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Five steps to social media etiquette that may keep you out of court

Thursday, May 12th, 2011

Facebook logoLeading family law firm Bross Bennett is warning just how damaging digital communications can be if used incorrectly, with detrimental effects going further than recipients and online communities, and right into courts of law.

Only this week a US court has slashed maintenance payments to an ex-wife because of her blog posts. Far too frequently users of social media don’t think before they post and don’t consider that once they post information, it is out there for just about anyone to see and use.

Says Sharon Bennett of Bross Bennett; “It’s important that everyone thinks about the possible consequences before they type. They don’t think about the impact of what they have done, and we have seen first hand just how damaging the written word can be in a court of law, especially in the case of divorcing couples who send aggressive tweets, texts or emails in the heat of the moment.

People need to remember that not only can these pour fuel on an already flaming relationship, they can later be used against them as written evidence. Both outcomes are hugely damaging.”

If used correctly, modern technology can be very helpful. For divorcing couples in particular, texting and emailing can be a great way to help you avoid confrontational verbal conversations. Modern technology allows us the luxury of time to think and create a constructive response that can diffuse a situation and preserve your dignity, something that can be very hard face to face.”

We think these guidelines apply to people in business as well as to personal communications. We’ve seen some businesses jump on Facebook comments in accusatory ways that can only alienate not only the specific customer, but also potential future ones.

The five steps to good social media etiquette

1. Before you post or send anything that may be inflammatory or controversial, wait for 24 hours, after which you’ll be able to consider what you’re writing more objectively. Try and think how your communication will be viewed if read out of context, perhaps by your child or a Judge.

2. Don’t respond to or initiate inflammatory language, and resist replying immediately to anything you do receive of this nature. If you feel you have to respond, adopt the 24 hour delay rule. Get your thoughts and feelings down on paper, but give yourself a day or two to reflect on your response.

3. Consider getting the input of your solicitor before you send anything other than the most simple of communications. They can give you invaluable and constructive advice and remove any sting that you may not even have been aware was there.

4. Do not ever vent your frustrations on Facebook or Twitter, where things can ‘mushroom’ and get out of hand. Anything of this nature can end up being viewed very unfavourably by a judge in a court of law and your children or family might be very hurt by it.

5. Treat correspondence as business-like and straight to the point, rather than emotional – there are better ways and places to express this.

 

TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:

SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org

Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com

Digital East: www.digitaleast.com

Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com

Spend less, get more with five steps to true integrated marketing

Monday, May 9th, 2011

By David M. Mastovich

David M. Mastovich

David M. Mastovich

What do senior leaders of organizations, regardless of size or industry, think when they are asked to commit more resources to messaging and selling?

While those working in the field talk about different disciplines like Marketing, Public Relations, Sales, Communications and Advertising, decision makers tend to lump them all together and ask:

Do we really need to do that?

How much is this going to cost me?

How will we know if it is working or not?

Isn’t (Insert name of person or department) responsible for that?

Focus on ROI needed

Marketing and messaging professionals are quick to passionately explain why their recommendations are vital to the organization.  However, they often do not focus enough on the Return on Investment in terms CEO’s, entrepreneurs and CFO’s are accustomed to hearing and end up without the buy-in necessary for success.

Senior leaders also tend to lose patience with multiple departments or vendors (PR, Sales, Marketing, Corporate Communications, etc.) that rarely communicate with each other as well as they should.  Each function or area sees things in their own biased way.

Sales thinks they’re king because they bring in the business. Others find them arrogant and demanding. Advertising sees themselves as cool and full of big ideas. Others see them as full of something else. PR talks about framing the message while other departments wonder what they really do.  The list could go on and on.  The end result is a perception among senior leaders that these areas are inefficient cost centers with overlapping, duplicative efforts.

Organizations often talk about getting these departments to work together more but become frustrated with mixed results attributed to the type of work and workers involved.  Phrases like “You know those creative people,” or “He’s a marketing guy, they’re different,” are used to explain it away.

How can organizations overcome this vicious cycle of frustration?

Five Steps to Integration

Senior leaders need to champion the idea of creating a true integrated marketing and PR program and then focus on these five strategic initiatives to make it happen:

  1. Develop mutually agreed upon target markets that the organization and its messaging and selling efforts will focus on.  Far too often, target markets are described in broad or general terms.  Drill down each target audience into manageable market segments then make sure each department knows and agrees on the segmented target markets.  For example, Sales often overlooks the importance of employees as a key target market while Corporate Communications clearly sees this group as vital.  Marketing/Advertising sometimes focuses so much on the creative message but forgets that the target audience has to see or hear it when they are able and willing to buy.  Taking the time to clearly communicate information about the target market segments is the first step toward successful integration.
  2. Find out what each target market wants by asking them, through multiple channels.  While engaging a market research firm is the most formal of research methods, don’t overlook other ways to learn about target markets.  Your Sales team can ask customers and prospects what they think and track the results.  Corporate Communications should be able to easily survey employees.  Your methodology doesn’t have to be perfect.  The key takeaway is that you should ask your customers, internal and external, what they think and act accordingly.
  3. Develop a consistent message and require that each department live by it.  Be vigilant about message integrity and consistency but also be flexible. For example, your sales team isn’t going to use the slogan from your advertising all the time.  Tweak the messaging accordingly for each target market but ensure that the overall theme and key message points are still being conveyed. Consider secret shopping so that you are more aware of what your customers are really seeing and hearing.
  4. Work with each department or vendor on clearly defining their goals and the market forces that impact their ability to achieve those goals.  Develop a summary of each department or vendor’s specific roles and their strengths.  Then, convey these key points to everyone involved.  The goal is to increase the level of understanding and respect across functions.
  5. Instill a Corporate-Wide Marketing ROI focus. Challenge your marketing and messaging professionals to provide rationale in terms of Marketing ROI Success Metrics.  Ask them to work in conjunction with Finance to build the metrics.  Then, report the success metrics to leaders and managers throughout the organization.  The more everyone understands the marketing, selling and messaging goals and processes, the better.

 

Developing a true Integrated Marketing, PR and Selling program doesn’t just happen. But once you invest the time and effort, you will reap the benefits of a positive Marketing ROI.

David M. Mastovich, MBA is President of MASSolutions, Inc. With a core philosophy of integrated marketing, MASSolutions focuses on improving the bottom line for clients through creative selling, messaging and PR solutions.  In his recent book, “Get Where You Want To Go: How to Achieve Personal and Professional Growth Through Marketing, Selling and Story Telling,” Mastovich offers strategies to improve sales and generate new customers; management and leadership approaches; and creative marketing, PR and communications ideas. For more information, see: massolutions.biz.

Nine skills required for great company leadership

Friday, April 29th, 2011

John Hamm

John Hamm

Do your employees trust you? The brutal truth is probably not. It may not be fair, and you may not want to hear it, but chances are that previous leaders have poisoned the ground on which you’re trying to grow a successful business.

Make no mistake: Unless you and all the leaders in your organization can gain the trust of your employees, performance will suffer. And considering how tough it is to survive in today’s business environment, that’s very bad news for your company.

Why is trust so pivotal? According to John Hamm, it’s a matter of human nature: When employees don’t trust their leaders, they don’t feel safe. And when they don’t feel safe, they don’t take risks—and where there is no risk taken, there is less innovation, less “going the extra mile,” and therefore, very little unexpected upside.

“Feeling safe is a primal human need,” says Hamm, author of Unusually Excellent: The Necessary Nine Skills Required for the Practice of Great Leadership (Jossey-Bass/A Wiley Imprint, February 2011, ISBN: 978-0-47092843-1, $24.95, www.unusuallyexcellent.com). “When that need isn’t met, our natural response is to focus energy toward a showdown with the perceived threat.

“Our attention on whatever scares us increases until we either fight or run in the other direction, or until the threat diminishes on its own,” he adds. “Without trust, people respond with distraction, fear, and, at the extreme, paralysis. And that response is hidden inside ‘business’ behaviors—sandbagging quotas, hedging on stretch goals, and avoiding accountability or commitment.”

Hamm calls trustworthiness “the most noble and powerful of all the attributes of leadership.” He says leaders become trustworthy by building a track record of honesty, fairness, and integrity. For Hamm, cultivating this trust isn’t just a moral issue; it’s a practical one.

“Trust is the currency you will need when the time comes for you to make unreasonable performance demands on your teams,” he explains. “And when you’re in that tight spot, it’s quite possible that the level of willingness your employees have to meet those demands could make or break your company.”

Hamm has spent his career studying the practitioners of great leadership via his work as a CEO, venture capitalist, board member, high-level consultant, and professor of leadership at the Leavey School of Business at Santa Clara University. In his new book, he shares what he has learned and brings those lessons to life with real-world stories.

In his book Hamm explains that most employees have been hurt or disappointed, at some point in their careers, by the hand of power in an organization. That’s why nine times out of ten leaders are in “negative trust territory” before they make their first request of an employee to do something. Before a team can reach its full potential, leaders must act in ways that transcend employees’ fears of organizational power.

The first step starts with you, Hamm notes. As a leader, you must “go first”—and model trustworthiness for everyone else. Being trustworthy creates trust, yes. But beyond that, there are very specific things you can do to provide Unusually Excellent, trust-building leadership at your organization:

First, realize that being trustworthy doesn’t mean you have to be a Boy Scout. You don’t even have to be a warm or kind person, says Hamm. On the contrary, history teaches us that some of the most trustworthy people can be harsh, tough, or socially awkward—but their promises must be inviolate and their decisions fair.

“As anachronistic as it may sound in the twenty-first century, men and women whose word is their honor, and who can be absolutely trusted to be fair, honest, and forthright, are more likely to command the respect of others than, say, the nicest guy in the room,” says Hamm. “You can be tough. You can be demanding. You can be authentically whoever you really are. But as long as you are fair, as long as you do what you say consistently, you will still be trusted.”

