Since it's almost Halloween, I've been spending some time watching horror movies, especially ones from my childhood.
As a kid, I was scared to death by Freddy Krueger, but now I find "A Nightmare on Elm Street"
(and especially the sequels) cheesy and pretty silly.
They still give a good hit of nostalgia, but about horror movies:
There's a trope where someone is being chased by a killer, and the victim runs into an elevator
...
They then push the "close" button a bunch of times, in an attempt to shut the door quicker and make a safe escape.
But I recently read that the "close" button on elevators doesn't actually do anything!
In "The Diary of a CEO" (by Steven Bartlett), the author explains that elevator doors are set to close after a certain amount of time for safety reasons, and pushing the button doesn't make it close any faster.
It's all been put into place as
a placebo to make people feel like they're safer, but it doesn't do anything.
I got thinking about this when I was talking with Lucho and Lisza Crisalle the other day:
So many things in the online space aren't needed, and don't do
much, but we're told that we HAVE to have them ...
They've useless, like elevator "close" buttons.
Even if you eliminate all of them, you're still left with essential tools that you need to grow your business.
That could mean 10+ ones that each take significant time, and cost a lot of money every month, when put together.
Lucho and Lisza have something that solves this problem - they call it a "Business Command Center" that brings the essential
tools for coaches and online entrepreneurs together into one easy-to-use system.
Get the details here!