Toilet Email (And Why It Matters For Your Marketing)
Why do people email when they are on the toilet, and does it matter for your marketing? It does, and here’s why it’s so important.
Why do people email when they are on the toilet, and does it matter for your marketing? It does, and here’s why it’s so important.
This week only (February 21 and 23, 2019), join a free class all about business, marketing, and being smarter as an entrepreneur. In the class, you’ll learn how to 45X your marketing efforts using a tool everyone thought was “so over,” the website links that stop buyers dead in their tracks, and why more traffic isn’t always what you need — and what you should do instead.
I’m gathering a group of people together this year for ten months to help you make progress and stay accountable to your big dream or goal in 2020. If you need an accountability buddy and regular check-ins to keep you on track, check out this group.
Every summer, we take a break as a family—both from work and from business. I also do a social media sabbatical for at least two weeks (sometimes more) based on a series of experiments I conducted and wrote about for Harvard Business Review.
Paralysis. Indecision. Procrastination. I’m not alone. The 25/5 strategy helps every single time, and it’s so important I’m writing about it.
Want my brain on your project or business? Here’s how to access it on my monthly, private, patreon-only podcast.
I want to write about something I’m noticing—and struggling with. I don’t have an answer for it. It is, perhaps, a set of observations.When I was younger: in my twenties, I didn’t realize how much of my free time I spent doing things—things that I now try to do all inside of my limited work hours. There are small projects I used to indulge in that occupied pockets of time I no longer have in the same way. Today I want to talk through how work (and projects) eat our time, and why we have less time than we think. And how to deal with it.