Can you do all the right things and still fail?
Can you do all the right things
and still fail? But, if you want to know how to avoid failure, we can help you.
Kaya Street Kitchen, Los Angeles,
did and failed. They had a major Japanese titan Toridoll
acquire a majority stake in 2015 and a premier retail designer design
their restaurants. Kaya Street Kitchen closed
in 2018 in less than 4-years in spite of incredible YELP
reviews. Kaya Street Kitchen did all the right things and still
failed. Yes, hindsight is always 2020.
I bet that most of you have been
struggling to get to $50 million for many, many years. Do you want to get to a
billion-dollar business? Chobani
did in
less than 10 years.
Sure, you are doing all the conventional
things with your data, but are you effective?
Can conventional thinking lead
you astray? Using my 40-year expertise in data analytics across many different
industries, I proved (yes, I am the first person to prove this) that the Yield
Curve Inversion (YCI) guarantees a recession.
Again, based on my extensive data analytics experience across many different
industries I proved that the Fed’s
Bank Stress Test was meaningless. But, I took this a step further, I
detailed how the Fed should correct their Bank Stress Test methodology.
That is, I beat the Federal
Reserve Bank at their data analytics, not once but twice. First with YCI
guarantees a coming recession. Second, I proved that the Fed’s
Bank Stress Test was meaningless, but more importantly I showed how
the Fed can correct their methodology.
As a boutique consulting firm, Competitive Dynamiques LLC,
I am focused on small to mid-sized businesses in the Los Angeles area.
I rebuild businesses for
sustainable growth. I come in, sit with you and your staff, guide, coach,
mentor and help solve problems to get you there. Don’t mistake my “coaching”
for counseling. It is not. It is based on solid rigorous data analytics, and
not on same-old-same-old conventional thinking.
Don’t you want to know how to
apply your sales & business data effectively? From someone who has beaten
the Federal Reserve Bank at their game, not once but twice?
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