Get all the inside secrets and tools you need to help you develop your intuitive and leadership skills so you are on the path to the highest level of success with ease. Listen in as Peter shares his amazing journey through several careers and an international move and the key habits that helped him accomplish so much!
In this episode you will learn:
More about Peter:
Key habits and decisions that directly fueled my success Why these worked and how others can apply them in their own journey Actionable marketing and business tips that entrepreneurs can implement immediately Lessons learned from mistakes that taught me more than my wins ever did
Peter is a seasoned digital and performance marketing expert with over 20 years of experience helping retailers, brands, wholesalers, and service providers elevate their branding, strategy, and marketing programs. His extensive background spans multiple industries, working with businesses of all sizes—from startups to large enterprises.
https://www.linkedin.com/in/peter-kalanda/
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Are you ready to tiptoe into your intuition and tap into your soul’s message? Let’s talk
Listen in as Jennifer Takagi, founder of Takagi Consulting, Certified High Performance Coach, 5X time Amazon.Com Best Selling-Author, Certified Soul Care Coach, Certified Jack Canfield Success Principle Trainer, Certified Professional Behavioral Analyst and Facilitator of the DISC Behavioral Profiles, Certified Change Style Indicator Facilitator, Law of Attraction Practitioner, and Certified Coaching Specialist - leadership entrepreneur, speaker and trainer, shares the lessons she’s learned along the way. Each episode is designed to give you the tools, ideas, and inspiration to lead with integrity. Humor is a big part of Jennifer’s life, so expect a few puns and possibly some sarcasm. Tune in for a motivational guest, a story or tips to take you even closer to that success you’ve been coveting. Please share the episodes that inspired you the most and be sure to leave a comment.
Official Website: http://www.jennifertakagi.com
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I look forward to connecting with you soon,
Jennifer Takagi
Speaker, Trainer, Author, Energy Healer
PS: We would love to hear from you! For questions, coaching, or to book interviews, please email my team at Jennifer@takagiconsulting.com
Other. Welcome to Destin for success. I'm your
Jennifer Takagi:host, Jennifer Takagi, and today we're going to have a very
Jennifer Takagi:interesting fun conversation with Peter kalanda, and Peter is
Jennifer Takagi:going to talk about key habits and decisions that directly
Jennifer Takagi:fueled his success. Peter, welcome to the show,
Peter Kalanda:Jennifer, thank you so much for having me
Peter Kalanda:looking forward to the conversation
Jennifer Takagi:Well, and I love it. You just, I'll just let
Jennifer Takagi:you go. Yeah, you got here, like, how does this all come
Jennifer Takagi:together? What do you do?
Peter Kalanda:Yeah, sure. So. How do I get here? I am. You
Peter Kalanda:know, I actually immigrated here in 1983 from the former
Peter Kalanda:Czechoslovakia with my parents and my brother two suitcases,
Peter Kalanda:you know, seeking political or political refugees from the
Peter Kalanda:former Eastern Bloc. You know, kind of the rags to riches
Peter Kalanda:story. My dad had a his first job was a chief engineer out in
Peter Kalanda:out on Long Island. That's where we settled. Lived in New York
Peter Kalanda:City. Lived in New York City my whole life. Now I live in LA
Peter Kalanda:manage. I got into the hospitality industry. I went to
Peter Kalanda:school for that, managed a hotel in New York City for a while.
Peter Kalanda:Then, you know, I wanted to change. And I was thinking to
Peter Kalanda:myself, you know, what can I do in the future? What were my
Peter Kalanda:passions? And the digital marketing, kind of SEO and
Peter Kalanda:websites and design was kind of starting out at that time. It
Peter Kalanda:was in the in the early 2000s that I that I work with this
Peter Kalanda:gentleman who managed a hotel, one of the hotels that I worked
Peter Kalanda:at, and he created one of the first booking engines for hotels
Peter Kalanda:I was very early on. I was still working at the hotel at that
Peter Kalanda:time, and I kept in contact with him. So, you know, forward a
Peter Kalanda:couple years, and 2008 comes along, you know, big crash. And
Peter Kalanda:I worked at Ernst and Young of all places, doing hospitality,
Peter Kalanda:real estate. I mean, some of these things where I got to and
Peter Kalanda:where I am now, it's kind of crazy and wild when you think
Peter Kalanda:about it. So I started working. I started contact. I got in
Peter Kalanda:contact with him, and he brought me on as kind of a financial
Peter Kalanda:person, and it was all hands on deck. I had to do everything. We
Peter Kalanda:were doing projections. And then we started getting clients for a
Peter Kalanda:digital marketing hotel agency. So I started learning SEO on my
Peter Kalanda:own, trial and error practice and working with clients. And,
Peter Kalanda:you know, making mistakes. Don't be afraid to make mistakes. It's
Peter Kalanda:what's when everyone learns everything. I mean, this is a
Peter Kalanda:philosophy that I talk about and practice. I get in there and get
Peter Kalanda:in the weeds and do the work and there's you'll get rewarded. And
Peter Kalanda:that was a startup. Sometimes startups just don't work out.
