Does this shirt indicate that the wearer is not concerned about money ??
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The business model of petsitting is so insane?Getting paid to spend time with someone else’s pet without having to deal with the owners? I’m petting this cat that isn’t mine, and I’m on the clock? Wild
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There’s a phrase that’s often used in upper management: “Don’t talk about it, be about it.” Good ideas are worthless. Your ability to execute them will bring value. This is true no matter how much capital you have to invest into your business.
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The Loser’s Club from the movie “It.”
I’ve seen this film twice and I think it’s now my top favorite horror film ever. I couldn’t help but draw them. You can order a print here.
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Growing up in southwestern Minnesota, I was exposed early on to farmers’ co-ops, and I’m shocked – SHOCKED, I tell you! – that the Solarpunk movement hasn’t embraced this already.
Co-ops are awesome. Basically, everybody who has a hand in production also gets a share in the profit.
In farming communities, this means everyone gets money from the corn they grow, while the Coop sells that corn to the big businesses that need it.
In Duluth, we have this grocery store called the Whole Foods Co-op that is owned by people in the community who shop there, and they actively do business with regional farmers.
So how would this look in a Solarpunk setting? Imagine a bike shop owned by the very people you see at the shop who are making and repairing the bikes. Or a fashion boutique where people can become members by contributing something (food? fabric? currency?) and the designer heavily marks down the prices for them. Or a bar where the bartenders and the regulars each have a stake in the place doing well.
We need more co-ops in our Solarpunk, people.
Always mind your “business”.
Write beautifully what people don’t want to hear.
Frederick Seidel (via help-n-quotes)
“The pain of regret is far worse than the pain of discipline.” - Nathan Whitley
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🌈 Rainbows of Vintage Loser 🌈 ✨ x / x / x / x / x / x / x / x / x ✨
The journey of a thousand miles... may even be across a rickety bridge.
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No matter what type of business we are running or what goals we chase - we all face apparently insurmountable difficulties - as for example
building a user base for your app although there is no interaction yet,
having to postpone some to dos although they are all crucial and diligent,
finding investors without having finished that prototype yet
or hiring the great but still affordable talents that help you to get done all that work
…
The Dutch bicycle manufacturer VanMoof had such a problem as well:
They sell almost 90 percent of its bikes online.
But as they shipped the custom made bikes to customers, it found that they were often arriving severely damaged.
The damage reports were a major problem for the company because the street bikes that it manufactures are at the high-end of the market… But even with the best brand and great marketing you CANNOT WIN, if the products is delivered to the customer in bad shape or even in pieces…
But then the company came up with a genius solution - dropping shipping damage by over 70 percent!
Printing a graphic of a flatscreen television on the side of the packaging box - making shippers think that they were transporting flatscreen televisions.
(Source: http://www.theverge.com/2016/9/25/13048668/vanmoof-shipping-damages-dutch-bicycle-design)
A highly effective but yet cheap way of fixing the problem and giving the business the push it needed…
Innovate like VanMoof!
Always look out for solutions like this - practical, easy to apply, affordable but effective. Dare to try new paths, unconventional solutions, be creative. Find your hacks and workarounds.
your m