5 Ways To Make A Great Impression in Business

5 Ways To Make A Great Impression in Business - http://breakingdownyourbusiness.com Avatar Posted by devan under Management
From http://breakingdownyourbusiness.com 3635 days ago
Made Hot by: NolanGreen on May 12, 2014 9:59 pm
Jill and Brad discuss the best ways to make a great impression. From knowing when it’s time to calm down to becoming more memorable to sticking to your personal style to speaking up, there are so many ways to make a better impression in business.





Comments


Written by lyceum
3613 days ago

Devan: I think it is pretty clever! ;) Do you drink tea?



Written by devan
3613 days ago

I do -- but mostly just Sleepy Time tea before bed. :)



Written by lyceum
3628 days ago

Devan: Thanks for your reply! I often ask if they drink tea! :) You are often served some kind of beverage at the networking event, and often coffee is the standard choice. So, if you talk about tea, you are standing out from the crowd, showing your genuine passion and interest for a product. For your information, I am writing a book on tea, Tea For The Win. #teaftwbook



Written by devan
3614 days ago

Haha very interesting! Never would have thought of that. ;)



Written by tiroberts
3628 days ago

I know all to well the struggles of both creating and launching your own product. It can be rather daunting and confusing.

Yes, you may only get one shot at an "initial" launch, but there's so much that's learned from a first product launch that makes all of your other launches of new products much more effective.

Thanks for taking the time to share this episode with us.

Ti



Written by lyceum
3629 days ago

The name of the podcast is pretty clever, Breaking Down Your Business. I will listen to the ways you could make a great impression in business.

What is your personal way of becoming "memorable"?



Written by devan
3628 days ago

Thanks, Lyceum. Take a networking event for example. For me personally, it's asking questions beyond the typical "where are you from" or "what do you do." Instead ask questions like "Are you a Cubs or Sox fan (I'm from Chicago. ;) )" or something more personal, fun, and not boring. It makes conversation much easier to go from there, and they'll remember you for it.

How about you?



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