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  • Atricle Dump - Hocus Pocus Focus (Part 2)

    Rapid Growth in Telecom & VoIP Employment Opportunities
    U.S. Department of Labor forecasts show that the second fastest growing occupation through 2014 is that of Network Systems and Data Communication Analysts. Jobs in this category are expected to increase by 55% compared to the employment level in 2004.Ranked 5th in this time horizon were jobs for Computer Software Engineers-Applications, which are seen as growing by 48%. Ranked 8th, 11th and 12th, respectively, are Computer Software Engineers-Systems Software, Network and Computer Systems Administrators and Data Base Administrators."Job increases will be driven by very rapid growth in computer systems design and related services, which is expected to be one of the fastest growing industries in the U.S. economy," reported the U.S. Department of Labor in the 2006-07 edition of its Occupational Outlook Handbook.More IT jobs are available in the U.S. today than at the peak of the dot.com explosion, in spite of the offshoring of a number of jobs in this category.The Internet Telephone Technology or VoIP, is quickly replacing the centuries-old, conventional communications industry. Simplicity and low cost are driving its rapid adoption by both consumers and businesses.Developing applications that are able to make full use of the ever increasing availability of new Internet resources requires professionals that satisfy demanding performance standards.It has been stated that VoIP will be able to support new communications functions that don’t even exist today. The U.S. Department of Labor anticipates tha

    Magic tricks, owing to the importance of patter for an effective presentation, are ideally suited for illustrating key points through stories. A visual magic trick combined with patter related directly to the point being made is an unbeatable combination. The language in the story appeals to the left hemispheric logic circuits while the illusion and the metaphor it represents appeals to the holistic right hemisphere. The result is a powerful learning tool.

    4. Use magic to conclude the learning segment.
    The strongest entertainments have fully satisfying endings. Before Hollywood releases a new movie, it is common practice to screen it for a test audience. If the studio discovers that the test audience dislikes the ending, the ending gets changed. Many films, including Casablanca, Patriot Games, Fatal Attraction and The Bourne Identity have had their ending altered through this process. The alternative is disappointed moviegoers, bad word of mouth and ultimately, poor box office.

    In show biz, there is an old saying about starting strong and finishing even stronger. For successful entertainers, the ending is the high point of the performance. In a similar manner, the conclusion of training is an important moment. The trainees have accomplished something of importance and should be allowed to luxuriate in that achievement. A magic illusion, when pl

    Web Branding: Nobody's Perfect – and That's Good
    Web branding is antithetical to the notion of perfection. Sometimes the best web branding advice is to let your humanity leak onto the web page. Life’s messy and perfection is not a trait known to mankind.If you make a mistake admit it, laugh about it, make fun of it, allow others to comment on it – in the process you will find prospects looking at your website or blog with an appreciation for the voice of common humanity.So many businesses rely on a level of perfection they can never attain and hope to sell the idea of a perfect company to prospects. If that’s what you’re doing you have a commodity nobody is buying.Web branding is about being creative, inventive and sometimes taking your prospect off guard. If you can work on these elements you may find that your website is connecting with customers in a brave new way.Google provides an example of this approach that has spread to other parts of the web. They have taken their logo and revamped it for almost every holiday and special event. Sometimes it’s fun just to go to their site to see how their logo has changed since the last visit. It’s a bit like the window dressings of yesteryear when your favorite store would redress their windows on a regular basis to provide a sense of newness to their store.Many websites will try to appeal to all demographics, but the truth is by selecting a demographic your wish to market to and then allowing web branding to help cast your business as an authority in this demographic you may find your approach is a turn of
    “When we are absorbed in anything we are unaware of time; and so it seems to pass quickly.” Magician Sam Sharpe

    This is part two of a two-part article that focuses on magicians and trainers. In Part One, we discovered that magicians and trainers have a number of similarities. We discovered that both:
    • Were once viewed as miracle workers
    • Are regarded with suspicion by their audiences
    • Practice manipulation of the audience
    • Strive to not remind the audience of the manipulation
    • Direct the audience’s attention toward the outcomes they desire
    • Must control their environment to be effective
    • Suggest the outcomes they expect
    • Must focus their manipulation for the audience’s benefit

    With these comparisons between magicians and trainers in mind, we will next turn our attention to the placement of magic in the learning environment. In this article, Hocus Pocus Focus Part 2 will determine when to use magic, and what magic to use.

