Post by amirmukaddas on Mar 11, 2024 11:31:11 GMT 5.5
If you have ever seen at least one of my promotional videos, but above all if you have ever had a Skype call with me, you will have noticed that I am literally surrounded by the musical instruments that practically furnish my studio. I really care that they are visible, because these tools represent me, or rather they represent my approach to SEO, which is the same as a musician who studies one or more musical instruments out of pure pXxxion, spending hundreds of hours on individual steps to make everything work. Well. To view this embed content you must accept cookies. Read the extended information on cookies . Accept Cookies The tools you see in the video above are often the subject of conversation with people who contact me. I'm not saying that people decide to entrust me with SEO tasks just by seeing the musical instruments in my studio, but they certainly add a connotation to my professionalism, such as to help capture the interest of my interlocutors more easily. And to be honest, it's easier for me to talk about SEO when I'm in the midst of my tools, because I feel "at home" and whoever is interacting with me at that moment also perceives it (and often points it out to me).
In short, those musical instruments you see behind me are not a quirk and they are not a hobby. In reality they concern my work more than it might seem, not from a technical point of view - since I certainly don't process data for SEO analyzes with my Ludwig snare drum - but with respect to the acquisition of new customers and also to maintain those already acquired, because between one thing and another Denmark Telegram Number Data it's incredible how often we end up talking about music with entrepreneurs who perhaps played the guitar or the drums. Here very often we "end up" talking about music precisely because in the videos in which you see my studio there is a "display" of musical furnishings. Is it a way to do public relations? In my case certainly yes, but not only. I don't think I would be able to express the same confidence when I exhibit if I didn't have the "Linus blanket" behind me which are those musical instruments.
Now, why am I telling you this story? Because in this particular moment - even if it has always been like this for me - offices tend to coincide with homes, therefore what people see through the webcam every time they connect with you is a place that can and must say something of you beyond taste in the choice of sofas, tables or wall colors. These connotations are important because they tell the story of a personal brand, reveal its attitudes and offer it colour. I have made video calls with people who had behind them the clXxxic white wall, or (even worse) the fake Skype background, or even messy objects, sloppily piled up. In the absence of valuable conversations, I tend to immediately forget about the former and retain a terrible memory of the latter. For this reason, if your job requires you to deal with other people via video conference, please pay a little attention to what they will see, because it is not a detail, but "the" detail.
In short, those musical instruments you see behind me are not a quirk and they are not a hobby. In reality they concern my work more than it might seem, not from a technical point of view - since I certainly don't process data for SEO analyzes with my Ludwig snare drum - but with respect to the acquisition of new customers and also to maintain those already acquired, because between one thing and another Denmark Telegram Number Data it's incredible how often we end up talking about music with entrepreneurs who perhaps played the guitar or the drums. Here very often we "end up" talking about music precisely because in the videos in which you see my studio there is a "display" of musical furnishings. Is it a way to do public relations? In my case certainly yes, but not only. I don't think I would be able to express the same confidence when I exhibit if I didn't have the "Linus blanket" behind me which are those musical instruments.
Now, why am I telling you this story? Because in this particular moment - even if it has always been like this for me - offices tend to coincide with homes, therefore what people see through the webcam every time they connect with you is a place that can and must say something of you beyond taste in the choice of sofas, tables or wall colors. These connotations are important because they tell the story of a personal brand, reveal its attitudes and offer it colour. I have made video calls with people who had behind them the clXxxic white wall, or (even worse) the fake Skype background, or even messy objects, sloppily piled up. In the absence of valuable conversations, I tend to immediately forget about the former and retain a terrible memory of the latter. For this reason, if your job requires you to deal with other people via video conference, please pay a little attention to what they will see, because it is not a detail, but "the" detail.