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Archive for discount

Relationships First, then Business

By Des Walsh
Thursday, March 5th, 2009

The SOBCon “Blog It, Earn It” Discount

Successful and Outstanding BloggerThis blog displays proudly the SOB (Successful and Outstanding Bloggers) badge.

SOBCon is the annual “Biz School for Bloggers” to be held once again in Chicago, May 1-3. What has always impressed me about SOBCon is the complete focus on helping participants develop viable business plans. It is also a manageable size – maximum 250 participants – with a faculty of very knowledgeable, very practical, business-focused blogging stars.

This year, as part of the preparation, SOBCon founder Liz Strauss and her colleagues have come up with an interesting challenge and a discount for those who join in.

The challenge is called “Blog It, Earn It” – i.e. earn a discount on the price of admission. And at $200 off the $795 full price, that is a very substantial discount indeed.

What do you have to do to play? You have to post something on what relationships mean to you, in business parlance the “ROI of Relationships”.

SOBcon 09I’m going to join in, even though, regretfully, I am not planning to do the long trek to Chicago. I’ll apparently be able to pass my discount on to someone else, which is nice (see the note at the end of this post for what I propose to do about passing it on) .

I could write at length about how important relationships have been and are to me: relationships with my parents, my brothers, uncles, aunts, cousins, friends, nieces, nephews, teachers, and my wonderful partner of twenty years and co-author on this blog, Suzie Cheel.

But for the purpose of this exercise I am going to concentrate on relationships in business.

And especially on why one of my key operating principles is “relationships first, then business”.

So here goes:

What Relationships Mean to Me in Business

Thinking now about what relationships mean to me in business I feel quite moved, with deep feelings of gratitude especially.

Because it seems to me that all or most of the good business I have done over the past twenty years has stemmed from and has been sustained by relationships. And I can say with confidence that where the business has been good there have been good relationships and where it has not been good there has been a problematic or sour relationship involved. Not always at the beginning, but at some point.

When I speak of business as being “good” or “bad” I am not thinking of whether it paid well or not. In fact I have sometimes been quite well paid for business that with hindsight I could well have done without.

One example of a business deal that was bad is the time, early in my consulting career, that I was consulting to a government agency and with every draft of the report we submitted we were asked to make changes. I kept thinking that with one more lot of amendments we could be done, and indeed that eventually came to pass. But in the meantime, I had developed a twinge in my back  – it only bothered me when I sat down to type. It was very painful. When the report was done and handed in, the pain went away! Weird, but true.

A well paid project, but bad business. Why? My pretty confident assessment is that, although I had a reasonable relationship with the person commissioning the report, there were others behind the scenes “monitoring” the project from the viewpoint of a particular political agenda.  So what had looked like a project initiated on the basis of a reasonable relationship foundered because there were other, hidden and – from my point of view – unreasonable relationships at work which turned the exercise into such a bad project that my body actually revolted.

Of course, I’ve endeavored at times like that to buck myself up with the old “it’s just business” comment. But what sort of a life is it to have to “put up” with things, not enjoy what you do? No thanks.

Fortunately, I have many examples of business projects, past and current, which have been based on and sustained by good relationships.

I think for example of one client where I had an ongoing consulting role and who used to turn to me and my company when specific projects came up that might otherwise have gone elsewhere. He knew that with some of these projects I would not be doing the detailed work personally, but he trusted me to put together an appropriate team or outsource the details responsibly. Financially this was very worthwhile. It was also enjoyable work because of the frank, mutually trusting relationship I had with the client.

Other work has come to me “out of the blue” because someone I knew was in a conversation with others about a project that needed my skills and knowledge, which led to my being contacted and subsequently hired.

Yes, I did tender for projects and spent hours writing submissions, but because the projects I was good at were often the ones that did not fit neatly into regular categories of consultancy, much of that submission writing was, with hindsight, a waste of time. Maybe all of it – I don’t like to dwell on that too much!

