Archive for January, 2012

Boat Show 2012

Boat Show 2012 is underway….. and for me, it’s kind of like the beginning of Spring Training for baseball — a sure sign that the long, dark days of winter are going to be over soon, and we’ll be back into better (notice I didn’t say ‘sunny’) weather and more time on the boat! We attended last night’s opening night, expecting to see old friends, learn about new boat models, cool things we need on the boat, and generally wander around amongst the crowd. It lived up to expectations.

Of course, being SeaRay owners, we always stop to say ’hello’ to our friends at Lake Union SeaRay, including Steve Thoreson, take a look at the new boats, and I will say the 390 looks great — with a large cockpit seating area, a center transom entrance, and fewer sharp lines below (I like smooth edges). The new 500 is impressive, but if I’m moving into that league, I’ll likely be looking for something a little more fuel efficient. The best thing, and another friend who owns a boat model just like ours, agreed — we like the boat we have. The model works especially well for a couple — not too big, but large enough to have friends aboard, and also stay on the boat for a week or so if we want.

Then it was into the booths, where we said ‘hi’ to Recia Weigelt of Cleaner Cook! She sells just the thing boat owners who grill on their boats need to protect their gel-coat. Plus, she also has this killler barbeque sauce with a number of different flavors. Commodore Greg Dore’ heads up the Tyee Yacht Club, and they are one of the few clubs adding members. We also learned they’ve added a new outstation at Port Hadlock thanks to a generous club member! Sue Hicks, over at Sea Magazine, is a must-see, and the magazine is a must-read for boat owners in this area with the latest news on new boats, cruising grounds, new products, and industry updates. We did pick up our new Waggoner Cruising guide, and said ‘hello’ to founding editor Robert Hale, as well as new editor Mark Bunzell, who filled us in on some of the latest legislative news from Olympia regarding the boating industry. (The Northwest Marine Trade Association is a great resource for the last news on this front). In fact, I had them both autograph our new guide!

Back onto the floor, we stopped by to say ‘hi’ to Niel Steenkamp, of Ocean Alexander and now Tiara boats. OA just keeps building bigger and bigger yachts, and they’re beautiful. (Thank goodness for their floating boat show at Roche Harbor, where I worked from the flybridge of the 65′ OA to get an internet connection last summer)! And finally, we stopped by Greg Norwine’s booth, Windworks, where I learned what it would take to get my captain’s license. (Start logging sea-time now)!  We could wander for days among all the different booths, looking at all the new products, and drooling over the cool electronics that are out there now. And when I really want to dream, I head over to the floating show on Lake Union to check out all the yachts. Maybe one days I’ll have one of these! (see photo below).

Margo Myers, Principal, Margo Myers Communications

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The Recipe Collector

Given this has been a snow week, and I’ve been laboring over my computer as much as I can — I also need to take a break every once in awhile, and actually cook dinner. My husband is a better cook than I am, but since he’s been slaving away in the weather and coming home exhausted, it’s fallen to me to ‘step up my game.’

I keep favorite recipes in the cupboard by the stove, ready to pull out at a moment’s notice if I need inspiration. (Of course, my mother-in-law ‘gifts’ us with a cookbook every Christmas, made up of recipes from friends and family, but that’s a blog for another day). As I was thumbing through my stack of recipes today, looking for the Chicken Scallopine recipe from Sunset Magazine, it occurred to me how many friends have touched our lives  simply by sharing their favorite foods.

There’s the Goat Cheese and Asparagus Strata from either Debbie Parietti or Julie Boehm, made for several years running when we hosted the Mother’s Brunch for moms from St. Anne’s on the first day of school every year.

Or the Spaghetti with Bacon and Rosemary from 2006 from the Rutherford Hill wine club, to be served with the 2003 Syrah! And then I find the program from the March of Dimes Gourmet Gala from Monterey, California in the early 1990′s when my cooking partner was James Brolin. Another year I cooked with a race car driver, Jon Beekhuis. Whoever my partner was, I always had a running competition with Judge Jonathan Price and the guy who owned Pebble Beach at the time.

Kathy Casey makes several appearances — great recipes for potato salads!

And there’s the recipe from Mel’s kitchen for Individual Cream Cheese Cakes. When I worked at KSBW in Salinas, California, my co-anchor, Joe Glover, producer Sheila Riley, writer Michelle Rossi and I all took turns cooking dinner each night for the rest of our crew. Friday nights, we ordered out. We always got some interesting concoctions from Joe, depending on how many beers went into the chef on Sunday night. Sheila was a fabulous cook, and I imagine still is, and so was Michelle. You could usually find us on Thursday or Friday nights after our 11pm newscast (our sports guy, Dennis Lehnen, was a regular, too) at the Brass Rail or a bar we called ‘The Silver Bullet’ to play Liar’s Dice. (Yes, Liar’s Dice, and it was tons of fun). One of our regular players was Mel. Mel was a businessman in Salinas with the bass pipes of a radio announcer’s voice, and Mel wanted to contribute to our dinner group, so he offered his recipe. It was only a year or two later that we spoke at his funeral.

One of my favorite recipes actually comes from Emeril LaGasse’s Thanksgiving Contest from Good Morning America in 2000. It’s a recipe for Pumpkin Praline Pie with bourbon whipped cream. My mom and I made it one year, and it looked like a ‘flour bomb’ had gone off in the kitchen. We had a great time making the pies, getting the crust just right, carefully building the layers of pumpkin and praline, and when we gave my dad a taste of the whipped cream, he simply looked at us and asked, “Who needs pie?”

There’s the Grilled shrimp with Mango Salsa, the Captain’s Chicken from Rachael Ray (given to me by another TV producer), and the secret recipe for Chocolate Chip Cookies from the Ritz-Carlton, Kapalua — all recipes collected over the last 20+ years from vacations, events, and special people. So keep in mind the next time you share a recipe with friends — you’re sharing memories of good times when the dish was made.

