5 easy digital business card ideas

mediation careerI’m still a believer in paper business cards and love the card David Airey designed for me.

But I don’t have only a paper card anymore. I have an online version I can embed on social media “about me” pages and a version I can beam from my iPhone to another mobile phone.

You can, too, and most of the methods require zero geekdom. Here’s a run-down of free and low-fee approaches that’ll have you up and running in no time.

Top options

  1. Text your business card from your mobile phone. Services like DUB make it pretty easy.
  2. Create your business card as a stand-alone web page you own. The Digital Business Card for WordPress works well, particularly if you already know how to use WordPress.
  3. Create an online card hosted by a service, such as card.ly (click here for a demo of my card.ly card) or BusinessCard2
  4. For Twitter fans, you can Tweet your business card with twtBizCard.
  5. For iPhone enthusiasts there’s an ever-growing list of options for sending your card over the airwaves. Two that get good reviews are SnapDat, which sends an image of your business card, and the straightforward beamMe.

Sources and resources

Tammy
Making Mediation Your Day Job by Tammy Lenski is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License. Based on a work at MakingMediationYourDayJob.com.

Post to Twitter

Special book offer and a website resource

news and announcementsTwo quick announcements:

One-Time Special Offer on Hardcover Copies of My Book

I’ve got hardcover copies of Making Mediation Your Day Job left over from a signing. I’d like to get them out of my file drawer so I’m going to make them available, until my short stack runs out, at the softcover price. I’ll inscribe them, too. That’s a $24.95 book for $14.95 (U.S. shipping only, sorry everyone else).

This offer is good only for one week or until my supply runs out. [Update: All available books have been purchased. Thanks, everyone!]

Click here to buy and enter coupon code TvqHv28H where indicated.

Premium WordPress Themes I Recommend

If you’ve been reading this blog for a while, you know I recommend that websites – blogs or not – be built with WordPress, a free, high-quality software tool commonly used for blogs.

I get a lot of questions about how to customize WordPress so it has the look and feel you want. One way, the expensive one, is to hire a customizer. Another is to purchase a premium WordPress theme; a theme is a design that’s built work with WordPress and allows you to control aspects of the look and presentation of content on your site. The Making Mediation Your Day Job site, for instance, is built with the StudioPress theme.

To make answering these questions easier in the future, I’ve now put up a web page listing the premium WordPress themes I use and recommend. All are well-respected in the website-building community and in my experience come with superb customer support.

I’m an affiliate of the themes listed, meaning I receive a small bonus if you buy via my link. I like to disclose this and hope you’ll consider any bonus a small gesture of thanks for five years of my offering advice and ideas here, gratis!

Can it possibly be mid-August already? Yowza! Happy late summer,
Tammy
Making Mediation Your Day Job by Tammy Lenski is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License. Based on a work at MakingMediationYourDayJob.com.

Post to Twitter

Is blogging a good mediation marketing strategy?

online marketing for mediatorsI get asked this question a lot.

My typical answer: For most mediators, no. For mediators who’ve set a solid marketing foundation, the question gets answered as part of the right mediation marketing groundwork. When you know what you want to accomplish with your mediation marketing, and for what audience, then you’ll know if blogging is a good ADR marketing strategy for you and your ADR business.

But don’t just take my word for it. [Read more...]

Post to Twitter

ADR blogging and the comment spam problem

online marketing for mediatorsOver time I’ve written a lot here about how blogs help you market your mediation services.

All well and good. These days, if you’re going to blog, you need a good spam prevention plan to go along with your ADR blogging. Spammers use computers and hire real people to fill out the comment forms at the bottom of your posts, flooding your site with spam. I know some bloggers who have become so overwhelmed by it that they’ve either disabled their comment box or prevented anyone without a Blogger account (if they use Blogger themselves) from leaving a comment.

It need not be so dire a solution. Disabling your comment feature diminishes the dialogue-building potential in your ADR blog, because your readers can no longer start or contribute to the conversation you begin with your blog posts. [Read more...]

Post to Twitter

Selecting a Web Host for Your ADR Blog

blook
Finding a reputable, service-oriented and feature-rich web hosting service for your blogsite similar to finding a good domain registrar: Ask around, find out what services have good track records and what ones to avoid.

