posted by Andrew Hartley - Business Consultant & Entrepreneur on Sep 13
Today I will be getting back in the cockpit! I finally got in touch with my friend (a former student of mine when I was a training consultant in aviation) who is a flight instructor. We will be flying tonight - I’m going to attempt to pass a biennial flight review and aircraft rental checkout after nearly FOUR YEARS of not acting as a pilot of an aircraft.
Wish me luck - it’s a first step to return to my journey of becoming a professional pilot! The teacher again becomes the student…
Fair Winds,
Andrew
posted by Andrew Hartley - Business Consultant & Entrepreneur on Sep 1
Quick blurb today:
I was attending a “brown bag” session about communication once, and we were doing an activity to illustrate how, often, what one says is not exactly the same as what someone else hears:
The “Explainer” has a sheet of paper with a fairly simple drawing on it (ours was a rabbit in a hat). This person must instruct the “Drawer” on how to draw the picture without giving away what the picture is - in other words, the explainer will instruct, line-by-line, how the drawing is made up, like so: “Start with a straight, horizontal line at the bottom of the page. Now draw two vertical lines, each starting at the end of the horizontal line and going up, about the same length as the horizontal line, and each vertical line the same length.” and so on and so on until the picture is complete (or the communication has broken down so badly that the picture is unfixable!).
It was a neat exercise, but the most interesting thing was that, as the exercise was being explained to the “Explainer” and the “Drawer,” there was a misunderstanding on the part of the “Drawer,” and the Director of Training said, “She might be a good communicator, but she’s not a very good listener!”
WHAT!?!
Communication is not just about talking! 50% of communication must be about listening - it’s a part of communication! If you’re not a good listener, by definition, you can’t be a good communicator!
So I’ve decided that we should have a mini-course on communication on the Aviation of Business blog!
Stay tuned for it!
Fair Winds,
Andrew
posted by Andrew Hartley - Business Consultant & Entrepreneur on Aug 12
I’ve been kicking around some business ideas for quite awhile now. Third Floor Cards is a site that I started and then put off for a long time… and it’s one that I would still like to see up and running with a decent site and some good business running through it.
But the most recent one that I have started is The Teacher’s Forum. Currently, it is a dull yaBB forum with a generic look, but it is functional and up and running. So far the only registered members are me (administrator) and my wife, Jill. There are three posts. Two are introductions in the “Break the Ice” section.
We’ll be continuing the design of the site to make it look less generic and more eye-catching when people first come to the forum, but this brings up two questions:
1) Is yaBB (a freeware forum software) the right software to use for this forum, or should I use something more “well-known” throughout the forum world like vBulletin? I’d have to buy a license for the vBulletin software.
2) What is the best way to encourage people to be the first ones to post on a new forum? I’ve thought about using a service like ForumShock to jump start it, but is there a better way?
In beginning to answer number 2, I will be offering free “upperclassman” membership to the first 50 people to register and introduce themselves (in the “Break the Ice” section) on the site. However, I don’t have any kind of paid membership level (yet), so they’ll be taking it on my word that the site will, in the future, have that capability. Which begs the quetion laid in 1, above again - is yaBB the right forum software for the site?
I also spent some time yesterday listing The Teacher’s Forum on search engines and free site-listing web-pages to help bring up the site’s “link love,” as so many search engine optimization (SEO) gurus (like Rae Hoffman and Jeremy Schoemaker) call it.
Any other suggestions and help would be appreciated! Leave a comment if you have any ideas…
And if you want to register and be among the first 50 people to get your free lifetime “Upperclassman” membership, I certainly won’t shed any tears over you posting and helping to get the site active!
Fair Winds,
Andrew