Tag: planning

  • WordPress Meetup#3 Planning Gains momentum

    It’s officially the first event I’ve been involved in organising in the blogging community and it’s been a great experience thus far. There’s been alot of interest as well as sponsorship and speaking offers which makes my task alot easier.

    What we need now is to get the message out there and get people to register!. Herewith the details thus far.

    I’ve secured the Bandwidth Barn as a venue and have set the date for Wednesday 28th May. Bandwidth Barn, 125 Buitengracht Street, Cape Town (map). Buitengracht street runs just bewteen Cape Town City Centre and Bo Kaap. There’s a Euro Scooter Shop just below it and it’s opposite a building with a Huge O painted on it.
    Date & Time:

    Wednesday 28 May 2008, 4pm – 7pm (feel free to come an hour early & stay an hour later if you’re a wordpress freak)
    Speakers

    * Mark Bloomfield – WordPress as a CMS
    * Johann Botha – WordPress Security
    * Rafiq Phillips – SEO for wordpress
    * Adriaan Pienaar – Topic to be confirmed

    more speakers requested
    Sponsors Secured

    * FrogFoot Networks – Domain & Hosting, the new domain with fresh installation of WP & a media wiki should be up in the next few days.
    * Adii – Premium WordPress Theme as a prize
    * Red-Button – 50 mb per person for the event

    Sponsors Negotiating

    T-Shirt sponsorships being negotiated (more sponsors required!) We’ll be putting a list of logos or urls of the T-shirt sponsors on the t-shirts so hop on board. if anyone knows of a good place we can get the T-shirts printed let us know.

    We’re looking for a few people to chip in for Yellow Llama’s flight costs, he’s covering most of it but as I asked him to come down to Cape Town to speak I thought it might help if we helped him out a little.
    Sponsors Required

    * Snacks – Sponsorship required
    * Looking for someone to sponsor copies of wordpress for dummies
    * Projector Needed for the Presentations
    * Additional T-Shirt sponsors

    Marketing

    I’ve been talking to a few people in my own capacity about the event, but need to rest of the community’s involvement in getting some interest going, sharing some ideas and preparing topics etc. Sharing your pics of previous events and blogging about the upcoming one will be much appreciated.

    All you online social networking junkies out there are requested to work your magic with getting the message for the meet out there and drumming up some interest.

  • How can we make WPCPT meetup #3 rock?

    All you wordpress superstars, Planning for wordpress meetup 3 is under way. We can’t do a thing without wordpressy peeps though. Check out the latest post on how we can make the next meetup Rock Big Time.

    We got some ideas to start you off, first off we’d like some feedback if you were at the last one and please send your photos to post on the site as well.

    Head on over to http://wpcapetown.wordpress.com/ and get involved.

  • Tapping into the power of strategy

    The importance of having a strategic approach to business cannot be understated. While many business people are content to keep going at it in the same way they always have, taking a step back and assessing what lies ahead, the challenges, the goals, the failures and successes is not always part of the process.

    Dr Jonathan Foster Pedley of the GSB posted with You Tube video his students developed to explain “What Strategy Is …”. Inspiring & Insightful.

    I also “stumble” across this article(Tapping into the power of strategy) written by Antoinette Tyrrell, strategy director at the Switch Group in which she says:

    Strategy means planning, doing, checking and replanning – while keeping your staff engaged in this process. To ensure it’s the most successful it can be it needs to cross disciplines; linking the silos in your organisation. This will ensure that each and every person in your organisation, no matter their department, is working towards a common goal.

    A business plan should be one of the key tools driving your strategy. I’m not talking about those dead never to be opened business plans developed merely to apply for funding, I’m talking about something which is dynamic and changes with the needs and growth of your company.

    The business plan covers the bigger picture and many times this is something we neglect to take a look at in the daily running of our businesses, what is the overall mission we are trying to achieve, and do our daily activities contribute towards that.

    Sometimes it’s good to get the help of an outside party who is detached from emotional involvement and can give you an outsider’s perspective.

    Antionette goes on to say:

    a strategy expert doesn’t have to come with an intimidating price tag. Look for a company that offers you someone who will immerse themselves in your business; someone who will go down the mineshaft, wear a hard hat, and get into the thick of things to find the answers you need. Great strategies are not developed behind closed doors or in ivory towers.

    Taking the concept of immersion deeper, it takes conscious immersion to pin point areas of focus. Many times immersion of the wrong kind, like that of the micro-manager hovering over everyone’s shoulders produces negative results. the type of immersion needed should allow for weaknesses to be uncovered. inviting a strategist on board and then trying to plug the gaps before he/she arrives might save some perceived embarrassment but won’t produce the results you are in need of.

    If you’re not willing to take advice from an outsider on your weaknesses, then you’re probably more likely to get stuck into certain static patterns which eventually reach deadlocks and don’t produce results.

    The term strategy has it’s roots in war, and was used to define the plan needed to win the battle. It’s a war zone out there when you think about how tight competition is and having an edge over your competitors means having a differential strategy.

    Strategy is also not about plans being passed down from the top through the hierarchical chain. It’s more about conversation and insight into what goes on on the ground. It goes without saying that all parties must be willing to talk and listen and to be transparent in their conversation.

    It’s the leader who is willing to employ someone more knowledgeable than himself that understands this.