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Rod Aparicio

Fits

Published 18 days ago • 1 min read

Fit in. Fit with. Fit.

You're supposed to find a product-market fit, a customer-product fit, a product-channel fit (omnichannel, right?), so that your business thrives.

Which means you need to look like the others —or VERY similar at least. And becoming something like the others turns your offering into average. That's why it fits.

Now think of this: if you're supposed to fit in (your market, customers', channels), how are you supposed to stand out?

Rod Aparicio

Finding The Gap

Get one tip, question, or belief-challenge that just might change the way you market yourself, so that your customers buy. A *daily* email for indie consultants and creators —without the bullshit.

Read more from Rod Aparicio

If you're focused on what you're going to say next. On how to make your argument more solid. On how your point is the valid (and true) one. No matter what your counterparty says, you'll hear what you want to hear. You'll listen to either reply or present. And that's no conversation. The same is with your prospects and customers. If you don't meet them where they are, if you try to convince them —or influence them— and they're not at that stage, they won't hear you. Here's a work around: Focus...

about 11 hours ago • 1 min read

Internet connection problems. So here's a great article by Tim Williams on the same subject of expertise. :) Getting Paid for Years - Ignition Group.

1 day ago • 1 min read

"If I do a job in 30 minutes it's because I spent 10 years learning how to do that in 30 minutes. You owe me for the years, not the minutes." Nonsense. This whole argument assumes that to know something, it's about the effort you put on. About the time you "spent" in learning the thing. How much it meant, in terms of effort, for you to do something. It takes that if something feels as simple as breathing to you, but not for others, it shouldn't be valuable. Or that for it to be valuable, you...

2 days ago • 1 min read
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