Media Ecology Association, Toronto, June 20, 2014
“We shape our tools and thereafter our tools shape us” John Culkin, SJ
Technogenic cultures, such as ours, demonstrate tightly-coupled economic systems with cultural production. This has become a self-reinforcing societal process, where the production of technological efficiencies becomes an inviolable social good desirable as product of culture.
Design for Social Innovation A Brief OverviewPenny Hagen
This presentation is a quick introduction and overview of Design for Social Innovation, including some local examples. The presentation was developed for students of the Design and Business Major at Auckland University of Technology and aims to help show how design extends and is adapted for the challenges of social innovation - with an emphasis on community involvement, collaboration and ownership of 'design' and 'change'.
Internet Jerk: How I learned to stop making junk and start making stuff that ...Melbourne Geek Night
The world's biggest brands and best digital talent are actively making the internet worse, bit by bit. But there’s no good reason why we shouldn’t be using the same opportunities to make stuff that adds value to people's lives. This is Adam's story of learning to design for Good.
Building beyond sustainability: an introduction to needs based designStack Strategy
Needs Based Design is an approach, framework and method that provides development teams with a common language, strategy and method for constructing and maintaining communities that help society move towards, and beyond, sustainability.
Needs Based Design uses an ‘outside-in,’ systems thinking approach to pursue the full potential of a project by addressing complex problems and the needs of individuals early in the process with everyone present.
The Needs Based Design framework provides a structure for decision-making that allows urban design and planning to be approached from a scientifically-derived definition of sustainability and uses ‘backcasting’, ‘meaningful participation’ and ‘strategic guidelines’ to guide development at the project level.
The IDEA method helps development teams stay on the same page by asking them to state the Intents of their project, Discover the needs of the social and natural communities that it will exist within, Envision a successful future for all and Act to achieve that vision through an integrated design process.
Presenting at Startup Edmonton for Make Something Edmonton, SiG National Executive Director, Tim Draimin, explores "Making Change Through Social Innovation" - introducing what social innovation is, why it is important, and the opportunity for Alberta to become a social innovation leader.
What is social Innovation? Why is social innovation position to drive change in telecentres and telecentres networks? What is the process of social innovation? The Australian Centre for Social Innovation shares its views with the telecentre movement.
Presenting in partnership with United Way Central Alberta in Red Deer, SiG National Executive Director, Tim Draimin, explores social innovation: what it is, why it is important, and the opportunity for Alberta to become a social innovation leader.
Design for Social Innovation A Brief OverviewPenny Hagen
This presentation is a quick introduction and overview of Design for Social Innovation, including some local examples. The presentation was developed for students of the Design and Business Major at Auckland University of Technology and aims to help show how design extends and is adapted for the challenges of social innovation - with an emphasis on community involvement, collaboration and ownership of 'design' and 'change'.
Internet Jerk: How I learned to stop making junk and start making stuff that ...Melbourne Geek Night
The world's biggest brands and best digital talent are actively making the internet worse, bit by bit. But there’s no good reason why we shouldn’t be using the same opportunities to make stuff that adds value to people's lives. This is Adam's story of learning to design for Good.
Building beyond sustainability: an introduction to needs based designStack Strategy
Needs Based Design is an approach, framework and method that provides development teams with a common language, strategy and method for constructing and maintaining communities that help society move towards, and beyond, sustainability.
Needs Based Design uses an ‘outside-in,’ systems thinking approach to pursue the full potential of a project by addressing complex problems and the needs of individuals early in the process with everyone present.
The Needs Based Design framework provides a structure for decision-making that allows urban design and planning to be approached from a scientifically-derived definition of sustainability and uses ‘backcasting’, ‘meaningful participation’ and ‘strategic guidelines’ to guide development at the project level.
The IDEA method helps development teams stay on the same page by asking them to state the Intents of their project, Discover the needs of the social and natural communities that it will exist within, Envision a successful future for all and Act to achieve that vision through an integrated design process.
