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Center Stage: Models of the Solar System

Resource ID#: 99989

Primary Type: Student Tutorial


This document was generated on CPALMS - www.cpalms.org



Compare and contrast the heliocentric and geocentric models of the Solar System in this interactive tutorial.

Attachments

Accessible version: Accessible Version of the tutorial content inPDF Format

General Information

Subject(s): Science
Grade Level(s): 8
Intended Audience: Educators , Students
   
 
Keywords: Heliocentric, Geocentric, Solar System, , Parallax, models, planets, the Sun, the moon, space science, outer space, interactive, tutorials, elearning, e-learning, science, Earth science,
Instructional Component Type(s): Original Student Tutorial
Resource Collection: Original Student Tutorials Science - Grades K-8



Source and Access Information

Contributed by:
Name of Author/Source: Robert Lengacher
Access Privileges: Public


Aligned Standards

Name Description
SC.8.E.5.8: Compare various historical models of the Solar System, including geocentric and heliocentric.
Clarifications:
Florida Standards Connections: MAFS.K12.MP.4: Model with mathematics.



Dating apps are springing all over the place. Due to the pandemic, people want to find friends online. But are dating apps the solution to this? We want friends, not dates, and nobody even cares it seems, as dating apps usage is increasing. Should we build things, just because of demand?


Was reading an article on Linkedin news today about how there is a surge in the usage of dating apps, because of the pandemic, and how it might be a boom time to build one.Based on my conversations with people using these apps, I actually feel that we might be a bit haphazard with this conclusion?Aren't dating apps giving rise to a culture of judging people quickly based on their profiles, and faces? Aren't they feeding this toxic culture of trying to present yourself in the best light, even though it might all be fake?Where is such a technology going to lead us? Should we, as entrepreneurs, build things just because there is an increase in demand for them? Cocaine is popular, isn't it? So we should become drug sellers then, and make a tone of money?I think connecting people "organically" is the thing we should be after, not feeding this system of building tech that has proven to work, just for the sake of it!What are your thoughts? see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

I made an animated summary of "Grit" by Angela Duckworth. I hope this is useful to you.


Link to video: https://youtu.be/doUSy1Eo76sI release new videos often, if you’re interested in subscribing here’s a link: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCfbLDMh6uGOZePAfqqjVZ-g?sub_confirmation=1If you'd prefer to read the script instead of watching the video, here it is:Grit By Angela DuckworthAbout The AuthorShe presently studies self-control and grit as a distinguished professor of Psychology at the University of Pennsylvania, the same university in which she studied. Her book, Grit, distills what she has learned about the importance of effort to the attainment of success. It solves the mystery of why some people can work harder and longer while others fall to the wayside.The Book’s Main IdeaAs suggested by the title of the book, Grit, a combination of passion and resilience, is the main idea behind the book.“Enthusiasm is common. Endurance is rare.” Angela DuckworthA look at the main ideas shared in the bookGrit is a research-centric book. Here are the main ideas behind it:1: Grit and why it matters (more than anything)“Our potential is one thing. What we do with it is quite another.” Angela DuckworthAngela Duckworth defines Grit as a combination of passion, feeling intimately driven towards a specific achievement, or rather, the ability to pursue one goal over time, and perseverance, the ability to overcome challenges, put in the work, and to finish the things you start. She notes that passion and enthusiasm are not the same; passion is endurance.“....Grit is about working on something you care about so much that you're willing to stay loyal to it...it's doing what you love, but not just falling in love―staying in love.” Angela DuckworthGrit is a predictor of success. Given two people who have the same amount of talent but where one is grittier, the grittier person will be more successful. This does not negate the importance of IQ or talent. On the contrary, Angela notes that both IQ and talent are important success factors. However, on their own, they are insufficient success/achievement catalysts.To get the most of IQ or talent, you must couple it with GRIT, passionate and consistent hard work over time. If you lack talent or a high IQ but have an undying passion for your aim/work and the ability to work and persevere through everything, you are far more likely to succeed—vis-a-vis someone who has talent or high IQ but is not a diligent worker.“As much as talent counts, effort counts twice.” Angela DuckworthOn the importance of Grit, from her interviews with a broad spectrum of successful people including writers, athletes, musicians, and politicians, Angela Duckworth created two equations that show the important relationship between talent and effort and why effort trumps talent.She noted that to achieve any aim, you need the right set of skill. Mastery or achievement, which is the measure of true success, comes from practicing the skills after the fact.2: On Developing gritBeing a self-development book, Grit by Angela Duckworth is both data-centric and actionable. She goes out of her way to illustrate how anyone can become grittier. She does this by mentioning that grit has four main characteristics.(1) Interest, a deep love for what you are doing/pursuing and (2) Practice, improving bit by bit so “…that doing one thing better and better might be more satisfying than staying an amateur at many different things….” (3) Purpose, a strong belief in the importance of what you are doing, and (4) hope, believing that you will overcome challenges that arise as you pursue and practice your interests and purpose.“I won’t just have a job; I’ll have a calling. I’ll challenge myself every day. When I get knocked down, I’ll get back up. I may not be the smartest person in the room, but I’ll strive to be the grittiest.” Angela DuckworthGrit develops as we go about living life, learning important lessons that mold our beliefs and philosophies, from overcoming challenges and dealing with failures and disappointments, a principle she dubs the maturity principle, of which she notes:“Over time, we learn life lessons we don’t forget, and we adapt in response to the growing demands of our circumstances. Eventually, new ways of thinking and acting become habitual. There comes a day when we can hardly remember our immature former selves. We have adapted, those adaptations have become durable, and, finally, our identity—the sort of person we see ourselves to be—has evolved. We’ve matured.” Angela DuckworthConclusionGrit is an invaluable asset that we can all learn to develop, as long as we take it a step at a time.“At the start of an endeavor, we need encouragement and freedom to figure out what we enjoy. We need small wins. We need applause. Yes, we can handle a tincture of criticism and corrective feedback. Yes, we need to practice. But not too much and not too soon. Rush a beginner and you’ll bludgeon their budding interest. It’s very, very hard to get that back once you do.” Angela DuckworthI hope that was useful, have a great day!I release new videos often, if you’re interested in subscribing here’s a link: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCfbLDMh6uGOZePAfqqjVZ-g?sub_confirmation=1I've made over 60 summaries of the best self improvement books, the links are below.Full playlist of them all here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dOImyOGN9UE&list=PLaNTB6oQAa0AYuul0tqUscg1ZLj_arZgaHere are the links:Make Your Bed: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z7mBNcI2H1c The power of the subconscious mind: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UNi9zDGaZtw Getting things done: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oCNN2pyO5Yc The power of intention: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ezM3fIKHTY Deep work: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2SOQpjHKESA The magic of thinking big: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wdQRQ82AED8 The alchemist: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NcQjBghtxMU Blink: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rie9Pkp4Ktk Atomic Habits: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B6u0X0CDEqU The E-Myth Revisited: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ctHTVZRnE7g Mindset: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0QU5Q3lyTqo The art of war: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8_5qhA2y-E4 Rework: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zsaZU-HW18k The lean startup: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j6QPZp--lJE The hard thing about hard things: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yl_Q3E5d33U Crush it!: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=onbmkc-29KI Delivering Happiness: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GiUWCZkHbA8 The personal MBA: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eFpXccN3YEU The $100 startup: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cqa1LqahOLE Zero to One: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RGtQjkSUahc Grit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=doUSy1Eo76s Start with why: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LgMnlf4jcYY The compound: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0nSIiAMnDY0 The Prince: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lzVmhWFdwBQ The willpower instinct: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jz5EXLYxWDQ The slight edge: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sItMk2xS_ZU Meditations: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ul2nuHOnCPI Who moved my cheese?: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PQhJkIPHiyw The One Thing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cS5lgHhbUoM The richest man in babylon: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xbnHlWFnWLs The power of habit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d366w-o8nhA Secrets of the millionaire mind: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R1WjeoCw30g The 6 pillars of self esteem: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y5NRiB_-w10 The 7 Habits of Highly Effective people: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_nGzZ9m_Xsg Thinking Fast and Slow: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fqw9dwxiKSw The 4 hour work week: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tCWzSlAqO0g The power of positive thinking: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IAdxM_19KBc The power of now: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wa7mAlLhD3w Think and grow rich: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=btQNKjSy8Ww 12 rules of life: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9InBOOy1eTU The 5 love languages: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nPq4Vxh74jY Rich Dad Poor Dad: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GV31Wpr2Fl8 How to win friends and influence people: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s61o8y22BpM The inside out revolution: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=68OwvuqZEGo Models: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hs0d7Da8ufo Man’s search for meaning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eyXFQ5W0bMk The subtle art of not giving a fuck: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dOImyOGN9UE How to stop worrying and start living: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qUQXrEk52Ug The millionaire fastlane: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vrtjXONWVfA 5 extremely powerful techniques to master motivation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vmRzDIisUeM Quiet by Susan Cain: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SzRcYLq63dU Extreme Ownership: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eMWeEyqWHe0 see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

Do you think a card business on Etsy would be profitable?


