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10 Steps with Chat GPT
10 Steps with Chat GPT
Prompt: 10 steps for the best way to sell anything
Response:
1. Research the market: Research your market and understand the needs of your customers.
2. Know your product: Understand the strengths and weaknesses of your product and how it stands out from the competition.
3. Develop a sales strategy: Develop a sales strategy to target the right customers and market your product effectively.
4. Build relationships: Build relationships with potential customers to create loyalty and trust.
5. Promote yourself: Promote yourself and your product through online and offline channels.
6. Offer incentives: Offer incentives such as discounts, free shipping, or other perks to motivate customers to buy.
7. Follow up: Follow up with customers after the sale to ensure satisfaction and encourage repeat purchases.
8. Use customer feedback: Use customer feedback to improve your product and refine your sales strategy.
9. Monitor the competition: Monitor your competitors’ activities and use the insights to stay ahead of the curve.
10. Stay positive: Stay positive and confident in your sales approach to inspire customer confidence.
: Project management is about setting a goal, creating a plan of action, and leading a team of people to get there. It is about setting the right expectations, understanding the context, and having the courage to make hard decisions. It is about creating an environment where people can work together to do something that has never been done before. It is about bringing people from different backgrounds, different perspectives and different skillsets together to create something truly remarkable.
Grammarly Score: 96
For more on Chat GPT click here (the response)
For more on Grammarly click here (the score)
Loyalty In Work
Loyalty In Work
Being loyal to a corporation is unhealthy. It has a poor foundation. They are created to drive profit and promote their interests. Not yours.
It is healthy, if applicable, to identify with the goals and mission of the corporation. But we should not find our identity in it.
Now when talking about the people in a corporation, well, they can be your advocates. Your champions. Being loyal to a solid manager or leader can be a launch pad. A library of wisdom.
When challenged with where to put your loyalty, put in in people and not the corporation.
Innovation Equation
Innovation Equation
Pick an equation:
Lack of Time + Lack of Resources + Optimism
or
Abundance of Time + Abundance of Resources + Optimism
= Mediocre & Undisciplined
Optimism applied as a cure all or silver bullet is not strategic. Optimism should be a strategy, applied sensibly and practically.
Enthusiam is Underleveraged
Enthusiam is Underleveraged
We have the opportunity to approach our interactions bland and transactional or bold and enthusiastic.
What are the people we are trying to serve going to remember?
The process could stink. The software could be taking a while. The people before us could have done wrong. We can’t control everything.
Yet, bringing enthusiasm to any of those situations and the experience of the customer is drastically improved.
So I ask again, what are the people we are trying to serve going to remember?
Tolstoy Wisodm
Tolstoy Wisdom
“The most difficult subjects can be explained to the most slow-witted man if he has not formed any idea of them already; but the simplest thing cannot be made clear to the most intelligent man if he is firmly persuaded that he knows already, without a shadow of doubt, what is laid before him.” – Leo Tolstoy
Almost Missed
Almost Misses
Almost missed my daily exercise goal, but I moved some things around and made it happen.
Almost missed the deadline for a huge opportunity, but I strapped in, got focused, and made it happen.
Almost missed the chance to make an impression, but I dismissed my nerves and made it happen.
Almost misses are filled with making it happen. And we aren’t going to sit idly by, we are going to make it happen.
You may hit it out of the park. If you don’t you still got the experience. Almost missing it is better than missing it entirely.
Crappy First Drafts
Crappy First Drafts
We’ve all been there. You are in a meeting with a team responsible for creating a presentation or document of some sort.
In general, this team is aligned on the path forward and understands what needs to be done. It’s time to stop talking about what we are going to do and now we need to document how we and others are going to see it through.
Then the silence ensues. The waffling begins. Nothing happens.
“Should we start here?”
“Oh, I could see us going in this direction.”
“Whatever you think is best!”
“I’m driving so I can’t see the screen, but I trust you.”
Sometimes it’s best just to own the crappy first draft. We’ve talked about First Pancakes, but the crappy first draft is different. Our goal is to create something objective. People have an easier time critiquing and building off already-established content compared to a blank page.
It’s important to take no offense to the feedback or edits you receive on this crappy first draft. That is exactly what you want! No more cyclical inaction. be the one who rolls a snowball down the mountain so you can get the avalanche.
It’s easy to align with undocumented ideas because we craft those ideas to align with our understanding. Documented ideas are tangible and objective. People will have direct opinions about them. And when alignment is needed, you can make sure you’re clear when it’s documented.
The crappy first draft is invaluable. Learn to love them. learn to excel in them.
How To Give Feedback
How To Give Feedback
As project managers and leaders, we find ourselves in a space where we need to offer feedback. Now this feedback could be on a product, performance, or any number of things. Having a simple framework for us to fall back on so we can remain concise and consistent is extremely helpful. Below is the SBIR Framework.
Situation – In what situation did you observe this person doing something?
Behavior – How did you find the behavior in that situation to be?
Impact – What was the impact of this behavior, in this situation, to you?
Response – What is your response, and what questions might you have for this person?
It’s easy to give positive feedback. These are merely complements and kind words. There is certainly a time and place for this type of positive reinforcement. With the SBIR a “great job yesterday” turns into “during the marketing meeting I noticed how engaged you were. The team really fed off your enthusiasm. I enjoyed seeing our project gain momentum”
However, it’s more effective to give constructive feedback. This can be positive or negative, but it needs to offer ideas for improvements in one way or another. And if you are unable to offer a direct idea, perhaps offer an open ended perspective shifting question that can allow your team member to further analyze. It might look like “After seeing what the marketing team came back with, have you considered how to update our sponsors?”
The trickiest type of feedback is when you have someone who has been difficult to work with on your project. This is someone who may not be bringing their all or they might be bringing everyone else down. I’ll say it time and time again, project managers have all the ability and none of the authority. Can we alert their manager for serious issues, sure. But when its related to the project we are responsible for we have every right to jump into dialogue.
First, understand where this person may be coming from. Are there issues at work or at home? Is there something personal going on? Empathy, first and foremost. But going back to SBIR we can remove blame, we can identify the Situation, softly label the Behavior and Impact, and craft a Response that engages back and forth conversation. It may take a few attempts to gain the trust of a disengaged or disgruntled team member, but as a leader you can decide if this is going to define your work or create an opportunity for the both of you.