![]() No secret.-did not expect any) Basic sales techniques you can read about anywhere. Bigots have nothing to teach me that I want to learn. DEFINITELY get this book!ĭISGUSTED! Pro-HITLER comments x 2 a an hour in. This was my first deep exposure to Russell Brunson and his idealogies, and I was blown away. The others are Rich Dad Poor Dad, Never Split the Difference, and Crucial Conversations. I've finished 34 business, marketing, and self-development books over the past 10 months and this is top. After that he goes deep into how he sells, how he presents, and how he markets his expert business with great techniques that feel extremely authentic because he's all about perfecting how you tell your own stories. By the time that is over, you have nothing holding you back and you feel compelled to get your message out. For the first hour of this book, Russell identifies and completely destroys every possible irrational limiting belief you could ever have to becoming an expert in your industry. Russell Brunson shares the way he sells, which is by bashing limiting beliefs preventing the customer from buying. ![]() This is the best sales book and the best marketing book I've ever read. This book completely transformed the way I look at being an expert. To say this book changed my life is an understatement. A map of educational provision may interest researchers and educators of small and micro-business owners, and those from the fields of entrepreneurial learning.Most Impactful book read since Rich Dad Poor Dad Insights into business group formation will be of interest to business group researchers. This study has implications for academics engaged in outreach to small-business owners who may learn from the marketing tactics of these groups, although academics may still lack perceived credibility. It offers participating entrepreneurs critical insights into the charismatic settings, which can be both enabling and disabling for venturing. This study is significant for both researchers of entrepreneurs and the sociology of religion. Adherents choose educators with perceived entrepreneurial credibility to lead them on a purposeful mission for the type of knowledge that promises emancipation. Wealth Creationists display entrepreneurial chauvinism, which equates employment with bondage, viewing the employed as slaves. Participants do not acknowledge religious interpretations of their activities, yet three North American authors provide plausible canonical works that legitimise the movement. Employing similar narrative features and resources as religious sects, the socially constructed co-extensive nomos and cosmos privileges esoteric knowledge and is closely identified with modern Gnosticism. ![]() Insulating directives of behaviour and the construction of stigmatised out-groups maintain social boundaries. The movement teaches entrepreneurship know-how and ‘mindset’ -ways of thinking and being. Interdisciplinary theories, including the sociology of religion, accounted for findings which were analysed at the meso-group level. Using grounded theory methodology the providers were initially researched through participative observation in the educational settings followed by theoretically sampling data with various collection methods. This qualitative study takes an interpreted approach through a social constructionism perspective. Teaching content and methods were also investigated. This inquiry critically examines the attraction of these educational collectives and evaluates the social processes of eight wealth creation education providers in England. While publicly subsidised educational support for small-business owners has suffered from low uptake, this study provides new knowledge about the kind of education that is engaged with in large numbers, despite being more expensive. Led by charismatic entrepreneurs this newly identified research domain represents rich opportunities to study entrepreneurs in naturally arising settings, but has been neglected and understudied. This emergent sectarian movement is identified as wealth creationism. Entrepreneurship education in these collectives includes venturing know-how but also co-constructs existential meaning and purpose for adherents, a role traditionally fulfilled by religion. A dynamic movement known as wealth creation education attracts many thousands of people seeking education for the vocation of an entrepreneur in the UK. ![]()
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