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Tuesday, December 30, 2014

The 9 Marketing Disciplines of Great SaaS Companies

TOMASZ TUNGUZ

venture capitalist at redpoint

The 9 Marketing Disciplines of Great SaaS Companies

Bill Macaitis, the former CMO of Zendesk, articulates how a SaaS marketing team should operate better than anybody else I've met. At a recent Point9 conference, Bill outlined the 9 marketing disciplines of great SaaS companies and how they fit together to create a marketing powerhouse. I've copied my notes from Bill's talk below.

Ops & Analytics Team
The operations and analytics teams is the first marketing team every SaaS company should build because this team you erects the experimental infrastructure for determining which marketing tactics are viable. Over time, it also becomes the largest team.

Zendesk employed a combination of products to build this infrastructure including Convertro, Google Analytics, Infer, Optimizely and DemandBase. This team employed sophisticated attribution models to understand precisely how many impressions and the types of impressions were required to catalyze a conversion to paid event.

In addition to managing the experiments of performance marketing, the Ops and Analytics team measures qualitative metrics like net promoter score, aided and unaided recall, and sentiment analysis of the brand. These qualitative analyses provided Zendesk insight into the top five reasons users recommended product and the top five reasons users didn't convert to customers, informative data for adjusting marketing tactics and guiding the product roadmap.

Customer Evangelism
Zendesk's strong brand enabled its efficient growth. Bill's team built the brand by investing in long term initiatives like customer evangelism and content.

Bill tasked the customer evangelism team with three goals. First, to identify evangelists; second, to nurture relationships with them; and third to leverage their enthusiasm for the product to drive awareness and ultimate conversions.

For example, this team would mine the results of the net promoter score surveys for people who self identified as evangelists. The customer evangelism team would build a relationship with them and eventually ask them to write reviews, speak, or for customers on the company's behalf, creating a huge library of positive reviews all over the web.

Content
Bill frames the value of the brand incredibly well. In his words, "A brand is the sum total of all interactions a customer has with the company. I never want a customer's first interaction with a product to feel like visiting a used car salesman. In SaaS, that means the first visit is the pricing page."

To ensure this didn't happen, Bill and his content team devised a content marketing strategy that mimicked the buying process of their target customer. The team created content (text, audio and video) for the top, middle and bottom of the funnel. Top of the funnel content focuses on industry questions like the Top 5 Trends in Customer Support, or the Top 10 Interview Questions for Support Teams. Top of the funnel content identifies Zendesk as a helpful resource in the ecosystem to future customers.

Middle of the funnel content introduces the company and some of the key value propositions that solve tactical challenges for customers. Bottom of the funnel content focused on a specific features in the product that would trigger a conversion to paid event.

Creating content at scale is challenging. So, much of the inspiration for the content came from interviews with different team members within the company. In addition, content is the second largest marketing team at Zendesk.

Paid
The third largest team is paid acquisition. Many SaaS companies equate paid acquisition to marketing. In Bill'n view, this is short-sighted. Paid is just one part of the nine disciplines of marketing.

Zendesk used paid acquisition to target and saturate a particular vertical, geography, customer segment, or company. The Ops and Analytics teams' infrastructure enabled the company to quickly determine which channels worked to drive leads and which built brand equity.

Zendesk used video frequently because it was less competitive than SEO/SEM. They also advertised on the search "Zendesk alternatives" by creating a fictitious alt rock band called Zendesk Alternative. The video went viral, further bolstering the brand.

Website/Conversion Team
Known better know as growth hacking, the Website/Conversion team is a group of front-end and back-end engineers optimizing the various funnels potential users may go through, by creating referral program, testing new designs on the website and experimenting with incentives.

Product Marketing
Zendesk's product marketing team focuses on understanding customer needs, segmenting the market and developing pricing plans to meet their needs.

When Zendesk moved into the enterprise, the company tested substantially higher price points. Like other Veblen Goods, Zendesk's product increased in demand as the team increased the price point. The higher price conferred a greater perception of value and quality to enterprise customers accustomed to paying large amounts for software.

