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
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