@trang.leo.cang.bong: Nụ cười của chủ spa khi tìm được dòng peel ưng ý. #xuhuong #viral #căngbóng #làmđẹp #xuhướng

trang.leo.cang.bong
trang.leo.cang.bong
Open In TikTok:
Region: VN
Sunday 05 July 2026 13:01:51 GMT
1423
26
18
24

Music

Download

Comments

linh.cng.bng.tr.h
Linh căng bóng trẻ hoá :
Tv m nhé
2026-07-06 16:22:57
1
mainghiem_ada_group
Mai Nghiêm ADA :
E ở đâu vậy
2026-07-05 13:05:34
1
latmuc12345
4cm nữa là m7🎋 :
Đẹp lắm c ạ
2026-07-05 16:54:01
1
lequyen.21052002
Lê quyền :
Mướt mườn mượt luôn ạ
2026-07-05 13:39:55
1
doaidinhvan3
doaidinhvan3 :
Ib bạn ơi
2026-07-05 13:36:17
1
thanh.hong3837
Hoàng Thanh :
Siêu phẩm đây chứ đâu
2026-07-05 13:33:49
1
thuycangbongtrehoa
THUÝ CĂNG BÓNG TRẺ HOÁ :
Peel bong nhiều không e
2026-07-05 13:18:06
1
nghiemhien1988
NghiemHien1988 :
Làm xong da căng bóng luôn
2026-07-05 13:17:04
1
user681477298567
luu cuc :
U 50 làm đc k e
2026-07-05 13:03:40
0
nguyenthianh_94
Trung Anhhhh :
Chek ib e với ạ
2026-07-06 09:57:59
0
mainghiem_ada_group
Mai Nghiêm ADA :
Peel có bong k em
2026-07-05 13:05:41
1
bannhacbuon67
BeCốmdangiu😍 :
đẹp điên
2026-07-05 14:27:15
1
nghiemhien1988
NghiemHien1988 :
❤️❤️❤️❤️
2026-07-05 13:17:10
1
trang_leo_spa
trang_leo_spa :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-07-05 13:11:46
1
namsayhii
sayhi :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-07-05 13:08:23
1
user3cogn7ht9i
Phùng Ngọc Sơn :
😁😁😁
2026-07-05 13:08:30
1
mainghiem_ada_group
Mai Nghiêm ADA :
🥰
2026-07-05 13:05:29
1
nghiemhien1988
NghiemHien1988 :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-07-05 15:18:03
0
To see more videos from user @trang.leo.cang.bong, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

@Mr. Wonderful Kevin O’Leary says the fastest way to lose an investor’s trust is to blame everyone else for your business failure. When a founder and CEO explains that “the market changed,” competitors changed their prices, or outside forces destroyed the company, the explanation may sound reasonable—but it can also reveal a lack of founder accountability. Investors know that market conditions change. Competition gets tougher. Costs rise. Customer behavior shifts. Unexpected problems happen. The real question is whether the founder takes accountability and ownership for how they responded. Strong leaders do not pretend every event was under their control. They take responsibility for the decisions that were. They explain what they missed, what they should have done sooner, which assumptions were wrong, and how the business failure changed the way they lead. That level of CEO ownership shows self-awareness, resilience, and the ability to learn from failure. Weak founders protect their ego with excuses. Strong founders study the loss and own their part in it. That distinction matters during a startup pitch because investors are not only evaluating the business idea. They are evaluating how the entrepreneur reacts when the plan breaks. A founder who cannot admit past mistakes may repeat them with someone else’s money. Do you agree that a founder should call a failed company 100% their fault—even when the market genuinely changed? #FounderAccountability #StartupFailure #InvestorMindset #CEOLeadership #EntrepreneurshipLessons
@Mr. Wonderful Kevin O’Leary says the fastest way to lose an investor’s trust is to blame everyone else for your business failure. When a founder and CEO explains that “the market changed,” competitors changed their prices, or outside forces destroyed the company, the explanation may sound reasonable—but it can also reveal a lack of founder accountability. Investors know that market conditions change. Competition gets tougher. Costs rise. Customer behavior shifts. Unexpected problems happen. The real question is whether the founder takes accountability and ownership for how they responded. Strong leaders do not pretend every event was under their control. They take responsibility for the decisions that were. They explain what they missed, what they should have done sooner, which assumptions were wrong, and how the business failure changed the way they lead. That level of CEO ownership shows self-awareness, resilience, and the ability to learn from failure. Weak founders protect their ego with excuses. Strong founders study the loss and own their part in it. That distinction matters during a startup pitch because investors are not only evaluating the business idea. They are evaluating how the entrepreneur reacts when the plan breaks. A founder who cannot admit past mistakes may repeat them with someone else’s money. Do you agree that a founder should call a failed company 100% their fault—even when the market genuinely changed? #FounderAccountability #StartupFailure #InvestorMindset #CEOLeadership #EntrepreneurshipLessons

About