Look for chances to reveal some vulnerability. We trust people we believe are real and also human (imperfect and flawed)—just like us. And that usually means allowing others to get a glimpse of our personal vulnerability—some authentic (not fabricated) weakness or fear or raw emotion that allows others to see us as like them, and therefore relate to us at the human level.

Hamm offers Carl, a self-made success and CEO of a venture-backed software company, as a great example. Carl had a Ph.D. and held senior management positions at several large IT companies. But he came from a family with humble roots. In fact, he was the first kid in his family to go to college. The stories Carl used when leading his team came from his own rural upbringing.

He told them from the heart and with great humility. He would emphasize a point not by reference to some academic theory, but rather with a story about working in the corn fields. His team not only trusted him more because he wasn’t afraid to show that side of himself, but they loved him for it.

“Carl knew that if he was authentic, it would be much easier for him to earn his team’s trust,” says Hamm. “The best leaders consciously present themselves as accessible and open and vulnerable—that is, they talk about their fears, challenges, and failures with humility, candor, and at times even some humor—so as to break down the barriers with those whom they wish to know. They know this does not threaten their power, but, rather, increases their influence.”

No matter how tempted you are, don’t bullsh*t your employees. Tell the truth, match your actions with your words, and match those words with the truth we all see in the world: no spin, no BS, no fancy justifications or revisionist history—just tell the truth.

“Telling the truth when it is not convenient or popular, or when it will make you look bad, can be tough,” admits Hamm. “Yet, it’s essential to your reputation. Your task as a leader is to be as forthright and transparent as is realistically possible. Strive to disclose the maximum amount of information appropriate to the situation.

When you feel yourself starting to bend what you know is the truth or withhold the bare facts, find a way to stop, reformat your communication, and tell the truth.”

Never, ever make the “adulterer’s guarantee.” This happens when you say to an employee, in effect, “I just lied to (someone else), but you can trust me because I’d never lie to you.” When an employee sees you committing any act of dishonesty or two-facedness, they’ll assume that you’ll do the same to them. They’ll start thinking back through all of their conversations with you, wondering what was real and what was disingenuous.

In his book, Hamm describes an incident that took place at a famous, fast-growing technology company. A young, inexperienced, but talented associate had what he thought was a plan for a powerful new marketing initiative. So he asked the CMO to broker a meeting with the CEO to make a presentation on the subject. The CMO agreed, and the meeting took place.

During the presentation the CEO was polite, if noncommittal. He gave the presenter a sort of passive accepting feedback—“Nice point,” “Interesting,” and so on—and wrapped up the meeting quickly, thanking the presenter for his initiative. But the CMO could sense a duplicity in the CEO’s behavior and attitude as the parties all headed back to their respective offices.

Then, ten minutes after the meeting, the CEO called the CMO into his office and said, in essence, “That presentation was absolutely terrible. That guy’s an idiot. I want you to fire him, today.”

“The story of this harsh and unjust firing spread (as it always does) throughout the company, morale slipped, and the CMO never completely trusted his boss again,” writes Hamm. “The CEO’s reputation for trustworthiness had been wounded forever. The wreckage from one seemingly small act of dishonesty was strewn all over the company and could never be completely cleaned up.”

Don’t punish “good failures.” This is one of the stupidest things an organization can do—yet it happens all the time. A “good failure” is a term used in Silicon Valley to describe a new business start-up or mature company initiative that, by most measures, is well planned, well run, and well organized—yet for reasons beyond its control (an unexpected competitive product, a change in the market or economy) it fails.

In other words, “good failures” occur when you play well, but still lose. When they’re punished, you instill a fear of risk-taking in your employees, and with that you stifle creativity and innovation. Instead, says Hamm, you should strive to create a “digital camera” culture.

“There is no expense associated with an imperfect digital photograph—financial or otherwise,” he explains. “You just hit the ‘delete’ button, and it disappears. No wasted film, slides, or prints. And we are aware of this relationship between mistakes and the consequences when we pick up the camera—so we click away, taking many more photos digitally than we would have in a world of costly film.

Because we know failure is free, we take chances, and in that effort we often get that one amazing picture that we wouldn’t have if we were paying a price for all the mistakes.”

Don’t squelch the flow of “bad” news. Do you (or others under you) shoot the messenger when she brings you bad news? If so, you can be certain that the messenger’s priority is not bringing you the information you need: It’s protecting her own hide. That’s why in most organizations good news zooms to the top of the organization, while bad news—data that reveals goals missed, problems lurking, or feedback that challenges or defeats your strategy—flows uphill like molasses in January.

“We must install a confidence and a trust that leaders in the organization value the facts, the truth, and the speed of delivery, not the judgments or interpretations of ‘good’ or ‘bad,’ and that messengers are valued, not shot,” says Hamm. “Make it crystal clear to your employees that you expect the truth and nothing but the truth from them. And always, always hold up your end of that deal. Don’t ever shoot the messenger and don’t ever dole out some irrational consequence.

“Unusually excellent leaders build a primary and insatiable demand for the unvarnished facts, the raw data, the actual measurements, the honest feedback, the real information,” he adds. “Very few efforts will yield the payback associated with improving the speed and accuracy of the information you need most to make difficult or complex decisions.”

Constantly tap into your “fairness conscience.” Precise agreements about what is fair are hard to negotiate, because each of us has our own sense of fairness. But at the level of general principle, there is seldom any confusion about what fair looks like. Just ask yourself: Would most people see this as fair or unfair? You’ll know the answer (indeed, as a leader, you’re paid to know it).

“If you treat your followers fairly, and do so consistently, you will set a pattern of behavior for the entire organization,” says Hamm. “This sense of fairness, critical to the creation of a safe environment, can be reinforced not only by complimenting fair practices but also by privately speaking to—or if necessary, censuring—subordinates who behave unfairly to others in the organization.”

Don’t take shortcuts. Every organization wants to succeed. That’s why, inevitably, there is a constant pressure to let the end justify the means. This pressure becomes especially acute when either victory or failure is in immediate sight. That’s when the usual ethical and moral constraints are sometimes abandoned—always for good reasons, and always “just this once”—in the name of expediency.

“Sometimes this strategy even works,” says Hamm. “But it sets the precedent for repeatedly using these tactics at critical moments—not to mention a kind of ‘mission creep’ by which corner-cutting begins to invade operations even when they aren’t at a critical crossroads.”

Plus, when employees see you breaking the “code” of organizational honor and integrity to which your company is supposed to adhere, they lose trust in you.

“Betray your organization’s stated values when you’re feeling desperate—by lying to clients or ‘spinning’ the numbers to get out of trouble with your boss—and you devalue the importance of trust and honesty in their eyes,” adds Hamm. “They see you breaking your own rules and suddenly they see you as less trustworthy. After all, if the client or the company’s executive suite can’t trust you, why should they?”

Separate the bad apples from the apples who just need a little direction. The cost of untruths to an organization can be huge in terms of time, money, trust, and reputation. As a leader, you have to recognize that you are not going to be able to “fix” a thief, a pathological liar, or a professional con artist—all of these must go, immediately.

“In my coaching practice, there are three failure modes that I will decline to coach: integrity, commitment, and chronic selfishness, that is, manipulating outcomes for individual gain at the expense of the larger opportunity,” says Hamm. “These are character traits, not matters of skill, practice, knowledge, or experience.

“That said, one huge mistake leaders make is to doubt or distrust someone because their work or performance disappoints us,” he adds. “Performance problems should be managed fairly and with little judgment of the person’s underlying character, unless that is the issue at the root of the trouble. Ultimately, unlike my failure modes, improving performance is often merely a matter of feedback, course correction, and some coaching.”

“Trustworthiness is never entirely pure,” says Hamm. “Everyone fails to achieve perfection. So the goal for a leader is to make those wrong choices as rarely as possible; admit them quickly, completely, and with humility; fix them as quickly as you can; and make full recompense when you cannot. Trust is the most powerful, and most fragile, asset in an organization, and it is almost exclusively created, or hampered, by the actions of the senior leader on the team.

“A working environment of trust is a place where teams stay focused, give their utmost effort, and in the end do their best work,” he concludes. “It’s a place where we can trust ourselves, trust others, trust our surroundings, or—best of all—trust all three.”


John Hamm is one of the top leadership experts in Silicon Valley. He was named one of the country’s Top 100 venture capitalists in 2009 by AlwaysOn and has led investments in many successful high-growth companies as a partner at several Bay Area VC firms. Hamm has also been a CEO, a board member at over thirty companies, and a CEO adviser and executive coach to senior leaders at companies such as Documentum, Cisco, Hewlett-Packard, TaylorMade-adidas Golf and McAfee. John teaches leadership at the Leavey School of Business at Santa Clara University.

 

TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:

SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org

Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com

Digital East: www.digitaleast.com

Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com

Three steps to the perfect employer

Tuesday, April 26th, 2011

Jim Beqaj

Jim Beqaj

The typical job-seeking approach in these tough economic times: Passively send out dozens of resumes for any job remotely related to a person’s qualifications, and wait by the mailbox, stay glued to an e-mail inbox, or sit by the phone for an unlikely acceptance notification.

If you desperately need a job, or are woefully under-employed, you don’t have to – and you shouldn’t – take anything that comes your way. Jim Beqaj, (pronounced BAY-KEE-EYE) author of the new book: How to Hire the Perfect Employer: Finding the Job and Career That Fit You Through a Powerful Personal Infomercial, explains how to find and get the ideal job; a job you will enjoy. Turn the tables, according to Beqaj, and you can hire the right employer.

Beqaj should know. He’s hired over 800 people in his career, and helped hundreds of companies find and hire the right employees. Founder of a company that provides recruiting, consulting and coaching services to individuals and companies, he knows that which he preaches. Moreover, he reinvented himself after losing his own job in a corner office.

“If you ask a person ‘What are you good at?” many have a hard time answering,” says Beqaj. “You have to understand what you’re good at, what you love to do, and present yourself in a clear and persuasive manner.”

