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Sometimes you get to meet your actual heroes! This was one of those days for me. It's Sophie Cross, founder of Freelancer Magazine and creator of one of the best online courses for mastering social media, LinkedIn for Humans.Sophie's very open about things that I think we can all relate to:- Burning out after working too hard- Constantly trying to improve your business in small ways- Finding time for herselfSophie's focus is very much on processes, something she's passionate about. For her, getting her business optimised means two things - one she can avoid restarting tasks, and can work in 'sprints' to get things done efficiently, and two she has a structure to support a growing team around her. Win!Sophie used Kickstarter to get her business off the ground with funding behind it - hearing about that is super useful. She's also not afraid to accept help, and turn to the community around her when she needs it. All in all, there's so much good stuff in this interview that there's no point you reading this. Just crack on and give it a listen! Let's Niche Upon A Star!
Copywriter and Publisher of Freelancer magazine, Sophie Cross, is the guest for the 374th episode of The Copywriter Club Podcast. Kira and Rob asked Sophie why she decided to publish a print magazine in a time when many printed magazines seem to be struggling to find readers and advertisers. She shared what it takes to accomplish such a Herculean task each quarter. One of our big take aways from this discussion is that you may need to do something BIG to stand out in today's competitive world. Publishing a magazine is that kind of big idea that stands out. And this episode may give you a few ideas that you can use to stand out in your own niche or industry. Click the play button below, or scroll down for a full transcript. Important links to check out: Freelancer Magazine The Copywriter Club Facebook Group The Copywriter Underground Full Transcript: Rob Marsh: Want to build your authority? Then you need to be sharing your ideas, insights and content in places where your audience will find you. Linkedin. Instagram. Medium. Twitter. That's good advice and it has helped hundreds of copywriters rise above the crowd and get noticed by the clients they serve. But if you really want to stand out… the way to do it is by showing up in ways that no one else has thought of before. Instead of posting on someone else's platform, why not create your own? Hi, I'm Rob Marsh, one of the founders of The Copywriter Club. And on today's episode of The Copywriter Club Podcast, my co-founder, Kira Hug, and I interviewed copywriter and magazine publisher Sophie Cross. Sophie is the publisher of Freelancer magazine, a printed quarterly magazine about the ins and outs of working on your own. As you'll hear her explain, Sophie wanted to create a platform to help her get noticed. So she started her magazine and we wanted to understand what it takes to publish and mail a 100-page magazine 4 times a year. Turns out it's a lot of work. We also talked about freelancing in the hospitality industry, creating courses and other assets, and Sophie's advice for anyone working as a freelancer today. Stick around because this one is pretty good. But first, this episode of The Copywriter Club Podcast is brought to you by The Copywriter Underground. It is truly the best membership for copywriters and content writers… let me just give you an idea of what you get for $87 a month… first there's a monthly group coaching call with Kira and me where you can get answers to your questions, advice for overcoming any business or client or writing challenge you have. There are weekly copy critiques where we give you feedback on your copy or content. There are regular training sessions on different copy techniques and business practices designed to help you get better. And we're adding a new monthly AI tool review where we share a new AI tool or a technique or prompt you can do with AI get more done. That's on top of the massive library of training and templates. And the community is full of copywriters ready to help you with just about anything… including sharing leads from time to time. Find out more at thecopywriterclub.com/tcu And with that, let's go to our interview with Sophie. Kira Hug: All right, Sophie, let's kick off with your story. How did you end up as the editor of Freelancer magazine? Sophie Cross: I ended up with the editor because I made the magazine and made myself the editor. Rob Marsh: That is a very good way to start. Yeah. Sophie Cross: I I was already making a magazine, had a little bit of experience in my backgrounds in hospitality marketing before. Yeah. Well, when I went freelance and went freelance, I had the experience making hotel brochures and collateral and things like that. You can only look back at the stepping stones, can't you can't sort of see where they're taking you. I sort of didn't think much of it at the time, but actually now realizing that I had this real passion for printed collateral and things l...
How the freelance community can help you grow your business.
