Archive for January, 2010

Frugal Fun Tip, January 2009

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

-> Creative Cooking with Winter Veggies
This year, in addition to our regular farm share during the summer months, we joined another CSA (Community-Supported Agriculture) farm just for winter vegetables. So our counters are filled with squash, potatoes, and sweet potatoes, while beets, parsnips, and celeriac take up much of our vegetable drawer in the fridge.  So we have to get very creative with our cooking… (click here to continue reading)

-> Hear & Meet Shel, January 2010

  • Pioneer Valley Book Launch Event for Guerrilla Marketing Goes Green: Winning Strategies to Improve Your Profits and Your Planet, Broadside Books, Northampton, MA, 7 pm, Tuesday, January 26.
  • Roger C Parker, a well-known marketing guy and author of numerous books including Looking Good IN Print (a classic of design principles that’s been on my bookshelf for decades), interviews me about my brand new book Guerrilla Marketing Goes Green (co-authored with Jay Conrad Levinson), Wednesday, February 3, 7 pm ET/4 pm PT. This is for paid members of my co-author’s Guerrilla Marketing Association, but I’m allowed to invite people to the call. Check the Green and Ethical Marketing Page on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/pages/Green-and-Ethical-Marketing-with-Shel-Horowitz/203659771513?ref=mf or my Twitter feed http://twitter.com/shelhorowitz for the call details after January 28.
  • I speak at the two-day Forum Davos conference in Davos, Switzerland, February 9: “Communicate the Value in Your Values and Turn it Into Sales: Effectively Marketing Your Social/Environmental Commitment” (this is the same hall and just after the world-famous Davos World Economic Forum, where people like Bill Clinton speak–I’m extremely excited).
  • Monday, February 22nd at 9:00 pm ET, 6 pm PT, I’ll be leading another teleclass for Hilton Johnson’s organization (which means, once again, you’ll be getting notices about his health coaching and about the other speakers booked that month, which include T. Harv Ecker). This time, my topic is “Create Value from Your Values.”
  • February 23, the incredible Sean D’Souza from Psychotactics will interview me about cracking the best-seller list without any kind of big dollar outlay.
  • Wednesday, February 24, 5 pm, I’ll be exhibiting my new book and other goodies at the Amherst-Area Chamber’s Buy Local Expo. Somewhere within ten miles of Amherst, MA.
  • I’m attending Ryan Lee’s Continuity Summit, March 4-6 in Stamford, CT, http://www.ryanlee.com/rsvp/. He’s not even charging for the seminar, though of course, you’re on your own with lodging. Last year’s conference was excellent, although a bit high-pressure for my taste.
  • March 24, I’m doing a teleseminar for Stacy Karacostas on Green and ethical business success: stacy (at) success-stream.com
  • April 25, I’ll be speaking on collaborating with a co-author at the American Society of Journalists and Authors conference in New York. http://asja.org/wc/2010/
  • May 8, I’ll be speaking once again on book marketing at CAPA University in Hartford, CT (also in negotiation to speak at both IBPA-U and Book Expo America later that month)

You can also read several recent interviews with me:

-> Friends Who Want to Help

  • If you follow me on Twitter, you might notice that some of my Tweets originate from “ShelHorowitzEthicalGreenMarketing”–and that if you click on that origination message, it takes you to the home page for my new book, Guerrilla Marketing Goes Green. I think this is waay cool. If you’d like to get your own branded tweets, from whatever you want to be known for and pointing to the link of your choice, it costs nothing to sign up: http://su.pr/1vpxQN Thanks to Tammy Fennell for developing this, and telling me about it.
  • Suzanne Evans is driven by a passion and desire to help business owners discover the key to success – being authentic in their business. In just two years she grew her business from zero to a quarter of a million dollars by helping more people. She thought this growth was normal and when she realized it was not, she wanted to find a way to share her journey with you. In retrospect, she realized that helping more people and making more money begins with finding your own authentic marketing blueprint. The coolest part? When she stopped traditional “salesy” marketing, she made over a half a million dollars. She’s sharing her story on a no-charge call on January 12: http://www.1shoppingcart.com/app/?af=1076845
  • At the recommendation of both Mari Smith and my long-time Vitual Assistant Michelle Shaeffer, I just signed up for Backupify, the leading social media Backup provider. Backupify makes secure, automated, daily backups of your online accounts. Backupify supports backup of Twitter, Facebook, Gmail, Wordpress, Basecamp, Flickr, and more… 15 services in total. Too new to know how well it does, but certainly worth trying. Best of all, Backupify is free if you sign up before Jan 31st. Click this link to register.

