Webinar: 12:00-1:00pm AEST Thursday 24 June.
If you work with clients, talk with team members, interview for jobs, or present at seminars using Zoom, Teams or WebEx then you’ll find this session extraordinarily useful.
In one hour you’ll discover practical ways to improve your virtual presence and important lessons on virtual business etiquette.
Elisabeth Steele Hutchison has been teaching professionals how to zoom like TV news anchors since 2020. She is the founder of Work from Home University and the Director of Admissions at the University of Hawai'i School of Law. You can find out more from her website
Registration
Fee: AUD $40 excl GST
Members of the Continuous Legal Education Association of Australasia (CLEAA) can register at the discounted rate of AUD $20 plus GST
About the Session
This session is designed for one person per registration. Please contact Sue-Ella if you’d like to join a room.
Attendees should plan to participate with their webcams on. We recommend you join the meeting from a computer (not a phone or tablet) from your regular zoom location.
Before joining the meeting please check you have the latest and most secure version of Zoom installed https://zoom.us/download#client_4meeting
A recording of this session will be available to registrants.
What participants said…
“I’ve had around eleventy thousand virtual meetings over the past year and thought I was an ‘old hand’ at using the tools. I was wrong. This is great.” Sue-Ella Prodonovich
“I got a lot more out of it than I expected. So much more. Easily the most valuable tips I've found on how to Zoom. I only wish I'd learned this stuff sooner. I will be re-watching in the future for the parts that didn't sink in this time. This is an exceptional presentation.”
“Quite honestly, every trick was mind-blowing! This should be mandatory for all instructors using Zoom. Elisabeth’s delivery was engaging and it was the most valuable presentation I have ever attended in Zoom.”
“Wow. Great presentation. And thank you so much for promoting content creators and using lots of examples of people of color! We need more of this.”