Archive for November, 2008


How Do You Grow Your Company From a 1-Person In-Home Biz?

I got asked a great question in email about how I grew my company from a 1-person in-home enterprise to a larger business in an office with more people.

Figured I’d venture into the VLOG world and answer the question.

Do you like the idea of vlogging instead of text? Cast your vote!

Was this interesting? Let me know what you think - I love feedback and can continue to evolve the content of this blog the more I get!

PS - HAPPY THANKSGIVING!!

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Omnipresence Found in LogMeIn

OK, so what do you do when you’re the owner of the company, the buck stops with you, you’re pretty much expected to be omnipresent - and you get sick?

Now, I don’t mean “I have the sniffles” kind of sick - I mean the kind where you feel like someone’s run you over with a dump truck and you can’t move much, let alone breathe.

I’ll tell you what you do - you make sure you have your laptop with you and use LogMeIn - familiar with it? If you’re not, here’s what Wikipedia says it is: LogMeIn is a suite of software services that provides remote access to computers over the Internet. The various product versions are designed for both end users and professional help desk personnel.

In this image, you can see that I’m using my computer at my office (the B&W) from my laptop at home (color).

Its internet based, so I can access my office computer from virtually any other computer I find.

It works a lot like a VPN, where you can use your office computer from another computer.

It allows you to do whatever you need to do on your computer remotely - with only a minor sacrifice in image quality (see the image striping on the gradient?).

So when you’re in between bouts of feeling like the dump truck has backed up and run you over again and you have moments of lucidity, its a great way to stay caught up. The only thing that stinks more than being sick and missing work is going back to work after being sick with a huge pile of stuff waiting for you.

Try it out - LogMeIn is free!

PS - curious about my inspiration for this post? I feel like a dumptruck ran me over about 6 times, I can’t breathe (raging sinus infection), and am working from home when I can. Despite that, I’m NOT FALLING BEHIND. :)

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Critical Tip for Ping Users

Use Ping to update your statuses on your social networks? If so, this is specifically for you.

Keep your update limited to LITERALLY less than 100 (not 101) characters, and it will work on all. You’re only as strong as your weakest link, and LinkedIn is the weakest, truncating your posts and making them look funny. Further, don’t use ampersands (this thing –> &) and be judicious about using the at symbol (this thing –> @).

As if 140 characters wasn’t short enough, this sure forces the brevity issue, doesn’t it?

Happy Pinging!

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Getting Started with Social Networking - Where to Begin & How

So you’ve heard about social networking and if you read last month’s article, you’ve learned about what it is and how it works. In either case, by now, you might be asking yourself how you can get involved.

One of the best places to start, for a beginner to the social networking universe, is with Twitter, found at www.twitter.com. Twitter is a free social networking and micro-blogging utility that allows account holders to send and read other users’ status updates (otherwise known as tweets). Following someone allows the follower to get the other person’s updates in their feed as they make them. These updates are text-based posts of up to 140 characters in length that answer the question “what are you doing?” It is very easy to jump into without any experience, as it is highly user-friendly, and is gaining popularity faster and faster every day because of its ease of use.

Of the many draws to Twitter, it is its simplicity of use, lowest barrier to entry, and habit-forming nature of the utility that make it my starting-point suggestion.

Carrie Johnson, director of the Center for Women & Enterprise here in Worcester, says, “Twitter is a utility that has become an essential part of my marketing efforts for CWE. At first glance, I wasn’t entirely sure how useful it would be, but it has turned out to be an extremely valuable tool.”

Ready to get started? Log onto the website and create your account. When choosing your user name, consider who you are and how you sell. If you are an independent sales person (or, if you rely on relationships to make sales), try to get your name as one word. Mine is LauraBriere. If you have a common name, like MichaelSmith, it probably will be taken. Try to use MichaelKSmith or some close variation. On the other side of the coin, if you are the owner/marketer of a regional brand (or, if you rely on a brand to make sales), pick the company name. For example, Betsy Brewer and Cindy Brewer Lavoie of Southwick’s Zoo aren’t marketing themselves. They are marketing the zoo. They’ve picked SouthwicksZoo and SouthwickZoo as their user names.

From there, you’ll be given the opportunity to look for who you already know that may have an account on Twitter. It will prompt you to put in a web-mail address (i.e.: Gmail) and that account’s password. This is NOT your new Twitter password; it’s your email password. Click “Continue.”

Once you upload your contacts (don’t worry, it won’t keep these contacts), it’ll show you who is on, and who isn’t. By checking the boxes of the people you know, it will allow you to follow them. The next screen will allow you to invite your friends who aren’t on Twitter yet. Want to skip either of these parts? There is a skip button that sits in the very top right of the screen or at the bottom center.

Now to use and leverage the account—if you know me, or have met me, a great place to start is to type in the address bar (while logged in): www.twitter.com/LauraBriere. On the top right, it will show how many people I follow, and you can click on that number. From there, you can look at who I follow. See someone you know? Click on their name or their picture and then click the “follow” button that appears under their photo in their account page. You’ll see their updates in your feed when they post, and if they follow you back (likely if they know you), they’ll see your updates.

Leveraging the power of this utility relies on the same principles that traditional marketing methods do: consistency, clarity, conciseness and repetition. Get into the habit of posting 2-3 times a day on Twitter, regularly working to build your network (seeing who your friends know that you might know) and reaching out to invite your friends/colleagues that aren’t on Twitter yet. When it’s time to add another utility later to your marketing plan, it will be much easier.

(Second in a series of articles on this subject)

This article appeared in the November issue of DBA Magazine. You can check out this great publication online. Here are some links:

November Issue of DBA

DBA Blog

This Article

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