To lose a cellphone and gain peace.

O and n this Spring break (2023), I visited hard rock hotel with my brother law, my sister and mother. We enjoyed the days on this amazing place. We meet people from India, Nebraska, Colombia and obviously USA. Such as an extra activity, we planned go to Xcaret.

We saw all the show about the different cultural representations of each local state of Mexico: Jalisco, Sinaloa, Veracruz, Yucatán and more. Before to see this show, my brother law was to the restroom and put over the sink his cellphone. He is living on Miami and he came with this perspectiva of respect to everyone and this thing. However, that thinking way don’t work with some people in Mexico. So, someone stolen the cellphone.

My sister and brother law were so angry for this situation. However, my brother law said something that Impact my life and I think is super essential to live better. He said: I don’t know why this situation happen but I will wait to see how God or Universe works on this situation.

My sister hent him their cellphone for locking the cellphone. My brother law take the cellphone, locked the phone and added a message about if someone found it to call to the my sister’ number. Also, he added that there would be gratification.

Finally, the guy who stolen the cellphone, to called to my sister to back the phone and all finished great. One important point is that my family enjoyed the Xcaret Mexico Spectacular. I mean, the bad things that happen to us should not take away the opportunity to enjoy other things.

Essential message: Sometimes we focus on things that are out of our control and we do get angry, we feel bad about ourselves, but at the end, things work out positively. And if that doesn’t happen, it’s because God has a plan for us that we can’t see.

Effective Selling Strategy

On this post, I’ll share an imagen about an strategy about a delivery company. Currently, I have a company about Data Science. Right! It’s totally different. However, we could take off some important aspect about it. For example: EACH STRATEGY IN THE COMPANY IS FOR MAKE TO MUCH SELLS.

The main Objective is SALES. In other words, a selling strategy must be measured by the number of sales daily, montly or seasonal.

Recommendations.

We must recognize that to have a winning combination, online information, customer support and sales must work together.

  • The most important thing about selling is, and always has been, the buyer: Let’s never forget this commonsense, but very sage, advice. Customers get to decide how they want to buy. If they want to skip the formal sales process, let them do so. If they want to do their own research, give them the tools they need (a knowledge base on a website, videos on YouTube, etc.). If they want to talk directly to someone in the company, give them easy access to the right person. Let the customer buy from you the way they want to, which might be different from the way you’ve traditionally sold in the past.

  • OFFER A FREE TRIAL OR DEMOSTRATION: Make it easy for your prospective customer to understand your product and how it will help them by offering a personalized demonstration of your company’s product. If you are selling to a university, try including their logo and school colors for visual appeal. Then, focus the demonstration on addressing the challenge your customer is facing. If tracking prospective students through the admissions cycle is a concern, focus exclusively on that process rather than giving a standard demo that explains all of your product’s features. After explaining the product, allow your prospective customer to experience positive results by offering a short, free trial. If possible, have your team ready to reach out and offer customer support during this time. We must recognize that to have a winning combination, online information, customer support and sales must work together.
  • THREE VARIABLES OF EACH SALES MODEL:
    • Customer call capacity.
    • Close rate.
    • Profit per sale. 
  • Key scaling questions:
    • Does the sales program align with corporate sales strategy?
    • Do aspects of this program allow salespeople to spend more time with customers?
    • What is the return on the investment to scaling?
    • Can leaders create the right incentives to drive adoption?
    • Improved outcomes

Referencias.

Highlight and color – Coding.

Before starting, Happy New Year!!!!

On next three months I’ll read to much articles about education and I need to have a codifing for highlighting:

  • Key Idea. (Yellow)
  • Key Concepts (Green) – Usually buried mid-paragraph. i.e «Multiplicity», «Conflict», «Vagueness».
  • Examples (Pink)
  • Sequential set ideas
    1. Positive side (Blue)
    2. Negative side (Purple)

Note: To organize my bibliography of articles, I decided to follow the Conceptual Synthesis Excel Dump (CSED). (Volcado de Síntesis Conceptual).

TESIS

  • Actividad 1. Temas que le han interesado desde el inicio de la licenciatura.
  • Actividad 2. Tips para implementar para seleccionar tema de investigación.
  • Actividad 3. Buscar un paper del tipo «literatura review».
  • Actividad 4. Palabras clave.
  • Actividad 5. Identificar textos básicos para iniciar la revisión de la literatura. (15 papers).
  • Actividad 6. Iniciar la revisión de la literatura (revisar los 5 papers más importantes.
  • Actividad 6.1 De cada uno de los 5 pares Identificar 3 aportes metodològicos y/o conceptuales para su proyecto de investigación.
  • Actividad 7. Plantear 5 problemas de investigación que enuncien de manera clara y concreta la tarea investigativa a la que gustaría abocarse.
  • Actividad 8. Justificación del proyecto (relevancia empírica).
  • Actividad 9. Población y muestra. Describir a la población y a la unidad de análisis.
  • Actividad 10 (Faltante). Proponer outline o revisión de literatura.
  • Actividad 11. Planteamiento de objetivos de investigación.

How to overcome atychiphobia?

How to Overcome Your Fear of Failure

Author: Susan Peppercorn.

Summary.   