    When to Use Magic Within the progression of a training program, there are four specific times when magic is appropriate.

    1. Use magic to begin the learning segment.
    In my opinion, the best instructional designs are those that capture attendee attention immediately while framing up the learning to come without resorting to artificial “icebreakers.” The very word icebreaker implies a counterproductive learning metaphor. Trainers shouldn’t try to break through as if using an ice pick. Instead, the focus should be on melting the cold atmosphere present due to trainee fear and apprehension. Magic is an ideal resource for pulling learners immediately into the presentation without putting them on the spot with a pointless activity.

    In my early days, I performed magic at children’s birthday parties. Often the children where keyed up and needed to settle down before I could begin. Instead of waiting for them to settle, I would invite them (so that we could “introduce” ourselves to each other) to shout their names out as loudly as they could. Once they had shouted their excess energy out and were ready to focus on the show, I would begin the performance.

    In a similar fashion, most movies begin with a prologue that teases the audience with fragments of information. The intent of the prologue is not to begin the story, but rather to stall for time until everyone is seated, to capture the attention of those already seated and to place the audience in the proper mood for the story to follow.

    Magic, when placed in this kick-off position, functions in a like manner. It provides an interesting way to begin without really beginning. The trainees who have arrived on time receive extra value while the late arrivals don’t miss critical instruction. An introductory magic illusion also captures learner attention, drawing them in and releasing tension in the process. And, if the magic trick you place here directly relates to your content, it will provide your learner with a frame of reference for the content that follows.

    2. Use magic to refocus energy.
    Master magician Sam Sharpe once commented, “People will always pay attention so long as they are curious. Keep them guessing and wondering by doing the unexpected. Unpredictability is a key factor in holding attention.”

    When performing in nightclubs, I often found that the audience's attention would wander. It's not that those audiences weren't enjoying the show. Rather it was the fact that there were more stimuli present than the average person could simultaneously absorb. To recapture wandering attention, I would present a flashy, attention capturing, illusion. As a result, the patrons would pay closer attention lest they miss any future illusions.

    In the training or classroom, learner focus also wanders. Learning can be hard work and any learner, even the most attentive, will occasionally tune the trainer out. The best defense against a lack of attention is to place the suggestion in the learner’s mind that paying attention is vital. This can sometimes be accomplished with the force of the content alone, but occasionally the content requires help. A well-placed magic trick tied to the subject matter can help. It suggests that interesting things occur in this classroom and that, in order catch it all attention is required. In addition, when a session is focused and serious, a magic trick can provide some levity, much as a steam valve functions on a pressure cooker, releasing excess tension in a safe and timely manner.

    3. Use magic to illustrate a key point.
    All magic tricks, to be successful, are tied to a story. Magicians call it “patter.” Many would-be magicians have discovered to their sorrow that buying a trick alone is not enough to make them magicians. As magician Dariel Fitzee explained, “The secret is NOT important. The ONLY thing that is important is its favorable impression on the majority of the spectators.” It is often the story that leaves that favorable impression.

    In learning, some of the most effective points are made through metaphorical stories. (A metaphor is a figure of speech where a word, a phrase or an item from one context is applied in another context.) As Peg Neuhauser explained, “Stories allow a person to feel and see information as well as factually understand it . . . because you ‘hear’ the information factually, visually and emotionally, it is more likely to be imprinted on your brain in a way that it sticks with you longer, with very little effort on your part.”

