Problems with your mail delivery? Come to the WRPCO U.S. Postal Service Community Forum

Monday, June 15, 2015
7:00pm – 8:30pm
Devon Bank (Lower Level)
6445 N. Western Avenue, Chicago

Area residents have been complaining about mail delivery, so WRPCO is hosting a forum with representatives from the U.S. Postal Service.  We invite you to hear what they have to say and to learn how to help them improve our service.

Learn what you can do to help your mail carrier deliver your mail in a safe and efficient manner.

PLEASE NOTE: This is not a forum to present your mail issues.

We are asking residents to use the USPS trackable system for logging and following up on customer issues, and to please call 1-800 ASK USPS (275-8777) with your complaint/issue.

All those calls are logged, sent to the delivery unit in question for response within three days, and the USPS monitors if those complaints are being responded to. If you have done this and not received a response of any kind, please email Mark Reynolds at mark.v.reynolds@usps.gov with the following:

1. NAME
2. COMPLETE MAILING ADDRESS INCLUDING YOUR ZIP CODE
3. MAIL ISSUE/PROBLEM:
4. CONTACT PHONE NUMBER OR EMAIL

Again, this Forum is not going to be the place to air your personal grievances with the USPS, we want to get as many problems to them in advance to discuss that evening.

Please email at chair@wrpco.org if you have any questions regarding the Forum.

From last week's Skokie Review – On the air: Skokie's small business guru hosts radio show

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Shalom Klein must have the largest hat rack in all of Skokie considering how many hats he wears in his day-to-day life.

Just when you think he could not possibly fit another one, Klein takes advantage of a new opportunity that he says was too meaningful to pass up.

Not long ago, the Economic Development Commission chairman, Dempster Street Merchants Association co-founder, student, Jewish B2B Networking chairman, jobs adviser and vice-president of Moshe Klein & Associates Ltd. in Skokie added another unlikely role to his arsenal: radio host.

What was not unlikely, though, is that just over a year later, “Get Down To Business With Shalom Klein” on radio’s AM 560 (WIND) seems a big success.

Read more at: http://www.chicagotribune.com/suburbs/skokie/lifestyles/ct-skr-shalom-on-radio-tl-0528-20150601-story.html#page=1

JCC PresenTense Chicago Launch Night

After six months of start up professional training & fellowship, the JCC PresenTense Chicago entrepreneurs are ready to present to the public how they plan to change the face of our community. From a life-changing bicycle to new ways to make manufacturing cool again, audiences will interact with the fellows and divvy up valuable PresenTense Dollars to help choose who should be funded.

Join other business professionals of all ages to meet and network amongst the high-tech environment that started it all in Chicago – 1871.

The Details

  • 6:15pm: Registration, appetizers and drinks
  • 7:00pm: Opening remarks by Howard Tullman, CEO of 1871 Chicago
  • 7:15pm: Venture presentations
  • 8:00pm: Networking, Expo & crowd-funding

Free and open to the public when registering in advance. ($10 at the door).
Seats are limited.

Includes Kosher appetizers & drinks.

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When and Where

June 16, 2015  | 6:15–9:00pm

1871 (Merchandise Mart, 12th Floor) [ map ]
222 W Merchandise Mart Plaza
Chicago, IL 60654

Free if registered in advance / $10 at the door
Click below:
jcc chicago eventbrite

Questions? Contact Program Director, Becky at: Badelberg@gojcc.org or 847.763.3629

10 Tips For People Who Hate Networking

1. Be True To You

You are better qualified to be you than anyone else. Stamp out networking advice that demands you behave in ways that drain you. Harness natural abilities as networking strengths rather than liabilities. Like to listen, not talk? Do it. Energize alone? Go for it. Prefer one-on-one conversation? Arrange it.

2. Realize Less Is More

Be selective. Go to fewer events and be more focused when attending – rather than dragging your weary self to every business opportunity and showing up like a networking prisoner.

3. Plan Your First Impression

Cognitive scientists say it can take up to 200 times the amount of information to undo a first impression as it takes to make one. Who has that kind of spare time? Not you! Show up with the best version of you, every time. You never know who you are meeting.

4. Volunteer

Many of us dislike networking events because we don’t know what to say to a group of strangers. Free floating through a room is a fast track to free-floating anxiety. What to do? Simple. Volunteer to help out. Voila! You have a purpose and something to talk about. Even better, you position yourself as someone helpful – proving how indispensable you are rather than telling everyone about it.

5. Get In Line

This strategy is brilliant. You walk into a networking event with nowhere to go and no one to glom onto. What’s a desperate networker to do? Get in a queue. Any queue. The longer the better!

Why? A queue gives you a place to put your body and a temporary purpose in the world. There are only two people to talk with – the person in front and person behind you. There is a reward – whatever is given out at the front of the queue. And a natural ending – the front of the queue. Nice meeting you!  Ta-ta!

6. Set Challenging Yet Achievable Networking Goals

Well-formed goals vary by personality. At a networking event, task yourself with meeting one or two people, not a dozen. And follow up (see #10!).

7. Show Don’t Tell

Rather than boring others with a canned advert of how marvelous you are, demonstrate live-time your fabulous self. Be useful and gracious. Greet others with a warm smile and leap at every chance to be helpful.

8. Research

Rather than wandering cavernous expo halls at industry events, do your pre-work. Learn in advance what organizations are of particular interest. Spend more time with fewer people. Impress key targets with your knowledge of who they are and why you are a perfect match.

9. Listen

Ever sense your remarks just shoot off a cliff and crash to the ground? Who needs that kind of pressure? Instead focus on those around you, asking thoughtful questions. Network via a sincere interest in others rather than promoting your fine self.

10. Follow-Up Or Forget About It

If you’re not following up, you’re not networking! We forget half of what we hear within 48 hours. Write personalized follow-up within two days or risk having your brilliant remarks erased permanently from the minds of those you wowed. If you’re not following up, you’re not networking.