And my Chicken Scallopine recipe? Yes, it was on the bottom of the pile. We’ll have it tonight.

Margo Myers, Principal, Margo Myers Communications

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The Springboard Academy Announces Program Expansion

Many of you know, in addition to my Communications firm, I work with a talented group of business people to run The Springboard Academy! Here’s our newest announcement for 2012!

Margo Myers, Principal, Margo Myers Communications

Seattle, January 20, 2011 – The Springboard Academy, a Seattle-based professional development company that helps men and women accelerate their career success, today announced its full line-up of workshops and programs for 2012.  In addition to programs for individuals, the Springboard Academy, formerly GoGirl Academy, now offers development programs for businesses, focusing on business developers, future leaders, high-performance team members, and others.
“We’ve developed our curriculum based on years of business experience, and we see tangible results with our clients as they take on more responsibility within their companies, gain promotions and achieve higher levels of success,” said Margo Myers, Executive Director. “Now we offer more targeted programs to help businesses get the results they want.”
The Springboard Academy offers multi-week programs and workshops, including those aimed at the:
High Performer – increases effectiveness, leadership and communication skills within internal teams.
Business Developer – develops presentation and networking skills needed for employees with high visibility in the community.
Developing Leader – prepares high potential individuals for future leadership opportunities within the organization.
Personal Coaching – one-on-one coaching for high potential employees in line for promotion.

“All of these programs are designed to teach people the tactical skills needed for success that you don’t learn anywhere else,” said Tom Eckmann, Chairman. “You can be technically proficient, but we’ve found that employees with these added skills advance in the workplace more rapidly.”

The Springboard Academy holds classes at their offices in south Seattle, and also conducts programs on site.  Faculty consists of career coaches, successful corporate executives, media professionals, image consultants, best-selling authors and community leaders.

For more information about The Springboard Academy, visit www.thespringboardacademy.com, or call Margo Myers, Executive Director, at 206-494-0416.

The Springboard Academy is a unique professional development organization that helps men and women accelerate their career success. Our curriculum focuses on tools and techniques not taught anywhere
else. We show students how to be their very best selves and develop a personal brand and reputation that helps them succeed at whatever they do. Founded in Seattle in 2010, the Springboard Academy gives people the tools to be their best, because your success is our business. Visit us at
www.thespringboardacademy.com.

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The Argument for Solitude (to get things done)

Update —- Who knew we’d get such a snow event this week? And that it would lead to plenty of solitude for many of us stuck in our home offices instead of heading to work? (Please don’t think I was hoping for snow just to get things done)! I have made good progress on several projects, and I hope you have, too. I’m now ready to get back into the normal routine! How about you? Margo

While work teams are often the popular way to go for many businesses, Susan Cain in the New York Times, makes an argument for solitude in order to get things done.

I agree. While we need the group at times, getting the real work done (and doing it well), coming up with new ideas, and even learning can be done better on our own.

Here’s the link: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/15/opinion/sunday/the-rise-of-the-new-groupthink.html?pagewanted=3&ref=general&src=me. What do you think?

Margo Myers, Principal, Margo Myers Communications

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Theme for January 2012 — Get Organized!

Hard to believe that it’s really January 2012! Time has a way of speeding by, especially when we are busy, and like many people, one of my resolutions for this month focuses on getting organized. I officially launched ‘Margo Myers Communications’ in September of 2009. After 20+ years of being in TV news, I’m having a blast being on the other side in PR, and finding ways to tell my clients’ stories to get them positive media exposure. But I also find that the busier I am, the better organized I need to be. Add to that helping run a second company, the Springboard Academy, a professional development company to help people be more successful in the workplace, and my need for organization is at a ‘max level.’

Here are a few goals I’m setting for myself in January to become the most organized I can be. My top 5 goals for the month include:

1. A new desk with storage. Most people work more productively with a well-organized workspace. I’m no exception. Now that my business is becoming better established, I need more space for keeping files, supplies, laptop, printer and notes. My current desk just doesn’t provide a big enough workspace for me to spread out. It’s too messy, and doesn’t look anything like the desk in the photo! Goal: get a new desk by January 31st.

2. Develop improved bookkeeping systems. I recently attended a workshop with Elizabeth Harris, who runs Resultist Consulting. The biggest aha! moment for me was learning ways to use financial reports to grow your business. I had Quickbooks on my computer, but hadn’t really worked with it. Now I’ve already gotten help from an accountant to set it up, and am promising myself to actually use it in 2012.

3. Organize my email. I get emails — lots of emails. And this is the year I organize it. I will put emails in the appropriate folder, act on it if it needs immediate attention, defer it to the end of the day if it doesn’t, or delete it if it’s not relevant. And my other goal is to respond within 24 hours! (Yes, you can hold me to this one).

4. Keep up with my contact list. (As I write this, I’m looking at literally hundreds of business cards sitting on the corner of my desk). My goal is to add them to my contacts in Outlook by the end of the month, instead of shuffling through them every time I need a phone number or email.

5. Prioritize my day. I love lists, and I resolve to keep using them, especially if I can compose my ‘to-do’ items for the day, prioritize it with what absolutely needs to get done by the end of the day, and focus on each task at hand. I find I work better when I focus on each project, turn off email (or at least have it update only every 30 minutes), and then cross each item off my list! Not only do I get a lot done, but I can track where I am on a project, and I love that feeling of completing a task!

These are my top five goals for the month. What are yours? Do you have some systems in place that work well for you? Please feel free to share at margo@margomyers.com.

Margo Myers, Principal, Margo Myers Communications

 

 

 

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