cheap microsoft software discount adobe Snap Schedule 2010 3.0 cheap adobe adobe best price adobe best price Plastic Animation Paper 3.2 Film Edition discount adobe secure oem software cheap soft cheap microsoft software buy oem software oem adobe discount adobe cs5 discount adobe cs5 cheap software Microsoft Office Accounting Professional 2008 buy cheap adobe best price software MS Money Premium 2006 buy discount cheap College Algebra Solved 2008 cheap adobe oem soft

RSS .92| RSS 2.0| ATOM 0.3
  • Home
  • Magazine Home
  • Subscribe to Magazine
  • SOI Supporters
  •  



    Speaking of IMPACT is a magazine devoted solely to excellence in all aspects of planning and delivering the very purpose of most meetings...the content. This is one of the most valuable resources for professionals in the meeting industry who are committed to providing events and programs with significant and lasting bottom-line value.

    This blog gives you, the reader, an opportunity to share your experiences, and opinions related to these articles as well as to ask additional questions of the author. In many cases the author has contributed additional information or a video message to go along with the article.

    Speaking of IMPACT is a publication produced by the Canadian Association of Professional Speakers. CAPS is your best source for finding the right speakers for your next event or meeting.

    WHY DO BUSINESS IN A BOX?

    December 17th, 2009
    Ed Bernacki

    Ed Bernacki

    Why Do Business in a Box?
    Challenging the boundaries for successful meetings
    By Ed Bernacki

    You’ve tried laser light shows and motivational speakers to engage people. You even thought of drummers, indoor fireworks and opera singing waiters to stir things up. And what is the result?

    I have seen these gimmicks in different countries as a speaker on innovative thinking. What is clear is that too many events think that adding some sparkle to the same old format for meetings will improve results.
    It is time for more “outside the box” thinking to design our meetings. Yet, before we can think “outside the box,” we need to see what the current “inside the box” thinking is producing. Here are my observations: 
    We start planning many events without defining learning objectives for what it should achieve for participants.

    With no overriding objectives, speakers are not challenged to create more original, unique and focused presentations.

    Read the rest of this entry »


    REWRITING THE RULES OF SELLING

    December 17th, 2009
    Tom Stoyan

    By Tom Stoyan


    Rewriting the Rules of Selling
    Learn the insider secrets of Canada’s fastest-growing companies
    By Tom Stoyan, HoF

    Let’s face it, as a meeting planner your reputation is only as good as the last speaker you hired. You really can’t afford a so-so client experience especially during these tough economic times.
    With fewer meetings, it’s now more important than ever to “wow” them at each and every meeting/event. Your speaker selection is often the biggest factor in providing them that “wow” experience. 

    A Hyundai will get your client to their wedding but is that the experience they are looking for? That next meeting you’re planning may be the equivalent of someone’s corporate “wedding” day.

    When the client presents you with a budget, ask them specifically what they want. Some clients are explicit and provide lots of detail.  Others want you to look after everything. And then there are those who think you are a mind-reader and should know exactly what they want. 

    Read the rest of this entry »


    THE 80/20 RULE

    December 17th, 2009
    By Sunjay NathBy Sunjay Nath

     

    The 80/20 Rule
    Untangling the Pareto Principle
    By Sunjay Nath, MBA, BScE, CSP
     

    Italian economist Vilfredo Pareto observed that 80 per cent of the land in Italy was owned by 20 per cent of the
    population. Upon further research, Pareto concluded that
    this trend was not an anomaly but, in fact, the norm in other countries. These observations were the basis for the Pareto Principle also known as the 80/20 Rule.

    Read the rest of this entry »