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Casual Articles - Never Say It Can't Be Done
Choosing A Career In The Video Gaming Industry n very easy to take that $420 and spend it on food, clothing, and shelter, but Kolo’s vision was much bigger than that. I’ve seen entrepreneurs kill their businesses by spending the profits on themselves. Kolo brilliantly avoided that mistake and so should you.If you really enjoy playing video games and you find them a challenging form of entertainment why not consider a career in the video gaming industry. If you are going to be working at something for 40 years or so don't you think it sounds like a good idea to choose something you enjoy doing?There are plenty of opportunities out there in the gaming market, it is a truly huge industry with a turnover of billions of dollars worldwide. There are lots of different aspects to the industry so most people with an interest in video Diversify to build revenue. I’m sure Kolo realized that to grow his business he would need to diversify his offering. After all, there’s only so much you can make from a single cellphone hanging on the wall. With the addition of the gaming business he unplugged a second revenue stream that complimented his initial offering instead of competing with it. It was win/win for Kolo and his fellow villagers who were hungry for some kind of recreation other than kick the rock. The final lesson is this: never s Office Workers and Warm, Breezy Weather I ran across an interesting article in Wired magazine this week that told the tale of Kolo Soro, an elementary school teacher in the tiny village of Tomono in the northern Ivory Coast of Africa. This is an area so remote and void of technology that for generations communication between villages has been done by tying notes to rocks and having passing trucks toss them out the window at pre-described locations.Warmer weather has arrived. April showers have brought May flowers. Now it’s time to get out and enjoy that fresh air!Office workers spend the majority of their days inside, toiling in their little cubicles. Many of these workers aren’t even near a window. Have any of you been surprised, upon leaving work at 5:00, to see that it rained sometime that afternoon?These same office workers are seated, day in and day out, in their sedentary jobs. It’s easy to experience burnout that way, especially when deprived of V Kolo Soro changed all that when he purchased a cellphone during a visit to a larger city and found that if he held the phone seven feet off the floor in a corner of his bedroom he could get a decent signal. Being an enterprising young man he hung the phone on the wall, hooked up an earbud, and started charging his fellow villagers 80 cents per minute to make calls. He earned $200 the first month. Being a smart entrepreneur Kolo plowed those profits back into his business. He bought a PlayStation 2 game console and connected it to a 13-inch color TV and charged 10 to 20 cents to play games. He made $20 in the first three days. Now I’ve worked with some pretty sharp entrepreneurs over the years, but in my mind Kolo Soro leaves them all in the dirt. He lives in a tiny African village where the average income is probably no more than a few dollars a month, yet he has founded a thriving enterprise that continues to grow. Kolo’s next purchase will be a computer, which he plans to connect to the Internet using the cellphone signal. You have to wonder how Kolo’s tactics would go over here in the good old US of A. He’d probably be fined for operating an unlicensed telco and arrested for contributing to the delinquency of minors. Or some superstore would move in next door, slash prices, and drive poor Kolo out of business. I guess there are some advantages to starting a business in a region of the world not as advanced and competitive as our own. What entrepreneurial lessons might you learn from Kolo Soro? The first lesson is as old as the rocks Tomono villagers used to communicate with: think outside the box. I’m pretty sure people used to say that even before there were boxes, that’s how creativity works. In fact, give the box to the kids and let them think with it. You never know what those little buggers might come up with that can make you a fortune. Next, know your market well. Kolo knew his fellow villagers well. He knew what was lacking in their lives. He identified a critical need and when he filled it, people literally beat a path to his door. Find out what the customer wants and give it to them. Boy that was an MBA moment, huh. Kolo knew communication with the outside world was a crapshoot and the moment he discovered that cellphone signal he knew he could make money from it. There is no more basic tenet of business than to find out what people will pay you for and sell it to them. Make waves, then sell boats. Reinvest your profits back in the business. It speaks highly of Kolo’s entrepreneurial acumen that he saved up all the money from his first venture and plowed it right back into the business. I’m sure it would have been very easy to take that $420 and spend it on food, clothing, and shelter, but Kolo’s vision was much bigger than that. I’ve seen entrepreneurs kill their businesses by spending the profits on themselves. Kolo brilliantly avoided that mistake and so should you. Diversify to build revenue. I’m sure