Podcast For Phoenixes

Marketing Strategist: How to Position Your Brand Globally Through Perception, Trust & Authority

1 h 7 min · 18 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio Marketing Strategist: How to Position Your Brand Globally Through Perception, Trust & Authority

Descripción

Amir Anzur joins Podcast for Phoenixes for a sharp, eye-opening conversation on branding, perception, wealth creation, and why Pakistan may be one of the most undervalued opportunities of the next decade. From passports to pricing power, from freelancing taxes to global positioning, Amir breaks down how the world judges countries, companies, and individuals before they even speak. He explains why talent alone is not enough, why branding changes economic outcomes, and how nations that control their narrative create leverage. This episode explores the hidden cost of poor perception, the untapped value of Pakistani talent, and how creators, founders, freelancers, and businesses can reposition themselves globally. If you are building a company, a personal brand, or a future in an emerging market, this conversation is a masterclass in understanding how trust, image, and reputation shape opportunity. Inside this episode: * Why your country becomes part of your personal brand * How perception changes what markets pay you * Why Pakistan is undervalued globally * The hidden “tax” freelancers pay because of location * How branding can unlock wealth creation * Why YouTube, podcasts, and media can reshape nations * The power of youth, English, and digital infrastructure * Why confidence and action create momentum * How founders can sell globally from Pakistan Amir Anzur brings a rare lens that combines marketing psychology, global business experience, and deep belief in Pakistan’s future. This is not just a conversation about branding.It is a conversation about power. 🚀 Watch the full episode on Podcast for Phoenixes: for the 3% redefining possible.

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34 episodios

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episode Marketing Strategist: How to Position Your Brand Globally Through Perception, Trust & Authority artwork

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Amir Anzur joins Podcast for Phoenixes for a sharp, eye-opening conversation on branding, perception, wealth creation, and why Pakistan may be one of the most undervalued opportunities of the next decade. From passports to pricing power, from freelancing taxes to global positioning, Amir breaks down how the world judges countries, companies, and individuals before they even speak. He explains why talent alone is not enough, why branding changes economic outcomes, and how nations that control their narrative create leverage. This episode explores the hidden cost of poor perception, the untapped value of Pakistani talent, and how creators, founders, freelancers, and businesses can reposition themselves globally. If you are building a company, a personal brand, or a future in an emerging market, this conversation is a masterclass in understanding how trust, image, and reputation shape opportunity. Inside this episode: * Why your country becomes part of your personal brand * How perception changes what markets pay you * Why Pakistan is undervalued globally * The hidden “tax” freelancers pay because of location * How branding can unlock wealth creation * Why YouTube, podcasts, and media can reshape nations * The power of youth, English, and digital infrastructure * Why confidence and action create momentum * How founders can sell globally from Pakistan Amir Anzur brings a rare lens that combines marketing psychology, global business experience, and deep belief in Pakistan’s future. This is not just a conversation about branding.It is a conversation about power. 🚀 Watch the full episode on Podcast for Phoenixes: for the 3% redefining possible.

18 de abr de 20261 h 7 min
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Most people talk about “starting young.”Hanzala Raja actually did it.Straight out of A-levels, while his friends were planning gap years and university transfers, he walked into his father’s office, failed a few times, learned fast, and stumbled into the idea that would become Highfy Pakistan’s fastest-growing beauty commerce brand.This episode isn’t a glorified success story.It’s a blueprint for anyone who feels “too young,” “too unprepared,” or “not ready yet.”What you’ll hear in this conversation:How early failures turned into Highfy’s first sparkWhy dining-table conversations became the real business schoolHow he built a beauty destination doing 1,500+ orders/dayWhy 90% cash-on-delivery is both a constraint and an opportunityThe discipline behind growing 120% YoYHow they stayed profitable from day oneThe mental switch that turned him from a student into a founderBalancing university, scaling, and real-world pressureWhy execution is better than ideas, especially at 20-somethingHanzala’s story is a reminder:You don’t need a degree, a network, or permission.You need a starting point, and the focus to stay on it.This episode is for the young builders who feel the itch to begin,and for the older founders who forgot what real hunger looks like.If you’re building anything in Pakistan today… you’ll want to listen to this.

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Most people chase growth. Rashid Mehmood chased meaning.From the frontlines of journalism to his years working with the Navy, and now as the founder of Kasib, his journey is a study in reinvention, the kind that forces you to confront who you are beneath all the roles, titles, and noise.On Podcast for Phoenixes, Rashid breaks down the moments that shaped him, the silence after chaos, the discipline that built resilience, and the realization that purpose isn’t found in what you do, but why you do it.He speaks about the gap between potential and self-awareness, about raising a generation that questions more and conforms less, and about the hard truth that success without identity feels empty.This isn’t a story about career transitions.It’s a story about coming home, to yourself.

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