    Magic tricks, owing to the importance of patter for an effective presentation, are ideally suited for illustrating key points through stories. A visual magic trick combined with patter related directly to the point being made is an unbeatable combination. The language in the story appeals to the left hemispheric logic circuits while the illusion and the metaphor it represents appeals to the holistic right hemisphere. The result is a powerful learning tool.

    4. Use magic to conclude the learning segment.
    The strongest entertainments have fully satisfying endings. Before Hollywood releases a new movie, it is common practice to screen it for a test audience. If the studio discovers that the test audience dislikes the ending, the ending gets changed. Many films, including Casablanca, Patriot Games, Fatal Attraction and The Bourne Identity have had their ending altered through this process. The alternative is disappointed moviegoers, bad word of mouth and ultimately, poor box office.

    In show biz, there is an old saying about starting strong and finishing even stronger. For successful entertainers, the ending is the high point of the performance. In a similar manner, the conclusion of training is an important moment. The trainees have accomplished something of importance and should be allowed to luxuriate in that achievement. A magic illusion, when pla

    Nevada Corporation Law
    The Nevada Constitution was framed by a convention of delegates chosen by the people met at Carson City. The constitution was framed on July 4, 1864 and adjourned by the same year on July 28. On the 1st September of 1864, the people of Nevada approved the constitution. On October 31, 1864, President Lincoln proclaimed the state into the union along with others states.Nevada corporation law is categorized into three actions: the preliminary actions during the constitution development; the Preamble; and the Ordinance. Declaration of Rights, Right of Suffrage, Distribution of Powers, Legislative Department, Judicial Department, Executive Department, Taxation, Education, Militia, Amendments, and Initiative and Referendum are the major preliminary actions that have been developed for Nevada corporation law.Nevada Constitutional law allows major ordinance that has developed are prohibition of slavery, freedom of religious worship and the disclaimer of public lands are the ordinance which was effective until the congress has consented to the amendment. The other major ordinance is the taxation of certain property, which was effective on the time when the congress has consented to the amendment or a legal determination is developed that such consent is not needed.The Preamble of the Nevada Constitution states: “We the people of the State Nevada, Grateful to Almighty God for our freedom in order to secure its blessings, insure domestic tranquility, and form a more perfect Government, do establish this Constitution.” The ot
    rproductive learning metaphor. Trainers shouldn’t try to break through as if using an ice pick. Instead, the focus should be on melting the cold atmosphere present due to trainee fear and apprehension. Magic is an ideal resource for pulling learners immediately into the presentation without putting them on the spot with a pointless activity.

    In my early days, I performed magic at children’s birthday parties. Often the children where keyed up and needed to settle down before I could begin. Instead of waiting for them to settle, I would invite them (so that we could “introduce” ourselves to each other) to shout their names out as loudly as they could. Once they had shouted their excess energy out and were ready to focus on the show, I would begin the performance.

    In a similar fashion, most movies begin with a prologue that teases the audience with fragments of information. The intent of the prologue is not to begin the story, but rather to stall for time until everyone is seated, to capture the attention of those already seated and to place the audience in the proper mood for the story to follow.

    Magic, when placed in this kick-off position, functions in a like manner. It provides an interesting way to begin without really beginning. The trainees who have arrived on time receive extra value while the late arrivals don’t miss critical instruction. An introductory magic illusion also captures learner attention, drawing them in and releasing tension in the process. And, if the magic trick you place here directly relates to your content, it will provide your learner with a frame of reference for the content that follows.

    2. Use magic to refocus energy.
    Master magician Sam Sharpe once commented, “People will always pay attention so long as they are curious. Keep them guessing and wondering by doing the unexpected. Unpredictability is a key factor in holding attention.”

    When performing in nightclubs, I often found that the audience's attention would wander. It's not that those audiences weren't enjoying the show. Rather it was the fact that there were more stimuli present than the average person could simultaneously absorb. To recapture wandering attention, I would present a flashy, attention capturing, illusion. As a result, the patrons would pay closer attention lest they miss any future illusions.

