2. Inventory Your Strengths and Interests Which

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zihadhosenjm90
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Joined: Sat Dec 28, 2024 3:35 am

2. Inventory Your Strengths and Interests Which

Post by zihadhosenjm90 »

2. Inventory Your Strengths and Interests
Which skill sets are required to start your business?

Secondly, are you genuinely interested in this business concept or are you simply pursuing a money-making opportunity that doesn’t have a deeper meaning?

I spent months putting together and rigorously testing my Skill Assessment Guide that I’m giving away to everyone who reads this post. You’ll list out every asset & skill your business idea requires and map those needs to what you can or cannot do for yourself right now. It’ll guide you toward discovering your entrepreneurial strengths and point you in the right direction moving forward.

You likely possess at least some of the necessary skills you’ll need in order to start a business, but if you don’t—you’re now faced with a tough decision:

Pause and spend time learning a new skill
Or outsourcing the difficult components to someone who can help
There’s no right or wrong answer, it depends solely upon your albania phone number database threshold, urgency and desire (or lack thereof) to learn new skills and abilities.

Be honest with yourself about your strengths.

What are you good at?
What are you great at?
Where is there room for improvement?
If you want to be successful in learning how to start a business quickly, you need to maximize the time you spend on doing what you’re great at, and work to outsource your weaknesses.

"Want to start a successful business? Maximize the time you spend on doing what you're great at and work to outsource your weaknesses."
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For me, I know that I can tell a compelling story through a good blog post idea, email, or on social media and drive in traffic to my blog.

That’s one of early the reasons I chose to first learn how to start a blog and eventually learn how to make money blogging in a scalable fashion—so that I could leverage my existing strengths towards pursuing a business that I’m more naturally designed to succeed at… blogging.

That’s my basis for connecting with people, so I focus on that ability.

And that also largely why my transition into blogging full-time was fueled by starting a freelance business as a content marketer on the side of my day job. I already had the skills locked down, so I could build up a cushion of savings (in order to eventually launch into blogging full-time) by selling my services.
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