Beqaj lays out a powerful, systematic plan anyone can follow to find the right job, and get hired.

His book explains three essential steps:

1)    Conduct an in-depth personal assessment of what you’re good at, what you love to do, how you are ‘wired,’ and your personality
2)    Find companies in your ‘Target Rich Environment,’ those with a philosophy similar to yours, including vision, culture, conflict resolutions techniques, and size, growth and opportunity
3)    Create your own personal ‘infomercial,’ presenting yourself with clarity, persuasiveness and strength, rather as just the person whose name is on a resume

“If you find the right employer for you, one that has a need for what you love to do, a Personal Infomercial enables employers to see the real you,” adds Beqaj. “The Personal Infomercial defines you, as opposed to letting words on a resume and others people do it.”

While many career advice books explain ways and offer resources for getting the names of companies in a person’s area of expertise, few emphasize Beqaj’s pillars of success: Introspection, identification of companies matching your personality, and powerful personal presentation.

“When I hired people, resumes were simply something that gave basic facts,” notes Beqaj. “I wanted people who inspired me by honestly revealing themselves.

“For an employer, nothing is better than having people who love what they do and love the culture of their company. From an employee’s perspective, loving what you do and where you are, and truly fitting in dramatically increases your opportunity for advancement. Equally important, it provides stability and job security because your passion for your work will make you indispensable to a company.”

Jim Beqaj began his career in investment banking in 1977 with the investment banking firm Wood Gundy and at age 37, ended up president of CIBC Wood Gundy after WG was purchased by CIBC. He subsequently worked as vice-chairman of the Bank of Montreal and co-founded an Internet-based IPO company, Baystreetdirect.com. In 2002 he founded Beqaj International, Inc, providing recruiting, coaching, and business consulting services.

How to Hire the Right Employer is available for purchase at all major online bookselling outlets. Beqaj’s website: http://www.beqajinternational.com. Blog: http://jimbeqaj.blogspot.com/

TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:

SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org

Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com

Digital East: www.digitaleast.com

Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com

Five ways high achievers get things done

Monday, April 25th, 2011

By Joelle Jay, Ph.D.

Joelle Jay

Joelle Jay

High achievers… go-getters… type-A personalities… Whatever you call them, one thing is certain: these people want to do it all, and they want to it all…right now.

While having many lofty and simultaneous goals is a good thing, doing too many things at once can make you feel overwhelmed and stressed out. There just never seems to be enough time to make everything happen. But that doesn’t stop high achievers. They are determined to make everything happen, even if doing so ruins their day and everyone else’s in the process.

Realize that the answer to getting everything done isn’t about doing less, especially since high achievers gain great happiness from getting many things accomplished. They’re determined to do whatever it takes to meet their objectives.

Rather, this is about having a system in place that can simplify the process of doing many things fast—one that will bring you progress as well as peace.

If you’re ready to supercharge the completion of your ‘to-do’ list without becoming overwhelmed or alienating others, the following five-step process will help you get it all done, with less stress and greater results.

1. Make a mess.
If you’re like most high achievers, you likely have numerous sticky notes, lists, files, piles, papers, and a host of other items spattered around your office, on your desk, and in your computer. Each one is meant to help you move forward to reaching your goals; however, as the piles and files grow, they become overwhelming, no matter how neatly you may have them organized. Therefore, begin by getting all of your ideas and notes in one place. Make a big pile of all the papers and items in the middle of your office floor or on your desk. Don’t leave anything out.

2. Sort and purge.
Now it’s time to roll up your sleeves and start digging. Go through your pile of “stuff” and look at each item to determine what you should keep and what you can toss. For each item, ask yourself,
• Is this idea or information still important to me?
• Can I retrieve this information from elsewhere should I ever need it?
• Is this information duplicated somewhere else?
• Will this information or idea help me reach one of my goals?
As you decide which items to keep, put them in separate piles or files as they relate to a particular goal or task.

3. Organize your list.
Look through all your “keep” papers and ideas to get clear on which goals are truly important to you and what steps you need to take. Put all your ideas and action items into one organized list, preferably on one page. You don’t have to painstakingly detail every action step at this point; the objective is to simply create one coherent ‘to-do’ list rather than have multiple ones floating around your office.

4. Rank the list in chronological order.
Redo your list one more time, now paying special attention to the order in which you feel you should do things. At this point, you can also add more detail to your action items. In other words, you can list not only what to do, but also how to do it, who to call for help, which resources you may need, etc. You may feel as if you’re wasting time here by going over the same tasks, but trying to rank your initial ideas in chronological order is difficult until you can see them all on paper at once.

5. Get going!
Now that all your ideas are organized, all you have to do is take action and tick off the tasks as they’re completed. No more thinking, planning, and organizing; it’s already done. And most important, no more confusion of what to do when. Just look at the list, take the top task, and knock it out. What could be easier?

Mission Complete
This process works for a variety of scenarios, including special event planning, home and family goals, work and business projects, as well as long-range strategizing for professional and personal objectives. And while it’s designed for high achievers who tend to have many high priority tasks going on at once, it works for anyone who simply wants to end the stress and chaos of having incomplete tasks hanging over their heads. By taking the time to complete this five-step process, you can finally meet all your goals and achieve the results you want.

Dr. Joelle K. Jay, Ph. D., is an executive coach and the senior managing partner of the leadership development firm, Pillar Consulting. She strategizes with business leaders to enhance their performance and maximize business results. Her clients include presidents, vice presidents, and C-level executives in Fortune 500 companies. Joelle is the author of “The Inner Edge: The 10 Practices of Personal Leadership.” For a free Sample Chapter, go to www.TheInnerEdge.com or email Info@TheInnerEdge.com.

Information Architecture for Website design: a primer

Friday, April 22nd, 2011

By Anthony Poillucci

Tony Poillucci

Tony Poillucci

While analogies may not be the most sophisticated way of describing complex subjects, they tend to work pretty well for helping people understand a fairly abstract subject like Information Architecture (IA). When talking to clients about the importance, the cost and the time invested into something that they have probably never heard of, such as IA, I tend to use the following analogy.

What is Information Architecture?

Like building a custom house, a website redesign is a huge commitment. You would not dream of investing large sums of cash into a new home without a set of well-thought-out plans drafted by a proven professional who understands your specific needs. Neither should you commence a large scale website redesign without a well-thought-out IA done by an experienced professional who understands the goals of your organization. Essentially, the IA of your website is the blueprint and plans of your home.

Unfortunately, the IA phase is typically the most overlooked part of many large-scale website development projects. What IA allows you to do is to make sure that all decisions are carefully considered and tested before you bang that first nail.

A Space Designed for the Needs of the User

For your house, you have a set of needs. You might need three bedrooms, two and a half baths, a living room, a kitchen and perhaps that library you’ve always dreamed of. The arrangement of the space in a home can be compared to the arrangement of content types on your website. Just as the planning of a home’s space affects the way people are able to move around in it, the planning of a website’s content structure (its IA) affects the way your visitors navigate your website.

In your home, you would not put the kitchen on a different floor than the dining room, nor put the master bathroom in the basement, two floors away from the master bedroom. Instead, you would want to design the space in a way that makes sense for its use, so that people can intuitively find what they want.

In the same vein, your website needs to group “like content” together, so that users can find the information they are looking for and take the action they’ve come to the website to take. For example, if your organization is an institution of higher education, you don’t want students roaming around your website, frustrated that they can not find the course description they need any more than you want people roaming around your house, frustrated they can not find the guest bathroom.

The Foundation for a Successful User Experience

Like real architecture, IA is a complex discipline that requires analytical thinking, an understanding of user behavior and years of training and experience. My company has created complex IA for large-scale websites since the inception of the Web for clients ranging from a large global company’s intranet (with more than 400,000 pages) to dynamic publishing sites to entire university website redesigns.

Expertly crafted IA provides the foundation for a successful user experience. Before you get into design, coding or content development; you must develop an IA that will:

·         Serve your users

·         Inform intuitive navigation through content grouping, categorization and clear nomenclature (plain language)

·         Inform page-level hierarchy

·         Allow for growth in the future (so you do not have to tear down your site and start from scratch a couple of years from now)

·         Serve SEO and searchability

·         Inform visual design

With the right IA in place, users will be able to find what they are looking for quickly and easily, and they will not be calling you for help with information that should be readily located on the website.

Anthony Poillucci is vice president, Creative & Strategy at VisionPoint Marketing. For more information, call (919) 848-2018, visit visionpointmarketing.com, or send inquiries to info@visionpointmarketing.com.

 

TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:

SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org

Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com

Digital East: www.digitaleast.com

Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com

Develop products that deliver more than your share of customer value

Thursday, April 21st, 2011

New Product BlueprintingThe best technology. The best employees. The biggest budget. The strongest R&D department. Check, check, check, and check! If you think these are all the elements you need in order to build a consistently successful company, you’re wrong. Dan Adams says there is one other factor you’ll need to check off that list—an innovation strategy that works.

“The best way to ensure your company will be a success is to deliver more than your share of customer value,” says Adams, author of New Product Blueprinting: The Handbook for B2B Organic Growth (AIM Press, 2008, ISBN: 978-0-9801123-4-4, $35.00.

“Specifically, you need to develop differentiated products that provide benefits your customers crave. Products they can’t get anywhere else at a comparable cost. But you shouldn’t be guessing what they want. You should base your product innovation on what they say they want.”

Take it to the next level. For more than five years, Adams has been helping B2B suppliers engage their customers in the innovation process. In that time, he has almost seen it all! And he’s used what he’s seen to distinguish six levels of customer engagement during product development. What’s your level?

