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7 contributions to The Digital Collective
how to buy trust....?
I want to challenge a common mindset. Prospect says: “Can you show me a quick example?” “Can you mock something up?” “Can I see how this would work?” And the immediate response is: “I don’t do free work.” Sometimes that’s correct.... But often, it’s ego protecting time instead of strategy building leverage. Let me explain. When someone asks for proof, they’re not trying to exploit you. They’re trying to reduce risk. Especially in AI, automation, client acquisition systems, people don’t understand what they’re buying. They just understand THEIR DESIRED OUTCOME. So they hesitate. You have two choices: 1. Explain it again 2. Show it The gap between explanation and demonstration is massive. Most people send bullet points. Very few people build something small and say: “Here, this is how it works.” That small move collapses doubt instantly. And when you collapse doubt, you win trust. And trust increases: Close rate Client retention Retainer conversion Lifetime value Inside here, we’re not trying to win one-off projects. We’re building systems that create long-term relationships. That means thinking differently about effort. Here’s the real math: 30 minutes building a mini demo→ lands a £3k–£10k client→ turns into a 6-month retainer→ leads to referrals That 30 minutes wasn’t “free.” It was acquisition cost. People obsess over protecting their time. Smart operators invest time where leverage is high. This is the bigger principle: The gap between doing nothing and doing something decent is huge. Most people: Don’t follow up Don’t overdeliver Don’t simplify Don’t show proof So even small effort creates massive separation. Now... important nuance: This is not about being a pushover. It’s about being intentional. You don’t build entire systems for free. You build proof. A mini automation. A working snippet. A personalised Loom with something already live. (this is my fave) A small mock workflow running. Something tangible. Enough to remove doubt.
how to buy trust....?
0 likes • 12d
Any suggestions/tips for when you're trying to get your first few clients and, as such, you don't have proof/testimonials yet? Plus if your offer is a service rather than a product and therefore there's no working demo etc?
0 likes • 10d
Just bumping this...
Consistency Is the Missing Link
Many people don’t get results because they aren’t consistent. I was the same until I focused on taking simple actions daily that create real growth. That’s when my income started improving. Consistency is what turns effort into results. Question: What’s one action you need to be more consistent with?
1 like • 12d
Outreach and establishing a presence on social media. I agree re consistency. Atomic Habits and all that.
0 likes • 12d
@Mark Bowman Yes, that's totally true. I'm consistent with busy work mainly, I guess, hoping that it will lead to income-producing activities. Lots of preparation and ideation, but I get stuck with execution.
👋 Introduce Yourself
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👋 Introduce Yourself
1 like • 13d
@Shaun Chrisp Digital products, apps, and productising my own consulting services. I contain multitudes haha.
0 likes • 13d
@Shaun Chrisp I'm close to finalising my flagship consulting service along with an accompanying webinar to attract clients - hopefully haha. Could probably get it done fairly quickly but I keep getting distracted by more ideas. I'm sure I have ADHD (not a joke) and it drives me mad. 🫣
Procrastination isn’t laziness. It’s fear wearing a suit.
One of the biggest silent killers of momentum in this community isn’t lack of ability. It’s procrastination. Not the obvious kind. The respectable kind. The kind that looks like: Tweaking things endlessly Learning instead of launching Refining instead of executing Waiting to feel “ready” It feels sensible. It sounds professional. But it’s rarely about time or quality. It’s usually fear. Fear of being seen trying. Fear of being judged. Fear that your best effort might not be good enough. I recently watched a clip from Chris Williamson that articulated this better than most business advice ever does. He tells a story about Victor Hugo. Hugo was catastrophically behind on a deadline for The Hunchback of Notre Dame. So he did something extreme. He gave all his clothes to his servant. Locked them away. Kept only a thick wool shawl. He was so embarrassed to be seen dressed like a hermit that he physically couldn’t leave the house. No distractions. No escape. Nothing to do but write. The result? He finished one of the greatest novels ever written in a matter of months. The lesson isn’t discipline. It’s removing alternatives. Most people don’t struggle because they can’t work. They struggle because there’s always another option. Another tab. Another idea. Another thing to “fix” first. Chris makes a point that hits hard: Procrastination isn’t a time management problem. It’s a self-protection strategy. The logic goes like this: If I try and fail, people will see. If I never try, the failure stays private. So we hide in preparation. We convince ourselves we’re being careful. But what we’re really doing is choosing hypothetical excellence over real effort. And here’s the trap. By avoiding failure publicly, you guarantee failure privately. You get to say:“I could have done it if I really tried.” But you never find out if you actually could. The market doesn’t reward people who look ready. It rewards people who ship, adjust, and stay in the game.
Procrastination isn’t laziness. It’s fear wearing a suit.
0 likes • 13d
For me it's: "That's a good idea!" then "Ooh, that's a better idea!" then "What if I tried this instead?" then "How am I going to get all these things done?" then I don't and others beat me to the punch or the moment has passed and I have to go back to the drawing board and start all over again. And so ad infinitum haha.
0 likes • 13d
I'm in the AI space - particularly agentic AI - so I'm working on consulting packages. I'm also trying to up my game in building a community - want to get my YouTube channel up and running after procrastinating on it for literally years haha. Also looking at doing webinars in order to get clients. Then my app/software ideas are always ongoing too. Like I said, I guess I'm a Master Procrastinator - trying to find the Goldilocks project but I keep thinking of new things to try or thinking of new things to think about thinking about trying lol.
Trying to think of quick product ideas that will sell...
What kinds of digital products have you had success with? TLDR: I want to create digital products to sell. I'm just starting out, and I need it to happen as quickly as possible. I haven't nailed down a niche yet. I just need something to sell which will buy me the time I need to finish developing my product line. Context: I invested in a "coaching program" to help me finally launch an online business and kept getting put back at square one with each rushed group coaching call because the coach would basically steer me away from the product ideas I'd been developing long before I joined the program, causing me to be more confused. They wanted me to coach in order to create a high ticket offer - something I explained that I did not want to do before I invested in the program. Now, I don't have the same amount of time to develop MY product line because I've wasted it, getting nowhere in this program. At this point, I'm looking for something that I can launch to bring in income. It needs to be something that I can create rather quickly so I can buy myself the time I need to circle back to my own business idea and get back on track. I'm looking for anything that is quick to spin up and that I may be able to build on easily and quickly. It doesn't have to tie into my overall initial product idea because I need to do more development on that. I plan to create a different anonymous account for this quick launch product so it won't be tied to my product brand. I've thought about everything from coloring books to prompt guides to automations to various re-skinned PLR product collections. I've even considered digital art. This really just needs to be something that has demand and can sell in the marketplace right now. I'm open to suggestions.
1 like • 14d
@Ena Jenkins I used to be on Quora all the time but not used it in quite some time. You just reminded me to maybe give it another whirl haha.
0 likes • 13d
@Shaun Chrisp I actually quite enjoyed using it. I found the people on there to be a bit less crazy than on Reddit haha.
1-7 of 7
Leon Glover
2
13points to level up
@leon-glover-4681
An entrepreneur in the AI space. Always looking to learn additional skills and network with other entrepreneurs and people interested in AI and tech.

Active 5d ago
Joined Feb 26, 2026
Manchester 🇬🇧
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