I want to start a card business on Etsy where I make custom cards for people that cost around $5-$7 each. I was wondering if you think something like this in terms of, my designs or your personal experience with Etsy.Here are some of my designs see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

I’m a work in progress...needing help with making progress


I started a jewelry line called “Steeling Time Pieces” because (1) the jewelry is stainless steel and (2) it’s a reminder to steal a few of minutes of time to check your mental health. The jewelry set is centered around the 5-4-3-2-1 grounding technique and the five steps are engraved on the bracelet charms. While each piece can be worn and used independently, the idea is to have the three piece set of bracelet, necklace and ring. The ring can be used as a tool to help with breathing exercises and the pendants store a removable lava rock (which is thought to have its own grounding powers) and can be used with lavender essential oils for all day soothing smells.There are so many stigmas around mental health and I wanted to create something practical that serves a purpose but also beautiful and can be worn everyday. Short term, I want people to start giving mental health the same importance as physical health. You see your PCP, you see your dentist...you should also see a therapist. Long term goal I want to work to remove the negative connotations around mental health. Regardless of the degree, EVERYONE has moments of stress or anxiety where they need a reminder to be grounded and remain in the moment.I created a Kickstarter campaign to raise funds to complete manufacturing of the jewelry and not surprisingly...I only have 5 backers. Honestly I’m ok with making a few handmade bracelets and sharing them as gifts but the thought of being able to help people on a larger scale gives me a sense of purpose. Even if Steeling Time Pieces doesn’t become an actual thing, I hope that I’m at least getting the conversation started and am bringing awareness to mental health and can at least help one person.Learn more about Steeling Time Pieces: https://ift.tt/39vfuaA see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

Website flipping


How do i start? Where o purchase a website and improve on it then sell it for profit later on see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

What are steps the needed to get a concept for a computer expansion card from my brain to product?


Ok, so I have a concept for a computer expansion card that would make a lot of a lot of peoples lives much easier.I would rather not spend the next 6 months learning how to build and solder boards and I would prefer not to spend and arm and a leg to get project off the ground.With that said what paths are available to me? see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

Why I quit entrepreneurship to become a writer


I made a big mistake.It was at the end of December of 2019, and I started working right away on my idea. A platform to send newsletters.I spent six months working on it. Every day. From Monday to Sunday, until I had an MVP. I was very proud of what I created, and I wanted to share it with the world.The results: Zero clients.I was expecting people to try it, at least out of curiosity or to think about using it. But no one did.Is the project a failure because I have zero clients?1 - The site only had around 4K visits so far. That's not enough.2 - From those people, 99% were visits from places like Indie Hackers, Product Hunt, BetaList, etc. Are they my clients? Maybe not.I have two big reasons to consider this a failure and quit.1 - I still need to put in twelve more months of work.To add paid newsletters, static pages, a better writing editor, a blogging experience, custom domains…. If I want to create those, I need to spend at least another 12 months. Probably more.And for what? Adding more features is not going to help with finding clients because they won't see them.2 - I need to find clients.I am sure that you can make a lot of money from a service like this.The problem is, if I code, I can't do sales or marketing. It seems to me that there are at least 3 full-time jobs to do simultaneously, and that's too big for me.I was naive when I started.What was my big mistake?I wanted to create a Micro-Saas. I wasn't looking to be a big company. I thought to have 500-1000 clients and make 10/20K per month.I wanted to create a family business. Pay salaries for a couple of people and flying low. I wasn't looking for attention. I didn't want to be the greatest entrepreneur.My big mistake was to think that creating a SaaS was easy. At least easier. I was expecting to have 50/100 clients in the first couple of months. I thought: "Internet is big, they will come."And there is some truth to that, but I learned after that you need to find them. Or spend money on ads. Or both.And I don't know how to do it, and I don't have a budget for that or the experience.What do I mean by "I quit"?I quit big projects that keep me attached to my desk for years and infinity hours. Projects that you can never say: done. A SaaS is never done.Last week I created and launched slideslist.com. It took me a week to create it. It had some visits and no sales, but it doesn't matter. No risks were taken and minimal effort.How to know if you should start a project?If you are starting today, you should start small. It would be best if you learn first. Start by creating a SaaS is too big and risky in time, money, and effort or even Micro-SaaS. The "micro" doesn't reflect the effort you need to put in anyway.Create something small in less than a month and try to sell it. You will see how hard it is and how many people tell you: "nice! I will take a look later" And they will never do. So then you learn, and you keep trying small things until you have enough experience.Even enough experience to realize that creating a SaaS is not for you. Like I learned.Do You Need to Create a SaaS?I’d say probably not, but I am still figuring this out.I started this to be free. And being free involves, of course, having more money. But I don't want to buy a fancy car or a big house. You can make a lot of money from a SaaS, but there are also other ways to make money online.The problem with the SaaS I was creating is that I was giving away my freedom by doing things that I wasn't enjoying. But I didn't want to spend every single hour of the day adding more features and at the same time trying to find clients.If that's what you want, that's fantastic, go ahead and start a SaaS. But that's not what I wanted.I romanticized the idea of travel and writing. And that's what I want. I wanted to make money to write, to share lessons on the things that I think are valuable for people to have a better and more balanced life.Know yourself.If I wanted to write, why was I spending my time creating a SaaS?Now I am writing, and let’s see from here.Thanks to this article I published telling my story I learned that I might not have to create a SaaS to start living the life I want.People paid me for it, and I made a good amount of money. It paid my rent for the month, and that blew my mind.So I decided to start a newsletter and a blog and start writing about the things I enjoy. Who knows if in the future I will go back again trying to create a big project, but for now, I’m going to try something small that is also fun to do for me.If you want to follow my new journey as a writer, follow me on Twitter for daily updates! see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

High-end D2C brand stories?


Hiya, years ago I prototyped a beautiful leather backpack that I never did anything with.I still use it daily, and I am thinking about setting it up as a company (once again).Do you know of any resources/case studies on high end D2C brands? Think, Daniel Wellington.Thanks. see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

Avoiding burnout after a hard year: I am the owner of a small landscaping business and feeling burnout


I am the only employee of the company, we average sales of $100-$150k annually, before COVID, and right now it's about half that. Recently I am just feeling burnt out... this year has been super hard for us all.. Any advice? see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

Help me invest $30000 into something asap


Just sold a collectable item I had, I now have $30k in cash, the following skills, and 8 hrs per day. How exactly do I turn that 30k into 35k-45k in a month? Bonus points if you don’t use words like tik tok or social media.Pro videographer / high-end video producer / film directorPro photographer with a ton of gearPro music producer / singer / recording engineerSemi-pro at direct marketingSemi-pro at web designSemi-pro at graphic designBachelor of ArtsPro screenwriterPro event producerPro video editorPro choreographerSome experience selling on e-commerceSome experience with facebook adsPassion for fashion, comedy, and competitive billiards.Very EntrepreneurialType A personalityOwn lots and lots of high-end audio and video gear including a home recording studio.Have a car and live in a major city in the USPassive income preferred but willing to work my butt off as long as it’s not “comment on relevant sm accounts” type bs.Thanks in advance, appreciate the help see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

You need to study your competition.