Level 1: Our Conference Room: At the lowest level, you decide what customers want around your conference room table. Internal opinions determine the design of your next new product.
Level 2: Ask Our Experts: At the next level, you poll your sales force, tech service department, and other internal experts to determine customer needs. Better—because more voices are heard—but still too “internal.”
Level 3: Customer Survey: Here you use surveys and polls to ask customers what they want. This begins to shake out internal biases…but doesn’t deliver much in the way of deep insight.
Level 4: Qualitative VOC Interviews: You send out interview teams that meet with customers to learn what they want. This is a quantum leap from VOO (voice of ourselves) to VOC (voice of the customer).
Level 5: Quantitative VOC Interviews: The problem with just qualitative VOC is that people hear what they want to hear. Quantitative feedback drives out assumptions, bias, and wishful thinking.
Level 6: B2B VOC Interviews: Unlike end-consumers, B2B customers are knowledgeable, rational, and interested. B2B-optimized interview methodology fully engages them to take advantage of this.

“If you aren’t happy with your level, don’t worry,” says Adams. “Through solid training and committed leadership, I’ve seen businesses leap from Level 1 to 6 in the space of a year.”

Remember who’s showing you the money. A successful company innovates for its customers, not itself. “That’s because nobody inside your company can pay for innovation,” notes Adams. “Only your customers can do that. So the more closely you engage those who pay…the more you learn what they’ll pay for.”

Make sure you’re asking the right questions. Too often, innovation is misunderstood as the process of coming up with the right answers. “The reality is that it is actually about asking the right questions,” explains Adams. “If the bright people in your company are focused on real customer needs, they’ll run circles around the bright people at competitors who are focused elsewhere.”

Learn to pre-sell. “I believe the Booz Allen Hamilton conclusions are especially potent for the B2B supplier serving a concentrated market,” says Adams. “If you interview the ten largest prospects in your target market correctly, you’ll engage them so they’ll be primed to buy when you launch that new product.”

“So the bottom line is if you want to boost your innovation, you should start by directly engaging your customers,” says Adams. “And do this in a way that allows you to understand their world, focus on their important, unsatisfied needs, and entice them to keep working with you.

“This innovation strategy is great because you are removing the guessing game aspect of new product development,” he concludes. “You won’t have to worry about whether or not your customers will like your new products because you’ll already know you are delivering exactly what they want.”

TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:

SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org

Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com

Digital East: www.digitaleast.com

Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com

Five ways to define success

Friday, April 15th, 2011

Linda Seger

Linda Seger

By Dr. Linda Seger

We all seem to want it. We all seem to seek it. “Success” seems to be the magic word for what we chase after, prepare for, choose, desire. It’s how we often define our lives. Money, fame, and power are often what we have been told make up success. If we don’t get it, we’re consumed with envy of those who do.

Some who feel they have lost this golden ring have mental breakdowns, mid-life crises, and get ill just thinking about it. Others give up, and decide that success isn’t all that important; what is important is simply having a job and keeping food on the table. Some, at the end of their lives, suddenly realize they blew it, and what they thought they had, they never had at all.

Worldview Definitions of Success

Americans tend to define success by money, and by what money can buy. We are known around the world as a rather materialistic country, always striving after things and defining success by the accoutrements that money can buy – such as our snazzy cars, the size of our homes and designer clothes. And that’s just what we get – more things. This doesn’t mean more fulfillment or contributing to make the world better in some way. It simply means more things.

Other countries define success more in terms of whether their work supports their family life. If they enjoy their work, and if it gives them an opportunity to spend time with their family and have a balanced life, they’d consider themselves successful.

For example an Israeli screenwriter was asked if she had plans to come to Los Angeles to try to break into the Hollywood film industry. She replied, “Probably not since I can’t imagine being that far away from my family.” For her, success would be defined by her ability to get her film made in Israel, without compromising her family life.

Success and Effectiveness

For some, success is defined by effectiveness. The question is: “Are they making things happen? Are they achieving project goals? Are they contributing in a way that adds value to the project?” Success for them means the project becomes better as a result of their participation. They can see the results, and feel fulfilled by their work, but also know their work fulfills others, either because the product they make is useful, or because the service they provide is helpful.

Success and Joy

Some define success by whether their job suits them and by how much joy they have as a result of their work. They define it by the joy they feel when they do the work; the joy they feel when they’ve finished the work; and by the joy that others feel as a result of their work.

If their work doesn’t add to their sense of happiness and joy of themselves and others, then no matter how much money they’ve earned or how many accolades they receive, they don’t feel successful.

This joy not only comes from their own work, but from the collaboration with other talented people who not only bring their skills to the project, but also bring harmony to the working relationship. Nobody wants to work among discord. For many, if those work relationships aren’t fulfilling and harmonious, they don’t feel good about their work, themselves, or about others.

Success and Balance

Some define success by the sense of balance they have between their work lives and the rest of their lives. For them, work is not what success is about. They believe that life needs to be balanced, and that work is not meant to be the only thing in our lives.

John Woolman, an early American abolitionist, cut back on his successful work as a tailor because he wanted to be “free of cumber.” When his work was getting so cumbersome it was controlling him and left him no time for other things of value in his life, he did not consider himself successful.

If a job is driving someone, demanding all their time, and giving them no balance between their work, physical exercise, time with their family and other relationships, and time for spiritual growth, then the balance is off and many would consider this is not living a successful life. This can lead to a frenetic lifestyle, as well as illness, family problems, and not paying attention to the values that make a good life.

Making a Difference

Ultimately, many define success by how their lives will be summed up at their funeral. Will attendees be talking about how much money the person made or perhaps even say “good riddance” to a failure as a human being?

Or will they be talking about this person’s contributions and how blessed they feel to have known this person as a friend or co-worker? For most, success is ultimately defined by the Good that has been contributed, and by what is remembered about someone who has finished the work. Has the person made a good difference?

Dr. Linda Seger is the author of The Better Way to Win: Connecting not Competing for Success, and Spiritual Steps on the Road to Success: gaining the goal without losing your soul. She began her business as a script consultant in 1981 and recently received a Lifetime Achievement Award for her contributions to the film industry. She can be contacted through her websites, http://www.lindaseger.com/ and http://www.spiritual-steps.com/

Six strategies to manage interruptions and take control of your time

Thursday, April 14th, 2011

Power WithinBy Danita Johnson Hughes

Time gets lost. People kill time. Time flies. It gets wasted.

Time weighs heavy on our hands.

We spend time. Time passes. It drags on or it hurries by. Those behind bars are said to be doing time.

Sometimes, we have no time left; we’re out of time.

According to the great American inventor, Thomas Edison, “Time is really the only capital any human being has, and the one thing he can’t afford to waste.”

The perception of not having enough time for the things we must do or, just as importantly, the things we want to do is a leading cause of stress in society today. Continued exposure to stress can have an adverse effect on a person’s health, both physical and mental.

Interruptions hamper managing time

Because you spend a great deal of your time at work, meeting your employer’s expectations becomes increasingly important.  Managing your time effectively, however, is often hampered by interruptions at work.  Constant interruptions can significantly hinder effort, curtail creativity, and decrease productivity by disrupting thought processes and workflows, causing individuals to lose focus and take longer to complete tasks. A high rate of interruptions can be a serious issue in the workplace and can be a barrier to success.

Think back to your last day at work.  I bet it went something like this.  You arrive at work, sit down, and slowly begin to get into a groove.  You begin working on that report that’s due at the end of the day.  After about an hour and a half, you quit to go to a meeting that was scheduled a few days ago.  After the meeting you think, “What a waste of time. They could have just sent a memo for us to read and not interrupted my work day.”

You go back to your office and try to get back to that report.  The phone rings.  It’s Tom. You decide not to answer.  Whatever it is, it can wait.

Two minutes later, Tom is knocking on your door.  You bite your tongue and invite him in as you’re thinking, “Can’t he take a hint?  I’m busy!”  He spends twenty minutes discussing the meeting you just had and how he thought it was such a waste of time.  He leaves.

The phone rings again. It’s Jenny.  You don’t answer.  You really need to get this report completed by the end of the day.  Jenny sends you an email.  You open it.  She needs to discuss a matter of mutual concern regarding another work matter.  She’d like to do this at your earliest convenience.  You email her back that you will meet with her later in the afternoon. Gee! Another meeting!

While emailing her, you notice several emails received since yesterday.  You think, “Maybe I’ll read some of these and get them out of the way.  Two hours later, it’s past lunch time and you haven’t eaten.  You take a break for lunch.  When you return, Jenny is waiting to start the meeting you agreed to this morning.

Jenny leaves.  Before you restart your computer, you decide to take a bathroom break.  You run into John in the hallway. He comments that he hasn’t seen you all day and wants to know what you’ve been up to.  You tell him you have a report due and need to get back to it. The two of you talk for ten minutes.

You finish the conversation and complete that trip to the bathroom, resolving to get back to that report as soon as you get to your office.  In your office, you remember a file you need to finish the report.  You don’t remember where you put it.  After 30 minutes you locate it.  Finally, you get back to your computer.

As you’re typing away on your computer, your boss walks in, pats you on the shoulder and wants to know how it’s going.  You try to keep a straight face as you’re thinking, “It could be going better if I could get around all these interruptions.”  After a light conversation, you’re alone again.

Does this sound familiar?  If so, you may be experiencing “time stress.”  Learning to manage your time more effectively by controlling interruptions is the key to reducing stress and being more productive and successful on your job.

Here are six helpful strategies for taking control of your time and using it more effectively:

  • Regularly organize and prioritize your work.
  • Assess the types of interruptions you experience most.  Are they necessary or not?
  • Distinguish between available time and time that is off limits.
  • Postpone unnecessary interruptions until you have some available time.
  • Be willing to say “no.” There are only so many hours in a day and only so much you can do with that time.
  • Recognize that some interruptions are unavoidable.  When these occur, encourage the interrupter to get to the point quickly.  Don’t engage in “small talk.”  Establish how much time you have initially, e.g. 10 minutes, and stick to it.

Time management is a journey.  By keeping control of your time and managing how it is spent, you may find that you have just a little more to spend.