Presenting at Startup Edmonton for Make Something Edmonton, SiG National Executive Director, Tim Draimin, explores "Making Change Through Social Innovation" - introducing what social innovation is, why it is important, and the opportunity for Alberta to become a social innovation leader.
What is social Innovation? Why is social innovation position to drive change in telecentres and telecentres networks? What is the process of social innovation? The Australian Centre for Social Innovation shares its views with the telecentre movement.
Presenting in partnership with United Way Central Alberta in Red Deer, SiG National Executive Director, Tim Draimin, explores social innovation: what it is, why it is important, and the opportunity for Alberta to become a social innovation leader.
An excellent white paper outlining the importance of multi-partnerships to develop community & social innovation for complex human service & social issues.
The Role of Social Media in Sustainability Oriented PracticesFahad Ramzan
The Role of Social Media in Sustainability Oriented Practices
Presented By: Fahad Ramzan
https://www.facebook.com/Fahad.R.Rehmani
pk.linkedin.com/in/fahadramzan/
https://twitter.com/FRamzan
SPECIAL EVENT Social Entrepreneurship Training: Developing Community Capital ...DavidHopkins
Are you engaging your community as effectively as you could, whether for your business, product launch, event, or fundraising campaign? This Social Entrepreneurship Training will teach you the newest trends in corporate innovation, social responsibility, triple-bottom line accounting, and strategic partnership building. After this seminar, accelerate your impact in the markets and communities you serve. Come join us to make a profound, values-driven shift to better engage your community “beyond sustainability.”
A pretty comprehensive summary of the nexus of concepts that my current project .commUNITY is working on. We have rebranded the concept as an Ekosystem.
Sustainability, social innovations and information technologyTomislav Rozman
Is a bitcoin a social innovation? Is it sustainable? It depends on the point of view. Who is a sustainable leader? Can you learn about it to become one?
A result of TeachSus project, presented on 15. Feb. 2019 in Ljubljana, Slovenia (Multiplier Event).
As the world’s problems become more interconnected and complex, there is an increasingly large role for engineers to play in the realm of innovation, both in the business and social sector. Speaking to the students of the DEEP Summer Engineering Academy, I go through various case studies of social innovation.
Over the last 21 years, PARK has worked with Design Leaders and Design Teams all over the world, helping them to maximise the business and consumer impact of Design.
As we look forward to the next 21 years, it’s clear that the business landscape is changing, and the companies that win in the future will be those that make a positive contribution to the world - those driven by an authentic, deep-rooted purpose.
At PARK, we believe that this shift creates a significant opportunity for Design Leaders to step-up and help business leaders address some of the world’s most pressing environmental and social challenges.
If you’re an established Design Leader that believes Design can do more; join us this September at Raymond 21 as we seek to collectively re-think the role of design, and work towards a humanity-centered future.
Looking forward to meet you in Hamburg!
For more information visit our website Raymond at www.empdl.com or contact boogerd@park.bz.
FUEL is a collaborative forum for leaders, entrepreneurs, creators and engaged citizens to come together and reimagine our collective future.
The FUEL Report is a summary of the ideas and discussions shared at the 2014 FUEL forum, with additional insights drawn from our continuing work in this field.
The report is organized into three broad shifts that frame the conversation: Money to Meaning, Individual to Group, Siloism to Meritocracy.
Social innovation a new fad in entreprenurship ecosystemPraveen Asokan
Social Innovation
- A New Fad in the Entrepreneurship Ecosystem
This is a blog post written by me for Startup Weekend-Social Innovation-Bangalore held form 29th to 31st May 2015.
WECREATE Innovation presents a thought piece on 'next practice' on how to co-create breakthrough purpose-driven innovations. It contains tools, approaches, processes, mindsets and cultures, killers of innovation and drivers of innovation and more. A thorough synthesis of available thinking and cutting-edge tools from the WECREATE experience of doing disruptive innovation with leading NGOs, national and local government and Fortune 500 companies. With the intention of helping all innovators generate and implement breakthroughs - particularly those working in the complex social and impact economies.
