Podcasts

Business Infrastructure, With Alicia Butler Pierre

Filed in Podcasts, Previous Episodes on November 9, 2023

 

Growing a Custom Socks Business by Focusing on the Client Experience, With Samuel Moses

Filed in Podcasts, Previous Episodes on November 7, 2023

 

 

Broadcast Your Brilliance Through Podcast Guesting, With Nancy Juetten

Filed in Podcasts, Previous Episodes on November 2, 2023

 

If you have more money than time and want a done for you solution to get media ready fast, check this out!
https://getknowngetpaid.com/get-podcast-guest-ready/

Veteran Owned Business, With Zachary Leyden

Filed in Podcasts, Previous Episodes on October 31, 2023

Invitation from Guest: 

Free Rides for Veterans
www.Oceanviewstables.com

Getting Rid of Cheesy Team-Building Techniques in Favor of Genuine Connection, With Scott Clancy

Filed in Podcasts, Previous Episodes on October 24, 2023

Invitation from Guest: 

Hone your skills with Scott’s free guide to time management and tools on how to thoughtfully prepare.

scottclancy.ca

Make Your Website Do More for Your Business, With CJ Gilbert

Filed in Podcasts, Previous Episodes on October 17, 2023

Invitation from Guest: 

CJ’s Video Course – Make Your Website Work For You! –
https://www.mywebsitesafari.com/

Unlocking Success: The Power of Incrementality in Affiliate Marketing, With Chelsey Holt

Filed in Podcasts, Previous Episodes on October 10, 2023

 

Calling Out Unconscious Bias in the Workplace, With Buki Mosaku

Filed in Podcasts, Previous Episodes on October 3, 2023

 

 

Wisdom Comes From Evaluated Experience, Not Time Served, With Antonio Garrido

Filed in Podcasts, Previous Episodes on September 26, 2023

Invitation from Guest: 

1) Free Chapter of Antonio’s Book – https://www.mydailyleadership.com/book-chapter
2) Leadership health check – https://www.mydailyleadership.com/leadership-health-check

Why Building Trust Should Be Every CEO’s Top Priority, With Zain Raj

Filed in Podcasts, Previous Episodes on September 19, 2023

In their search for continued success, many businesses lose touch with the foundational elements that fueled their success, becoming complacent and expecting the good times to go on forever.

Then they begin to struggle.

Not just because of operational weaknesses, management disruptions, or changing business environments, but rather because they forget that their success depends on one crucial foundation: people.

Human beings who are their customers, their suppliers, and their employees. It is those people who make or break a business and brand. To win with them, businesses need to earn and retain their trust.

By leveraging a framework grounded on proven social sciences principles, ancient wisdom, and modern-day management principles, any company, whether surviving or thriving, can ignite business growth.

Trust is the most underleveraged impact-maker in the business world today.

The power of trust can help any company ignite growth in a way never imagined before:

Forget AI, sustainability, or any other ideas: amplifying trust will have a transformative impact on any business.
Don’t think you’re a manufacturing, services, transportation, etc. business. You’re actually in the people business.
There is a framework to building trust grounded on proven principles in the social sciences, ancient wisdom, and modern-day management principles.

A visionary leader, business accelerator and industry futurist, Zain Raj combines innovation and creativity to create new business models for the future in his new book, THE PYRAMID PUZZLE: Igniting Transformation with the Power of Trust.

Tune in to hear Zain’s answers to questions such as:

  •  In your new novel, The Pyramid Puzzle, you say the average business consultant often focuses on the wrong things when they are called in to help a struggling brand or business. What do you think most consultants get wrong?
  • You identify trust as key to business success. Can you define trust in the context of business?
  • A business’ three constituents are customers, employees, and suppliers. Where are trust pressure points for each of these groups?
  • In The Pyramid Puzzle, your three protagonists put their heads together to save a legacy brand that is on the skids. Your main protagonist, Joseph Chandler, is a business professor; his role in the process is somewhat self-evident. But he works side-by-side with a young woman whose first interest is the social sciences, and her boyfriend, a philosophy major. Can you talk about how those latter two disciplines relate to business success?
  • What does the pursuit of trust look like in practical terms? Where should a struggling brand start in order to turn things around, and what are the most cost-effective ways to use their presumably limited financial resources?
  • And much, much more!