In this issue... |
Quantum2 Web Sessions
Spotlight on Quantum2 InfoStar
Quantum2 Topic of the Month
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Quantum2 Web Sessions
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| The following Quantum2 Web sessions are being
offered through June 2006. Our second series of related
sessions revolves around marketing and include basic
marketing concepts, as well as more advanced sessions
on branding and negotiation (time to be announced
later in the year). The sessions in this series will
be offered twice in one day to accommodate various
time zones. The World
Clock will
convert the hours to match your local time.
Building Relationships I
Achieving Results through Relationships:
The Power of Influence
January
26, 2006 – 9:00 a.m. ET;
2:00 p.m. GMT
January
26, 2006 – 2:00 p.m. ET; 7:00 p.m.
GMT
Conducting an Information Audit I
Assessing Clients’ Needs: Gather
and Analyze the Data
February
23, 2006 – 9:00 a.m. ET;
2:00 p.m. GMT
February
23, 2006 – 2:00 p.m. ET; 7:00 p.m.
GMT
Building Relationships II
Gaining Commitment: How to Partner with
Management
March
23, 2006 – 9:00 a.m. ET; 2:00
p.m. GMT
March
23, 2006 – 2:00 p.m. ET; 7:00 p.m.
GMT
Conducting an Information Audit II
Assessing Clients’ Needs: Map the
Information Flow
April
27, 2006 – 9:00 a.m. ET; 2:00
p.m. GMT
April
27, 2006 – 2:00 p.m. ET; 7:00 p.m.
GMT
Creating a Knowledge Sharing Culture: How
to Thrive on Change
May
25, 2006– 2:00 p.m. ET; 7:00 p.m.
GMT
Achieving Operational Excellence: Best
Practices for Information Services
June
22, 2006 – 9:00 a.m. ET; 2:00 p.m. GMT
REGISTER
TODAY for these WebEx sessions.
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From
the Editor
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As always, your suggestions for workshop topics are welcomed. Also, if you know a friend or colleague who would benefit from Quantum2, please encourage them to sign up today.
Regards,
Betty Jo Hibberd
Senior Manager
IPMD, NA
Dialog
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Quantum2 Highlights
A newsletter of the Dialog leadership development program for information professionals
Dear Quantum2 Member...
We hope your holidays were wonderful and that you’re
ready for a great new year. And while we’re
on the subject of the new year, have you made your
professional New Year’s resolutions? When you
do, you might want to consider regularly scheduling
professional development sessions, such as those
offered by Quantum2. Choose a session or two from
the sessions listed below to support your resolutions,
and then go ahead and sign up.
Spotlight On Quantum2 InfoStar:
Marilyn Bromley
Marilyn
Bromley is the Library Director at The Bureau of
National Affairs, Inc. (BNA), an employee-owned
legal publisher in Washington D.C. She is dedicated
to ensuring that the Library is appreciated as a
valuable part of BNA. According to Marilyn, the perception
is often that everything on the Internet is free,
and librarians aren't really necessary. To combat
this perception, the Library staff identified key
services and interviewed key users about the time
and money that the Library helped them save and the
money it helped them make. Marilyn then performed
a Return on Investment (ROI) analysis of the Library
that brought high praise to the to the group’s
efforts.
To
learn more about Marilyn, read her full InfoStar
profile at http://quantum.dialog.com/infostars/marilyn_bromley/.
For
Marilyn’s ROI analysis, go to http://quantum.dialog.com/media/pdfs/roi.pdf .
And watch for more upcoming InfoStar profiles at http://quantum.dialog.com/.
Quantum2 Topic of the Month
Marketing: The Elevator Speech
Often, we’re asked to deliver a Quantum2
session in 30 minutes. You may know that our sessions
are usually 90 minutes long, and because it’s
difficult to compress a topic that much,
one of the sessions we developed is on how to create
an elevator speech.
What is an elevator speech?
It is a marketing technique. Think of the elevator
speech as a 30-second “second impression.” It
is a publicity and public relations opportunity,
and is a brief, sincere message to move people
toward mutual goals. Anyone can use it and it can
be delivered to anyone you meet — a manager,
a CEO, a customer, a potential client, a professor,
an airplane seatmate, even your mother-in-law.
It’s effective because it’s a brief
and positive way to lead to the “next step,” and
it can be used whenever the opportunity arises.
How do you create an elevator speech?
Here are four quick questions that will
get you started:
- Who is your target customer? Think in terms
of your customers’ difficulties and what
motivates them.
- What are your deliverables? Describe the features
of your products. Help form this answer using questions
such as: Who are we? What do we offer? (the services
or features we provide) What are our key strengths?
What are our limitations?
- What
are your services/products? Consider questions
like: What problem is solved by my service? What
solutions have worked? What has failed?
- What is the desired outcome? Do you want the
customer to call you? Stop by the information center?
Recommend you to a colleague? You need to have
an objective in mind and be able to offer a suggestion
for customer action.
Once you’ve answered these questions, your
elevator speech becomes fairly simple to formulate.
You can find different ways of handling this by a
cursory search of the Web, but my favorite is the
formula that uses these key words to create a couple
of sentences:
- FOR (target customer)
- WHO (needs or is an opportunity for)
- THE (product or service name)
- IS A (product category)
- UNLIKE (primary competition)
- OUR PRODUCT (primary difference)
Then add an introduction and a call-to-action at
the end and there you have your elevator speech.
Naturally, the first speech you create will only
be a rough draft. You need to refine it and practice
it and refine it again…and then practice it
some more. The elevator speech should not be delivered
as a “memorized speech. Rather, you should
practice until it becomes internalized, almost a
part of who you are. And the next time you’re
in an elevator with your CEO, you won’t have
to think twice about promoting your information service.
You’ll have the words and the confidence you
need.
By the way, I used this technique to create my
own elevator speech and offer it to you as an example.
Hello, I’m Betty Jo Hibberd and I’m
the North American manager of the Quantum2 program
at Dialog. For Information
Professionals who are interested
in expanding their roles as leaders in their organizations, Quantum2 is
a leadership development program that
offers workshops based on strategic and business
competencies. Unlike similar programs,
ours is not merely information posted on the internet. It
also offers a combination of training,
communications, white papers, case studies and
other tools to help information professionals demonstrate
their value within their organizations. Why don’t
you explore our Web site at http://quantum.dialog.com/ and,
if you like the information there, join the Quantum2 network?
It’s free to information professionals worldwide.
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