Peter Kalanda:But I learned a lot. I then I moved on to a textile company.
Peter Kalanda:Took them from about 500,000 a year to 3 million when I left.
Peter Kalanda:And then I figured, you know, I can do this on my own, starting
Peter Kalanda:my own agency, three horizons, interactive, and that's where I
Peter Kalanda:am. Now work a variety of clients. And you know, a lot of
Peter Kalanda:the things that I learned that hospitality is completely
Peter Kalanda:transferable to what I'm what I'm doing now, so and now I'm
Peter Kalanda:here with you.
Jennifer Takagi:Now you're here with me. So I think it's really
Jennifer Takagi:fun when you like that, your skills can transfer. Yeah, as an
Jennifer Takagi:entrepreneur, it can be very daunting to think, Oh, but I was
Jennifer Takagi:an expert in this, and now, like, Am I an expert? I had a
Jennifer Takagi:conversation, a podcast interview, actually, recently,
Jennifer Takagi:with a woman, and she goes, I decided to be an interior
Jennifer Takagi:decorator because I love beautiful things. I hung my
Jennifer Takagi:shingle, and then I signed up to go to school so I'd have all the
Jennifer Takagi:letters after my name, right? I already had clients before I
Jennifer Takagi:started, because I love beautiful things, and I know how
Jennifer Takagi:to make things beautiful, so I love that like you, you transfer
Jennifer Takagi:your skills, but we often don't consider that like I came from
Jennifer Takagi:corporate and federal in the housing industry and all kinds
Jennifer Takagi:of things come out that I learned there and are
Jennifer Takagi:transferable skills. But let me tell you, it took a long time
Jennifer Takagi:for me to embrace that,
Peter Kalanda:right. Yeah, yeah. You never Yeah. Same thing
Peter Kalanda:when you know coming from hospitality, there's certain
Peter Kalanda:things that are just completely transferable, like just working
Peter Kalanda:with people knowing and different kinds of people and
Peter Kalanda:tests anticipate issues and needs, and you curate kind of
Peter Kalanda:member memorable interactions when people come to a hotel, and
Peter Kalanda:that's kind of the same thing. You translate to mark marketing.
Peter Kalanda:You know you're you're looking at customer journeys, your user
Peter Kalanda:experiences, building campaigns. And it all works. It All. It's
Peter Kalanda:all completely transferable. I.
Jennifer Takagi:Problem. So we, we mentioned Glendale,
Jennifer Takagi:California. I went to Glendale, I don't know, well, 14 times for
Jennifer Takagi:Brenda burchard's Ultra event, and I stayed every time at the
Jennifer Takagi:Residence Inn. And I'm a Marriott bomb boy member. And I
Jennifer Takagi:don't know that I really get that many perks out of it, but I
Jennifer Takagi:am like, I stay at Marriott's a lot. And I walked in first time,
Jennifer Takagi:and there was a, like, a picture frame, and it said, welcome our
Jennifer Takagi:Platinum members enlisted, and welcome our Gold members,
Jennifer Takagi:whatever. And I had a friend who was staying there also, and his
Jennifer Takagi:name was on there, and he was a higher status, whatever the
Jennifer Takagi:statuses were, and I was like, well, I need that status. How
Jennifer Takagi:many nights do I need? Oh, okay, it was nothing. They they spent
Jennifer Takagi:two minutes and printed out on a piece of paper and stuck it in a
Jennifer Takagi:frame. And I was like, wait, I need status. Where am I? Those
Jennifer Takagi:are the kind of things that, as entrepreneurs, our clients want
Jennifer Takagi:right, like they want to feel special.
