We might adopt a style of leadership when we lead for the very first time. After trying and learning from different leading experiences we tend to stick with the one that works best for us. Let me know about yours in the comments below :) I d love to learn from your approach.
I started using Copilot from GitHub. The experience was a bit painful in the beginning, but now I feel it helps me a lot. (Copilot helps while writing code) I even use it to create Google Sheet functions as it uses GPT-3 and can do more than code. What kind of tools are you using and to what extent? I'd love to have some recommendations.
All options have pros and cons; some are more convenient, the feedback you get with certain ways are more accurete and genuine, some are just complicated to manage. What are your experiences?
I think in our day to day lives we all have aspects we wish we could automate and in startups thats especially true, for me I think it would be the entire design side. A.I please make a solid Figma design generator
If you didn't see, last night, a lot of Twitter employees chose resignation over committing to Twitter 2.0, Musk's grand vision for a brand new Twitter. Some have started saying Twitter will last maybe a week and there are reports that the offices have been abruptly closed. Do you think Twitter can survive? Personally, I think it will, it will be buggy for a while and the World Cup is going to be wild on it, but ultimately I see it lasting.
Hi! I'm Sarah Evans, founder of Sevans Strategy and Sevans Digital PR, I'm a digital strategist and global brand correspondent, who works with companies worldwide to create and improve their social and digital strategies, advising on branding, marketing, advertising, and public relations. Here to answer any and all questions about PR, Social strategy, consulting, advertising, branding, and more I will be answering questions this week.
Interesting piece by a writer I enjoy reading: https://www.theterminal.info/i/8... Some choice quotes:
"I think it s pretty clear by now the software-led tech boom of the 2010s is pretty much over. The combination of pandemic stimulus and tech-enabled remote work kept things ebbing along a few years longer than they perhaps would have otherwise, but the party s over. There are the mass layoffs helpfully tracked here plunging stock prices and missed revenue guidance, but all of those can be blamed on a generally flagging economy. The rest of it is in the vibes." "You don t have to look far for those vibes. Elon Musk ascending to the throne of Twitter atop a pile of middle manager skulls. Mark Zuckerberg pumping the spoils of a decade of social media dominance into brute forcing the existence of a parallel universe nobody wants to spend any time in. Legions of platform businesses collapsing on their own rickety scaffolding. The form and function of the smartphone growing stagnant, such that it is no longer really possible to discern the difference between iPhone models. The slushy cultural output of a legion of streaming services chasing what few potential subscribers remain. Elizabeth Holmes going to jail." What do people think? Personally I think there is a significant correction occurring and the easy money spigot, is obviously given what is happening in the global economy, has turned off. At the same time I still hear about significant fundraising success for startups. I am definitely a skeptic and a bit of a doom guy so I'm interested in other takes and thoughts?
Everyday, we are undoubtedly evolving as tech-enthusiasts and I believe social media is going to be a huge disruption in our lives. Do you think technologies like AI, VR, Metaverse would greatly influence the upcoming dimensions of social media. Would love to hear your perspective on what social media holds in the future?
As 2022 comes to an end, I thought it would be neat to share how we plan to maintain a healthy lifestyle in the new year. For me, I plan to continually cook and eat at home more frequently and move my body on a daily basis. If you are in need of accountability to make cooking and eating at home a habit, consider following @themealprepjar on Twitter to find out when we launch!
Inspire yourself with fast-paced learning snippets, learn a new technique, in 15 minutes, through firsthand mini-courses and complete your learning experience in a one-to-one session with a skilled expert, all from your mobile phone
KoolStories is here to improve your daily upskilling with micro-learning. Inspire yourself with fast-paced 1-minute learning video, learn a new technique, in 15 minutes, with mini-courses and discuss your doubts within the community.
1. There is no such thing as too much social proof 2. The higher price, the better customers 3. Empower users, not market them 4. Talking to customers is a shortcut to success 5. Having an email list is a superpower 6. Nobody wants to book a meeting with you 7. Showing the product > Describing the product 8. Nail one acquisition channel before adding the second 9. Sell positive future, not product features 10. Your customers are the best promoters 11. Distribution is more important than the content 12. Paying customers is the true validation You can see how we implement all these rules on the landing page of MakerBox Marketing Workbook https://www.makerbox.club/workbook
We are witnessing social media moving at an unbelievable pace. You wake up everyday learning about new trends. With all the hype around meta not being able to match the expectations, to Elon Musk doing some peculiar activities with Twitter. Are we about to jump into the new dimension of social media? If yes, then what are your thoughts?
Hey guys, some of us build a significant audience after launching a product, mainly because we are limited in workforce and finances. Indeed, having an audience before the launch is critical. How do you handle this issue, especially if you are into marketing?