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How You Can Be More Productive With the 80 - 20 Principle fit from specialized training. He said that if he were just now starting this process, that would be the number one thing that he would do differently.The 80/20 Principle asserts that a minority of efforts usually leads to a majority of the rewards. For example, 80 percent of what you achieve in your job comes from 20 percent of the time spent. For all practical purposes then, four-fifths of the effort- a dominant part of it—is largely irrelevant. This is contrary to what people normally expect.The 80/20 Principle states that there is an inbuilt imbalance between causes and results, inputs and outputs and effort and reward. A good benchmark for this imbalance is provided by the 80/20 relationship: a typical pattern will show that 80 percent of outputs result from 20 percent of inputs; that 80 percent of results come from 20 percent of effort.In business, many examples of the 80/20 Principle have been validated. Twenty percent of products usually account for about 80 percent of an organization’s profits. In society, 20 percent of criminals account for 80 percent of the value of all crime. Twenty percent of motorists cause 80 percent of accidents, and so on.The pattern underlying the 80/20 principle was discovered in 1897 by Italian economist Vilfredo Pareto. He discovered the principle by looking at patterns of wealth and income in nineteenth-century England. He found that most income and wealth went to a minority of the people in his samples.He also discovered two other facts that he thought were highly significant. One was that there was a consistent mathematical relationship between the proportion of people and the amount of in When asked what advice he would give to someone who was considering using speaking engagements as a marketing tool for his or her practice, he replied he would encourage them to contact the State Bar and local Bar Associations. For example, where he lives, the Dallas Bar Association has luncheon programs. “Try to get on the list and make a presentation. With the State Bar, or continuing legal education, just try to get on one of the committees and become a speaker.” 4. Presentations are the most cost-effective marketing tool that you can use. They connect your key messages to your key audiences. Your audiences are often highly-qualified prospects. Because they already want to be there, you can focus on moving them further along the client-development process. Joy Butler, a sole practitioner whose office is in Washington, DC, agrees. She initially began doing speaking engagements as a cost-effective marketing tool to promote a product called, “The Guide Through the Legal Jungle Audiobook Series.” Presentations have played a key role in the development of her law practice as she speaks on topics related to her practice areas of entertainment, intellectual property and business law. Her audience generally consists of attorneys, musicians, artists, writers, film and tele Find New Cheap Car Insurance Did you ever wonder what your most effective business development tool is? Stand in front of the nearest mirror to find out. No one can sell you or your practice better than you.If you have saved enough money to purchase a new car, or have already spent your savings on the new car of your dreams – congratulations! There is no thrill like cruising around town in your brand new car you worked so hard for. But before you start cruising, you have to think about getting insurance for your new car – ideally, cheap insurance for your new car.How can you get cheap insurance for your new car if you have never had a car insurance policy? Consider these three tips:Check out the safety of your new car. Before you purchase your new car, check out the safety features. If you have already purchased your new car and it does not include certain safety features, add them. Cars with safety features are seen as less risky to insure than cars without safety features; therefore, insurance companies give cheaper car insurance quotes to drivers who own safe cars.Ask about “spinning off” of another car insurance policy. If you have ever been on another driver’s car insurance policy, such as your parents’ car insurance policy, ask the insurance company about “spinning off” of that car insurance policy onto your own car insurance policy. You will have your own car insurance policy, and you will most likely get a cheaper premium than you would if you purchased a new car insurance policy out right.Add yourself to another car insurance policy. If you are married, or have parents who trust your driving habits, ask if you can be added to their car insurance policy. This may rais Today, many law practices are reaping the benefits of developing active speaker programs and expanding their public relations objectives through speaking engagements. Whether you realize it or not, you’re already “presenting” yourself and your practice on a daily basis by speaking at meetings, client presentations, community groups, bar functions and seminars. Presentations are a sophisticated form of marketing and they are particularly suited to marketing legal services. They often result in generating new clients while providing increased awareness of the firm and its specialty areas. Here are the top four reasons to use presentations as a marketing tool. 1. Giving a presentation positions you as the expert on a particular topic. Just as writing a book or article lends credibility to the author, speaking helps you build your status as an expert. There is a viral marketing effect at work—the more you speak, the more people see your name. The more people see your name, the more positioned as an expert you become. The more positioned as an expert you become, the more you are invited to speak and so on. In addition to increased visibility, your credibility is also established by the sponsoring organization that has invited you to speak to their group. Bob Nabors is a partner with Nabors, Giblin and Nickerson, P.A., a statewide firm of 23 attorneys, with offices in Tampa, Orlando and Tallahassee, Florida. His