People are quick to blame themselves for failure. But not doing something because you’re afraid to get started isn’t going to help you grow. Here are four strategies to help you get over the hump. Start by redefining what failure means to you. If you define failure as the discrepancy between what you hope to achieve (such as getting a job offer) and what you might achieve (learning from the experience), you can focus on what you learned, which helps you recalibrate for future challenges. It’s also important to set approach goals instead of avoidance goals: focus on what you want to achieve rather than what you want to avoid. Creating a “fear list” can also help. This is a list of what may not happen as a result of your fear — the cost of inaction. And finally, focus on learning. The chips aren’t always going to fall where you want them to — but if you expect that reality going into an event, you can be prepared to wring the most value out of whatever outcome.

A client (who I’ll call “Alex”) asked me to help him prepare to interview for a CEO role with a start-up. It was the first time he had interviewed for the C-level, and when we met, he was visibly agitated. I asked what was wrong, and he explained that he felt “paralyzed” by his fear of failing at the high-stakes meeting.

Digging deeper, I discovered that Alex’s concern about the quality of his performance stemmed from a “setback” he had experienced and internalized while working at his previous company. As I listened to him describe the situation, it became clear that the failure was related to his company and outside industry factors, rather than to any misstep on his part. Despite that fact, Alex could not shake the perception that he himself had not succeeded, even though there was nothing he could have logically done to anticipate or change this outcome.

People are quick to blame themselves for failure, and companies hedge against it even if they pay lip service to the noble concept of trial and error. What can you do if you, like Alex, want to face your fear of screwing up and push beyond it to success? Here are four steps you can take:

Redefine failure. Behind many fears is worry about doing something wrong, looking foolish, or not meeting expectations — in other words, fear of failure. By framing a situation you’re dreading differently before you attempt it, you may be able to avoid some stress and anxiety.

Let’s go back to Alex as an example of how to execute this. As he thought about his interview, he realized that his initial bar for failing the task — “not being hired for the position” — was perhaps too high given that he’d never been a CEO and had never previously tried for that top job. Even if his interview went flawlessly, other factors might influence the hiring committee’s decision — such as predetermined preferences on the part of board members.

In coaching Alex through this approach, I encouraged him to redefine how he would view his performance in the interview. Was there a way he might interpret it differently from the get-go and be more open to signs of success, even if they were small? Could he, for example, redefine failure as not being able to answer any of the questions posed or receiving specific negative feedback? Could he redefine success as being able to answer each question to the best of his ability and receiving no criticisms about how he interviewed?

As it turned out, Alex did advance to the second round and was complimented on his preparedness. Ultimately, he did not get the job. But because he had shifted his mindset and redefined what constituted failure and success, he was able to absorb the results of the experience more gracefully and with less angst than he had expected.

Set approach goals (not avoidance goals)Goals can be classified as approach goals or avoidance goals based on whether you are motivated by wanting to achieve a positive outcome or avoid an adverse one. Psychologists have found that creating approach goals, or positively reframing avoidance goals, is beneficial for well-being. When you’re dreading a tough task and expect it to be difficult and unpleasant, you may unconsciously set goals around what you don’t want to happen rather than what you do want.

Though nervous about the process, Alex’s desire to become a CEO was an approach goal because it focused on what he wanted to achieve in his career rather than what he hoped to avoid. Although he didn’t land the first CEO job he tried to get, he did not let that fact deter him from keeping that as his objective and getting back out there.

If Alex had instead become discouraged about the outcome of his first C-level interview and decided to actively avoid the pain of rejection by never vying for the top spot again, he would have shifted from approach to avoidance mode. While developing an avoidance goal is a common response to a perceived failure, it’s important to keep in mind the costs of doing so. Research has shown that employees who take on an avoidance focus become twice as mentally fatigued as their approach-focused colleagues.

Create a “fear list.” Author and investor Tim Ferriss recommends “fear-setting,” creating a checklist of what you are afraid to do and what you fear will happen if you do it. In his Ted Talk on the subject, he shares how doing this enabled him to tackle some of his hardest challenges, resulting in some of his biggest successes.

I asked Alex to make three lists:  first, the worst-case scenarios if he bombed the interview; second, things he could do to prevent the failure; and third, in the event the flop occurred, what could he do to repair it. Next, I asked him to write down the benefits of the attempted effort and the cost of inaction. This exercise helped him realize that although he was anxious, walking away from the opportunity would be more harmful to his career in the long run.

Focus on learning. The chips aren’t always going to fall where you want them to — but if you understand that reality going in, you can be prepared to wring the most value out of the experience, no matter the outcome.

To return to Alex, he was able to recognize through the coaching process that being hyper-focused on his previous company’s flop — and overestimating his role in it — caused him to panic about the CEO interview. When he shifted gears to focus not on his potential for failure but on what he would learn from competing at a higher level than he had before, he stopped sweating that first attempt and was able to see it as a steppingstone on a longer journey to the CEO seat. With that mindset, he quickly pivoted away from his disappointment at not getting the offer to quickly planning for the next opportunity to interview for a similar role at another company.

Remember:  it’s when you feel comfortable that you should be fearful, because it’s a sign that you’re not stepping far enough out of your comfort zone to take steps that will help you rise and thrive. By rethinking your fears using the four steps above, you can come to see apprehension as a teacher and guide to help you achieve your most important goals.