Featured Articles & Columns

  • Shoot for the moon

    Ask yourself, “What are you passionate about?” Make sure that your goals/targets are in line with your passions. Write it all down. ...

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  • Executive wheels: The wow! factor meets tech overload

    Of all the cars I review, BMW ranks among the leaders in the “Wow!” factor. The reasons: First, BMW has a great reputation, ...

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  • Best of CoBiz: High-performance selling

    A sales secret - the best way to control fear of sales. The best way to minimize fear of selling is to create a belief ...

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  • One thing every manager must do

    Without asking and answering, “How will the employee or team know they are successful?” managers are unable to define job success. Absent this ...

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  • Leading by lying

    Want to get your people on board to implement a new process or product? Present it so the staff believes that success is only a ...

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  • Social selling

    The ability to access information and gain critical information about the customer quickly is easier than ever. Conversely, social media has also empowered consumers to ...

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  • Let’s make a deal

     the new position and see how it played out. However, he took a different route. cowardly business traveler has two options: fast food or ...

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  • Tapping into the power of storytelling…

    As we learn to talk about why we’re here as companies from a storytelling perspective – rather than traditional marketing speak – we ...

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  • Party of one: A five-step plan for going solo

    The cowardly business traveler has two options:  fast food (on an expense account? Nope!) or room service.  I know the thought of room ...

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  • Best of CoBiz: Top 10 questions to bolster your brand experience

    Your business does not exist in a competitive vacuum! Your customers and prospects have a multitude of choices when it comes to parting with their ...

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Shoot for the moon

Even a miss lands you amidst the stars

By Teri Karjala

Executive wheels: The wow! factor meets tech overload

BMW's bizarre bells and whistles

By Jeff Rundles

Best of CoBiz: High-performance selling

Four surefire steps to blast through the fear

By TC North

(10) Reader Responses

One thing every manager must do

Define this for success

By Timothy LaMacchio

Leading by lying

Re-scaling reality

By David Sneed

(5) Reader Responses

Getting better at doing good

How technology can help

By T.J. Cook

Social selling

A new way to prospect

By Sam Reese

Best of CoBiz: People don’t leave companies….

...they leave managers!

By Laurence B. Valant

(1) Reader Responses

Let’s make a deal

Choosing door No. 4

By Todd Ordal

The futurist: The rise of the city

A look at cities in a century

By Thomas Frey

Tapping into the power of storytelling…

...from the inside out

By Carla Johnson

Best of CoBiz: Role-play for sales results

The importance of casting and direction

By Julie Hansen

Party of one: A five-step plan for going solo

The art of dining out alone, demystified

By Laura Cook Newman

(11) Reader Responses

Best of CoBiz: Top 10 questions to bolster your brand experience

The world has become one big marketplace

By Neil McKenzie

(1) Reader Responses

Readers Respond

Leading by lying

An interesting proposition David. My Pop landed beach engineers that morning. Originally tasked to land on Easy Green, enemy fire from a series of defense nests closed Easy Green and they moved to Easy Red. German defense positions included an anti-tank ditch just over the shale wall on Easy Red. German riflemen and machineguns occupied the ditch and raked the top of the shale. What my Pop said about the invasion and what Ambrose's studies showed, that all commands concentrated on landing and getting off the beach. The hedgerow problem caused the greatest surprise. Everyone from highest to lowest assumed the hedgerows were the type found in American and British gardens, proved much more. Mini-fortresses easily defended and farmhouses with a little work also became fortified positions that cost much blood and treasure. By bill oneill on 2013 05 20

Leading by lying

That was my initial reaction also, until I read between the lines through his examples. I chose to hold the principle in this way - As a leader I will not lie to or mislead my people. I will not move forward unless and until I see a real path to success. I will not lead lambs to slaughter. I will take the bulk of the 'worrying' upon myself and keep the collective focus and belief on the vision and desired future, rather than on the obstacles. Removing obstacles is my job. And so on.... By Trina Hoefling on 2013 05 20

Leading by lying

This article disturbes me. The premise that it is OK to lie to (or at least decieve) employees to get what is needed is wrong. I would content that if one has to go to those lengths then maybe the idea is not a good one. The reference to the Congress is a perfect demonstration of the problem. I can't imangine you think Congress (either side) is functional today. Maybe it is because they feel that they have to spin everything to such a degree that it is not truthful anymore and the other side has to knock it down. It certainly does not allow the public the ability to sift through the language to determine what is good or not so good. Sorry, I can't agree with your premise. By tom murphy on 2013 05 20

Leading by lying

"Leaders help us visualize success." Yes Sir, they do! By Mark Vujeva on 2013 05 20

Leading by lying

I agree with your precept, especially about changing perspective. I worry, though, that when those same motivated troops come to the process change agents with feedback are heard and not denied (because execution of new process impacts them whether it's their problem or not). Now I'm with you! By Trina Hoefling on 2013 05 20

Party of one: A five-step plan for going solo

you're article is great! I am a food service professional and am glad to say that I ALWAYS respect the solo diner, and there are things we as service professionals SHOULD do to make people feel more at ease. The best thing about your article actually comes from one of your reader's comments. I never knew that pretty solo female diners in Texas were lesbians!?!?!? How interesting! By Ta Tee on 2013 05 17

Best of CoBiz: Three smart ways to keep your work-life balance

Good advice for all of us Derek. I too read about Sheryl Sandberg's 5:30 departure. But several other articles have stated that she then returns to work, maybe from home, by 8:00 every night. Not sure I want to do this. By Gale Dunlap on 2013 05 17

Party of one: A five-step plan for going solo

This article gets an A+ Laura. It's your best one yet! Luckily I've never had a fear of dining alone. Serve me some fabulous rare prime rib and I'm glad to be in my own world. Believe me...who really wants the pleasure of in the presence of a ravenous cave woman in a feeding frenzy? Let me get my canines on gristle and fat. Tendons and ligaments don't stand a chance around me. Give me skin, marrow, and cartilage. And yeah, give me the bill. I don't mind paying. You'll get a better tip too because I'm not footing the bill for a rum guzzling dinner partner! By Pamsclams on 2013 05 16

Party of one: A five-step plan for going solo

Coincidentally, I am traveling right now and breaking an above-mentioned "solo dining rule" as I type. Instead of savoring my Coors Light at Oakland International Airport, I am writing this response. How gauche! Anyhoo, I've enjoyed all your comments. Movies alone = absolutley! Steve Martin clip - yessir! Wit and Wisdom? Well color me happy and humbled. As for dating advice...well, maybe we'll broach that topic next week, as it seemed to genrate some interest. I wasn't exactly intending for this to turn into a "dating column", but then again, stranger things have happened. Time to fly, y'all. By Chef Laura on 2013 05 16

How to stay out of voicemail jail

I don't know, Gary. Maybe just tell them EXACTLY why you're calling, and let them decide if they want to call you back? If you trick me into calling you I'm not buying anyway, even if I need the product. I'll buy it from someone else. By Dave on 2013 05 16
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