Peter Kalanda:Yeah, yeah. I mean, 100% agree, like we would
Peter Kalanda:do. When I managed a hotel in New York City, we were one of
Peter Kalanda:the first hotels to offer a wine and cheese hour for free that
Peter Kalanda:was included in the rate. And it was amazing, such a little
Peter Kalanda:thing, and
Jennifer Takagi:it cost minimal, like you had time of
Jennifer Takagi:the employees, and minimal amount for the food. It
Peter Kalanda:was. The reviews were amazing, just kind of
Peter Kalanda:mentioning that, you know, you're paying this rate, and you
Peter Kalanda:get this free, you know, wine and cheese and food and drinks
Peter Kalanda:and stuff, and it's, it's huge that what you described at the
Peter Kalanda:is with the Sheraton, Yes, Maria, Maria, it was such a
Peter Kalanda:little thing for them to do, but it's massive. And a lot of
Jennifer Takagi:hotels, every time I'd be like, where's my
Jennifer Takagi:name, right?
Peter Kalanda:And then there's, it's these little things. Anyone
Peter Kalanda:can do it, any hotel manager, owner can do it, but some and
Peter Kalanda:still don't. And it's simple,
Jennifer Takagi:yeah, it's a simple thing, and it's and so
Jennifer Takagi:it's the same with our client journey. Yes, exactly email that
Jennifer Takagi:you get, that follow up, that you get for your time on our
Jennifer Takagi:call, like, those are the kind of things that,
Peter Kalanda:yeah, I mean, exactly that's kind of like my
Peter Kalanda:kind of, what comes back comes from transitioning, and that
Peter Kalanda:transferable skill is kind of just being able to be thankful
Peter Kalanda:and appreciative for the phone call. And, you know, there's
Peter Kalanda:multiple times where I'm part of a proposal or trying to get a
Peter Kalanda:new client, and we're talking, and people have maybe three or
Peter Kalanda:four proposals that they're looking at. And why I stand out,
Peter Kalanda:I think. And what people have told me is that, you know, I
Peter Kalanda:took the time to talk on the phone, maybe more than once, and
Peter Kalanda:got to know the business and the team members, and kind of that
Peter Kalanda:translated into them wanting to work with me. Where that I
Peter Kalanda:asked, you know, who else are you? You know, what other kind
Peter Kalanda:of proposals you're getting? Like, Oh, you know, we're
Peter Kalanda:getting one or two, but it's, you can tell, it's just a form
Peter Kalanda:that they fill out, put the company name, and there it is.
Peter Kalanda:Send it over, and that's it. And I, you know, that's why I think
Peter Kalanda:we do well, is that we take the time and kind of become part of
Peter Kalanda:your team, which, again, is one of those transferable skills,
Peter Kalanda:being able to do that for clients well.
Jennifer Takagi:And it's that, that whole customer service type
Jennifer Takagi:thing,
Peter Kalanda:yeah,
Jennifer Takagi:is is kind of gone at work one day when I was
Jennifer Takagi:still in the government, I just got call after call after call
Jennifer Takagi:transferred to me, and none of them were my department. None of
Jennifer Takagi:them were my job. I knew the answers. I knew where to send
Jennifer Takagi:the calls because I had been there for a long time, but none
Jennifer Takagi:of it was my job. And when I left for lunch, I stopped at the
Jennifer Takagi:reception desk, and I was like, I'm getting an ordinate number
Jennifer Takagi:of calls today. Is there something going on, like a whole
Jennifer Takagi:division out today? So I'm getting more calls. It wasn't
Jennifer Takagi:even my division, right? Not Yeah. And he goes, but you're
Jennifer Takagi:nice, and I know that you'll get him the answer. And I was like,
Jennifer Takagi:Okay, I have a busy afternoon when I get back from lunch,
Jennifer Takagi:would you not do this anymore? Like, I like that. I'm helpful,
Jennifer Takagi:but, like, I have work to do. I'm not Yeah. Would you please
Jennifer Takagi:quit? Yeah, I recently had my knee replaced, and I had some
Jennifer Takagi:extra little, stupid, little complications at the beginning,
Jennifer Takagi:nothing from the surgery, all you know, probably self induced,
Jennifer Takagi:but I went back into the doctor's office. I don't know
Jennifer Takagi:how many times I went back in, and I was never nice, right?
