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The Productivity Tricks Of Seven Successful Entrepreneurs

The Productivity Tricks Of Seven Successful Entrepreneurs | Education 2.0 & 3.0 | Scoop.it

Successful entrepreneurs have a lot of things in common; one is knowing how to make the best use of their time. When the clock is ticking and they are under pressure to deliver, many have a favourite productivity hack to ensure things get done on time. Here, seven entrepreneurs share their tried and tested ways of being more productive.

 

Create artificial deadlines

 

Business expert and author of The Startup Coach Carl Reader uses a clever technique of creating artificial deadlines to guarantee a productive finish.

 

“One of my favourite tricks is the ‘train journey to nowhere,” he said. “I book a return train ticket, don't take my mobile phone, and set a completion target for the journey. With a clear deadline and no distractions, I find that I often produce more than I would in the office in a whole day. It's great if you can tie this around meetings that you need to travel to, but if not, the productivity boost is well worth the cost of a train ticket.”


Via The Learning Factor
The Learning Factor's curator insight, November 26, 2017 4:40 PM

Entrepreneurs must learn to manage their time and energy to maximise their business productivity

Jerry Busone's curator insight, November 27, 2017 7:30 AM

Thoughtful tips on improving productivity and getting the most from your day.

Ian Berry's curator insight, November 27, 2017 5:15 PM
Good list of actions to take. I havent gone back to the Nokia yet agree that wise use of phone is a key to investing my attention
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Five Questions To Ask Yourself Before You Launch Your Product

Five Questions To Ask Yourself Before You Launch Your Product | Education 2.0 & 3.0 | Scoop.it

You had a great idea for a product. Your prototype got great reviews from focus groups or even from a crowdfunding campaign. Now you’re planning for mass production, ready to launch your own website, prepping for massive online sales, and practicing poses in the mirror for your picture on the cover of Forbes. Whoa! 

 

Having something to sell is the easy part. Getting it into the hands of consumers is sometimes the more complicated step. E-sales may make marketing easy, but that can be deceptive. Ben Wong is the Head of Startup Launchpad at Global Sources. He helps startups understand the distribution channels they need to leverage, and the different challenges they need to address to get their products into the hands of paying consumers in an offline setting. Global Sources runs the largest electronics sourcing trade show in the world.  This October, more than 63,000 distributors and retailers from around the globe will wander the aisles at the Asia-World Expo in Hong Kong, stopping — or not — at 6,000 manufacturers’ booths. Among those will be about 300 booths where ambitious, hopeful, sometimes naïve, startup companies will beam with pride, burst with anticipation, and sweat with anxiety as they demonstrate their products and hope for a chance to launch a product, start a business, and scale to meet demand.


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The Learning Factor's curator insight, August 13, 2017 7:01 PM

Having something to sell is the easy part. Getting it into the hands of consumers is sometimes the more complicated step.

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Top 10 TED Talks for Entrepreneurs in 2014

Top 10 TED Talks for Entrepreneurs in 2014 | Education 2.0 & 3.0 | Scoop.it


TEDGlobal 2014 kicked off this week in Rio de Janeiro with panels focusing on how ideas, both good and bad, spread across borders. 


If you’ve yet to accumulate enough frequent-flier miles to dash off to South America for this global-minded innovation conference, you can get inspired at home by watching the following top TED Talks of the year. 


Bill and Melinda Gates: Why giving away our wealth has been the most rewarding thing we’ve done.


In 1993, Bill and Melinda Gates took a trip to Africa that changed the way they viewed what was truly valuable. The extreme poverty they witnessed then instigated a lifelong commitment to give back 95 percent of their wealth.


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Marco Favero's curator insight, October 16, 2014 8:21 AM

aggiungi la tua intuizione ...

Viren Lall's curator insight, October 16, 2014 11:13 AM

TED is a great resource for some inspirational stories on entrepreneurship

J.Frazier's curator insight, October 17, 2014 9:50 AM

A great forum for insight into some pretty awesome though leader and even those not so awesome that have something provocative to say.

