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TechLatte: Cheryl Marquez

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Inspiration…One Thing Leads to Another

Since January, in my efforts to get productive, I signed up for several events in San Francisco and Phoenix. The first event I attended was the Girls in Tech Catalyst Conference, it’s purpose was to enable women to take their next step either in their careers, launching a business, joining a startup, or building their online brand. This event was inspiring because the experts and innovators on the panel were CEOs of their own companies and they were women. There was one high school girl who got permission from her school to attend the conference instead of going to classes. I wish there were programs available where high school girls can attend events similar to the Catalyst Conference so they can see there is a path to reach the top.


I wrote about the second event I attended in my last blog, it was the Women 2.0 Will it Launch workshop. This was great because my business partner was able to go through the experience with me, I learned how to iterate through ideas to figure out which ones were viable, learned how to do a 30 sec pitch, and to network all while getting over the flu. We pitched our idea and got a thumbs up on the project from the panel of industry leaders and investors. 

The last event I attended was the Society of Women Engineers Designing Women event. This event was to teach junior high school girls about engineering careers. They spent the day at different work stations doing hands on experiments or projects to learn about aeronautical, civil, computer, electrical, and mechanical engineering. Since I got so much inspiration from the last two events, it was time to give back. My friend sent me the email asking for volunteers naturally I said yes. I was at the electrical engineering station and we did experiments with LEDs, a resistor, and a 9-volt battery. The girls learned to put the LEDs in series and saw how the polarity of the LEDs either allowed the current to flow or not. I thought we were going to be creating circuits on breadboards, which in my personal opinion would have been more fun, plus we could have taught the girls more complicated circuits and  measuring current with the flux meter.

After arriving back in Arizona, I asked myself what next? I’m inspired, have the thumbs up to turn the idea we pitched into a business, now how do I put it all into play? After attending a Southwest Job Network workshop on networking, I had lunch with one of my friends and she suggested I take a class on entrepreneurship through the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, she sent me an email to the Fasttrac TechVenture program. I applied for it a couple days later and the following Monday, I received the email that I could start class that evening. This is a 10-week condensed workshop which gives the entrepreneur the tools to develop the skills needed to do market research, find a customer need, start, operate, fund, monetize, and grow a technology business. The advisors also make themselves available for one-on-ones to answer specific questions about your business. Francine Hardaway was facilitating, she knows everyone in the Arizona entrepreneurs community and it seems everyone in the bay area as well, you can find her on Twitter @hardaway. I think with all the tools they’ve given us plus the speakers she’s brought into the workshop, we’ve been able to make more forward progress than if I hadn’t been attending Fasttrac.

The last thing I want to mention is a workshop I “accidentally” attended. I signed up for a workshop on how to manage your finances and creative ways to find money through the Phoenix Workforce Connection. Since they had moved the class locations around, I ended up at the “You and Your Future: It Starts Now” workshop led by Kristi Staab. She is a teaching assistant to Jack Canfield, who is known for his Chicken Soup for the Soul books. After a couple of phone calls, she found the finance class I was supposed to go to, however since I am still unfamiliar with Phoenix, I decided to stay. I learned to push outside my comfort zone in this workshop and through it was able to implement some of the success tools I’ve been using when working in a “real job” into the rest of my life. I will write more on some of the lessons I’ve learned from this workshop separately. 

Here’s a quick summary of common themes in all of the workshops and conferences I attended since January.
  • Have a 30 second elevator pitch, use Buzzuka to help create a pubic or private elevator pitch on yourself, your business, your hobbies — this is free.
  • If you’re out of work, you need a pitch to sell yourself to friends and family so they can also network for you to hiring managers and recruiters. You should answer the following questions succinctly in this pitch, where were you recently, what you want to do, what skills or accomplishments do you have to qualify you for what you want to do, mention your top 3 target companies or industries, and a call to action. An example of a call to action is closing with, “Do you know anyone I can talk to in  X, Y, Z companies or is in the ____________ industry?” Fill in your target companies and your specific industry.
  • If you are starting a business, you should have a hook on what your product is and explain the benefits or the value proposition. The goal is not to get your audience to ask you more about your business or have them tell someone else about your business so don’t worry if you don’t get to finish your pitch.
  • Have business cards
    • If you’re out of work, attending workshops or networking events requires you to give and get business cards to people you find interesting or who can help you find your next job. Business cards are inexpensive or free at Vistaprint or create your own at home with Microsoft Word and clean edged business cards you can print on your own.
    • If you have a business, put your Facebook Fan Page or Twitter name on it to encourage people to become fans, try to engage with the people who fan your Facebook and Twitter profiles to learn more about your customers.
  • People really like helping
    • My friends, colleagues, and people I’ve met at the workshops or conferences have been very generous about giving advice or helping link me to other people. I’m really grateful to have such great people in my life. The key to getting help is to ask for it.

