YourAverageExecutive

joined 10 months ago
[–] YourAverageExecutive@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

If only people realized they’re being advertised to via these folks. Scary effective for a big chunk of the population. Modern day mlm is what it reminds me of before people became aware of mlms.

[–] YourAverageExecutive@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Terrible. There are people here with huge exits. I know at least a handful of them because we all get coffee. We all chuckle at comments here assuming there aren’t. I bet there’s more than you think. We just get burnt out since we tend to do this in real life also as mentors and advisors.

[–] YourAverageExecutive@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Someone above said it. Find podcasts from successful founders. Read HBR, bcg/bain/mckinsey content (they have a TON). Go find books from professors about marketing, advertising, etc. Successful founders don’t want to become YouTube gurus. They’re too busy lol. It’s the people who are typically middlemen that do because they hit a ceiling and get stuck since they’re not unique and typically just get social followings to sell crap. Don’t get me wrong, they make some money, just more of a scam-ish than creating any real value long term.

[–] YourAverageExecutive@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Ding ding. Dead on.

[–] YourAverageExecutive@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Thanks for the defense :)

[–] YourAverageExecutive@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

I’ve sold ventures worth hundreds of millions. Sorry bud. Wrong commenter to pick on :)

[–] YourAverageExecutive@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (6 children)

Stop watching YouTube gurus. Period.

You’re basically offering agency services as a success fee instead of hourly or etc. It’s not unique, just a riskier pricing model. Just become a marketing agency and offer the standard services. See what you could make doing it normal and offer success fees in lieu of standard fees once you have an audience.

[–] YourAverageExecutive@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

People like choices. You keep saying water. Why does wine, whiskey, coffee, tea, etc. exist. Coke is dominate due to them being one of the first colas to the market (unique), had a hard to replicate formula that gave them intellectual property (even without cocaine since it didn’t scale until that was long gone in their formula), capital since they grew due to being unique (and invested in), etc.

Basically, they built barriers to entry and own the top spot in the market. It’s VERY hard to dethrone a top player. Remember the coke sells a lot of other products also, including water. They also diversified when their sales were growing as quickly and/or slowed down in the past.

[–] YourAverageExecutive@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

It really depends on your savings and risk tolerance. I’ve jumped into founding startups (different than what you’re doing but similar salary tradeoff) when I was 22/23. I had some savings as I worked a lot since I was in high school (and through college). Just have a backup to your backup plan. If your idea fails, what will you do? If it only succeeds 50% what will you do? What if it takes longer but you see traction (and not enough income), what do you do? etc. Basically, decision tree out what you want to do, what may happen, and what you realistically can do after. It doesn’t have to be crazy or complex… but it’s a super smart thing to do when evaluating risk and understanding your options today and tomorrow.

Good luck!

Source: serial entrepreneur who does a lot of corporate strategy and startup advisement/mentorship.

[–] YourAverageExecutive@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Learn to be a mechanic, valet, work at a specialized service center behind the desk, etc.

[–] YourAverageExecutive@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Built and sold ventures with vc/pe. I don’t, and haven’t had, any cash flow management or monitoring issues. It’s not that hard to do. Just a good financial model in excel and some type of accounting software checks the boxes until you’re big enough to warrant the bit kids of netsuite, sage, msft dynamics, SAP, etc. The important things are around setup of said software, export of said data, and import into financial models. Again, all very simple to do.

[–] YourAverageExecutive@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

At 15 they should educate themselves on stock. Sure, but why not just use a tool that lets them fake invest to play around in the market - tons out there? Then, IF they are comfortable, use the funds they’ve saved and earned interest later on. No need to waste $1500 on learning the stock market. Just me two cents.

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