A Pastoral Reflection on the Changes and Challenges Challenging the Church i...Peter Chan
A personal pastoral reflection shared at the Christian Education Seminar of Glory Presbyterian Church Singapore (2013 July 13) and also at the English Presbytery (Singapore) Mentoring Fellowship (2013 August 06).
An excellent white paper outlining the importance of multi-partnerships to develop community & social innovation for complex human service & social issues.
The Role of Social Media in Sustainability Oriented PracticesFahad Ramzan
The Role of Social Media in Sustainability Oriented Practices
Presented By: Fahad Ramzan
https://www.facebook.com/Fahad.R.Rehmani
pk.linkedin.com/in/fahadramzan/
https://twitter.com/FRamzan
SPECIAL EVENT Social Entrepreneurship Training: Developing Community Capital ...DavidHopkins
Are you engaging your community as effectively as you could, whether for your business, product launch, event, or fundraising campaign? This Social Entrepreneurship Training will teach you the newest trends in corporate innovation, social responsibility, triple-bottom line accounting, and strategic partnership building. After this seminar, accelerate your impact in the markets and communities you serve. Come join us to make a profound, values-driven shift to better engage your community “beyond sustainability.”
A pretty comprehensive summary of the nexus of concepts that my current project .commUNITY is working on. We have rebranded the concept as an Ekosystem.
Sustainability, social innovations and information technologyTomislav Rozman
Is a bitcoin a social innovation? Is it sustainable? It depends on the point of view. Who is a sustainable leader? Can you learn about it to become one?
A result of TeachSus project, presented on 15. Feb. 2019 in Ljubljana, Slovenia (Multiplier Event).
As the world’s problems become more interconnected and complex, there is an increasingly large role for engineers to play in the realm of innovation, both in the business and social sector. Speaking to the students of the DEEP Summer Engineering Academy, I go through various case studies of social innovation.
Over the last 21 years, PARK has worked with Design Leaders and Design Teams all over the world, helping them to maximise the business and consumer impact of Design.
As we look forward to the next 21 years, it’s clear that the business landscape is changing, and the companies that win in the future will be those that make a positive contribution to the world - those driven by an authentic, deep-rooted purpose.
At PARK, we believe that this shift creates a significant opportunity for Design Leaders to step-up and help business leaders address some of the world’s most pressing environmental and social challenges.
If you’re an established Design Leader that believes Design can do more; join us this September at Raymond 21 as we seek to collectively re-think the role of design, and work towards a humanity-centered future.
Looking forward to meet you in Hamburg!
For more information visit our website Raymond at www.empdl.com or contact boogerd@park.bz.
FUEL is a collaborative forum for leaders, entrepreneurs, creators and engaged citizens to come together and reimagine our collective future.
The FUEL Report is a summary of the ideas and discussions shared at the 2014 FUEL forum, with additional insights drawn from our continuing work in this field.
The report is organized into three broad shifts that frame the conversation: Money to Meaning, Individual to Group, Siloism to Meritocracy.
Social innovation a new fad in entreprenurship ecosystemPraveen Asokan
Social Innovation
- A New Fad in the Entrepreneurship Ecosystem
This is a blog post written by me for Startup Weekend-Social Innovation-Bangalore held form 29th to 31st May 2015.
WECREATE Innovation presents a thought piece on 'next practice' on how to co-create breakthrough purpose-driven innovations. It contains tools, approaches, processes, mindsets and cultures, killers of innovation and drivers of innovation and more. A thorough synthesis of available thinking and cutting-edge tools from the WECREATE experience of doing disruptive innovation with leading NGOs, national and local government and Fortune 500 companies. With the intention of helping all innovators generate and implement breakthroughs - particularly those working in the complex social and impact economies.
A Pastoral Reflection on the Changes and Challenges Challenging the Church i...Peter Chan
A personal pastoral reflection shared at the Christian Education Seminar of Glory Presbyterian Church Singapore (2013 July 13) and also at the English Presbytery (Singapore) Mentoring Fellowship (2013 August 06).
What makes places like Silicon Valley tick?
Can we replicate that magic in other places?
How do you foster innovation in your own networks?
