“What’s a Tele-Seminar?”
May 16th, 2007 by Sue Blaney
As I introduced myself at a meeting last evening, I said that I’m a publisher of products and programs for parents of teenagers, and that I’m also offering audio products and tele-seminars. One woman asked “What’s a Tele-seminar?”
Forgive me for assuming you know! And allow me to tell you how they work…for this is the BEST way of gathering and consuming information I know of!
A Tele-seminar is a seminar that takes place through the phone. Sometimes they are called tele-classes…and yes, they are the cousin (or twin sister…I’ll explain) of podcasts. It’s EASY to take a tele-seminar and there are many reasons why they are gaining in popularity.
Tele-seminars are great because:
- They are very time-efficient. There is no commuting time because you sit on the phone from your own home or office. There is little “chit-chat” because you don’t feel the need to visit with your neighbor, and a good leader keeps the program on track and focused.
- They are very focused because there are few distracting stimuli. In a live seminar you may be distracted by many elements (the people around you, outside noises, settling down after your trip there etc.) but in a tele-seminar you tend to stay focused on the subject matter.
- They can be inexpensive in comparison to a live seminar.
- They are easy. All participants do is call in to a preassigned telephone number (it is customary that participants pay for the phone charge), dial in a passcode…and that’s all there is to it.
- They are flexible. Depending on the number of people on the call, the leader may choose to have the lines open so everyone can speak live, they may ask participants to mute their lines to avoid background noise from their homes, or the leader can mute everyone and run the class in “lecture” mode.
- Handouts can be printed out separately.
All the visual supports are available through pdf files sent separately.
I became a big fan of tele-seminars a few years ago as I began taking them on a variety of topics. In 2005 I became certified as a tele-class leader; this training is helpful because leading a group with whom you have no eye contact requires some special skills. Last year I had the privilege of running several ongoing tele-seminars with employees at AT&T. Through their Employee Assistance Program I was hired to run an ongoing parent support group for parents of teenagers, and another for parents of college students. These groups ran for a whole year and were a wonderful benefit for the employees. I’m hoping that other companies will offer this kind of programming as it’s helpful and empowering to gather parents in this way as they learn together and process their experiences. I will be offering a 3-part tele-seminar support group for parenting teenagers beginning in a few weeks. (Details coming soon…e-mail me if you want me to contact you with details.)
Tele-seminars are like podcasts…sort of. Podcasting is a term that many people banter around and the meaning isn’t always the same. Podcasting is both a format and a channel of distribution. The format refers to an mp3 audio file, and a tele-seminar that is recorded can be put into an mp3 file which will make it a podcast. In this case, however, you’ll note that the tele-seminar is consumed as a recording, not live. Podcasting is growing in popularity because you can consume the content on your time, in the method of your choice. You can listen to the recording of a previously run tele-seminar, and you can listen wherever you want: at your computer, or on your i-pod or mp3 player. (You don’t need an i-pod to listen to a podcast; any mp3 player will do.) This is great because it’s flexible, portable and you’re in the driver’s seat.
Podcasting as a “channel” refers to the many ways podcasts get pushed out onto the internet and thru services like blogs and i-tunes.
Your kids know how to download and use podcasting technology because this is how they download music.
If you don’t know how to do this yet, begin with a tele-seminar. It’s easy and highly effective. You are invited to join me in my FREE tele-seminars. Next week I’m offering 3 different 60 minute tele-seminars:
- Practical Tips for Parenting Teens…for parents of teenagers,
- Help Parents Move from Conflict to Connection…for professionals and parent leaders who work with parents of teens,
- Introducing the Jewish Please Stop the Rollercoaster! Parent Group Program…for those of you interested in offering this program in your Jewish community.
You can listen to these tele-seminars live, or download them to listen later. Either way, you’ll need to register to receive the call-in information and the link to the recording. Hope you can join me!
NOTE: Marty Fahncke, of Conference Call University contacted me as a result of this post. You should visit his site where he lists tele-seminars, podcasts etc that are being offered in a wide variety of topics. You’ll be hooked on this way of learning before you know it!
This entry was posted on Wednesday, May 16th, 2007 at 1:08 pm and is filed under Tips and Tools, Culture & Media, Internet, IM, etc.. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
























May 16th, 2007 at 3:44 pm
Sue,
This is a great blog post. Thank you for clarifying what a teleseminar is, and how they can benefit participants.
The more people out there who understand this powerful information channel, the faster we can change the world for the better!
Marty M. Fahncke
Founder
Conference Call University
Learn. Earn. Succeed.
http://www.CCULearning.com