In this episode we talk about freelancing and how to navigate this lonely world as a creative. Whats the best way to get work as a freelancer? what's the best way to get support if you have questions or concerns and how can we own the title of freelancing? Featuring Sophie Cross editor or Freelancer Magazine and Benjy Potter the LinkedIn Whisperer.Main TopicsWhat is freelancing Common questions and concernsUseful resources And more…Additional ResourcesYou can find me at www.jotroy.comMy E-BOOK https://www.jotroy.com/ebookJoin the community https://www.instagram.com/voaudioadventurepodcast/_____Sophie Cross - https://www.linkedin.com/in/sophcross/Freelancer Magazine - https://www.freelancermagazine.co.uk/_____Friends: Benjy Potter - https://www.linkedin.com/in/benjy-potter/_____All music used in the episode by Phoenix and the Flower Girl can be found here shorturl.at/gipSZTRANSCRIPTS - https://www.jotroy.com/transcriptsListen, rate, and subscribe! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Face au film 'Harry Potter et la Coupe de feu' sur TF1, au documentaire 'L'Ukraine au coeur' sur France 2 et à l'émission 'La France a un incroyable talent' sur M6, c'est France 3 qui se hisse en tête des audiences de ce mardi soir grâce à la série 'Sophie Cross'.
Face au film 'Harry Potter et la Coupe de feu' sur TF1, au documentaire 'L'Ukraine au coeur' sur France 2 et à l'émission 'La France a un incroyable talent' sur M6, c'est France 3 qui se hisse en tête des audiences de ce mardi soir grâce à la série 'Sophie Cross'.
Face au film 'Harry Potter et le prisonnier d'Azkaban' sur TF1, au débat 'Harcèlement scolaire, briser le silence' sur France 2 et à l'émission 'La France a un incroyable talent' sur M6, c'est France 3 qui se hisse en tête des audiences de ce mardi soir grâce à la série 'Sophie Cross'.
Face au film 'Harry Potter et le prisonnier d'Azkaban' sur TF1, au débat 'Harcèlement scolaire, briser le silence' sur France 2 et à l'émission 'La France a un incroyable talent' sur M6, c'est France 3 qui se hisse en tête des audiences de ce mardi soir grâce à la série 'Sophie Cross'.
Face à M6, C'est France 3 qui se hisse en tête des audiences de ce mardi soir grâce à Sophie Cross.
Face à M6, C'est France 3 qui se hisse en tête des audiences de ce mardi soir grâce à Sophie Cross.
Face à «OSS 117», c'est France 3 qui se hisse en tête des audiences de ce jeudi soir grâce à «Sophie Cross».
Face à «OSS 117», c'est France 3 qui se hisse en tête des audiences de ce jeudi soir grâce à «Sophie Cross».
Sophie Cross is the founder and editor of Freelancer Magazine. Join us while we chat about freelancing, starting a magazine and Good Boss-ing ourselves! Sophie Cross - Freelancer Magazine LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sophcross Website: https://freelancermagazine.co.uk/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/FreelancerMagz Emma Cossey Follow me on Instagram Email: hello@emmacossey.com Come join us in the free Freelance Lifestylers Facebook group Want more support? Check out the Freelance Lifestyle School courses and membership.
