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Tips for Planning the Beginning and Ending of Your Next Meeting
Aug 18th, 2010 by admin

Amidst all the logistics of planning a meeting, it’s easy to forget the impact the start and end has on the meeting as a whole. Below are a few simple tips you can use while planning to make sure your next meeting is as successful as it can be.

To ensure the meeting begins on time and participants have the needed resources to start immediately, you can:

• Develop an agenda a week in advance and send it to participants.
• Ask participants to review the agenda and encourage them to add anything missing so all key items can be addressed.
• Confirm the meeting’s time and location with participants the day before.
• Establish a firm start and end time so everyone gets down to business faster and knows when to wrap everything up.
• Choose an unusual time like 2:05 to improve punctuality.

The ending of a meeting is also very important, because it’s the way a meeting concludes that solidifies the ideas offered and decisions made during the discussion, which leaves participants feeling productive and satisfied. Here are some things you can do:

• Establish clear wrap-up procedures including a conclusion and summarization of the items discussed.
• Have a timekeeper that signals the time a few minutes before the end.
• Set a deadline for reporting back and follow-up.

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Should Self-Employed Meeting Planners Meet with Clients in Their Homes?
May 26th, 2010 by admin

If you are a self-employed meeting planner, you already know that quite a bit of planning is required before you can even begin to meet with clients and provide services. Decisions must be made about which niche should be your main focus, which marketing methods will be most effective, how to build successful relationships with venues and vendors, and how you will manage your client contacts. If you work from a home office, there are also the issues of setting up a home office that is quiet and conducive to productivity, establishing a professional feel for your business that does not give away that you run it out of your home, and determining how and where you will meet with clients.

The issue of where to meet with clients is a simple one when working with larger companies that have offices or storefronts. In this case, you can simply go to them and meet with them on their premises. However, when you are working with smaller companies or are meeting with potential clients that are located elsewhere and visiting your city, meeting on their turf may not be an option.

If the client company is also conducted from a home office, then it is appropriate for you to meet in either your home or theirs, as long as you feel comfortable having clients in your home and you have a professional environment in which to conduct meetings. Options for meeting clients outside of your home include meeting at a local coffee shop or looking into office sharing programs that offer meeting space for reasonable rates.

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