This. I’d suggest if you want to read books about chance and rarity, to check out Malcolm Gladwell and Nassim Taleb.
This. I’d suggest if you want to read books about chance and rarity, to check out Malcolm Gladwell and Nassim Taleb.
Co-signed on this. Turn your current content into a portfolio piece (or your whole portfolio). Otherwise, it seems like you’re experiencing sunk cost fallacy, which is normal, but I’d decide to either pull the plug or accept that it simply costs that amount of money to run.
I second Gumroad!
I love the How I Built This podcast, and though he’s polarizing, have found value in listening to Grant Cardone’s audio books.
This is the approach I take with sharing content on Medium: I provide introspective and/or service pieces in the form of short essays my clients are interested in, but I don’t promote or push my services/platforms.
Honestly, it’s all about routine and consistency for me. I have a project I started in June I had to put on hold that I’d hoped to launch this week, but the only way I’ve ever made headway on it is by tackling it bite by bite — a half hour dedicated to it daily. It’s also how I’ve established a pattern otherwise of creating and launching a lot of content as a whole.
Something in between Instacart and Care.com for errands/groceries. I don’t just want any produce; I want the kind that looks like X. Someone who knows to check my dry cleaning to make sure buttons aren’t falling off before leaving, etc. Basically, an on-demand personal assistant who’s already familiar with a certain geographic area, who maybe groups others’ tasks together, and who can be trained upfront on what clients like.
Sure thing!