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MustImprove

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Dear newly minted Fastlane member,


Good News!


With “just“ a focused attitude, relatively minor action (in terms of your life), little money, and without any formal qualifications whatsoever….

…(it’s true)….

…. you can set yourself on a verified road to financial freedom that will astound your friends, confound your enemies, and give you a grin to make Will Smith’s pearly white smile look British.

Well hot dang! Ain’t that terrific?

Sure is MustImprove, sure is! That’s why I’m here man! What next?!!

Well, I'll explain more below, but first.......


Bad News!

90% of people reading this won’t be bothered to make even the relatively minor effort required.

Threads here have shown time and time again that people can’t resist looking for the lazy-boy way to a mil, even though nearly every real millionaire says it doesn’t work like that.


…but wait, hold on, what’s that you say? All of you are part of the 10%?

Oh well, OK, then great! …and in that case I’ll continue. It’s my turn to put something in the pot.

This thread might get a few reads after all!


The Call We All Want…

A few days ago I received a most marvellous phone call. The type of call that makes you sing to your dog.


Oh, and for @Vigilante ----this is the start of the “next time”. Thanks. :)


It was a customer who I have done business with before, and he’s a good one.

This chap plays the yes/no game with millions of dollars. Are you a “yes” or are you a “no”?…for the money I mean. Well, he decides.

Anyway, I’ll paraphrase, but this is roughly how the conversation went”


Mr Millions – “Hey, MustImprove, how are you? Family doing OK?”

MustImprove – “All great thanks, hopefully you too. I’ve been hanging about with the cool kids over at The Fastlane Forum, discussing how wonderful entrepreneurial life can be. Boy oh boy, I sure feel dandy when I’ve added so much value for my customers that they just LOVE to do business with me, and that when they have a problem that smarts like a 5 year old jabbing your iris, I’m number 1 on their speed dial.”

Mr Millions – “Wowsers, I bet that’s a rockin good joint, but listen……..I have a problem that smarts like a 5 year old jabbing your iris, and you’re number 1 on my speed dial!”


OK, ya got me. That bit was HEAVILY paraphrased, but you get the gist.


So let’s split up and look for clues.

Those who still think the shiny silver bullet to drill the werewolf of mediocrity between the eyes is just around the corner on the internet, you go that way.

Those who are interested in learning something of the real world that can make every day like a Superbowl half-time show, come with me.


The Clues

Some of you still with me? Top work team! On we go!

Look, I’ve found some clues!

Besides, the luminous footprints, and a fake beard, please note the following:


Clue Number 1

Mr Millions didn’t talk about price. He knows my company will be one of the most expensive solutions, and this will be a 200k deal roughly (yeh yeh yeh fellow travellers, I know I need to expand my own mind-set too J). A solution is a higher priority.​


Clue Number 2

Mr Millions didn’t dictate terms, such as being here or there at certain times, or how I solve the problem. A solution is what matters.​


Clue Number 3

No clue, but just to drive it home like a prefect’s wedgie….. A. Solution. Mattered. More. Than. Anything.​


Now pay attention you potential power value generators, a key question is coming up!


A Key Question

How much incremental effort did it take me to secure a solution focused deal worth more than 7 times the average annual USA salary from just 1 customer?


I’ll have to hurry you…….​


You sir, with the stylish Hawaiian shirt at the back (not you Vigilante)….. Correct! – almost no effort at all!


Wow, imagine that. Almost zero effort!


No copywriting challenges and split-testing for months.

No 10k seminars with a guru.

No reading books for years.

No setting up a website, logos, and agonising over a brand.

No Google.

No research.

No digging in forums (again for years!) for the magic “buy now” link that will mean I can print money with no effort forever.

No No No No No No No….


”All” I did to win another great deal was solve the right problem at the right time for the right person ONCE BEFORE.


I want you to think about that.


<contemplation time for you and for me>


‘…and I wuda gotten away with it if it wasn’t for you darned kids!”


Enough reminiscing. What’s the lesson here, and what specifically should you do?


