A paradigm behind childhood career aspirations is often the same: We want to be heroes. Glamorous! Make a difference! B
Posted: Sun Feb 02, 2025 8:23 am
I became an artist; today I am professionally creative in all aspects of communication. I represent the inbound methodology as a direct line from the company to the customer. I am an inbound specialist. But I never saw myself as a "salesperson".
In the next 7 minutes I will explain to you why I am proud to be one! And:
Why I know today that inbound is more than gambling data hong kong just 'doing', why it is the inevitable future for marketing AND sales, why we all sell but rarely do it right, and why inbound thinking is the solution to a fundamental problem.
From Dream to Reality
That's how it was for me too.
Influenced by the ultimate film fantasy of the 70s, I wanted to become a Jedi: a knight of wisdom. A champion of good. A master of the 'Force'.
And it was clear to me what was involved:
Hard training. (At least based on the Shaolin model, because their 36 chambers were constantly celebrated in the cinema at the time. Not to mention Luke Skywalker...)
Expanded knowledge. (Gained through learning and reflection. After all, wisdom doesn't fall from the sky.)
And the decision to do 'the right thing'. (Whatever that means. Hence the claim to wisdom.)
As you can imagine, I didn't become a real Jedi. - That was a dream.
But from these demands arose a philosophy for the profession, consisting of discipline, thirst for knowledge and ethics. - Doesn't your job ethos look similar?
In the next 7 minutes I will explain to you why I am proud to be one! And:
Why I know today that inbound is more than gambling data hong kong just 'doing', why it is the inevitable future for marketing AND sales, why we all sell but rarely do it right, and why inbound thinking is the solution to a fundamental problem.
From Dream to Reality
That's how it was for me too.
Influenced by the ultimate film fantasy of the 70s, I wanted to become a Jedi: a knight of wisdom. A champion of good. A master of the 'Force'.
And it was clear to me what was involved:
Hard training. (At least based on the Shaolin model, because their 36 chambers were constantly celebrated in the cinema at the time. Not to mention Luke Skywalker...)
Expanded knowledge. (Gained through learning and reflection. After all, wisdom doesn't fall from the sky.)
And the decision to do 'the right thing'. (Whatever that means. Hence the claim to wisdom.)
As you can imagine, I didn't become a real Jedi. - That was a dream.
But from these demands arose a philosophy for the profession, consisting of discipline, thirst for knowledge and ethics. - Doesn't your job ethos look similar?