by Alexia Leachman | Dec 17, 2020 | Business, Entrepreneurs, Head Trash, People
One important aspect of leadership is getting other people to do stuff for you. You can’t scale your business until you can let things go and trust other people to crack on and do the work. Whether this is outsourcing to outside suppliers or delegating to...
by Alexia Leachman | Sep 22, 2020 | Business, Head Trash, People
Kindness sucks and we need to be wary of it. Just like being nice. And that’s because not all kindness is equal. Most of the kindness we experience is the toxic kind. Toxic kindness is when… ? You let others walk all over you and forget about yourself ? Your need to...
by Alexia Leachman | Apr 21, 2020 | Entrepreneurs, Head Trash, People, Personal Branding
Lots of people worry about sounding silly. They think that if they sound silly that they won’t be taken seriously. Because of this they don’t do stuff. Stuff that could transform their business and their lives. They don’t go networking … because when they have to...
by Alexia Leachman | Apr 16, 2020 | Head Trash, People, Personal Branding
Today is national voice day and it’s made me think about the people I work with. They feel as though they have no voice, or that they need to ‘find’ their voice. What does that even mean? It means having an opinion. It means putting pen to paper and not being afraid...
by Alexia Leachman | Nov 5, 2012 | People, Personal Branding, Uncategorized
The short answer is there was a gap between what I said I did and what I actually did; the services sited on my website didn’t marry up with my recent projects and clients. How I was communicating who I was and what I did wasn’t right anymore. But while I knew it...
by Alexia Leachman | Sep 26, 2012 | Entrepreneurs, Freelancers, People, Personal Branding, Uncategorized
I don’t know about you, but I have a silly habit of taking books on holiday that are stimulating and inspiring rather than allowing me to escape, and this holiday is no different; I took Ian Sanders & David Sloly’s book, Mash Up, and Graham Allcott’s How to think...