The Lesson Here

At the start, your most important piece of self-development (in my humble opinion), is to become a black belted, top-of-the-class, 1st round draft, Cyberdyne Systems Model 101, whoop-a$$ problem solver!

An ability (and reputation) for solving problems can open doors for you in any industry you choose, and for the rest of your life.

Think about that too!.....the rest of your life. Right now that probably feels like a long time. Well, that feeling won’t last as long as you expect, so enjoy it now!


…and by the way, some of those things I just told you “NO”/ not to do ARE actually important, just at a different time in your development. You need to use them selectively, but you don’t need them to start solving problems now.


So I say “become a problem solver”, and you (might) say. “Good for you MustImprove, but……..”:


“How do I become a problem solver?”


“Every problem is different!”


“How do I win the deal to solve the first problem?”


All valid questions. You are just starting out. You want/need more detail…I gets ya.


What Should You Do? – Two Steps

The first step is easy. It’s not easy to maintain, but that’s for later.


Step1….you find a girl to lov…..oops, sorry.

<reset>

Step 1 - Make a personal decision that from now on you will be steely determined


This means that you commit yourself to repeated and continuous effort, focused on a problem at hand, until you deliver a satisfactory solution (and ideally a delightful solution) for the person with the problem


Decided already?


Nah. Not right.


It doesn’t need to take a week, but you should consciously embrace this decision. It took me a few attempts, but one day, I really decided, and I’ve not looked back since.​



Step 2 - Develop your problem solving “muscle”

…and now we get to the piece that most of you will ignore, or promise to get back to later, and go for some action faking that will get you in trouble with @theag . If that’s you, you are probably one of the 90%.


By the way, @theag is a valuable member here. He’s a tough love “back-hander” kind of chap, and he smells action faking across continents. He knows the score. Good luck in the ring with him if you are a 90%er!​


For the remaining 10% of the 10% who stayed and haven’t got fed up with me yet, and by my reckoning that’s about 1% of those who read my opening lines, this is my Step 2 challenge to you.


I want you to get into the habit of solving problems for people.


That’s “all”.

It doesn’t need to take too much of your time.

It doesn’t need to cost you a lot of money.

It just takes a conscious decision and some effort.​


Just start, and start simply.


Your first goal is to find someone that has a problem…almost anyone with almost any problem, and smash that problem to smithereens…..out of the park son!

However small it seems, just make that person’s life better…..for free, and without obligation of any kind. Pheww…heavy I know!


….and then, when you have done that and they say thank you (probably), make some time for yourself, pause for more contemplation, and reflect that you got your “starter for 10” (first question) correct, and that you’re now “in the game” properly.

You will have solved a real problem for a real person.

That’s worth a whole week of browsing without real action.


So, then you are a hero to someone. Birds are flyin high, and you’re feelin……good.

….then go be a hero again!.....and again, and again, and again, and again, and again, and….well you know how this works.


You Will Become More Effective With Every Solution

As you solve each new problem you will get better and better at solving.

At first, your creative synapses will barely sputter a spark. You will find solutions hard to come by.

However with each solution sprint, and with your different: approaches, angles, and possibilities, you pour creative go-go juice onto your nascent twinkles of brilliance.

You get better. You get faster. You get stronger and more effective.

More importantly, your personal reputation will grow, as will your self-belief and personal confidence.

People will start to call you when they need a solution.

You will be number 1 on more speed-dials, and that’s a powerful position.


Start To Focus Your Energy

…and then, as you keep reading this forum and TMF (for young Jedi, I know you will still read a lot whatever I/we say), you will become more aware of the value that each of your solutions generate.

…and then, as you become more aware of the value that each solution generates, you will become more aware of the potential for money to flow to you as a result of your problem solving.


…and then you will be able to focus on the solutions that will make you a fully paid-up rubber stamped fastlaner.


….and Then Comes Copywriting and Marketing

@MJ DeMarco and others will tell you that selling, copywriting, and marketing are absolutely vital for fastlaning.

