Top products from r/ladybusiness

We found 5 product mentions on r/ladybusiness. We ranked the 5 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

Next page

Top comments that mention products on r/ladybusiness:

u/Moppy6686 · 2 pointsr/ladybusiness

Hello! I responded to your post on /r/Entrepreneur with advice, but never heard anything back :)

My husbands a massage therapist and we love your stuff! It seems that the style would be suited to schools and maybe pediatrics. The only problem is that schools budgets are so tight that I'm not sure that they could afford your posters. You can find detailed body posters on Amazon for $5-10. Where do you print your stuff? How are your margins? I would try packaging up similar posters to sell together and contact after school programs. They're always looking for decoration and usually have the funds.

I think your stickers would sell amazingly at actual massage/accupuncture/physical therapy schools (the Florida School of Massage has it's own gift shop) and they'd probably do well in gift shops in funky/alternative areas (eg. the Bay Area, Seattle, LA, New York, etc).

Also, have you thought about making coloring books? The minimalist style to your work I think would do really well here. You could do kids educational books and fun stuff for anatomy students.

Anyway, good luck and let me know if you'd like to bounce some ideas around :)

u/Faustyna · 3 pointsr/ladybusiness

My novelette, Larkspur, has been out for just three weeks.

It's a gothic/dark fantasy romance story, the first in a series. I keep calling it the entrée since the next story will be longer and more in-depth. It's 60 pages, but only .99cents and so far it's been really well received- it's 4.5☆'s on average.

I hope anyone who gets it enjoys! :)

u/PeggyAnne08 · 7 pointsr/ladybusiness

All of the time. I'm a woman who manages a large division of males in the tech industry. I am one of very few women in my position. If you keep focusing on these aspects of yourself, that is what your male colleagues will focus on as well. It sounds like he's actually interested in mentoring you. Things like not making eye contact and speech patterns are definitely more inherent in women, but are generally signs of people who aren't confident. For people to take you seriously, you need to be confident in yourself.

My best advice is to read the "Happiness Advantage". Basic tenet is that you focus on what's in front of you and doing really really well at what you have to do. Your work will speak for itself. The rest will come. Its this mentality that has helped me change my working habits.

u/Leithia24 · 2 pointsr/ladybusiness

I'm a Project Manager, in the UK though so the certification is different here. I got to my role by getting a place on a graduate course whereby my employer funded me through a masters degree in project management and I got a job at the end. My degree counts as the first level of qualification but I have to do an exam for a certification.

My introduction to Project Management was a book called "Project Management Demystified by Geoff Reiss I still refer to it now for helpful hints and tricks.

Something else I started doing was treating everything as a project. House renovation, buying a sofa, a day out with OH, anything is a project really. Budget, programme, key risks, stakeholders. It helped me get into the mindset. Being organised is a helpful side of PM, as is (depending on your industry), being firm and authoritative.

The most important thing though, never be scared to ask a question or seek clarification on anything you don't understand.

u/throwaway500k · 3 pointsr/ladybusiness

Links:

  • Project Management Institute --- this is definitely the place to start. Check the 'Professional Development' tab for one.
  • CAPM
  • PMBOK via Amazon

    If you're serious about a PM career, you'll probably want to pursue the PMP credential, which requires (from the PMI site):

  • A secondary degree (high school diploma, associate’s degree, or the global equivalent) with at least five years of project management experience, with 7,500 hours leading and directing projects and 35 hours of project management education. - OR -
  • A four-year degree (bachelor’s degree or the global equivalent) and at least three years of project management experience, with 4,500 hours leading and directing projects and 35 hours of project management education.