How to Stand Out – Young Hustlers

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Grant Cardone and Jarrod Glandt offer Millennials tips for getting attention in business. Great news! Businesses are hiring. This means you must get attention and set yourself apart in the marketplace. For people with jobs this means you must promote your value within your organization. Grant and Jarrod begin the show explaining how money follows attention and why you must have a ‘whatever it takes’ attitude and do what others refuse to do. Some examples Jarrod shares include arrive early and stay late, think like the owner and bring ideas that meets the business’ objectives and purpose. Specifically Grant offers these 3 Steps to Get Attention 1. Make yourself known. 2. Deliver what is needed. 3. Improve yourself every day. Grant and Jarrod take callers, with questions about standing out despite being young, how to get attention to expand their business and how to advance to the next level.
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Star of Discovery Channel’s “Undercover Billionaire,” Grant Cardone owns and operates seven privately held companies and a private equity real estate firm, Cardone Capital, with a multifamily portfolio of assets under management valued at over $4 billion. He is the Top Crowdfunder in the world, raising over $900 million in equity via social media. Known internationally as the leading expert on sales, marketing, and scaling businesses, Cardone is a New York Times bestselling author of 11 business books, including “The 10X Rule,” which led to Cardone establishing the 10X Global Movement and the 10X Growth Conference, now the largest business and entrepreneur conference in the world. The online business and sales educational platform he created, Cardone University, serves over 411,000 individuals and Forbes 100 corporate clients throughout the world. Voted the top Marketing Influencer to watch by Forbes, Cardone uses his massive 15 million plus following to give back via his Grant Cardone Foundation, a non-profit organization dedicated to mentoring underserved, at-risk adolescents in financial literacy, especially those without father figures.