Hey Guys,As we all know, studying our competition is necessary, and one of the most important things to study is their ad strategy. You can understand a lot about their messaging, creative and funnel strategy when you look at their ads.Here's a simple way to understand what your competition is doing in terms of their ad strategy:-Google "Facebook Ads Library".Write your competitor's page name.Look at their ads, and scroll to the bottom.If an ad is running for a month, or more, chances are that they are getting good conversions from it.So study their copy, their creatives, click on the ad, and see what their funnel is, what their landing page looks like, what action it wants you to take, what mail you get when you do that action, etc.This will help you learn from them, get creative ideas, and actually do things better than what they are doing.I've done this for multiple businesses, across various industries, and this always saves me money (and time) to test things, especially in the initial stages. see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

business in a nutshell?


Using creativity to figure out an outstanding offer for a target customer. The foundation is based on doing things efficiently and by the book. Imo, this is business in a nutshell. Do you agree? What is your idea of what business is in a nutshell. see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

Mobile signing agent.


About to leave the military with a associates in criminal justice.My wife and I are looking into venturing into starting our duel signing services as our main source of income. I have about 10k to work with and I know start up cost is fairly low, what else do you think we could invest in to build continuous profit?Highly motivated for the signing services but don’t wanna be stuck on one option. Thanks! see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

Is it even likely that a sub like this one is going to actually help people get anywhere?


What I mean when I ask that is. Has anyone benefitted from this sub? Or is it just another circlejerk like wallstreetbets has become where everyone forgets those that loose money and all the dumb big plays get upvoted and when they fuck up nobody talks about it see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

Is this website confusing?


Hi internet, please help. We're struggling with this new concept, and need to learn from people who don't already know what we do, whether we are explanating it all wrong?!I set up a survey if you have 10 minutes, would be so much help if you could lend your feedback. <3https://anna799450.typeform.com/to/M2L31ytAPS. If I figure out this Reddit coins thing I will be sure to gift you some!! see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

So I learned a lot from my econ degree and r/personalfiance. I want to share my knowledge with my peers from the restaurant industry, many of which struggle with budgeting.


I worked in restaurants for years before graduating in economics and I still work at a restaurant two days a week as a server on weekends. I have coworkers and ex-coworkers ask me all the time how I manage to be so financially stable when getting paid the same as everyone around me. I thought of doing a low-cost budgeting subscription charging $10-15 a month to help people in their personal finance journey. Mostly servers and basic budgeting, emergency fund, get out of debt, then pushing them to invest without the part where I tell them what to invest in. I'd do give advice away for free all the time, but I don't go as far as to help them take these steps.Is there any way I can get a good overview of someone's finances so I can assist them in building their financial future easily? Also, does anyone know how to bill someone monthly? I figured I would just use a reoccurring transfer from their bank. Is this even legal? see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

has anyone's business ever failed despite having a good domain name and logo?


has anyone's business ever failed despite having a good domain name and logo?curious and if you failed, why? see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

I made an animated summary of "Zero to One" by Peter Thiel. I hope this is useful to you.


Link to video: https://youtu.be/RGtQjkSUahcI release new videos often, if you’re interested in subscribing here’s a link: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCfbLDMh6uGOZePAfqqjVZ-g?sub_confirmation=1If you'd prefer to read the script instead of watching the video, here it is:Zero To One by Peter ThielPeter Thiel is one of the greatest business minds in the world. Besides authoring Zero to One, he is also the cofounder of PayPal along with several other companies. The book is primarily about how businesses can be successful. And owing to the fact that this book is written by a serial entrepreneur having cofounded multibillion dollar companies, you can bet that it is packed with real life next level wisdom taking business to the next level.Chapter 1 and 2: The Challenge of Future and Party Like it is 1999The first chapter begins with Thiel discussing his most favorite question:“What important truth do very few people agree with you on?”According to Thiel, this is an important question, which can help readers to figure out the real truth behind things as it is something that not most people agree on.This question helps readers to reflect on the knowledge they can create for themselves and enables them to think differently and outside the box. Also, this readers to figure out what they need to build their startups on so that they can use that truth to convince a large group of people.The second chapter talks about the economic landscape of 1999, including the economic crash that occurred in Thailand, investments migration in USA and the commencement of the dot.com mania, and talks about how one should enjoy life like it is still 1999.Chapter 3 and 4: All Happy Companies are Different And Competition Is NobleIn chapter 3, Thiel highlights how all successful companies that are completely different can create a monopoly by catering to a different problem experienced by the different segments of the society. It also highlights how all the unsuccessful companies are same because they somehow fail to fight the competition and make a difference in the market.In chapter 4, the author talks about the reasons why people and companies compete with one another. According to the book, companies compete when they follow the Marx Model, which states that they have dissimilar goals and ideas, or when they follow the Shakespeare model, which states that all the combatants are more or less similar. Hence, when companies set out on a war against one another, it is because of either of the two reasons.Chapter 5 and 6: Last Mover AdvantageIn chapter 5, Thiel talks about the characteristics of a company that holds a monopoly such as starting with a niche market, providing a better solution than other companies in the market, taking advantage of economies of scale and excellent branding.It then moves on to talk about how to build a monopoly using different strategies such as choosing the right target market, expanding to adjacent markets and creating something influential then disrupting the market.Then he goes on to talk about how nobody can control his/ her future as nobody is a lottery ticket so it is futile to work out life based on assumptions. To shape a successful future, one has to see it as something clear and definite, as this provides a basis for targeted action.Chapter 7, 8 and 9: Follow the MoneyThiel talks about the 80/20 rule in this chapter and discusses how one should follow the money and understand how it is made to draw abundance and wealth towards their business.Then in chapter 8, the author centers on the importance of believing in secrets all around you and looking for secrets i.e. new ways to perform better in life and in business. This includes all types of secrets including business, technological and success secrets.It also discusses how companies fail and their success drops low when they stop looking for secrets around them using the example of Hewlett Packard and how its net worth dropped from $135 billion in 2000 to $23 billion in 2012.In the chapter that follows, Thiel highlights three important elements related to any organization: its ownership, which comprises of its founders, investors and employees; its possession, which lies with its managers; and its control which is under its board of directors. He also highlights the need of everyone belonging to the three categories to be fully involved in the business to make it work.Chapter 10-14: The Mechanics of Mafia, If You Build it, Will They Come? And Man and MachineThe 10th chapter highlights the importance of building a cult by your business like Apple Inc. did to become successful. In the 11th chapter, Thiel discusses how building a cult isn’t only integral to the success of a business; startups must also worry about their sales just like they do about their product.The 12th chapter talks about using technology and human resource simultaneously in the business to make it successful.In the 13th chapter of the book, Thiel discusses 7 questions every business must ponder on before starting off to become successful, including questions on the right time to commence a business, how to create a breakthrough with technology and what type of team to select for the business. The last chapter highlights the significance of having great founders for a business as they lead the company towards success.If you are looking to build a successful business, this book is a must-read for you.I hope that was useful, have a great day!I release new videos often, if you’re interested in subscribing here’s a link: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCfbLDMh6uGOZePAfqqjVZ-g?sub_confirmation=1I've made over 60 summaries of the best self improvement books, the links are below.Full playlist of them all here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dOImyOGN9UE&list=PLaNTB6oQAa0AYuul0tqUscg1ZLj_arZgaHere are the links:Make Your Bed: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z7mBNcI2H1c The power of the subconscious mind: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UNi9zDGaZtw Getting things done: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oCNN2pyO5Yc The power of intention: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ezM3fIKHTY Deep work: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2SOQpjHKESA The magic of thinking big: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wdQRQ82AED8 The alchemist: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NcQjBghtxMU Blink: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rie9Pkp4Ktk Atomic Habits: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B6u0X0CDEqU The E-Myth Revisited: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ctHTVZRnE7g Mindset: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0QU5Q3lyTqo The art of war: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8_5qhA2y-E4 Rework: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zsaZU-HW18k The lean startup: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j6QPZp--lJE The hard thing about hard things: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yl_Q3E5d33U Crush it!: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=onbmkc-29KI Delivering Happiness: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GiUWCZkHbA8 The personal MBA: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eFpXccN3YEU The $100 startup: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cqa1LqahOLE Zero to One: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RGtQjkSUahc Grit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=doUSy1Eo76s Start with why: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LgMnlf4jcYY The compound: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0nSIiAMnDY0 The Prince: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lzVmhWFdwBQ The willpower instinct: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jz5EXLYxWDQ The slight edge: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sItMk2xS_ZU Meditations: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ul2nuHOnCPI Who moved my cheese?: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PQhJkIPHiyw The One Thing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cS5lgHhbUoM The richest man in babylon: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xbnHlWFnWLs The power of habit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d366w-o8nhA Secrets of the millionaire mind: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R1WjeoCw30g The 6 pillars of self esteem: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y5NRiB_-w10 The 7 Habits of Highly Effective people: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_nGzZ9m_Xsg Thinking Fast and Slow: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fqw9dwxiKSw The 4 hour work week: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tCWzSlAqO0g The power of positive thinking: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IAdxM_19KBc The power of now: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wa7mAlLhD3w Think and grow rich: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=btQNKjSy8Ww 12 rules of life: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9InBOOy1eTU The 5 love languages: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nPq4Vxh74jY Rich Dad Poor Dad: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GV31Wpr2Fl8 How to win friends and influence people: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s61o8y22BpM The inside out revolution: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=68OwvuqZEGo Models: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hs0d7Da8ufo Man’s search for meaning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eyXFQ5W0bMk The subtle art of not giving a fuck: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dOImyOGN9UE How to stop worrying and start living: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qUQXrEk52Ug The millionaire fastlane: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vrtjXONWVfA 5 extremely powerful techniques to master motivation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vmRzDIisUeM Quiet by Susan Cain: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SzRcYLq63dU Extreme Ownership: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eMWeEyqWHe0 see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

