Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
What is this?
Less
More

Memberships

Poppy AI Academy

2.1k members • Free

Referral Training Center

218 members • Free

The Inner Edge

696 members • Free

Lead Generation Secrets

22.4k members • Free

Promote Your Hustle

670 members • Free

AI Simple

5.8k members • Free

High Ticket Sales | BOC™

2.3k members • $19/month

Insurance Sales Success!

14k members • Free

Wealthy Sales Pro

347 members • Free

15 contributions to Mind Technology
Not all marketing works the same
When I first started focusing on marketing, I honestly thought the solution was to try everything. More content, more platforms, more strategies. If it was trending, I wanted to use it. Then I got advice from a marketing expert that really changed my mindset. They told me, “Don’t just try any marketing. Use the marketing that fits your business.” That made me realise marketing isn’t just about being active everywhere. It’s about attracting the right people, building trust, and guiding them to buy in a way that matches your business model. For example, in e-commerce, the goal is to bring traffic to your store and convert visitors into buyers. So strategies like social media marketing, paid ads, influencer content, strong product pages, and email marketing tend to work well because customers are discovering and buying products online. But they also explained that the same approach won’t work the same for a service-based business like coaching or consulting. People don’t rush into buying services the way they buy products. They need more trust, education, and connection first. That’s why content, storytelling, and trust-building marketing usually work better there. That conversation made me realise I was being too random with my marketing, trying everything instead of choosing what actually fit my business. Since then, I’ve been more intentional, because not all marketing techniques work the same for every business. What do you think? And if you’ve got any questions, drop them in the comments lets interact
Why Most Ecommerce Stores Struggle
There was a time I honestly felt like my e-commerce store just wasn’t working. I kept adding more products, trying new ads, posting more… doing more of everything, but not seeing better results. I spoke to a strategist, and that convo really changed how I see ecom. They told me e-commerce isn’t just about putting products online. It’s about solving a clear problem for a specific group of people and making it easy for them to buy. I realized I was trying to sell to everyone… so I wasn’t really connecting with anyone. They also pointed out my product choices were all over the place. I was chasing trends instead of focusing on products that made sense for one type of customer. Once I niched down, things felt way more aligned. Then we looked at my store from a customer’s view. Some things weren’t clear, and it didn’t build as much trust as I thought. Improving my photos, descriptions, and layout made a bigger difference than I expected. Another big lesson is that traffic and sales are two different problems. I was focused on getting visitors, but not enough on what made them actually buy. Once I improved my product pages and offers, conversions got better, without needing way more traffic. And finally, I learned that the first sale isn’t the end. Emails, follow-ups, and giving customers a good experience so they come back again, that’s where real growth happens. That advice helped me stop moving randomly and start treating my store like a real business. Have you ever gotten advice that changed how you run your business? Or if you’ve got questions about ecom, drop them below
Feedbacks and Analytics
I used to think analytics were boring and kinda “optional.” Honestly, I just wanted to post, show up, and hope people bought something. But here’s the thing, once I actually started paying attention to what was working and what wasn’t, everything changed. Even small numbers can give you huge insight. For example, I noticed some posts were getting a lot of likes but almost no comments or clicks. That told me people were seeing it, but it wasn’t really connecting or moving them to do anything. Once I tweaked my messaging and focused on posts that made people stop and respond, engagement went up, and sales followed. A few simple things I learned work: - Track what gets attention — likes, comments, shares, clicks — and notice patterns - Listen to what people are saying in comments or DMs — sometimes they tell you exactly what they want - Don’t freak out over numbers — small tweaks over time matter more than obsessing over every little stat The big lesson is that Analytics aren’t about pressure or perfection. They’re just a way to see what’s actually working, so you can do more of that and fix what isn’t. So do you usually track how your posts or marketing are doing, or just post and hope for the best?
1
0
Long-Term Marketing
I wanna share something that really changed how I look at marketing, and honestly, it’s been a game-changer for my business. For the longest time, I was chasing quick wins. One post did well, one ad got a sale, and I thought, “Yeah, I’m killing it!”… but nothing really stuck. Then I got some guidance from someone who helped me see it differently. Marketing isn’t about quick spikes, it’s about slow, steady growth. Think of it like planting seeds. Every post, every email, every little update is a seed. You won’t see results the next day, but over time, people start recognizing you, trusting you, and actually buying. For me, that’s what turned followers into real customers, without burning myself out trying to “go viral.” What really worked for me: - Show up consistently — even small posts count. Don’t wait for perfect. - Focus on the right people — speak to the folks who actually need your stuff, not everyone. - Own your platforms — having a website or email list keeps you in control, instead of relying only on social media. - Pay attention and tweak — notice what’s working, adjust what’s not, and keep going. The biggest thing I learned? Growth takes time. But if you stick with it, those small efforts really add up, and before you know it, people know you, trust you, and are ready to buy. So what about you? are you more focused on quick wins right now, or trying to build something that actually grows over time?
2
0
Target Audience
Let’s talk about target audience, because this is where a lot of marketing starts to feel frustrating. Most people don’t actually have a consistency problem. They’re showing up, posting, talking about what they do. The real issue is that the message is landing in front of people who aren’t ready or aren’t the right fit, so it feels like you’re doing all this work and nothing’s coming back. When people hear “know your audience,” they usually think demographics. Age, gender, location. That stuff matters a little, but it’s not what moves the needle. What really matters is understanding what your people are dealing with in their real life. What’s already bothering them. What they complain about casually. What they Google when no one’s watching. Most people don’t search for solutions, they search for symptoms. That’s why someone can read your content, nod along, and still not take action. You’re answering a question they haven’t asked yet. This is also why visibility alone doesn’t equal results. You can be seen by thousands of people and still feel invisible if the right people don’t recognize themselves in what you’re saying. Good marketing isn’t about convincing people they need you. It’s about making the right person feel like, “Oh… this is for me.” When that happens, trust builds naturally and the education starts to land. A simple way to check this: when someone reads your post, do they feel seen? Or do they feel like they’re watching from the outside? If you get clear on who you’re really talking to, everything else, content, platforms, even consistency, gets easier. So, when you’re creating content, who do you picture reading it?
3
0
1-10 of 15
Rita Stugart
3
31points to level up
@rita-stugart-8468
Driven businesswoman focused on scaling my ventures, building strategic partnerships, and boosting profits before year’s end for lasting growth.

Active 4d ago
Joined Dec 12, 2025