11-05-2016, 04:41 PM
11-06-2016, 12:42 AM
Thanks for sharing
11-06-2016, 03:14 AM
(11-06-2016 12:42 AM)Topiano Wrote: [ -> ]Thanks for sharing
You're most welcome :)
11-06-2016, 04:59 AM
Sounds interesting, but I don't think Dan Kennedy is the right man to teach about mastering new skills. He has a few skills that he is a master of, particulary marketing positioning, copywriting and copying good copy, but to say that he is mastering new skills all the time (presupposed from the title) is not really a description of Dan as I have seen him in something like 30 courses.
11-06-2016, 06:20 AM
(11-06-2016 04:59 AM)edge1 Wrote: [ -> ]Sounds interesting, but I don't think Dan Kennedy is the right man to teach about mastering new skills. He has a few skills that he is a master of, particulary marketing positioning, copywriting and copying good copy, but to say that he is mastering new skills all the time (presupposed from the title) is not really a description of Dan as I have seen him in something like 30 courses.
Fair point edge! And actually, I felt the same way when I first came accross the "cassette" recordings (haha the announcer actually instructs the listener to turn over the cassette in the middle section)! But, in listening to it, there wasa gem or two (mainly around spaced repetition). That topic (spaced repetition) isn't new to me, nor or other ideas he brings up around active and passive learning, but I was thinking about how it may be a good intro for someone else in our community!
Also, it's a really short recording, so not a major investment of time either. Anyway, as with all content (especially "guru" content), it's probably better to take things with a grain of salt, but have an open mind. Keep what may be useful, discard what probably isn't.
At this stage in his career, Kennedy was probably trying to learn new skills himself too (keep in mind, the internet was starting to become "a thing" then, and he did reject it as a fad at first, considering his direct mail roots.... I don't remember which works of his gave me that impression but that was the gist I'd gotten about how he felt about the internet in the early days). Meanwhile now, it's funny to look back at him as someone who rejected the internet at first. But I guess that's part of the behind-the-scenes work that shows what he eventually felt needed to be done in order to adapt to the reality that marketing was changing, whether he liked the shift or not.
11-11-2016, 03:59 AM
11-11-2016, 01:38 PM
(11-11-2016 03:59 AM)LadyDee Wrote: [ -> ]
You're welcome LadyDee :)
11-14-2016, 07:38 AM
Great share rep5 added
11-14-2016, 02:44 PM
(11-14-2016 07:38 AM)chavala79 Wrote: [ -> ]Great share rep5 added
Glad you found it useful chavala. :)