February 4, 2012

Designs on getting some recognition for your creative talent?

Modern design items

The Design, Advertising and Digital Awards 2010 are open for entries from anyone with creative, commercial work to showcase.

Established in 1962 to reward exceptional and inspirational design and advertising work, the D&ADs offer recognition across an enormous number of categories.

Awards are organised into the following areas:

  • Integrated
  • TV & Cinema Advertising
  • TV & Cinema Communications
  • Radio Advertising
  • Music Videos
  • Direct
  • Outdoor Advertising
  • Press Advertising
  • Graphic Design
  • Packaging Design
  • Magazine & Newspaper Design
  • Book Design
  • Branding
  • Product Design
  • Environmental Design
  • Digital Advertising
  • Mobile Marketing
  • Websites

A full breakdown of the list of separate categories can be found in the D&AD Awards catalogue and price guide (PDF).

Entry to each category is individually priced, and all entries must be made by Wednesday 27th January 2010. However, entries made before Wednesday 18th November 2009 will receive a 10% discount.

Visit the D&AD Awards 2010 for more information.

Last call for entries from brilliant business women

business women

The deadline for the Enterprising Women Awards 2009 has been extended, so you now have until Monday 2nd November to get your entries in.

Ten awards are available this year:

  • 2009 Enterprising Woman of the Year
  • Inspirational Business Mum
  • Best Boss
  • Enterprise Challenge
  • Social Enterprise
  • Innovator/SET
  • Customer Impact
  • High Flyer Award
  • Green Award
  • Young Entrepreneur

Visit Enterprising Women Awards 2009 for further information.

Freelancer? Have a day all to yourself

Working on sofa

National Freelancers Day 2009 is an initiative organised by the Professional Contractors Group to bring attention to the work of freelancers, contractors and consultants, and to highlight the economic benefit they bring to the UK.

The day will see a range of real world and web events designed to encourage a better understanding of freelancing as a style of work, while encouraging both businesses and workers to a tackle of the issues facing the sector.

National Freelancers Day 2009 is being promoted with the key message that freelancers form a significant part of the UK business sector, and has the following aims:

  • To deliver a ‘Manifesto for Freelancing’ to those standing at the next election; and
  • To seek to educate both businesses and the community to provide a better overall environment and support network for freelancers.

National Freelancers Day takes place on 23rd November 2009.

For more information on getting involved, visit National Freelancers Day.

Case study: the tea & cake approach to networking

cupcakes in a row

This is a guest post is by Sam Pearce, co-founder of Mum’s The Boss, a networking and support group for mums who work from home, run their own business or franchise, or who would like to set up in business on their own.

The group, founded in September 2008, runs monthly networking meetings, drop-in business surgeries and start-up events. We asked Sam to explain how Mum’s the Boss events work; to illustrate that networking events exist to suit almost any walk of life.

A year ago, when I was trying to get a new business off the ground, I found myself invited to some local networking meetings. However, with a business that was not yet making a profit and two young children aged 1 and 2, I wasn’t in a position to attend an early breakfast, expensive lunch or early evening event. Nor, if I’m honest, was I comfortable with the idea of networking with ‘proper’ business people – this was my first experience of self-employment and I still felt more ‘mummy’ than ‘entrepreneur’.

The creation of Mum’s the Boss

“I can’t be alone,” I thought – and, as it turns out, I wasn’t. So we set up Mum’s the Boss to target this niche, but growing market of ‘mumpreneurs’, setting up businesses from home, offering an informal, supportive, child-friendly environment to meet other mums in business, to learn from each other and to promote each other’s businesses wherever we can.

Bringing work and life together

While many women return to work after their first child, we had found it was often after the birth of the second child that the reality of commuting and double childcare costs really hit home. Therefore we tried to make our meetings accessible for mums, whatever age their children are – meeting from 10-12 to allow plenty of time for dropping off school aged children and providing a crèche so that babies and toddlers could come along too.

Another prohibitive factor for a lot of small business owners and start-ups wanting to network is the cost of membership and meeting fees. Therefore we purposefully adopted a low cost approach and secured local sponsorship to cover the costs of our venue.

Networking without the scary bits

The last thing that stops lots of people networking is, quite simply, fear – so to counter this we have adopted an informal, supportive style, with no dress code, no 1-minute speech and no 1-per-profession rule, encouraging people working in the same sector to collaborate rather than compete. We like to think of ourselves almost as a ‘stepping stone’ for complete novices towards traditional networking, where they can develop and grow both their business and their confidence.