Need your feedback. I built a chat widget for websites that work with Twitter


I wonder what problems this solves? I appreciate any feedback you think this tool will solve.It's just a chat widget you can install on your own website allowing people to login with Twitter and chat. Good for social proofhttps://imgur.com/a/TWgaUoL see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

Ideas/Logistic help for an International Giveaway


Hey everyone,I'm looking for advice on how to hold an international giveaway via Instagram.I offer online language tutoring services, and I'm hoping to do a 12 days of Christmas-esque giveaway on Instagram this month.My Goals: Increase follower post engagement & encourage audience to sign up for a free trial class.Increasing audience size isn't a huge priority for me right now.My Problem: I'm based in the US, but most of my audience lives abroad - namely in Brazil, Turkey, Hong Kong, Colombia, Mexico, Italy, Spain, and Panama with some other countries sprinkled in.My Question: What kind of prizes can I offer that people will like but that can also be received internationally or virtually for an affordable price? I know I can offer free or discounted classes, but I'd like to offer something else as well.My Budget: ~$300. I don't want to go too far over $20 per prize.​Idea 1: At first, I considered virtual gift cards (Netflix, Spotify, Steam, etc.) and just having a list of the countries that the gift card could be used in listed somewhere, but from what I've seen, that can be tricky because gift cards are often tied to the country they are purchased in???Idk if there's some way around that, but I'd rather do something more straightforward so that I don't risk running into hiccups when it comes to delivery.​Idea 2: Then, I found a book site that ships all over the world, and I thought of choosing 12 books from that site and having those be the prizes. That's still an option, but depending on the country, those shipping costs can be a little crazy.​Idea 3: Finally, I thought about finding small businesses in those countries that I could buy from so I could both support other small businesses and also offer quality prizes because I wouldn't have to spend half my money on shipping. This is my favorite option right now, but of course, time is an issue.I know a few entrepreneurs in Brazil and Colombia that might be willing to participate - one sells adorable desserts, another does gift baskets, and another sells all kinds of books, but I'd need to find businesses in those other countries, which I think is doable, but I want to make sure I'm not overlooking any other options.I also thought about looking for some digital artists who I could buy work from, but I'm pretty sure that for this, I'd need to decrease the number of prizes and/or increase my budget.​Any ideas you all have would be IMMENSELY appreciated.Thank you. see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

I'm looking to move from Squarespace to Weebly or Wix. This is to setup the ecommerce for my travel photo business. For Weebly, I'd use Ecwid integration. For Wix, I'd use either Wix or Ecwid. I want to sell on Instagram, Facebook, and Etsy too. I need a multichannel solution.


Back in college, I ran travel photo business. I sold greeting cards, calendars, and prints of my work. I suspended that back in December, 2019 when I graduated college with a BBA in Management.I'd like to sell fine art grade prints (up to 60 or 72 inches high depending on method), greeting cards, and wall calendars. The fine art printing will be from a business that supports automated fulfillment. I may do my own fulfillment for calendars and cards unless the demand is there to justify 3PL. I'd work like to work directly with clients for photo murals too.I'm looking at selling on my website, Instagram, Facebook and Etsy. Moving away from Squarespace will be a given for many reasons. I ruled out Weebly's and Squarespace's ecommerce system because I want to use Sumup for payment processing. Sumup is lower cost than Square. It's also why I ruled out Shopify.I'd like a solution that automatically syncs the sales from the website, Facebook shop, Instagram store, Etsy page, and occasional in person sales. I keep finding solutions that don't work with all four. Either they integrate with Etsy or Instagram but not both.What's the best system for integrating and syncing all four sales channels? I'm asking because time and money are all limited. Should I use Ecwid or Wix for the online store? I need something cost effective. What are some other systems worth looking into?Thanks in advance. see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

Retail


Been thinking about doing retail arbitration. Don’t know where to start as of yet but anyone ever done or is doing this? see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

Starting a Cigar Newsletter


Hey all - I'm a big fan of newsletters like The Morning Brew and The Hustle. Aggregated info makes for easy reading and I look forward to them daily.I've decided I'm going to try my hand at a weekly newsletter like this for the cigar world. I'm planning to aggregate news/reviews/deals from several industry sources in a once-a-week send (on Mondays). My first email goes out tomorrow! Chances are it will be rough, but we'll see. If anyone is interested in receiving the newsletter, check out: http://theblend.newsI'm planning to work closely with subscribers to make it something that you find useful and engaging! I'll be running a small, free giveaway for the first month. A lucky subscriber will receive a 5 cigar Cuban sampler at the end of December. Free entry for subscribing and for each person that you refer.Thanks for checking it out! see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

Franchise FDD - Are These Red Flags?


Just got finished reading an FDD for a franchise and noticed a few things that may or may not be warning signs.​it looks like between 2017-2019, 9 stores closed and only 4 opened.It also looks like 80 new contracts were signed in 2019 but they only project 9 stores to open in the next fiscal year.Also if you take out the top 20% and bottom 20% It looks like 60% of the franchises are making about 95K. This is before rent, insurance, and paying employees. I'm estimating that employees alone could take at least 60K a year which leaves me with 35K.​#3 is only an estimate based on the numbers I was given in the FDD but #1 and #2 are solid facts.​Thoughts please! see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

How do draw more people to your pages?Also Etsy is it worth it?


I just recently opened a Facebook page and instagram for my tie dye..This is really all I have now and do not get a lot of traffic. I’m hoping to increase traffic to my pages as I’m starting to become discouraged a tiny bit.My question is Etsy really a good place to sell things? Or is there other places?New to this! Thank you! Wish you positive vibes! see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

Business w/o needing a license?


Are there any businesses out there that one thinks may need a license to operate but in fact does not need one? Ex. In my state, if you sell less than 10 cars a year, you do not need a used-car sellers license. Any others that anyone can think of? see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

If you had $10k, what would you start?


I'm just curious what others would do if they had $10K cash to start a company, what would you start and why? see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

How do I help my wife's store succeed?