Jennifer Takagi:Like I shouldn't be there. The first replacement, six weeks
Jennifer Takagi:later, I flew to LA and this one is been a struggle bus. Let me
Jennifer Takagi:just tell you. Mm hmm. And I was in the other day and they said,
Jennifer Takagi:Well, you have a copay. And I was like, Oh my gosh, I've come
Jennifer Takagi:in so many times since my surgery that I have a co pay.
Jennifer Takagi:And one of the women that I know for a fact I was not really nice
Jennifer Takagi:and friendly to was usually at that desk, and she was at a
Jennifer Takagi:different desk, and she circled around and looked at me, and she
Jennifer Takagi:goes, Oh, Jennifer is sad when they all know your name, right?
Jennifer Takagi:Jennifer had a really rough start, and I was like, Oh,
Jennifer Takagi:that's so nice. She could have said, You're a hateful little
Jennifer Takagi:witch. And we just,
Peter Kalanda:yeah, yeah. It's just like, I mean, it goes to
Peter Kalanda:that phrase I always kind of go back to, is just kind of kill
Peter Kalanda:him with kindness. It's so true, like a smile at a front desk or
Peter Kalanda:just a nice conversation with a prospective or current client
Peter Kalanda:and just trying to solve a problem, whether that be, hey, I
Peter Kalanda:need you know, how do I get more visitors to my website? They're
Peter Kalanda:not converting things like that, which, which I can help with. My
Peter Kalanda:company does on all the time. Yeah, you just want to, just
Peter Kalanda:want to be nice. It's not hard to be nice, well.
Jennifer Takagi:And sometimes I was, I was at a conference in
Jennifer Takagi:San Diego years ago. And the person, it was her conference,
Jennifer Takagi:her business, yeah. And somebody asked her a very technical,
Jennifer Takagi:specific question, and she said, there are 80 people in this
Jennifer Takagi:room, and I can stand here and tell you every single thing I
Jennifer Takagi:do, step by step, and I really don't have a problem doing that,
Jennifer Takagi:because only, like, 1% will possibly even attempt to do it.
Jennifer Takagi:And I was like, what? So when somebody asks you a question and
Jennifer Takagi:you can easily give them one or two strategic tips to increase
Jennifer Takagi:their traffic, increase their SEO, it's really not taking
Jennifer Takagi:anything off of you, guess what? They're not going to do it.
Peter Kalanda:Yeah, and these things are easily doable, like
Peter Kalanda:I, you know, you can, you can do them yourself. It's just you
Peter Kalanda:have to have someone look at it and tell you what the issues
Peter Kalanda:are, which, again, you know, I can help.
Jennifer Takagi:Yeah, I can help. Okay, so you have key
Jennifer Takagi:habits and decisions, and I'm sure we have danced around and
Jennifer Takagi:talked about them a little bit here, but do you have some very
Jennifer Takagi:specific key habits that you incorporate?
Peter Kalanda:Yeah? I mean, the number one thing that I do, and
Peter Kalanda:I've learned through kind of just managing my day to day is,
Peter Kalanda:you know, everyone has a to do list, right? And my to do list,
Peter Kalanda:you in, before I did this was 10 things long, you know, and then
Peter Kalanda:trying to cross them out. But it never, it never got to the end.
Peter Kalanda:So I literally have a post it note with three things that I
Peter Kalanda:need to do today, every day, and I have the I do those three
Peter Kalanda:things and I cross them out, and it's so fulfilling. You wouldn't
Peter Kalanda:even know just to see those cross outs. There's certain
Peter Kalanda:things that you know I have in a notebook that I'll go this can,
Peter Kalanda:I can do this tomorrow, the next day, or in a week or so, but
Peter Kalanda:just having a little just a little post it note, I would
Peter Kalanda:highly recommend and write three or four things and do them and
Peter Kalanda:just cross it off. It's huge. That has been very, very helpful
Peter Kalanda:for me.