Freelancing can smell like freedom but it can also reek of fear. “I can't wait to be my own boss…but what if I can't manage myself?” “I'm so excited about finding my own clients…but what if nobody wants to work with me?” “I can't wait to choose how I spend more of my days…but what if I spend them in ways that set me back?” In this podcast recording, freelance strategist Lydia Taylor hosts a conversation with Sophie Cross and Howie Chan about specific tips that will make the freelance life feel less scary. Lydia Taylor is a freelance strategy consultant https://www.linkedin.com/in/lydiataylor0/ Sophie Cross is Editor of Freelancer Magazine https://www.linkedin.com/in/sophcross/ Howie Chan is a healthcare brand consultant https://www.linkedin.com/in/howiechaniam/ **
Herpetologist, wildlife photographer and self-confessed lizard nerd, Dr Sophie Cross (pronouns: she/her) has spent the past few years working to understand the behaviour and ecology of vertebrate fauna, specifically reptiles following mine site restoration in the remote mid-west of Western Australia. Today, Sophie shares her journey as well as some great career advice for getting to where you want to be in the wildlife space…#ITSAWILDLIFE #itsawildlife is a podcast and blog, sharing the great work being done for wildlife conservation worldwide and solving problems for ecologists by ecologists. If you're a fellow wildlifer, whether you're just starting out or you've been about the traps for a while, you're in the right place! Tune in each week to talk all things nature: amazing projects, inspiring ecologists, and step-by-step advice to land your dream job in wildlife conservation. Read a transcript of this episode here.FREE RESOURCES:Feel like you've tried everything to land your dream job in wildlife conservation? We got you! Here's a whole bunch of free resources to inspire your next move and hand you some tricks of the trade.· FREE guide: 10 steps to land your dream job in wildlife conservation· FREE guide: 3 ways to stay confident whilst “stuck” applying for jobs· FREE guide: How to get clear on your dream job in 3 easy steps· FREE template: How to write a kickass CVFor more information, check out our website www.itisawildlife.com for more free resources, blog posts and more. SUPPORT & CONNECT:If you like what you hear, please subscribe, rate and review to support the show and share the love with your network.Check out the website to get on board and subscribe for #itsawildlife updates– we send monthly emails with fresh tips and fun updates! We'd love to hear from ya! Get in touch by email hello@itisawildlife.com or connect on Instagram @itisawildlife or Pinterest.
Sophie Cross is one of the kindest and savviest people I've had the privilege of knowing. And if you aren't connected with her already, I highly recommend you correct it right away and give her a follow! An entrepreneur, writer, editor-in-chief, playlist connoisseur, advocate for freelancers, lover of vans, and all-around badass, Sophie shows up in numerous ways for the community and has several newsletters under her belt including: The now-retired Thoughtfully The Dunker by Freelancer Magazine And the newest star in the block, Make It Monday At the time of recording this episode, we delved deep into the Thoughtfully newsletter. Tune in to hear Sophie talk about her life in the van, crazy business ideas, navigating the freelancer life, having a song for everyone she meets, the importance of community and so much more! This is episode #19 on the Newsletter Nerd Show.
Face à l'émission d'aventures "Koh-Lanta, la légende" sur TF1, au divertissement "La fête de la liberté" sur France 2 et à la série dramatique "Sauver Lisa" sur M6, c'est France 3 qui se hisse en tête des audiences de ce mardi soir grâce à la série policière "Sophie Cross".
Face au magazine sociétal "Les temps changent" sur France 2, à la série policière "Sophie Cross" sur France 3 et à la série dramatique "Sauver Lisa" sur M6, c'est TF1 qui se hisse en tête des audiences de ce mardi soir grâce au match de football Finlande-France.
Pour cette nouvelle émission, on évoque le nouveau succès de France 3, Sophie Cross en compagnie de son héroïne Alexia Barlier et le producteur Toma de Matteis. Sophie Cross, brillante avocate, et son fils de... Cet article Sophie Cross (3×90 min) avec Alexia Barlier et Toma de Matteis (producteur) | La loi des séries #525 est apparu en premier sur VL Média .