    April 3, 2010 Cheryl Marquez Lifehacks Leave a Comment

    Domestic Technical Goddess: Saving Blackberry

    December 15 & 16:
    In the midst of my pozole making adventure, my daughter, technical goddess in training, thought she bricked her Blackberry by typing the wrong password too many times. I watched as she scoured the internet for the technical support number to see how she can fix it. She called technical support and they suggested she download the latest Blackberry Desktop Manager to restore her contacts. Unfortunately, she never synced her Blackberry to the desktop and since she uses Yahoo instead of Gmail, she lost everything on her phone except the pictures she saved to the microSD card.

    After several calls to tech support and no success, she looked up the address to the cell phone store and asked if we can bring her phone in because only they would be able to restore the operating system. Her phone screen looked somewhat like the phone in the picture. The error message said something about the JVM and to reset it, if you select reset it just brings you back to this page. I told her I can fix her phone, so she left it behind for me to fix with a clear look of doubt in her eyes.

    The day was consumed by making pozole so I didn’t get a chance to work on her phone until she got home. I downloaded the latest version of Blackberry Desktop Manager to my netbook. Once I launched Blackberry Desktop Manager, I plugged in her phone and selected the application loader. In about 5 minutes, I had her phone booting up and going through the setup process. The reason I didn’t help her until she asked was because I liked watching her take the initiative to fix her Blackberry on her own.I want her to get in the habit o taking the initiative to solve her own problems. It was also nice to see her try to solve the problem herself without asking for help until she exhausted all her options. My daughters’ most recent Facebook status, “well my mom is amazing! 😀 she fixed my phone!”. Didn’t she read my post about getting my Nextel Blackberry to work on Boost? 


    I also told her she needed to get a Gmail account and use Google Sync to backup her contacts over the air or she would need to back her phone up to the computer so she doesn’t need to request all her contacts from her friends if that should happen to her phone again. If you lose your Blackberry OS in the future, here the instructions on how to get it back yourself.

    To restore Blackberry OS:

    1. Download Blackberry Desktop Manager (North America link)
    • Select PC or Mac download
  • Plug in Blackberry using he USB cable which shipped with your phone
  • Select Application Loader
    • This will check to see what is loaded on your Blackberry
    • It will have checkmarks for the the bare minimum, I added Blackberry Messenger, Maps, etc.
  • Once it’s done loading the operating system and any additional application you’ve selected, it will bring you to the home page and let you go through the setup process like when you first got your phone out of the box.
  • December 17, 2009 Cheryl Marquez Lifehacks Leave a Comment

    From Crackberry to Boostberry

    During the last week, I switched my mobile carrier from AT&T to the $50 Boost Unlimited everything plan. I mean, it sounds attractive to go from $80 – $150/month down to a flat fee of $50 without taxes or anything else and the bonus is better service than the Ghettro phones. I purchased a cute little flip phone on Amazon which came with a SIM card and ported my number over last Wednesday.

    It turns out I can’t use a regular flip phone because it’s hard for me to text on it, the screen was tiny and I had no contacts on there because all of my contacts lived in Outlook. I heard that the Nextel Blackberry 8350i (iDen) can be converted to Boost with a little bit of work. I scoured through Howardforums and the Crackberry forums to see how to do it but a quick search on Google got me an easy set of instructions to follow to “hack” my Blackberry into  Boostberry. I know this sounds a little geeky and most of you are probably thinking, “Why on earth would you do that??? Just get a phone that does what you want on the mobile provider you’re on.” I like the challenge of getting technology to work where I want it to work and I heard other people did it already. I also saw on craigslist and on ebay people charging up to $100 to convert these phones and I simply wasn’t going to pay that because I knew I could do it myself.

