Filed under: Leadership

Veterans: Business Assistance Programs

Great Resources for Veterans

We want to thank all of the military veterans out there, for the safety of our Country. Now we want to give back to you. Did you know that there are several resources available to you, if you are looking to begin a new adventure, as either an entreprenuer or small business owner? Below is a partial resource listing:

Programs that will offer you more opportunities:

Other Resources

There are other programs available in your state, check online for your local state agency.

Vernita Naylor, Ft. Worth SCORE
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Leave a Comment March 9, 2010

Public Speaking: Ensure Your Team Is Ready To Represent Offline

3 Tips for Effective Public Speaking

Ready to Fly by Marcel Germain, Creative Commons

A small business owner and I recently discussed the growing relationship economy. And a favorite topic of ours came up: social media and the progress her team was making on that front.

She was thrilled at how her staff engaged through their Facebook fan page and a Youtube video series to engage prospect relationships and drive sales.

She then admitted something that really caught my attention.
Her savvy team was so skilled at engaging through social media. So she felt comfortable with them presenting as panelists for a small industry event.

…which didn’t turn out as she first hoped.

To her surprise, the team lacked confidence and basic skill in this public speech scenario.

She realized she had assumed their comfort and savvy in communicating online would automatically translate to offline environments.

Some ideas to audit and shape your team’s public speaking skill:

1. Assess team skill before game time.
Create chances with your team to discuss, audit, and practice public speaking skill, like in assessment and goal setting situations.

Discuss which scenarios where they’ve publicly presented – like what type of audiences, with or without co-presenters, or in vs outside your industry. Learn what topics and stories related to your business most draw out their interest. Build off that subject matter and collaborate on a plan to finesse their speaking ability.

2. Make the marketing value of public speaking a team mindset.
Are there small business events/conferences (great calendar of entrepreneurial events at Small Biz Trends), podcamps, or local meetups (in case you’re in the DC region) that would be ideal places for your business to be seen? …and be conversational forums for your team to present?

Fast Company blogger and presentation guru Ruth Sherman recently made a great point: always be ready to speak. That’s not to say folks on your staff should be ready for a 60 minute keynote at the drop of a hat.

It means that for business to succeed, the mindset ‘always be marketing’ rules the day. And the team’s ability to represent well even at the most relaxed speaking environment makes an impact.

3. Develop quick key messages for a range of speaking opportunities.
To bolster team readiness, it’s worth it to craft a mini, ongoing archive of key messages that reflect your business values, service, and industry relevance. These can be on-hand for future fleshing out for speeches or even networking events.

It’s the relationship economy.

Is your team ready to help build those relationships through authentic and skilled public speech ability?

Jill Foster, SCORE Guest Blogger
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2 Comments February 26, 2010

Public Speaking: Overcome Your Fear

Eight Tips for Success

As a business owner it is essential to know how to get up and speak on demand. You will find that many opportunities will arise and it is crucial that you can express your message about your business clearly and concisely.

Important Tips:

  1. Take a course in public speaking.
  2. Learn your talk or elevator speech by heart or with note cards.
  3. Be comfortable with information that you are speaking about, the more comfortable you are, the less nervous you will be.
  4. Practice in front of friends, family and colleagues and ask for feedback on what you are doing well and what you need to improve on.
  5. Imagine speaking to only one person in the room and have eye contact with that person.
  6. Remain calm, take deep breaths and focus on the topic.
  7. Keep your hands open and welcoming, never in your pockets.
  8. If possible video tape your talk or stand in front of a mirror and be conscious of how many times you say Um, how fidgety you are and what your body language is saying.

The more you speak the more comfortable you become. Just know that in your business you are an expert and having the ability to speak about your business in many situations can only help you succeed. You may need to speak to a group for funding, your employees, professional associations that you are a member of and customers, suppliers or distributors. The more often you do it the better the results will be in getting what you want.

Please share the things that have helped you speak more comfortably and effectively.

Julie Brander, New Haven SCORE
View posts by Julie Brander

Leave a Comment February 25, 2010

Event: Celebrate Entrepreneurship

National Entrepreneurship Week: February 20-27

Celebrate your success! This is National Entrepreneurship Week sponsored by the Consortium for Entrepreneurship Education. This week recognizes the contribution of American entrepreneurs like you. Share stories of how you overcame the past year and succeeded. Leave a comment below. Then find out more about events near you.

More Resources

  • Watch videos from successful entrepreneurs
  • Read hot topics in business
  • Get ideas on how to promote entrepreneurship

SCORE Association, SCORE View more posts by SCORE

1 Comment February 22, 2010

Public Speaking: Convey Your Passion to Your Audience

The One Criteria for Building Your Signature Speech

Do Your Own Thing by Pie4Dan, Creative Commons

Do Your Own Thing by Pie4Dan, Creative Commons

Two events recently made me reflect on an audience and the impact of public speaking.

