Houchin’s Famous Garlic Grillin’

A few days ago I posted a tweet that I had grilled up some of my famous garlic grilled potatoes & veggies and that the kids were digging in.  A bunch of people asked for the recipe.  Since I usually don’t work from recipes (I hate playing by other people’s rules if you’ve not noticed….) I promised to document the next batch and share the secrets.

I’m going to risk it and send this to my mailing list too… I beg your indulgence…

Here we go.

Open a beer or a bottle of wine, maybe mix up a Marg…

Then, gather all the ingredients.  Start with:

  1. Olive Oil
  2. Lowery’s Seasoning Salt
  3. Fresh Ground Pepper
  4. Fresh Crushed Garlic
  5. Parmesan Cheese (optional)
  6. Fresh Basil (optional, but worth it…)
  7. Potatoes – Medium/Large
  8. Other veggies of choice: bell peppers, zucchinis, and mushrooms are wonderful.  Eggplant (which I hate) is one of my wife’s favorites.
Get all the stuff ready. (Sorry about the poor lighting.)
Get all the stuff ready. (Sorry about the poor lighting.)

Get a big mixing bowl – biggest you can find.

Mix up the goodness:

  1. In the mixing bowl, pour in a few tablespoons – maybe around 1/4 cup of olive oil.
  2. Liberally add some Lowery’s salt.
  3. Generous fresh ground pepper.
  4. Several nice sections of crushed garlic.
  5. Fresh Basil if you have it.
  6. Grated Parmesan if you’re in the mood.
Prep the good stuff.
Prep the good stuff.

Now, go turn on your grill – nice and hot – then come back in to start cutting potatoes.

Cut the potatoes along the long axis of the spud. Try to get them as uniform as you can at around 3/16 of an inch thick – give or take. Try not to cut wedges or the slices won’t cook evenly. I always do the potatoes first because if you put more porous veggies in the bottom of the bowl, they soak up all the olive oil and get kind of nasty. The potatoes don’t absorb the oil like the others.

Taters ready to roll.
Taters ready to roll.

Now it’s time to cut the other veggies. Go ahead and add them to the same bowl.

All the veggies in the bowl with the potatoes.
All the veggies in the bowl with the potatoes.

Now mix it all up.  You MUST do this with your hands because you’ll want to separate all the potato slices to make sure they get coated with the oil mixture on all surfaces. Watch out, they’re slippery.  You’ll probably have to claim a 10-second rule at least once.

All Mixed Up & Ready to Grill
All Mixed Up & Ready to Grill

Open another beer or pour another glass of wine.

Now, head out to the grill.  It should be nice and hot by now. Brush off the burners and turn the heat down to about 2/3 max.  Your grill is your grill, so it’ll probably take a few practice rounds on these to find the right setting.  You don’t want the heat to high, or the potatoes will burn on the outside without cooking all the way through. If your fire is too low, then you don’t get the right surface crunchiness.

The potatoes take the longest to cook.

Line ’em up.

Grillin' Taters
Grillin' Taters

I have a thermometer on the grill. I’ve found that the perfect temp to turn the potatoes is every time the temp hits 300 degrees.  I don’t really trust that thermometer, but if you have a thermometer on your grill, make note of the reading.

All in progress
All in progress

As the potatoes get nice and crispy on the outside, move them to the upper tray of the grill to continue cooking in the middle without burning. Then start adding the rest of your meal. If you’re doing bell peppers, always put them skin-side up to begin with so they can cook through without burning.

Tonight we had a nice spicy sausage for the grown-ups and some all-natural hot-dogs for the kids. Notice the quartered pepper and the zucchinis (some halved, some quartered). As the veggies get done, just move them up to the top tray too.  If you’re doing mushrooms, I’ve found that it’s just as nice to just put them all up in the very top swing-tray and let them slow-cook.

Veggies on top.
Veggies on top.

Depending on the meat you’re cooking (if you’re eating meat), you might want to crank up the heat.  If we were doing steak or pork chops, I’d crank the heat up to high to cook the meat. Sausages need a little more patience.

Dinner is Served
Dinner is Served

Enjoy.