    In the training or classroom, learner focus also wanders. Learning can be hard work and any learner, even the most attentive, will occasionally tune the trainer out. The best defense against a lack of attention is to place the suggestion in the learner’s mind that paying attention is vital. This can sometimes be accomplished with the force of the content alone, but occasionally the content requires help. A well-placed magic trick tied to the subject matter can help. It suggests that interesting things occur in this classroom and that, in order catch it all attention is required. In addition, when a session is focused and serious, a magic trick can provide some levity, much as a steam valve functions on a pressure cooker, releasing excess tension in a safe and timely manner.

    3. Use magic to illustrate a key point.
    All magic tricks, to be successful, are tied to a story. Magicians call it “patter.” Many would-be magicians have discovered to their sorrow that buying a trick alone is not enough to make them magicians. As magician Dariel Fitzee explained, “The secret is NOT important. The ONLY thing that is important is its favorable impression on the majority of the spectators.” It is often the story that leaves that favorable impression.

    In learning, some of the most effective points are made through metaphorical stories. (A metaphor is a figure of speech where a word, a phrase or an item from one context is applied in another context.) As Peg Neuhauser explained, “Stories allow a person to feel and see information as well as factually understand it . . . because you ‘hear’ the information factually, visually and emotionally, it is more likely to be imprinted on your brain in a way that it sticks with you longer, with very little effort on your part.”

    Magic tricks, owing to the importance of patter for an effective presentation, are ideally suited for illustrating key points through stories. A visual magic trick combined with patter related directly to the point being made is an unbeatable combination. The language in the story appeals to the left hemispheric logic circuits while the illusion and the metaphor it represents appeals to the holistic right hemisphere. The result is a powerful learning tool.

    4. Use magic to conclude the learning segment.
    The strongest entertainments have fully satisfying endings. Before Hollywood releases a new movie, it is common practice to screen it for a test audience. If the studio discovers that the test audience dislikes the ending, the ending gets changed. Many films, including Casablanca, Patriot Games, Fatal Attraction and The Bourne Identity have had their ending altered through this process. The alternative is disappointed moviegoers, bad word of mouth and ultimately, poor box office.

    In show biz, there is an old saying about starting strong and finishing even stronger. For successful entertainers, the ending is the high point of the performance. In a similar manner, the conclusion of training is an important moment. The trainees have accomplished something of importance and should be allowed to luxuriate in that achievement. A magic illusion, when pl

    A Review of Billing Software
    Recent recurring themes, like cutbacks and downsizing, are in the news every day when it comes to businesseses of all sizes. Due to those problems there are now less people in the companies left to complete essential company work and that’s typical for every company. Fortunately there are products that can help companies cope with the results of that trend. Billing software is one of those products. As there always are bills to be processed no matter the size and the type of the business itself, there are a number of programs to choose from that can help doing that, and that include so many additional useful features that they can actually match the needs of any company.Such software can be used for example both in a medical clinic and in a law firm. It will equally well serve for medical billing that includes direct billing of patients, processing claims to insurance companies and many others depending on the situation and for the law firm to track time that’s billed to a certain customer. This professional billing software is capable of tracking incurred expenses by the attorney’s work also and many other things.Application of such software seems to be unlimited as it can also be used by merchandise selling companies. Such program can be so set up that it will send and track invoices and include them for the specific time periods required. What is more, the billing software can fit perfectly a company with routine expenditures as it can produce time based bills electronically for all the automatic and recurring purchases
    troductory magic illusion also captures learner attention, drawing them in and releasing tension in the process. And, if the magic trick you place here directly relates to your content, it will provide your learner with a frame of reference for the content that follows.

    2. Use magic to refocus energy.
    Master magician Sam Sharpe once commented, “People will always pay attention so long as they are curious. Keep them guessing and wondering by doing the unexpected. Unpredictability is a key factor in holding attention.”

    When performing in nightclubs, I often found that the audience's attention would wander. It's not that those audiences weren't enjoying the show. Rather it was the fact that there were more stimuli present than the average person could simultaneously absorb. To recapture wandering attention, I would present a flashy, attention capturing, illusion. As a result, the patrons would pay closer attention lest they miss any future illusions.