Jennifer Takagi:I have heard that in similar ways. And there
Jennifer Takagi:was a year that I had a notebook, but I would only put
Jennifer Takagi:three things per day on it and mark it off, and then at the end
Jennifer Takagi:of the week, I could see them all, but same type concept, but
Jennifer Takagi:that's really big. I I worked with a lady one time, and
Jennifer Takagi:something was said about a to do list or something. And she goes,
Jennifer Takagi:Well, I never get through it. And there's got to be some
Jennifer Takagi:scientific study out there that the brain gets overwhelmed when
Jennifer Takagi:you've got those List of 10 things.
Peter Kalanda:And it is overwhelming. When you look at
Peter Kalanda:the notebook, yeah, when you look at down at it and you see
Peter Kalanda:1015, things, it's, it's, it's very, it's overwhelming. So just
Peter Kalanda:a little post it, it's huge. That's something anyone can do
Peter Kalanda:right away.
Jennifer Takagi:I heard a guy, he said that when he got through
Jennifer Takagi:his three things, and I don't know if it was a post it or what
Jennifer Takagi:he wrote it on, he said, I like, crunch it up and throw it away.
Jennifer Takagi:Like, it's just, like a very dramatic,
Peter Kalanda:yeah, yeah. It's funny to say that. And the
Peter Kalanda:corner of my desk, I have some post it notes at the end of the
Peter Kalanda:day, I literally do crunch them up and just throw them out and
Peter Kalanda:never have to see them again. You know, in the notebook, you
Peter Kalanda:can kind of go through and kind of see it's still there. But I
Peter Kalanda:also I do. Have a notebook for work notes. I have a notebook
Peter Kalanda:for just personal things, which has been huge, just separate
Peter Kalanda:that, because sometimes before I used to tend to write, I have
Peter Kalanda:to, you know, doctor's office and this client needs to
Peter Kalanda:increase their budget, and it was all lumped together, and it
Peter Kalanda:was, it just was out of control, so post it note, two notebooks,
Peter Kalanda:major things that anyone could do, and you can implement that
Peter Kalanda:today, tomorrow.
Jennifer Takagi:Oh, I love that. That's really great. And I
Jennifer Takagi:need to get back to that, because it is like, I'll lay in
Jennifer Takagi:bed in the morning think, what do I have to do today? Yeah,
Jennifer Takagi:already had my three notes for today last night when I went to
Jennifer Takagi:bed. Do you do that? Do you put your three things for the next
Jennifer Takagi:day? If you already know what they are fresh in the morning.
Jennifer Takagi:Like how
Peter Kalanda:I like, I like in the morning. I like to do it in
Peter Kalanda:the morning, because I just, for me, that's that's helpful, but I
Peter Kalanda:can, I can totally see why the night before would be great. And
Peter Kalanda:even, you know, Sunday night, Sunday scaries rolling around,
Peter Kalanda:I've done it where I put a little little note on a Sunday
Peter Kalanda:night and just be okay. This is what I need to do. And I feel a
Peter Kalanda:little better about little
Jennifer Takagi:about it. I love that. All right. So our to
Jennifer Takagi:do list three things on it. I think it was Jack Canfield said,
Jennifer Takagi:If you cannot, absolutely cannot do only three, no more than
Jennifer Takagi:five. Five is the absolute.
Peter Kalanda:Yeah, for sure, yeah, yeah, yeah, I agree.
Peter Kalanda:Anything more than that, yeah, you're not gonna know. The life
Peter Kalanda:gets in the way and there's, you know, it's hard to we got so
Peter Kalanda:distracted now with all these different messages, Slack and
Peter Kalanda:teams and texts and all these things are popping up all over
Peter Kalanda:the place, like even, you know, for our conversation, I not
Peter Kalanda:deleted, but just quit out of all these things. So I'm just
Peter Kalanda:fully focused. And sometimes, you know, there's been times
Peter Kalanda:when I'm calls and I just don't do that, and it just affects
Peter Kalanda:your day so much. You can't be present, and it's tough. I mean,
Peter Kalanda:I understand I do it. It's just more of like a habit. It's
Peter Kalanda:almost just training yourself. Well,
Jennifer Takagi:my husband and I have a conversation a lot.
Jennifer Takagi:He's like, Well, you didn't tell me that. And I'm like, Well, I
Jennifer Takagi:told you that, but you were playing on your iPad and so you
Jennifer Takagi:weren't focused enough. A friend said, Oh, y'all are going on
Jennifer Takagi:this vacation with all of us, like a whole group of people.