Hi. My wife makes awesome stuff and sells it on Etsy. She specializing in making custom drink tumblers, purses, jewelry, hats, shirts, all that sort of thing. She's serious about it, we've invested in the serious equipment to do it, and she's very good at what she does.Sales are slow and sporadic. Customers seem to love her stuff, and stuff is selling organically, but slowly. The one obvious hole is we have no marketing plan other than basic word of mouth.How do we take her store from 150 happy customers to 1500 happy customers? What should we read, what videos should we watch, etc etc.Cheers see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

I aggregated the best stuff I read on entrepreneurship this week - Week 1


Here's a list of topics so that you can skip to anything you find interesting :)​Chris Bakke’s interview on why you should hire a fax machine salesman from Baltimore than someone from Google, pivoting from an agency business to SaaS like Workday, why most startups pivot like Shopify and Slack, looking for middle-market opportunities in startup investing, and VC firms hacking their way into early-stage startupsHow a tiny peanut butter company grew to $500k per month in salesHow Jeff Goins hacked guest posting for popular bloggersNow that I've made sure you don't waste your time if none of this relates to you, let's move on with those who're still here :D​My takes from Chris Bakke's interview on the Acquirer's podcastChris finds lucrative deals in companies that lie between bootstrapped small businesses and Unicorns, ideally the ones that raise a few million and sell for 10-20X in 3-4 years. Most investors are looking for either unicorns or undervalued public companies. Chris finds middle-market opportunities.Another interesting trend is VCs writing $10-50k checks to multiple startups as an engine for gathering information. It helps build relationships with founders early on in their career and VCs get regular updates on growth and can decide which startups to double down on. $50k is pennies to write off for VCs and can give them a glimpse into the next unicorn.Investment philosophy - who's the founder I know will kick ass? There are only a few companies that never pivot. It's almost always better to bet on the founder than the idea. Slack was a videogame startup, Twitter was a podcasting startup.Hiring - It's better to hire a fax machine salesperson from Baltimore than someone in charge of YouTube ads growth. You're not great just because you inherited a great process. He shared the story of Lambda school founder, Austen Allred on his mission in Ukraine. He went door-knocking every day from 11 am until 9 pm. “Nine hours of a 19-year-old American boy mustering all the courage he could to knock on the door of an old Ukrainian Communist and strike up a conversation about God”. The story reminds me of this story of Mitt Romney over the course of his 30-month mission abroad, Romney’s duties consisted mainly of going from door to door in Paris. He watched many of those doors close in his face. “Most of what I was trying to do was rejected” There's something about door to door sales I guess.Agency to SaaS - Workday is a prime example of a company pivoting from services to SaaS company. Even at the time of their IPO, almost 50% of their revenues came from services. Chris is building his startup Laskie to understand sales and marketing in large companies from the agency side and then productize his services into a SaaS.Play Long term games - Shopify was a snowboard shop for 2 years. Palantir had 1 customer for 6 years​How a tiny peanut butter company grew to $500k per month in salesNerdy Nuts leveraged TikTok, Supreme-style drops, and scarcity to scale their tiny operation into a peanut butter powerhouse. They borrowed Airbnb’s playbook and leveraged the US elections to drop 4 flavors based on the food preferences of Donald Trump, Joe Biden, Elizabeth Warren, and Bernie Sanders. Zachary Crockett has done an excellent job, sharing the startup cost, profits, and growth numbers in detail.​How Jeff Goins hacked guest posting for popular bloggersJeff Goins grew his blog Goin Writer to 10k subscribers in 2 years and made $150k. It was his 10th attempt at blogging. He'd failed in all previous 9."All my failed blogs had 1 thing in common. I had quit them." So with Goins Writer, he made 1 decision. He'd write every single day for 2 years. And if he failed to get 250 subscribers at the end of 2 years, he'd quit. He also decided that for every 1 thing he'd sell, he'd give away 3 things for free.And here's how he hacked guest posting - Become someone's case studyAn example of this is Jeff Goins becoming Michael Hyatt's case study. Michael, in those days, was teaching his readers about implementing lead magnets. Jeff did exactly what Michael had asked and reached out to him with his results."I did this enough times with enough people that some of them started talking about me"Michael asked Jeff to write a chapter in his book "Platform".An important insight that Jeff had in the process was, everyone is looking for testimonials. If you implement someone's strategies and ask them to share your story, there's a chance you get to tap into their audience. You're helping them for sure, but every relationship starts with a favor.---------------------------Thanks for reading. My Twitter if you like to say Hi! :) see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

How can I calculate the carbon footprint for the products that I sell? I want my company to become carbon neutral!


Does anyone know how I can go about estimating the carbon impact of a product's development through the supply chain?In case anyone wanted to know, my company makes pencil cases. see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

Cant seem to connect Instagram account to a Facebook page?


Hi everyone,So I have a business Facebook page (of which my personal account is an admin), a business Instagram and a personal Instagram account. I am trying to link my business accounts so that when I post on Instagram it also posts to my business Facebook page.The issue I could really use some help with though is when I get to the option to connect my Business Instagram account to my business Facebook page only my personal admin Facebook profile appears as an option and when I try to select this I get met with an error that reads:"**Personal Instagram profile name** will be removed from you accounts center. Your Facebook account was already used to set up your accounts center with another Instagram account. There can only be one of each."I thought this would be a simple process of my personal FB account being admin of a Facebook page that is linked to a related business Instagram account but this looks like I cant have a personal and business account associated with the same profile?I would consider myself pretty social media capable but this has me stumped!Any help/advice anyone could offer would be very much appreciated! see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

29-years old making $5k/month building SaaS products without investments, without a team, without a CS degree, all the way from Italy! 🇮🇹


I run multiple profitable software products with no investments, no team, and even no computer science degree. These software products do not make millions - but make me enough to earn a living.I think there are some mantras everybody says that could be true. Most people buy into these mantras without thinking that the opposite could also be true. I try to question everything.Everybody says "focus on one thing". Well, it turns out you can absolutely focus on multiple things at a time. In fact, I think it's best for many reasons: you can share resources between businesses, you can try your luck many more times, you can learn faster and apply what you learned to all of your businesses. There are more.Everybody says "build a team". Well, it turns out it's entirely possible to build a business as a solopreneur. In fact, I think it's better. One of the invisible cost of having a team is communication: you spend hours communicating what you want to other people. One of the cons of having a team is also that people are strong inputs whereas what you need most of the time is isolation. You need to think strategically and to do that, you need to be alone. I try to live like a monk to reduce my inputs and focusing on my outputs.If anybody is on the fence about starting a business or building a career in tech: you should do it.I learned to code when I was younger, the first programming language I used was PERL. But, I'm not a programmer. I'm actually a jazz musician, I studied music pretty much all of my life. If I can do it, you can.Here's my personal website for reference: https://ift.tt/3qdK52j, I also believe in transparency and fact-checking, so I share publicly all of my revenue and app stats, and even what I'm working on at any time: https://ift.tt/2KHhu5c see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

How to make time for your own professional development and prioritize this over the every-day-business?


I want to spend more time learning things that help me and my company. I’ve got a lot of books that I want to read and learn from. But I struggle prioritizing this over the usual busy work that exist every day. It’s just the feeling that “I can’t spent 30 min reading a book if there are so many things to work on”.I’m curious if I’m the only one here. I’m interested how you make time for your own professional development while running your business. see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

Big 5 and Entrepreneurs?


I was wondering if anyone has done the Big 5 and found a link between personality scores and entrepreneurship. I read openness to experience correlates with entrepreneurial success. Thoughts?Here's what I got (final-year student and working on my own business):Openness to Experience: 94th (Intellect: 97th, Openness: 75th)Conscientiousness: 13th (Industriousness: 62nd, Orderliness: 0th)Extraversion: 99th (Enthusiasm: 96th, Assertiveness: 99th)Agreeableness: 0th ( Compassion: 7th, Politeness: 0th)Neuroticism: 16th (Withdrawal: 8th, Volatility: 34th) see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

Currently in the fitness niche (apparel) and we’re absolutely smashing sales, consistently, any ideas on what to branch out in?


