Browse LinkedIn templates for Failure
Liz Willits
Bad LinkedIn advice:
"Post every day. You'll succeed eventually."
Not true.
I see people posting on here day after day — for years — without getting results.
Because "showing up" doesn't lead to success — not without mastery.
It's like weightlifting.
If I lift every day with terrible form, I'm going to get injured. Not fit.
Be consistent.
But more importantly, hone your skills.
Samuli Salonen
Everyone at TalentBee will close laptops today and return to work in January.
I think getting a bit of rest for the whole team after a busy year is crucial.
Everyone is getting a normal full salary from December, and our team fully pays for these days off.
Here are 5 successes and 5 f*cks ups from this year:
✅ Build a brand - it pays off.
✅ Throwing a +300 people's birthday party
✅ 0% customer churn
✅ Giving our team members much responsibility --> It's not easy for them, but they are growing so fast.
✅ Growing our MRR to + 30 000€
❌ Too many development projects at the same time and no focus
❌ Not enough time and focus on sales
❌ Not understanding when my team members needed help and solving the problems for them
❌ Not succeeding in onboarding new people to TalentBee's ways of working in the way I should have
❌ Not talking enough about our vision and mission but focusing too much on the hard numbers
There are a few more hours of work today and then on the holidays.
Enjoy Christmas and Happy New Year 🥰
Lara Acosta
99% of my followers don't know this about me...
I failed 3+ businesses before landing on LinkedIn.
But it wasn't because I couldn't do it:
- I wasn’t interested
- I didn’t believe in the products
- I wasn’t emotionally invested in it
So I failed and/or quit them all.
Then I found online writing and stuck to it for 1 year.
I liked it, I committed to it and eventually found success
For months, nothing was happening. But I persisted.
Then everything happened. It changed my life.
Stop quitting so soon.
PS: What do you think I was dropshipping?
Emilia Korczynska
Beatrice Vladut
Watch this before you start building your personal brand.
One thing I see most of the people doing is sharing general tips in the same format...
That every other personal branding account is sharing... AGAIN AND AGAIN!
Literally every account in their niche.
And ironically...
They talk about "how to stand out as a personal brand"
Umm.. really?
Well...
Sorry to burst your bubble but...
If you and everyone else are doing the same thing, that means nobody stands out.
So, how do you actually stand out if you want to talk about the same topics?
Well...
You change the packaging.
So you move people from point A to point B (same as others), but through a different path than everybody else.
So the message (or the destination in this case) is the same...
But the packaging or the path is different.
And that's exactly what you need to do to create a solid personal brand.
If you can't be best, be different.
Does this makes sense?
So, tell me...
Are you also bored of creators posting the same iIIegal tools and 30 content ideas post and stuff?
Do you now want them to share something different?
Tell me in the comments below.
Marc Randolph
Persistence isn't easy.
It means screwing up, dusting yourself off, and having the courage to head back into battle.
Sofia Wakabayashi
Thanks to Helena Parmeggiani for suggesting this week's Women in Business topic: FAILURE.
Your insight will spark powerful conversations on a topic part of the entrepreneur's journey.
Let's share thoughts from author and philosopher @CharlesPepin in the spirit of learning and growth. He beautifully articulates how failure is not a roadblock but a stepping stone to success. "The Virtues of Failure". https://lnkd.in/dr2rRHSV
Let's celebrate the strength in vulnerability and the lessons learned through setbacks. Share your thoughts on failure in the comments!
#WomenInBusiness #FailureIsNotFinal #EmbraceTheJourney #Gratitude #Entrepreneurship #Resilience #SuccessMindset #LearnFromFailure
Gian Seehra
I see it every single day:
Fundraising founders drowning.
Stuck with a failed fundraise lasting months.
All the while never actually building your business.
But it doesn’t have to be this way, you know.
If you have the right systems?
You can do both.
All it takes is building out your own fundraising operating system.
That way you can fundraise more effectively.
And spend more time actually building the business of your dreams.
You can see more about how to do that in the comments below.
♻️ Repost to help other founders with this.
—
P.S. Building these systems is not a quick-fix. It takes time.
But these can be used for every single fundraise you do after, so its always worth it.
Iuliia Shnai 👩💻
My last recap of 2023 "Linkedin wins" :
1. I cried 10 times over 3 likes on my posts
2. Commented "Great" under smn posts 500 times
3. I hit 3 figure MRR for Linkedin tools I built
4. Get viral 1 time
5. Explained my family what viral is 20 times
6. Thought about becoming a ghostwriter 100 times
7. Never did, so did not reach 7 figure MRR
8. Spend 100 hours on creating pyramids for my lists
9. Spend 200 hours on creating carousels
10. Get 20 offers to be promoted by Linkedin influencers with 137k+ followers
11. Repeated "Build in public" 300 times
12. Create 100 photos of me with computer where I pretend to code
13. Start doubting I really code
14. Mentioned people 350 times
15. Did not get response from 349/350
16. Stopped saying that Linkedin cringe
17. Thought for a second maybe I am also cringe now
18. Read interesting posts and spoke with interesting people to stop doubts
19. Laughed on memes on Linkedin every day
All numbers in this post are fake or exaggerated by me.
😀