Dealing with Difficult People PLR; Learn and Log
Published: Sun, 02/20/22
I'm so bummed about something on Tik Tok. I had a learning curve (still in it lol) and apparently I didn't activate the analytics when I first uploaded and the one video I had that went kind of viral isn't counted in my stats.
So week 1 I officially had over 41,800 views of my videos. What!? I gained 341 followers in week one. Today marks the end of week 2 and yesterday I was up to 500 followers and over 60k views. I think what I love about this compare to YouTube is I have ZERO attention span anymore! I can NOT sit through a 10 minute video. But under 3 minutes? 60 seconds? Oh yes. And these bite-size snippets of info are great - I can binge someone's account in one night watching snippets.
FYI: Tomorrow's email goes out at 11 AM EST and if you need to see what limited PLR is left and see what big, discounted store bundles are available, go here.
Dealing with Difficult People PLR
Sharyn Sheldon has a new PLR bundle called Dealing with Difficult People.This is something everyone needs - whether you're an online entrepreneur or not. But the content is geared toward business owners.
You get:
Student Materials:
- Course Book (7086 words, 49 pages) – All the content and activity instructions you need to create a comprehensive self-study eBook, online course, bonus resource, or handout for a live workshop (Value $1997).
- Action Guide (33 pages) – A complete set of worksheets which helps your students take action on what they learn in the Course Book, so you’ll have happy, successful students.
- Case Study Review (8 pages) – Suggested ways to deal with the case studies in the course, so your students can compare the suggestions with their own responses.
- Summary Cheat Sheet (3362 words, 21 pages) which includes the main takeaways, key points, and action steps from the course. You and your students can use it as a quick reference to save time, versus having to refer to the course book every time. (TIP: Our customers love using the cheat sheet to identify what they want to customize in the course, and for sales copy snippets.)
- Graphics (24 colorful graphics that are used in the course book and slideshow, .pdf, .ppt & .png). These give a snapshot view of concepts, as well as adding some visual zing.
- Course Overview Infographic – A 1-page at-a-glance visual of the course, so your students always know where they are in their progress (.pptx, .pdf & .png).
- Course Roadmap Infographic – A 1-page at-a-glance visual of their path through the course (.pptx, .pdf & .png).
- Slideshow (126 Slides) – Ready to fire up your recording software or share on webinars, online classrooms, and live presentations or workshops (Takes at least a day to create or $600 to outsource).
- Speaker Notes (in Slide Notes below slides) – Use the script under the slides (in the .pptx) to guide your presentations and recording. Ready to customize for your language.
- Top Ways to Deliver Your Training Program – Use our tips for picking the best way to deliver your course, based on your audience and your own skills.
- Instructions for using your new content – Step-by-step tips for getting started, customizing, and repurposing your content.
- Social Media Posts (10 Tips for sharing on social media) – Use these to get more traffic to your content
http://www.contentsparks.com/1232-291.html
High Achievers Learn and Log Ideas from Others
Sometimes, you might be resistant to the idea of taking a lot of advice and ideas from others. It can feel like you’re discrediting your own success because you didn’t build it all up from scratch, but rather had to get help along the way.This is not a success oriented mindset. As humans, we’re inherently social creatures, and have found such success in life by working together and building a something greater than what we could hope to achieve individually.
Take that same approach into building up your own success by taking advice and ideas from others. Now, when you want to learn from successful individuals, there’s a way to do that without plagiarizing them or just ripping off their hard work.
What you should take note of and emulate is the way that they became successful, and that doesn’t mean copying their every move along the way. Learn what mistakes they made, and avoid those.
Understand how they overcame certain circumstances that you may find yourself in at some point. Take away concepts and ideas that you can use to create your own map to success rather than just imitating what they did exactly.
There are plenty of successful people who are more than willing to share their tips and advice for up and coming people trying to accomplish similar feats. Some are more open than others, but if you’re able to really take their advice and implement it into some of your own daily activities, then you should see some results.
While it might seem better to build your own success story from the ground up, that’s really never how it happens. Any time you talk to someone successful, you can ask them who inspired them and helped them along the way, and they almost always have someone they looked up to that they used as a role model.
You’re really not so different. You probably have role models of your own in your career or in life that you want to be like, so there’s nothing wrong with learning and growing from them and becoming your own successful person.
Be sure to take notes on what they say to avoid, what they say to look for, and so on. It’s crucial advice that could really end up helping you a lot in the long run, and it’s in your best interest to take any good advice that you can get.
Tiff ;)
P.S. Prefer a weekly digest?
http://www.tiffanylambert.com/weeklytiff.html