Here’s something you might not think of on your own – the grilled potatoes are WONDERFUL with a side of Caesar dressing, and you can never have enough parmesan cheese for me.

Now, if you have kids, stand back because you don’t want to get between them and the food.

13 minutes and 42 seconds later...
13 minutes and 42 seconds later...

It looks like we’re finished, but we’re not.

Get another beer.  Pick out a movie.  Have the kids wash up.

Now, make some popcorn and put it in the veggie bowl.  YUMMY!

Use the mixing bowl for your popcorn. MMMMMM
Use the mixing bowl for your popcorn. MMMMMM

Let me know if you have any questions or comments. Give it a try, then come back here and post your reviews.

10 Basics of Services Marketing

I just met with a smart young attorney who is fresh out of law school and hanging his shingle. Like any service-based business, he was very concerned about how he’s going to attract the clients with whom he would love to work. Like I said, he’s smart.

Attracting clients is not just an issue for lawyers, it’s an issue for everyone – especially if you’re a service provider.

He’s doing his homework and asked me to share some ideas about how he should approach his target niche.

While this type of information is at the heart of the discussions we’re having as part of The Space Between Center lawyer mastermind groups (business law, estate planning, & collaborative/family law programs), I thought I’d share what I told this young man over coffee this morning.

Here’s what I suggested:

1.  Consolidate his knowledge of the target niche area of law into a short (say 20 pages) ebook that outlines the core issues his target clients should be thinking about.

2. Distill that ebook into a PPT presentation.

3.  Offer to give that presentation to as many groups in his target market as possible.  Free.  In person and via Webinar when he can.

4.  Constantly blog with short value-providing articles for his potential clients and use social media (twitter, facebook, linkedin, youtube) to build friendships and increase the number of people he’s helping with his blog.

5.  Break out sections of the ebook into blog posts and submit those post to other blogs/sites read by potential clients.

6.  Offer the full ebook as a free gift in exchange for people getting on his mailing list.

7.  Use the ebook and blog to qualify potential clients.

8.  Build a flat-fee engagement model to build relationships.

9.  Have a merchant accounts to take credit card payments.

10.  Tell clients that your initial consultation fee is rolled into the engagement if the potential client wants to engage, otherwise, it’s a fee of $XXX due at the end of the meeting.  He can always waive that if he wants, but it sets the expectation of value in the initial meeting and lets the tire-kickers move on to someone else for free advice.

These 10 elements work in every services business, not just for lawyers.

For the lawyers reading this:

If you’d like to learn more about how to attract more perfect clients to your practice using these approaches, you owe it to yourself, your clients, and your family to be on our informational call next Wednesday, May 19th at 2pm Eastern.  You can sign up for that call here. We’ll be sharing some tips and tricks and also giving you the details about how you can be part of The Space Between Center lawyer mastermind group.

Space Between Center Update – Lowering Fees, Adding Value

The leadership team at The Space Between Center for Creative Spirit in Business has been listening to our members, potential members, and friends. As a result, we’ve made some major changes.

Very quickly, those changes include:

  1. Lowering membership fees.
  2. Adding a program for family law attorneys.
  3. Adding a program for estate planning attorneys.
  4. Welcoming our first three “Fellows” to The Center.

We’re hosting a free informational call next Wednesday, May 19th at 2pm Eastern to explain the full details about what these changes mean for you, so please register to be on the call or receive the recording. You can find out a few more details and register for the call here.

Oh, and if you have never signed up for anything before you also will get a copy of my Fuel The Spark: 5 Guiding Values for Success in Law & Life Action Guide as a complementary gift for joining our community.

Go ahead, sign up for the call now.

Joint Works (copyright)

No, we’re not talking about creativity that originates from prison.

Nor are we talking about helping a bud roll one.

We’re talking about when at least two people work together on a creative project.

Unfortunately, “inadvertent” joint authorship happens all the time.

Here’s the analysis:

1.  A work is “jointly authored” automatically upon its creation if:

1) two or more authors contributed material to the work; and

2) each of the authors prepared his or her contribution with the intention that it would be combined with the contributions of the other authors as part of a single unitary work.