firm represents predominantly local governments and state agencies in finance and tax matters. “We do what is called traditional bond counsel or tax exempt debt work and then we represent governments on a variety of local issues related to generating revenues and solving local problems.” Although he’s been giving presentations and seminars for 35 years, he did not initially set out to use them as a marketing tool. He says, “It was really just to be involved in bar organizations and other groups. We would put on seminars. I served as special counsel to the Florida Association of Counties, and they put on seminars periodically as an educational tool for new commissioners, staff and county and city attorneys.” However, now his firm actively utilizes speaking engagements as a subtle form of marketing, with many of the attorneys making in-house presentations and teaching educational classes around the state. Nabors’ audience is generally county and city attorneys that have an interest in local government, elected officials, government staff, or a combination of all three. He has definitely obtained new clients out of these presentations. He says “By speaking at events, if people have a problem of a similar nature, it puts your name in front of them and they will maybe remember to ask for your help.” 2. Presentations differentiate you from your competition. The person who can clearly express her ideas is seen as more intelligent and more self-confident than the person who stumbles through a disorganized presentation. When you’re competing for business, a well-crafted presentation can give you the advantage. An attorney once told me that he was sure his firm was more successful in getting business because the people they chose to make their presentations were highly trained in presentation skills. David W. Henry, a shareholder with Allen, Dyer, Doppelt, Milbrath & Gilchrist, P.A. of Orlando, Florida, has been doing speaking engagements for ten years. Approximately twelve times a year, he speaks to audiences that consist primarily of other lawyers and insurance industry personnel about insurance coverage, litigation topics, the role of insurance agents, and corporate culture building in the insurance industry. He purposefully started making presentations as a marketing tool for his own practice in intellectual property and business litigation, and acquired one of the firm’s largest clients through a speaking presentation he made in Texas several years ago. As a marketing strategy, Henry recommends that attorneys explore the possibilities for in-house presentations for companies that show up at association sponsored programs and events. These days, Henry thoroughly enjoys speaking engagements because as he says “It gives me face time with people who are potential clients. I’m speaking to them for long periods of time and I connect with them in a way that I would not be able to do otherwise.” 3. Presentations provide unique opportunities for interaction. Presentations provide you with an environment to capture and maintain audience attention for an extended period of time. Advertisements compete with other advertisements for mindshare, but when you can demonstrate benefits and make the material relevant to the audience in a presentation, you’ll enjoy an unparalleled opportunity to make your singular message heard. Ed Wright is a name partner with Stradley & Wright in Dallas, Texas, where he practices civil and personal injury litigation in a firm consisting of 11 attorneys. He was first encouraged to start making presentations about 20 years ago by one of his former law partners. Wright says that he has definitely brought clients to his practice through speaking engagements, either by someone who attended a presentation or referred him to another individual after the presentation. Wright believes speaking presentations generate excellent publicity. Having your firm’s name and logo on handouts that people can take back to their office will have a strong impact and is a great form of “free” advertising. He feels that an attorney who is just starting out securing speaking engagements would benefit from specialized training. He said that if he were just now starting this process, that would be the number one thing that he would do differently. When asked what advice he would give to someone who was considering using speaking engagements as a marketing tool for his or her practice, he replied he would encourage them to contact the State Bar and local Bar Associations. For example, where he lives, the Dallas Bar Association has luncheon programs. “Try to get on the list and make a presentation. With the State Bar, or continuing legal education, just try to get on one of the committees and become a speaker.” 4. Presentations are the most cost-effective marketing tool that you can use. They connect your key messages to your key audiences. Your audiences are often highly-qualified prospects. Because they already want to be there, you can focus on moving them further along the client-development process. Joy Butler, a sole practitioner whose office is in Washington, DC, agrees. She initially began doing speaking engagements as a cost-effective marketing tool to promote a product called, “The Guide Through the Legal Jungle Audiobook Series.” Presentations have played a key role in the development of her law practice as she speaks on topics related to her practice areas of entertainment, intellectual property and business law. Her audience generally consists of attorneys, musicians, artists, writers, film and telev Are Ad Agency Account People Evil? group.Before we discuss just what constitutes 'evil,' let's be brutally honest.Ad agency account people have very, very tough jobs. In actuality, they probably have the hardest positions there are to be had in the entire world of advertising.Why?Well, in addition to not being able to participate in 'every day is dress down Friday' like the creatives are able, being an account person means taking marching orders while trying to stay the course.The account person is the middle person to a lot of information brokerage. They are the