….and they’re spot on, absolutely right. Well, who knew eh?

My only nuance is that you get yourself on the road and rolling first, and in my (extremely) humble opinion you do that best by solving the problems you see first. As you roll on, you focus…..and then you scale with the skills!


Still Doubting?

Well, OK. I can’t force it, but do remember I am telling you this from a very personal perspective.

This is what has worked for me, and nearly every successful person I have known/read about operates (more or less) in this way.

By some standards I am reasonably successful (top 3% financially according to the stats), and I wake up thankful and happy every single day. Life is wonderful.

However I know that I am far from a finished article. I have a lot of work to do to improve. I must! ….but still I hope I can pass on a gift to you so that you can fulfil your potential in your own way.

I don’t need to write this up. I have nothing to gain, apart from the pure satisfaction of passing on some knowledge to others, and giving back to this most special community.

Make of it what you will.


Summary

Problem solving works.

It works for customers and it can give you everything you want too.

It’s not easy, but it is doable. You can do it. You just need to start doing it.

I have personally witnessed millions of dollars being given to people who solve problems. You can be one of those people.

You can choose to be a sheep in the utterly fruitless mass flock search for an easy mil, or you can choose to be a problem solver that the mil will find. It really is your choice.


Now, I’m off to sing to my dog. Success and good luck to you all!




P.S. Respect to MJ and all the other authors and posters who have shared “execution” stories and advice to help new fastlaners before me. I salute you. This is merely my take and real world experience around execution and solutions, and it’s just my small contribution to the shared pool of knowledge. Best wishes!
 
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MustImprove

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19 posts. Damn that was good!
Now you have to top that with #20.
Hey Jon,

I know you've seen a few threads and given much to this forum, so that's extra special. Thanks. :)
 
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jon.a

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Hey Jon,

I know you've seen a few threads and given much to this forum, so that's extra special. Thanks. :)
I haven't given nearly as much as you just did. Well done.
 

Andy Black

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Great post on so many levels.

Just go help someone, this week.

Seriously, thank you for taking the time to write that up.

Personally, my takeaway is to keep on helping people, even if it's just to exercise my problem solving muscle.
 
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MustImprove

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Great post on so many levels.

Just go help someone, this week.

Seriously, thank you for taking the time to write that up.

Personally, my takeaway is to keep on helping people, even if it's just to exercise my problem solving muscle.
Thanks Andy,

Yes indeed, keeping on helping people is a truly smart attitude to take.

You never know when or how it can benefit you and others. I'm tossing around an idea of a thread around that concept. It is truly inspiring and surprising what you receive when you give.

I'm glad I could give something back to you. Cheers.:)
 

Andy Black

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It is truly inspiring and surprising what you receive when you give.

I had a coaching call earlier this year. I paid for 30 minutes at a special-offer rate, but we over-ran so I took up 2 hours of his time. I thanked him for over-delivering. His reply stuck with me...

He said if I paid for the full 2 hours then the "transaction" would be complete. He wouldn't have created an imbalance in the world, and there would be nothing to come back to him.

It's an interesting way of looking at it. Some might think it a bit foo-foo, but it makes sense even viewed with the cold lense of ROI. I feel I owe him. I am more likely to do repeat business with him again, and be happy to pay more next time. I am more likely to recommend him to others. With that extra 90 minutes of coaching, I am more likely to succeed and earn more money, and therefore more likely to be able to afford him at a higher rate.

Just that one way of looking at things was worth that call for me. And it's stuck with me ever since.

It's odd, but until recently I've almost felt the need to apologise or justify to people why I would help them without asking for anything in return. Your post helped by almost giving me permission to keep doing what I believe is the right thing.

Thanks again.


(This has just reminded me... as soon as I've posted this I'm going to mail him straight away and ask if I can get on his normal coaching program, and at full price.)
 

Nicko

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Great thread and hugely entertaining :)

I can attest to the absolute value of problem solving. In a previous incarnation as an SAP consultant I worked in Germany (the home of SAP) and was surrounded by people who were much more technically proficient than I was. I mean I really felt stupid in comparison to some of these guys.

