Last weekend at the national convention the good people in the Mises Caucus
swept all the positions in the Libertarian Party, so we no longer have to be embarrassed by it.
Folks on the other side hardly knew what hit them.
Good for us, bad for them.
In business, you want to be the winners (the Mises Caucus), and not the poor souls standing around wondering what just happened.
And right now if you do business online or are even planning to someday, you can’t afford to stand still and stick your head in the sand.
We're in the middle of major shifts in online business -- shifts that libertarians will love, and business owners must adapt to: from Big Tech to data privacy, from third-party to zero-party data, from algorithmic choice to more individual choice, and from spying to ASKING.
So how should your (current or future) business adapt to these changes?
That’s exactly what the great Ryan Levesque is teaching these days.
He's hosting a free 5-day live virtual symposium called The Web 3.0 Future.
5 days. 5 talks. 5 ways to prepare for the Web 3.0 future.
Here’s what the event will cover:
Monday, June 6: Web 3.0 Traffic: Effective Lead Generation in the Cookieless World
Tuesday June 7: Web 3.0 Product: How Blockchain is Going to Disrupt More Than Just Money
Wednesday June 8: Web 3.0 Email & Follow Up: How Email And Follow-Up Marketing Must Evolve to Keep Up
Thursday June 9: Web 3.0 Data & Privacy: The Changing Laws and How to Use Privacy as a Strategic Advantage
Friday June 10: Web 3.0 Funnel: Why Standard Marketing Funnels Won’t Work in the Web 3.0 Era
This event is designed for any small business owner, freelancer, or entrepreneur who sells something online, everything from e-commerce to agency services to coaching or consulting.
It's also for anyone who doesn't want to start a new business the wrong way, and then wind up very, very sad.
The talks will be equal parts theory and practical teaching to help you adjust your business -- because Web 3.0 isn't coming -- it's already here.
Save your spot right now, while you're thinking about it -- this is for you, dear reader:
Tom Woods