Danita Johnson Hughes, Ph.D. is a healthcare industry executive, public speaker and author of the forthcoming “Turnaround.”  Through her work she inspires people to dream big and understand the role of personal responsibility in personal and professional success. In her first book, Power from Within,” Danita shares her Power Principles for Success that helped her overcome meager beginnings and achieve professional, community and personal success. For

Survey says: Washington D.C. businesses seize cloud opportunities

Wednesday, April 13th, 2011

Karen Del Vescovo

Karen Del Vescovo

WASHINGTON, DC – You won’t often see the Washington, D.C. area compared to uber-trendy cities like New York and Los Angeles when it comes to things like fashion and music, but when it comes to evolving tech trends, our nation’s capital is a trend setter.

In fact, in a recent survey sponsored by Microsoft and conducted by 7th Sense Research that assessed the attitudes and opinions of IT decision makers (ITDMs) toward cloud computing, D.C. surfaced as a city that’s particularly receptive to making the most of cloud computing.

The survey results revealed a number of reasons why D.C. ITDMs have so readily embraced web-based services. For one, supporting a mobile workforce is no longer a perk, but a necessity in a business climate defined by anytime, anywhere availability. Therefore, 81 percent of enterprise ITDMs in the Washington, D.C. area agree that IT must address the business need of enabling workers to work anywhere at any time.

Many of these ITDMs are turning to the cloud for help, since it enables workers to access key business applications from nearly any location. In fact, the main reason 46 percent of these respondents bought into cloud services was to support and enable a remote workforce.

What’s more, D.C.  ITDMs view cloud computing as a technology revolution and an opportunity for IT to be more strategic, as well as a way for companies to show they are innovative. The cloud doesn’t just provide another way to access information – it helps companies better manage resources and talent, create new efficiencies and cut costs.

The cloud also makes new things possible and allows enterprise organizations to grow. For example, 26 percent of enterprise ITDMs in the Washington, D.C. area said the cloud enabled them to start a new line of business. With the cloud’s pay-as-you-go model, businesses can keep costs low while expanding their offerings, develop different ways of serving customers and clients and even enter new markets.

Hiring more staff

Fortunately, all of this benefits the local workforce – 28 percent of D.C. enterprise organizations are hiring more staff with cloud computing experience while 14 percent are hiring more staff in general as a result of cloud services. Additionally, half of D.C. ITDMs in enterprise businesses said they would be more likely to purchase a cloud solution if they could work with a certified partner; among D.C. enterprise ITDMs, 32 percent hired vendors to assist in deploying cloud projects.

Local IT consulting firm and Microsoft Gold Certified Partner RDA is just one area vendor that’s showing local businesses how to reap the benefits of cloud computing. “There’s no doubt that the cloud is igniting a growth in the IT services economy,” said Tom Cole, President and Chief Executive Officer of RDA.

“More and more of our customers are asking us how they can take advantage of the cloud because they’re starting to see how it can create tremendous efficiencies, while also providing much needed flexibility and control.”

As with any trend, it’s never wise to jump on the bandwagon before doing your homework. If you’re debating whether or not cloud-based technologies will benefit your business, take some time to talk with a local IT services vendor, learn how businesses similar to yours are leveraging the cloud and determine what’s right for your organization.

Don’t follow the trend just because it’s the popular thing to do right now, but don’t let it pass you by either – it might be just what your business needs to grow and thrive in a competitive marketplace.

Karen Del Vescovo is general manager for Microsoft’s Mid-Atlantic District, which includes Washington, D.C. For more information on how to harness the power of the cloud, visit_www.microsoft.com/cloud

TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:

SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org

Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com

Digital East: www.digitaleast.com

Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com

Nostalgia: the golden nugget in social media

Tuesday, April 12th, 2011

By Genae Girard

star-trek-monopoly

TV shows, games, or both may be nostalgic items to some

Michael owns a bakery that has recently started using social media. He decided to get on board and try to build his following through Facebook and Twitter, yet consumers that “Like” his Facebook page keep dropping off. He has been posting facts about his business including specials and new products with limited success.

Michael knows that Social Media is important to grow his business, but is confused about consumers jumping ship.  How can Michael keep his customers engaged so that he can continue to build his social media following?

There is a new goldmine in social media that more companies are discovering. That treasure consists of a doorway that bridges the gap between your brand and the consumer. That gold nugget is nostalgia. That’s right, talking about the yesteryears creates that warm fuzzy feeling conjuring up images of childhood, fun and remembrances of a less fast-paced hectic life.

In this world of constant change where we are bombarded by texting, e-mails and other forms of marketing, we long for the less complicated times of hot dogs, baseball and apple pie.

At social gatherings you often hear of people bringing up childhood games, toys or food with great joy and camaraderie. An old Radio Flyer wagon, or grandmother sneaking them a brownie before dinner brings a broad smile and instant conversation. Why not use that joy to your marketing advantage? When used properly, nostalgia can be the social media glue between you and your consumer. Here are some tips on how to use nostalgia for your advantage:

Dos

-Pick topics that are directly relatable to your demographic. For example, if your consumer base grew up in the ‘80s, pick topics directly relatable to that timetable including music, social references or trends.

-Ask open-ended questions about the history of your group to get them talking about fond moments in their lives. This can be as simple as asking the question, “ What was your favorite song in the ‘80s?”

-Get creative. If you are in the grocery industry, try talking about the fact that you remember when generic cans were black and white. If you are in the communications industry, try talking about when cell phones were the size of a bread machine.

-Keep it light and humorous. People like to laugh. Humor wins their hearts and their buying habits. Often in social media, consumers are surfing Facebook or Twitter in their spare time. A break of laughter endears your brand to them.

-Be a listener. As your consumer base responds, keep notes on what topics get the most discussion responses. Note them in a file and use them to your advantage. Use responses to tailor future posts as well as your marketing materials.

Don’ts

-Never pass judgment on responses to your posts. Let them unfold organically and you will be amazed at the creativity people use to get involved in the discussion.

-Never talk about historical events like politics or religion that could spark too much negative debate.

-If you are missing the creative gene, don’t be in charge of creating the posts. Determine the focus and overall content and have someone on your staff who is creative be in charge of posting.

Need a source of information and inspiration? United Online, Inc. has launched MemoryLane.com, the largest archive of nostalgic content on the Internet. This website allows visitors to relive the past with over 100 million pieces of content dating from 1940 through 1999.

Using the tools out lined above will develop the dialog between you and the group and endear your customer to your brand by bringing to the forefront topics that they miss from their past.  Echo their history, warm their heart and solidify your brand.

Genae Girard is a speaker, author and entrepreneur. She is the founder of www.BeyondtheBoobieTrap.com, an online social media tribe of over 18,500 breast cancer survivors and regularly speaks on the topics of women in leadership and building a tribe. She is also the author of “Off the Rack: Chronicles of a Thirty-Something, Single, Breast Cancer Survivor.” For inquiries email: info@BeyondtheBoobieTrap.com

 

TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:

SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org

Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com

Digital East: www.digitaleast.com

Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com

 

Alternative financing can offset cashflow problems

Friday, April 8th, 2011

The Commercial Finance GroupBy Tracy Eden

The statistics may say that the U.S. economy is out of recession, but many small and mid-sized business owners will tell you that they’re not seeing a particularly robust recovery, at least not yet.

There are various reasons for the slow pace of recovery among small businesses, but one is becoming increasingly apparent: A lack of cash flow caused by longer payment terms instituted by their vendors. Dealing with slow-paying customers is nothing new for many small businesses, but the problem is exacerbated in today’s sluggish economy and tight credit environment.

This is ironic given the fact that many big businesses have accumulated large cash reserves over the past couple of years by increasing their efficiencies and lowering their costs. In fact, several high-profile large corporations have announced recently that they are extending their payment terms to as long as four months, including Dell Computer, Cisco and AB InBev.

So here’s the picture: Many large corporations are sitting on huge piles of cash and, thus, are more capable of paying their vendors promptly than ever before. But instead, they’re stretching out their payment terms even farther. Meanwhile, many small businesses are struggling to stay afloat, much less grow, as they try to plug cash flow gaps while waiting for payments from their large customers.

How Alternative Financing Can Help

To help them cope with these kinds of cash flow challenges, more small and mid-sized businesses are turning to alternative financing vehicles. These are creative financing solutions for companies that don’t qualify for traditional bank loans, but need a financial boost to help manage their cash flow cycle.

Start-up businesses, companies experiencing rapid growth, and those with financial ratios that don’t meet a bank’s requirements are often especially good candidates for alternative financing, which usually takes one of three different forms:

Factoring: With factoring, businesses sell their outstanding accounts receivable to a commercial finance company (or factor) at a discount, usually between 1.5 and 5.5 percent, which becomes responsible for managing and collecting the receivable. The business usually receives from 70-90 percent of the value of the receivable when selling it to the factor, and the balance (less the discount, which represents the factor’s fee) when the factor collects the receivable.

There are two main types of factoring: full-service and spot factoring. With full-service factoring, the company sells all of its receivables to the factor, which performs many of the services of a credit manager, including credit checks, credit report analysis, and invoice and payment mailing and documentation.

With spot factoring, the business sells select invoices to the factor on a case-by-case basis, without any volume commitments. Since it requires more extensive controls, spot factoring tends to be more expensive than full-service factoring. Full recourse, non-recourse, notification and non-notification are other factoring variables.

Accounts Receivable (A/R) Financing: A/R financing is more similar to a bank loan than factoring is. Here, a business submits all of its invoices to the commercial finance company, which establishes a borrowing base against which the company can borrow money. The qualified receivables serve as collateral for the loan.

The borrowing base is usually 70-90 percent of the value of the qualified receivables. To be qualified, a receivable must be less than 90 days old and the underlying business must be deemed creditworthy by the finance company, among other criteria. The finance company will charge a collateral management fee (usually 1 to 2 percent of the outstanding amount) and assess interest on the amount of money borrowed.

Asset-Based Lending: This is similar to A/R financing except that the loan is secured by business assets other than A/R, such as equipment, real estate and inventory. Unlike factoring, the business manages and collects its own receivables, submitting a monthly aging report to the finance company. Interest is charged on the amount of money borrowed and certain fees are also assessed by the finance company.