But I managed to turn a 3 month contract into more than a 4 year contract despite my lesser technical skills. Because I was the guy that was always willing to have a go at solving problems. Didn't matter if it was not 'technically' my area or department. I was always happy to help someone find a solution to their problem.

In the end, I was one of the last contractors to leave (and on my own terms) - not because I was a wiz at coding, or had the most extensive knowledge of my module, but because I was always willing to help other people solve their problems.

It never fails.
 
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Imgal

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@MustImprove = totally and utterly knocked it out of the park. I struggled, really struggled breaking out on my own when I was chasing after work... when I felt I had something to offer and I wanted to find people who wanted that exact thing and would pay the exact price I wanted for it. Now don't get me wrong it didn't not work, but it felt like climbing a hill made of quicksand. I felt like I was putting everything into getting the work so by the time I got any I was effectively exhausted and not working at anywhere near my best.

And it just got worse. Every time a job ended and I had to go out again I was starting from a point of already been exhausted and the whole process just made me more tired and disillusioned and no-where near the bouncy, energetic person a client wants to be dealing with. I was burnt out doing such work. About the same time I was playing about with the affiliate world and started doing really well... to the point I didn't need to do the work I'd be hating. A strange thing then started to happen. I didn't need to do the work so I stopped selling. I just became what I've always been. A natural problem solver. Now not tied to needing to do the work it felt awesome to be able to just go out and help people and offer advice on what they need to do with their websites and marketing strategies and not expecting anything back. Basically doing exactly what I had been doing and expecting nothing from it...

... you can guess the rest. No selling got me more requests for work then ever before and at 5 times the price I'd been fighting to get before... and all because I went from chasing the greens to chasing nothing, but serving others.

He said if I paid for the full 2 hours then the "transaction" would be complete. He wouldn't have created an imbalance in the world, and there would be nothing to come back to him.

I'm not the woo woo type, but I can totally connect with this. I have to admit if I help someone out I'm really rather annoyed if they do something equal in return. The existence of the imbalance feels like there's real room for growth, maybe for me or maybe for someone else in the world.
 

MustImprove

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Didn't matter if it was not 'technically' my area or department. I was always happy to help someone find a solution to their problem.

In the end, I was one of the last contractors to leave (and on my own terms) - not because I was a wiz at coding, or had the most extensive knowledge of my module, but because I was always willing to help other people solve their problems.
This made me smile.

Who would be your first pick (without knowing which problem you will face next week)?

A technical wizard who can solve a really difficult problem in a narrow silo.....

.... or a reasonably technical type who complements their own knowledge with interpersonal skills, working across multiple silos, and who probably knows many technical wizards capable of solving multiple problems in a wide variety of scenarios?

errrr, I'll take Nicko thanks. :)
 

MustImprove

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No selling got me more requests for work then ever before and at 5 times the price I'd been fighting to get before... and all because I went from chasing the greens to chasing nothing, but serving others.
.....and everyone is a winner! Well deserved I'd say. Another real example for the new folks. :)
 
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Nicko

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This made me smile.

Who would be your first pick (without knowing which problem you will face next week)?

A technical wizard who can solve a really difficult problem in a narrow silo.....

.... or a reasonably technical type who complements their own knowledge with interpersonal skills, working across multiple silos, and who probably knows many technical wizards capable of solving multiple problems in a wide variety of scenarios?

errrr, I'll take Nicko thanks. :)

Precisely mate. If I couldn't solve their problem (because it was beyond my technical ability) I'd find someone who could help me help them.

So many end users would bypass the (not so helpful) Helpdesk and come straight to me. So when it came time to cull contractors no one wanted to see me go. And I got paid an absolute sh!tload as well which is always nice :p
 

JaxAttacks

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Fantastic, well-written, entertaining and VALUABLE post. Thank you! Rep+
The challenge is the same one I just started from doing an Eben Pagan course, he says to just find someone with a problem and solve it from them to start learning to create value. You said it in a much more entertaining and memorable way, thanks again.
 