    ——————GEEKY BORING STUFF SECTION——————
    First, I needed to move my contacts from Outlook to Gmail contacts since I was no longer going to be using Outlook. I synced Outlook to my Gmail contacts using Google Sync. I was pleasantly surprised that Google Sync didn’t import duplicates, I had some cleaning up to do of my Gmail Contacts because I never really fixed those contacts but other than that I was set.

    The basic steps to follow to convert the Blackberry 8350i to Boost:

    1. Activate a Boost SIM in a regular Boost phone (the flip phone I already purchased worked well)Note if you try to activate in the Blackberry, it might not work because that phone isn’t officially supported by Boost and the following steps need to be followed to access the internet and send text messages.
    2. Download and install Blackberry Desktop Manager to PC, if the box didn’t come with the CD
    3. Download the service books
    4. Backup existing Nextel service books
    5. Then after it’s been backed up, delete the service books from the phone
    6. Delete Browser from the Blackberry
    7. Alt + {S}{B}{E}{B}). A message reading Legacy SB Restore Enabled should appear on your screen.
    8. Install the service books you downloaded in step 3
    After following these steps, your Blackberry should be able to send picture/text messages and browse the web. Even without doing these steps putting the activated SIM into the 8350i should already let you place phone and Direct Connect (walkie-talkie) calls. The only caveat is that Blackberry Messenger and Email doesn’t work (huge bummer) because there is no support for that from Boost.
    Other apps I’ve downloaded to get my Boostberry to work exactly I want it to work.
    • Facebook app (essential!)
    • Pandora (internet radio) – with my microSD of music, I’m all set for the gym
    • Gmail – this also notifies me of incoming messages, it’s push style so I don’t need the Blackberry Email
    • Google Sync – to get my Gmail contacts and Google calendar on my phone
    • Google Maps
    • IM+ from shapeservices ($39.95) – lets me login to all IM’s (Yahoo IM, MSN, Googletalk, Skype, Twitter, Facebook IM)
    • Update: Just loaded BeejiveIM, it creates the iPhone like bubbles for instant message on (AIM, MSN, Yahoo, Googletalk, and Jabber) it’s only $19.95 and there is a 30-day free trial.
    • Snaptu for RSS feeds, Facebook updates, Twitter, weather, etc. 
    • I read Mashable, TechCrunch, BusinessWeek, LifeHacker, & the NY Times, Snaptu lets me post articles I find interesting to both Facebook and Twitter…awesome!
    ——————END OF GEEKY BORING STUFF——————

    OK, so after using this phone, I don’t totally love it. I like the ID or industrial design of the Nokia E71 because it was sleek and felt good in my hands. The 8350i feels like a fat piece of plastic by comparison. Texting on the keys is hard because the keys are harder to push in and it doesn’t feel as good as texting on the E71. This phone is also glitchy, I looked for newer firmware but the version I have is the latest. Other than that, I’m loving how the Boostberry is helping me stay organized. I’ve added my niece and daughter’s dance classes to my calendar, Zumba on Saturday’s with my sister, and story time for my niece at the library.

    As a side note, I stopped using my iPod Nano (can’t even find it) since I started using my smartphone as my music device at the gym. All I need is to get FM radio on the phone like I did on the E71 and I would be truly happy. See how easy it is to make me happy 🙂


    October 9, 2009 Cheryl Marquez Lifehacks Leave a Comment

    Experiment: 1 year without satellite or cable TV

    Last July my satellite TV subscription ended and I gave back the TV I was borrowing. During this time, I thought, why not give up satellite service for a month which will save me about $65 and then purchase a new flat panel TV for my living room. My one month experiment turned to two, it’s now been over a year with no TV and no cable/satellite service.

     

    In order to get my TV/movie fix, I put my computer monitor in my bedroom and hooked up my work laptop to it so I can watch TV shows over the internet or streaming movies. In September, I brought home an HP TouchSmart computer and was so much more convenient than using my laptop that I didn’t really see a need to purchase a TV anymore. The TouchSmart has a 720p screen resolution so watching HD movies was a good experience. The 25.5″ TouchSmart has a 1080p screen resolution and I’m thinking of getting that at the end of the summer.

