Why 4 stars then? When joining this program I thought there will be 1on1 sessions with coaches and that is not the case. Overall I am happy with the results and I am sure that I could get much more clients if I only put more effort into it. Most importantly, I didn't watch videos about sales but still was able to change my mindset and actions just by reading posts on Facebook group. All of this was possible even though I never finished video course from Max and his team. Following month 3 other clients joined my program. I made my first sale 3 months after starting the program.
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Thanks to all the team in Kiev! This program taught me how to position myself, find my potential clients and how to engage with them. The only thing I regret is why not this program was available 10 years ago. This program empowered my strengths that were dormant and the biggest lesson I have gotten is that self perfectionism leads you nowhere as I always thought that I was not good enough to help someone with my current knowledge. But it was until November that I decided to push myself beyond the comfort zone, where is painful and you have to work and hustle whereas people in your network chills and do leisure time. It was going to be another year until I got into Max Tornow Business content. Since I wanted to start doing something else in my life. Freedom Business Mentoring Review by Max Tornow So far, after several calls, he got 0 clients, improve nothing and got blamed "you're not doing properly what we teach". I am sure that being in business "is not that simple" as max always quotes as he loves to oversimplify. Thank you thank you thank you! Well, where to start? Unfortunately, I felt like a bunch of young guys are trying to teach me the basics which are not even very good. I've closed bigger deals than ever before in my life and I feel very confident about getting on the phone with a prospect and handling any objection they might have. Max and his team really helped me identify what my specific abilities are as a coach and how to position myself in a powerful way. Loading comments… Trouble loading? Most popular.This program was and is what I was looking for for a long time. Topics Foxcatcher Mark Kermode's film of the week. A picture caption in this article was amended on 12 Feb to remove a plot spoiler. Yes, the Schultzes are dedicated to earning their medals and trophies, but they also need to earn a living.
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Just as Moneyball lifted the veil on the number-crunching realities of professional baseball, so Foxcatcher wins our confidence with its brooding portrayal of wrestling as a business rather than a sport. It helps that Miller has a keen eye for the mundanities of this sporting life. The wrestling sequences are eloquently choreographed, combatants, coaches and observers speaking volumes through gesture rather than dialogue. If you watched Foxcatcher with the sound turned down, you could still follow its intricate interplays through body language alone: Mark, punchy and defensive Dave, protective and observant du Pont, increasingly isolated and embittered. In stark contrast to du Pont, the Schultz brothers are not big on talk early scenes establish their primary communication as physical rather than verbal. Yet for all its dramatic licence time-frames are skewed and compressedthere is more going on here than frustrated stereotypes. The results are rarely pretty the real-life Mark Schultz took to social media recently to denounce Miller as a liar, apparently stung by the delayed realisation that Foxcatcher of which he had previously been supportive had a homoerotic subtext. As awards-courting movies such as The Wrestler and The Fighter have reminded us in recent years, the strange world of competitive physical combat offers rich pickings for film-makers wishing to delve into the tortured male psyche. It is here that du Pont dreams of creating Team Foxcatchera group of world-beating wrestlers for whom he will be figurehead, father, coach and mentor. Foxcatcher is no exception, with Channing Tatum and Mark Ruffalo utterly convincing as the blue-collar brothers who find themselves dragged into a world of privilege and prejudice at the du Pont family estate in Pennsylvania. Better to allow director Bennett Miller to tell this stranger-than-fiction story with the same engaging intelligence that characterised his previous works, Capote and Moneyballboth of which drew career-best performances from their casts. Yet when I first saw this strange and disturbing sports psychodrama last year, I not only knew nothing of the grim, real-life events upon which it was based, but I was also initially unaware that I was watching Steve Carell.Ĭarell may have played things straight before, but not since Robin Williams in One Hour Photo has a comedian put so much clear water between himself and his back catalogue.