Long story short: we are absolutely killing consistent sales through fb ads/Instagram organically for our clothing, we’re at a point that over the next year if things continue the way they are, we will be a major player in the fitness apparel space. Our brand is at exploding point.I have a huge customer list of people into the fitness niche, and I’m wondering if people have any input on other products in this niche that could compliment our apparel?We have already thought of certain fitness products (exercise bands etc) and we have these stocked already, and we have an online PT app in development now as an example of products we’ve already branched out into.My idea’s are to either branch into a separate higher end fitness/casual wear brand and use the current customer list to market it to, keeping CPT low and ROAS high.However I’m wondering if anyone else is in the same niche or has any ideas of alternative avenues/products that they could think I could market to in our niche with our current customer list?Any open discussion or ideas would be great! see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

Taught myself to code a year ago. Just released my first product as as solo entrepreneur. Super proud and have got my first 60 paid customers! If you're interested in learning to code, I can highly recommend it


I spent 10yrs in a career of branding/advertising and went from knowing no programming to launching my first product in a year.It won't be for everybody but if you're on the fence about switching careers or learning to code, I'd definitely recommend it. Even if it's just to see if you like it.I learned by doing a short course on Udemy and then just watching a ton of YouTube videos.Here's my website for reference: www.llamalife.co(It's a productivity application which helps provide structure and focus to get work done).Feel free to ask anything about the journey. Not going to lie, it was a hard slog, but extremely happy I did it.Edit: for typos see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

Non technical founder woes


So I have an idea for an app but I’m not technical enough to develop it myself. Has anyone here had any experience drafting up an app idea and contracting it our to someone on Fiverr to build? I’m looking to do it as it is very cost effect (at least for an mvp) and also time conscious too. Thanks! see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

What will be the better platform for publishing my course Udemy or YouTube ?


Hello, I am creating a course [programming language] tutorial. I just started it as a side hustle. I am developer, and looking for making some extra cash, if possible. But I am in dilemma where to put my course, Udemy or Youtube ? see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

Looking for advice on a potential partnership situation


I'll try to make this as short as possible without leaving out anything important.-Started a rage room (destruction room, break room) a little over 2 years ago in upstate NY-Has been successful and profitable (aside from COVID)-Been looking to open up a 2nd location in Syracuse, NY this year. Waiting for COVID to clear up a bit more.-Started an online course 6 months on how others can start a rage room-Course has a non-competition agreement in the terms and conditions for anyone within 100 miles of me. Someone bought the course in Syracuse, NY without reading that.-Refunded him for the course. Got to talking about working together.He is coming from Syracuse to visit my location tomorrow. And I'm a bit unsure about this potential partnership. I really don't need anything from this individual. Except for him to run the business in my absence. (Which I know is a lot.) I have the capital, expertise, and other various things in place ready to open this 2nd location.I feel that a 50/50 partnership is not the way to go here. Because I think I'd be doing almost all of the heavy lifting. Especially in the beginning due to my expertise. Plus, I don't really want someone clashing heads with me regarding the choices needed to make the business succeed.Already have some experience being in a partnership at my first location before opening that was an absolute nightmare. Someone that didn't pull his weight and that I didn't need anything from.But, he may not be interested in anything less than 50%. I want someone running the business to have some skin in the game. Just, not 50%. Having someone set to run this 2nd location would allow me to get out to open a 3rd location much quicker.Hoping to learn more about him tomorrow when he comes to visit.Should I even be considering this partnership? If so, what are some partnership suggestions that would work for both of us? How can I use my leverage that I don't exactly need him to my advantage? And how do I communicate this without sounding like a jerk?I know I've left out a lot of details. Feel free to ask in the comments. see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

I made an animated summary of "Delivering Happiness" by Tony Hsieh. I hope this is useful to you.


Link to video: https://youtu.be/GiUWCZkHbA8I release new videos often, if you’re interested in subscribing here’s a link: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCfbLDMh6uGOZePAfqqjVZ-g?sub_confirmation=1If you'd prefer to read the script instead of watching the video, here it is:Delivering Happiness By Tony HsiehTony Hsieh, Zappos founder, shares powerful insights on how to deliver happiness to customers in order to make a business venture successful. The book is more of a biography that shares Hsieh’s stories and viewpoints on creating the path to success and building a happy workplace.Here is a summary of the different things covered in the book.Chapter 1 & 2: The ups and downsIn the first chapter, Hsieh takes the reader down the memory lane of his childhood wherein he tells the readers about how his parents had mapped out his life. From wanting him to learn to play piano to doing every little to big thing in life, Hsieh’s parents had decided everything for him when he had plans of his own and wanted to study computers, technology and build his own business.He also discusses how he began thinking outside the box at a young age when he was in school and eventually made his way to Harvard. While he never took too many classes in college or school, he learnt a lot, did well in the exams and also kept running his business. It was creative thinking that helped him achieve that.The second chapter talks about the different struggles people experience in life and how people emerge victorious, but sometimes things do not work out in their favor. The chapter also discusses how Hsieh experimented with different career options such as working for a reputable company, running his own business, declining offers to sell it and eventually selling it at a whopping price of $265 million to Microsoft.Chapter 3 & 4: DiversifyIn chapter 3, Hsieh shares his story about how he invested in and diversified Zappos by looking for different companies that required seed money to start off their business ventures. He then met Nick and Fred who had worked on creating a website that sold shoes. While Hsieh wasn’t sure of the idea, he still invested in it and soon, the business started doing well. It was then that Hsieh invested more money in the company and changed its name to Zappos.Following that success story, Hsieh invested in around 27 other business in need of seed money and diversified his investments. However, he was soon bored with not being directly involved in the routine activities of all the businesses and then experimented with poker. He talks about how a company’s CEO must study the business in depth before investing in it to make an informed decision.Then in the next chapter, Hsieh talks about how Zappos was doing good business, but its sales became adversely affected after the 9/11 episode. The sales dropped low and to save his company, Hsieh changed Zappos’ business model and turned into a dropshipping. He also liquidated his assets to get enough money to buy inventory and was able to turn the idea into a huge success. However, Zappos experienced problems with a company that it had outsourced to ship their orders, which affected their sales to which Hsieh argues that while outsourcing can be great, it is not always the best option especially when you don’t have any control over what the other service provider is doing.Chapter 5 & 6: Platform for GrowthChapter 5 centers on the importance of building a company culture and focusing more on creating loyal customers instead of advertising. When a company has scores of happy customers, they will publicize it themselves and the company won’t really need the support of any other advertisement. Hsieh emphasizes on the importance of establishing core values and principles in a business to make it a huge success.Then in chapter 6, the focus is on the need to build and maintain great, profitable relationships with influential and reputable people across the globe to take your business to the next level. Building strong networks is what helps a business grow and that’s how Hsieh drew the attention of other successful businesses towards Zappos.Chapter 7: End GameIn the last chapter of the book, Hsieh encourages the readers to ponder on their goals and aspirations in life because it is only when you are clear on what you wish to achieve that you can become successful in life. He also talks about how one’s mission should be to deliver happiness to the entire world, including your customers when running a business because that’s how you can influence people. This can be achieved by pursuing an idea you are truly invested in.Delivering Happiness is a warm, inspirational read that holds readers by the hand on how to run a successful business.I hope that was useful, have a great day!I release new videos often, if you’re interested in subscribing here’s a link: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCfbLDMh6uGOZePAfqqjVZ-g?sub_confirmation=1I've made over 60 summaries of the best self improvement books, the links are below.Full playlist of them all here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dOImyOGN9UE&list=PLaNTB6oQAa0AYuul0tqUscg1ZLj_arZgaHere are the links:Make Your Bed: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z7mBNcI2H1c The power of the subconscious mind: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UNi9zDGaZtw Getting things done: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oCNN2pyO5Yc The power of intention: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ezM3fIKHTY Deep work: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2SOQpjHKESA The magic of thinking big: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wdQRQ82AED8 The alchemist: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NcQjBghtxMU Blink: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rie9Pkp4Ktk Atomic Habits: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B6u0X0CDEqU The E-Myth Revisited: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ctHTVZRnE7g Mindset: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0QU5Q3lyTqo The art of war: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8_5qhA2y-E4 Rework: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zsaZU-HW18k The lean startup: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j6QPZp--lJE The hard thing about hard things: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yl_Q3E5d33U Crush it!: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=onbmkc-29KI Delivering Happiness: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GiUWCZkHbA8 The personal MBA: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eFpXccN3YEU The $100 startup: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cqa1LqahOLE Zero to One: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RGtQjkSUahc Grit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=doUSy1Eo76s Start with why: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LgMnlf4jcYY The compound: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0nSIiAMnDY0 The Prince: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lzVmhWFdwBQ The willpower instinct: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jz5EXLYxWDQ The slight edge: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sItMk2xS_ZU Meditations: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ul2nuHOnCPI Who moved my cheese?: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PQhJkIPHiyw The One Thing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cS5lgHhbUoM The richest man in babylon: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xbnHlWFnWLs The power of habit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d366w-o8nhA Secrets of the millionaire mind: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R1WjeoCw30g The 6 pillars of self esteem: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y5NRiB_-w10 The 7 Habits of Highly Effective people: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_nGzZ9m_Xsg Thinking Fast and Slow: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fqw9dwxiKSw The 4 hour work week: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tCWzSlAqO0g The power of positive thinking: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IAdxM_19KBc The power of now: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wa7mAlLhD3w Think and grow rich: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=btQNKjSy8Ww 12 rules of life: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9InBOOy1eTU The 5 love languages: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nPq4Vxh74jY Rich Dad Poor Dad: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GV31Wpr2Fl8 How to win friends and influence people: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s61o8y22BpM The inside out revolution: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=68OwvuqZEGo Models: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hs0d7Da8ufo Man’s search for meaning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eyXFQ5W0bMk The subtle art of not giving a fuck: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dOImyOGN9UE How to stop worrying and start living: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qUQXrEk52Ug The millionaire fastlane: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vrtjXONWVfA 5 extremely powerful techniques to master motivation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vmRzDIisUeM Quiet by Susan Cain: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SzRcYLq63dU Extreme Ownership: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eMWeEyqWHe0 see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