One was hearing a keynote address by tech entrepreneur and champion of Twitter Laura Fitton. The other was reading a quote from Gel Conference creator Mark Hurst.

Laura gave the opening keynote address at last year’s Blogworld Expo. She offered plenty of knowledge on Twitter applications and entrepreneurship. But that didn’t drive her speech.

What did: Her passion for how an online social network made her and many others more connected – and in the end, the world is becoming a less isolated place in her view. It compelled me to look at social networks in a different way. Her story of authentic enthusiasm came across like a unique ’signature of attitude.’ And then in Seth Godin’s fantastic ebook of insights by thought leaders in business, digital tech, and more – Mark Hurst said:

“People at events are hungry for authenticity. [As a speaker] …you have to build the talk around your passion.”

Sure it’s critical to know the specific audience before you as a speaker – the time requirements, good speech mechanics, stage tech, etc. The goal is not to give generic presentations to every audience. But what Mark conveyed (and what Laura demonstrated) is this:

It’s worth recognizing clearly what exhilarates us as business owners and relate to the audience through that attitude.

Three questions that helped me articulate driving passion in speeches for greater audience impact:

  1. What is your driving motivator?
  2. How can that motivation be described in a story (and then become your signature story that conveys what you believe in most?)?
  3. How can that story relate to what your specific audience requires? An example comes to mind from a professional photographer who described her workshops recently.

She said: “There’s a lot of technical instruction involved in my workshops. But what I really help my audience understand is how to give the world an archive of beauty!”

That’s her driving passion and I couldn’t wait to help fill her workshop with attendees. What do you think? What does the passion in your signature speech look like?

Jill Foster, SCORE Guest Blogger
View more posts by SCORE’s Guest Bloggers

2 Comments February 19, 2010

Public Speaking: Make Yourself Memorable

Tips on How to be an Effective & Memorable Speaker

Public speaking is a great way to promote your business.  You instantly become credible and can share your expertise.  I just attended an event at the Chamber of Commerce where three speakers presented on topics, but they had no idea what types of businesses were present.

Mistake: Not knowing who is in the audience and speaking on a topic that is not relevant. This makes the audience walk away feeling like they wasted their time.

Solution: Know your audience by having them introduce themselves. Not only do you want to know their names, the names of their businesses and perhaps even a short elevator speech. You may also want them to include information that they hope to learn or questions they would like answered.

Tips on How to be More Effective

  1. Always know your audience and talk about the information that they are interested in.  As an expert it is essential to present valuable information that can be useful and practical.
  2. Always give your background and credentials with some proven measures of success to build credibility.
  3. Share real life stories that are relevant to the information being presented, it always makes a talk more interesting.
  4. Engage the audience.  If you can get audience participation it makes the talk more effective.  Encourage questions.
  5. Enthusiasm is essential when speaking.  Being a dynamic speaker keeps the audience attention and makes you more memorable.

Always know that when you speak the audience is looking to be entertained and at the same time you are educating them.  Always engage the audience and encourage networking.  You never know who you may meet at any event.   Share stories and ways to keep lectures interesting.

Julie Brander, New Haven SCORE
View posts by Julie Brander

3 Comments February 18, 2010

Spotlight: Volunteer Success

SCORE Honors Maryanne Weiss

Maryanne WeissMaryanne Weiss is a business mentor with SCORE and chair of the Phoenix SCORE chapter. She was recently name “Woman of the Year” by the Women’s Financial Group of the National Bank of Arizona. She has also been given the Carnation Award for Community Service and was made an honorary lifetime citizen of Orange County, California.

In her professional life, Weiss is a licensed general contractor. She was a partner at DIXCO, an award winning construction company in Los Angeles, CA. She then founded Gustare Limited, a business consulting firm in Phoenix, AZ where she is the company president. Weiss is also an adjunct lecturer at Arizona State University. Her specialities in business are real estate, mortgage financing, marketing, and strategic planning. In her spare time, Weiss is also very active in the community. She is an dvisory board member with the Arizona State Board of Business and was also a guest blogger with the SCORE Women’s Success Blog.

SCORE would like to congratulate Maryanne Weiss on her many achievements and than her for her dedication to supporting entrepreneurship.

SCORE Association, SCORE
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2 Comments February 15, 2010

Public Speaking: Fix Blunders & Engage Your Audience

Avoid Public Speech Mistakes and Re-build Trust with an Audience

Healing by Wolf Soul, Creative Commons

Healing by Wolf Soul, Creative Commons

It’s almost Valentine’s Day and images are everywhere reminding us to care.

In that spirit, have you ever seen a public speaker who came across like they just didn’t care?

I did recently at a conference. And their indifference was like receiving toothpicks for Valentines - it was technically still a gift of function but without making the recipient (or audience) feel special in the process!

