Archive for May, 2010

The Art of Networking

Networking is not a four-letter word! I know many people feel that way in professional networking and career-related networking. As a connector, I often have talked to people about my methods in networking. The first place to start might sound obvious, but it’s often overlooked. It’s all about the PEOPLE! I truly care about people, their stories and what makes them tick, so for me “networking” is a hobby to me like playing an instrument. I keep up with people in my spare time.

But for introverts, those starting new businesses or those who aren’t comfortable in professional networking environments, I’ve created a talk and slidedeck that I go through with easy and tangible steps in networking 101 for the busy career professional.

I spoke this week to the 2010 Entrepreneur Class at Idea Village and my slideshare from that talk is above.

Making connections and building relationships is one of the most important things you can do to help your professional career. So next time you think about networking, replace the word “networking” with “connecting with people” and go get ‘em!

The Giving Project Launches


I really do believe that we all can make a difference. Have an impact. Leave the world better than we found it.

But too often, in the day to day of life, we get weighed down by responsibility and it’s hard, just plain hard to make it through. It’s one thing after another and our very best intentions (whatever they may be) fall to the side as we struggle just to get through the day.

I’m no different. Even in my cause-filled living way of life, I often find myself not doing as much as I want to when I think about giving back. It’s the Lance Armstrong effect. He gets on a bike and goes 50 miles without batting an eye. He must feel like he should do more training, step up his game, be the best he can be every day. That very best is more than most people could ever hope for, yet for him, those 50 miles don’t seem like enough.

I’m no Lance Armstrong, but I feel the same effect. I give a piece of me every day to the world, and yet at night, I often feel like I should be doing more. My sense of giving has been normalized and I need more. In 2010, I decided, I would find a way to incorporate a more structured giving campaign into my life and share those details on my blog. That structure means a number of hours volunteered, money donated, in-kind donations, everything.

This May, I’d like to introduce The Giving Project. The Giving Project is where I partner with one nonprofit for a set period of time to help them, to lend them my skills, my contacts, my network and create a customized program that matches both their needs and wants with my skills.

My first partner is the St. Bernard Project. I was first introduced to them last year when I was in New Orleans volunteering. I loved their passion, their business savvy in a nonprofit world and their desire to ultimately “put themselves out of business.” Their mission is to create housing opportunities so that Hurricane Katrina survivors can return to their homes and communities.

The St. Bernard Project, a nonprofit, community-based organization that carries out its mission through three primary programs: Rebuilding Program, Center for Wellness and Mental Health and Senior Housing Program. Over 900 families are still without their homes in St. Bernard and I want to do every little bit I can do to help get that number to ZERO.

In partnering with them here is what I’m doing:

  • They have a Women’s Rebuild Week May 24th-29th. I am working on helping with sponsorships.
  • I hosted a Women’s Only Happy Hour through NOLAlicious to bring together women in New Orleans to learn about their organization and the Women’s Rebuild Week.
  • I’m leading a Rebuild Day, again through NOLAlicious (and my whole NOLAlicious family), where anyone (COED y’all) in New Orleans can come out and join us for a fun day of giving back, rebuilding a house, networking and meeting cool people and helping provide housing for members of St. Bernard Parish.
  • I’m attending their Hammer to Heels Fundraiser Friday night. If you’re in town, you should too!
  • Social media assistance – I’m helping their team create a plan to maximize their social media efforts.
  • Promotion – Creating blog posts like this. Creating content like photos and videos, having them top of mind and telling everyone about their. Being an evangelist for all of the work they do.

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Exciting Day for NOLAlicious!

What started as a concept to cowork with two friends (and new transplants to New Orleans), turned into an opportunity to create a small side project capturing the best of 2010 – our first year in New Orleans. NOLAlicious was born and today continues to blossom.

I’m excited to announce that today NOLAlicious launched a new website. We wanted to make it simple – sign up for the newsletter for more great content! We have changed small pieces of either the website or the newsletter just about every week – all the while – creating learning opportunities, reacting to our open rate, click through, sign ups – I have to say side projects are the best place to play. We’ve made errors, we’ve had success. We continue to grow and learn from the experience.

What is NOLAlicious?
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The Mother’s Day Gift That Keeps On Giving

Thank you to everyone who tuned into last night’s Vokle live chat with Stacey Monk, Jen Consalvo and Susan McPherson to talk about To Mama With Love, Epic Change and nonprofit fundraising online. From my post yesterday, Give Your Mom The Gift Of Giving Back: ToMamaWithLove.Org I heard so much from people how much they loved this campaign, which was also apparent last night. The chat made the homepage of Vokle and we had a robust conversation not only about this campaign and others we had been a part of, but the larger issues at hand within social media around fundraising and doing good.
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Give Your Mom The Gift Of Giving Back: ToMamaWithLove.Org


According to the LA Times, this year Americans alone will spend $14.6 billion on Mother’s Day. Imagine if the gifts we gave made the world a better place for children & mamas everywhere.

By now, hopefully your calendar, a Twitter post or all the Mothers Day cards in the stores has reminded you that Mothers Day is right around the corner. My mom, always taught me that a gift I made just for her was what she really wanted – so this year I’m taking the time to do just that. She taught me I could change the world, and with my gift this year I plan to do that too. Actually my mom also reminded us you couldn’t go wrong with buying her shoes, but that’s another post for another time.

This year, my gift will be my personally created “heartspace” on To Mama With Love, and a donation in my mother’s name that will help another mama who is even further away. In her village in Arusha, Tanzania, Mama Lucy (@MamaLucy) is literally a mother to an entire school that she envisioned and built using her money she made selling chickens as seed capital. Serving over 400 children, the school is already one of the top-ranked primary schools in her region – all because of a woman with a vision of a brighter future and an organization called Epic Change who helped generate thousands of donations via various social media outreach efforts.

To learn more about this exciting campaign, I’d like to invite you to join me as I moderate a discussion about To Mama With Love tomorrow night (THURSDAY) from 7:00 – 8:00 PM EST with Stacey Monk (@StaceyMonk), founder of Epic Change and Jen Consalvo (@noreaster), founder of Shiny Heart Ventures (plus one more guest I’m excited to announce tomorrow)!

Join us in a live chat to talk about #ToMamaWithLove and how we all can give back a little more each day. It will be an informative and fun panel debate and we’d love to see you. Thursday night, 7pm EST. Details here: http://bit.ly/tomamawithlove
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NOLAlicious

Award-winning free weekly email newsletter about New Orleans, brought to you with the eye of a tourist and the soul of a native.

Cause It's My Birthday

Seven days, seven cities, seven parties, one cause. $19K raised for malaria nets in Ghana.

Gulf Coast Benefit

$60,000 raised in response to the Gulf Coast oil spill through Gulf Coast Benefit and Citizen Gulf.

Kiva

All the details about my Kiva Fellowship in the Phillipines in 2009.