If you use Loom or similar for recording & sharing videos — check https://t.co/KYWt8Yv55s
And if you use Wistia or similar for embedding vids on your sales funnel — also check https://t.co/KYWt8Yv55s
It’s better in every aspect. Recording, editing, sharing, embedding, analytics
@the_don1722 Lol. Firstly, Loom is one of the most buggy softwares I’ve ever used. And it has so many limitations. Secondly, millions of marketers are embedding videos, and virtually every embedding tool is overpriced and lacks customization options. I know because I’ve tried them all.
1 hour league of legends tutorials on YT will get like 100k views, meanwhile a 1 hour in depth convo between two unknown 8-9 figure business owners gets like 500 views.
Both videos are "gaming tutorials" in their own respect.
It's just a matter of which game you choose to play.
Let’s not have a petty discussion about who was first. None of us were. People have been uploading uncut videos for decades. I was uploading uncut videos 5 years ago. I started using the word raw in video titles 3+ years ago — and yes, it was definitely my recent video that kicked off/influenced/set the trend that people are currently following the most — the one you mentioned included. That being said, I watched your video and thought it was cool — so respect to you! :)
imo one of the best things you can do to increase / accelerate your success in virtually any domain (be it business or something entirely different) is to read and reflect on philosophy and global economy in sync while simultaneously building / working on your projects
Common but good and open-ended question to which every person will have a unique answer.
Surface answer: Think different.
Complex answer: Not tunnel visioning towards $ or limiting scope to believing initial idea is perfect - not taking every opportunity to floor the speeder and maximize profit short-term profit - instead always stepping back and taking the time necessary to evaluate the long-term impact, vision & mission of what we're working on.
Always putting value-creation and impact first. Having perspective and purpose in every effort. Having a moral foundation and compass for what I believe a successful business should yield for humanity in the long term. Without this you'll get lost in the trenches, even if you make good money.
Finally, viewing every project, situation, conversation & opportunity as the potential catalyst for developing something great.
Alright, perhaps not any domain - philosophy and global perspective might not accelerate the early stages of say your tennis / football / sports career much - but then again, look at some cool sports stars, Djokovic for example, whom I used to dislike tremendously - I've gained great respect for him over the past few years due to his political and humanitarian statements / opinions - and moreover I'm sure his studies have also assisted him significantly in finding continued drive and passion within his domain. Perspective is everything.
Instead, I believe in benevolence-driven capitalism.
And what would be at the core of enabling such a world?
..Higher average education at all levels - globally.
Eventually making benevolence the core of any competitive company.
This is part of my long-term vision with COET.
What will happen when our civilization only needs people of unique expertise & creativity?
When all essential jobs are done cheaper and more efficiently by AI robots that can build more AI robots?
And no, I definitely do not believe that communism or deeply rooted socialist ideologies will help carry the less fortunate into a better future - those ways of governing people are inherently inefficient and can only inspire long-term regression.