But what I hope makes us really different is our welcome. I don’t know anyone who really enjoys walking into a room of strangers, or full of people already deep in conversation. So the first thing we always do when people arrive is offer them tea or coffee and homemade cake!

Facing challenges together

Now to some people this may all seem a bit twee but to us it is all about niche marketing – understanding our audience, removing the obstacles that stop this particular group of business owners from networking, and making it as pleasant and useful an experience as we possibly can. Working from home, and running a business around a young family presents its own set of unique challenges which are best understood by people in the same situation, so it is just as important for our members to feel just as able to talk about their families as to talk about their businesses. After all, for most of our members, their children are the reason they are in business.

Building relationships

And it is the personal nature of these relationships that make the connections so strong. We support, encourage and promote each other through a genuine desire to help. Our speakers, who are generally successful businesswomen, have all given their time freely to provide practical business advice as well as inspiration and motivation when our own is fading. Our business connections may be made over tea and cake, rather than expensive lunches, but the results are just as positive.

This post is part of a week-long series of guest posts on the topic of real world networking. Read all about it here: Online networking is booming, so why network in the real world?

Can I stop all this ‘real life’ networking now?

group idea

This is guest post from Rob Hanson, a web developer based in Grimsby. Rob is also involved in GeekUp, “a community of web designers, web developers, and other tech-minded folk from the UK”.

With the abundance of social networking web sites and ways to access them, using social media is becoming ever easier. These are not just social and promotional tools, they can also be very useful tools for improving your knowledge base in whatever area you choose.

Take Twitter for instance. I use Twitter a lot, and not purely from a social angle either.

“Aaah, Twitter. Isn’t that just for seeing what celebrities had for breakfast?”

Yes, it can be, if that is all you want from it.

One of my biggest uses for networking these days is to increase my knowledge on a specific subject. I’m involved in producing websites for small to medium enterprises, and I follow a number of web designers, web developers and graphic designers on Twitter.

I follow them not just for their more mundane tweets – although they can be fun too – but for the information they freely impart to their followers. This might relate to how they solved a coding problem, an idea they had for something new, something that inspired them…You get the idea.

Online beats offline?

“Ok, so I’m signed up with Twitter & dozens of other social networking sites. Can I stop all this ‘real life’ networking now?”

Actually, no. Not if you want to make the best of your connections. Online social media is great to a point, but there’s really no substitute for face-to-face interaction. Don’t get me wrong, the online networks are a great way to broaden your ‘friend base’, but I still reckon I get way more from an hour having a coffee with someone than two hours online.

The best of both worlds

“Now I’m confused. So I don’t actually need to bother with Twitter & the other sites at all?”

It’s simple really: online and offline work brilliantly when used together.

Here’s an example: I recently decided to improve my knowledge of CSS & HTML (they’re programming languages for those not in the know), and a trawl through Twitter produced a number of people tweeting information & links on those very subjects.

Chatting with them online has led me to meet some people local to me who can benefit from my knowledge and who can in turn help me improve my knowledge in just the areas I wanted – all without hours spent poring over Google Results and clicking through to countless websites that wouldn’t be quite what I wanted.

Tweetups and other gatherings

A quick way to meet like minded folks is to use one of the online methods such as Twitter to set up a meeting at a local pub or coffee house (if organised through Twitter, they are often called ‘tweetups’).

If you’re not keen on the idea of instigating such an event yourself, a couple of great resources to help you find relevant events in your area are Twitter Search (use this facility to search for relevant keywords along with mentions of towns local to you) and Upcoming (a user generated directory of local events).

Pretty much all other social networking sites come with some kind of search facility or events section, but if you’re struggling just send out a post asking about future events.

Just do it

I guess my main message is: go do it! All of the ways I’ve mentioned can help you improve your level of knowledge on a subject of interest to you, not to mention broaden your horizons too…and it’s fun. So, give it a try – you may be pleasantly surprised at the results.

This post is part of a week-long series of guest posts on the topic of real world networking. Read all about it here: Online networking is booming, so why network in the real world?

Opening doors: selling without selling

open doors

This is a guest post by Gary Gorman, group leader for 4Networking Grantham, and director of Paradigm Training, a company that works with businesses to attract more customers and increase sales.

In every networking organisation, large or small, there will be some people who treat every meeting like a sales pitch. These are the people who pounce on any new visitors, stuff a business card in their hand and virtually say, “Well? When are you going to buy from me?”