Jennifer Takagi:And my husband goes, Oh no, Jen never told me about that. And I
Jennifer Takagi:was like, yeah, yeah, I did
Peter Kalanda:want to go. It's kind of, I've had these
Peter Kalanda:conversations too, just kind of where technology is and where
Peter Kalanda:it's going and what it's doing, and, you know, just the phone
Peter Kalanda:and just having, you know, you can't focus on things at the
Peter Kalanda:same time. And it's becoming more and more like this was
Peter Kalanda:supposed to help, but I feel like it's just getting just,
Peter Kalanda:it's getting harder. Well,
Jennifer Takagi:you've got to take control of it yourself,
Jennifer Takagi:right? Because it will take control of you. Yeah, all right.
Jennifer Takagi:So you've got a great to do list. I love that. Do you have
Jennifer Takagi:another habit for me?
Peter Kalanda:Um, you know the one, the other thing is just
Peter Kalanda:kind of not taking off, not doing too much, not taking on
Peter Kalanda:too much that you can't handle. I've been better about
Peter Kalanda:delegating. And this goes back to kind of just, just my
Peter Kalanda:personality. I tend to have, I tend to want to control, kind of
Peter Kalanda:everything. And it's been, this has been throughout my whole
Peter Kalanda:life, when I worked the front desk and just delegating, and
Peter Kalanda:now just working with designers and developers and trusting that
Peter Kalanda:they can do the work. And I'm there. I've gotten there and and
Peter Kalanda:it takes a long time, you know, certain people are better than
Peter Kalanda:it than others, but it was hard for me to just just let someone,
Peter Kalanda:you know, do the smaller tasks and just taking on too much
Peter Kalanda:I've, you know, sometimes I'm in the weeds of an SEO audit, I get
Peter Kalanda:involved. Sometimes I do the keyword research and things like
Peter Kalanda:that that I don't necessarily have to do, and just have
Peter Kalanda:someone else on my team do it, but it's just hard for me to
Peter Kalanda:give it up, because I love to do it, but I've gotten so much more
Peter Kalanda:better. So just delegating and just trusting that, you know,
Peter Kalanda:people on my team will, will, will do the work, and I don't
Peter Kalanda:have to worry about it. It's hard.
Jennifer Takagi:Well, it's a lot. And I, after I left the
Jennifer Takagi:federal government, I was fortunate enough to teach
Jennifer Takagi:classes for the great state of Oklahoma, and they provided all
Jennifer Takagi:the material, and I just had to go in and deliver it. And it was
Jennifer Takagi:super fun. And the people were really engaging and fun, but one
Jennifer Takagi:of them was on becoming a new supervisor and and step. Into
Jennifer Takagi:that new supervisory role. And there was a quote, and I you
Jennifer Takagi:know, maybe it was Eisenhower, I don't know it was somebody super
Jennifer Takagi:famous from the 50s, 60s, but he said, give your team a task and
Jennifer Takagi:tell them you trust they will get it done. Yeah, sit back and
Jennifer Takagi:just wait to see what great things they come up with. And
Jennifer Takagi:that word trust is so big because it goes both ways, like
Jennifer Takagi:if somebody goes I trust you're going to do what you said.
Jennifer Takagi:Jennifer, I'm like, wow, now I'm elevated to a higher level of
Jennifer Takagi:getting it done. But then when I transfer that trust to somebody
Jennifer Takagi:else, I trust you'll get that done. You know, I'm not going to
Jennifer Takagi:worry about it. I trust you'll do it. It elevates them. So that
Jennifer Takagi:whole passing it off with that level of trust is just Yeah,
Jennifer Takagi:it's hard. It's so hard, don't get me wrong, but it's very
Jennifer Takagi:important,
Peter Kalanda:yeah, and then, and then, with that, the other
Peter Kalanda:kind of key habit leads into is kind of just patience, that
Peter Kalanda:patience that someone will get it done. And I've, I've been
Peter Kalanda:really good about just having the patience and being able to
Peter Kalanda:kind of, you know, whether it be at a front desk, kind of
Peter Kalanda:teaching an agent or bringing on a junior or marketing person,
Peter Kalanda:just being patient with them, and just kind of bringing them
Peter Kalanda:on and showing them what I do, and just kind of learning from
Peter Kalanda:doing, learning from doing. And is, I know everyone kind of
Peter Kalanda:talks about this, but it's so it's so huge. All these things
Peter Kalanda:are kind of related patience with giving up, of giving up
Peter Kalanda:that kind of control.
