POPULARITY
Posibil ca Mindset-ul pe care îl ai să fie cel mai important factor în investiții și în educație.Nivelul la care reușești să duci o anumită activitate sau un anumit proiect va fi limitat în funcție de mindset.În acest interviu, Daniel Tudor și George Nedelcu discută dincolo de imobiliare sau de investiții și vorbesc despre cum poți să îți setezi modul de gândire pentru a avea succes.Daniel iubește antreprenoriatul așa cum o face de la 24 de ani. Acum se concentrează pe Real Estate și IT, unde construiește servicii de vânzări de top și o platformă globală pentru a conecta în mod captivant toate părțile interesate de pe piața imobiliară. El este cel mai cunoscut ca CEO & Fondator al THE CONCEPT, companie lider în servicii imobiliare din România. Împreună cu echipa sa uimitoare, a gestionat peste 60 de ansambluri rezidențiale și a vândut peste 2.000 de case noi.dezvoltatorilor de lux.Contact Daniel: https://danieltudor.roSpor la vizionare!Cine este George Nedelcu?De peste 20 de ani George Nedelcu s-a antrenat în vânzări, distribuție și management, a format și a condus echipe de mai bine de 18 ani, și făcut parte din echipa lui Tony Robbins le evenimentele UPW London din 2018 & 2019.De mai bine de 7 ani, George lucrează cu mintea omului, fiind coach pentru antreprenori de top din România și ajutându-i să își formeze echipa, să îmbunătățească sistemele companiei, să maximizeze profitul și să minimalizeze costurile. Este de asemenea hostul Power Podcast, partener în platforma de educație FreedMond și directorul executiv al agenției de marketing Kronstadt Media.Vrei să îți modelezi mintea și obiceiurile? Aplică pentru o Sesiune Gratuită De Strategie: https://bit.ly/CoachingGNMasterclass Gratuit: https://bit.ly/MasterclassGNFolosește codul "NEDELCU" pentru 10% reducere pe site-ul https://www.e-lit.roMai multe detalii pe:https://georgenedelcu.ro
Of the many things wrong with North Korea, beer is, apparently, something they do right. Indeed, if any were to take the leap and plunge their money into the Pyongyang abyss, the brewing industry may be one of the safer bets, due to the diversity of beers, the equipment, and proven domestic and international demand. Daniel Tudor identified this bright spot years ago, and successfully leveraged his interest in beer (and North Korea) into two well-received books on changes in North Korea – particularly markets and private sector character – as well as a South Korean brew pub. Daniel Tudor previously worked as Korea correspondent for the Economist. He has written several books on North and South Korea, including "North Korea Confidential" and "Ask a North Korean." He is also the co-founder of The Booth Brewing Co. About the podcast: The “North Korea News Podcast” is a weekly podcast hosted exclusively by NK News, covering all things DPRK: from news to extended interview with leading experts and analysts in the field and insight from our very own journalists. Featured image: Uriminzokkiri
Cine? Daniel Tudor - CEO si Founder THE CONCEPT Real Estate Advisers De ce? Daniel conduce propriul business si e pasionat de dezvoltare personala. Imi place ce a reusit sa construiasca pana acum asa ca i-am propus sa facem acest podcast. Mai multe despre ce face Daniel aici: https://www.linkedin.com/in/danieltudor http://www.theconcept.ro/
Daniel Tudor is the former Korea Correspondent for the Economist and co-author or author of North Korea Confidential, Korea: The Impossible Country, and Geek in Korea. Daniel is also the co-founder of the Booth Brewing Company, a business endeavor made towards correcting the imbalance of taste between North and South Korean beer. He is a graduate of the University of Oxford where he studied Politics, Philosophy and Economics at Somerville College, and also received an MBA from the Manchester Business School. Show notes, links, and bios can be found at www.settlersofseoul.com
During the 1990s, North Korea suffered one of the worst famines of the 20th century. The result of this “Arduous March,” as the regime calls it, was not only a humanitarian catastrophe: the large-scale suffering also ignited economic and social changes that are still shaping the country today. This is the analysis of James Pearson and Daniel Tudor, who argue in their latest book, "North Korea Confidential", that this experience, although highly traumatic, helped sow the seeds of capitalism in North Korea. In North Korea Confidential, Tudor and Pearson depict a changing society, communist by outside perception only , where the poor now almost exclusively survive thanks to the little businesses they maintain to complement their almost worthless official wages. Pyongyang is the seat of a new economic elite that conducts trade with China and beyond. Foreign currencies have taken over in some parts of the country as the primary medium of exchange, and consumerism seems almost celebrated as a virtue - the winners of North Korea’s economic revolution flash expensive items and take great care in following the latest fashion trends. James Pearson, a foreign correspondent for Reuters in Seoul and co-author of "North Korea Confidential", is our guest for this episode of Korea and the World. He holds a Master’s in Oriental Studies from the University of Cambridge, and a Bachelor’s in Chinese and Korean from the University of London’s School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), where his interest in North Korea began.
In Seoul's Hongdae district, Colin Marshall talks with Daniel Tudor, former Economist correspondent in Korea, co-founder of craft beer pizza pub chain The Booth, author of the books Korea: The Impossible Country, A Geek in Korea, and (with James Pearson) North Korea Confidential. They discuss the difference between Gangnam and Gangbuk style; the recently emerging trend toward Korean nostalgia, and what happens when you pull out an two-year-old mobile phone; what he discovered in Korea during the time of the 2002 World Cup; his time among the "studying machines" that constitute Korean youth, and why so few want to break from that hard-driving mode; education, especially abroad, as a means of "jumping the queue" back in Korea; the greater progressivism he's found among Koreans who've never left the country; why it matters when a foreigner voices the same criticism of Korea that Koreans think; whether he felt any fear of legal action when he publicly stated that Korean beer sucks; why Korean beer has continued to suck for so long; what it takes to get decent beer into Korea today; the "emotionalism" of Korean conversational style, and whether it plays in the wider world; to what extent Korea may westernize, given the presence of a certain "spineless love of all things American"; whether Korea's narrative of weakness can accommodate the country's new strength; what it was like writing for The Economist, a magazine newspaper given to short sentences, cynical humor, and an interest in "North Korea, North Korea, and sometimes North Korea"; where he still feels the presence of dictator Park Chung-hee, and the backlash to his "developmentalist" mindset that seems to have begun; the possibility of "de-Seoulification"; what he experiences on train trips that tells him too much has concentrated in Seoul; the parallels between Park Chung-hee and Margaret Thatcher; Korea's nature not as a conservative country, but as a country with a conservative veneer; the "natural socialism" that coexists in Korea with extreme capitalism; why Koreans believe their food too spicy for any foreigner to handle; why he hates even to hear the Korean term for "foreigner"; whether Korea can afford to continue burning so much energy on purely internal competition; the parallels between the chaebol system and North Korea; how soon a Pyongyang branch of The Booth would open after reunification; and what the English could stand to learn from the attitudes of the Koreans.
In our second episode we talked to Daniel Tudor, a British journalist and the author of two books on South Korea. He discusses with us the appeal of the country to foreign audiences – and where the limitations of this appeal might lie.