Nobody move!


Play it safe.

You're not chased by a T-Rex.

Not now —and certainly not once you get to innovate and bring great, new things to the market you serve.

However, that's how many businesses, orgs and entrepreneurs behave once they reach a certain point.

Because now that you're there, you've got much to lose.

Just think of this:

What if you get much more to win?

Rod Aparicio

Get one tip, question, or belief-challenge that just might change the way you market, to help your customers buy. A *daily* email for b2b founders on improving your business —without the bullshit.

Read more from Rod Aparicio

What do you see yourself still talking and interested in in 10 years from now? How many of the current things you do/research/write/publish/work on are in that spectrum? Think it'd be worth going on one of them deep enough to experiment and build new offerings/products/services? That's a quick way to see if what you're working on is aligned with what you see in a (not-so-distant?) future. 10 years can pass quickly. And 10 years can also be long enough to figure out if what you're currently...

Next time you're on a sales conversation with a prospect, ask them this: "It's a year from now. We're having coffee together and you're happy. What has happened in your business in that year for you to be happy?" [Now you don't say a word. Embrace silence. Bite your tongue if you need to. :)] This question will push them to think. And you need to give them space to do that. If you talk, you take it away from them. When they talk, they'll give you A TON of valuable information to start seeing...

It's a year from now. We're having coffee together and you're happy. What has happened in your business in that year for you to be happy? I'd love to know. :)