top of page

Search Results

27 results found with an empty search

  • 5 Reasons why Web Design is Important for your Business

    With the amount of time being spent on the internet, business owners have realized the importance of being online and have started moving their businesses and services online. Living in the digital world, having a website is very crucial for any business. If a business does not have a website, it is missing several business opportunities and potential customers. A website design is an integral part of a business growth. Web design helps in promoting the brand image of your company, making it recognizable and increasing the chances of being found online. 1) Brand Awareness A website helps create brand awareness and showcasing your brand to prospective customers. It helps to establish your image by letting the audience know who you are and what you represent. A website provides reliable information to the consumers, which helps in setting your business apart from the competitors. 2) Reach More Customers Online The number of consumers shopping online has increased in recent years and it’s still increasing with the help of smart phones and tablets. More than half of the world population uses internet on their mobile devices. This gives a great opportunity for businesses to reach more local and global customers, even if they don’t have physical stores or shops. 3) Generates Business Leads Many people believe that generating leads is only possible through huge marketing campaigns. However, the truth is that a website can also generate leads for business. Only a professional looking website can convince potential customers to use your service. As per a research report, 94% of the people claimed that the web design is important in developing their trust towards a business. 4) Increased Sales A website provides you with an opportunity to sell your products 24/7 to anyone across the globe. No matter what time of the day it is, or where your visitors are located, it still gives them a chance to buy from you. Customers can browse through your online store, see what's on offer and make their purchase anytime they like. Takeaway: A website will help grow your business and allow it to reach new heights. 5) Customer Support Your website can be used as customer support center, where they can find answers to their questions or concerns regarding products or services offered by you. A website is proof of your business in the market, and it gives you the platform to establish yourself as a prominent player. So look out for services of web designer who can assist you with your business technological needs to ensure growth in the industry. The most ideal way you want to market your business is through that one particular method known as designing your own website. A professionally made website will make all the difference in how you market yourself, and how you are seen by customers. Because if they cannot see what you have to offer on the website, then they are never going to know about it. So it is vital that you ensure good web design for your business.

  • Public Health Engineering III

    Introduction Lecture 1

  • Welcome to Art Book Studio 🎨

    Art Book Studio is a creative design marketplace for independent designers to showcase and sell their creative design services to business owners, startups, and brands. Freelance marketplaces have become a great alternative for businesses to hire freelance professionals and for freelancers to find their clients. With Art Book Studio, freelance professionals from around the globe can find new opportunities, get hired, and showcase their work. It is an Interactive E-Commerce Platform for Artists, Designers, and Art Lovers. Here you can find different kinds of artworks, you can bid on them, post your portfolio, hire graphic designers and illustrators, and much more. Is now a good time to start your own company? I'm not saying we are doing this right, but it seems to be working. Designers and Creatives can earn from their Art Portfolios. Hiring Organization gets access to a vast talent pool and access to tens of thousands of Artworks from Designers, Illustrators, Design Agencies, and freelancers across the globe. Arena: A marketplace for Freelance Designers, Artists, and Creatives. Get Design Work Done at the Best Rate with ZERO LAYER:- You can either sell your services by design or you can buy design or any design-related services on the platform. Keep freelancers & services in one place, get the job done quickly & easily & save yourself some money.

  • The Psychology of Money: By Morgan Housel

    Doing well with money isn’t necessarily about what you know. It’s about how you behave. And behavior is hard to teach, even to really smart people. Money—investing, personal finance, and business decisions—is typically taught as a math-based field, where data and formulas tell us exactly what to do. But in the real world people don’t make financial decisions on a spreadsheet. Free Audiobook 🧠💸 : https://www.artbookstudio.club/podcast/episode/20ecd656/the-psychology-of-money-by-morgan-housel

  • Rick Ross Boss Talk: Let's Read, How to get $800,000, Motivation & Elevation, You need a Team 📈