The Right Pricing Model for Your Micro-SaaS Product


I've been writing chapters in my micro-SaaS guide and up till now, we have covered finding and validating a business idea, and building a minimum loveable product to launch into the market.But, your product can't go live without pricing plans. So let's get that sorted right away!A look at common SaaS pricing modelsIt is only prudent that we explore the most common SaaS pricing models before deciding our own.The best pricing strategy for your SaaS depend on several factors, but most notably they depend onthe type of product you're building,the segment of customers you are targeting, andthe way your customers derive value.Per User PricingPerhaps the most common way to price a SaaS product is to have a per user pricing model. Your customers pay per user, and with each additional user, they pay more.Example of per user pricing: Front's pricing model (screenshot).Pros - It's common and easily understood by users, and revenue scales with higher adoption or growth of an organization.Cons - Might limit adoption as users might share accounts or be apprehensive of adding new members of their team to your product, due to the per user cost.Tiered PricingAlso very common is slab or tiered pricing. It's when a SaaS company gates certain usage limits, or features, or both. The best companies typically have 3-4 pricing tiers.Example of tiered pricing: Buffer's pricing model (screenshot).Pros - Appeals to distinct customer bases, if done right. A small customer will pick the lower pricing tier, large customer higher tier. The cognitive load of selecting a pricing plan goes down. You or your inside sales team will also have a clear path to upselling existing customers when they outgrow their pricing tier.Cons - If you have too many tiers, or if you split features without being thoughtful, you might create confusion in your customer's mind. They would be overwhelmed in trying to decide which pricing tier is right for them.Usage Based PricingA pay as you go model works perfectly for certain products where the value derived increases almost linearly with increasing usage. This could be an API company where you can charge per API call. Or your product might aid customers in increasing sales and revenue, in which case you could collect a % of the revenue.Example of usage based pricing: Twilio's pricing model for SMS (screenshot).Pros - Pricing scales with usage, which is great for you in terms of revenue. It's also easy for a new customer to get started, they only need to pay for what they use and they can quickly gauge how much their usage might be, provided the value metric you use to scale pricing makes sense.Cons - Hard to predict revenue for you as a business, and hard to predict costs a customer.Flat PricingA flat pricing model is like a buffet, pay a fixed sum for an all-you-can-eat experience. I personally think it's a good pricing strategy to adopt for the early days, given its simplicity and low cognitive load to arriving at a decision.Example of flat pricing: Basecamp's pricing model (screenshot).Pros - Easy to communicate, and hence easy to sell.Cons - Someone whose usage is lower might want to pay less. Someone whose usage is super high might end up costing you too much.SaaS pricing strategies that can help increase adoptionOther than picking the right pricing model for your micro-SaaS, there's also additional strategies that lower the barrier for new users to start using your product.Should you offer a Free plan?Free plans work great if they attract and keep users who are likely to either:use your product and by virtue of usage spread the word about itincrease their usage of your product with time, hence creating a path to upgrade to a paid planyou are launching in a marketplace and need to gain early traction to gather reviews and gain rankingsIf neither of these conditions apply to your micro-SaaS, including a free plan might not really benefit you in any way.Should you provide a Free trial?A free trial is perfect for your would-be customers to try out your product and its advertised features, especially if you are unproven and they aren't sure whether your product will deliver on its promise.In today's time, free trial is considered a standard for almost every kind of product. And so users have a built-in expectation that you might need to satisfy.The only thing to think deeply about is the free trial length. I've covered this in a later part of this post.Should you only have paid plans?You can completely make your business work by being paid-only, and the benefits of it are manifold.fewer customers sign up, so fewer people to supportmore serious customers who are ready to pay for the problem they face sign upthe costs of running your business are lowerA post on Indiehackers surveying what pricing model IH prefers (screenshot).However, as a new micro-SaaS business I urge you to consider the free trial and free plan routes.The primary reason? You are trying to do everything you can to lower the barrier for new people to sign up and use your service and give you feedback on whether you are solving a real problem, solving it well, and generally headed in the right direction.Have the mindset that your first 100 users won't be the reason your SaaS makes it big and grows to a high MRR.The first 100 users are validation that there exist 1000 (or more) others facing the same problem and needing your solution. Those 1000 is where you need to focus on earning from.The right pricing strategy for your Micro-SaaSThe literature on pricing models and strategies does not end here, but as you delve deeper, you enter the land of optimizations and smaller improvements.I keep repeating this because it's important - in the early days, you want to keep things clean and simple, for you and for your customers. Not only that, you want to do everything you can to get users through the door and signed up.Your objective should not be revenue optimization. It should be to cast a wide net before you have enough data and gut-driven insights to start narrowing down. And all the concepts discussed in this post so far are sufficient for you to achieve that simple pricing.So how should you price your Micro-SaaS? Here's what I recommend:1. Have as few pricing tiers or options as possibleFewer options means lesser cognitive load. Customers only have to decide whether they want to sign up or not. And in case you have a free plan, the choice to be made is between two, hopefully clear, options.A simpler pricing model with fewer tiers will enable potential customers of your product to get signed up quickly. And that's your primary objective during the early days.Example: Lunch Money's pricing (screenshot).2. Use the right value metric to scale your pricingIf your product delivers increasing value to users the more they use it, then there's likely an axis on which you can build a scalable pricing model.Zenmaid has nailed it here - they understood that the size of business run by maid service owners is determined by how many cleaners they manage. And so instead of having pricing tiers, gated features, or anything else for that matter, they simply included a slider that scales with the number of cleaners in their team.The mental model for Zenmaid's customer to understand the scalable pricing is also very obvious - "I pay according to how big a team I manage? Makes sense!"Example: Zenmaid's scalable pricing model (screenshot).However, scalable pricing is not as simple as the above example illustrates. If you pick the wrong scalable axis, you might end up charging too little. Or worse, you might incentivize bad behaviour for your users.Let me illustrate with an example (remember, this is a hypothetical) - in a parallel universe, Zenmaid's pricing could have scaled with the number of houses or clients served by the maid service. Seems straightforward right? You pay more if your business is bigger.Well, here's how it might go down. Maid service owners would onboard all their cleaners to the software, as there's no additional charge for doing so. And then they would simply NOT log all the clients or houses they serve in the software.This is because they are disincentivized from logging all their clients - after all, not logging means they pay less. And unless Zenmaid's product has a clear value proposition that increases with the number as a maid service owner logs more clients into the software (eg. accounting, invoices, etc.), their users are now incentivized towards bad behaviour.3. Price it low, but not too low$5/mo is usually too low, and it attracts people who aren't really serious about using the software. Worse, you might attract users who say "this should be free." These are not the users with whom you can build a business. In the early days, you don't want to attract non-users who waste your time and resources.Jon of Bannerbear learnt early that a very low starting price attracted the wrong type of users, and has since adopted a clean and simple tiered pricing structure with a good starting price of $29/mo.Example: Bannerbear's pricing (screenshot).However, if you think your SaaS should be priced at a $100/mo, try to start at 1/4th of that. Start at $25/mo, which is a sufficiently high price point to attract serious users, but also low enough not to deter someone from trying your product in the early days.4. Have a free planThe purpose of the free plan is to attract users who are likely candidates to eventually upgrade to your paid plans. If that's not the case for your SaaS, then you can skip having a free plan altogether.If there is a viable way for you to cut down on features for a subset of users, or set usage limits that don't cannibalize the paid plans, then a free plan be right for you.An advice that I often give - if you're launching your app in a competitive marketplace, you might benefit from offering your app for free for the first few weeks, only because it provides strategic value to you in terms of users for quick iterations, and reviews & ratings to help you climb the ranking ladders.You'll have to decide for yourself if going free for the first few weeks can provide you that boost, and if yes, go for it.5. Have a free trialIn the early days, following the principle of keeping friction low, you might let users start a trial without entering their credit card details.Again, this doesn't mean you never add that friction later. All these tiny decisions to keep friction low in the early days adds up.Set the right trial lengthWhen offering a free trial, bear in mind what is the right length of trial to offer. If you offer too long a trial, people might sign up but not end up using your product immediately, leaving it for later. If the trial period is too short, it might deter people from signing up at all.The right trial length is one that gives your customers sufficient time to use your tool and experience its value proposition.For the example we have followed so far - SaaS product to collect user feedback - an appropriate trial period might be 30 days. That's because it might take that long for your new users to setup your product in theirs, start receiving feedback from their users, and experience the full value of your product.A simple and scalable SaaS pricing exampleThe pricing model in the screenshot below has nailed everything in terms of simplicity, and having a scalable axis to the pricing model. It's the best example that I could find which captures most of the points talked about in this post.Example: Simple and scalable, EmailOctopus nailed it! (screenshot)Let's unpack everything happening in EmailOctopus' pricing page:A free plan for small users to get started, and upgrade once their usage crosses a threshold.A paid plan which unlocks all features like email design, which a power user would definitely want to use. It also starts at $20/mo which is low enough to not be a barrier, but high enough to attract serious users.A scalable pricing that grows with the number of email subscribers. It's perfect because a user with a 50,000 subscriber list intuitively understands that they have to pay more than a user with a 5,000 subscriber list.If your SaaS product has similar characteristics as EmailOctopus, then I urge you to copy and adopt their pricing model for your own.Not sure how your SaaS pricing could scale? Use Flat pricingIn case your SaaS does not have a scalable usage component, or you're not clear about which component scales with user value, then the easiest solution for you is to start with a a flat price.Remember, this pricing is only to attract your first 100 users. You can always modify your pricing model later once you understand your users better and how they derive value from using your product. and modify it later.Keeping that in mind, a flat price is simpler than a scalable pricing that scales on the wrong axis, as that would confuse and alienate your potential customers.--Hope you've got pricing for your SaaS sorted now? If not, DM me and share your questions. I'll try my best to help.Originally posted here see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

