Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Marketing Lessons From Geese

Dear Friends:

I just received an inspirational video clip from a leader in marketing, Alex Mandossian.

Alex is an amazing marketing teacher through teleseminars, and continually provides addedvalue to everything he does.

Here's the latest from his blog...

If you've got 2 minutes, 17 seconds, I'd recommend taking a look at this...

Alex says, "This movie will take 2 minutes out ofyour day ... but what you'll learn maylast you a lifetime. Give me your candid comment when you finish watching it and feel free to forward this to a friend or colleague.

For those who'd like to read more of Alex's posts, visit: www.Alexmandossian.com.

If you're interested in learning how teleseminars can be used to promote your business, attract funds, boost book sales or educate the public, check out: www.profitableteleseminars.com.

To Your Success,
Lynn Sanders
"Multimedia That Makes A Difference"
Park Avenue Productions

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

A Reminder From Thoreau...

Dear Friends,

I can't believe so much time has elapsed since my last post! Yikes!

My new year's resolution is to write at least one post a week. How does that sound?

With the relatively new creation of my free marketing tips, I've focused my "extra" time on
writing tips that can be useful for both non-profit and for profit audiences. It has proven to be quite helpful to a wide range of people.

If you'd like to subscribe, I'd love to have you on board -- and you'd get a free bonus. For non-profits, just sign up on my website -- www.parkaveproductions.com. Everyone else at this time can simply send an email to ourfriends@getresponse.com, and you're automatically entered. You can easily opt out at any time, and I don't give my list to anyone else.

Now -- here's a great contemplation --
"If you have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost; that is were they should be. Now put the foundations under them. - Henry David Thoreau

In this day and age when people are concerned about the economy, I believe it's also important to stay focused on your vision... YOUR dreams. What do you want from life? How can you get there? What foundations do you need to build your dream into a reality?

We can each be a visionary and not let worries overcome us. The choices we make with our time are up to us. So -- just as I encourage myself, I urge you to take some time for yourself. Even five minutes a day. Close your eyes. Repeat a positive affirmation to yourself. It can be as simple as, "I'm having a very productive day today." (T. Harv Eker's idea...) If you can, give yourself a few minutes to quietly sit and meditate.

It doesn't take long. But I've found that when I give myself time for peaceful reflection, I reap great calming benefits for the whole day. And -- it's easier to focus on getting things done.

What do you think?

Friday, October 10, 2008

Coping with An Uncivil War...

Dear Friends,

My friend, Laura Marier just published an excellent Op-Ed piece in the Chicago Sun-Times.

Check it out at: http://www.suntimes.com/news/otherviews/1213690,CST-EDT-open10.article.

She confronts the divisiveness within our country over politics.... and she does it well. It's too bad that political candidates resort to personal attacks on each other, rather than just dealing
with the issues.

What do you think about it?

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Introspection

We just celebrated the Jewish New Year, Rosh Hashanah, a time for reflection. How did another year fly past?

In just a few more days, the holiday of Yom Kippur, the Day Of Repentance, will be here... a time for fasting and feeling the "oneness" with the world.

With such a tumultuous political scene in front of my eyes, it's often tough to feel the "oneness." So much nasty political slamming by the Republican candidates... especially Sarah Pallin. She mentioned that Obama is friends with Bill Ayers, who was a political revolutionary forty years ago. I personally know Bill Ayers and he is a fine, dedicated man, a author and professor in Chicago. Obama knew Bill from his childhood at age 8, and Ayers' past has nothing to do with his current status... Still, Pallin has to search for some dirt to throw, since she knows so little about solving the important issues in our country... like the economy.

It's upsetting to watch political talk -- especially when I realize that Pallin voted against healthcare rights for women, and wants to keep our country in a war that is unjust.

I hope and pray at this time that the significant masses out there will put aside their prejudices against race and color, and vote for an intelligent man, Barack Obama. His running mate, Joe Biden, offers our country compassionate leadership. That's what we need.

Somehow, if more people could feel this "one-ness".... perhaps war could be considered a thing from the past.

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Great to be back...

Can't believe it has been almost a month since my last post. How time flies....!

It took a L-O-N-G time to recuperate after Ecuador. Both Joel and I came down with a type of bronchitis that seemed to hang on forever. Thank goodness, our immune system finally kicked in. Despite getting ill toward the end of our Ecuador adventure, it was quite an experience. I'm hoping to upload some pictures onto this blog soon.