Digging deep into freelance communities in London after she'd lost a lot of her work during the pandemic inspired freelance marketing strategist and copywriter Sophie Cross to do something no one's ever really done: start a magazine by freelancers, for freelancers. In this chat with Sophie, she shares how the idea came to her, how it's taken over her life (and her work!) and much more. Listen to find out: + How the pandemic affected Sophie's work and caused her to start becoming more embedded in online freelance communities + Why she decided to start Freelancer magazine and (and how the Kickstarter campaign sold 1000 copies before the magazine even existed) + The nostalgic reason Sophie really wanted to start a print mag, despite the struggles magazines are having right now + Why she agrees that niche publishing is the future + The power of communities and word of mouth for freelancers + Why she loves the chance to talk to so many different freelancers and what she's learned + Why LinkedIn is her main platform for promoting the mag and how her strategies can be used by freelancers promoting themselves + The future of Freelancer magazine (it's all good, people!) + Sophie's favourite tools More about Sophie Freelancer magazine: www.freelancermagazine.co.uk/ Sophie on Twitter: twitter.com/fullythoughtout Sophie on LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/sophcross/ Sophie's marketing and mindset courses www.thoughtfully.co.uk/
Face au documentaire animalier "Kalahari, l'autre loi de la jungle" sur France 2, à la série policière "Sophie Cross" sur France 3 et à la comédie "Mauvaises herbes" sur M6, c'est TF1 qui se hisse en tête des audiences de ce mardi soir grâce à l'émission d'aventures "Koh-Lanta".
This is another newsletter reading (the 3rd in 83 episodes), written by the brilliant Sophie Cross. The title caused one of the highest unsubscribed rates in her newsletter history. Well, I loved it as I do all her work. As Sophie says, "the more me I am in my emails, the more people I will attract who they really are for. And the fewer subscribers I'll have to pay for who aren't reading or into them anyway." Subscribe to Sophie's emails here.
Freelance Feels: The podcast for humans who work for themselves
Sophie Cross and Ange Lyons work together to produce Freelancer Magazine. They chat about the moment Sophie had the idea, how that came together, working in their own freelance jobs and producing the mag, freelance friendships and much more. Sophie Cross, a freelance marketer and writer at Thoughtfully.co.uk, came up with the idea of a quarterly business and lifestyle, square and glossy, print-first mag for freelancers at the beginning of 2021. She launched Freelancer Magazine via a Kickstarter campaign in February which hit 150% of its goal and sold 1000 copies of the magazine before the magazine even existed. It now has a rapidly growing community of B2B and creative freelancers and readers in 20 countries. Angela Lyons is a freelance graphic designer who has been designing for over 20 years, and freelance for the past ten. She specialises in print-based designs but does digital, too, with clients varying from start-ups to established companies. She lives in London and I was born within the sound of Bow Bells! "My heritage is West Indian both parents are St Lucian. I'm married and have 2 children who are now in secondary school. Oh and I have my 3rd child... my cat CoCo," she says. Find Freelancer Magazine, Sophie and Ange via these links: Freelancer Magazine Thoughtfully Twitter @FullyThoughtOut @freelancermag on Insta @ange_lyons Ange also mentions a charity she works with, find out more at storiesandsupper.co.uk
At the end of 2020, Sophie Cross had an idea. A good old fashioned magazine in a time where the prevailing wisdom is to go digital. In a few short months, Sophie conceptualised the magazine, targeted an audience, smashed her £12,000 target on Kickstarter, created and edited the magazine and had it land on doorsteps around the world. How did she do it? This is the story.
In this week's episode we hear from Sophie Cross, the founder and editor of Freelancer magazine. She tells Peter about her penchant for writing business plans, the freelance community that inspired the Freelancer magazine launch, and how she kept the spark going after the initial rush of the first issue. In the news roundup the team discusses the remarkable e-commerce based turnaround of Future plc, Twitter's revenue results, and ask if Facebook is launching its independent publishing platform Bulletin in a smart way. See you later in summer!