    In a Complex interview, the Miami mogul and rapper said the goal is to help everyone get rich. “That’s the game [plan] for 2022,” Ross declared. “Everybody leaves invigorated with a whole m———–g drive to push for you and spread the love to the next tier. That’s how big boys do it.” Ross bought 87 acres of land near his 235-acre estate in Georgia, dubbed the “Promised Land.” Last May, he introduced Luc Belaire’s new “Bleu” bottle. Ross also owns over 25 Wingstop franchises, one of which he gifted his 16-year-old son for his birthday in September Ross’ empire includes two New York Times bestselling books, 120 cars, and a $2 million watch from Jacob & Co. The 45-year-old now aims to invest in one of the most prominent NBA franchises, the Miami Heat basketball team. “Everything else got to be big boy s–t, too. We got to buy a piece of the Heat,” he explained. “Give me three years, and I’ll be able to do it.”

  • Why the Cheap Will Never Get Rich

    The other day a friend of mine approached me excitedly, saying, "I found the house of my dreams. It's in foreclosure and the bank will sell it to me for a great price." "How good is the price?" I asked. "Just before the real estate market crashed, the seller was asking $780,000 for the property. Today, I can buy it from the bank for $215,000. What do you think?" she asked. "How would I know?" I replied. "All you've given me is the price." "Yes!" she squealed. "Now my husband and I can afford it." "Only cheap people buy on price," I replied. "Just because something is cheap doesn't mean it's worth the cost." I then explained to her one of my most basic money principles: I buy value. I will pay more for value. If I don't like the price, I simply pass. If the seller wants to sell, he will come back with a better price. I let him tell me what he will accept. I know some people love to haggle; personally, I don't. If a person wants to sell, they will sell. If I feel what I am buying is of value, I'll pay the price. Value rather than price has made me rich. Against my advice, my friend sought financing for her "dream" home. Fortunately, the bank turned her down. The house was on a busy street in a deteriorating neighborhood. The high school four blocks away was one of the most dangerous schools in the city. Her son and daughter would either have to go to private school or take karate lessons. She is now looking for a cheaper house to buy and has asked her father, who is retired, for help with the down payment. If her past is a crystal ball to her future, she will likely always be cheap and poor, even though she is a good, kind, educated, hard-working person. My Point of View What follows are some thoughts on why my friend will probably never get ahead financially -- especially in this market. She and her husband have college degrees but zero financial education. Even worse, neither plans to attend any investment classes. Choosing to remain financially uneducated has caused them to miss out on the greatest bull and bear markets in history. As my rich dad often said, "What you don't know keeps you poor." She is too emotional. In the world of money and investing, you must learn to control your emotions. When you think about it, three of our biggest financial decisions in life are made at times of peak emotional excitement: deciding to get married, buying a home, and having kids. My dad often said, "High emotions, low intelligence." To be rich, you need to see the good and the bad, the short- and long-term consequences of your decisions. Obviously, this is easier said than done, but it's key to building wealth. She doesn't know the difference between advice from rich people and advice from sales people. Most people get their financial advice from the latter -- people who profit even if you lose. One reason why financial education is so important is because it helps you know the difference between good and bad advice. As the current crisis demonstrates, our schools teach very little about money management. Millions of people are living in fear because they followed conventional wisdom: Go to school, get a job, work hard, save money, buy a house, get out of debt, and invest for the long term in a well-diversified portfolio of mutual funds. Many people who followed this financial prescription are not sleeping at night. They need a new plan. Had they sought out a little financial education, they might not be entangled in this mess.