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12 Entrepreneurs Share The Best Advice They Received From A Teacher

12 Entrepreneurs Share The Best Advice They Received From A Teacher | Education 2.0 & 3.0 | Scoop.it

1. Don’t Let Bad Days Stop You

 

“My 12th-grade anthropology teacher told me: ‘When you’re feeling bad, do the work and let the feelings take care of themselves.’ This turned out to be great advice for running a business. Every startup, even the most successful, is a roller coaster. When the bad days hit, you can’t let them stop you. I’ve found that the act of doing the work often makes you feel better.”

 

2. Be Precise

 

“My second-grade teacher, Ms. Caruso, gave us a seemingly simple writing assignment: Describe how to build a peanut butter sandwich. On the day we turned in our assignments Ms. Caruso had bread, silverware, and jars of peanut butter and jelly.

 

 


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The Learning Factor's curator insight, September 4, 2014 6:38 PM

From fostering character to keeping things simple, it’s often words of wisdom that teachers offer during casual conversations or informational sidebars that have the biggest impact on students.

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Eight VCs Explain How (And Why) They Assess Founders’ Emotional Intelligence

Eight VCs Explain How (And Why) They Assess Founders’ Emotional Intelligence | Education 2.0 & 3.0 | Scoop.it

When you’re pitching investors, you need a great product and a great story–that much is a given. But those aren’t the only things venture capitalists are looking for. Just as emotional intelligence (EQ, or EI) has steadily crept to the fore in hiring, it’s also “a critical part in the process that we go through when deciding whether or not to invest in a company,” says Janet Bannister, general partner at Real Ventures. As Bannister sees it, “A leader with strong EQ can hire people to complement their skill set and cover for areas where they are weak. However, someone low in EQ will never be able to attract, retain, and motivate high performers–and therefore will have huge difficulties in scaling a company.”

 

She isn’t the only VC who’s thinking this way about sizing up founders’ emotional intelligence. Here are a few key questions that seven other investors like Bannister typically ask to assess entrepreneurs who pitch them for funding.


Via The Learning Factor
The Learning Factor's curator insight, October 10, 2017 5:28 PM

These are five key questions investors ask to determine whether they’re being pitched by emotionally intelligent founders.

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How First-Time Independent Workers Can Avoid Getting Burned

How First-Time Independent Workers Can Avoid Getting Burned | Education 2.0 & 3.0 | Scoop.it

More people are working for themselves than ever before, but that doesn't mean the new ranks of gig workers, so-called "solopreneurs," and everybody in between are finally freed from experiencing the corporate world—far from it.

 

 

The clients that independent workers take on inevitably put them (back) into contact with work cultures, expectations, and financial pitfalls that many had hoped self-employment would mean a clean break with. And that's true not just of the businesses independents contract with but also of the third-party platforms that match both parties up. Here's a look at how to navigate that dynamic and some of the risks it contains.


Via The Learning Factor
The Learning Factor's curator insight, December 8, 2016 4:42 PM

Many newcomers to self-employment have no experience running a business, a fact that some companies take advantage of.

Hale1@me.com's curator insight, December 10, 2016 5:53 PM

Useful post, presenting an interesting vision of the theme. For those who speak Portuguese or Spanish and are interested in business management, please visit http://www.quanticaconsultoria.com

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Entrepreneurs Like Steve Jobs And IKEA Founder Share These 3 Personality Traits

Entrepreneurs Like Steve Jobs And IKEA Founder Share These 3 Personality Traits | Education 2.0 & 3.0 | Scoop.it

Author Malcolm Gladwell — who’s sold some 4.5 million books — says that entrepreneurs like Steve Jobs and IKEA founder Ingvar Kamprad become so successful thanks to a rare combination of personality traits.

As he said on stage at on Tuesday at the World Business Forum in New York, they are open to experience, conscientious, and disagreeable.


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The Learning Factor's curator insight, October 12, 2014 4:08 PM

The best entrepreneurs are open, conscientious, and disagreeable.

Carlos Rodrigues Cadre's curator insight, October 13, 2014 12:43 PM

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