To me, it’s no surprise when I later hear them complain that networking isn’t winning them any sales. Their approach is like going into a bar and grabbing the nearest group of drinkers to saying, “Hi! My name’s X. Here’s my card. Let me place an order for you now.” You just wouldn’t do it, would you?

Put it this way: would you buy from somebody who did this to you? I know I wouldn’t. I’d get away from them within 30 seconds, if not sooner!

So why would anyone take this approach when attending networking meetings? They might as well cover themselves in sales repellent spray – it simply won’t work, ever.

But what if that same person took time to get to know you, found out a little bit about your circumstances, listened to the issues you’ve had in the past? What if over the course of a couple of conversations, you realised you liked the person and would bear them in mind whenever you had a real need for their product or service? You might even begin to trust them and refer them onto another contact who might have a specific need right now.

Would you have felt like you’d been sold to? Probably not. Would you have felt that you’d been listened to and understood? Probably, you would. Would you buy from them if the time was right? Again, probably you would.

So, in any networking situation, I firmly believe that it’s far better to forget the initial sale and instead concentrate on building rapport and listening to the other person, giving them time to get to know, like and trust you. Then, when the time is right, the sale will come.

This approach is, and always will be, the way to get networking working for any business.

Building rapport

Here are my top 10 tips to help you build rapport and increase your chances of winning business in the long term:

  1. Listen more than you talk.
  2. Show that you are listening by occasionally nodding, saying “yes”, or confirming that you understand.
  3. Maintain good frequent eye contact, without staring.
  4. Ask open questions such as “What’s the biggest challenge you face right now? What have you done about this so far?”
  5. Link your next open question to what they just said, not what you prepared to say.
  6. Listen for their speech patterns and mirror their language. If they are a visual person you might say, “Yes I see what you mean” or if they are an auditory person you might say, “I hear what you say.”
  7. Get them in a “yes” frame of mind by saying something that they are unlikely to disagree with such as, “growing sales can be a challenge for any business, can’t it?”
  8. Use light and shade. Ask probing questions but lighten the mood where possible with humour or an observation. They shouldn’t feel that they are being interrogated.
  9. Let them decide how they would like to carry the conversation forward. See whether they feel a further phone call or meeting is the next stage. The more they own the next step the more likely they are to be open and receptive to your proposal.
  10. Overall, forget the sale – just concentrate on them.

This post is part of a week-long series of guest posts on the topic of real world networking. Read all about it here: Online networking is booming, so why network in the real world?

Networking meetings: they don’t work, do they?

People talking

This is a guest post from Gary Johannes, 4Networking
Regional Leader for the Eastern Region, Bartercard rep, and the man leading the BRAVE challenge for children with spinal injuries.

Because of the work I do, and the number of people I meet, one of the questions put to me on an almost weekly basis is this: “Networking doesn’t work, does it?”

And the simple answer? “Yes, actually, it does.” In fact, it also works for the majority of the hundreds of people I meet every month. But, of course, some of the people I come across would give a resolutely negative answer to the same question.

When I find myself chatting someone who is disillusioned by networking, and firmly believes it simply doesn’t work for them and never will, I generally come to the same conclusion: they don’t ‘get’ networking. They’ve got a skewed view of how it works and what it’s for, and that’s letting them down.

Rule no. 1 – Be likeable. People relate to humans, not walking sales brochures

For me, making networking work for you starts with some basics that are applicable to any area of your life. So, I treat people with respect and I talk to them as people, not prospects. No one likes to find themselves cornered at a social event, being sold to as if they were in a car showroom. It’s a turn off. Instead, I’m friendly and I take an interest in the other person – sometimes what I do barely comes up.

Why? Because having a person like you is far more valuable than winning a business lead there and then.

Rule no. 2 – People are valuable. Nurture and protect your assets

If you’re an astute business person, you’ll realise that having lots of contacts in lots of industries doesn’t just give you more chance of winning referrals, it also makes you more valuable to your clients.

How? Well from time to time, your clients will ask you if you know a good wed developer / plumber / financial adviser. The more tuned in you are to the range of providers out here and the quality of their offerings, the more valuable you are to your client as a resource.

Rule no. 3 – Trust is everything. Stay honest

In networking circles, people applaud great work, they offer testimonials and they recommend great providers – it’s all part of the process. But keep letting customers down, and recommendations will quickly dry up.

Don’t promise what you can’t deliver on, don’t go into a meeting trying to be something you’re not, and never, ever lie to win a recommendation, because it will come back to haunt you, and you’ll miss out on more than you ever gained. Networking, after all, is all about trust.