  • How to Get Rich Without getting Lucky

    You can’t earn non-linearly when you’re renting out your time You won’t get rich renting out your time Next you go into more specific details on how you can actually get rich, and how you can’t get rich. The first point was about how you’re not going to get rich: “You are not going to get rich renting out your time. You must own equity—a piece of the business—to gain your financial freedom.” **Naval:** This is probably one of the absolute most important points. People seem to think that you can create wealth, and make money through work. And it’s probably not going to work. There are many reasons for that. But the most basic is just that your inputs are very closely tied to your outputs. In almost any salaried job, even at one that’s paying a lot per hour like a lawyer, or a doctor, you’re still putting in the hours, and every hour you get paid. So, what that means is when you’re sleeping, you’re not earning. When you’re retired, you’re not earning. When you’re on vacation, you’re not earning. And you can’t earn non-linearly. If you look at even doctors who get rich, like really rich, it’s because they open a business. They open like a private practice. And that private practice builds a brand, and that brand attracts people. Or they build some kind of a medical device, or a procedure, or a process with an intellectual property. So, essentially you’re working for somebody else, and that person is taking on the risk, and has the accountability, and the intellectual property, and the brand. So, they’re just not gonna pay you enough. They’re gonna pay you the bare minimum that they have to, to get you to do their job. And that can be a high bare minimum, but it’s still not gonna be true wealth where you’re retired. **Renting out your time means you’re essentially replaceable** And then finally you’re actually just not even creating that much original for society. Like I said, this tweetstorm should have been called “How to Create Wealth.” It’s just “How to Get Rich” was a more catchy title. But you’re not creating new things for society. You’re just doing things over and over. And you’re essentially replaceable because you’re now doing a set role. Most set roles can be taught. If they can be taught like in a school, then eventually you’re gonna be competing with someone who’s got more recent knowledge, who’s been taught, and is coming in to replace you. You’re much more likely to be doing a job that can be eventually replaced by a robot, or by an AI. And it doesn’t even have to be wholesale replaced over night. It can be replaced a little bit at a time. And that kind of eats into your wealth creation, and therefore your earning capability. So, fundamentally your inputs are matched to your outputs. You are replaceable, and you’re not being creative. I just don’t think that, that is a way that you can truly make money. **You must own equity to gain your financial freedom** So everybody who really makes money at some point owns a piece of a product, or a business, or some kind of IP. That can be through stock options, so you can be working at a tech company. That’s a fine way to start. But usually the real wealth is created by starting your own companies, or by even investors. They’re in an investment firm, and they’re buying equity. These are much more the routes to wealth. It doesn’t come through the hours. **You want a career where your inputs don’t match your outputs** You really just want a job, or a career, or a profession where your inputs don’t match your outputs. If you look at modern society, again this is later in the tweetstorm. Businesses that have high creativity and high leverage tends to be ones where you could do an hour of work, and it can have a huge effect. Or you can do 1,000 hours of work, and it can have no effect. For example, look at software engineering. One great engineer can for example create bitcoin, and create billions of dollars worth of value. And an engineer who is working on the wrong thing, or not quite as good, or just not as creative, or thoughtful, or whatever, can work for an entire a year, and every piece of code they ship ends up not getting used. Customers don’t want it. That is an example of a profession where the input and the outputs are highly disconnected. It’s not based on the number of hours that you put in. Whereas on the extreme other end, if you’re a lumberjack, even the best lumberjack in the world, assuming you’re not working with tools, so the inputs and outputs are clearly connected. You’re just using an ax, or a saw. You know, the best lumberjack in the world may be like 3x better than one of the worst lumberjacks, right? It’s not gonna be a gigantic difference. So, you want to look for professions and careers where the inputs and outputs are highly disconnected. This is another way of saying that you want to look for things that are leveraged. And by leveraged I don’t mean financial leveraged alone, like Wall Street uses, and that has a bad name. I’m just talking about tools. We’re using tools. A computer is a tool that software engineers use. If I’m a lumberjack with bulldozers, and automatic robot axes, and saws, I’m gonna be using tools, and have more leverage than someone who is just using his bare hands, and trying to rip the trees out by the roots. Tools and leverage are what create this disconnection between inputs and outputs. Creativity, so the higher the creativity component of a profession, the more likely it is to have disconnected inputs and outputs. So, I think that if you’re looking at professions where your inputs and your outputs are highly connected, it’s gonna be very, very, hard to create wealth, and make wealth for yourself in that process.

bottom of page