- Nicknames
- Pookie
- Monkey
- Ldub
- Weis Words
- Loren Edward Taylor Weisman
- Loren E T Weisman
- Loren T Weisman
- Height6′ 4″ (1.93 m)
- Loren Weisman is a messaging and optics strategist with a focus on the authenticity, authority, optics, psychology and perceptions of a brand, persona or product for Fish Stewarding Group FSG is stewarding strategic solutions by educating, developing and transitioning businesses through strategic guidance and process architecture.
Weisman has stayed up to date with the constant changes inside and outside of the entertainment industries over the past three decades as well as keeping up with the pulse and optics of content creation, marketing, promotion, and social media trends, allowing for the most effective, and up to date consideration when applying the individualized and personalized methods, approaches and plans.
Starting his career in music and behind the scenes as a drummer and then music producer, Weisman got to see the ins, outs, ups and downs of music. He wrote both "The Artists Guide to Success in the Music Business" (Greenleaf Book Group) and "Music Business for Dummies" (Wiley & Sons).
Shifting to TV production as well as authoring a few books on the music business, Loren gravitated toward the strategic production elements as much as he did the psychological ones. From speaking and counseling on brand messaging to brand discovery, analyzing the two sides of artistic vision while igniting the investor confidence, as well as brand protection and amplifications approaches for marketing, sales and retention, Weisman helps across the array of the story and the messaging experience.
Loren's speaking and talks focus on the brand messaging strategies, marketing perceptions, audience optics and authentic engagement methods.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Loren Weisman
- RelativesRoger Weisman(Sibling)
- A straightforward answer to a straightforward question will move you that much more forward in this world, that much faster.
- Only Getting the A and Z with out the B through Y, leaves you SOL.
- Your actions and approach with what you have, will showcase to others what you would be able to do with more.
- Your mistakes aren't learning experiences ... if you aren't learning from them.
- Try holding yourself accountable to yourself. If you had to give yourself a daily, weekly, or monthly report, would you be proud to talk about what you had done, or would you need to be prettying up things, b-sing, or lying to keep your job?
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