Lifecycle Nuturing
The typical enterprise customer will have 10-30 interactions with a company before buying software. And because of upsell and cross-sell after the sale, more than half of the customer's revenue potential occurs after the customer starts to pay. The lifecycle team strengthens the companys' relationship with the customer throughout this lifecycle.

Zendesk marketed to existing customers most effectively by building an internal a messaging platform within their product that allowed very granular targeting and segmentation of their users. For example, if a user checks the reports tab frequently and a new advanced reporting feature were released, they might receive free access for 30 days to the advanced reports.

Comms
The marketing communications team is a PR team managing the brand strategy, brand narrative and the public relations of the company.

International
Zendesk structured their international team differently than most companies. They hired native speakers of their target countries to work at headquarters in San Francisco. Keeping these marketers at HQ enabled them to stay connected to the company and feel empowered rather than isolated.

The field marketing teams complemented the HQ-based marketing teams. But these field marketing teams focused more on user activation, sales enablement and training, rather than feature announcements and content.

Bill has built marketing teams at four very successful companies. It's plain to see why. He has mastered the structure, organization and management of large scale marketing teams that balance performance advertising and brand building, top and bottom of the funnel, product marketing and growth hacking.

Y


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Sunday, December 28, 2014

Mengapa Startup gagal ?

Pertanyaan yang sama, pernah saya lontarkan ke diri saya sendiri, waktu memulai ini beberapa tahun yang lalu, di 2005 tepatnya. Tapi saya perhatikan, hingga sekarang masih valid apa yang ditampilkan dalam gambar dibawah ini.

Monday, December 22, 2014

Big Data: Faster. How Sisense’s Crowd Accelerated Analytics platform can boost the banking world - International Banker

Untuk dunia finansial, gunakan Sisense untuk analisa beragam data.

Big Data: Faster. How Sisense's Crowd Accelerated Analytics platform can boost the banking world - International Banker

Big Data: Faster. How Sisense's Crowd Accelerated Analytics platform can boost the banking world

By Leron Kornreich, Communications Director, Sisense

Financial institutions and banks know what to do with traditional data. They've been using and processing huge amounts of data long before anybody was talking about Big Data, yet the financial world has been slow to join the Big Data revolution. The banking world is often described as conservative, and, until recently, hasn't been quick to adopt technological solutions to solve financial problems.

All that could be about to change. Sisense, the Big Data Company, with offices in Israel and now NYC, offers a faster, cheaper solution to data processing issues facing banks and large financial institutions. At the Strata+ Hadoop World Conference in NYC last month Sisense unveiled the latest version of their Prism BI tool- Prism 2.0 in-chip technology with Crowd Accelerated Analytics. This means that whilst other data analytics tools slow down trying to information, Sisense's Prism speeds up the more queries it has to deal with, even if they aren't under the same query. "While other solutions get clunky and costlier as load increases, SiSense Prism gets faster and overcomes the increased expenses associated with slow-downs," says Amit Bendov, CEO, SiSense. "It's like we're breaking the laws of physics. We call it power querying."

Non-traditional data sources

Big Data Analytics Solutions, such as Sisense can pull huge amounts of data, including from non-traditional sources including social media and search engine queries, and can process it to help financial institutions gain greater insight into their customers, and into their transactions. Most Big Data solutions slow down when processing huge amounts of data, resulting in processing that is costly and slow. Prism 2.0 Crowd Accelerated Analytics maximises data processing, both from traditional and non-traditional sources for banks and other institutions with large-scale financial data, allowing different team members to query and process the same data set without slowing down the processor.

Improved customer relationships, better risk management

Big Data Analytics such as SiSense Prism 2.0 offer financial institutions the possibility of improving their customer relations, by using non-traditional data to understand their customer behaviour. By collecting data both from social media and google search a bank will better understand it's online reputation, and how better to offer their customers what they are looking for.

Big Data also helps banks and other financial institutions with their risk management. Combing social data, news sources and other available information together with tradition financial data the bank may hold allows them to get a clearer picture of transactions, and the risk they involve. Big Data is vital for traders, and other financial professionals deal with high-risk transactions, and the speed the data is processed is crucial to financial success.