Overcoming Fears and Objections

Some businesses shy away from alternative financing vehicles, due either to a lack of knowledge or understanding of them or because they believe such financing vehicles are too expensive.

However, alternative financing is not hard to understand—an experienced alternative lender can clearly explain how these techniques work and the pros and cons they may offer your company. As for cost, it’s really a matter of perspective: You have to ask whether alternative financing is too expensive compared to the alternatives?

If you’re in danger of running out of cash while you wait to get paid by large customers and you don’t qualify for a bank loan or line of credit, then the alternative could be bankruptcy. So while factoring does tend to be more expensive than bank financing, if this financing isn’t an option for you, then you must compare the cost to possibly going out of business.

Most business failures occur because the company lacked working capital, not because it didn’t have a good product or service. Unfortunately, this problem is currently magnified for many small businesses dealing with ever-longer payment terms from their large customers. Alternative financing is one possible solution to this common cash flow problem.

Tracy Eden is the National Marketing Director for Commercial Finance Group (CFG), which has offices throughout the U.S. CFG provides creative financing solutions to small and medium-sized businesses that may not qualify for traditional financing. Further information on the company and their services offered can be found at http://www.CFGroup.net and http://www.fvf.ca. Tracy’s direct email is tdeden@cfgroup.net.

Opinions expressed in guest columns on TechJournal South are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of TechMedia or TechJournalSouth.

TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:

SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org

Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com

Digital East: www.digitaleast.com

Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com

Top five things that haven’t changed for technology marketers

Thursday, April 7th, 2011

By Laurie Zuckerman

Laurie Zuckerman

Laurie Zuckerman

When an editor agreed to give me a spot as a guest columnist, he requested a head shot, and it suddenly struck me that my photo was, gasp, at least 12 years old. Time for a new photo, a task which, as the editor pointed out, is no quite longer an onerous task. You just take a bunch of digital shots, pick out the best one, and fix it up. It may not be as good as a professional photographer, but it will usually do the job.

This conversation made me think about all that has changed in the past 12 years for technology marketers. For starters, there’s been the explosion of online media, social media, digital media, the blogosphere and search marketing along with the dragging down and decline of traditional media.

Then I started thinking about what hasn’t changed. Here’s my top five.

Know thy audience

A deep understanding of your customers’ wants and needs is, and always has been, the number one requirement for a solid marketing plan.

Hint: it usually doesn’t take a $20,000 focus group to find out if your value prop is on target. Need a quick reality check? Ask a few customers (the ones you want more of just like them) some direct, concrete questions. Then listen, really listen, even if you don’t like what they have to say.

Some companies are still struggling to tell their story

How many times have you gone to a web site and been left wondering what the company offers?  It’s a challenge for technology companies everywhere to clearly and compellingly articulate (in writing and in person) what they’ve got and why anyone should care.

Hint: if you are asked about your company and you become mired in a lengthy description of features, you have some positioning/messaging work ahead of you.

Content is king

There are now innumerable platforms from which “experts” can pontificate: webinars, blogs, twitter, Linked in, etc. This is cool stuff. But in the race to “become part of the conversation,” marketers should not forget that at the heart of all this outreach must be rich, thought-provoking, original content.

Hint: the beauty of great content is that it can be used over and over in different ways (a white paper becomes fodder for a presentation which is posted on YouTube and then evolves into a webinar which, in turn, is broken into a series of blogs, pieces of which can be tweeted (and hopefully re-tweeted) … and then, well, you get the picture).

Industry analysts continue to top the influencer chain

Even (and perhaps especially) in a time when social media is giving everyone a platform, industry analysts, such as Gartner Group, Aberdeen, Forrester and others, are still leaned on for reporting on who’s who and what’s what. Bottom line, their opinions influence tech purchasing decisions.

Hint: You don’t necessarily need to sign on as a client to start building relationships with analysts. They realize they need to go beyond their client roster to keep on top of industry happenings. Most firms have online briefing request forms.

Ye old press releases live on

The old fashioned press release is still a typical component of most tech company’s PR/marketing plans (especially now that it’s known to be a great SEO booster).

Hint: While press releases have their place, many companies make the mistake of equating press releases with media relations. In truth, media relations, just like it sounds, is about building relationships with journalist and bloggers and is an effort that goes well beyond the press release.

Laurie Zuckerman is a writer and communications specialist based in Chapel Hill, NC. She can be reached at laurie@zuckermanink.com or through LinkedIn at www.linkedin.com/pub/laurie-zuckerman/2/174/425

 

TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:

SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org

Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com

Digital East: www.digitaleast.com

Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com

Twitter scales with growth over five-year life

Wednesday, April 6th, 2011

AlertSiteBy Gary Beerman

Since the birth of Twitter five years ago, the social networking/microblogging site has experienced staggering growth. To celebrate this milestone, the company released a new set of numbers about its growth and usage.

Twitter has reached approximately 200 million registered accounts, with an average 460,000 new accounts being created daily. Over the past year, the average number of Tweets sent per day has increased from 50 million in March 2010, to 110 million in January 2011, to 140 million this month. In any given week, 1 billion messages are shared.

The site’s burgeoning use and popularity hasn’t come without growing pains, however. For many users across the globe, Twitter has become THE preferred news source, 911 system, and communication outlet. As such, at some points during major worldwide events—for example, the 2010 World Cup, which yielded 2,940 Tweets per second; the 2010 Haitian earthquake; and even Michael Jackson’s 2009 memorial service—activity has spiked so high that site slowdowns,  availability issues, or full-blown outages have ensued.

Despite these occasional blips, the performance of Twitter’s homepage over the years has remained steady and in line with industry averages.

At the start of 2010, Twitter.com delivered response times averaging 2.09 seconds. Delays spiked in the second quarter at 4.54 seconds, but declined steadily throughout the remainder of the year.

Twitter Response Time chart

Despite a few widely-publicized performance issues, availability of Twitter’s homepage remained consistently above 99 percent throughout the year.

Twitter Availability chart

The site is off to a good start in 2011 as well. As of March 15, Twitter has delivered average response times of 2.67 seconds and 99.63 percent availability. A pretty remarkable feat given the 140 million tweets the site serves up per day.

Millions of users worldwide now rely on Twitter as a real-time source for information and updates on everything from natural disasters to pop culture. Recognizing this role, Twitter appears to have made great improvements and investments in the scalability of its site, even as it adds new features and users by the millions.

Gary Beerman is Vice President of Product Management for AlertSite, a Florida-based provider of Web performance management solutions acquired by Beverly, MA-based SmartBear Software Tuesday (April 5). SmartBear delivers quality and performance tools throughout the quality lifecycle, anywhere – on the desktop, mobile and the cloud.

AlertSite uses it’s DéjàClick to monitor Twitter’s homepage every five minutes from 12 geographic locations across the United States. Response times refer to how quickly visitors are presented with the complete home page, including objects, JavaScript, Flash and any third-party page components. Availability is measured by the percentage of time the website is accessible. This includes the ability to reach the website from multiple locations and complete page rendering in a browser within a given time period (maximum of 90 seconds) without error.

 

TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:

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The future of IT, security, privacy, compliance and e-discovery

Tuesday, April 5th, 2011

By John L. Watkins

John Watkins

John Watkins

I recently attended an event that involved a discussion of current issues facing information technology, security, privacy, compliance and e-discovery experts.  One of the subjects discussed is whether corporate America is entering a period of “convergence” of these areas.

The discussion was in reference to management issues in this context, so I will use the term “management convergence.” What does management convergence mean?

In a corporate governance sense, it means coordination of these areas in a business unit reporting to a single executive. At a minimum, it means the management personnel in these areas should at least talk to each other and understand the specific concerns and functions of each discipline.

Given that we are living in a time in which businesses are still being asked to do more with less, but with electronic information multiplying at an ever-increasing rate, the potential benefits of management convergence struck me — as perhaps the lone generalist in the room – as rather obvious.

Nevertheless, the discussion indicated that many businesses are still using a “silo” mentality, in which, for example, the compliance professionals work separately from the e-discovery professionals and there are multiple fiefdoms.

Upon further reflection, the predominance of the silo mentality is not surprising. Silos reflect the all too human characteristic of preferring to build and control a small empire rather than serving as a part of a larger organization. In addition, for many companies, silos simply reflect the way that business has always been done. Sometimes, for example, silos are adopted as a way to assuage the competing egos of executives.

Businesses continuing with a silo approach, however, are likely missing the boat both with respect to both minimizing costs potential liability.  In many respects, a company using the silo approach is in a situation much like the U.S, intelligence agencies found themselves after 9/11: They did not talk to each other and share information, and hence no one “connected the dots.”

The common thread in all of these disciplines is the management and control of electronic information. The proper management of information is especially critical in the financial institution and healthcare sectors, but, in reality, it is important in almost any industry.

The benefits of management convergence would appear to be obvious:

  • Compliance and security personnel would almost certainly benefit from tools developed for e-discovery.
  • E-discovery personnel would benefit from understanding compliance and privacy concerns, which could lead to proper protection of sensitive information in discovery.
  • Compliance personnel need to understand privacy issues in performing their jobs.
  • Risk management personnel need to understand all of this and to make sure that risks are properly assessed and that insurance and risk controls are in place.

These are only a few examples why managers in these various areas should at least talk to each other. At an absolute minimum, the Chief Information Officer or Chief Technology Officer should be coordinating with the General Counsel. Even greater benefits might be achieved my managing these different, but related, disciplines in one unit reporting to one executive.

The C suite needs to consider these issues carefully. In the event of a class action lawsuit or governmental inquiry, it will be important for officers and directors to show that (a) they paid proper attention to all of these subjects; (b) considered carefully how these disciplines fit together; and (c) implemented a strategy for making sure that those involved in managing and controlling the company’s information work together.

