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Educational Moments

Some Apps to Streamline your business

Some Apps you can use in your smartphone that help you in your sales activity (being more productive, cost saving, etc)

I will start by sharing the ones I’m aware of:

  • CamCard - As soon as someone gives me a Business Card I use the app to take a photo and through OCR the app maps all the details of the person into my Contact database. ( there are several different apps doing more or less the same)
  • Tripit - to keep a record of my flights, hotels, etc and add them automatically to my agenda.
  • Waze - To get directions and live feedback on the status of traffic. Always useful for one who frequently travel
  • GeniusScan - To scan documents or sketches done in a board and transform them into PDFs
  • XE currency - Quite useful when one travels to many countries with different currencies
  • Concur - For expenses logging and claiming
  • TrueCaller - displays informations about the caller with a reverse on the phone number
  • Contact+ offers some sync features with social connections
  • http://www.cardign.com/ for iphone only, Quickly capture new contacts using face recognition and search the social accounts
  • Evernote Hello- seem really powerful.
  • CamScanner - use at least once a week - saves time and money.
  • Tact for Salesforce and Gmail - saves a huge amount of time
  • ScanBizCards and ThankYouPro for mailed thank you notes and referral gift cards.

 

 

 

 

Post By:

Tim Pervin 
tpervin@thepervingroup.com
416-934-5161

Posted: March 13, 2013 at 02:07 PM
By: Mantis System
(0) Comment/s
"We want to talk about it"

 

We are starting a business book club!!!

On February 28th myself and a few colleagues that love learning and developing our business brains will be meeting to discuss our first book “The Challenger Sale” – taking control of the customer conversation. By Mathew Dixon and Brent Adamson.

Anyone is welcome; you must read the book!

Where: 1135 Dundas St East, Suite 200

When: Feb 28th at 6:30

What to bring: The book, opinions and insight, a bottle of your favourite beverage, and a snack if you think you will need one. We have coffee and water and my favourite beverage is red wine so there will be some to share.

If you are interested in joining in please join our group – “we want to talk about it” on linked in.

Here is how you can get the book:
Amazon

TPL

Posted: January 30, 2013 at 03:55 PM
By: Mantis System
(0) Comment/s
January 31st Presentation

 

c-Seven Helping Hands Program

 

Please join me for a quick overview on how the c-Seven Helping Hands Fund Matching Grants can assist Not for profit organizations. I am also excited to say that I will be unveiling our new partner program.

In 2011 we introduced the Helping Hands program to benefit not-for-profit organizations by matching their web development investments dollar-for-dollar. It was a tremendous success! Now in its third year, the program has provided nearly $300,000 in development grants is expanding each year. We are happy to have helped so many deserving organizations better harness the power of the web to further their fundraising and awareness efforts.

Since the launch of our Helping Hands grant matching program we have helped several not-for-profit organizations by providing them with the tools they need to get the web working for them.

Understanding the challenges not-for-profits face was key to the development of the Helping Hands program. And although a great site and a strong web presence are crucial to raising both awareness and funds, there are many components involved in helping you reach your goals. Realizing this, and knowing that many hands make light work, we called on a number of experts in other fields who offer services that could benefit your organization. These like-minded companies are as committed to helping the community as we are and each one has extended a special offer to Helping Hands participants.

Space is limited click here to register!!!


Posted: January 21, 2013 at 04:27 PM
By: Mantis System
(0) Comment/s
The Problem With Your Elevator Pitch--And How To Fix It

The following article was published this week and deals with an issues affecting all of us. I fully endorse Deb Riegel’s suggestions as to how we can simplify our “elevator messaging” and ask you to consider this nest time someone asks you, “what do you do?”

Thanks

Tim Pervin
The Pervin Group

 

By Deborah Grayson Riegel

January 7, 2013

Five tips to dropping the phony facade and elevating your pitch so that you sound like a real person instead of a marketing automaton.

At a recent networking event, I walked up to woman who, like me, was trying to balance a plastic tumbler of wine, a plate of cheese, and a handful of business cards. We laughed at our shared predicament, put down our plates and introduced ourselves. “I’m Robin,” she said. “I’m Deborah,” I replied. “So, Robin…what do you do?”

Suddenly, she broke eye contact and stared up at the wall, as if something were written there. Without expression, Robin recited, “I help busy professionals live pain-free lives so that they can get back to work.

My first thought was, “What does that mean?” Was she a chiropractor? A career coach? A drug dealer?

My second thought was, “Who talks like that?”

The answer to the first question turned out to be “physical therapist.” The answer to the second question was: Entrepreneurs who have been taught that they need an elevator pitch, but haven’t practiced how to actually deliver it and sound human.

Your elevator pitch is a short summary of your service, product, or company and how it adds value to customers. It’s a useful tool for communicating core information quickly that will hopefully yield you an invitation to have a longer conversation with potential clients down the road.

The problem with most elevator pitches is that they get crafted on paper but not adjusted to sound like how a real person speaks. The majority come across as synthetic as an infomercial (“We help startups maximize their social media strategies to grow their customer base…But wait! There’s more!”). It’s one-way delivery system, designed to make a powerful, positive first impression, but listeners tend to feel “pitched at” rather than engaged with. As much as I am a hearty consumer of goods and services for my personal and professional life, I don’t like to be sold.

When you are so focused on making sure you sell the benefits because anyone could be a customer, you neglect a primary reason why people want to do business--because they connect with you.  Not with your pitch, but with you.

Here are five tips to drop the phony facade and elevate the delivery of your pitch so that you sound like a real person:

Don’t speak the way you write. “I help individuals, couples, and families make sound financial plans so that they don’t outlive their money” may read well on a website, but doesn’t sound the way people really talk. When speaking, you might start with, “I’m a financial planner, and I make sure my clients don’t outlive their money.” Much more compelling, genuine and even fun.

Utilize common vernacular (aka, use the simplest language possible). Your organization’s mission statement may talk about serving “the growing population of at-risk adolescents” but most people would say “kids who are at risk” in regular conversation. So say that.

Turn your pitch into a question. If you’re a professional organizer, ask “You know that pile of papers you’ve got somewhere in your house that you’ve been meaning to get through? As a professional organizer, I help people finally get through it.”

Practice saying your pitch out loud, with feedback. Rehearse it until it sounds completely unrehearsed (ironic, but important), and then get feedback on how “real” you sound rather than how “polished” you come across.

Be willing to forgo your pitch entirely. If you’re already making a warm connection with someone and they ask you what you do, don’t risk bringing a cold pitch into the conversation. Just say what you do--and more importantly, find out what the other person does and show genuine curiosity about them.

--Deborah Grayson Riegel is a communication and behavior expert, and is the president of Elevated Training Inc. and MyJewishCoach.com. She is the author of "Oy Vey! Isn't a Strategy: 25 Solutions for Personal and Professional Success

Posted: January 8, 2013 at 02:37 PM
By: Mantis System
(0) Comment/s
November 22nd, SR&ED Industry Update at Lamaquette 715am

"What's going on with the SR&ED program" is the topic of presentation on November 22nd. Come join us at Lamaquette, 111 King Street East, at 7:15 am - 9 am. This topic is very relevant to people interested in bureaucratic trends within the government, and how this affects the Canadian businessperson.

Julie Bond is the President of Bond Consulting Group. With 10 years experience in the industry, she provides a wealth of experience on the topic of SR&ED.

Click here to let us know you if you want to attend!

Posted: November 20, 2012 at 10:31 AM
By: Mantis System
(0) Comment/s

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