    In the training or classroom, learner focus also wanders. Learning can be hard work and any learner, even the most attentive, will occasionally tune the trainer out. The best defense against a lack of attention is to place the suggestion in the learner’s mind that paying attention is vital. This can sometimes be accomplished with the force of the content alone, but occasionally the content requires help. A well-placed magic trick tied to the subject matter can help. It suggests that interesting things occur in this classroom and that, in order catch it all attention is required. In addition, when a session is focused and serious, a magic trick can provide some levity, much as a steam valve functions on a pressure cooker, releasing excess tension in a safe and timely manner.

    3. Use magic to illustrate a key point.
    All magic tricks, to be successful, are tied to a story. Magicians call it “patter.” Many would-be magicians have discovered to their sorrow that buying a trick alone is not enough to make them magicians. As magician Dariel Fitzee explained, “The secret is NOT important. The ONLY thing that is important is its favorable impression on the majority of the spectators.” It is often the story that leaves that favorable impression.

    In learning, some of the most effective points are made through metaphorical stories. (A metaphor is a figure of speech where a word, a phrase or an item from one context is applied in another context.) As Peg Neuhauser explained, “Stories allow a person to feel and see information as well as factually understand it . . . because you ‘hear’ the information factually, visually and emotionally, it is more likely to be imprinted on your brain in a way that it sticks with you longer, with very little effort on your part.”

    Magic tricks, owing to the importance of patter for an effective presentation, are ideally suited for illustrating key points through stories. A visual magic trick combined with patter related directly to the point being made is an unbeatable combination. The language in the story appeals to the left hemispheric logic circuits while the illusion and the metaphor it represents appeals to the holistic right hemisphere. The result is a powerful learning tool.

    4. Use magic to conclude the learning segment.
    The strongest entertainments have fully satisfying endings. Before Hollywood releases a new movie, it is common practice to screen it for a test audience. If the studio discovers that the test audience dislikes the ending, the ending gets changed. Many films, including Casablanca, Patriot Games, Fatal Attraction and The Bourne Identity have had their ending altered through this process. The alternative is disappointed moviegoers, bad word of mouth and ultimately, poor box office.

    In show biz, there is an old saying about starting strong and finishing even stronger. For successful entertainers, the ending is the high point of the performance. In a similar manner, the conclusion of training is an important moment. The trainees have accomplished something of importance and should be allowed to luxuriate in that achievement. A magic illusion, when pl

    The Art of Negotiation in 535 words
    I want to get better at negotiation, but where to start?  UK Amazon currently has 2332 books on negotiation.  Google indexed nearly 4 million relevant (yeah right) pages.  All I need is a simple, straightforward model that I can put to use now.  Phased by the glut of information, I went within and remembered the wise teachings from a senior manager in my early working life.  So, come closer, listen up, because he was very wise indeed… He said “Do you know your LIMits?” “My what? said I cautiously, wondering if he was asking about my drinking capacity, driving speed or something equally off the wall. Being worldlier than I, he noticed my confusion and helped me out. “Lyndsay, if you want to be successful in life, you need to know your LIMits.  Let me explain.  What would you Like to have?  What do you Intend to have?  What Must you have?  What are your LIMit’s?” Slowly it dawned on me that he was talking the strange management language of mnemonics. He wrote down the word for me like this. LIMITS And next to the letters he wrote L – like to have: your number 1, top of the pile, best outcomeI – intend to have: your realistic, shoot for the stars but reach the moon outcomeM – must have: your bottom line.  Deal is off if this is not met. (The I,T and S are irrelevant, just convenient additions to prevent asking what your LIM are!) Testing the Theory And so ended his lesson.  Off I scampered l
    A well-placed magic trick tied to the subject matter can help. It suggests that interesting things occur in this classroom and that, in order catch it all attention is required. In addition, when a session is focused and serious, a magic trick can provide some levity, much as a steam valve functions on a pressure cooker, releasing excess tension in a safe and timely manner.

