More cold outreach (>20/day)
Give less for more
Templatize and reuse, e.g. onboarding
Delegate pedantic tasks to VAs
Serve but don't forget to sell
Automate marketing emails (5–10/campaign)
Sell short books that solve big issues
Raise prices by ≥10% after each new client
https://t.co/et3QobiKzU
"Based on the 1915 citation [we] provisionally credit Frank Norris with 'Don’t like to write, but like having written' … almost 100 years since many other writers have made similar remarks."
"Just as there are authors who enjoy having written and others who enjoy writing, there are books you enjoy reading and others you enjoy having read."
—Nassim Nicholas Taleb, The Bed of Procrustes
@rassenpapst@4_2__0_@Neon_Crusade@ObviousRises No you damn fool, the entire point of the parable is that the Samaritan and the Jew, two people from totally different backgrounds and belief systems, are neighbors. Why would you say something like this when you have no idea what you're talking about?
Is there something worse than woke leftists celebrating Charlie Kirk’s assassination or his Zionist supporters cheering over genocide? Yes: the Popperian reaction against democracy, called for by centrist bourgeois politics to criminalize dissent from the two “opposite extremes”.
The “secular leftoid” in America has no hermeneutical defense against paganism, new age cults, etc. They will become, almost always, “spiritual” in this “occult” sense— the only people with a strong hermeneutical toolkit against idolatry are the “radical christians”
“I have no emotional investment in Christianity in the abstract, but only in a certain vision of God’s dealing with humanity in and through a crucified slave who, impossibly enough, is the center of all human history and the very form of God... It’s only the figure of Christ—the peasant agitator and radical lover of the poor, murdered by the state and the interests of the enfranchised, but still a boundless source of love and forgiveness, the good shepherd who never abandons even one of his sheep—that holds me in place.”
—David Bentley Hart
Image: Christ in the Desert, Ivan Kramskoi