The Rainforest is a groundbreaking new book from two of the world’s leading experts at the intersection of venture capital and global development. Victor W. Hwang and Greg Horowitt propose a radical new theory to explain the nature of innovation ecosystems -- human networks that generate extraordinary creativity and economic output. They argue that free market thinking fails to consider the impact of human nature on the innovation process. This ambitious work challenges basic assumptions that economists have held for over a century.
Kirkus Revews: "insightful, forward-thinking..." "provocative..." "Hwang and Horowitt write with authority and wit, carefully backing up their theory with substantive examples. Readers get the feeling that the authors have unveiled a very big, important concept, one that could serve as the basis for intentionally, methodically developing other “rainforests” similar to Silicon Valley."
Read a preview at: www.therainforestbook.com
The 7 Shifts were developed by Tommy Crawford, Brian Fitzgerald, Amrekha Sharma, and Iris Maertens to help frame a change agenda for Greenpeace International. They were derived from a series of workshops worldwide that articulated Greenpeace's overarching story and posed the question: "What would be different about the organisation that truly lived that story from the organisation of today?"
Tommy and Brian now help other beautiful troublemakers articulate their stories and their shifts through their creative agency, Dancing Fox.
Attribution: Story Team, Greenpeace International
Developing a culture of innovation, especially of radical innovation, is extremely challenging - perhaps nothing could be more challenging for an organisation, particularly those entrenched in conventional, risk-averse and hierarchical management practices. What is more, the usual costs associated with such a wholesale change management process are prohibitively high in this economy and risk alienating staff. But there is another way...
This is a career development workshop, which shifts participants' awareness toward a clarity of vision and career opportunities that "do well" for yourself while "doing good" for others.
The media plays an important role in defining who we are, what we desire and what is acceptable (or not) in our reality.
In this talk, we discuss the current state of affairs and discuss how we improve upon it.
This is the actual slides presented at Arizona State University on February 10th, 2014
Society is at the cusp of the 5th Industrial Revolution, which in reality is a New Renaissance as every aspect of life, work, and existence will change dramatically. The key to adapting to the new lifestyles and norms is to handle social and societal changes is to perform massive transformations. The problem is that governments and current institutions have no clue as to how to handle massive transformations. They do not have the right institutions in place or programs to handle such extensive transformations. This presentation offers a few clues as to what is happening and how to handle those massive ntransformations.
"What got us here, wont get us there!" Pirelli july 2014 Mebs Loghdey
I have developed and delivered two fresh and interesting sessions for Hyper Island, Unilever, Mercer and Pirelli. These sessions were developed as a response the Innovation and Sustainability imperatives faced by most managers.
Entitled "What got us here won't get us there!", this sessions teach managers about
1. Language, metaphor and reframing
2. Q-storming - designing powerful questions
3. Systems thinking
Managers leave these sessions better equipped to engage a future that is at once digital, mobile, social, green and data rich.
Systemic Design Toolkit - Systems Innovation BarcelonaPeter Jones
The Systemic Design Toolkit represents a formalized set of methods and research tools designed by Namahn and developed with collaboration by me (SDA) and Alex Ryan of MaRS. The Toolkit can be discovered at https://www.systemicdesigntoolkit.org/
Anticipatory Factors in Dialogic Design ISSS 2016Peter Jones
Applications of the systemic practices of dialogic design (Structured Dialogic Design and it variants) have recently developed and integrated futures and foresight models as anticipatory frameworks for policy and long-term planning situations (Weigand, et al, 2014). We have identified this model of practice as collaborative foresight, reflecting the perspective from practice that futures literacy must be considered an essential complement to multi-stakeholder deliberation where complex and competing interests are considered in planning and decision making. This study proposes approaches to advancement in science and practice that integrate essential properties of collective anticipatory modelling for design decisions.