I am presently using DreamHost and have been quite satisfied with their service, though I know others who haven’t been. As you decide what’s right for you, consider the following: [Read more...]

Post to Twitter

Choosing Your ADR Blog’s Platform

blook
Your blogging platform is the software you use to run your blog—it’s infrastructure. Before choosing a host for your blog, it’s important that you understand the software options available to you.

I have strong opinions about these options and so do other experts. For every opinion I offer, I’m confident you can find someone with a different view. I think you’ll find, though, that most marketing and business development experts share many of the views I’ll offer here. If you want to find alternative views to round our your thinking, the web can help you.

Blogging Platform Options

At the moment, there are essentially two options from which to choose. [Read more...]

Post to Twitter

Tech Tools for Mediators

mediator tech tipsWhat kinds of technology tools can help mediators and other ADR professionals promote and manage business? Here are the tools I use for marketing and managing my private practice and recommend for your consideration. I discuss a number of these tools in detail in an interview to be released soon on CD.

Tech Tools for Promoting Your Practice

  • Blogging software. Instead of web development software for your new or enhanced site, consider blogging software. It’s simple to use, your webhost may already offer it as part of your package, and it’s easy to add and update site content. I’m a WordPress fan.
  • Autoresponder. I use and recommend AWeber. Not sure what an autoresponder is or does? Take a look at my short series, beginning with Building Client Relationships with Autoresponders.
  • Digital audio recording software. I’ve used and been satisfied with AudioAcrobat for creating welcome audio (see the right-hand navigation bar on this site), recording interviews, creating audio FAQs, and recording teleclasses.
  • Site metrics. If you have a website or blog, then you want metrics to help track traffic to your site and find out what pages or articles generate the most interest, where people enter your site (it’s not always from the home page if they find you through a search engine) and where they exit. If you presently have a website, then your webhost probably has a metrics package already measuring these stats – get in touch with them to find out how to access it. For blogging metrics, I use FeedBurner and Performancing.

Tech Tools for Managing Your Business

  • Call management software. Route your calls to your cell phone or any other phone, choose different business hours and after-hours messages, offer multiple voicemail boxes (I have one designated for weather cancellation notices, New Englander that I am), receive faxes to your computer inbox. Take a look at GotVMail.
  • Online invoicing. Simplify your invoicing or offer payment via a website shopping cart without setting up credit card processing procedures. While there are many powerful options out there, I am happy with FreshBooks.
  • Online appointment scheduling. If you don’t have an assistant and are not always available by phone, consider allowing your clients and prospects to book themselves if your market is Internet-savvy. At the time I write this, I’m experimenting with AppointmentQuest.
  • Online event calendar. Use for promoting upcoming information sessions or trainings. I’m experimenting with Trumba, which is free and can be added to your own website (there is also a paid upgrade to sync with your Outlook calendar).
  • PDF document converter. If you send documents (contracts, agreements to mediate, letters) over the Internet you want to make sure that they arrive on the other end in the same format you sent them. PDF-formatting ensures this and Adobe makes a free reader now automatically installed on most new computers. If you want the full power of Adobe like I do you can purchase the package; otherwise, try a low-cost PDF document converter like FinePrint PDF Factory.
  • Outlook add-ins. If you’re an Outlook user, consider using add-ins to make a good program a great one. I highly recommend by GTD and ClearContext (pick one or the other but don’t try to use both at once).

Tech Tools for Learning More About ADR, Marketing and Business

  • RSS news aggregator. Read other blogs effortlessly by subscribing through an RSS reader. I’ve recommended Onfolio in the past and now use Bloglines (Onfolio was recently purchased by Microsoft and Internet Explorer isn’t my browser of choice). Not sure what I’m talking about? Read RSS 101 for more information.
  • Podcasts. There are some terrific podcasts out there on just about any subject you can imagine—and they’re usually free. I use iTunes to automatically download new podcasts to my Windows computer (you don’t need a Mac to use iTunes) and my iPod to listen to them while driving or cleaning house. Some of my favorites include Negotiation Tip of the Week, Contrary Public Speaker, BusinessWeek Cover Story, and for a daily chuckle, The Onion Radio News.

I’ll add to, delete from, and update this list as I find or fall out of love with tech resources. I’ve posted a copy in the main navigation bar to the right, so you can always find it easily.

Post to Twitter