#1 ๐ก
Action produces information.
Just keep doing stuff.
Trying to solve the issue by thinking about it only makes it worse.
Don't stop. Trust the process.
Eventually the right opportunity will appear right in front of you and the choice will be crystal clear.
#2 ๐ก
AirPod accessories turned into a huge market.
Very likely this will be the case for Appleโs Vision Pro too.
#3 ๐ก
This looks like a solid opportunity. Reach out to everyone with a Google Business Profile and offer to build a simple website for them that contains the same infos.
Hosting of static sites is dirt cheap/free so you could easily offer this with a one-time fee (โ10 year hosting includedโ).
And of course, thereโs plenty of potential for upsells once you get the foot in the door.
#3.5 ๐ก
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#4 ๐ก
Why you should ignore most business advice
(video + essay on the same topic from me)
I recently listened to a great podcast where the guest Vince Nguyen explains the contrarian way he runs his Facebook ad agency.
He doesnโt hire. Itโs just him.
Thereโs no retainer. He simply takes a percentage of the profit he generates.
And he only works with companies that are already doing well with their Facebook ads.
He also says that itโs not that much work for him and he isnโt even that good at what he does.
That almost sounds too good to be true.
Insane margins, easy sales process thanks to his no-brainer offer, no need to manage a team, and only work with clients that are already successful.
But I have no reason to doubt that everything he said is 100% true.
The problem is that none of it works outside the extremely specific context his business exists in.
How do I know?
Well, letโs just say Iโve tried hard to make the exact same strategies work.
And they didnโt.
Even though Iโm also running an agency and the niche isnโt that different.
We both generate leads for businesses. Iโm doing it with cold email, heโs doing it with Facebook ads.
And yet, the strategies that work for him did not work for me.
For example, the profit share model requires an clear way to attribute profits, short deal cycles, and significant volume.
Attribution is easy with Facebook ads. Itโs not with cold email.
When youโre dealing with long deal cycles and low volume, you risk that you work for months without getting paid anything.
The feedback loop is too long.
Also when there is just one or two big deals closing, the temptation on the client side strong to simply not pay you.
But if youโre generating hundreds of leads, it doesnโt matter if a few fall through the cracks.
Somewhere midway the podcast Vince revealed that heโs only working with digital product businesses, primarly course sellers.
Thatโs an essential piece of the puzzle.
He tried and failed to make his model work, for example, for SaaS companies.
That perfectly illustrates why even changing a tiny piece of the equation can make the whole thing fall apart.
Also without the profit share model, none of the other parts of his business would work.
Currently heโs making a lot of money per client per month.
Clientโs happily pay him that because as digital product sellers they have crazy margins too and itโs such a clear a win-win.
So he doesnโt need a lot of clients to make a nice living and hence doesnโt need to hire.
But if heโd be charging a regular retainer, the story would be very different.
Another similar example is Brett Williams who runs Designjoy.
He offers an โunlimitedโ design subscription for a fixed monthly fee.
Like Vince he says he doesnโt need to hire and heโs making a lot of money.
But then again, the problem is that this model doesnโt work outside the very specific context his business exists in.
Heโs doing design work.
People like and are used to having a designer on call they can send work to whenever they need something done.
And heโs only doing design for well-funded software companies that have no problem paying a premium for a good designs.
Many people have tried to apply the same model to other types of services since Brett even teaches a course on how to do it.
But none of his advice makes sense unless you copy his exact business.
This is one of the hardest lessons to learn as an entrepreneur.
We all want advice, learn from others, and copy what works.
And people might have the best intentions and genuinely want to help you.
But they canโt because all the lessons they learned are so specific to their business that theyโre not applicable to yours.
Most business advice is futile.
The faster you accept that and stop wasting time looking for advice thatโs ultimately not applicable to your business, the better.
#5 ๐ก
On the same note as #4: careful who you copy. You rarely see the full picture from the outside.
End Note
As always, if youโre enjoying this brainstorm, Iโd love it if you shared it with a friend or two.ย You can send them here to sign up.
Have a great week,
Jakob
"He also says that itโs not that much work for him and he isnโt even that good at what he does.
That almost sounds too good to be true."
Ha, I don't recall ever saying I'm not that good at what I do. Might have misheard me there. ;)