2. Intent AT THE TIME THE WORK IS CREATED is the controlling factor.

3. The contributions do NOT have to be equal.

4. IN the ABSENCE of a Collaboration Agreement or agreement otherwise:

  • Joint authors have undivided interest in the ENTIRE WORK.  (that means even-Stephen for all the authors, even if they didn’t contribute equally.)
  • Each joint author has the right to exploit the copyright, without the other’s consent.
  • Each joint author has the right to license the joint work, without the other’s consent.
  • Each joint author has the right to transfer their share of the ownership without the other’s consent.
  • The ownership interest does NOT revert to the joint author upon one author’s death, it goes with the estate.
  • Both authors have a duty to account for profits – each joint author has to pay the other the appropriate share of profits.

So, what this means to you is that before entering into any collaborative creative project, you should create a “Collaboration Agreement” that irons out the details of the project and relationship.

A collaboration agreement should include at least:

  1. Description of the project
  2. What each person will contribute
  3. Ownership %
  4. Authorship credit
  5. Control of use – decision making

There are a bunch of other things your lawyer will help you with, but the things listed above are the key relationship issues to keep in mind and bring to the meeting with your attorney.

Please understand that I’m not saying “don’t collaborate” because collaborations can be incredibly powerful.  I’m saying get the deal in writing before you begin the work, even if you’re sure everything will be swell.

Things happen.

The Foolproof 5

A Foolproof 5-Step System to Attract Perfect Clients

“It’s Foolproof!”

“I think you’re nuts.”

–       Finding Nemo

Are you attracting the type of clients you want?

I’m surprised at how many lawyers and non-lawyers answer “no” because it’s really not that hard to do. It seems that not a week goes by when I’m not asked how I’ve been successful in attracting the clients I love to work with – entrepreneurs.

You can use my system to attract your perfect clients, no matter who they are. You don’t need a massive marketing budget either, because you can do everything on this list without spending a dime.

Here are the steps.

  1. Know the type of problem you will be helping people solve until they put you in a hole.
  2. Create a product or service offering to solve that problem.
  3. Share information of value to people experiencing that problem for free via your blog.
  4. Let people know where they can find what you’ve posted on your blog.
  5. Allow people to hire you to help them solve their problem.

Want to know more?

I thought so.

Here’s how you do it.

Step 1: Know the type of problem you will be helping people solve until they put you in a hole.

That may sound crass, but when you know what you love to do – the thing you can’t NOT do – you’ll have recognized your purpose in life and retirement will be an obsolete concept.  The day you commit yourself to aligning your income streams with that thing you love to do will be the day you “retire” no matter if your 65 or 25. For instance, I’ll be helping people share their creativity with the world through entrepreneurism until the day I die.  I can’t NOT help those people. What will you do until the day you die, happily, and for free?

Step 2: Create a product or service offering to solve that problem.

You have to “package” your passion into something people can repay you for.  Notice I didn’t say “pay you for”, I said “repay” you for.  You MUST provide value first. You have to put it out there.  You put it out there for free initially (see the next step), but don’t expect people to take a risk on you – you must take the risk on them.

If you have a service offering, package it up in some way that doesn’t equal a blank checkbook – in other words, do you absolute best to avoid pricing your service by the hour.  Hourly fees are lose-lose, you only end up trading your life for a few bucks.  Sometimes you’re not worth your hourly rate, sometimes you’re worth a thousand times more. It’s a bad, outdated, shortsighted metric of value. If you can build in some continuity, such as a monthly flat fee for your services that lasts for a year, then do it.  Trade a long-term relationship for a higher project fee every time you can.

If you have a product offering, price it to move, but at a profit.  The key to success is to make a lot of people a little happier, at a profit each time. If you can build in some continuity (and you can), do it.

Step 3: Share information of value to people experiencing that problem for free via your blog.

There is no excuse for not having a blog. None. You can have one set up for free inside of 10 minutes. Just go to http://www.wordpress.com and you’re good to go.  If you have 20 minutes, you can get your own domain name and have a wordpress blog set up in your own name or brand, like http://houchinlaw.com , http://www.spacebetweencenter.com or http://kevinhouchin.com . It doesn’t take a technical genius, it only takes a bit of passion for your message, which shouldn’t be a problem if you took step one seriously.

