Mojo is that ineffable quality of great businesses. Explore these strategies to increase the mojo in your business.
What makes one business better than another? Better at making money. Better at marketing. Better at setting up great systems.
Yes, all the great business skills that people put into practice definitely play a role.
But it’s more than that. Every business that puts those skills into practice doesn’t necessarily do as well as the founders had hoped, in a sustainable way.
What’s missing in those businesses that don’t achieve their promise is mojo.
Mojo is about impact. About using your leadership to bring together all the elements of your business to make a positive difference in the lives of the people it comes into contact with.
How do you get mojo? By actively appreciating that your business has the potential to become a difference maker in people’s lives. Let’s break that down:
Business isn’t just about the mechanics, the spreadsheets, the tangibles. Great business is an art. Mojo lets you be an artist, in your own unique way.
Mojo creates intimacy, a deep connection between your business and the people it touches. The relationships with team, clients, suppliers, and the community is one of the great rewards of your business and one of the crucial generators of mojo that your business radiates.
The mojo effect ripples out. Fulfilled and satisfied team and clients become people who can make a positive difference in other people’s lives too. It’s all part of your mojo!
There Is Such a Thing As Too Much Free Content
When you fundamentally reexamine your marketing strategy, it’s very freeing. You can focus on what’s most important.Do Your Prospects and Clients Really Know You?
People buy from those they know, like, and trust. How can you help them get to know your business? How can you build their trust?Postpone Your Impact, and It May Never Happen
Life will always get in the way, if you allow it. We can put ourselves in a holding pattern too. For a long time, I put off starting a podcast. I’m not ready, I said. I don’t know how to do it, I said. I’m scared to do it, I said. I’ve got too much going on, I said.