point people between the client and the head of the agency, between the client and the creatives, between the client and the media department, between the media department and the head of the agency, between the head of the agency and the creatives, and between the producers and, well, hopefully you get it.They are it.All communications go through them, and as such, they are ALWAYS put in the position of having to bear bad news. What do ad agency people do? They middle man bad news."The client wants to reduce the budget for next quarter.""The client wants the logo bigger in the commercials.""The client wants to eliminate Metro Dallas from the next print campaign."Bad news to all at the agency who receive it. Bad news that means more work.And it becomes the account persons job to find a way of being able to deliver the constant barrage of bad news so that it doesn't seem so bad. But only the great ones achieve that m Bob Nabors is a partner with Nabors, Giblin and Nickerson, P.A., a statewide firm of 23 attorneys, with offices in Tampa, Orlando and Tallahassee, Florida. His firm represents predominantly local governments and state agencies in finance and tax matters. “We do what is called traditional bond counsel or tax exempt debt work and then we represent governments on a variety of local issues related to generating revenues and solving local problems.” Although he’s been giving presentations and seminars for 35 years, he did not initially set out to use them as a marketing tool. He says, “It was really just to be involved in bar organizations and other groups. We would put on seminars. I served as special counsel to the Florida Association of Counties, and they put on seminars periodically as an educational tool for new commissioners, staff and county and city attorneys.” However, now his firm actively utilizes speaking engagements as a subtle form of marketing, with many of the attorneys making in-house presentations and teaching educational classes around the state. Nabors’ audience is generally county and city attorneys that have an interest in local government, elected officials, government staff, or a combination of all three. He has definitely obtained new clients out of these presentations. He says “By speaking at events, if people have a problem of a similar nature, it puts your name in front of them and they will maybe remember to ask for your help.” 2. Presentations differentiate you from your competition. The person who can clearly express her ideas is seen as more intelligent and more self-confident than the person who stumbles through a disorganized presentation. When you’re competing for business, a well-crafted presentation can give you the advantage. An attorney once told me that he was sure his firm was more successful in getting business because the people they chose to make their presentations were highly trained in presentation skills. David W. Henry, a shareholder with Allen, Dyer, Doppelt, Milbrath & Gilchrist, P.A. of Orlando, Florida, has been doing speaking engagements for ten years. Approximately twelve times a year, he speaks to audiences that consist primarily of other lawyers and insurance industry personnel about insurance coverage, litigation topics, the role of insurance agents, and corporate culture building in the insurance industry. He purposefully started making presentations as a marketing tool for his own practice in intellectual property and business litigation, and acquired one of the firm’s largest clients through a speaking presentation he made in Texas several years ago. As a marketing strategy, Henry recommends that attorneys explore the possibilities for in-house presentations for companies that show up at association sponsored programs and events. These days, Henry thoroughly enjoys speaking engagements because as he says “It gives me face time with people who are potential clients. I’m speaking to them for long periods of time and I connect with them in a way that I would not be able to do otherwise.” 3. Presentations provide unique opportunities for interaction. Presentations provide you with an environment to capture and maintain audience attention for an extended period of time. Advertisements compete with other advertisements for mindshare, but when you can demonstrate benefits and make the material relevant to the audience in a presentation, you’ll enjoy an unparalleled opportunity to make your singular message heard. Ed Wright is a name partner with Stradley & Wright in Dallas, Texas, where he practices civil and personal injury litigation in a firm consisting of 11 attorneys. He was first encouraged to start making presentations about 20 years ago by one of his former law partners. Wright says that he has definitely brought clients to his practice through speaking engagements, either by someone who attended a presentation or referred him to another individual after the presentation. Wright believes speaking presentations generate excellent publicity. Having your firm’s name and logo on handouts that people can take back to their office will have a strong impact and is a great form of “free” advertising. He feels that an attorney who is just starting out securing speaking engagements would benefit from specialized training. He said that if he were just now starting this process, that would be the number one thing that he would do differently. When asked what advice he would give to someone who was considering using speaking engagements as a marketing tool for his or her practice, he replied he would encourage them to contact the State Bar and local Bar Associations. For example, where he lives, the Dallas Bar Association has luncheon programs. “Try to get on the list and make a presentation. With the State Bar, or continuing legal education, just try to get on one of the committees and become a speaker.” 