SURFER’S PARADISE

23 enero, 2017

Nam metus odio, ultrices aliquet ipsum eget, posuere maximus est. Aliquam erat volutpat. Vestibulum ultricies, ipsum in vestibulum luctus, ante diam dapibus leo, id placerat odio risus eget dolor. Maecenas in imperdiet ligula. Integer convallis pharetra tortor quis ornare. Sed ac bibendum nisl. Proin dictum lacinia mauris a lobortis. Vestibulum vel elit efficitur, fringilla ex sit amet, lacinia est. Sed a nulla id tellus efficitur malesuada. Mauris eget volutpat nulla. Maecenas ut orci magna. Suspendisse ac felis non elit ornare cursus.

«Aenean volutpat nunc urna, eget facilisis orci laoreet ut. Etiam eget mattis dolor.»

Vestibulum sed lacinia diam. Morbi varius augue quis fringilla molestie. Etiam eget mattis dolor. Pellentesque porta metus dolor, eu pretium felis sagittis ac. Phasellus tortor nunc, porttitor viverra lobortis ac, tincidunt nec ligula. Suspendisse potenti. Aliquam quis sapien pellentesque dui accumsan ultrices non eget velit. Fusce eu aliquam lorem. Pellentesque vel tellus enim. Ut sapien elit, dignissim ut ornare vitae, viverra ut nisi. Morbi quis sagittis velit.

Mile Truison
Lourdes Coteron

Etiam iaculis lorem sed velit ullamcorper vehicula. Cras consequat tortor nisi, et venenatis metus congue sed. Sed ultricies commodo aliquam. Donec condimentum consequat urna a efficitur. Aenean volutpat nunc urna, eget facilisis orci laoreet ut. Phasellus tincidunt luctus felis, at congue libero vehicula a.

¡Hola mundo!
Calm over the horizon
Many years ago, I worked for my parents who own a video production company. Because it is a family business, you inevitably end up wearing many hats and being the czar of many different jobs. I mainly managed projects and worked as a video editor. On production, there were times that I was called on to work as an audio tech and was made to wear headphones on long production days. In those days, having a really good set of headphones that picked up every nuance of sound was essential to making sure the client got what they needed.
Inspired by clouds
Last year I wrote about why booking too far in advance can be dangerous for your business, and this concept of margin so eloquently captures what I had recognized had been my problem: I was so booked up with clients that I wasn’t leaving any margin for error, growth, planning, or reflection.

    Leave a comment

    diecinueve − catorce =