In yet another invaluable conversation with the great Steven Stegman today, I was reminded: in moments of uncertainty, what saves you isn’t certainty. It’s clarity.
Bobby Doyle
1d
Clarity of conviction enables us to walk by faith and not by sight.
Wow, that's on point!
John Kraski
1d
Amazing share Ryan Roslansky!
Kenan Sabea
1d
The idea is good. I think so too.
Absolutely agree & love it!
Well said Ryan!
Hi Ryan Roslansky In times of uncertainty, having a clear perspective can truly guide our decisions. Always a pleasure to reflect on these important lessons! 😎😎
Please bring on the clarity 🙏🏻!
Mom who sees it's a problem that kidscantvote.org; Co-founder childrenvoting.org to talk it through.
13hConfidence helps, too! By the way, let me pay LinkedIn a compliment — LinkedIn is an excellent civic square. Consider expanding the vernacular about LinkedIn beyond ‘professional’ and into ‘civic.’ I say this, as a changemaker seeking to an act law in Massachusetts for age-inclusive ballot access. Typically, a major challenge is figuring out who’s in an organization, how to talk with them, and how to hold them accountable. One of the things that I love the most about LinkedIn is that public comment isn’t relegated to a few minutes at the end of a meeting — it’s ever-present! I am very grateful for how much more effective I have been in my suffrage work since I started ramping up my use of LinkedIn. I am disinterested in sending mass emails, because I want mutuality and reciprocity in communications. It bugs me when campaigns send emails that obscure the authors behind them. On LinkedIn, I can more quickly gauge how authoritative a person is based on their experience as presented through their profile, comments, group belonging, ad network relationships.