Big Data Analytics may offer a boost to the financial world, but processing all that data gets expensive, and when dealing with the massive data input of the banking world, any established data solution was bound to be slow. Cue SiSense's release of Prism 2.0 last month. Now Big Data solutions are quicker, because the more data is inputted the faster the results will be. SiSense's Crowd Accelerated Analytics are a revolution for the banking word precisely because the product can handle massive data, whilst maintaining optimum speed, even for complex queries.

Unlike some enterprise BI products, Prism 2.0 In-chip technology is relevant to financial organizations and institutions of all sizes. SiSense is democratizing Big Data Analytics by pioneering a new approach that enables organizations of all sizes to make sense of their data. SiSense Prism™ — powered by Elasticube™ technology — delivers unmatched performance, agility & value. With customers in 49 countries, including global brands like Target, ESPN, Merck and NASA, SiSense was recently recognized as one of the "10 Most Innovative IT Ventures" at Under the Radar and designated a company to watch by Information Management and Prism won the "Audience Choice" award at the O'Reilly Strata Conference.

http://internationalbanker.com/technology/big-data-faster-how-sisenses-crowd-accelerated-analytics-platform-can-boost-the-banking-world/

Via Dolphin Browser

Sunday, December 21, 2014

15 IT Trends for 2015

Check this out.

15 IT Trends for 2015


Posted by Sarah Lahav on Thursday, 11 December 2014 in Technologies
15 IT Trends for 2015



To shepherd in the New Year I've created a list of 15 IT trends for 2015. They're in no particular order, and most are not new – they're just more relevant in 2015 given the long lead time for mass corporate adoption of new technologies, practices, and thinking despite what industry pundits get excited about and predict…