-> Media Coverage of Shel

-> Which of Shel’s Books is Right for You?

-> New on the Sites, December 2010

-> Administrative Information
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Published monthly since May, 1997 by Shel Horowitz
16 Barstow Lane, Hadley, MA 01035 USA
413/586-2388

Hear & Meet, January 2010

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

* Pioneer Valley Book Launch Event for Guerrilla Marketing Goes Green: Winning Strategies to Improve Your Profits and Your Planet, Broadside Books, Northampton, MA, 7 pm, Tuesday, January 26.

* Roger C Parker, a well-known marketing guy and author of numerous books including Looking Good IN Print (a classic of design principles that’s been on my bookshelf for decades), interviews me about my brand new book Guerrilla Marketing Goes Green (co-authored with Jay Conrad Levinson), Wednesday, February 3, 7 pm ET/4 pm PT. This is for paid members of my co-author’s Guerrilla Marketing Association, but I’m allowed to invite people to the call. Check the Green and Ethical Marketing Page on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/pages/Green-and-Ethical-Marketing-with-Shel-Horowitz/203659771513?ref=mf or my Twitter feed http://twitter.com/shelhorowitz for the call details after January 28.

* I speak at the two-day Forum Davos conference in Davos, Switzerland, February 9: “Communicate the Value in Your Values and Turn it Into Sales: Effectively Marketing Your Social/Environmental Commitment” (this is the same hall and just after the world-famous Davos World Economic Forum, where people like Bill Clinton speak–I’m extremely excited).

* Monday, February 22nd at 9:00 pm ET, 6 pm PT, I’ll be leading another teleclass for Hilton Johnson’s organization (which means, once again, you’ll be getting notices about his health coaching and about the other speakers booked that month, which include T. Harv Ecker). This time, my topic is “Create Value from Your Values.”

* February 23, the incredible Sean D’Souza from Psychotactics will interview me about cracking the best-seller list without any kind of big dollar outlay.

* Wednesday, February 24, 5 pm, I’ll be exhibiting my new book and other goodies at the Amherst-Area Chamber’s Buy Local Expo. Somewhere within ten miles of Amherst, MA.

* I’m attending Ryan Lee’s Continuity Summit, March 4-6 in Stamford, CT, http://www.ryanlee.com/rsvp/. He’s not even charging for the seminar, though of course, you’re on your own with lodging. Last year’s conference was excellent, although a bit high-pressure for my taste.

* March 24, I’m doing a teleseminar for Stacy Karacostas on Green and ethical business success: stacy (at) success-stream.com

* April 25, I’ll be speaking on collaborating with a co-author at the American Society of Journalists and Authors conference in New York. http://asja.org/wc/2010/

* May 8, I’ll be speaking once again on book marketing at CAPA University in Hartford, CT (also in negotiation to speak at both IBPA-U and Book Expo America later that month)

You can also read several recent interviews with me:

* Willi Paul interviews me on sustainability and frugality: http://www.planetshifter.com/node/1455

* Dollar Days, on frugal/ethical marketing and the new Guerrilla Marketing Goes Green book: http://blog.dollardays.com/small-business-expert-interview-shel-horowitz-ethicalgreen-marketing-expert/

* The Examiner, on environmental advocacy, the Greening of my own life, and environmentalism’s intersection with marketing: http://www.examiner.com/x-14744-LA-Renewable-Energy-Examiner~y2010m1d4-Interview-with-Shel-Horowitz-of-Frugal-Marketing

* Dr. Dave Hale interviewing me and other experts on our social media predictions for 2010: http://drdavehaleonline.com/blog/social-media-predictions-for-2010/

Friends Who Help, January 2010

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

Gina Mollicone-Long’s book Think or Sink impressed me a great deal, looking at the interaction of physiology, emotions, and success. I particularly like her approach to failure as a learning experience. If stress, job worries, or even weight loss issues are dominating your thinking, this book can pull you out of your funk. Visit http://www.ginaml.com/think/ for the book and a pile of bonuses, including my 12 New Year’s Resolutions For a More Ethical, Ecological, Profitable, and Successful Business.