Kolo realized that to grow his business he would need to diversify his offering. After all, there’s only so much you can make from a single cellphone hanging on the wall. With the addition of the gaming business he unplugged a second revenue stream that complimented his initial offering instead of competing with it. It was win/win for Kolo and his fellow villagers who were hungry for some kind of recreation other than kick the rock. The final lesson is this: never sa Mental Skills in Business: The 7 Key Rules of the Mental Road (Part 1 of 2) rned $200 the first month.Why is it that in some situations, our personal performance is so good while in others we struggle and cannot seem to get into the groove where we do our best work? Is it because we forget, from one day to the next, the important details of our profession or what it takes to excel? Of course we all know that this is not the reason we sometimes follow up a great personal performance with one that leaves something to be desired. The answer to these questions lies more in the inconsistent application of basic mental skills that unde Being a smart entrepreneur Kolo plowed those profits back into his business. He bought a PlayStation 2 game console and connected it to a 13-inch color TV and charged 10 to 20 cents to play games. He made $20 in the first three days. Now I’ve worked with some pretty sharp entrepreneurs over the years, but in my mind Kolo Soro leaves them all in the dirt. He lives in a tiny African village where the average income is probably no more than a few dollars a month, yet he has founded a thriving enterprise that continues to grow. Kolo’s next purchase will be a computer, which he plans to connect to the Internet using the cellphone signal. You have to wonder how Kolo’s tactics would go over here in the good old US of A. He’d probably be fined for operating an unlicensed telco and arrested for contributing to the delinquency of minors. Or some superstore would move in next door, slash prices, and drive poor Kolo out of business. I guess there are some advantages to starting a business in a region of the world not as advanced and competitive as our own. What entrepreneurial lessons might you learn from Kolo Soro? The first lesson is as old as the rocks Tomono villagers used to communicate with: think outside the box. I’m pretty sure people used to say that even before there were boxes, that’s how creativity works. In fact, give the box to the kids and let them think with it. You never know what those little buggers might come up with that can make you a fortune. Next, know your market well. Kolo knew his fellow villagers well. He knew what was lacking in their lives. He identified a critical need and when he filled it, people literally beat a path to his door. Find out what the customer wants and give it to them. Boy that was an MBA moment, huh. Kolo knew communication with the outside world was a crapshoot and the moment he discovered that cellphone signal he knew he could make money from it. There is no more basic tenet of business than to find out what people will pay you for and sell it to them. Make waves, then sell boats. Reinvest your profits back in the business. It speaks highly of Kolo’s entrepreneurial acumen that he saved up all the money from his first venture and plowed it right back into the business. I’m sure it would have been very easy to take that $420 and spend it on food, clothing, and shelter, but Kolo’s vision was much bigger than that. I’ve seen entrepreneurs kill their businesses by spending the profits on themselves. Kolo brilliantly avoided that mistake and so should you. Diversify to build revenue. I’m sure Kolo realized that to grow his business he would need to diversify his offering. After all, there’s only so much you can make from a single cellphone hanging on the wall. With the addition of the gaming business he unplugged a second revenue stream that complimented his initial offering instead of competing with it. It was win/win for Kolo and his fellow villagers who were hungry for some kind of recreation other than kick the rock. The final lesson is this: never s Selecting The Right Promo Item for operating an unlicensed telco and arrested for contributing to the delinquency of minors. Or some superstore would move in next door, slash prices, and drive poor Kolo out of business. I guess there are some advantages to starting a business in a region of the world not as advanced and competitive as our own.Last Monday I met with a new client – a representative of a local university. She was a very cheerful lady but had no marketing background, and was completely in the dark about what promo item to choose. At the top of her list were custom magnets – she wanted refrigerator magnets with her university logo, and she wanted the enrollment and inquiry trunk line imprinted, too.I could see where she was coming from. Magnets are, after all, among the cheapest promo items, and at roughly $0.56 each, they fall right within her bud What entrepreneurial lessons might you learn from Kolo Soro? The first lesson is as old as the rocks Tomono villagers used to communicate with: think outside the box. I’m pretty sure people used to say that even before there were boxes, that’s how creativity works. In fact, give the box to the kids and let them think with it. You never know what those