Social Leverage to Connect with Clients
Social media has altered the way that we make big purchases, that we announce our engagements to speak and our engagements to be married.
Social media has altered the way that we make big purchases, that we announce our engagements to speak and our engagements to be married.
Earlier this year, my city declared a state of emergency. Later, President Trump made the same declaration.
Focus Forward, Never Back In practicing collaboratively, we focus our clients on the future. Fixing your attention on how you want your life to look five years from now is a positive and optimistic endeavor that inevitably uplifts your spirits, especially when the present is an upheaval of divorce-related stress and anxiety-provoking decisionmaking. And making
When you consult, how often are you able to “close the deal,” to sign your consult up for a collaborative divorce or some other courtless process that you know in your heart is far healthier than a litigated divorce?
How many of us ever wanted to speak in public? Or ever thought we’d have to engage in public speaking?
I’m not an active Facebook user, in fact, my generation tends to stay away from it altogether. Baby Boomers are a bit put off by all these social media choices.
Lessons of High Profile Divorces High profile celebrities and business moguls who find themselves getting divorced have more than most of us to lose. Financially, they are likely to have more assets to divvy up. But socially, because of their prestige, they must also deal with the whole world being interested in their private business.
It’s time now to discuss our last marketing forte, Partner. In my previous blogs, we discussed how best to Pitch, Publish, Present, and Profile in this lockdown environment.
We’ve now discussed three of the five marketing fortes and how you can work on them during this quarantine. You’ve learned about Pitch, Present, and Publish. Now it’s time for Profile.
As first seen on the Florida Academy of Collaborative Professionals website Hanlon’s Razor I love this. “Hanlon’s Razor states that we should not attribute to malice that which is more easily explained by stupidity.” In a complex world, this principle helps us avoid extreme paranoia and ideology, often very hard to escape from, by not