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Sean Calvert
506 posts

Sean Calvert
@SeanGCalvert
22 years in corporate engineering and prog. management. Left to be home more. Now I help career lifers design the exit they keep postponing. → Free call in bio.
Walla Walla, WA เข้าร่วม Ekim 2012
721 กำลังติดตาม248 ผู้ติดตาม

@ScottPresler @BasedMikeLee Yes! It is remarkable and very much appreciated.
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@BasedMikeLee Can we all thank @BasedMikeLee for being one of the most accessible Senators in the entire Senate?
👏
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Sean Calvert รีทวีตแล้ว

@PattyMurray Seems 80% of the population think voter ID should be required. As an elected official, you should represent your consistents.
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We are doing the same thing! Father and son are working towards building a business. Both are in trade school- hubby will get it all started and will teach him the people skills required to network and deal with challenging clients. The boy has input now and is invested in the outcome. Eventually it will be juniors business when hubby finally decides to retire.
Boy lives at home- helps out with chores and can grill a mean steak. It’s a nice arrangement actually.
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@HeroDividend Essential services are the way to go! Economics, AI, whatever. They keep showing up.
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Sean Calvert รีทวีตแล้ว

We're currently looking at relatively low-cost, product and service-focused franchise concepts. The structure and support of these businesses make it a bit easier to step into them. It's a bit more of an up-front investment than just starting our own, but with some of these, the value add is worth the investment.
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@SeanGCalvert @TheRobertBshow I’m eager to hear what ideas you’ve explored
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@brockpierson Thanks for the tips! Just started engaging on X. Trying to learn as fast as possible. Appreciate the insights.
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Pro tip:
Reply guying big accounts will help you get into the 𝕏 monetization faster because its easier to farm the 5M impressions
BUT…
It does next to nothing to help get engagement on your OWN posts (which is what gets you paid the most once you are in the program)
So if ideally you need to build towards both.
Best way to get engagement on your own posts is to connect with other small accounts.
An account like mine you can find tons of good, verified small accounts in the comment sections of my posts.
Dont just reply to my posts. Find new people in the replies and engage with them.
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Thank you! It was planned. I have a friend who is a cruise planner and asked him to give us some itineraries that would have us on the ground in Greece on our 10,000th day. Planned, but a great milestone to celebrate. We might actually be starting a trend. On the ship, as we shared with people, they all started counting their own next big day milestone.
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Ten thousand days. What a wonderful way to celebrate your marriage! And arriving in Greece on your anniversary? This isn't just any ordinary cruise; it's fate rewarding your hard work! 😄🥂 What a beautiful milestone. What a fantastic way to celebrate! Was this a carefully planned event, or just pure coincidence?
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@BrianFeroldi Great, succinct post. Nearly everyone I work with wants the same thing: more time for family and friends. Freedom = time ownership with enough money to do what you want.
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@ItsKieranDrew The book Deep Work by cal Newport talks about this as well. Focus without distractions is how you get there.
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A hill I'll die on:
You should be unreachable for at least half your day.
For example, I recently launched my 1-1 coaching offer. I'm working with five people.
I tell them I'm available every day, but only after my writing is done.
This protects my creative time, but also lets me invest energy more smartly.
Everyone wins.
Most people think being always available makes them a better service provider. It doesn't. It makes you a worse writer, a worse thinker, and eventually, a worse coach.
Your best work comes from deep focus. And deep focus requires being unavailable.
Don't be afraid to draw boundaries. Your clients will respect you for it.
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This is absolutely correct. I spent 22 years as a mechanical engineer, and when I would mentor younger engineers or speak to college classes, this was the number one skill I would tell them to perfect. Engineers are notorious for being poor communicators, so those who can master that skill outpace their peers.
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I left the same company twice.
The first time, the travel was too hard on my family. I needed to be home more than I needed the title.
The second time, I'd come back on my own terms, rebuilt as an engineer, and quietly topped out. The financial math stopped working and it wasn't going to fix itself.
Both times I left, I thought I was giving something up.
What I actually did, eventually, was take a leap into my own business. Best decision I've made. I wish I hadn't taken so long to get there.
If you're circling the same decision, that feeling probably isn't going away on its own either.
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