Today's guest is the OG of freelancing, Sophie Cross. Sophie has been providing marketing, strategy and copywriting services as a solo act since 2013. She's also built her own marketing and mindset courses titled ‘Thoughtfully', for ambitious freelancers and creatives. Most recently, Sophie became known as the founder, editor and publisher of Freelancer Magazine, a hard copy publication that launched earlier this year after a wildly successful crowdfunding campaign. We love the idea of returning to physical print and the magazine is beautiful.Sophie is a big believer in collaboration across the freelancing industry and she's never afraid to put herself out there in bold and colourful ways. We hope you enjoy this incredible episode, hosted by Harriet Osborne and Joe Welstead.Subscribe to the podcast to enjoy our incredible lineup of interviews about hustle culture, work, success and happiness. Say hi to us at instagram.com/antihustle.hustleclubIntro music by Ant Henderson soundcloud.com/antphenderson
We've set tripwires to snare the Jimmy Choo's of the freelance community's very own Anna Wintour, the editor of Freelancer Magazine, Sophie Cross. An OG freelancer with over 15 years' marketing experience, Sophie launched her very own 100-pages of glossy printed freelance goodness earlier this year. She talks to us her first cheese-related jobs, thinking she wasn't creative enough for marketing, sausage and mash business plans, launching a magazine, her ‘Kevin from Home Alone' moment, starting before you're ready, the immensely supportive freelance community, how to get your first client and more. Ears this way please. ///// Check out Sophie's website Follow her on Twitter Issue 2 ‘Community' of Freelancer Magazine is out now Watch Start Before You're Ready on ISOLATED Talks Listen to the stunning rendition of Dave Harland's poem ‘Dogs' Sophie kindly dedicated this episode to @thatcontentshed Sophie's book recommendations are: The Artists Way by Julia Cameron The Choice Factory by Richard Shotton /////
Today's solo episode is about shipping before you're ready, lessons learned from 25 episodes of this podcast, and banishing perfectionism."Step over any negativity that comes from people who haven't stepped into the arena themselves. There will always be a reason to procrastinate. But if we take the leap before we're ready, and we just start, then we have real data to work with. So don't wait for someone to give you permission. Choose yourself."Wanna leave me a voice note? Go to memo.fm/15 and say hi!Louise Shanahan is a freelance health copywriter and content marketer. She's on a mission to help others build a freelance business that feels easy and works for them – in weekly snack-sized bites.Mentioned on this podcast:10. Sophie Cross on the power of community and launching a magazine20. Choosing your business name, with Mark Grainger21. Stress-free accounting, with Martin Brooks22. Should you hire a virtual assistant, with Caroline Marshall23. Saying no and beating burnout, with Sarah Townsend24. Journal your way to freelance success, with Jen McKeownHillary and Margo Yell At Websites (HAMYAW) - How to handle your perfectionismKeep in touch!Twitter: @LouiseShanahan_LinkedIn: Louise ShanahanInstagram: @Louise_Shanahan_Website: thecopyprescription.comNewsletter: thecopyprescription.com/subscribe
In der neuen Mini-Serie "Sophie Cross" spielt er "den verrückten Germanen" und wir sprechen mit ihm in diesem Podcast über die neue Thriller-Serie und was sie so sehenswert macht. Foto: ARD Degeto/ndF international Productions/Les Gens/Gardner & Domm/France TV/Sofie Gheysens
In der neuen Mini-Serie "Sophie Cross" spielt er "den verrückten Germanen" und wir sprechen mit ihm in diesem Podcast über die neue Thriller-Serie und was sie so sehenswert macht. Foto: ARD Degeto/ndF international Productions/Les Gens/Gardner & Domm/France TV/Sofie Gheysens
Freelance marketer and course creator Sophie Cross is the first ever guest on 15 Minute Freelancer!Sophie is the brains behind Thoughtfully Marketing and founder and editor of Freelancer Magazine, which hits our shelves (literally, it's a real print mag!) on 1 April 2021. Join us while we talk about:how a random idea on New Year's Day turned into a Kickstarter phenomenonhow the freelance community changed Sophie's businessSophie's fave online communities for freelancershow to nose your way into online communities if you're feeling shyone way to make LinkedIn not awfulMentioned on this episode Freelancer MagazineThoughtfully MarketingFreelance Heroes#ContentClubUK (Twitter chat, Tuesdays, 11am GMT)Write 52Being FreelanceDigital Marketing UnionSunrise ClubLeapersLinkedIn for HumansSay hi to Sophie!Twitter: @FullyThoughtOutLinkedIn: Sophie CrossSay hi to Louise!Twitter: @LouiseShanahan_LinkedIn: Louise ShanahanInstagram: @Louise_Shanahan_Website: thecopyprescription.comNewsletter: thecopyprescription.com/subscribe
