Saturday, March 6, 2021

Guerilla Wealth Building Topics

 

Many social media posts and YouTube videos regarding money are misleading or easy to misinterpret because the viewers have different situations and needs.  A marketer or influencer could deliberately mislead their readers because the readers are doing something wrong to the client of the influencer.  It could also be because the marketer wants to derail the efforts of his competitors.  A marketer, like a used car salesman or MLM rep can flat out lie.

One birdbrain made a video on why not to sleep.  Neglecting sleep will hurt your performance and enough sleep deprivation can hurt your health.  But, if other wanna be influencers stuck in the rat race neglect their sleep, life could become easier for the maker of the video.

I think it’s a sound idea to suggest not sleeping late.  But saying not to sleep at all is dumb.  Idk if the no sleep gurus are satirists or saboteurs.  But there are people in the bottom 70%-80% of net worth / net income who are dumb enough to be influenced.

Damage control is an excellent skill to learn.  Don’t join opt-in lists.  Don’t seek approval from the CCINO who doesn’t like you.  Start reading the best cases and note how people effectively handle damaging info.

A marketer could yell from his platform that SWOT analysis, market research and etc. are for wimps.  They’ll say just to launch.  Then bruh fires off a poor prototype of a product, or out in the open solicits suggestions and investors.  Disaster ensues for bruh.  Then the marketer sifts through the product ideas of all his followers and maybe cherry picks the best one, if he finds one.

Let’s compare apples and oranges.  Stocks and cryptocurrencies are traded in a similar manner.  Cryptos trade 24/7/365 while stocks trade M-F 630 to 130PM, except holidays.  Both markets can be and have been manipulated.  While past performance does not guarantee future results, the track records of “gurus” you know or follow provide better odds in my opinion.  Note the 10-day moving averages of both instruments.

I’d avoid having an assistant if at all possible.  I’d especially avoid assistants if introduced by a person who doesn’t like you or by a compromised person.  It goes without saying, if they immediately want the keys to the kingdom (financial account passwords, etc.) not to trust them.  Hiring English speaking pros in foreign countries to do tasks should be ok.

I have outsourced some article writing and I attempted to get some calculators built for my main site.  Most of the articles were nothing special.  Two different firms couldn’t get the calculator job done. 

If you need employees or have to raise money, your venture must be BIG enough and carefully planned.  Lenders and investors don’t usually lend to micro-ventures.  Though they might brow beat you, gas light you, and/or steal your assets.


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