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March
2009 In this issue...
►$25,000 Technology
Makeover ►Business Survival
Expo ►Ideas -- SharePoint ►Holding Web
Meetings ►Twitter ►How to Pare Travel
Expenses ►Quote of the
Month ►Just for
Laughs |
SLPowers is on Twitter
In looking for ways
to increase communications with our clients, anyone can now
“follow” SLPowers on Twitter. The very simply Internet
sensation allows people (or companies) to connect with their
audience based on one simple question, "What are you doing?"
The answer must be under 140 characters in length and can be
sent via mobile texting, instant message, or the web. This
service will supplement our current alert broadcasting system
to deliver more frequent updates to those clients who desire
increased communication levels. Information to be disseminated
via Twitter includes network status alerts, holiday
announcement, or other information which SLPowers deems may be
timely and/or valuable to our clients.
You can begin
following SLPowers by visiting www.twitter.com/SLPowers
Holding a
Web meeting? 5 pitfalls to avoid by Christopher Elliott reprinted with permission
from the Microsoft Small Business Center

Think hard
now. Can you remember your first virtual meeting? For many of
you, it was in the latter decades of the 20th century, and you
likely called it a "teleconference." If so, chances are you
can recall how simple — but expensive — the technology used to
be.
Well, virtual
meetings aren't expensive anymore. Read on |
| Just for Laughs |
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Quote of the Month |
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The first day of
spring is one thing, and the first spring day is
another. The difference between them is sometimes
as great as a month.
~Henry Van
Dyke | |
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SLPowers announces
the birth of our $25,000 Technology Makeover
Giveaway
As we enter our 25th year in business,
SLPowers invites you to celebrate the birth of our $25,000
Technology Makeover. One lucky business or not-for-profit
organization will be selected by a panel of independent judges
to receive honor of being named the prize’s godfather, which
will comes with all the perks therein including products and
services from our national vendor partners including WatchGuard, IBM, Microsoft, Cymphonix
and HP, as well
as by local partners including Anderson Telecom. The winner
also will get various Guaranteed Networks® service
subscriptions by SLPowers, which will be designed to ease
passage through the infant years.
Businesses,
not-for-profit and charitable organizations must apply online
by April 30th at www.SLPowers.com/makeover.
Winner will be notified on May 26th. |
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| Business Survival
Expo
SLPowers is pleased
to announce the dates for the 2009 Business Survival Expo.
More than ever, South Florida businesses are under attack from
economic pressures, employee theft, foreign competition, the
risk of data loss, hackers, malware, even the weather. The
event, to be held on May 26th at the Deerfield / Boca Raton
Hilton, is a South Florida first and will feature local
and national speakers and presentations designed to help your
business save money, increase security and improve
efficiencies.
The event is
sponsored by SLPowers and supported by our national vendor
partners including WatchGuard, IBM, Cymphonix, HP and
Microsoft as well as local partners including Anderson
Telecom, Host.net and ISN Telecom. |
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Ideas to Help You
to Use SharePoint Effectively in Your Business Top 20 ways that SharePoint can solve your common
business needs. And I want to emphasize that these 20 are
only a few of the many ways to utilize SharePoint
.
| 1 |
Store all your emails on a secure and
centralized Website for easy archive. |
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| 2 |
Keep a central task location for assigning
tasks to team members. These tasks will automatically
show up in your team's Outlook 2007 To-Do List. Those
tasks will also link to your projects so you can easily
find out what tasks are still open for each
project. |
| 3 |
Organize large events and store the related
documents, assigned tasks, and generally post anything
and everything related to the events. It will also
integrate with Outlook for added
efficiency. |
Read on for more
ideas | |
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3 Easy Strategies
to Pare Travel Costs By Christopher Elliott reprinted with permission
from the Microsoft Small Business Center
Pinching pennies is a time-honored
tradition among many travelers. But it's a practice that's now
gaining increasing popularity among an unlikely group:
business travelers.
Road warriors long
have had rich tastes in travel. Back in the late 1990s, when
the economy was white-hot, they routinely bought expensive
airline tickets and stayed in pricey hotels while away on
business.
But those lavish
expenses paid by travelers have since dwindled back toward the
mainstream of travel. The average airfare paid by a business
traveler was $559 in early 2000 and dropped further to $500
for the same period in 2003, according to Topaz International,
an airfare auditing firm in Portland, Ore.
Hotel rates paid
likewise are on the decline. The average per-night rate for a
full-service hotel in an urban market was $121.02 per night
during the first quarter of 2000. Three years later, the
average price was $117.55 per night, according to the
Hospitality Research Group of PKF Consulting in Atlanta.
Is corporate travel
getting cheaper? Or are business travelers becoming miserly?
The answer: Both — but especially the latter.
When the economy
cooled off, road warriors and their employers became more
price-conscious. They refused to pay $2,000 walk-up fares that
could be booked for $200 if they agreed to stay over on a
Saturday night. This fundamental — and likely permanent —
shift in behavior has basically made professional travelers
act a lot more like vacationers.
In a 2003 survey of
corporate travel managers, the National Business Travel
Association found more than half the respondents had
implemented cost-cutting measures. Among the favorites: buying
cheaper, but more restrictive, airline tickets; booking less
expensive cars; and heading to the suburbs for downscale,
down-priced hotel rooms.
But you probably
already knew that. What about other ways of cutting costs? Here are three tips favored by the travel
pros.
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