A VERY strange thing happened since my last note. Somehow, my former website disappeared. Literally -- into thin air. I'm not sure how it happened. I'm in the midst of redoing the website, and temporarily have a few pages up. I'm planning to get a new design done soon. It all takes some time.

In the meanwhile, we're moving full steam ahead on a variety of projects. Our social justice film for Or Tzedek, the youth organization within JCUA (Jewish Council On Urban Affairs) is in the editing stages now. The director, Bruce Frankel and I reviewed hours and hours of great footage. Looking forward to seeing it all come together.

Westside Health Authority (www.healthauthority.org) keeps producing programs to help improve health and well-beintg on Chicago's west side. We're keeping the public updated with publicity releases.

I just finished a new children's story, "A New Home For Fuzzy Bear" that shares the story of one of our small stuffed animal donations to Ecuador. It's based on a true story, and I'm sending it out to a few publishers.

Soon, we'll be writing web copy for a most special, holistic, innovative, caring dentist on the north shore. He is someone who not only speaks Spanish fluently, but also has a passion for service. He has patients who flock to his office from hours away -- and yet he has built up his practice solely by word of mouth. It's now time to get his name out into the e-universe.... no one other than Dr. Joel L. Sanders, DDS -- my hubby! His construction page is still out there -- www.naturaldent.org.

Looking forward to hearing from you!

Lynn

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

We're BACK!

Dear Friends:

We're back from Ecuador!

What an amazing, transforming, challenging, exhausting, fascinating, and powerful trip.
Imagine a roller-coaster ride of highs and lows... that was our experience in Ecuador.

I'm going to write different blogs... so I don't get overwhelmed in trying to convey it all.

First, let me thank you all for your loving support, encouragement and help before our trip. We gathered about 1600 toys -- both small stuffed animals and other stuff -- balls, tiny cars, even a few puppets and jumpropes. Everything was so appreciated by the children.... they don't have any toys -- not one thing. So you can imagine how thrilled the kids were to have anything.

We arrived in the Guayaquil airport with 19 packages in tow... four suitcases of dental supplies, along with boxes and suitcases of toys and lotions. By the time everyone from around the U.S., Jamaica and Australia arrived, it was quite late -- around 11:00 p.m. We then boarded a bus for a 2 1/2 hour ride to a tiny town called Naranjal. We stayed in the only hotel there -- Hotel Delicias... and that would be our resting place for the week. No tourists come into Naranjal, and we were told to be very careful with our belongings. If we wanted to see a little bit of the area, we could turn right out of the hotel, go two blocks down the street, make a left two blocks, and then another left two blocks. That was it! We weren't supposed to go left because it was dangerous. (Even the director's sister had been held up once at knife-point for money...)

So, we were careful. Each day, a bus took us for an hour or so ride to another small village, where we were driven to a school. An armed guard came with us in the bus and stayed with our group throughout the day. People traveled for hours and from miles around -- just to get our free medical and dental care. Five rooms in the school were set aside for our use. One was for the eye doctor, one for the three dentists, one for the "education room" (to teach toothbrushing), one for pharmacy (dispensing kid vitamins and anti-parasite medicine, along with some aspirin), and one for the occupational therapist and medical doctor. Lines of moms and their kids lined up to get care.

In the meanwhile, I provided musical distraction for the kids while they waited for hours in line. Since the kids had never seen a shot before, you can imagine the reaction when they saw the dentists. Screaming, crying, and just plain fear... I sang songs with them, danced, played ball, taught them jump-rope, showed them puppets or we waved scarves... anything that I could do to keep them occupied... while speaking in my broken Spanish. It was fairly exhausting from morning till the end of day... That's why I now have a sore throat and feel quite tired.

The kids were being checked for abcesses or infections, and were having "extractions" (the fancy word for getting their teeth pulled out!). Even though an adult tooth would grow back in its place, the kids were naturally scared. There was no electricity... no fancy equipment... no modern conveniences.

The kids received their toy after the dental appointment, and those toys were invaluable in giving them comfort and joy.

Will write more as I get more energy.... I'm very glad to have been a part of this trip. The Mayor and his wife in Naranjal honored us all in the evenings with wonderful meals and performances by local children and adults of Spanish dancing. It was all non-stop activity.

