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Danny Brown

Danny Brown

podcaster - author - creator

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business success

Building a Culture of Success

Business cultures and success

Business cultures and success

No matter what business you?re in, your success can very often boil down to one thing ? your people culture.

You may have the greatest product with the big dollars to promote it, but it?s the people that will really define how successful the product is. This is true for internal people as well as external.

Customers Are Your External People

You need to build trust and loyalty with them.

Get your relationship right with your customers and you?ll be in a far stronger position to build from within and continue to enhance that relationship.

  • Keep them up-to-date with what?s happening.
  • Don?t trick them with false offers.
  • Listen to their feedback and act on it.

These are just some of the?ways to get your?external?people culture right.

Employees Are Your Internal People

They have the power to make or break your brand.

Unhappy employees don?t care if you had the best sales year; unhappy employees have no incentive to come to work except for the paycheck; unhappy employees don?t live the culture that happy employees do.

How do you encourage happy employees? Become part of their culture as much as asking them to be part of yours.

  • Be involved?in their lives.
  • Allow them time to be with those that matter.
  • Promote a healthy work/personal time split.
  • Have an open door policy.
  • Be genuinely interested in what they have to say as opposed to just offering them a sympathy nod.

Getting it right with your internal people is just as important as getting it right with your external people; sometimes more so.

Help Your People Grow

The most successful companies are the ones that build a strong people culture around everything they start; the most successful companies are those where the customers and the employees aren?t classed as customers and employees. Instead, they?re classed as?your people.

How are you building?your?success?

image:?iLenny

The Art of Patience

Impatient

We’re an impatient bunch.

We always want the new; the shiny; the next big thing. And we want it now.

As consumers, we want the latest and greatest to show off to our friends and family. As businesses, we always want to be first to market to get a jump on the competition.

The problem is, being first doesn’t always mean the best or the shiniest.

The business world is littered with examples of companies that were first to market but were superseded by competitors who learned from the path beater’s mistakes.

On the consumer side, homes are filled with gadgets and contraptions that are no longer needed by the buyer, nor supported by the company that made it (HD-DVD, anyone?).

There’s nothing wrong with wanting to be first. Just make sure it doesn’t end up being the last thing you’re remembered for.

© 2026 Danny Brown - Made with ♥ on Genesis