MustImprove

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TomTrepreneur

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This thread is fantastic thanks a lot. I do have a question though. If we do not yet have our own business, and we are also unemployed, in what way do we go looking for problems to solve?

In a nutshell, my life currently comprises of me studying for most of the day, going to the gym in the evening and meeting friends on the weekends for drinks... and yes I know why I'm not rich yet haha :) but since I am not operating in any particular industry and basically still stuck in an opportunity seeker mindset, is it literally as direct as asking random people "do you have any problems you need help with"? And I mean, "ANYTHING"? Like literally helping someone take out the trash? I know that's not much brain work, but is this the kind of attitude you're talking about, just to get into the mode of helping people in at least a small way?

I have fantasized about doing things like this, such as even calling to peoples houses and asking "is there any stuff they would like done but never got round to it", but it just seems like would be way too weird and risky. Another way might even be cold calling business owners and ask what they are having trouble with. What's your opinion on that?

But really, is it a case of asking loads of people what they are trying to achieve, and then doing anything, even giving my opinion on what they could or should do, giving encouragement (for example someone looking for a job, being too lazy to work out at the gym, on and on... I mean, does it need to be a focused skillset, focused industry etc... or can we just start with the plain desire to help people?

I myself have been looking for a way to get started for quite a while, and researching to find a niche on the internet is the thing I've planning on doing to get started, but since you mention no need for research, I'm trying to determine, do you mean completely irregardless of whether we have our niche, product or service or not? Because I do think this would be a great way to find a niche, if only we could connect with enough people who would give us the opportunity to try to solve their problems.
 

MJ DeMarco

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Marked GOLD.

Sad that most would-be entrepreneurs don't know that the synonym for entrepreneur" is problem solver? And those that don't know this, aren't entrepreneurs, or are at least, end up struggling entrepreneurs.
 

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I second the question TomTrepreneur...

I'm in a 9-5. After work I head back home to my wife and kid. In the spare 1-2 hours I've left after our son has gone to bed I'm working on my fastlane, selling an infoproduct. Recently my first sales have come in. Now I'm working on scaling the business.

However, even though I'm solving a problem it's mainly a one-time sale with no direct customer contact. I know I can add some products in the backend. But, I've read some threads lately from the seasoned guys and the common recommendation is recurring revenue through solving huge problems in old industries.

What I can't get my head around... how to find these problems since I don't have that type of network (yet). I'm definitely willing to go out and talk to people. But I'd rather not go back to the idea extraction... spent too many months and cold phone calls on that without any result.

So in short: how do you start to build a network of (succesful) people who have huge problems to solve? So that I can provide TRUE value and build TRUE relationships... Would be interested in your opinion on this.

And thanks for this terrific thread!
 
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TeflonDon

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This thread is fantastic thanks a lot. I do have a question though. If we do not yet have our own business, and we are also unemployed, in what way do we go looking for problems to solve?

Having a go at answering this and the similar posts after it. .

Talking to people is the way to find problems. People at the gym, at work, friends and family, they all have problems. Talk to anybody and everybody you can, ask them how their day is going - don't just ask to be pleasant, show a genuine interest and people seem to open up quite a lot!

If you can start the conversation off and show interest, I'm finding people will open up very easily. Just let them talk, they'll tell you whats going on with their lives/jobs, what's annoying/stressing them, what they need to get done etc. Opportunities for this are everywhere.

I got a new dentist a few weeks ago. After one appointment I know quite a lot about him, including a major annoyance he's having in his personal life. The same works with the local shop attendants, hairdressers, and anybody else.

The other beautiful thing about talking to people and showing a genuine interest is they seem to want to help you in return when they can. Opportunities you didn't even know existed begin to come your way. .

Just keep your eyes open and help when and where you can.

