The best way to build an MVP is to distill the solution to the smaller unit of value to deliver something to a customer. Start small, time box it and focus on solving the problem at it's core even if it's ghetto (I call the best MVP's ghetto but useful). Here's an image that represents my think...
Hi there, I know this can be a frustrating problem.. I've been on Clarity since 2012 when its creator, Dan Martell, invited me and several others to the launch event and asked us to sign up as experts. For the first few years, I had hardly any calls. Also, it seemed like only those in the IT sta...
It depends on exactly what your situation is. Anyone who offers you a one-size-fits-all "solution" is just blowing smoke and will make you lose a lot of money. Even two companies in the same industry will have a different "best way" to improve their marketing. Remember, marketing is an INVES...
An open beta or an initial limited access for 100 users, or something like that? If it's a good game, it'll grow organically from there. Encourage people to share their experiences via Facebook and Twitter.
You can hire app development freelancers from www.odesk.com and www.elance.com. I am an app developer myself, and I got profiles on both of these networks, a link is given below: https://www.odesk.com/users/~012d73aa92fad47188 Please feel free to get in touch to discuss ideas and clarify any con...
We've used MeetingBurner with success for our webinars. The price point for a large audience is not too high. It also has recording and automated webinar capabilities.
Many ideas come to mind. You might book some calls with people you follow on Clarity, to flesh some of these out better. Start a Kickstarter project with high dollar perks of some number of weeks. Setup a travel site about how to enjoy your particular part of Mexico (sites, activities, seasona...
Focus on improving your sales skills and delivering constant value to your accounts. With that in mind, I would recommend: "If You're Not First You're Last" by Grant Cardone "Closers Survival Guide" by Grant Cardone "Fanatical Prospecting" by Jeb Blount
Hello, I would go for a Phoenix framework (backend) / ELM (frontend) based platform. The use of these two functional languages will allow you to support high user concurrency and to serve real-time user experience. Feel free to reach me if you want to talk about it. Cheers
Essentially, you need to have clearer opt ins and make it very clear what you want to store and collect the users data for. So, as long as you can get people to opt in, you don't have a problem but if you can't it can affect everything dependent on the data you need.