From: Richard Seltzer Subject: Chat reminder: Thursday, May 11, "Clicks and Mortar" with co-author , Terry Pearce Date: Monday, May 08, 2000 11:16 AM *** BUSINESS ON THE WORLD WIDE WEB -- WHERE WORD OF KEYSTROKE BEGINS *** Our chat session last Thursday had to be postponed due to technical difficulties at our hosting site (perhaps related to the Love virus that was spreading that day). Please join us this Thursday, May 11, to talk about the new book "Clicks and Mortar" with co-author Terry Pearce, founder of Leadership Communication. (The other co-author is David Pottruck, president and CEO of Charles Schwab). The book deals with the survival of physical-world companies in the Internet age. "Through many stories and examples from Schwab, start-ups, and Fortune 500 companies, the authors show how organizations can marry technology with the best qualities of people to creat the perfect environment for profitable success." Next week, on Thursday, May 11, we'll have Jack Trout author of "Differentiate or Die", a new book about Internet marketing. (It was his session that had to be postponed last week.) You can see his profile at www.tenagra.com/ips/private/Wiley/differentiate/profile.html Or read an excerpt at www.samizdat.com/diff.html Or read an article of mine prompted by reading his book at www.samizdat.com/raging.html These chat sessions take place Thursdays 12 noon-1 PM (US Eastern Daylight Time = GMT -4). Connect to the Web-Net Web site http://www.web-net.org Once you are there, click on "Richard Seltzer's Chat: Business on the World Wide Web." Complete, edited transcript of all past sessions are available at www.samizdat.com/chat.html You can also see our upcoming schedule of topics there. Please send email with your follow-on questions and comments, suggestions for future topics, and requests to receive email reminders about upcoming sessions. Best wishes. Richard Seltzer seltzer@samizdat.com Internet evangelist/writer/speaker/consultant For details, check http://www.samizdat.com/consult.html PS -- While chatting, I keep my webcam on. If you'd like to see me "almost live" (updated every 5 seconds), open a second window and check it out at http://www.samizdat.com/cam/livenetcam.html All you need is a browser. (Thanks again to Anthony Alvarez, alvarez@acunet.net)