4. Presentations are the most cost-effective marketing tool that you can use. They connect your key messages to your key audiences. Your audiences are often highly-qualified prospects. Because they already want to be there, you can focus on moving them further along the client-development process. Joy Butler, a sole practitioner whose office is in Washington, DC, agrees. She initially began doing speaking engagements as a cost-effective marketing tool to promote a product called, “The Guide Through the Legal Jungle Audiobook Series.” Presentations have played a key role in the development of her law practice as she speaks on topics related to her practice areas of entertainment, intellectual property and business law. Her audience generally consists of attorneys, musicians, artists, writers, film and tele SEO - 2 First Steps to SEO nd they will maybe remember to ask for your help.”Seo is of course search engine optimization, but it makes for a whole lot easier typing if I do not spell it out! But seriously, seo is pretty important.Seo is one of the most important things you can do for traffic generation long term. You see, in the short term, seo is not really that important. When you are first getting started, you really need the direct traffic, and you need it fast. Seo can takes months to take effect, and sometimes it moves up and down. You are number one for weeks and then you fall out of place. It just happens – but when you have many pages and many sites it affects you less than when you first get started and you only have a few sites.Seo is just really a long term strategy, but the changes take awhile to take place – so you have to work on it now, while you are small, and it will help you get big. That is the bottom line. You have to work on seo now.So what are the first 2 steps to seo?1) You have to have your keywords on your web pages. I like to have my keywords on my titles, in my content, in my heading tags, and in my description tag.2) You have to get backlinks to your web site. I like to use article marketing and web directory submission to do this. Article marketing can create faster inbound links than web directory submission, but the web directory submitting can help you get longer lasting links. 2. Presentations differentiate you from your competition. The person who can clearly express her ideas is seen as more intelligent and more self-confident than the person who stumbles through a disorganized presentation. When you’re competing for business, a well-crafted presentation can give you the advantage. An attorney once told me that he was sure his firm was more successful in getting business because the people they chose to make their presentations were highly trained in presentation skills. David W. Henry, a shareholder with Allen, Dyer, Doppelt, Milbrath & Gilchrist, P.A. of Orlando, Florida, has been doing speaking engagements for ten years. Approximately twelve times a year, he speaks to audiences that consist primarily of other lawyers and insurance industry personnel about insurance coverage, litigation topics, the role of insurance agents, and corporate culture building in the insurance industry. He purposefully started making presentations as a marketing tool for his own practice in intellectual property and business litigation, and acquired one of the firm’s largest clients through a speaking presentation he made in Texas several years ago. As a marketing strategy, Henry recommends that attorneys explore the possibilities for in-house presentations for companies that show up at association sponsored programs and events. These days, Henry thoroughly enjoys speaking engagements because as he says “It gives me face time with people who are potential clients. I’m speaking to them for long periods of time and I connect with them in a way that I would not be able to do otherwise.” 3. Presentations provide unique opportunities for interaction. Presentations provide you with an environment to capture and maintain audience attention for an extended period of time. Advertisements compete with other advertisements for mindshare, but when you can demonstrate benefits and make the material relevant to the audience in a presentation, you’ll enjoy an unparalleled opportunity to make your singular message heard. Ed Wright is a name partner with Stradley & Wright in Dallas, Texas, where he practices civil and personal injury litigation in a firm consisting of 11 attorneys. He was first encouraged to start making presentations about 20 years ago by one of his former law partners. Wright says that he has definitely brought clients to his practice through speaking engagements, either by someone who attended a presentation or referred him to another individual after the presentation. Wright believes speaking presentations generate excellent publicity. Having your firm’s name and logo on handouts that people can take back to their office will have a strong impact and is a great form of “free” advertising. He feels that an attorney who is just starting out securing speaking engagements would benefit from specialized training. He said that if he were just now starting this process, that would be the number one thing that he would do differently. When asked what advice he would give to someone who was considering using speaking engagements as a marketing tool for his or her practice, he replied he would encourage them to contact the State Bar and local Bar Associations. For example, where he lives, the Dallas Bar Association has luncheon programs. “Try to get on the list and make a presentation. With the State Bar, or continuing legal education, just try to get on one of the committees and become a speaker.” 