IntelBoutique commented on the following stories on BizSugar
6 Key Marketing Do’s and Don’ts For Your Startup
"Excellent point about not networking with strangers. So many of us when we started our businesses always seem to flock to networking events never really making connection that lasted longer than the time of the event. If we look within our own already established networks, friends, we'll come across the people we need and who need us. "Own your content!
"I absolutely agree. It's important as business owners and bloggers that we control our content as much as we can, it is part of our intellectual property in a sense. It is one of the surefire ways we can distinguish ourselves from the masses and the better we oversee our content, the more likely we'll get the responses we're looking for from interested parties and readers alike. Thanks for posting!"Can An Honest Approach Be Detrimental To Business?
"At the heart of it, Jeffries was entitled to defend his company's target market, you're absolutely right about that. Businesses cannot be everything to every person, we hear it all the time. I think more people were upset with the sugarcoat and underlying text of Jeffries comment more than anything. Thanks for the reply! "Building a Successful Blog Plan: Everything You Need to Know
"The blog plan is ideal, but not likely to be followed if it's not flexible enough to accommodate our ever-changing landscape. Just like starting a business, writing a blog is an organic process. And if you're writing a blog for the very first time, getting followers to read and follow your blog is harder at times than writing the content itself. Definitely find your (and you might have to do so a few times over), keeps tabs on current affairs and integrate societal happenings in your blog (it'll help bring traffic to your blog) and test the waters with what works for you and your readers and what doesn't: photos, videos, articles, interviews, etc. "Subscribe
Entrepreneurship out of Necessity
"Even in the U.S., entrepreneurship has been adopted as a means of survival. After all, when we were going through the recession, many of us had to find alternate income sources to pay the bills and keep food on the table. That meant turning to useful skills and talents we possessed, working for ourselves, whether full time or part time. We have more options here in the U.S. for such decisions, but we understand the necessity of it as well. Thanks for posting!"