Audiera hits 1M users!
Here's the reality entrepreneurs don't want to hear: sales need fixing first. Mike Michalowicz covers this in his book "Fix This Next." The majority of businesses have decent products and people, but they're not selling effectively. This truth became even more stark during the pandemic. McKinsey found that 70-80% of small businesses experienced 30-50% revenue drops between 2020 and 2021.
Trade shows and print ads brought in a trickle of interest, but most of those leads were unqualified. Follow-ups were slow, spreadsheets were messy, and opportunities were slipping away. But what if, within 90 days, that brand was able to sign franchise agreements in three new states without a single in-person meeting? By combining targeted social media lead generation with an automated CRM system, that outcome could be possible. Why? Scattered efforts would turn into a predictable, scalable growth engine.
You're known as the systems guy. Do you have a system for generating ideas when a business is stuck, or even starting to flatline? How can someone replicate that to breathe new life into their own business? Michalowicz: Absolutely. Idea generation is a skill, not a talent. And like any skill, it gets better with practice. The best way to start is by using a method to structure your brainstorming, especially when you're learning to flex that creative muscle.
One of Airbnb's most underappreciated competitive advantages is how it has quietly become a home for long-term travelers. In 2024, stays of 28 nights or more made up 18% of gross nights booked, according to company filings. That's not a small niche -- it's nearly one in five stays. This trend aligns with broader shifts in how people work and live. Remote and hybrid work have unlocked new flexibility, allowing millions to combine travel with their professional lives.
Every new idea depended on our engineers, and our internal requests were piling up faster than we could clear them. We were adding new people to our company every week, but our engineering team was underwater. Every new feature, every minor internal tool, every process tweak depended on our developers. We were hiring as fast as we could, but it felt like shoveling sand against the tide.
Big companies have full teams: marketing departments, content writers, designers and salespeople all working together to grow the brand. But solopreneurs and small business owners don't have that kind of support. Sometimes it's just one person, or maybe a part-time virtual assistant or freelance copywriter. That's why using AI tools isn't just helpful - it's necessary. With the right AI systems in place, small teams can get more done, move faster and compete with bigger players without needing a big budget or staff.
Apollo.io analyzed 404,823 real sales activities targeting CMOs using Pythia, Apollo's proprietary language model trained on billions of B2B sales interactions. The findings completely shatter conventional C-suite wisdom. CMOs don't just move fast - they move at negative speed. This data reveals the massive gap between optimal and terrible timing. Send at the wrong hour? Your open rate drops by 42%. But nail the timing, and you're already ahead of 90% of your competition.
This isn't another "AI tool." It's ChatGPT's new Agent - a fully autonomous virtual worker that can predict trends, reverse-engineer your competitors and even scan your Instagram for untapped revenue hiding in forgotten DMs. In this video, you'll see exactly how solopreneurs are using it to run profitable one-person businesses on autopilot - replacing tasks that once took entire teams.
Constant growth and scaling are probably the dream of any modern entrepreneur. This stimulates an increase in the customer base and orders, and as a result, allows the company to generate more revenue. However, achieving these goals requires a lot of effort using relevant tactics. Don't focus on what worked in the past. Instead, use only tested strategies that have proven their effectiveness nowadays. As a small spoiler, we would like to advise you to focus on promoting online sales channels, implementing enterprise AI solutions, and expanding your product range as your capabilities grow. Where to look for new opportunities? How to expand your company? We will try to answer these questions in detail in this article, sharing with you the five best strategies for company growth in 2025!
Substack's bet that writers want the platform to provide a community just as much as distribution appears to be paying off in 2025. Five newsletter creators who moved their operations over to Substack from other platforms such as Patreon and Beehiiv in the past year told Digiday that their following - and revenue - had grown since they made the jump, directly crediting Substack community tools such as co-livestreaming and recommendations for the subscriber boost.
Generic prompts don't make you money. They give you generic ideas that everyone else is using. To build a successful business in a short space of time, you need prompts that force you to think differently. Your current thoughts, words and actions have got you here. But to build the business of your wildest dreams, you need to operate at the next level up. ChatGPT can help.
I walked away from what was familiar and comfortable to chase something completely different, something uncertain, but deeply exciting. It wasn't just about switching careers. It was about choosing growth over routine, purpose over predictability.
"Based on what you know about my business and industry from our conversations, identify 5 emerging trends that could create million-dollar opportunities in the next 3 years. For each trend, explain why it matters, what gap it fills, and how I could position myself to capitalize on it early."
First principles thinking is literally just breaking down complicated problems into their basic, underlying facts and rebuilding solutions afresh from scratch. Instead of analogizing solutions from one's own background (or worse, copying competitors), this process forces you to question assumptions, drill down, and generate true innovation.
"The threat actor added code in the installed binaries of the fake NetExtender so that information related to VPN configuration is stolen and sent to a remote server," Ganachari said.