4. Presentations are the most cost-effective marketing tool that you can use. They connect your key messages to your key audiences. Your audiences are often highly-qualified prospects. Because they already want to be there, you can focus on moving them further along the client-development process. Joy Butler, a sole practitioner whose office is in Washington, DC, agrees. She initially began doing speaking engagements as a cost-effective marketing tool to promote a product called, “The Guide Through the Legal Jungle Audiobook Series.” Presentations have played a key role in the development of her law practice as she speaks on topics related to her practice areas of entertainment, intellectual property and business law. Her audience generally consists of attorneys, musicians, artists, writers, film and tele Adsense Profits- Can You Make Money With Adsense? speaking engagements because as he says “It gives me face time with people who are potential clients. I’m speaking to them for long periods of time and I connect with them in a way that I would not be able to do otherwise.”If you are anything like me then I'm sure you have been scammed many times online. I see ad after ad on how to easily and quickly make money online. Well I have finally figured it out. If you want to make money online you have to work. If you hear anyone else tell you different, then they are probably setting you up for a scam. I have found adsense to be profitable for me, but it takes some work to make it happen.What is adsense?One of the best ways to make money online is with adsense in my opinion. Adsense is a program offered by google that pays you to place ads on your website. Basically you place the ads on your site and when people click on them you get paid. You may get 10 cents per click all the way up to $20 per click. I would say that in my experience I make an average of 10 cents to 50 cents per click.The only way you are going to make money with this program is if you get free traffic to your website. The best free traffic comes from the search engines. Let's say that you have a website about motorcycles. Let's also say that the term motorcycles is searched for 10,000 times per month in google. Well if your website gets on the front page of google for this term then you can expect a lot of traffic.How Do You Get Your Website Ranked Well In Google?Ranking well in the search engines has become a science all of its own. It is referred to as SEO, or search engine optimization. You will hear many things from many different people on SEO. What worked well one day may no 3. Presentations provide unique opportunities for interaction. Presentations provide you with an environment to capture and maintain audience attention for an extended period of time. Advertisements compete with other advertisements for mindshare, but when you can demonstrate benefits and make the material relevant to the audience in a presentation, you’ll enjoy an unparalleled opportunity to make your singular message heard. Ed Wright is a name partner with Stradley & Wright in Dallas, Texas, where he practices civil and personal injury litigation in a firm consisting of 11 attorneys. He was first encouraged to start making presentations about 20 years ago by one of his former law partners. Wright says that he has definitely brought clients to his practice through speaking engagements, either by someone who attended a presentation or referred him to another individual after the presentation. Wright believes speaking presentations generate excellent publicity. Having your firm’s name and logo on handouts that people can take back to their office will have a strong impact and is a great form of “free” advertising. He feels that an attorney who is just starting out securing speaking engagements would benefit from specialized training. He said that if he were just now starting this process, that would be the number one thing that he would do differently. When asked what advice he would give to someone who was considering using speaking engagements as a marketing tool for his or her practice, he replied he would encourage them to contact the State Bar and local Bar Associations. For example, where he lives, the Dallas Bar Association has luncheon programs. “Try to get on the list and make a presentation. With the State Bar, or continuing legal education, just try to get on one of the committees and become a speaker.” 4. Presentations are the most cost-effective marketing tool that you can use. They connect your key messages to your key audiences. Your audiences are often highly-qualified prospects. Because they already want to be there, you can focus on moving them further along the client-development process. Joy Butler, a sole practitioner whose office is in Washington, DC, agrees. She initially began doing speaking engagements as a cost-effective marketing tool to promote a product called, “The Guide Through the Legal Jungle Audiobook Series.” Presentations have played a key role in the development of her law practice as she speaks on topics related to her practice areas of entertainment, intellectual property and business law. Her audience generally consists of attorneys, musicians, artists, writers, film and tele Email Marketing Done Right fit from specialized training. He said that if he were just now starting this process, that would be the number one thing that he would do differently.Email marketing is one of those buzz phrases, striking a mixture of glee and trepidation all at once in the heart of most business owners and marketing departments. Email marketing and e-zines have become all the latest excitement, providing an opportunity to reach a large number of clients with little more than the rattle of a keyboard and the click of a mouse. The power of this marketing tool and a successful email campaign need hardly be argued, but there are many issues of etiquette and responsibility to be considered, or your presentation risks simply being labelled as spa and quickly blocked, filtered away or deleted.As you design your email marketing campaign, it is a good idea to keep the following points in mind to make your campaign successful while still operating within the law and the expectations of your customers or potential customers. • Sign up subscribers • Allow for an opt-out • Legitimate contact information • Carry interesting and useful information, and non-aggressive advertising • Don’t cut corners to bulk up your list Let’s take a look at each of these points in detail, stressing the right ways to handle concerns and build your business.SIGN UP SUBSCRIBERS No matter what type of email marketing campaign you’re planning, be it an e-zine or simply a one-page blurb about a new shop’s grand opening, a mailing list with no-one signed up to it is a pretty poor list. You may be tempted to purchase email lists in bulk, but this When asked what advice he would give to someone who was considering using speaking engagements as a marketing tool for his or her practice, he replied he would encourage them to contact the State Bar and local Bar Associations. For example, where he lives, the Dallas Bar Association has luncheon programs. “Try to get on the list and make a presentation. With the State Bar, or continuing legal education, just try to get on one of the committees and become a speaker.” 