The thing I hear most often is “but I don’t know what to write…”  Ugh.  Yes, you do know what to write.  At least if you took step one seriously you do, because if you took step one seriously you have something to say.  It’s more likely that you probably have so much to say that you don’t know where to start and are simply overwhelmed.  Or, you’re really just afraid that you can’t write.

So, just have a conversation.

Imagine a perfect client sitting in your plush office.  What question do they ask you?  That’s a blog post.

  • What do they fear?  Each of those fears is a blog post.
  • What gets them jazzed? Each spark of enthusiasm is a blog post.
  • What’s the latest and greatest thing in their life?  That’s a blog post.
  • What just made YOU happy about the progress toward solving the problem from step 1?  Blog post.
  • What just made you angry about a setback? Blog post.

Are you starting to get the picture?

500-1000 words.  Just a few paragraphs.  FYI, we’re at just under 800 words right now.

I work with a lot of lawyers. There is absolutely no excuse for lawyers not to write because the one thing law school did to benefit each of us was to thrash the fear of writing 500 words in 15 minutes out of us. The place lawyers screw up is that they think they have to write like we did in law school or for the court. They think they have to include footnotes and case citations proving up every factual statement.

When lawyers write a blog post, they should write for clients, not other lawyers. No footnotes. No case citations. Minimal statutory citations (only if they’re REALLY helpful.)  You don’t get brownie points for acting smarter than your clients. They expect you to know the source, and they really don’t care where the answer comes from, just that you know how to help them, so don’t slow them down for the sake of your ego. Only your competition cares about the citation. Help them if you want, but I’d rather focus on attracting clients.

If you’re afraid you can’t write, then record yourself and pay someone the $12/hour it takes to have that recording transcribed.  If that’s too technical for you, trade services with a copywriter who can interview you for 15 minutes and type up a blog post for you.  There’s nothing wrong with “ghost bloggers” helping share your message.

If you don’t write or don’t want to work in the written word, record yourself and post audio files, or even better, do video files (known as a “vlog”).  None of these will take much money or any real programming skill.  If you can use a computer, you can accomplish these tasks.  If you’re not willing to do any of this, get used to looking at the world from the inside of a cubical – if you’re lucky.  These activities are becoming more critical to successful businesses of any size every hour.

WordPress blogs also have “Pages” where you actually share how people can REPAY you for the valuable content you’ve shared with them via your blog by hiring you for your services or purchasing your products – maybe even both – but we’ll talk about that in step 5.

Step 4: Let people know where they can find what you’ve posted on your blog.

This is where social media comes in. You know, Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, and if you’re a video-savvy person, YouTube. These are speed-networking-on-crack and blow the roof off of conventional media outlets.  Sure, you’ll want to submit your great articles to major publications, but get the quick stuff out quickly – via your social media networks. Provide value and share the value.  Your blog is the hub. Media outlets are the spokes.  Almost all of the good ones are free.  Again, no excuses.

You can very quickly and easily set up your system to update your twitter.com status every time you post a new entry to your blog, and have that update Facebook and then LinkedIn, AUTOMATICALLY sharing your content with the world even EASIER than copy/paste. Again, no excuses.

If you are comfortable speaking in public, start giving talks to groups of people who personify the ideal of your perfect client. When you show up to speak, you’ll walk away with clients.  The key is to create as many avenues for people to engage with the content on your blog as you possibly can.

Integrated Marketing Model for Lawyers
Integrated Marketing Model for Lawyers

Step 5: Allow people to hire you to help them solve their problem.

If you’ve thoughtfully, sincerely, and regularly completed steps 1-4, your perfect clients will find you. They’ll ask for your products and services.  You just have to let them.  Too many people say “I’m just doing this for fun” and fail to create an income stream from their passion or hobby that will allow them to escape the day job and “retire” doing what they love.

If you take just these few steps and practice them regularly, the income streams will appear and you’ll be able to focus as much time on them as you want. You’ll “retire” well before you’re 60s because you won’t think of quitting what you do for a living – what you do FOR a living will be aligned with ACTUALLY LIVING, now. What could be better than that?

This is the only life you have (at least right now), why waste another day of it doing something you don’t love?