I recently had an opportunity to speak at an event
that featured numerous presenters, including me.
We had to endure something that speakers dread: a single attendee with a very loud and bizarre laugh.
That can be disorienting for a speaker, and it's certainly annoying to the rest of the audience.
Its practical effect, apart from how jarring it is to everyone, is to
suppress laughter from the rest of the audience. People go to laugh, and the loudness of the one guy stops them cold.
But it's also distracting to the speaker. It can certainly rattle the novice, and it can make even a seasoned speaker lose his train of thought.
Of course, distraction comes in many forms, and in each case it's the enemy of getting things done.
For example (this is not an example I am choosing at random, as you will see):
Over the past few weeks I ran two live sessions on monetizing the Internet, and I showed you the kind of simple business real-life people run from their homes by following the steps I laid out there.
These sessions were free, but they had more
actionable information than masterclasses people pay $497 for.
Well, the old man is back with yet another one.
I showed you the various pieces that combine to form a simple online business. (My friend Ben Settle, for instance, runs a 7-figure business with no virtual assistants, no employees, nothing, and it's run almost exactly according to the model I teach.) Now I'm going
to go deeper into how all those pieces work and fit together.
More importantly, and returning to our distraction theme:
One reason people struggle is that they don’t know what to do and what to ignore, so they keep getting distracted. Maybe they have a half-finished this, a draft of a that, and a third thing they bought three years ago and never did anything with.
I'll give you a decision matrix so you can understand what
to focus on and what to put off for the future (or not do at all) in order to make sure your efforts actually move the needle forward.
Another reason: they try to build without any real timeframe, so their work drags on forever. They keep thinking,"If I had more time, I could get this done"; or "I'll have time to finish this when the kids go back to school," etc.
Not having
enough time is not really the problem, as I'll show you. We'll talk about creating the right environment so you can actually get it done and launched without overwhelm.
So yes, I'm doing another free presentation, and like the others it'll be packed with info and won't cost you a cent.
It's coming up this Thursday, so reserve your spot right away and let's get you on the
right track:
https://www.tomwoods.com/righttrack
Tom Woods