Increased automation. There's no escaping that people costs continue to be a big part of total IT costs. The use of cloud services will continue to reduce this (with cloud service providers achieving lower costs through both economies of scale and the use of automation) but there is still a need to reduce human touch points, and the associated costs, within corporate data centers and operational environments – with speedier delivery and fewer human errors secondary benefits. 2015 will see even greater automation adoption by corporate IT organizations under pressure to reduce costs and better demonstrate business value.
Continued cloud adoption. IT organizations will continue to move IT services (whether buying SaaS, IaaS, or PaaS) to third-party cloud service providers. Security will continue to be a cause for concern, especially as the media's breach article frenzy continues. However, the ability to integrate (with existing on-premise and newer cloud services) – and have always-up service availability – will rise to be two very practical concerns for enterprise cloud adoption. From an IT management point of view, organizations will need to continue to seek out people with the ability to manage suppliers and service delivery. Nonetheless, IT will continue to head to the cloud in 2015.
The growth of hybrid cloud. Only the foolish ever thought that large enterprises would move everything from the corporate data center to the cloud. Yes, new companies might be able to rely on third-party cloud service providers but for those with a long business and data center history, and sensitivity to storing certain types of information in the public cloud, it was never going to be the case. The hybrid cloud, defined by global analyst firm Gartner as "a combination of private, public, and community cloud services," will continue to rise in popularity during 2015 as organizations look to get the best from both private and public cloud.
The BYO epiphany. This is where corporate IT organizations finally wake up to see that Shadow IT, BYOD, or BYO-anything is not being driven by consumer IT and cloud service providers but by the corporate IT organization's inability to meet stakeholder and user expectations across usability, cost, service, and agility. The 10 years of Consumerization of IT talk, with a focus on consumer gadgets, has thus been a red herring – hiding the true root cause of customer discontent with existing IT supply. Post-epiphany, corporate IT organizations will need to change; and change quickly.
Greater focus on IT costs. It's inevitable. It's been over 10 years since business colleagues buying consumer products and services first started to question why they receive lower spec IT equipment at a higher cost from the corporate IT department. And now as companies require more and more technology to function, especially those that are transforming to digital enterprises, those IT costs will continue to rise. The increased use of third-party service providers (cloud or IT services) will reduce the burden somewhat but it will not be enough for IT organizations to escape the scrutiny of the CFO and CEO, and the need for greater financial stewardship during 2015.
The increased focus on costs will drive a focus on assets. IT asset management has long been a poor relation to corporate IT service management activities and investment. In some ways, the lack of business scrutiny as to why IT costs so much, has allowed corporate IT organizations to be lackadaisical in their asset management. But those days have gone, or are quickly coming to an end, with 2015 finally seeing corporate IT organizations looking to physical and software assets as ways of reducing and optimizing costs.
IT service management models will trifurcate. The focus on delivering consumer-like service experiences and the extension of IT service management capabilities to other corporate service providers such as HR, facilities, and legal through enterprise service management, will cause IT service management as a discipline to divide into, and to evolve at different speeds within, two different schools of thinking. There will be traditional IT service management, enterprise service management, and then both with an emphasis on better meeting customer expectations around not only the consumed service but also the service experience. 2015 will see many corporate IT organizations at a crossroads as they chose which of the three service management roads to take.
The need to manage more complex IT supplier environments. This need will continue to grow as enterprises exit outsourcing deals that have failed to deliver against expectations of service improvement, cost savings, and innovation. In 2015 the need for service integration capabilities, often called service integration and management (SIAM) or multisourcing services integration (MSI), will come to the fore. And this will happen not only for larger organizations replacing previously outsourced scenarios with multiple suppliers but also smaller organizations needing to manage a portfolio of third-party, often cloud service, providers.
Continued mobile pervasiveness. Continued improvements in anytime, anywhere, any device access to data and services will continue to drive the need for better mobile apps and experiences, and the use of personal devices for work purposes. Not only will this dictate the need for better service and app design and delivery, and more intelligent approaches to BYOD, but also the need to consider the security implications of mobility such as data segregation issues – with personal and business data and applications isolated from each other on the same device.
Wearables and the quantified worker. The Apple iWatch launch in 2015 will no doubt see a greater potential business use case focus on wearable computing. While employees might like the idea of a new gadget giving them access to alerts and short messages related to email, social media, schedules, travel plans, or the weather, the ability of wearables to provide location and productivity-related information about the employee might not be so appealing. 2015 will provide an exciting technology opportunity, but one that will need the corporate IT organization and its business partners to fully understand the human implications of new technology.
Big Data. While there will continue to be big talk about Big Data, the real Big Data issue for 2015 will be the availability of Big Data people and their Big Data skills rather than Big Data technology itself. Not only from a tail-end analytics and insight perspective, companies will also need the people and skills for building the new data architectures required to handle unstructured data and real-time input, and other changes required as the increased focus on large data sets continues to disrupt business and IT operations.
The Internet of Things (IoT), or the Internet of Everything (IoE). Most of us are probably bored to death of hearing about how the IoT will change IT forever. It seems as though it has been a long time coming – from IP address management through service/fault management to Big Data analytics. Then there is the security of a whole new breed of network-connected end points. 2015 will see IT organizations having to look beyond the traditional IT capabilities, such as availability and capacity management, to work closer with business colleagues on how these now-connected devices do, can, and will tie in to business operations and business models.
Knowledge management will reappear. It's been around since before the end of the last century but 2015 will see it appear on the IT agenda again – not only because of the replacement of people with automation and the associated potential for corporate knowledge loss, but also due to the rise in self-help and self-service. Organizations need to be clear about what they need though. Knowledge management has previously been held back by its name – knowledge isn't valuable because it is managed, the value comes from its use and reuse. So look at knowledge management through a new lens, one of knowledge mining and knowledge exploitation.
Software-defined everything will continue its advancement. You've probably already heard the talk of software-defined data centers or software-defined networks, where the control plane is abstracted from the hardware. It seems to be in vogue across all data center domains: software-defined servers now seem old hat; software-defined networking continues to mature; and software-defined storage is gaining interest. But this is about more than quickly moving from the old to the new state data center, notwithstanding the fact that the legacy data center might not want to change so quickly. It's about increasing your agility, minimizing vendor lock-in, and improving your ability to serve the customers and consumers of your IT services.
Unicorn chasing will continue. Whether it be the use of cloud technologies or DevOps thinking and operations, in 2015 enterprises will continue their fascination with the operations of technology giants such as Amazon, Google, and Facebook. Business leaders will also continue to ask why their corporate IT organizations can't match these technology giants for unit costs, service levels, service experience, customer support, and agility. Thus, these technology unicorns will continue to be chased, and I'm not sure that 2015 or even 2016 or even 2017, for that matter, will be the year that they are caught.
So that's my 15 trends – what would you have included in, or omitted from, the list?