At that recent event, the speaker – a business owner in a room full of business owners – said when advancing their slides:

“Oh this set of slides is meant for a different talk. I guess I forgot to change these.” At that point, another conference’s logo (not the logo representing our event) glared on the overhead screen. Without apology, the speaker continued.

This experience was a lost opportunity for audience and speaker alike. Every public speech is a chance to give value, forge trust, and build brand credibility with the audience.

Steps to recover trust that this speaker could’ve taken:

1. Show ownership and a solution quickly
A simple apology gains tons of ground! In this case, the correct slides could’ve been made available later via email or Slideshare. Neither occurred.

2. Offer a gift
Extend a discount on services or sneak peek on upcoming product launches. That’s not to suggest giving ‘away the farm’ just because of a presentation error. But it’s a tangible way to show value for that particular audience.

3. Welcome honest feedback
Convey value for the audience’s opinion and insight even if it means eating humble pie, with this statement as example: “Thanks for your time today and hanging in there when I messed up. I’m committed to improving value so I hope you’ll relay feedback on the event evaluation.”

4. Invite ongoing conversation after the event
The speaker-audience experience is a relational dynamic with all sorts of potential for leads, partnerships, and even community. The speaker could’ve shown their interest by offering to engage post-event through LinkedIn, Twitter, or other networks.

What do you think? Have you been in a similar situation? How else could this presenter have shown they valued the audience after the slide mistake?

Jill Foster, SCORE Guest Blogger
View more posts by SCORE’s Guest Bloggers

3 Comments February 12, 2010

Success: Stay-at-Home Mom turned Millionare

Joyce Bone: Mompreneur to Successful CEO

Successful serial entrepreneur, Joyce Bone, provides success secrets, exclusively for SCORE!

Joyce Bone is a wife, mom and successful entrepreneur. She co-founded EarthCare, which grew from zero to $50 million in 18 months. She then took the company public on NASDAQ, ultimately reaching $125 million in annual revenues.

Joyce has managed over 350 employees and has executed dozens of mergers and acquisitions. She eventually left her company and started a real estate investment firm. She now owns a business consulting and coaching firm that works with small to mid-size companies. In another venture, Millionaire Moms, she also helps women entrepreneurs find ways to manage the demands of family life and the business world.

Check out her success tips, exclusively for SCORE!

Jacalyn Barnes, SCORE
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Leave a Comment February 8, 2010

Public Speaking: Do You Present Better Onstage or Online?

Tips to Develop Your Public Speaking Ability

Conversation

Conversation by Rishi Menon, Creative Commons

Fellow business owners and I met a few weeks ago to celebrate 2010. And social media came up – Twitter, Facebook, Posterous and other platforms. We kept reveling in how easy it is to ‘just be human’ when conversing online and agreed it helps build trust with customers.

Then someone said, “I wish I was more myself when speaking in public onstage as I am when on the Web.” This resonated with many of us and we all paused to let his comment sink in.

Then the challenge to ourselves became: how can we better assert our development as public speakers? Some ideas:

1. Observe your voice in relaxed environments when an audience doesn’t exist. Social media tools used in certain ways can be great for this. Consider creating unpublished content to improve speaking skill. Use a smart phone’s audio or video device and regularly record two or three minutes of just talking to yourself (or to a willing peer). Then often review these recordings. If you want to make these informal casts public and online (like on Posterous) great! But going online isn’t the end game with these informal casts. It’s to help you recognize (and emulate) your voice when it’s relaxed and fearless.

2. Seek accountability partners and chances to speak in public. Whether it’s through Ignite events, Toastmasters, or a small group of your trusted colleagues – commit to giving public speeches on a regular basis and receiving critique (this is separate from demos or client pitches, etc).

3. Include public speaking in your marketing strategy and developmental goals. I suggest committing to quantity here i.e., “Present five speeches in Q1.” Designate early in the year the conferences and meetups you/your team would like to present at to help pre-plan topic proposals. Here’s a diverse and per-month conference list from Susan Mernit that includes a collection of conferences dedicated to women in business – including the Women’s Leadership Forum, Blogher, NAWBO Women’s Business Conference plus those in entrepreneurship, social technology and her interests in social cause marketing. Warning! It’s 80+ conferences that haven’t been updated yet on this post to 2010. BUT all citations link directly to conference sites that will have respective event updates as they are published (with great upcoming events announced at SCORE regularly too).

How we present ourselves in conversation–online and off–is critical. The level of authenticity and skill we bring to both environments hugely influences how others respond to us (and the brand we represent).

It’s fascinating and I can’t wait to talk more about it through February with SCORE’s blog readers! How about you? What has helped develop your public speaking ability?

Jill Foster, SCORE Guest Blogger
View more posts by SCORE’s Guest Bloggers

Leave a Comment February 5, 2010

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