A massive data breach will result in numerous issues. Those involved in IT management and security will be focused on the technical issues – determining why the breach occurred and what can be done to prevent it.

Regulatory and compliance personnel will be involved in, as may be necessary, reporting the breach and providing redress to those affected. Those involved in risk management will need to assess potentially available insurance coverage, and put carriers on notice. The legal department will, of course, have to be involved generally, and those involved in e-discovery will likely need to implement a hold to preserve information for litigation that is likely to follow.

The company will also probably be faced with a public relations emergency. The company will want to present a coordinated and transparent response. Mixed messages or incorrect publicly disseminated information will only make the situation worse. If the company has made no effort to coordinate among the involved disciplines, the chances of an effective public response are greatly diminished.

There is also the strong possibility of litigation. Potential claims include multiple claims or a class action by those affected. If the event resulted in financial loss to the company, there may be a class action against officers and directors. In the event of litigation, it is a virtual certainty that plaintiffs’ counsel will seek to depose not only the managers of the various disciplines, but those in the C suite.

If the officers and directors have not already asked questions regarding coordination of those involved in handling and managing electronic data, the plaintiffs’ lawyers surely will.

One of the companies represented at the event – a large financial services company – has already adopted a coordinated approach under which all of the affected disciplines report to one senior officer. Those companies stuck with silos should consider knocking them down and adopting a similar approach. Coordination and convergence of disciplines should decrease risks, make breaches or incidents that do occur more manageable, and may have the happy incidental effect of lowering total costs.

John L. Watkins is a partner in the Atlanta office of Barnes & Thornburg LLP, and a member of the firm’s Litigation Department. He currently focuses his litigation practice on complex litigation matters involving trade secrets and confidential information, insurance coverage and insurance bad faith, corporate disputes, and other commercial matters. He is with the firm’s cloud computing and cyber security practice.

 

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4 ways to make social technologies relevant to your business

Thursday, March 31st, 2011

Scott KlososkyBy Scott Klososky

Social media/networking and the collection of tools they have spawned have moved solidly into the strategy toolbox for organizations. If you want to be the Zen master of social tools, then first understand the need to implement elements of social that will both drive revenues, and cut back office costs.

Too many people think of social tools as only being for sales and marketing when in reality, there are valuable uses in the back office. With that thought firmly implanted, there are a handful of social tech concepts that are mandatory for every organization today:

1. Building Rivers of Information – One of the least talked about dynamics of social technologies is the massive amount of real time information flying around the Web – on any subject.  If you are a CPA, doctor, lawyer, baseball player, or basket weaver for example, there are megabytes of data that could be critical to your performance uploaded each day.

The reality is that you will harness maybe 3 percent of what could be valuable to you.  Social tools give us the ability to aggregate and filter this explosion of information so that it can be funneled into your brain.  Every organization can institutionalize this process by teaching employees which information sources are valuable, and what tools can be used to aggregate and filter them to a manageable state.

It is a knowledge economy after all, so the smarter teams win.  Ergo, use social tools to harness relevant and timely industry information, and you will be smarter.

PS. Don’t use the excuse that you do not have time to digest this information.  That is like saying you don’t have time to be relevant.

2. Organizational Voice – Every organization can benefit from building a powerful Web-delivered organizational voice.  There are many channels through which this voice can be delivered, Blogs, Twitter, Facebook, podcasts, text messages.  The organizational voice gives entities a way to create a conversation with constituents so that they can earn the right to grab their mindshare.  The only way to earn that right is by providing a valuable flow of content through the voice.  The three biggest mistake companies are making when using tools like blogging, Twitter and Facebook to connect with customers/prospects/clients are these:

1. Lack of a specific and human sounding tone. Every communication through whatever channel you use must sound human, and have a tone that is interesting, intriguing, or unusual. You don’t want to read boring things so why would you think your constituents will?
2. Mistakes with the frequency of delivery. If you deliver content too often, you annoy people and they begin to tune you out.

Even if your content is great, it becomes overwhelming and people just stop paying attention.  If you deliver content too infrequently, they lower the perceived value in their minds.  What is the perfect frequency?  It depends totally on the audience, and the type of content, there are no hard and fast rules.

3. The mix of content is all wrong. As you send content through the organizational voice, you must be mindful of delivering nuggets that are valuable. For example, if you fill 80 percent of your content with sales related information it appears to be spam If you do nothing but deliver your opinions, people might get tired of the editorial.

A valuable stream of content includes a mix of stories, facts and figures, and links to valuable resources, opinions, and product or company information.  Get the recipe wrong and it is akin to dumping too much cayenne pepper in the soup.

3. Online Reputation Management (ORM) – Regardless the size, or type of business you are involved in, an online reputation is forming – like it or not. Internet users (which now number nearly two billion) are increasingly sharing their opinions about service providers and retailers through conversations and comments online. Every time they mention your company, or your products names, these comments become searchable.  That means that when any prospective customer searches to find information on you, they will find these comments.  For this reason, organizations must have today a formal ORM program.  The steps are simple, build a listening process, document and engagement policy, and then implement a measuring system.

4. Crowdsourcing – Who wouldn’t jump at the chance to get work done cheaper, faster and with more innovation!  That is the promise of crowdsourcing.  There are somewhere north of 75 sites on the Web that now assist people with the crowdsourcing process (CrowdSPRING, 99designs, logo tournament, Innocentive, mturk, etc.)  Learning to tap into the Internet herd to get work done that traditionally was sourced in house, or by local vendors is a strategic advantage.  The quick way to learn how to use this tool is simply to dive in and start experimenting.  The risk is low and the rewards are tremendous.  The crowdsource market is growing quickly, now is the time to give it a try.

For extra credit, go back and examine these social tech concepts and note that two can directly help the front end revenue generation, and two will help with the back office operation, thus fulfilling the promise mentioned at the beginning of this article. There are too many leaders that still believe that social technologies equal Facebook and Twitter.  The reality is that every company can use the four concepts listed above to get a fast return on the investment of their time.  You might see them as a luxury right now, but they will soon be mandatory if you want to stay in business.

Scott Klososky, a former CEO and author of the new books, Enterprise Social Technology and The Velocity Manifesto, specializes in having the vision and ability to see trends in emerging technologies, which allow him to be a thought leader who applies his skills to help organizations thrive, leaders prosper, and entire industries move forward. His unique perspectives on technology, business culture, and the future allows him to travel the globe as a speaker and consultant, working with senior executives in organizations ranging from Fortune 500 corporations to universities and nonprofits.

Website: www.EnterpriseSocialTechnology.com, www.TheVelocityManifesto.com,  Blog: www.TechnologyStory.com, Twitter: @sklososky

Remember when a website was optional?

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011

By David M. Mastovich

David M. Mastovich

David M. Mastovich

Facebook accounts for 25% of all U.S. page views online.

Awareness of Twitter has exploded from 5% of Americans in 2008 to 87% now.

LinkedIn has more than 85 million users including employees from every company in the Fortune 500.

These statistics show how integral social media has become in our lives.

Do you remember when having a website was optional?  If you think about it, that wasn’t too long ago. Now we take it for granted that an organization would not only have a website, but that we would be able to find what we are looking for in a few clicks.  Yet right now, many organizations still think having a Social Media Strategy and presence is optional.

Why?

It could be because just about everyone defines “Social Media” in a different, and often narrow, way.  Instead of thinking of just Facebook or Twitter, consider the entire medium.  There really is something for everyone and that means plenty of opportunities to communicate with potential or existing customers.

Organizations could also be wary of the informality of the medium—inappropriate content, posting of pictures, obscenities, etc.  Yes, questionable content is on the internet.  But so are opportunities to engage customers and prospects and to carry on meaningful conversations. And you have more control of your Social Media presence than you might think.

Business leaders, marketers, communicators and managers should work to maximize the opportunity and make Social Media part of their marketing and messaging strategy.

Begin by developing a Social Media Plan integrated into your current Marketing, PR and Communications efforts.

Start telling your story

Then start telling your story. While Social Media is the “new, big thing,” the basic tenets of messaging still apply.  Less is still more.  Authenticity is still key.  And making it about them—your target audiences—is still what it is all about.  Tailor your Social Media message to each target audience and what they are interested in.

You can avoid Social Media and hope it goes away or you can embrace it. Just know that while you’re debating which path to choose, your competition might be tweeting to your soon to be former customers.

David Matovich’s previous piece for us: Does your business really need an app for that?

David M. Mastovich, MBA is President of MASSolutions, Inc. With a core philosophy of integrated marketing, MASSolutions focuses on improving the bottom line for clients through creative selling, messaging and PR solutions.  In his recent book, “Get Where You Want To Go: How to Achieve Personal and Professional Growth Through Marketing, Selling and Story Telling,” Mastovich offers strategies to improve sales and generate new customers; management and leadership approaches; and creative marketing, PR and communications ideas. For more information, see: massolutions.biz.

 

TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:

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Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com

 

Cloud Computing Has Its Risks

Friday, March 25th, 2011

By Milton L. Petersen

Special to TechJournal South

Milton Petersen

Milton Petersen

“Cloud computing” is becoming increasingly popular and is often perceived, in these tough economic times, as an easy way to reduce information technology costs.  Cloud computing can, however, involve significant legal risks and implications, and companies need to be aware of these risks before heading into the cloud.

Although definitions can vary considerably, “cloud computing” generally refers to the use of remote computer networks or resources operated by third parties to process, store, and manage data.  Particular service offerings also vary, but the largest cloud service providers (such as Amazon.com, Google Inc., and Salesforce.com) basically provide computing services on what is essentially a commoditized basis – much like a utility company provides water, gas, or electricity.

Through economies of scale, large cloud service providers may offer pricing that, at first glance, seems quite attractive.  Prospective cloud customers need to look beyond the promised silver lining of cost savings, however, to understand the legal risks and implications of the bargain they are striking with their cloud service providers.