Scientific principles for dialogic design have been developed and practiced over the course of nearly 50 years of developmental evolution, following Warfield’s (1986) Domain of Science Model (DoSM) and Christakis’ (2006, 2008) research extending the DoSM. One of the key principles in the DoSM refers to the recursive learning necessary to develop systemic practices, a second-order (deutero) learning process as noted in Warfield’s DoSM cycle. The standard model requires warranted claims to be evaluated from their testing in the Arena of real-world practice and reflective learning in order to advance new theory for inclusion in the accepted Corpus (theory supported by accepted evidence).
Recent developments from practice following from advanced design and strategic foresight theory lend support for progressing the models of dialogic design to explicitly entail methods of design and futuring within the historical model of dialogue. The observation driving this proposal can be summarized as “participants in collective designing efforts are likely to fail in their expected outcomes if they do not facilitate the requisite anticipation of future complexity in their domain of action.” Simply put, people will make significantly better plans and policies together if they can develop competency in futures thinking and share their understanding with one another.
Flourishing Societies Framework - DwD Workshop Peter Jones
How might we move or collective thinking and action beyond single-issue social action?
Does it make sense to build our urban worlds and future societies by winning one political issue at a time?
Can we design civic business models for our cities and society?
All social services, determinants of health, and economics are complex and interrelated. So why do we expect any political body or activist group to get it right? Only meaningfully diverse, multi-stakeholder groups can envision the variety of interests and outcomes in complex social systems. In February's Design with Dialogue Peter Jones workshops tools for co-creating civic design proposals.
A significant design challenge of our time is anticipating the relationships of multiple environmental and social problems as a complex system of nonlinear relationships. However, we cannot think about, model or discuss the relationships well, especially in the heat of discussion with deliberative groups and decision making processes. We need not only better engagement and dialogue processes for citizen deliberative problem solving, we require relevant tools.
With the OCADU Strongly Sustainable Business Model Group and with Strategic Foresight & Innovation students we designed a relevant framework from the common language of business model tools, adapted for civic decision models for flourishing cities and settlements.
The Flourishing Cities framework adapts a design tool for strongly sustainable business models as a visual organizer for engaging stakeholders in co-creating normative operational guidance for civic groups, community planners, and local governments. Flourishing can be understood as “to live within an optimal range of human functioning, one that connotes goodness, generativity, growth, and resilience,” or as John Ehrenfeld states it:
“Flourishing is the possibility that human and other life will flourish on this planet forever.”
This visual model enables a participatory mapping of propositions, values, and preferences that might yield significantly better group decisions for sociocultural and ecological development and governance in any planning engagement.
Presentation by Peter Jones at RSD4 Banff, Alberta, 2015. Society can be defined as an object of culture, as culture is a medium for the collective development of social systems. Societies are not designed by a deliberative process, but are social entities that emerge over time as response to historicity and cultural development, and function largely by tacit agreement as observed in social norms.
In the 1960’s social systemicists such as Ozbekhan, Fuller, and Doxiadis advocated deliberative civic planning as a normative science for designing sustainable and preferable societies and settlements. Even though their original methodologies of normative planning (Ozbekhan), anticipatory design science (Fuller) and ekistics (Doxiadis) did not gain the results hoped in applications over time, these arguments could be lodged against most systems methodologies. Yet when we consider their views of the human capacity to design future outcomes as a serious social and political project, we in our fragmented polities in the postmodern era might take heed. An argument follows that we, as cultural innovators in our own societies, having access to the wisdom of successful past transitions or redirections, have also failed to motivate and enact changes requisite to our common concerns.
A systemic design approach is proposed toward constructing such idealizations as a necessary initial condition. The approach reconciles wisdom from our sociocultural histories with collaborative design practices of the current era to construct shared pathways to desired and feasible societal futures.
Designing Futures to Flourish: ISSS 2015 keynotePeter Jones
We now find ourselves as a systems thinking community inquiring into planetary governance for climate and ecological politics. The Anthropocene demands a planetary response, and yet we often find even our fellow travelers tethered to discourses of technological management, cultural change, and right action. We might now advocate a stronger role for social systems design as a process for continual engagement of citizen stakeholders, and between these citizens and policy makers, as advocated by Christakis, Ulrich and others. As we have seen power (economic and political) separate from its cultural histories, and become globalized, we may find ourselves in trajectories of action but with marginal power to effect societal outcomes.