Amazing trip.... and also so glad to be back home to a modern bathroom. (that's another story...)

Feel free to drop me a note and give me your comments... :)

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Pioneer Press Article About Us

Causes for Change at work in Ecuador
June 26, 2008

http://www.pioneerlocal.com/glencoe/business/1019733,gl-ecuador-062608-s1.article


Recommend (1)

By RUTH SOLOMON rsolomon@pioneerlocal.com
Winnetka resident Lynn Sanders runs a multimedia business and is not a dental assistant, but her dentist husband, Joel, said she can still help identify patients for him during an upcoming service trip to Ecuador.
The reason: the patients, many of them children, have such poor dental care that it is obvious when their teeth are decayed.
» Click to enlarge image

Three girls from a remote village in Ecuador happily clutch stuffed animals brought to them on a 2006 trip by Causes for Change International volunteers, including Wilmette photographer George Pfoertner. (George Pfoertner/for Pioneer Press)
» Click to enlarge image

Wilmette residents Nina Schield, 12, and Laura Tatgenhorst, 13, with bags containing 310 stuffed animals that dentist Joel Sanders and his wife, Lynn, of Winnetka will take to children in an impovishered area of Ecuador. (Joel Sanders/for Pioneer Press)
PHOTO GALLERYChanging Ecuador
RELATED STORIES
Ecuador trip facts
The Sanders, along with their son, Andrew, 17, and his friend, Winnetka resident Jack Fuller; Tom Bayne, a holistic physician with an office in Glenview; and Highland Park resident Anne Bartels, a premed student at the University of Illinois, are among a group of volunteers who will be heading to the South American country in July.
The program is sponsored by Causes for Change International, a charity run from an apartment in Chicago's Edgewater neighborhood by Zully JF Alvarado, who works in her husband's financial services and real estate business. Alvarado, the daughter of a banana plantation worker father and a mother who washed clothes for a living, grew up on the coastal areas of Ecuador. She suffered from untreated polio before finally receiving good medical care after being brought to the U.S. by missionaries in 1965 at age 9.
Alvarado set up the Causes for Change International charity in 1996 and it operates on a shoestring budget. Volunteers who go on the service trips pay their own way. Joel Sanders collected all the dental supplies himself.
Alvarado said she solicits volunteers through word of mouth or from her Web site (causesfor change.org).
Joel Sanders said he heard about Causes for Change International from a patient who runs a Web site that lists all not-for-profits needing volunteers.
"He (Joel's patient) knew I speak Spanish and that I had lived in Argentina for a year-abroad program," said Sanders, who years ago participated as a volunteer in the Amigos de Las Americas program.
Joel said he typically sees two patients an hour at his Highland Park office, but has heard in Ecuador he will be seeing 160 patients a day.
Joel's wife, Lynn, explained why he decided to undertake the grueling dental work free of charge. "My husband has a good heart," said Lynn, a publicist, commercial lyricist and writer with a multimedia company in Winnetka called "Parkside Productions."
For this trip, Lynn has been soliciting stuffed animals and toiletries to donate to the children in the Ecuadoran villages they will visit. After hearing about Lynn's request, two Wilmette girls, Laura Tatgenhorst, 13, and twins Nina and Audrey Schield, 12, donated 310 stuffed animals.
More volunteers
Another Wilmette resident, photographer George Pfoertner, has been to Ecuador as a volunteer on almost a yearly basis since the inception of the Causes for Change charity, including one trip two years ago with his daughter, Eva, now 19 and a New Trier graduate. (A sampling of some of Pfoertner's photos from the 2006 trip can be seen on Pioneerlocal.com.) One photo Pfoertner took shows three Ecuadoran girls with big smiles on their faces, clutching their new stuffed animals.
Alvarado said the children's teeth decay because mothers typically give sugarcane to their children to soothe them. The parents who live in the coastal areas work in the sugarcane, banana and fishing industries, Alvarado said.
Lynn said her son, Andrew, was, like his father, also in the Amigos program, helping build a water tank in Costa Rica. Such trips are good lessons for youths, she said.
"It's very important for them to see how much a difference they can make. And kids are more open to trying new things."
Lynn herself said a recent life-threatening bout with appendicitis and the death of several people close to her gave her the impetus to do more to help others. "It just shakes you up. Life is finite. Do what you need to do while you are on Earth," she said.