While large organizations may possibly, in some cases, have the leverage to negotiate material changes to the form contracts or standard terms offered by cloud service providers, small companies will often be faced with a “take it or leave it” situation.  And the form contracts or terms that cloud service providers typically offer (especially in online, “click-through” agreements) are generally quite one-sided and contain few, if any, terms to protect their customers from potential legal risks and liabilities.

For example, the form contracts or standard terms offered by most cloud service providers typically describe the services to be provided only  in very general terms and contain few truly meaningful commitments by the provider.  Service levels (i.e., minimum required levels of performance) to be met by the provider are usually not included or are drafted so as to be basically meaningless.

Cloud service providers generally make only very limited warranties and indemnities in their form contracts or standard terms, and the limitations of liability in these agreements are also carefully crafted to protect the provider and shift risk to the customer.

Be wary of storing personal info

Prospective cloud customers should be especially wary if they will be storing personal or individually-identifiable information (such as customer’s names, addresses, credit card numbers, etc.) on a cloud service provider’s computing resources, as the potential liability that could result from a security breach by a cloud service provider (not to mention reputational damages to the customer) could be quite high.

Nearly every state in the U.S. now has a law that requires notification of affected individuals in the event of a security breach involving unencrypted personal information.  Companies in certain industries, such as healthcare, finance, and telecommunications, are subject to additional regulations regarding the use and disclosure of personal information.  Restrictive privacy laws of other countries may also possibly apply.

As the information technology age continues to mature, the prevalence of cloud computing is likely to increase.  However, companies should carefully weigh the advantages and disadvantages of cloud computing, and be fully aware of the risks, before joining this popular trend.

____________

Milton L. Petersen is an attorney whose practice focuses exclusively on information technology-related transactions and issues.  He is a partner in the  Information Technology Practice Group at the law firm of with HunterMaclean in Savannah, Georgia and can be reached at 912-238-2629 or mpetersen@huntermaclean.com.

Telling your business story: narrow your audience, be accurate

Thursday, March 24th, 2011

David M. Mastovich

David M. Mastovich

When you get ready to tell your story online, in social media, or a press release, there are several factors to keep in mind, says Dave Mastovich, president of MASSolutions Inc.  MASSolutions focuses on improving the bottom line for clients through creative selling, messaging and PR solutions.

Mastovich recently penned one of our most popular posts, “Does Your Business Really Need an App for that?” and will be doing additional guest columns for us.

“We see how important technology and social media is to our clients, how critical it is to marketing, PR and sales,” he tells us.

The first thing a company needs to do to use them effectively is learn to to its story, he says. That story “Has to be authentic and real. People often do not realize their own stories are good and want to use hyperbole.” Exaggeration is a mistake, though, he says. “That sets you up for failure. We’ve all seen that, bought a product that didn’t live up to the hype. It’s a bad strategy and leaves a bad taste in the buyer’s mouth.”

So make your story authentic and accurate, he says.

To begin doing that, he suggests, “Clearly define who your target market is. Drill down into that until you have the smallest slice that’s accurate. Narrow it down to who you want to reach.” That’s a piece of advice we hear from multiple sources, particularly in defining social media goals.

Once you’ve narrowed down your audience, Mastovich says, make your story “About them. Don’t lie. Be accurate.”

Small business owners are often passionate about their companies, he notes. “But they have to be able to take that passion and talk about it in 30 seconds or less, in bullet points. You need three to five key message points about what you really do. Say them, then shut up and listen. If they respond, you elaborate, making it about them.”

Listening is “huge,” he adds. “In our sales coaching, we do a whole module on listening. Sales people can be some of the poorest listeners in the world. But we all have multiple products and services and if you don’t listen you won’t know what that person wants.”

–Allan Maurer

 

TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:

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6 keys to recovery after a customer service fail

Wednesday, March 23rd, 2011

And the clients went wildIt’s 8 a.m. and you’re in an upscale hotel in Times Square—part of a well-known chain you regularly frequent—getting ready for a crucial business meeting. As you turn on your hairdryer, the power goes out. A bit nervous but not yet panicked (it’s just a blown fuse, after all), you call the “At Your Service” number and hear “Someone is on the way.”

Fifteen minutes pass. Then twenty. All you can think about is the hotel’s constantly looping “At Your Service” video assuring you staff will get you anything you need, anytime, anywhere. Your meeting is drawing closer, and your hair still hangs in wet strings. Twice more you call, anxiety turning to anger, both times getting the same (evidently canned) response from the “service” person. (Once she even asks, “What do you want me to do about it?”)

Finally, the power comes back on, followed by a knock on the door. It’s the maintenance man explaining that it wasn’t his fault but the front desk’s and making excuses about what went wrong internally. At no time does anyone acknowledge your inconvenience—or apologize for taking thirty-five minutes for what should have been a five-minute fix.

“This customer service nightmare was experienced by a business associate of mine,” says Maribeth Kuzmeski, author of the new book …And the Clients Went Wild! How Savvy Professionals Win All the Business They Want (Wiley, 2010, ISBN: 978-0-470-60176-1, $24.95, and The Connectors: How the World’s Most Successful Businesspeople Build Relationships and Win Clients for Life (Wiley, 2009, ISBN: 978-0-470-48818-8, $22.95.

“It follows the arc of the many customer service breakdowns that came before it,” she adds. “One thing goes wrong, and then because a service recovery plan isn’t completely understood by a business’s entire staff, everything snowballs. The end result is an angry customer who vows never to return—and who may decide to share her anger with countless others with just the click of a mouse.”

According to Kuzmeski, many companies spend tons of money and time on big customer service initiatives in order to woo new customers—but they end up losing their regular customers over little things.

“Customer relationships are made or broken when something goes wrong,” she asserts. “If you don’t have well-developed service recovery techniques in place, you’ll lose the customer every time.”

Below Kuzmeski explains what the hotel staff should have done and offers service recovery advice every business can use:

Learn to recognize (and truly understand) your customer’s situation. Provide an individual care approach for your customers. For example, someone with children will have very different concerns from a busy businessperson and vice versa. Therefore, you must train your customer service people to recognize these key differences and adjust their responses accordingly.

“Teach service employees to understand the context of a situation and to sympathize with customers,” says Kuzmeski. “At this New York hotel, the ‘At Your Service’ rep simply said, ‘Someone is on the way.’ When the problem still hadn’t been fixed after almost thirty minutes, it became clear that she didn’t understand that guests getting ready at 8 a.m. are probably in a bit of a time crunch. Otherwise, she would have put in more effort to reach the maintenance man more quickly.”

Make sure what you’re saying is happening really is happening. In other words, customer service is a lot more than just reciting a “Someone is on the way” script.

“When the hotel guest made the second call, it’s very likely the front desk representative didn’t actually check to see where the maintenance man was,” says Kuzmeski. “By simply taking the time to locate him, not only would she have gotten the guest the service she needed more quickly, but she would have been handling the problem in a way that helped to build goodwill with the guest rather than just more headaches.”

Be very specific about how the problem will be handled. When handling a customer service issue, let the customer know what is going to happen and when it is going to happen. The more information a customer has, the less anxious she feels.

“The front desk representative could have said, ‘Someone is on the way. We will have your power back on in ten minutes,’” Kuzmeski explains. “That way the guest would have had a timeframe for when she could expect to be back in business. At the ten-minute mark, the employee should have then called the room to make sure the power was back on. Then, even if it wasn’t, her guest would at least know she hadn’t been forgotten.”

Anytime you receive complaint #2, treat it like an emergency. Most people are fairly forgiving after one mistake—assuming you address it promptly. But when you get a second complaint, well, it’s time to go into emergency mode. At that point there’s no room for further delay or error. If you want to keep your customer, you must make sure the problem is taken care of immediately.

“At her hotel, my business associate had to call the customer service rep three times before the power came back on,” says Kuzmeski. “And in a customer service situation, the third time is not the charm. At that point, a problem that could have easily been solved has turned into a service recovery nightmare. Unfortunately, for the hotel, it doesn’t seem like anyone understood that.”

Make sure the service brand permeates from top to bottom. The New York hotel in the anecdote is part of a larger chain, which has a rewards program for repeat customers.

When the guest called to complain, the rewards people naturally asked why. When she explained what had happened, they really seemed to get it. They understood the inconvenience and tried to make it up to her by offering additional rewards points.

“This hotel chain spent a lot of money on a special commercial touting its ‘At Your Service’ program, but when it came down to it, they hadn’t properly trained their onsite staff,” says Kuzmeski. “Essentially, the rewards program department was functioning as one company, the front desk person as a separate company, and the maintenance man as yet another company.

“The moral is clear,” she adds. “Don’t allow employees to silo your company. Make sure that everyone understands the customer service plan and that everyone knows how to work together to solve customer problems.”

Don’t assume your customers will give you a second chance. Think about it this way: If a customer has taken the time to call you about a problem, you are already getting lucky, so you’d better take care of it immediately. You don’t always get a chance to make it right. Often, customers will just move on.

“Remember, your competition is constantly trying to sell the same product cheaper, faster, and better than you,” says Kuzmeski. “Don’t make it any easier for them by providing inadequate customer service. In this case, the hotel had three chances to salvage the relationship—and struck out all three times. Now my associate has said she’ll take her business elsewhere. By completely mishandling a problem that could have been easily fixed, the hotel lost a very loyal client.”

And here’s the real concern: In an age of social media, it takes only one dissatisfied customer to create a PR disaster for a company. In fact, lately several national stories have cropped up featuring blogs and YouTube videos that customers have created for the sole purpose of sharing their tales of bad service with the world.

“The internet has really amplified the customer’s voice,” notes Kuzmeski. “It’s increased her power exponentially. If someone were to ‘go viral’ with a negative story about your company, you might lose a lot more than one customer. It pays to do everything possible to make sure you have a strong service recovery plan in place.

“Remember, you can absolutely keep and create loyal customers in today’s economy, but you have to have the service chops to take care of them,” she concludes. “Make your customers and your relationships with them a priority—always! When you do so, you can create clients for life and guarantee the success of your business.”