It’s Time to Clean Up Your Room
August 19, 2010 in Meeting Announcements by Doug Devitre
When you set up straight rows of chairs (or herring bone style) for any presentation, speech, or training, your participants experience a great deal of pain, learn less, and are reluctant to return. Not good.
Please join us in offering the “Angle Management: Giving Your Audience the Best Seat in the House” on Friday, September 10th from 11am-2pm.
Cost $20 – register online or pay at the door
Here is the new address we will be meeting this year:
- The Art of Living Building has a parking lot next to it and behind that is free. Giddy up!
- We’re meeting on the top floor, I believe they call it the Mezzanine Level. Just tell people to come to the lobby and say that they’re there for the NSA meeting.
Arrangements benefit your participants, employees, and your bottom line. Plus good seating improves learning, communication, meeting planning, and hospitality professionalism, including the dynamics and environment for:
- meetings
- performances
- weddings
- speeches
- special events
- conventions
- seminars
In the book Seating Matters written by Dr. Paul Radde you will find -
- 5 Principles for troubleshooting or setting up any room
- Rationales for improving every room you set up
- 17 factors to fine tune a room
- 71 illustrations to make every explanation vivid.
Readers will never again look at or set up a meeting room the way they do today.
- State of the Art Seating means taking the initiative in facing every participant toward the presentation.
- Straight row setups reveal just how little a facilities understand about audience dynamics in a meeting environment.
- Strengthen your learning and interactive meeting environment.
Dr. Paul O. Radde, an internationally known speaker and author, has produced a complete explanation of his remarkable system in:
Seating Matters: State of the Art Seating Arrangements, is available at www.Thrival.com. Seminar available.
Look for Paul’s bi-monthly column in Successful Meetings starting September 2010.
Successful Meetings: http://www.nxtbook.com/nxtbooks/nielsen/sm0510/#/16ml,
Smart Meetings: http://smartmeetings.com/issues/december-2009/
Convene:http://pcma.org/Convene/Issue_Archives/January_2010/Working_Smarter.htm
Thrive!
Paul O. Radde, Ph.D.
The Thrival Institute






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