P.S. I don't think you need huge problems, or successful people with problems. Maybe others will disagree with me, but to me helping is helping. If you can help somebody with their business, do it. If you can teach somebody something that helps them, do it. But for me, helping an elderly neighbour with their bins, helping somebody who's depressed to feel better, even helping somebody at the gym with tips on how to achieve their goals - it's all helping!
 

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Having a go at answering this and the similar posts after it. .

Talking to people is the way to find problems. People at the gym, at work, friends and family, they all have problems. Talk to anybody and everybody you can, ask them how their day is going - don't just ask to be pleasant, show a genuine interest and people seem to open up quite a lot!

If you can start the conversation off and show interest, I'm finding people will open up very easily. Just let them talk, they'll tell you whats going on with their lives/jobs, what's annoying/stressing them, what they need to get done etc. Opportunities for this are everywhere.

I got a new dentist a few weeks ago. After one appointment I know quite a lot about him, including a major annoyance he's having in his personal life. The same works with the local shop attendants, hairdressers, and anybody else.

The other beautiful thing about talking to people and showing a genuine interest is they seem to want to help you in return when they can. Opportunities you didn't even know existed begin to come your way. .

Just keep your eyes open and help when and where you can.

P.S. I don't think you need huge problems, or successful people with problems. Maybe others will disagree with me, but to me helping is helping. If you can help somebody with their business, do it. If you can teach somebody something that helps them, do it. But for me, helping an elderly neighbour with their bins, helping somebody who's depressed to feel better, even helping somebody at the gym with tips on how to achieve their goals - it's all helping!

Thanks Don, that is brilliant. I'll definitely open my ears a bit more, and yes helping is helping. That is one way that I view entrepreneurship, kind of like, help people as often as I can, and eventually if I find a thing that I can do for other people and get paid to do it, then that can be my entry (rather than forcing entrepreneurship (so we deserve it a little bit more because of it being more natural). Of course I will keep trying to force it too though :D But yeah I guess we always hear people talk about problems, things that they don't have the time to do, they don't have time to research, don't have time to go some place etc... and imagine how many times we've had opportunities to help people, but didn't??? Like in my case thinking I don't have time to help them because I'm trying to learn how to find problems :p
 
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MustImprove

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Hey MJ, and thanks for the GOLD!. It's an honour (and even a pleasure!) to give some value back to this place.

...and I'll try to add some more by answering today's extra questions.:)
 

MustImprove

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Hey @TomTrepreneur !

You were first to bat in today’s Fastlane innings of life, so I’m going to dig in to your questions first.

I want to give you a personalised and thought-out answer, and so (if you will excuse me) I took a look through some of your old posts.

You come across as a decent and enthusiastic type. A good foundation! I’m not looking to beat you up or anything, and stalking isn’t my bag, so just take what I say as well intentioned. I want you to get “it”…….and all the joy that goes with “it”.


About 20 months ago in another thread, amongst other stuff TomTrepreneur said:

How would you go about finding out the information you would need in order to provide value in an area where it is lacking….”


MustImprove Translation Services Ltd reckons that might mean:

“……in what way do we go looking for problems to solve?”​


About 20 hours ago in this thread, TomTrepreneur said:

“…..in what way do we go looking for problems to solve?”


About 20 months ago in the other thread, a real smart person with more that 10k in his RepBank called @Get Right said to TomTrepreneur:


“Analysis paralysis.

Get in the game bro.

Love to see action in your next post! Go get it!”


….and, about 20 months ago in the other thread, some new guy called @MJ DeMarco with oh, I dunno, about 120k in his RepBank said:


“Engage in life. Engage an industry.”



…and yet….

About 20 hours ago in this thread, TomTrepreneur said:

“In a nutshell, my life currently comprises of me studying for most of the day, going to the gym in the evening and meeting friends on the weekends for drinks... “


Now that indicates to me that you haven’t really decided to be an entrepreneur yet, but you have decided that you like the potential payoff. Hmmmmm…….


….and that’s like trying to hit the winning home run, clinch the title, swig the champers, do the interviews, jump in the Lambo, raz back to your swanky mansion, and slap your supermodel wife on her tush as she pours the Margaux and flips your Wagyu steak……


……whilst you are on the back row of the stands with your soggy popcorn.