Like this article? You may also like: BYOD: Will IT Departments Live Long and Prosper?.

Please share your thoughts in the comments or on Twitter, Google+, or Facebook where we are always listening.



https://www.sysaid.com/blog/entry/15-it-trends-for-2015?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=blog-15-it-trends-for-2015

Via Dolphin Browser

Friday, December 19, 2014

3D Marketing

Kita harus tahu:
1. Situational Buyer, orang yg membeli produk krn situasi dan kondisi dibuat sesuai dgn keinginan pembeli.

2. Rational buyer, orang yang membeli kembali (repeat customer), segala sesuatu dihitung untung ruginya.

3. Emotional buyer , tidak lagi bicara produk menguntungkan atau tidak, ia menumbuhkan kesetiaan utk memakai produk. Semakin dekat dgn perusahaan. Perlu digging / menggali ttg pelanggan. Perlu ciptakan kenyamanan.

4. Spiritual buyer, pelanggan jd pembela dan penjual produk kita.

Penghubung antara first customer dan repeat customer adalah kualitas produk dan layanan yg dibeli. Perlu mempercepat pembelian ulang dgn deepening.

Penghubung antara repeat customer dan emotional buyer adalah emotional benefit, trust, kepuasan.  Dipengaruhi oleh brand image, kepuasan dan pelayanan ke pelanggan. Perlu dilakukan digging.

Penghubung antara loyal customer dan advocate customer adalah kecintaan pelannggan terhadap produk, pelayanan dan perusahaan kita. Perlu dilakukan diving.

build-access-manage at dayaciptamandiri.com
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Build your own business


These people are often quick to dish out advice, but the issue is that nobody actually listens. If you really want to build your business, take the advice to heart.

Success doesn't happen by chance. It takes hard work and a large dose of good luck. Here are eight of the best tips on building businesses--apply them all and you'll be on the fast track to making your own riches.

1. Create happy customers.
"While strategy, market positioning, and coming up with a long-term plan are all important, focus on making the individual sales and creating happy customers. None of that strategic planning is any good if you can't keep the lights on because you're not making enough sales," says Tej Kohli, real estate entrepreneur and software business leader.

2. Learn your lessons.
"It's fine to celebrate success, but it is more important to heed the lessons of failure." Those are the sage words of Bill Gates, who learned early that celebrations are fun, but the hard lessons should be reviewed carefully. Otherwise, you risk embodying the definition of insanity.

3. Remember that there are no shortcuts.
"Formula for success: Rise early, work hard, strike oil." This is the advice from J. Paul Getty, who took the traditional approach to owning a successful business. In an era in which everyone wants to find shortcuts, get rich quick, and get morose if he or she isn't rich before the age of 30, it serves as a good reminder.

4. Forget perfection.
"Don't think you are unstoppable or foolproof. Don't think that the only way your business will work is through perfection. Don't aim for perfection. Aim for success." Brazil's Eike Batista found that he got flustered when things didn't go perfectly--but they never will. Instead, looking toward success and not perfection was his key.

5. Enjoy it.
"Have fun. The game is a lot more enjoyable when you're trying to do more than just make money." Tony Hsieh, the founder of Zappos, is quick to point out that when you stop doing what you enjoy, suddenly no amount of money is worth it. There's more to getting rich than making money and if you do it right, the cash is just a perk.

6. Really be an entrepreneur.
"If you want to succeed, you should strike out on new paths, rather than travel the worn paths of accepted success." John D. Rockefeller epitomized entrepreneurship, but it's something that's becoming more of a rarity. Instead of going with the safe path, try something new. You may surprise yourself.

