Home | Business | Sales


Absolutely Needed” Physical Components Of A Teleseminar

By: McLaren

There’s not so many things that go in to putting on a teleseminar. A successful teleseminar, however, is a whole different kettle of fish.

There are four main physical components necessary for any teleseminar to be successful. In this article I will discuss them one by one.

1) A bridge line.
Bridge line is a telephone number that all participants call. It allows hundreds of people to call in to the same line at the same time and it gives everybody the opportunity to be able to talk and participate simultaneously. It also provides a special pin code that will allow us to call in to the same number, but yet have control over the participation of everybody else, that is- sometimes if we had over 100 people register for call, unfortunately, you can’t have over 100 people all talking at the same time. So the conference host has the ability to be able to mute out all of the other callers so that you can provide a crystal clear teleseminar that everybody else can hear, without any distractions.

As a conference host, you also dial this same number and you have a separate pin code, which allows you to go in to the same room, but yet have control over that room. So number one, you need a bridge line.
We can get access to bridge lines or teleconference lines for free found at www.freeconferencecall.com. But it is limited to 100 callers. If we wanted more than 100 callers to be able to dial in, and if you’re interested in conducting teleseminars for 200, on a high-end 1,500 people then there are many paid services available.

Www.freeconferencecall.com gives us a number and a pin code that lasts a certain period of time – and we can sign up multiple times. If you’re conducting weekly teleseminars,We can have multiple accounts so that the number and the pin code change all the time.

At www.freeconferencecall.com, you have access to that line whenever you want. So if at the spur of the moment you decide to quickly put on a teleseminar, you don’t have to worry about registering your call and booking an appointment so that you have a bridge line available. It’s open and available to you 24-7, 365 days a year, if you continually sign up. That, again, is at www.freeconferencecall.com.

One of the places for paid service is called www.voicetext.com and www.eagleconferencing.com, They actually have a dedicated line, which is the same as www.freeconferencecall.com., but it allows them to have a dedicated line with a whole lot more lines for people to call in to, but they pay quite a substantial amount each and every month.

At Eagle, you actually have to call in ahead of time and book your teleseminar space. So it can be somewhat inconvenient in that if you all of a sudden decide to put on a teleseminar and you call in to book your lines, sometimes they don’t have them available. So that can be an inconvenience to you.

2) You need to get a telephone and a headset.
Getting a headset allows you to have your hands free, you can make notes, you can check your E-mail if questions are coming in, and you can also do all kinds of other things simultaneously. It’s very important that you get a telephone – preferably a cordless telephone – with a headset jack and then you also want to get a headset.

3) A recording device.
You need some way to be able to take the sound from your teleseminar and put it in to a digital form, and the only way to do that is to have some type of a recording device.

4) A wireless phone recorder
The next component is necessary if you’re looking to record, and it goes along with your recording device, and that is a wireless phone recorder.

Article Source: http://www.articlesinsight.com

Stu Mclaren consults, trains and educates small business owners on how to turn their ideas from concept to cash. For free strategies, ideas and tools on how to generates leads, sales and increase bottom line profits visit: www.myideaguy.com

Please Rate this Article

Not yet Rated

Click the XML Icon Above to Receive Sales Articles Via RSS!
articlesinsight.com » Copyright © 2006
Links | Terms of Service | Submission Guidelines | Contact Us | Improve google rankings| Privacy Policy | About Us

Powered by Article Dashboard