    3. Use magic to illustrate a key point.
    All magic tricks, to be successful, are tied to a story. Magicians call it “patter.” Many would-be magicians have discovered to their sorrow that buying a trick alone is not enough to make them magicians. As magician Dariel Fitzee explained, “The secret is NOT important. The ONLY thing that is important is its favorable impression on the majority of the spectators.” It is often the story that leaves that favorable impression.

    In learning, some of the most effective points are made through metaphorical stories. (A metaphor is a figure of speech where a word, a phrase or an item from one context is applied in another context.) As Peg Neuhauser explained, “Stories allow a person to feel and see information as well as factually understand it . . . because you ‘hear’ the information factually, visually and emotionally, it is more likely to be imprinted on your brain in a way that it sticks with you longer, with very little effort on your part.”

    Magic tricks, owing to the importance of patter for an effective presentation, are ideally suited for illustrating key points through stories. A visual magic trick combined with patter related directly to the point being made is an unbeatable combination. The language in the story appeals to the left hemispheric logic circuits while the illusion and the metaphor it represents appeals to the holistic right hemisphere. The result is a powerful learning tool.

    4. Use magic to conclude the learning segment.
    The strongest entertainments have fully satisfying endings. Before Hollywood releases a new movie, it is common practice to screen it for a test audience. If the studio discovers that the test audience dislikes the ending, the ending gets changed. Many films, including Casablanca, Patriot Games, Fatal Attraction and The Bourne Identity have had their ending altered through this process. The alternative is disappointed moviegoers, bad word of mouth and ultimately, poor box office.

    In show biz, there is an old saying about starting strong and finishing even stronger. For successful entertainers, the ending is the high point of the performance. In a similar manner, the conclusion of training is an important moment. The trainees have accomplished something of importance and should be allowed to luxuriate in that achievement. A magic illusion, when pl

    What's Important About PR?
    Quite a bit, actually. Public relations helps business, non- profit and association managers achieve their managerial objectives with results like these. New proposals for strategic alliances and joint ventures; rebounds in showroom visits; customers making repeat purchases; stronger relationships with educational, labor, financial and healthcare interests; enhanced activist group relations; new membership applications; capital givers and specifying sources looking their way, as well as improved relations with government agencies and legislative bodies; both new thoughtleader and special event contacts; and expanded feedback channels.Here are some of the public relations strategies they use.They accept the fact that the right PR really CAN alter individual perception and lead to the very changed behaviors they need. And they recognize that, because people DO act upon their perceptions of the facts they hear about these managers and their operations, they have little choice but to deal promptly and effectively with those perceptions by doing what is necessary to reach and move those key external audiences of theirs to actions they desire.What these business, non-profit and association managers are doing is taking steps to do something positive about the behaviors of those important outside audiences of theirs that MOST affect their operations.So they create the kind of external stakeholder behavior change that leads directly to achieving their managerial objective

    Magic tricks, owing to the importance of patter for an effective presentation, are ideally suited for illustrating key points through stories. A visual magic trick combined with patter related directly to the point being made is an unbeatable combination. The language in the story appeals to the left hemispheric logic circuits while the illusion and the metaphor it represents appeals to the holistic right hemisphere. The result is a powerful learning tool.

    4. Use magic to conclude the learning segment.
    The strongest entertainments have fully satisfying endings. Before Hollywood releases a new movie, it is common practice to screen it for a test audience. If the studio discovers that the test audience dislikes the ending, the ending gets changed. Many films, including Casablanca, Patriot Games, Fatal Attraction and The Bourne Identity have had their ending altered through this process. The alternative is disappointed moviegoers, bad word of mouth and ultimately, poor box office.

    In show biz, there is an old saying about starting strong and finishing even stronger. For successful entertainers, the ending is the high point of the performance. In a similar manner, the conclusion of training is an important moment. The trainees have accomplished something of importance and should be allowed to luxuriate in that achievement. A magic illusion, when placed as a coda to the learning, functions as the exclamation point. It concludes the event in a special, memorable manner.