We are faced with a dual mandate of restorative system design, recovering human needs in our communities, and policy system design, restoring the long historical arc toward democratic governance. And as these are both designable contexts, systemic design can integrate ecological, technological and design thinking to guide policy in more productive ways.
• We find ourselves captured in the politics of solutionism. Most presentations of the “problems” as stated before us reveal a trajectory of preferred solutions and their possible shortcomings.
• Climate change, even the entire Anthropocene aeonic perspective, represents a problematique of multiple effects systems. We are bound up in political discourses of “system change” and do not share a compelling common view of a flourishing world. We seem unable to reregister the most compelling societal choices and drivers save carbon mitigation.
• We have not conducted, to my knowledge, a substantial stakeholder discovery that extends beyond the immediate and obvious primary combatants in the climate change wars.
• As citizens and political actors on the planetary stage, we have been afraid or unable to present a clear view of the risk scenarios, possible governance strategies, or a normative plan for serious global investment. If the planet were a business concern, it would be in receivership by now.
The Flourishing Cities FrameworkSystemic Civil Planning for an Urban Busin...Peter Jones
Workshop at Urban Ecologies 2015. Today’s participatory design workshop is to learn and employ the Flourishing Cities canvas as a system map for designing civil governance processes. The Flourishing Cities framework adapts a design tool for constructing strongly sustainable business models as a visual organizer for engaging stakeholders in co-creating values-centred operational guidance for urban planners and local governments.
This is based on research work developed from OCADU sLab Strongly Sustainable Business Model group as applied to the flourishing of cities and settlements.
SDD Symposium - Bringing Design to Dialogic Design Peter Jones
Design competencies address many gaps in current SDD practice:
- Lack of methods defined for Discovery
- Contested ways of enacting Action from planning
- Creative approaches to coalition formation
- Ability to better adapt & stage practices to differing cultures
Systemic Design Principles & Methods (Royal College of Art)Peter Jones
For a guest lecture for Qian Sun and the RCA Service Design program, April 29, 2015, Talk based on the 10 shared design principles for complex social systems, related to the 2014 paper: https://ocad.academia.edu/PeterJones and http://designdialogues.com/publications/
Artifacts for the Systemic Design of Flourishing Enterprises - OCADU Research Peter Jones
Human commerce utilizes the most significant share of natural resources and produces the largest aggregate impact on the earth’s environment. As a consequence of modern employment and work cultures, commerce, corporations as opposed to governments, also construct much of the social contract and social organizational forms in developed societies. Sustainable development movements to conserve resources and to democratize or enhance organizational practices have called for culture change or transformation. However, these approaches have not yielded results that will significantly enhance human flourishing in the face of globalized commerce, which has no common governance system. We suggest that the goals of alignment toward sustainable development or so-called corporate sustainability are misguided and systemically depreciative, as they purport to sustain activities that foreseeably accelerate ecological degradation. We propose a modeling practice for stakeholder design of strongly sustainable enterprises for the intention of whole system flourishing across living ecosystems and organized social systems. This systemic design approach to business transformation functions at the level of the business model. We claim that business model design affords the highest leverage across all modes of organizing for collective cultural adoption ecosystemic practices.
Systemic Design Principles & Methods ISSS 2014Peter Jones
Research paper presentation at ISSS 2014: Design Research Methods for Systemic Design: Perspectives from Design Education and Practice
The recent development of systemic design as a research-based practice draws on long-held precedents in the system sciences toward representation of complex social and enterprise systems. A precedent article, published as Systemic Design Principles for Complex Social Systems (Jones, 2014) established an axiomatic and epistemological basis for complementary principles shared between design reasoning and systems theory. The current paper aims to establish a basis for identifying shared methods (techne) and action practice (phronesis). Systemic design is distinguished from user-oriented or industrial design practices in terms of its direct relationship to systems theory and explicit adoption of social system design tenets. Systemic design is concerned with higher-order socially-organized systems that encompass multiple subsystems in a complex policy, organizational or product-service context. By integrating systems thinking and its methods, systemic design brings human-centered design to complex, multi-stakeholder service systems as those found in industrial networks, transportation, medicine and healthcare. It adapts from known design competencies - form and process reasoning, social and generative research methods, and sketching and visualization practices - to describe, map, propose and reconfigure complex services and systems.