thinking about starting a travel agency


Hiim reaching out to the entrepreneurs who owns a travel agency. I want to know what is your experience, is there decent margins in this business or you find it difficult to compete with websites such as hotwire, expedia etc.We're thinking about starting a travel agency catering to a specific market who require a full guided tours and accomodations.thanks see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

Sales tax for beauty products in CA


Hello people that are much smarter than me!I am currently located in Los Angeles, CA, and I am about to sell a bulk of beauty products to a retailer. I just wanted to confirm if I am suppose to input 7.25% as sales tax in the invoice or more.Looking forward to hearing from you guys.Thanks see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

How do I start as an entrepreneur when I am strong in Tech, but looking for ideas?


I am a computer science grad and consider myself strong with Microsoft technologies (C#, .Net, SQL). I have been freelancing for the past ~6 years and make decent income.(btw, English is not my first language, so please pardon any errors)I am bitten by the entrepreneur bug for the past few months and want to start building and selling software products specifically for businesses. But, I do not have depth in one specific industry (like insurance, SaaS etc like my friends who build software for that domain). This is mainly because I was freelancing and worked on many areas (as per clients need) instead of going deep into one industry. Because of this lack of depth/exposure, I am not able to come up with meaningful product ideas for any domain. I see many simple but financially successful software products built for industries/B2B and they make 1 or 2 million dollars a year. When I see them, I automatically think "I could have built it only if I had know about that need". The implementation is within my technical capacity but the product idea seems to be eluding me.So my questions are:How to get to see what different industries need? how to judge what problems can be solved for them by new software?How to get mentors who can guide someone who is technically strong in the entrepreneur journey?How can I be a successful entrepreneur when I am strong in Tech, but looking for good ideas?what are good online resources to start?(I am not looking for billions of dollars or world wide scope. I want to start at self-sustainable levels of revenue. )Any guidance is strongly appreciated, thanks in advance. see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

How to open a small coffee shop?


Hi, just thinking about opening up a coffee shop here near our place, but I have no idea how to do it or where to start, I've never done this before. I have no experience being a cook or a barista, should I hire a chef for the menu and a good barista to brew coffee? What are the costs of maintaining a small space (air-conditioning?). How do I calculate the prices for my menu items? Anything I should know more? Any experienced coffee shop owners out there? Thanks. see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

Profit margins


We are currently shopping for a product to launch on Amazon. Besides, we will create a Shopify store and begin branding it on Social Media.The formula for a product I’ve created seems to be a bit more expensive than planned. It’s a supplement.Our profit margins are 30-40% depending on the order quantity. I’ve included all Amazon fees into the calculation.What are your thoughts? Is it enough for the initial product?Curious.Matt see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

I got an offer to become business partner but have no idea how to start discussions about the offer


I (38m) had a chat with my employer (58m) about the restart after covid. I have been the manager of this profitable business for the last 7 years.My employer helped me with the bigger issues and has spend the rest of his time travelling and relaxing at the pool while i worked in the stressful and demanding business (60fte).We both know its very hard or nearly impossible to replace me with someone else and have always been financially compensated in that way.My employer proposed to become business partners when we restart after covid and to discuss details when a real restart is on the table.How do i discuss becoming a business partner? How do i know what a fair deal is? Are there do's and dont's? Can i negotiate and till what extend? Any other advice? see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

Starting my first business as 19 Year Old


Hello, I've been an undergraduate student since last 1 year studying Computer Science. For last almost 4 months me and 2 of mine friends have been working for developing a product, it's a Digital Product specifically for those Interested in learning Data Science.Can you help/advice us, how we could gain first 100 customers? What our marketing strategy should be? see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

Entrepreneurs, what is the most "sound good doesn't work" stuff you know in Entrepreneurship ? Some strategies/methodologies/mindset it told to be working in Books/Website about Entrepreneurship but you know its impraticable or fake.


I've read a lot about Entrepreneurship, but I never really tried it myself (I tried a little, but lack of competences and good partners quickly put an end on it).So I am bit worried about create a fake knowledge about entrepreneurship because of all the things I read but I never applied yet.Thats why I ask Entrepreneurs if they know some fake stuffs about entrepreneurship (how building your business, how finding your partner, how selling, etc...) told to be working in books/internet, but its completely false or impracticable on the field. see hubwealthy.com/wealthy

How to start a side hustle for less that $300 - Feedback pls


Hello for the 4th time. Once again I've taken on board all of your non abusive feedback into a new video. Way less sound effects and comedy, way more meat and sensible tips.How to Start a Side Hustle for less than $300​I'd love more feedback, possibly less of the "you're talentless and you suck" variety, please. see hubwealthy.com/wealthy