    What Magic To Use
    Knowing when to use magic is a helpful but incomplete picture. The trainer must also know what magic to use. Next, we will focus on several illusions that any magic novice can perform and that are effective in the learning environment.

    Change Bag
    The Change Bag is one of magic’s most versatile props. It consists of a bag, sometimes on a stick, with two pockets. The beauty of the bag is in the fact that only one pocket is visible at a time. This duality allows the performer to magically transform any item into another item with the wave of a hand. The Change Bag can be used for diversity training as many items become one, for financial management as pennies transform into dollars or to emphasize teamwork as individual names “merge” onto one organizational chart. In short, it is ideal for any situation where something transforms into something else.

    This illusion, and those that follow, can be obtained through the following vendors: Creative Presentation Resources, Hank Lee’s Magic Factory, Tool Thyme for Trainers, Trainer's Warehouse,

    Disclaimer: I am not an advertising agent for these organizations. I simply report these vendors to aid you in finding the materials

    Flash Paper
    Fire effects can be dangerous and as such should be used with extreme caution. Nevertheless, fire-based effects are effective at capturing learner attention. Fortunately for the non-firebug, there is Flash Paper. This handy paper, as its name implies, burns in an extremely bright flash. It also burns so quickly that there is little danger from it. Flash Paper is a great tool for any situation where you want the learners to move beyond the past. Simply instruct the participants to write their negative emotions, complaints, lists of poor leadership traits, parking lot issues, situations where they have been “burned” by poor customer service or any other items you want them to discard onto individual pieces of Flash Paper. Then collect the pieces of paper, place them in a container and destroy the past. The image of complaints going up in a flash can be a highly effective method for moving the discussion forward.

    Magic Coloring Book
    The magic coloring book has become a staple in many a trainer’s toolbox. Although there are several versions on the market, the basic trick involves a coloring book that is displayed with blank pages, then with black and white drawings and finally with the black and white drawings fully colorized. The Magic Coloring Book is perfect for situations where you want to demonstrate three different progressive phases. For instance, you could recap the learning that will occur, or has occurred, with trainee knowledge of the subject progressing from a blank slate to a fully formed image of the subject. Another usage could be to demonstrate three steps in the process of solving customer service complaints, from approaching the complaint with an open mind, to determining what the customer wants, to delivering a solution beyond what the customer expected.

    Needle Through Balloon
    The final magic trick I’d like to highlight is called the Needle Through Balloon. In this illusion, a needle is pushed into a balloon without popping the balloon. The needle is then pulled all the way through the balloon and removed, but the balloon stays inflated. Finally, the balloon is punctured with the same needle. This routine requires minimal skill while providing maximum impact. Trainees cannot help themselves from being drawn into the suspense of the illusion. The Needle Through Balloon is applicable for encouraging trainees to overcome artificial barriers, to believe in their own abilities, to solve difficult problems, to focus on accomplishing supposedly unobtainable goals, to brainstorm new ideas and to believe they can achieve career success.

    A secondary use for the Needle Through Balloon is to validate the overwhelmed feeling that trainees sometimes feel in the middle of the learning process. I simply acknowledge to the trainees that their heads may feel as if they are ready to explode. Simultaneously, I insert the needle into the balloon. I then assure them that they will eventually absorb the information successfully and that, unlike the balloon, their head will not “pop.”

    Training Magic
    I would like to conclude with a word of caution. As Dariel Frizee stated, the trick is not important. Nor is the trainer’s ability to perform the trick. What is important is the success the trainees have in learning the class material. Magic should not be overused. Training is not a magic show. Nevertheless, the similarities between magicians and trainers are too numerous to ignore. For magic does allow ordinary people to become wizards in both the theater and the classroom. True learning is not an illusion but it should be magical!

    Visit Lenn on line at www.offbeattraining.com lennmillbower@offbeattraining.com

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