     

    I did turn on satellite service for about a month to test out the user experience for hooking up a set top box to the TouchSmart using S-video, L/R audio to view TV and my DVR content on the computer. The setup through Media Center was a huge pain and I found I wasn’t watching enough TV to justify the cost of keeping DirectTV service when most of the same content I wanted to see was available for free on the internet. That was including watching newly released movies which are streamed over the internet. It took some searching to find out which streaming movies were of better quality than others but overall it was easier than trying to find someone to go to the movies with at the last minute. I’m somewhat reconsidering DirectTV again since it’s football season but then I can always go downstairs to watch football at the bar.

     

    The switch to internet TV bought me more time to do other things instead of waiting for commercials to fast forward on my DVR. My viewing habits changed because I would search for shows I really wanted to watch instead of turning on the TV to keep me company while I sat on the computer to work or IM with friends. I had a stack of books and magazines I wanted to read that I was finally able to because I wasn’t spending hours watching TV. I also workout a little bit more because I can go to the gym and sit on the stationary bike if I can’t tear myself away from a particular book.

     

    Here are some of the sites I would check to catch my favorite shows and movies:

     
    • www.hulu.com (I use this a lot because I mark my fav full episode shows and it puts it in my queue, plus Hulu Desktop Beta is now available so I can go thru the list of shows with the remote for my computer making it feel like a TV watching experience)
    • http://www.fancast.com/
    • http://www.veoh.com/
    • http://www.yidio.com/
    • http://www.watch-movies-links.net/

    Here are some interesting statistics which show America’s TV viewing habits.

    Studies from Nielsen and Leichtman Research Group (LRG): A2/M2 Three Screen Report 4Q2008.  In the U.S. each month the average TV watcher soaks in 151 hours of television (an all-time high)
    • The average online video viewer watches some three hours’ worth of content on the web
    • People who use mobile video watch almost four hours of video on their phones and other wireless devices.
    • 8% of adults who watch video online strongly agree that they now watch TV less often, while 75% strongly disagree
    • 1% of adults view recent TV shows online daily, and 8% weekly – compared to 6% weekly last year
     

     

    September 14, 2009 Cheryl Marquez Lifehacks Leave a Comment

    I went to work to take a break from job searching

    Job searching is a full-time job, I had to go to the office today to take a break! First, I search for a job, look for which resume to send (product management or marketing), craft memorable sometimes witty cover letter. Then repeat process. Initially, I was keeping a spreadsheet of who I contacted, the date, the email address of the recruiter or hiring manager, salary range, and any other notes. This didn’t last long because after writing several cover letters, I was exhausted and forgot about my spreadsheet.


    I have a new tactic, search Twitter for jobs, look on Mashable for new ideas and technology, see if any of those companies are hiring.


    Plus follow up and follow through with friends and colleagues who have mentioned an opportunity to me. Here are my pros/cons and action list of what to do after finding out you are part of the workforce optimization (layoff) program.


    Pros:
    • Free to explore the next big thing
    • Time to think about what I want to learn
    • Freedom to check out other companies
    • Time to chill out and have the government pay for my vac…maybe not this one, the gov isn’t paying enough

    Cons: 



    • Liked the team I was on and the people I worked with a lot – this is probably a pro if I wasn’t leaving
    • Liked the job content and the frenetic pace
    • Not having income
    Here’s a list of things I needed to do in order to score the next big gig. I like lists, they make me happy. Feel free to borrow or use these ideas in your big job hunt, use your own URLs cause we don’t want you to post my links and then I will get the job of YOUR dreams.
    1. Find and update resume
    2. Schedule meetings with hiring managers within HP
    3. Schedule live editing review of my resume with colleagues (great idea Brian!)
    4. Sign up for Women 2.0’s Startup Weekend in San Francisco 
    5. Search Plaxo, Linkedin, and cool companies for opportunities which sound fun and exciting
    6. Edit online presence
    7. Add content to Linkedin:  www.linkedin.com/in/cherylmarquez
    8. Create Twitter account: www.twitter.com/cherylmarquez to tweet during Startup Weekend
    9. Create Youtube account to create video blogs about job hunt, life, love, and other adventures
    10. Brainstorm and visualize the ideal solution


    September 10, 2009 Cheryl Marquez Lifehacks Leave a Comment

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