Entrepreneur Reading – The continuity of life is never

Marketing a podcast with John WarrilloughWarrillough is a podcast transcript today in the marketing tape podcast channel I discussed with John Warrillough. Not that you had to look for problems in the business trip, the pleasure – to create opportunities for new business, to build a great relationship, but in the end, this also solves other people’s problems. Think about it – to listen means to solve other people’s problems, to imagine yourself if necessary, to have an open conversation, to celebrate the victory, to solve all problems. And especially as entrepreneurs, we understand that people do not buy our products or services, they buy what we solve. This is an episode of a podcast on Intercom ribbon marketing. This month, I read my next book every week, The Independent Entrepreneur, which will be published in October 2019. Troubleshooting seems a little negative until you start using it to understand who you are serving and communicate with them from your point of view. What problems do they solve? This is the most important question in life and certainly applies to the economy. Intercom is the only business messenger that starts with real-time chat and then expands its activities with robot calls and product visits. Think about it this way: being a good friend of a person during the day means solving their problems. You don’t have to look like this, it may not look good, but if you don’t think about it, you don’t have to think about it, but when you start thinking about it in terms of the value you bring? What makes the negative positive? If you can offer your customers what they are looking for, you will get incredible results for your business. The measure of your real impact, and therefore the shock that you need to maintain, is your connection with the problems that you will solve for others. The book consists of 366 daily meditations for entrepreneurs, lectures by famous writers and my comments on how everything relates to business travel and their invisible vouchers, taking advantage of the rescheduled offers of the past.