In more recent years, as a coach, author, workshop leader and speaker, business has typically, and perhaps universally, come to me via a relationship, whether a long-standing, professional network relationship or via the blogging or social media community, or from something more immediate such as someone observing me and speaking with me at an event and then talking to me about business possibilities.

These experiences, the bad ones as well as the good ones, have taught me that doing business based on (positive) relationships – and by that I mean open, honest, trusting, constructive relationships – is now the only way I want to do business.

That works for me, not only financially, but in peace of mind, mind-body health and sense of contribution, and in terms of my picture of how things should be when life goes well.

In short, Relationships First, then Business, is a principle that serves me well, first as a filter to keep out the toxic experiences before they start and then as a basis and framework for doing business happily, productively and with mutual respect.

To qualify for the discount, I need now to provide a link to this site on Twitter with the hashtag #blogiearnit. Then I propose to pass the discount on to one of our readers here. If you would like to qualify, just leave a comment, perhaps share your own story and say you would like to go in a random draw to qualify. If you are doing your own blog post to qualify for the discount, note that the offer from SOBCon ends a couple of days from now, on March 7.

Categories : Blogging, Business, Events
Tags : bloggers, Business, Chicago, discount, Liz Strauss, Relationships, SOBCon 09

What’s About to Happen in Vegas, Blogwise

By Des Walsh
Sunday, September 14th, 2008

So many bloggers are attending/speaking at BlogWorld & New Media Expo in Las Vegas on September 20-21 and some of them participating also in the Executive & Entrepreneur Day, Friday September 19, my hunch is that everyone who wanted one of the discounts that’s been offered will have taken it up by now.

But just in case you missed it or are re-thinking, see my post on my Des Walsh dot Com site for a last minute, 20% discount: note that it is valid up till Sept 15 – i.e. tomorrow!

Panels I’m On

In the same post I list the panel on which I am participating, moderated by my friend Rich Brooks of flyte new media, and the one I’m moderating the following day. It is sucha  privilege to be able to present with the people on these panels who individually and collectively have a huge amount of knowledge and experience – and are definitely very cool people to be able to hang out with.

A stall keeper at the local market this morning, when I told him where I’ll be next weekend, asked me about the event. After I’d explained what I would be doing as “work” and saw the look on his face, I had to say “OK, it’s not a hardship assignment”.

Indeed it’s not.

Ready to Blog from the Show

Getting ready to go to Vegas is one of my excuses for being unduly slack in posting to this blog in the past week or so. I posted yesterday on Des Walsh dot Com about what I’ve been up to in assembling my Road Warrior Blogger Toolkit (hereafter to be known as the RWBT), which I know is not complete, but is definitely an improvement on last year in terms of preparedness to blog from the event. I know that I am now equipped to be able to blog from the floor of the expo and conference – and I may even squeeze in a post with pics from the day or so we plan to spend visiting some scenic spots around Las Vegas in the couple of days we are there before the conference starts.

Parties too!

By the way, the parties at BlogWorld are great: you get to meet and party with Blogging Legends. Likewise the general networking of the event. If the first event, last year, is anything to go by, it is a terrific opportunity to chat with people you have until this time had to admire from afar. I was really impressed last year with how approachable and unpretentious so many people with big names in the blogosphere proved to be.

Of course, there were exceptions, but there’s something actually amusing about someone having a big ego about being big in the blogosphere. Test this: just ask someone in the checkout line at the supermarket what they know about “Famous Blogger X”.

But as I say, most were/are not like that.

A Challenge

If you aren’t able to go to BlogWorld Expo but have checked out the program and would like to know more about one or other of the exhibitors/products in the expo, or about one of the keynote or session topics, I’d love you to challenge me to get some up close and personal info and report back here: just leave your topic/session interest in the comments here or use the Contact page to give me my brief! In turn I will promise to do my best to get pictures and quotes.

You might even want to challenge me to get a (short) interview with one or other of the speakers. Go for it: challenge me!

And if you are going to be there, please say hello!

Categories : Blogging, Events, Social Media
Tags : blogworld, blogworld and new media expo, Blogworldexpo, discount, Las Vegas

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