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Join Joel Williams and Tal Lavian in this Seminar/Webinar as they discuss what consultants need to know: What patents are and how they are used, infringed, licensed, and litigated and how to work with your clients on IP issues and perhaps get started on your own patent.
What Everyone Should Know About China
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
Nearly 40% of the world's production is now in China, and it is the world's fastest-growing middle-class market. Because our everyday lives are affected by what goes on a hemisphere away, a fundamental understanding of this market is important to anyone wishing to be better informed about what their future holds. Consultants must often estimate the time it will take to generate measurable results for a client, but they often lack any real tools to do this other than their own experience. This presentation will describe how best to approach this task by introducing the concept of "Half Life" for estimating how long it will take to achieve 50% of a targeted goal. This presentation will also illustrate how technical consultants can migrate into management consulting and profit from the transition. How can you get your website and LinkedIn to help you achieve the credibility and exposure of a successful consultant? If you are successful already, how can you kick it up a notch? You may understand that the internet offers tremendous opportunities, but how do you take advantage of this potential? Get answers to these and other questions at this webinar.
The Professional Consultant
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Consultants everywhere want to be successful. Projecting a professional image is vital to that success. Knowing what you need to do - and incorporating these methods and behaviors in your daily practice - enhances your professional stature in the eyes of your current and potential clients.

Join John Gale and Duane Strong as they describe a series of recommended Best Practices for those who want to be Professional Consultants. How do you find Clients? How do you get them to engage with you and buy your services? In today's business climate, everyone has to do more with less. As a consequence, calls and emails are not returned. And the few contracts that are available are at substantially lower rates. It is no more business as usual. You cannot wait for the phone to ring anymore. You must learn how to find potential clients and then to qualify them. During this webinar, Mike Johnson will show you how to network, find your clients, and sell your services. This talk tells the story of how silicon technology came to the Santa Clara Valley from Bell Labs via Shockley Semiconductor Laboratory and Fairchild Semiconductor Corp. in the late 1950s. The contributions made by engineers and scientists at these companies laid the foundation of what today is called Silicon Valley. Do you have enough sales leads in your pipeline? Consultants have to make better use of time in today's business climate. This makes it harder to reach potential clients, let alone book an appointment. Mike Johnson will show you how to find your "suspects," make contact with them, and arrange that all-important interview. You have the technical expertise and you're ready to get to work, but it's not enough to be technically adept - or even technically brilliant! Your professionalness as perceived by prospects, clients, decision-makers and internal stakeholders directly affects your ability to land and maintain business. Join us for an interactive workshop and panel discussion on how to be a more professional consultant. CNSV member Dennis Falkenstein will help you learn how medical products are brought successfully to market by both large companies and start-ups. Understanding the aspects of introducing emerging new innovations will provide an overview of the necessary market study, sales channels, regulatory requirements and reimbursement issues that are required domestically. A brief insight into marketing medical devices globally will also be provided.
CNSV Event Details
From Bell Labs to Silicon Valley: A Saga of Technology Transfer, 1954-61
Tuesday, October 20, 2009 7:00 PM
KeyPoint Credit Union
2805 Bowers Ave., Santa Clara, CA 95051
Michael Riordan, UC Santa Cruz/Stanford University
Free to the public
No RSVP needed
Map & Directions

Although scientists and engineers at Bell Telephone Laboratories in New Jersey invented the transistor and developed most of the related semiconductor technology, the integrated circuit or microchip emerged at Texas Instruments in Dallas and at Fairchild Semiconductor Company here in Silicon Valley.

Physicist and historian Michael Riordan will recount how the silicon technology required to make microchips possible was first developed at Bell Labs in the mid-1950s. Much of it reached the San Francisco Bay Area when transistor pioneer William Shockley left Bell Labs in 1955 to establish the Shockley Semiconductor Laboratory in Mountain View, hiring a team of engineers and scientists to develop and manufacture transistors and other semiconductor devices.

In September 1957, a group later known as the "Traitorous Eight" resigned en masse from Shockley's company to start Fairchild Semiconductor Corp. Bringing with them a wealth of scientific and technological expertise that was unique in the world, their bold move marked the birth of Silicon Valley, both technologically and culturally. Amongst these eight were Gordon Moore and Robert Noyce, who later went on to found Intel.

In March 1961, Fairchild began marketing its Micrologic integrated circuits - the first commercial silicon microchips - based on the planar manufacturing technique developed at the company by Jean Hoerni which is still in use today.


About the Speaker
Michael Riordan is Adjunct Professor of Physics at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and Lecturer in Stanford University's History and Philosophy of Science Program. He is the author of The Hunting of the Quark (Simon & Schuster, 1987) and the coauthor (with Lillian Hoddeson) of Crystal Fire: The Birth of the Information Age (W.W. Norton, 1997), which was awarded the 1999 Sally Hacker Prize of the Society for the History of Technology.

A Fellow of the American Physical Society, Michael was the recipient of a 1999 Guggenheim Fellowship in connection with his research on the history of the Superconducting Super Collider. In 2002, the American Institute of Physics awarded Riordan its prestigious Andrew W. Gemant Award for his efforts in communicating physics and its relationship to the wider culture.

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