Rule no. 4 – Commit to networking regularly to see the real benefits

You are very unlikely to start winning work at your first, second or even third meeting. People need to meet, know, like and trust you (to steal a 4Networking phrase). Turn up once a year, and how can you possibly expect to build relationships? Turn up once a fortnight, and people will recognise you and, more importantly, remember your name when it counts.

And finally…Quick tips for networking

So to close, a round up of some of the key things to remember as you walk into a your first networking event.

  • Never go looking for sales.
  • Get to know people, not just what they sell.
  • Don’t discount people if they cant buy from you (they may be best mates with someone who can).
  • Sell yourself, not your business. Be likeable, warm and approachable.
  • The more you give the more you receive, so offer advice and support wherever you can.
  • Support others. If a fellow networker does a great job for you, let others know.
  • Enjoy yourself. Approach it like a chore and you won’t stick it out for long enough to reap the benefits.

This post is part of a week-long series of guest posts on the topic of real world networking. Read all about it here: Online networking is booming, so why network in the real world?

Online networking is booming, so why network in the real world?

IMAGE - chic crowds

Lots of men and women in business don’t network in person anymore. Some even consider it a waste of time.

If you’re of that mind, you may have instead opted to stay in the office and get yourself a swish website and sign up to LinkedIn. You may well have cottoned on to the rising importance of social media and created a presence on Twitter, Facebook and relevant internet forums. And to get your name out there, you may be using telemarketing, mailshots or email campaigns. You’re getting ‘out there’ from the comfort of your desk, so why bother taking time out to circulate in person with perfect strangers?

Well, here’s my take on things…

I love online social networking. It has expanded my knowledge base, brought new friends and new business my way, and been instrumental in raising my profile and that of my business. Similarly, I’m all for basing communications with potential and established clients online. It saves time, saves fuel, and it’s good for the environment.

But, I also strongly believe that face-to-face meetings are vital. Perhaps you’re happy to source all of your suppliers via the internet, but lots of buyers want to meet a real person in order to get a sense of who they’ll be dealing with before they part with their hard earned cash or sign on the dotted line.

It’s as simple as this: we buy from people we trust, and sometimes it’s a lot easier to win trust in person over a coffee than when relying on written/telephone communications alone. Not only that, there’s the potential to make a whole different set of creative and social connections in the real world – not everyone is online.

Networking in person works, and I’ve been thinking lately about the best way to communicate that fact and illustrate how best to make it work for you, whatever your personality or business.

Rather than writing a long post extolling the virtues of networking, I’ve asked four people whose opinions I value and respect to supply guest posts for the remainder of this week. Each will look at networking from a slightly different perspective and hopefully make you want to give face-to-face networking a go.

The first post will appear here tomorrow morning, 9am. See you then.

Update

The week of guest posts on real world networking was a great success, thanks to all who contributed and all who shared. Here’s the list in full:

Do you treat your customers like royalty?

crown

The Customer Kings Awards 2010 are set to celebrate businesses with a truly inspirational customer service focus.

Open to entrants based anywhere in the UK, the awards have recently expanded to include a ‘Commercial’ category for big business, to accompany the historical focus on small businesses.

The following awards are available:

  • Customer Kings Award x 8
  • Commercial Customer King Award x 1
  • Highly Commended Organisations x 8
  • The ‘Winner of Winners’ Award x 1

Entries must be submitted by online by midnight on 18th December 2009. Visit Customer Kings for more information.

Has your team topped the legal profession?

Bright star

The Legal Business Awards 2010 seek to honour the best firms and teams of lawyers across the industry.

There are 21 awards available:

  • Structured Finance Team of the Year
  • Banking/Restructuring Team of the Year
  • Insurance Team of the Year
  • Energy and Natural Resources Team of the Year
  • Private Client Team of the Year
  • TMT Team of the Year
  • Real Estate of the Year
  • Dispute Resolution Team of the Year
  • Corporate Team of the Year
  • Private Equity Team of the Year
  • Competition Team of the Year
  • Employment, Pensions & Benefits Team
  • Chambers of the Year
  • Most Enterprising Law Firm of the Year
  • International Office of the Year
  • US Law Firm of the Year
  • Lawyer of the Year
  • Management Partner of the Year
  • National/Regional Firm of the Year
  • CSR Programme of the Year
  • Law Firm of the Year

Submissions for the 2010 Awards must be received by 30th November 2009.

Visit the Legal Business Awards 2010 for more information.