Pour cette semaine du 1er février, nous nous aventurerons sur des territoires futuristes avec des implants cérébraux greffés sur des animaux ; nous visiterons des terriers de varans puis nous prendrons des nouvelles du coronavirus, avant de faire un tour dans l'espace et de finir avec la météo du futur. Bonne écoute, et bon week-end !Retrouvez les articles complets sur FuturaNeuralink : un singe capable de jouer par la pensée grâce à l'implant cérébral d'Elon MuskDes chercheurs découvrent des terriers géants abritant des centaines d'animauxLe variant anglais possède une nouvelle mutationSpaceX va envoyer quatre touristes dans l'espace en 2021 dont trois tirés au sortRéchauffement climatique : ce qui nous attend à l'horizon 2050, 2070 et 2100 en FranceTranscription du podcast :Bonjour à tous ! Bienvenue dans Fil de Science, le podcast Futura où nous retraçons l'actualité de la semaine.Nous commençons cette semaine aux frontières de l'éthique avec une nouvelle expérience de la société Neuralink. Après un premier test de son implant cérébral chez une truie baptisée Gertrude, l'entreprise d'Elon Musk s'attaque cette fois-ci au singe. D'après ses dernières annonces, l'implant permettrait au primate de contrôler le déroulement d'une partie de Pong sur un écran devant lui. Si l'exploit, aussi controversé soit-il, est déjà impressionnant en soi, il n'est qu'une première étape dans le programme de développement de Neuralink. En effet, l'équipe a annoncé qu'en dépit des problématiques éthiques soulevées par ces expérimentations, celles-ci visent au développement d'interfaces patients-médecins toujours plus développées, avec un bénéfice pour l'humain dépassant le coût imposé aux animaux. Est-il pour autant bien nécessaire de faire jouer un singe aux jeux d'arcade pour s'attirer les bonnes grâces du public ? Nous laisserons nos auditeurs en juger.Les varans ne sont certes pas les créatures les plus sympathiques à première vue. Et pourtant, il s'avère que ces gigantesques lézards d'un mètre quarante de long participent, bon an mal an, à la préservation des écosystèmes. En effet, en creusant les terriers destinés à accueillir leurs œufs, les varans construisent par là-même un véritable complexe sous-terrain où se rencontrent des dizaines d'animaux : geckos, lézards, serpents, crapauds, mille-pattes, coléoptères, fourmis et même des marsupiaux. Ces souterrains communautaires offrent à leurs résidents un abri pour hiberner et se protéger des prédateurs, et plus étonnant encore, un abri contre les varans eux-mêmes. Ainsi que le note Sophie Cross, écologue à l'université de Perth, bien que les créatures logeant dans ces tunnels constituent des proies faciles, il semblerait que le reptile géant n'y voit pas l'occasion d'un buffet gratuit, mais se contente plutôt d'y incuber ses œufs durant la saison sèche. Une belle façon pour la nature de nous prouver que la cohabitation est toujours possible.Du côté du coronavirus, les dernières découvertes continuent d'attiser l'inquiétude des chercheurs. Un récent rapport des autorités sanitaires britanniques fait état d'une nouvelle mutation sur le variant anglais, déjà observée auparavant chez les variants brésilien et sud-africain. Ce constat porte le nombre de mutations de ce variant à neuf sur la seule protéine spike du virus, celle sur laquelle ont été modélisés plusieurs des traitements actuellement en circulation. Compte tenu de sa capacité à se faufiler entre les mailles de notre système immunitaire, cette nouvelle mutation fait redouter une moindre efficacité des vaccins, mais trop peu de données sont pour l'instant disponibles pour se prononcer avec certitude. De retour chez Elon Musk, SpaceX s'apprête à envoyer quatre touristes dans l'espace d'ici la fin de l'année. Ce coup médiatique s'inscrit dans le cadre de la mission Inspiration 4 initiée par Jared Isaacman, le fondateur et patron de l'entreprise Shift4 Payments. Ce dernier participera au voyage et partagera sa cabine avec les trois candidats qui seront tirés au sort. Pour ceux qui souhaiteraient tenter leur