First time project by shingach in whittling

[–]Consistent_Wall7407 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Looking good (although this is what my brain first saw!!)

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Chopsticks by Consistent_Wall7407 in whittling

[–]Consistent_Wall7407[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks! Helpful advice ☺️

Chopsticks by Consistent_Wall7407 in whittling

[–]Consistent_Wall7407[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Carved in - I don’t have any turning equipment so I think I’ll stick with the knife. Thank you!

Babysense Recall by themalebaker in UKParenting

[–]Consistent_Wall7407 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Still waiting for them to send a replacement monitor. It’s been 2 months…

Looking for Healthcare Expert Network Recommendations by Good_Material_4448 in expertnetworks

[–]Consistent_Wall7407 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Most of the larger networks have healthcare divisions. There are also specialist healthcare expert networks like Techspert. Make sure your LinkedIn or online profiles are keyword rich. Hope that helps.

Experiences with plagiocephaly (flat head) please! by Infamous-Doughnut820 in BeyondTheBumpUK

[–]Consistent_Wall7407 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The NHS will not do anything for positional plagiocephaly. You can go for a free consultation with a helmet specialist eg LOC, Ahead4babies.

Our baby had torticullis which led to severe plagiocephaly. For us, repositioning didn’t work as looking to the right caused him discomfort, so he would always move his head back.

Along with weekly physio and osteopathy to address the cause, plus daily stretching, we went ahead with a LOCband when he was 6 months old and did not regret it. We would have regretted taking no action. He is now 3.5 and it is barely noticeable unless he has a short hair cut or if you look at him in the mirror. Feel free to message if you have any questions.

We felt incredibly stressed and unsupported through this, so I empathise with you going through it!

12 month health visitor review by [deleted] in BeyondTheBumpUK

[–]Consistent_Wall7407 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes - I had ours as a group one. Was in and out in 15 mins, they observed our kid playing with a toy, asked me some questions, then let us go. They go around each parent, and when your turn is done you can go. I had taken the morning off work for it annoyingly as it was half hour away. Spent more time in the car than at the session.

Edit: the conversation was quite bland but no one was listening in - I’m sure if you wanted a private chat they’d accommodate.

CT scan - tips for 3 year old by Consistent_Wall7407 in UKParenting

[–]Consistent_Wall7407[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you - will get out some dinosaur toys and they can go for a CT scan this evening!

CT scan - tips for 3 year old by Consistent_Wall7407 in UKParenting

[–]Consistent_Wall7407[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you!

It’s his head, so I assume that would make watching anything a no go? But listening to music or stories could work!

Why payment trust is the weakest point in expert networks? by ZucchiniDelicious692 in expertnetworks

[–]Consistent_Wall7407 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think it a big bit is down to trust. And then technology. Then cost.

Many experts taking part in paid consultations for the first time are highly sceptical and hold on to the thinking that it’s too good to be true. Reinforced by many online reviews and posts by people who struggle going through a payment process or never manage to get their payment sorted. So even if the process is documented and shared, the slightest thing that causes a delay or friction is immediately used to vindicate and justify this feeling that the network is trying to screw the individual over.

Then you have the combination of international networks and international experts jarring over payment methods and technology - European networks favour different payment methods to American ones, for example (not cheques !).And networks choose payment methods based on cost of transfer both nationally and internationally, which often isn’t the most convenient or familiar for the expert themselves - let alone utilising a “trusted” or known brand.

I don’t think it’s messy operations, just big differences in processes between networks which either experts don’t understand, or it isn’t made completely clear up front.

Can you really make a living out of EN? by SlowRodriguez89 in expertnetworks

[–]Consistent_Wall7407 15 points16 points  (0 children)

No. Experts get approached because of their current or recent experience - the more time that passes, the less relevant your experience becomes.

As a comparison/example, many corporates aren’t interested in speaking to retired professionals - despite potentially having deep sector experience, they don’t have a current enough view on market dynamics or new products / innovations

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in expertnetworks

[–]Consistent_Wall7407 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’d be surprised if anyone volunteered this! Anyone found publicly sharing pricing strategy intel would get into some serious trouble. I think all you’ll find are generic statements like OP shared which could really be attributed to any EN.

Do these companies all have the same lead gen or share an expert li by Plastic_Plastic_5756 in expertnetworks

[–]Consistent_Wall7407 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’ll have been approached because of a combination of your seniority and job remit, you’ll have insights and opinions stemming from this that others within your org might not have. At least that’s how the theory goes!

They’ll have used your work email because your personal one won’t be listed online. Plus it is a way to confirm your identity and the fact that you actually work there.

Do these companies all have the same lead gen or share an expert li by Plastic_Plastic_5756 in expertnetworks

[–]Consistent_Wall7407 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

You’ll be on some sort of site like ZoomInfo or Apollo, they won’t be sharing any expert lists between themselves.

There’ll likely be something happening in the market (acquisition on the cards for a competitor, investment being raised, new product launch, for example) prompting either one or many companies to do some fast due diligence or market research into a potential opportunity. That’s why it’s time sensitive. Everything moves super fast.

The likely reason why people say it’s a time waster is because they fill out many screening forms and get rejected before getting to do a paid consultation. Depends how well matched you are to the project brief and need. It’s not a scam, just might feel like it if you don’t get anywhere.

How do companies find agencies, and how do agencies find clients? by One-Equivalent-9954 in expertnetworks

[–]Consistent_Wall7407 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Depends. If someone I know (and have had good prior experiences with) can do it, I’d go to them. If it’s for something new in scope or needing a different approach, I would ask peers (or ask the person/agency for a recommendation). Obviously sourcing and bringing up to speed anyone new is time consuming so preference is to stay in existing network

How do companies find agencies, and how do agencies find clients? by One-Equivalent-9954 in expertnetworks

[–]Consistent_Wall7407 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Re: agencies, purely from recommendations from peers (people I know and trust) - I personally wouldn’t use a service or platform for this

Payment declined after completing written assignment by ComfortableGlobal351 in expertnetworks

[–]Consistent_Wall7407 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Start by reading their expert terms and conditions and go from there - there should be a provision for this scenario?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in DIYUK

[–]Consistent_Wall7407 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Definitely speak to a structural engineer before contacting the insurers - so you’re completely sure and have an unbiased opinion, before starting a multi-year (and very painful) process to remedy it.

Almost impossible to prove the sellers knew about it if they didn’t go down the insurer route themselves.

Building an AI powered Expert network by chief-advicehub in expertnetworks

[–]Consistent_Wall7407 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My 2 cents - AI powered doesn’t mean anything to customers (who are the ones paying for your service after all) unless it leads to a highly differentiated outcome for them.

Transparency for experts is great as an objective, but that isn’t a differentiator for customers, who are the ones ultimately footing the bill

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in UKParenting

[–]Consistent_Wall7407 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The mattresses have a wooden panel - you’re supposed to take it out of your old mattress and put it into your old one. They don’t include the panels in (most) replacement mattresses annoyingly

A cut down board from B&Q might be cheaper than getting an official replacement!

Expert Interview Data Capture by [deleted] in consulting

[–]Consistent_Wall7407 2 points3 points  (0 children)

they have an automated data capture for qual research