My experience with the Rejuvenate people is quite different—basically, if you are someone like a coach who can generate high income/hour but doesn’t work many hours, you just outsource everything.
Coaches (who have taken marketing courses) usually make $97+/hr, so in that position, if you can pay someone $10-50/hr, to do a few hours of work for you—usually they get more done/hour on tasks like cleaning, filing, and basic website development anyway, and then you use a fraction of the time they save you on marketing and doing coaching, and easily make it back while spending much less time working.
If you’re someone who can make a lot of money consulting or programming, do a little contract work, and hire college students to do all the work you don’t want to for your projects. Have them help you come up with systems that you can easily teach new people if they quit, and you save a lot of time and stress and work that is not what you want to be doing.
I’m working on developing a program with that sort of material for this crowd (decided it was higher leverage use of my time than individual coaching/counseling after seeing the response on this post) - I’d love to quiz you (or anyone else interested) about the topics you’d most like to see covered for making your life better, easier, and more successful when doing start-ups. If you’re interested, email me—shannon dot friedman at positivevector dot com. I have a ton of information I’ve collected through that program and other sources already, so I’m trying to figure out which pieces are highest impact to focus on for this crowd.
My experience with the Rejuvenate people is quite different—basically, if you are someone like a coach who can generate high income/hour but doesn’t work many hours, you just outsource everything.
Coaches (who have taken marketing courses) usually make $97+/hr, so in that position, if you can pay someone $10-50/hr, to do a few hours of work for you—usually they get more done/hour on tasks like cleaning, filing, and basic website development anyway, and then you use a fraction of the time they save you on marketing and doing coaching, and easily make it back while spending much less time working.
If you’re someone who can make a lot of money consulting or programming, do a little contract work, and hire college students to do all the work you don’t want to for your projects. Have them help you come up with systems that you can easily teach new people if they quit, and you save a lot of time and stress and work that is not what you want to be doing.
I’m working on developing a program with that sort of material for this crowd (decided it was higher leverage use of my time than individual coaching/counseling after seeing the response on this post) - I’d love to quiz you (or anyone else interested) about the topics you’d most like to see covered for making your life better, easier, and more successful when doing start-ups. If you’re interested, email me—shannon dot friedman at positivevector dot com. I have a ton of information I’ve collected through that program and other sources already, so I’m trying to figure out which pieces are highest impact to focus on for this crowd.