chance, seules deux conditions sont requises pour postuler : résider aux États-Unis et être âgé de plus de 18 ans. Les heureux gagnants voyageront à bord de la même capsule qui transporte les astronautes à bord de la Station spatiale internationale avant d'embarquer pour un séjour d'une durée approximative de cinq jours.Et enfin pour finir, un point sur la météo... pour les 80 années à venir. Si l'on en croit les dernières estimations, la France pourrait subir une hausse de 3,9 degrés en moyenne sur son territoire par rapport à la période 1976 – 2005, d'ici 2100. Une hausse largement supérieure aux objectifs fixés par les accords de Paris, qui ne laisse rien présager de bon sans la mise en place de mesures adéquates. Selon les experts, une réduction rapide et drastique des émissions pourrait permettre, dans le scénario le plus optimiste, de stabiliser cette progression à environ un degré d'ici 2050. Faute d'une action immédiate, des conséquences climatiques inquiétantes seront à déplorer pour notre pays qui s'inscrit pourtant au rang des bons élèves en terme d'énergie. Les explications de Nathalie Mayer et toutes nos autres actualités sont à découvrir sur Futura, bien entendu.Pour ne rien manquer de l'actualité scientifique, rendez-vous sur les plateformes de diffusion pour vous abonner à Fil de Science. Découvrez notre nouvel épisode de Chasseurs de Science samedi à 11h, et Bêtes de Science, notre nouveau podcast dédié à l'intelligence animale, fraîchement sorti des presses. Si cet épisode vous a plu, n'hésitez pas nous laisser un commentaire et cinq étoiles sur vos applications audio préférées. On se retrouve vendredi prochain, à 18h30, avec toujours plus de nouveautés scientifiques. Bon week-end à tous ! Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.
Today's passage has been sent by Sophie Cross of Thoughtfully Marketing School. In The Art of Gathering, Priya Parker gets to the heart of these questions and reveals how to design a transformative gathering. An expert on organizing successful gatherings, whether in conference centres or her living room, Parker shows us how to create moving, magical, mind-changing experiences - even in spaces where we've come to expect little. Order your copy from your local bookshop or on Amazon.
How positive are you feeling right now? How do you look for the positives when you're feeling the opposite? How do you stay positive? And what impact does this all have on your freelance business? This week's Freelance Heroes podcast aims to bring some positivity to you and your freelance business, and Ed would love to know how you go about that yourself, however, you are feeling. For example, you may be a generally positive person anyway or you may be feeling worried or anxious or something else and looking for those morsels of positivity. Do email your stories to podcast@freelance-heroes.com. Today we meet Sophie Cross who is very much a positive person. Who Ed met on social media, either Linkedin or Twitter, about a year ago. Recently, Sophie hosted a Freelance Heroes Twitter chats which focused on the big wins, small wins, planning, and general positive outlook on freelancing. We find out how Sophie has kept that way in a difficult 12 months while moving to a new house…twice. We also learn how Sophie sets her goals and how she deals with so much chaos around us. About Sophie Cross As the travel and hospitality industry shut down in 2020, a lot of my freelance marketing and copywriting client work went with it. After more than a couple of very long, thoughtful walks, I knew this was the time to start doing my very best marketing - to stand out, stay positive, and support others. I decided to put all my experience into creating marketing and mindset courses for ambitious freelancers and small businesses which would also put me at the forefront for clients. But as the client work started to pick up again, I was already getting really good feedback and sales for the courses, not to mention loving doing them. My priority now is to lift other freelancers and business owners with online courses that give them the confidence to market themselves and grow businesses they truly love. Find free marketing courses and resources at Thoughtfully.co.uk. And I am hoping soon to be Editor-in-Chief of FreelancerMagazine.co.uk. Make sure you connect with me on LinkedIn or Twitter if we're not already in touch. And excuse the fact that for some inexplicable reason I've started using more emojis than my mum.