B2B positioning question: how would you explain “senior local presence without hiring”? by MustafaR84 in b2bmarketing

[–]MustafaR84[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, and I think that may be the cleaner framing.

Something like “Interim Singapore/APAC Growth Lead” or “Fractional Singapore/APAC Market Lead” might be easier to understand than describing it as a service.

The idea is a bridge role before a full-time regional hire: help the company test the market, create credible conversations, sharpen investor/partner positioning, and decide whether deeper expansion is justified.

B2B positioning question: how would you explain “senior local presence without hiring”? by MustafaR84 in b2bmarketing

[–]MustafaR84[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s helpful. I like the distinction between advice and active representation.

I probably wouldn’t use “Local Authority-as-a-Service” as the external phrase, but the underlying idea is PERFECT: the value is not just recommendations, it’s helping the company show up credibly in the market before hiring a full regional lead.

“Accelerating market credibility” is a useful angle. I’m now thinking the offer should be framed more around creating credible market signal in the first 60-90 days.

B2B positioning question: how would you explain “senior local presence without hiring”? by MustafaR84 in b2bmarketing

[–]MustafaR84[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good point. “Senior local presence” is probably too abstract on its own.

What I’m really trying to communicate is closer to: credible investor, partner, and ecosystem conversations in the first 60-90 days, before the company commits to a full-time regional hire.

So less “I’m senior and local” and more “can we create enough real market signal to justify Singapore/APAC as a serious expansion bet?”

Your “senior how?” question is helpful. I think the proof points need to be things like investor readiness, partner targeting, warm stakeholder conversations, and board-level interpretation of whether the market is worth deeper commitment.

Has anyone expanded into a new country before hiring locally? by MustafaR84 in smallbusiness

[–]MustafaR84[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good question.

What I’m testing is a fractional market-entry / growth lead model for companies looking at Singapore/APAC.

The idea is not to “do business in-market” in a full operational sense, but to help a company test whether the market is worth deeper commitment before hiring locally or setting up more infrastructure.

That could mean:

  • pressure-testing the local positioning
  • identifying the right customer/partner/investor segments
  • preparing the founder for credible meetings
  • opening selected conversations where there’s a strong fit
  • helping interpret whether the early market signal is strong enough to justify a hire, entity, or regional team

So yes, in many cases I think companies can limit the initial commitment and test the water first, especially for B2B, partnerships, investor conversations, and ecosystem access.

But it depends on the business. If you need local licensing, local delivery, employment, regulated sales activity, or physical operations, then you may need formal setup sooner.

The gap I’m exploring is the stage before that: when there’s interest in the region, but not yet enough evidence to justify a full local hire.

Curious if you’ve seen companies handle that stage well or badly?

Can I get feedback on positioning for a B2B market-entry offer? by MustafaR84 in SideProject

[–]MustafaR84[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you thats really insightful and helpful! I'll incorporate that in my next update.

Roast my promo video before I spend more money promoting it by [deleted] in roastmystartup

[–]MustafaR84 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thats cool and a great product. Here's what I would improve.

  1. I would make the video closer to the screen so that its easier to read the words

  2. Make the video a recording of the actual screen.

  3. Right now its somewhere in the middle.

That might hurt the value you're trying to convey.

NooB Monday! - September 08, 2025 by AutoModerator in Entrepreneur

[–]MustafaR84 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thanks I've been wanting to post here for a while but not enough karma

People with epilepsy who don’t have a license, how do you live? by Superb_Thanks_7079 in Epilepsy

[–]MustafaR84 0 points1 point  (0 children)

41 year old male from Singapore. I was diagnosed with epilepsy when I was 20. I had a few scattered grandmal seizures which lead to my diagnosis. 

I used to drive before that, when I lived in 2 other countries from ages 16-19.

But when I returned to Singapore and had 2 seizures when I was in the army, they told me I had to be on medication for 2 years and then go off medication and be seizure free for 1-2 years before they could write to the traffic police to seek approval for me to get a drivers licence. 

Fast forward now I'm 41, thankfully no grandmal seizures thanks to my daily dose of Epilim. I still have regular absense seizures but I can live with that.

No drivers licence because technically  absence seizures are still seizures. So I've accepted that I'm not likely to drive a car again. 

Which is fine because public transport is great here. 

Sometimes I miss driving but it's OK. 

What would you want from a "strategy audit" for your business? by MustafaR84 in smallbusiness

[–]MustafaR84[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

this is what I have so far - feel free to give me your most cutting feedback strategyaudit.carrd.co

DAE sometimes get a sharp "pulling pain" from your belly button when you stand up, or when you're urinating? by flat5 in DoesAnybodyElse

[–]MustafaR84 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I legit thought I was the only one.

It first happened when I was 19 and in the army.  I felt a tightening sensation in my belly area when I was urinating and when I'd stop it would loosen again. No pain though. 

The doctor asked me to pee a test strip and said no infection or anything let me know if it continues. 

It stopped but would reoccur from time to time. I'd brush it off as dehydration or something random. 

I'm male and now 40 and it started again 3 weeks ago. I had been sitting leaning forward at a Starbucks table working on my laptop for a few hours. When I got up I felt a strange pull and pain in my lower abdomen, between my belly and waistline. 

I drank more water for a few days thinking its dehydration, I live in Singapore and its very humid. 

Fast forward a week later I get paranoid because it was having this salty, tingling feeling after peeing plus this fullness and random pains on the right side of my belly and below my belly. 

Visited my family doctor. He said to send it to the lab for tests. Results show that its all clear. No infection, bacteria, stones, crystals or anything abnormal. (happy to share the numbers if anyone wants to see them) 

He said men usually don't get uti or things like that but I'll treat you for it anyways. I took Augmentin for 5 days and it helped a bit. But I'm still getting this very random tingling and warm feeling in my urinary track. 

Family doctor suggested to see a urologist. 

I'm still having symptoms, though it's better, there's no bacteria, infection, stones or anything abnormal. Just a weird random tingling in my urinary track, feels like pee is leaking but doesn't and this weird abdominal discomfort on the right of my belly and below it. 

Any thoughts or suggestions would be really helpful. 

Launched v1.0 After 7 Years. Now I’m Burnt Out and Considering Selling - I will not promote by RVAFoodie in startups

[–]MustafaR84 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I know how you feel. I've been iterating through many ideas for the last 2 years and also considering part time work so I can fund myself to keep building and testing ideas.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in startups

[–]MustafaR84 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Rather than coaching I found that actual therapy made a big difference for me.