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		<title>Email Wire Press Releases</title>
		<link>http://emailwire.com</link>
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		<copyright>Copyright 2008</copyright>
		<pubDate>Fri, 14 Mar 2008 03:04:12 -0700</pubDate>
		<generator>emailwire.com </generator>
	<item><title><![CDATA[Five Technical Mistakes to Avoid When Running Teleseminars, From Creator of New 'Teleteach for Profit' Program]]></title><link>http://emailwire.com/release/12001-Five-Technical-Mistakes-to-Avoid-When-Running-Teleseminars-From-Creator-of-New-Teleteach-for-Profit-Program.html</link><pubDate>Fri, 14 Mar 2008 00:00:00 -0700</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Entrepreneurs]]></category><category><![CDATA[Human Resources]]></category><category><![CDATA[Online Marketing / SEO]]></category><category><![CDATA[Women in Business]]></category><guid>http://emailwire.com/feeds/pr_feeds.php?prID=12001&amp;protocol=rss</guid><description><![CDATA[(EMAILWIRE.COM, March 14, 2008 )  Goshen, MA - With teleseminars, teleclasses and teleconferences increasingly popular, newcomers to this remote learning format make numerous mistakes that mar their prospects for making money from the telephone sessions.  An upcoming four-week course with veteran teleclass presenter Marcia Yudkin enables teleseminar novices to avoid such mistakes when leading free or paid teleseminars and turning them into audio products (www.yudkin.com/teleteach.htm), gaffes like these:

Teleseminar mistake #1:  Using a cell phone or Internet phone instead of a land line.  "According to conference call line providers, the quality of the call is only as good as its weakest link," says Yudkin, author of 6 Steps to Free Publicity and 10 other books.  "Sometimes Internet phones create echoes and cell phones degrade the line quality for all the participants."

Teleseminar mistake #2:  Neglecting to turn off entry chimes.  Although every commercial conference-call line includes a command for turning off the chirps that signal someone coming on or getting off the line, many experienced teleseminar presenters fail to eliminate these distracting sounds.

Teleseminar mistake #3:  Relying on computer notes.  "If you have your notes printed out, you wont worry if the power goes out during a telephone session," Yudkin notes.  "Spread the notes out across your desk to avoid distracting listeners with the sound of paper rustling."

Teleseminar mistake #4:  Sipping water or coffee audibly during the teleclass.  "Always have a glass of water near you in case your throat gets dry, but use a straw to avoid gulping noises on your recording." 

Teleseminar mistake #5:  Recording in mono rather than stereo.  "I like to listen to teleclasses on my portable CD player as I walk around our lake," says Yudkin.  "Last month I returned a $99 teleclass collection for a refund because the mono recording played only in my left ear.  After five minutes, it hurt to listen." 

Yudkins upcoming "Teleteach for Profit" course meets the first four Wednesdays in April from 4 to 5 p.m. Eastern time and includes information on costs, teleclass structure, marketing, publicity, logistics, technologies needed and not needed for success with teleseminars, audio product creation and packaging; samples of pertinent emails, postcards, transcripts and other peoples teleseminars; one-on-one consulting or moderation of their teleclass; free distribution of one teleseminar-related news release; and two months of access to a private member forum for feedback and answers to questions.  The program costs $795.

For more information on "Teleteach for Profit," go to www.yudkin.com/teleteach.htm .
    

Creative Ways
					    Marcia Yudkin
					    413-582-4052
					    <a href='mailto:marcia@yudkin.com'>marcia@yudkin.com</a>]]> &lt;img src="http://www.emailwire.com/tracker/track.php?ID=12001" border="0" /&gt;
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				<subtitle><![CDATA[An upcoming four-week course with veteran teleclass presenter Marcia Yudkin enables teleseminar novices to avoid technical mistakes when leading free or paid teleseminars and turning them into audio products (www.yudkin.com/teleteach.htm).]]></subtitle></item>
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