An agenda for Systemic Design - An emerging research and educational track in systems sciences and design.
Peter Jones talk at ISSS 2014
Movements in Design & Systems Thinking
Education Movements
RSD3 Symposium
Systemic Design Research
Relationship to Systems Community
Textile Chemical Brochure - Tradeasia (1).pdfjeffmilton96
Explore Tradeasia’s brochure for eco-friendly textile chemicals. Enhance your textile production with high-quality, sustainable solutions for superior fabric quality.
Salma Karina Hayat is Conscious Digital Transformation Leader at Kudos | Empowering SMEs via CRM & Digital Automation | Award-Winning Entrepreneur & Philanthropist | Education & Homelessness Advocate
Best Crypto Marketing Ideas to Lead Your Project to SuccessIntelisync
In this comprehensive slideshow presentation, we delve into the intricacies of crypto marketing, offering invaluable insights and strategies to propel your project to success in the dynamic cryptocurrency landscape. From understanding market trends to building a robust brand identity, engaging with influencers, and analyzing performance metrics, we cover all aspects essential for effective marketing in the crypto space.
Also Intelisync, our cutting-edge service designed to streamline and optimize your marketing efforts, leveraging data-driven insights and innovative strategies to drive growth and visibility for your project.
With a data-driven approach, transparent communication, and a commitment to excellence, InteliSync is your trusted partner for driving meaningful impact in the fast-paced world of Web3. Contact us today to learn more and embark on a journey to crypto marketing mastery!
Ready to elevate your Web3 project to new heights? Contact InteliSync now and unleash the full potential of your crypto venture!
When listening about building new Ventures, Marketplaces ideas are something very frequent. On this session we will discuss reasons why you should stay away from it :P , by sharing real stories and misconceptions around them. If you still insist to go for it however, you will at least get an idea of the important and critical strategies to optimize for success like Product, Business Development & Marketing, Operations :)
Reflect Festival Limassol May 2024.
Michael Economou is an Entrepreneur, with Business & Technology foundations and a passion for Innovation. He is working with his team to launch a new venture – Exyde, an AI powered booking platform for Activities & Experiences, aspiring to revolutionize the way we travel and experience the world. Michael has extensive entrepreneurial experience as the co-founder of Ideas2life, AtYourService as well as Foody, an online delivery platform and one of the most prominent ventures in Cyprus’ digital landscape, acquired by Delivery Hero group in 2019. This journey & experience marks a vast expertise in building and scaling marketplaces, enhancing everyday life through technology and making meaningful impact on local communities, which is what Michael and his team are pursuing doing once more with Exyde www.goExyde.com
What You're Going to Learn
- How These 4 Leaks Force You To Work Longer And Harder in order to grow your income… improve just one of these and the impact could be life changing.
- How to SHUT DOWN the revolving door of Income Stagnation… you know, where new sales come into your magazine while at the same time existing sponsors exit.
- How to transform your magazine business by fixing the 4 “DON’Ts”...
#1 LEADS Don’t Book
#2 PROSPECTS Don’t Show
#3 PROSPECTS Don’t Buy
#4 CLIENTS Don’t Stay
- How to identify which leak to fix first so you get the biggest bang for your income.
- Get actionable strategies you can use right away to improve your bookings, sales and retention.
How to Build a Diversified Investment Portfolio.pdfTrims Creators
Building a diversified investment portfolio is a fundamental strategy to manage risk and optimize returns. For both novice and experienced investors, diversification offers a pathway to a more stable and resilient financial future. Here’s an in-depth guide on how to create and maintain a well-diversified investment portfolio.
Explore Sarasota Collection's exquisite and long-lasting dining table sets and chairs in Sarasota. Elevate your dining experience with our high-quality collection!