7. Stop stopping yourself.
"The biggest risk is not taking any risk … In a world that's changing really quickly, the only strategy that is guaranteed to fail is not taking risks." Mark Zuckerberg's wise words are certainly worth following. Without risk, there's no reward. If you don't make a leap every now and then, you won't be outstanding.

8. Give back.
"There has to be a balance in life. A balance of business, family, and the opportunity to learn and teach." Chuck Feeney's words certainly align with this fact: The people who give the most are often entrepreneurs or business owners. Without balance, everything falls apart.

Ready to become the next successful businessman? Learn from the greats and you're already ahead of the pack.

Tuesday, December 16, 2014

Tentang Mengalokasikan Pendapatan

Tentang Mengalokasikan Pendapatan


1. Selalu Bagi Pendapatanmu Jadi 5 Bagian

Selalu pisahkan jadi 5
Berapapun Penghasilanmu Selalu Pisahkan Jadi 5 Bagian
Menurut Li, apapun yang terjadi dan tidak peduli berapa pun penghasilanmu — kamu harus membaginya menjadi 5 bagian. Dengan begitu kamu dapat mengatur pengeluaranmu dengan baik.

2. Dana 1: Biaya Hidup

Biaya hidup
Gunakan Sebagian Pengahasilanmu Untuk Hidup Sehari-hari via images.bwbx.io

“Pilih makanan yang murah. Untuk sarapan kamu cuma perlu susu dan telur. Makan siang bisa kamu isi dengan menu sederhana dan buah. Memasaklah sendiri untuk makan malam. Menunya cukup dua jenis sayur dan segelas susu sebelum tidur. Selama badanmu masih muda, kamu tidak akan bermasalah dengan pola makan seperti ini”.

3. Dana 2: Menjamu Teman

Biaya sosial
Sisihkan Penghasilanmu Untuk Biaya Sosial via images.bwbx.io
“Perluas pergaulanmu. Ini akan membuat kamu jadi pribadi yang berkembang. Gunakan uang ini untuk biaya telepon dan mentraktir teman. Ingat, teman yang kamu jamu haruslah yang lebih dari kamu. Dia harus punya semangat yang lebih darimu, lebih kaya dari kamu atau punya pengaruh dalam perkembangan karirmu. Dalam setahun, kamu akan punya banyak teman. Dan dikenal sebagai orang yang baik dan pemurah”

4. Dana 3: Dana Belajar


Biaya belajar
Pisahkan Penghasilanmu Untuk Beli Buku dan Ikut Pelatihan via images.bwbx.io

“Karena kamu belum punya banyak uang, kamu harus fokus ke belajar. Sisihkan uang untuk beli buku setiap bulan. Resapi dan pelajari apa yang diajarkan di buku itu. Setelah selesai membaca, tuliskan lagi isi bukunya sesuai dengan pemahamanmu. Jangan ragu-ragu juga untuk mengikuti pelatihan yang bisa meningkatkan kemampuanmu”


5. Dana 4:  Uang Untuk Wisata


Dana wisata
Gunakan Sebagian Penghasilanmu Untuk Berlibur via images.bwbx.io
 “Pergilah berwisata minimal sekali setahun. Tinggal saja di hotel yang murah agar mengemat biaya. Gunakan kesempatan ini untuk mengisi ulang energimu agar kamu tetap bersemangat dalam bekerja”

6. Dana 5: Dana Investasi

Dana Investasi
Manfaatkan Penghasilanmu Untuk Berinvestasi via images.bwbx.io
“Belajarlah untuk berinvestasi. Masukkan uang ke bank sebagai modal awal. Cara termudah adalah datang ke penjual grosir, lalu cari barang yang bisa kamu jual lagi. Saat kamu sudah bisa menghasilkan uang dari bisnis kecil-kecilan ini, kamu akan bersemangat untuk belajar bisnis lebih banyak lagi”

7. Berhematlah Soal Belanja Pakaian

Hematlah belanja pakaian
Jangan Belanjakan Uang Terlalu Banyak Untuk Pakaian via images.bwbx.io
“Tekanlah pengeluaranmu untuk belanja pakaian. Kamu bisa beli semua yang kamu mau saat kamu sudah kaya nanti. Lebih baik gunakan uangmu untuk membeli kado bagi orang-orang terdekat. Jelaskan kepada mereka impian, cita-cita dan apa yang sedang kamu kerjakan untuk mencapainya. Buat mereka paham kenapa kamu sangat berhemat”