Jennifer Takagi:And it's that's a big one. And it's, you know,
Jennifer Takagi:when I was in school, like everybody had to learn the same
Jennifer Takagi:way. You had to do the same thing, you had to excel the same
Jennifer Takagi:way, and now they're being much more diverse about that, so more
Jennifer Takagi:people have a whole lot better chance of higher levels of
Jennifer Takagi:success in that it appears. But one of the things is that that
Jennifer Takagi:learn by doing, when you've just got to let him do it and
Jennifer Takagi:practice it and hands on.
Peter Kalanda:And, yeah, make mistakes. Mistakes are okay.
Peter Kalanda:Yeah, yeah, mistakes are okay. It's totally fine, right?
Jennifer Takagi:I used to tell myself, there was only one thing
Jennifer Takagi:that we can't undo. And it was so stupid, because it could
Jennifer Takagi:totally be undone, but it, you know, people made a federal case
Jennifer Takagi:out of it. Ha, ha. That was a joke, but it really was. But it
Jennifer Takagi:wasn't that big a deal, but it'd be like any mistake we make, it
Jennifer Takagi:can be undone and fixed. That just was the bottom line. And if
Jennifer Takagi:something is life or death, you need to call 911, because we
Jennifer Takagi:should not be involved in that. We can't do life or death. We're
Jennifer Takagi:not exactly, exactly. We're not the people to handle that. Yeah,
Peter Kalanda:yeah. We're not, we're not doing brain surgery.
Peter Kalanda:My job is in brain surgery, yeah? So, you know, I'll bring
Peter Kalanda:you leads and conversions and visitors to your site, but I
Peter Kalanda:won't, yeah, life or death.
Jennifer Takagi:No, I don't do life or death at all. All right,
Jennifer Takagi:you got a super fun gift for the audience. Why don't you tell us
Jennifer Takagi:a little bit about that? Because that's yeah. So quite the offer,
Jennifer Takagi:yeah.
Peter Kalanda:So every you know, all your listeners, I will
Peter Kalanda:go look at your website. You know, we'll take 1520 minutes on
Peter Kalanda:a call. I'll have everything ready before and we'll go
Peter Kalanda:through four or five things that you yourself can implement. You
Peter Kalanda:know, we'll look at what keywords you're getting, and
Peter Kalanda:some of those keywords are in that 10th to 20 position. And
Peter Kalanda:I'll tell you how you can get to number one. With that, we'll
Peter Kalanda:also look at AI, how, how can you appear in chat? GPT, all
Peter Kalanda:these LLM search. So my the offer is on Site Audit now.com
Peter Kalanda:and yeah, message me there, and we'll get your site up and
Peter Kalanda:running and more conversions and some things, they're more
Peter Kalanda:technical, you might have to have someone help you with
Peter Kalanda:whether that me or someone else, but there's so there's four or
Peter Kalanda:five things that everyone can do themselves right away that will
Peter Kalanda:just help your website and your business. So Site Audit now.com,
Jennifer Takagi:now.com and I will have that in the show
Jennifer Takagi:notes, so that if, if by chance, you know you need to grab the
Jennifer Takagi:link, the link will be there. Peter, this has been really
Jennifer Takagi:enlightening. I really look forward to having my
Jennifer Takagi:conversation with you in the near future, and as we wrap this
Jennifer Takagi:up, do you have any closing thoughts for the audience on
Jennifer Takagi:success?
Peter Kalanda:You know, just trust yourself. Trust the
Peter Kalanda:process. Will, you know, do make those mistakes? Takes work with
Peter Kalanda:good people, have the patience, and you'll get there. It's
Peter Kalanda:something it takes a long time. Sometimes it's hard, sometimes
Peter Kalanda:it's daunting, and I'm there. I had many sleepless nights, but
Peter Kalanda:it's it's worth it.
Jennifer Takagi:I love that. Thank you so much. Thank you.
Jennifer Takagi:This is Jennifer Takagi with destin for success, and I look
Jennifer Takagi:forward to connecting with you soon. Bye.