Are you working from home and leading virtual coaching/training sessions or meetings?
Do your virtual meetings drain your energy?
Is video exhaustion real for you and your clients?
In this webinar about creating Engaging Virtual Meetings, John Chen shows you the key secrets to having your attendees say, “I have more energy (rather than less) after 60 minutes meeting with you!”. You will notice that you can meet virtually for 4 hours or more and look forward to your next meeting. You will learn how to:
• Create a powerful virtual presence
• Create a smooth flow so attendees do not talk over each other
• Network without saying a word
• Engage everyone even if only one person is talking
• Guarantee that everyone feels engaged and heard
• Powerfully close your meeting and take steps to make your next meeting even more effective
Key Takeaways
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Learn to take your virtual meetings from energy sucking to energy creating
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See first-hand how zoom can be a powerful tool for engaging people in coaching/training and meetings
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Leave with tangible methods to improve your virtual sessions today
Offer for ICF South Florida members: http://engagingvirtualmeetings.com/conference will give you at 50% discount when you register
Time for Questions and Answers at the end of the webinar.
Earn 1.0 Resource Development CCEUs.
About the Speaker: John Chen
John Chen, the leader of Geoteaming – has been virtually meeting for over 35 years. He’s hosted virtual meetings on Prodigy. He can juggle 8 screens of information at a time. He has planned an international conference for 200 for Microsoft. John started Geoteaming 23 years ago and is a recognized thought leader on engaging virtual meetings. He is the John Wiley and Sons author of “Engaging Virtual Meetings” and “50 Digital Team Building Games,” a top selling business book. More than 230,000 clients across the United States and in countries including Spain, France and Taiwan have experienced breakthrough results.
“Your virtual meetings can be as good as, or even better, than face to face meetings” – John Chen