Meanwhile, Jim Garland hopes to raise $10,000 for The Mark Victor Hansen Foundation’s antipoverty/literacy/entrepreneurship training work through his book, The Practical Guide to Exceptional Living. Lots of focus on gratitude and how to discover your ultimate life experience. You get the book, e-book, audiobook, and $2500 in bonuses. http://www.thepracticalguidetoexceptionalliving.com/

Next week, you’ll get a special mailing about my own new launch, Guerrilla Marketing Goes Green–the most exciting book I’ve ever done, and one with the potential to change the business world.

If you follow me on Twitter, you might notice that some of my Tweets originate from “ShelHorowitzEthicalGreenMarketing”–and that if you click on that origination message, it takes you to the home page for my new book, Guerrilla Marketing Goes Green. I think this is waay cool. If you’d like to get your own branded tweets, from whatever you want to be known for and pointing to the link of your choice, it costs nothing to sign up: http://su.pr/1vpxQN Thanks to Tammy Fennell for developing this, and telling me about it.

Suzanne Evans is driven by a passion and desire to help business owners discover the key to success – being authentic in their business. In just two years she grew her business from zero to a quarter of a million dollars by helping more people. She thought this growth was normal and when she realized it was not, she wanted to find a way to share her journey with you. In retrospect, she realized that helping more people and making more money begins with finding your own authentic marketing blueprint. The coolest part? When she stopped traditional “salesy” marketing, she made over a half a million dollars. She’s sharing her story on a no-charge call on January 12: http://www.1shoppingcart.com/app/?af=1076845

At the recommendation of both Mari Smith and my long-time Vitual Assistant Michelle Shaeffer, I just signed up for Backupify, the leading social media Backup provider. Backupify makes secure, automated, daily backups of your online accounts. Backupify supports backup of Twitter, Facebook, Gmail, Wordpress, Basecamp, Flickr, and more… 15 services in total. Too new to know how well it does, but certainly worth trying. Best of all, Backupify is free if you sign up before Jan 31st. Click this link to register.

New on the Sites, January 2010

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

Ethics Articles

Global Travel Review

Down to Business

Peace & Politics

Frugal & Fashionable Living

Good Business Blog

Creative Cooking with Winter Veggies

Monday, January 4th, 2010
This year, in addition to our regular farm share during the summer months, we joined another CSA (Community-Supported Agriculture) farm just for winter vegetables. So our counters are filled with squash, potatoes, and sweet potatoes, while beets, parsnips, and celeriac take up much of our vegetable drawer in the fridge.
So we have to get very creative with our cooking. Otherwise, we’d get very bored, after a summer and fall filled with far more choices; after all, how many times can you do roasted root vegetables, or potato-leek soup, or a yogurt-beet salad? Tonight was my turn to cook, and here’s what I made:
I bought a single large portabello mushroom for a buck; we had a few strawberries left over from a cooking project of my daughter’s, some strong brie in the cheese drawer that needed to be used soon, and a bit of fresh cilantro we’d bought a few days earlier.
Two appetizers tonight: I sliced up a baked potato, topped with the brie, and then on one side of each slice, a thin slice of portabello mushroom stem, while on the other side of the same slice, an equally thin piece of strawberry. Topped with a pecan and threw it in the oven just long enough to melt the cheese and heat the potato. Yum!
The rest of the portabella made the second appetizer: I sliced the rest of the stem and laid it over the center, right where the whole stem had been. Drizzled some fancy olive oil over it, sprinkled it with a bit of thyme (dried, from our own garden) and some real Hungarian spicy paprika.
For a main dish, I baked a butternut squash and some potatoes, then cut them up in an Asian-style sauce with a sauce made of peanut butter, coconut milk, fresh cilantro, and garden hot pepper. And since I was running the oven anyway, I sliced up a beet and roasted it to use as a “chaser” between the very differently flavored appetizers and main course.
Not counting the hour and a quarter that the potatoes, the squash, and the beet were baking, my total prep time for all this food was about half an hour; total cost outside our CSA membership was around $2.50. And it was a delicious meal, creative and different. The potato appetizer made a particularly big hit with my wife. It was kind of like crostini, but with potatoes instead of bread.





Note: As is the case for most professional reviewers, many of the books I review on this site have been provided by the publisher or author, at no cost to me. I've also reviewed books that I bought, because they were worthy of your time. And I've also received dozens of review copies at no charge that do not get reviewed, either because they are not worthy or because they don't meet the subject criteria for this column, or simply because I haven't gotten around to them yet, since I only review one book per month. I have far more books in my office than I will ever read, and the receipt of a free book does not affect my review.