4. Presentations are the most cost-effective marketing tool that you can use. They connect your key messages to your key audiences. Your audiences are often highly-qualified prospects. Because they already want to be there, you can focus on moving them further along the client-development process. Joy Butler, a sole practitioner whose office is in Washington, DC, agrees. She initially began doing speaking engagements as a cost-effective marketing tool to promote a product called, “The Guide Through the Legal Jungle Audiobook Series.” Presentations have played a key role in the development of her law practice as she speaks on topics related to her practice areas of entertainment, intellectual property and business law. Her audience generally consists of attorneys, musicians, artists, writers, film and television producers, small business owners, entrepreneurs and entertainment business professionals. Joy said that when she was a junior associate practicing with a firm, she observed that many of the partners used speaking engagements as a way of generating business.” She says, “Presentations make a more permanent impact than direct mail or media advertising. Someone who sits and listens to you talk for an hour will remember you more readily when seeking legal counsel than someone who saw your advertisement in a trade magazine.” The evidence is clear: Presentations are one of the most effective, economical and image-enhancing ways to market your services. To implement this strategy and begin using presentations as part of your business development process, keep the following in mind: First, Make certain you have the requisite skills as a presenter Experience doesn’t necessarily translate into proficiency. We’ve been driving for most of our adult lives. Does that qualify us to race in the Indianapolis 500? We’d be taking our life in our own hands when we got behind the wheel. Yet many take their professional lives in their own hands when they get behind the lectern to speak without the appropriate skills. The only thing worse than not speaking is speaking poorly. Don’t equate knowledge of the law with proficiency in communicating it. Organization of the content, the way the speaker adapts it to a particular audience, defining a strategic goal in presenting the content and how it is delivered all play equally important roles. The principle of synergy is at work in presentations—the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. Some presenters may exhibit excellent delivery. Others may have the latest in visual aids. Some may possess such expertise in their field that their knowledge of the topic is superior to all others. However, without the integration of these various parts into a coherent whole, the presentation will always fall short of optimal performance. Henry, the Florida attorney mentioned earlier, feels that everyone should receive specialized training to make good presentations because, “It’s not a naturally occurring act to get up in front of 500 people with a microphone and start talking.” Second, Don’t substitute technology for strategy Although sophisticated software presentation programs are becoming the norm in many professional presentations, remember that your visual aids should be support for the message, not a substitute. Forget the bells and whistles, and focus on your message. Don’t use your slide show as a teleprompter by reading lines of text. Quotations and long text passages are meant to be read, not viewed. Too much emphasis on the visuals will steal audience attention away from you. You should be able to give your presentation effectively even if all the technology fails. Invest time in learning the principles of effective visuals and apply them to your presentations. Third, Actively market your presentations. Develop a strategic plan for how you’ll get in front of audiences. Offer to make presentations or be a panelist for non-profit organizations, local or regional chapters of associations, professional and industry trade groups, and academic institutions. Search for groups that have an interest in your specialty and can benefit from your expertise. You can also find speaking opportunities through national or international conferences and workshops. Keep in mind that your audience will include members of other organizations and associations, who may want to refer you as a presenter to their own group. When you’ve booked a presentation, be sure the event organizer or your firm sends a press release to the local newspaper or radio talk show. This is free publicity that puts your name and the firm’s name in front of people, and will bring in other people who share an interest in your topic. More and more attorneys and law firms are recognizing the importance of making presentations for business development. As the competition increases, it’s important to learn how to effectively present yourself and/or your firm. You can begin by reading articles and books on effective communication. The next step would be to find groups where you can practice your message. Toastmasters provides a supportive environment that can also help you overcome any communication anxiety. Their highly structured format provides limited opportunities for speeches over ten minutes in length, but you’ll gain confidence and experience. The greatest level of involvement, and the one that will produce the quickest results, is working with a presentation coach. The right coach can help to refine your key messages, suggest techniques to better connect with target audiences, and polish your presentation skills. Wherever you decide to start, you’ll be on your way to implementing a powerful new marketing tool.
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