Tentang Mengobarkan Semangat Kerja



8. Setahun Pertama Belum Juga Naik Gaji?

Kenaikan gaji setelah 1 tahu
Harus Merasa Malu Jika Dalam Setahun Gajimu Tidak Naik via images.bwbx.io
“Kalau kamu sudah berjuang selama 1 tahun dan belum juga naik gaji, itu tandanya kamu tidak berkembang sebagai individu. Pergilah ke supermarket terdekat, beli tahu yang terkeras yang bisa kamu temukan. Pukul kepalamu dengan tahu itu. Kamu pantas mendapatkannya”

9. Jangan Cepat Puas

Cari pekerjaan tambahan
Jika Gajimu Naik Hanya 15% Kamu Harus Cari Pekerjaan Tambahan via images.bwbx.io
“Saat gajimu naik tapi masih sekitar 15%, itu artinya kamu harus mencari pekerjaan tambahan. Cobalah berjualan. Menjadi pedagang memang menantang, tapi kamu akan banyak belajar soal apa yang bisa diterima pasar dan apa yang tidak. Kamu juga akan bertemu orang-orang yang akan berpengaruh bagi karirmu kelak. Hampir semua pengusaha sukses adalah pedagang yang baik”

Tentang Bersikap Saat Masih Miskin dan Saat Sudah Kaya


10. Perbuatan Baik dan Kekayaan

Berbuat baik
Berbuat Baik Kepada Orang Lain Waktu Miskin, Ketika Kita Kaya Orang Pun Akan Berbuat Yang Sama via images.bwbx.io
“Jika merasa dirimu miskin, belanjakan uangmu untuk orang lain. Saat kamu sudah kaya, barulah belanjakan uang untuk dirimu sendiri. Kebanyakan orang justru melakukan yang sebaliknya.”

11. Kamu Harus Keluar dan Rela Dimanfaatkan Saat Masih Miskin

Relakan dirimu dimanfaatkan
Biarkanlah Dirimu Dimanfaatkan Ketika Miskin, Karena Itu Tak Akan Terjadi Lagi Ketika Kamu Kaya viaimages.bwbx.io
“Ketika dirimu masih miskin, keluarlah lebih banyak dan jangan sering di rumah. Saat sudah kaya, kurangilah intensitas keluar dan habiskan lebih banyak waktu di rumah. Ini adalah seni kehidupan yang sering dilupakan orang”

12. Pemurahlah Saat Miskin, Jangan Menghamburkan Uang Saat Kaya

Jangan foya-foya
Kamu Harus Loyal Pada Orang Lain, Jangan Foya-foya via images.bwbx.io
“Saat kamu masih miskin, belanjakanlah uang agar orang lain bisa melihat. Saat sudah kaya, jangan biarkan orang lain melihat kamu sebagai pribadi yang suka berfoya-foya. Dengan melakukan ini hidupmu akan mencapai titik keseimbangan”

Muda, Miskin, Tapi Ingin Kaya? Bisa Kok!


13. Kamu gak Perlu Takut Miskin

Muda dan miskin, gak masalah
Tidak Ada Yang Salah Dengan Menjadi Muda Dan Miskin via images.bwbx.io
“Yang harus kamu tahu adalah bagaimana berinvestasi untuk meningkatkan kemampuanmu. Kamu harus memahami apa yang paling penting di hidupmu, di bagian mana kamu harus menginvestasikan waktu dan tenaga lebih banyak.”

14. Semua Bisa Direncanakan

Bisa direncanakan
Hidup Bisa Didesain, Karir Bisa Direncanakan, Mulailah Tentukan Langkahmu Dari Sekarang viaimages.bwbx.io
“Hal-hal baik yang terjadi dalam hidup bisa direncanakan. Kebahagiaan bisa diatur. Kamu harus turun tangan untuk mengaturnya mulai dari sekarang”