little buggers might come up with that can make you a fortune. Next, know your market well. Kolo knew his fellow villagers well. He knew what was lacking in their lives. He identified a critical need and when he filled it, people literally beat a path to his door. Find out what the customer wants and give it to them. Boy that was an MBA moment, huh. Kolo knew communication with the outside world was a crapshoot and the moment he discovered that cellphone signal he knew he could make money from it. There is no more basic tenet of business than to find out what people will pay you for and sell it to them. Make waves, then sell boats. Reinvest your profits back in the business. It speaks highly of Kolo’s entrepreneurial acumen that he saved up all the money from his first venture and plowed it right back into the business. I’m sure it would have been very easy to take that $420 and spend it on food, clothing, and shelter, but Kolo’s vision was much bigger than that. I’ve seen entrepreneurs kill their businesses by spending the profits on themselves. Kolo brilliantly avoided that mistake and so should you. Diversify to build revenue. I’m sure Kolo realized that to grow his business he would need to diversify his offering. After all, there’s only so much you can make from a single cellphone hanging on the wall. With the addition of the gaming business he unplugged a second revenue stream that complimented his initial offering instead of competing with it. It was win/win for Kolo and his fellow villagers who were hungry for some kind of recreation other than kick the rock. The final lesson is this: never s Quit Your Job and Go Freelance new his fellow villagers well. He knew what was lacking in their lives. He identified a critical need and when he filled it, people literally beat a path to his door.Did you really want to come back to work this week? Did you dread the very thought of it? Maybe you should consider quitting and go freelance! Sound irrational? Not really…you just need a plan.Several years back I decided to quit my job and do just that. I found some part-time freelance work late in July and decided that I would quit my (more than) full-time job. I figured that we could live on that part-time income for a while until I found another job (because I was working so much that I didn’t even have time to < Find out what the customer wants and give it to them. Boy that was an MBA moment, huh. Kolo knew communication with the outside world was a crapshoot and the moment he discovered that cellphone signal he knew he could make money from it. There is no more basic tenet of business than to find out what people will pay you for and sell it to them. Make waves, then sell boats. Reinvest your profits back in the business. It speaks highly of Kolo’s entrepreneurial acumen that he saved up all the money from his first venture and plowed it right back into the business. I’m sure it would have been very easy to take that $420 and spend it on food, clothing, and shelter, but Kolo’s vision was much bigger than that. I’ve seen entrepreneurs kill their businesses by spending the profits on themselves. Kolo brilliantly avoided that mistake and so should you. Diversify to build revenue. I’m sure Kolo realized that to grow his business he would need to diversify his offering. After all, there’s only so much you can make from a single cellphone hanging on the wall. With the addition of the gaming business he unplugged a second revenue stream that complimented his initial offering instead of competing with it. It was win/win for Kolo and his fellow villagers who were hungry for some kind of recreation other than kick the rock. The final lesson is this: never s Interviewing Over Lunch: Are You at Risk? n very easy to take that $420 and spend it on food, clothing, and shelter, but Kolo’s vision was much bigger than that. I’ve seen entrepreneurs kill their businesses by spending the profits on themselves. Kolo brilliantly avoided that mistake and so should you.Sometimes a hiring process will include having lunch with the hiring manager. Despite anything said to the contrary (like "It'll just be an informal lunch so we can get to know each other."), this is a formal part of your interview!This can be a very tricky situation.Impressions made in a restaurant are just as important as those in an office or meeting room.If you don't want an "eating mishap" to ruin your chances at a new job (or a promotion if you're dining with the boss), follow these tips:< Diversify to build revenue. I’m sure Kolo realized that to grow his business he would need to diversify his offering. After all, there’s only so much you can make from a single cellphone hanging on the wall. With the addition of the gaming business he unplugged a second revenue stream that complimented his initial offering instead of competing with it. It was win/win for Kolo and his fellow villagers who were hungry for some kind of recreation other than kick the rock. The final lesson is this: never say, "It can’t be done." If you think that you don’t have the brains or the money or the time or the resources to start your own business, think of Kolo’s thriving enterprise in that tiny African village and remember this: those who don’t know things can’t be done are usually the ones who end up doing them.
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