thoughts in order and you can access it from anywhere. I use Google docs because it allows me to share with all the people working on the event and allows real time collaboration without having to juggle multiple versions of a word doc and play “who has the most recent schedule” with everyone.

Webinar platform – Webex is arguably the most popular webinar platform out there. It’s a powerful and useful system and can handle a large amount of attendees. But it’s not the only game in town. There are other companies out there like  iLinc, or  ooVoo for very small one-on-one video webinars… do some research to find the one that works best for your needs and budget.

Topic – Have an engaging subject to talk about. While I’m sure you’re very excited to talk all about the product you want to sell, most people wouldn’t give up an hour of their day to sit through your demo. But? You’re an expert in your field, share your knowledge. Find a topic and focus on a portion of it. Give the attendee’s action points and give them something they can use right away. Information doesn’t count for much if they don’t understand how to put it into action.

Outreach- How do you plan to tell people about your event? Use your customer base to start with. These are your evangelists! Do you send out a newsletter? Include an article as a preview of the subject along with a link to register for the event. Send an email blast with just the basics of the event. Don’t overwhelm with too much information. You want to entice people to the event, not give them all the information before hand. Create an event alert in your Facebook or Myspace. Twitter and write blog posts supporting the topic and always include the link to register. You might think about creating a “badge” that goes along with everything. Think of it as the “logo” for the event.

Create excitement- You don’t want to flood your attendee’s but you do want to create excitement that they’re going to get a lot of good and valuable information by attending your event. Consider sending a survey a few days before the event to ask what they hope to get from the webinar. Listening to your audience will not only give you insight on what they’re expecting but also gives them a feeling of being engaged and included in the event and give them more incentive to attend.

Next time we’ll go over tips for the webinar itself and what goes on after the event is over.

‘Chelle Parmele
Social Media Marketing Manager, Palo Alto Software

New Back to the Fundamentals Marketing Webinar

In the second installment of Palo Alto Software’s “Back to the Fundamentals” webinar series, we welcome John Jantsch as he presents “Simple Marketing Tactics that Pay off Big in a Slumping Market“.

John Jantsch is a marketing and digital technology coach, award winning social media publisher and author of Duct Tape Marketing. He is the creator of the Duct Tape Marketing small business marketing system and has been called the world’s most practical small business expert for consistently delivering real-world, proven small business marketing ideas and strategies.

John will bring his extensive knowledge and know-how to this new webinar, exclusively for Palo Alto Software.

Learn how to:

* attract all the clients your small business can handle
* work only with clients who value what you have to offer
* significantly increase what you charge for your services

February 11, 2009 at 10 a.m. Pacific Time

Back to the Fundamentals

Back to the Fundamentals

Resources – Follow up from the Webinar

For those of you who attended Monday’s Back to the Fundamentals webinar, you heard a lot of references to some websites, books and blogs.

For the reference of those people looking for more information and for those of you who weren’t able to make it to the webinar, I’m going to put a reference list here.

If there are any that I fail to include here, please leave a comment and I’ll track it down and get it for you.

Tim Berry

Blogs : Planning, Startups, Stories, Up and Running,  Tim’s posts at HuffingtonPost, Tim at Anita Campbell’s Small Business Trends, Planning Demystified at AllBusiness.com

BooksThe Plan-As-You-Go Business Plan book and website, Three Weeks to Start-up

Slides: Download the slides from Monday’s webinar as well as other presentations Tim has given over the years.

The webinar itself will be available for download starting today at our video site   eta: This link is fixed now, sorry about that!

Resources: Palo Alto Software productsBusiness and Marketing calculators, more planning video’s.

I hope that was helpful, again, if I’ve missed anything or you’re wondering about a particular resource or website, just comment!

‘Chelle Parmele
Social Media Marketing Manager
Palo Alto Software

Are You in Cost-Cutting Mode?

Interesting article today on Businessweek.com about the importance of recognizing your business costs and getting them under control now verses later, when it could be too late:

“…by recognizing the problem early and making moderate reductions, small firms can avoid more severe cuts later on, financial experts say. Companies that ignore warning signs can erode their profits with rising costs, and those that borrow to meet those costs can wind up insolvent.”

How many of you are looking at your personal or household budgets and cutting expenses? Change vacations plans? Did you dump those magazine subscriptions that you don’t need?

Why wouldn’t you do the same thing at your business?

The answer is, you would! No question. Right?

Now, here’s the next question. Are you being smart in your cuts, or are you looking at the highest costs and slashing them without really looking down the road and seeing what the cut is going to do to you later on? How many of you immediately shut down your advertising campaign? Canceled all your trade show appearances? Eliminated a position or two on your staff?

Let me say this again. Cutting your business costs now verses later is a good idea… but making sure you make the right cuts is going to make the difference between having a strong and functioning business and a “just hanging on” business down the road.

You are in business now because you made smart choices. Keep that up. Pull open your budgets, study your cash flow, your planned vs actuals, your forecasts. Adjust them for the good, the bad and the really really ugly. Be brutal in your projections and then look at your costs.

Make a plan. A good plan.

Now is not the time for guess work and hasty decisions. You can’t afford it.

‘Chelle Parmele
Social Media Marketing Manager
Palo Alto Software

Have you signed up for the Back to the Fundamentals webinar with Tim Berry? There’s still time! Register Right Now by clicking this button Logo for Back to Fundamentals webinar

Business 101

There’s a lot of talk in the media and the blogsphere about the economy and how businesses will be reacting to the climate. Many are guessing there will be layoffs coming in the next several months. PR and Marketing departments are tightening their belts and some companies are cutting those departments altogether. Pretty scary times. But they don’t have to be.

If you look carefully, you’ll find a small but very vocal group of business advisers and business owners who are being smart and not reacting blindly to what is happening in the world.

They’re sitting down with their budgets, their management teams and consultants and really looking at what needs to happen to ensure their businesses survive.

If business is slowing down, what are you doing to ensure your customers keep coming back? If your competitor slashed their advertising budget, isn’t this the time for you to add a couple more budgeting dollars to pick up where they’ve left off? That expensive marketing tool or reporting system that costs you thousands of dollars a month – have you checked to see if there’s a low cost alternative that does pretty much the same thing?

Don’t doom your business by reacting too strongly to what’s going on. Sit down and make good decisions about where your money is being spent and where it will do even more good in the future.

Please join us November 17th, 2008 for a special webinar by Tim Berry on the importance of going Back to the Fundamentals of business.

Sign up for Tim Berry’s Webinar!