So yeh, like I said, first you got to decide man!

That’s step 1.


The key thing about this entrepreneurship lark is that you need to build a small snowball and start it rolling. In fact, scratch that, you probably need to build hundreds.

The point is that not all snowballs will hold together and gather momentum, but eventually you get better at building the core of the snowball, and better at rolling them. Then you have a chance of building one that starts to roll on its own, adding to its own layers as it trundles.


So, let’s assume that this time you REALLY decide to be an entrepreneur. Then what?


Let me address your questions directly:


“….is it literally as direct as asking random people "do you have any problems you need help with"?


No, if you do that, folks will think you’re a scout with a hormone issue. Best not.


“Like literally helping someone take out the trash? I know that's not much brain work, but is this the kind of attitude you're talking about, just to get into the mode of helping people in at least a small way?”

Now you are getting warmer, and since you mention the trash, let’s get all hypothetical.

Imagine, go on play along…..

…….You are on your way to work, and you see a previously un-noticed elderly neighbour struggling to lift their rubbish bag. Do you……


A) Trot on. “Hey, life’s tough for everyone dude, en I got ma mojo on to pay 6 dollars for a Starbucks pumpkin special!”


B) Stop and help.​


Turns out Mrs Jones wants to give you two dollars. Obviously you politely refuse (now ain’t that the perfect word!).


Turns out Mrs Jones has several elderly neighbours, and you know that old Jack has a bad back, and Mrs Jones used to help him, but now Mrs Jones can’t even do her own really.


Turns out your town has an aging population problem.


Turns out the official regulations forbid your official city refuse disposal experts from officially setting foot on private property.


Turns out that Mrs Jones is willing to introduce the pleasant and kind young man to her old dear’s tea party group so you can ask all the questions you want over a nice Earl Grey.


Turns out 10 of the 20 think 40 dollars a month to have an emptied, cleaned and washed bin at a time of their choosing, is a fair deal.


Well done! That’s a 400 dollar monthly recurring revenue from one street.


Hey, setting foot on the field of play wasn’t so bad was it?


Turns out that’s a snowball.​


As MJ and Jean-Luc say…..”Engage”!

Look you just must get out there and interact with people….naturally.

That can be in a slowlane job….there must a problem to solve there, otherwise the job wouldn’t exist.

Can you solve the original problem better?

Can you help the business owner save money?​


It can be at the gym (good for you)….what could be improved for the members?

Just casually chat to the manager

After small talk, say that you are passionate about improving businesses, especially good ones like his

Offer to do a member survey for the manager (for free)

Find the biggest problem

Find a viable solution.

Deliver a prototype (for free)

Ask him if he wants you to increase his member’s satisfaction significantly​


These are just examples based only on what you said, but those “off the cuff” examples can lead to serious Fastlane results.


“ I myself have been looking for a way to get started for quite a while, and researching to find a niche on the internet is the thing I've planning on doing to get started, but since you mention no need for research, I'm trying to determine, do you mean completely irregardless of whether we have our niche, product or service or not?”


When I said “no research” I was illustrating the point that once you have solved a problem for a person, they tend to trust you to solve their next problem. So I didn’t need to research to win this particular business. My previous action negated the need for research in this case.


Research can be important. When you have a snowball rolling, do research to make the snowball roll faster or better….but you don’t necessarily need it to get started.


My advice

You strike me as a good chap who has spent a long time procrastinating, looking/researching all over trying to find the perfect place to focus your effort. Stop. The perfect place does not exist.

Your previous 2 years of super-duper in-depth but ultimately fruitless research should tell you that.


Start building some small snowballs by having natural conversations with people about their lives in whichever organisation/location you have in your daily life.

Observe, ask questions, and listen.

Ponder.

Think how you can improve their life.

Make a gentle suggestion to them as to how you can help them make the improvement.

Listen again.

Do a quick/small proof of concept for free.

Worst case scenario: one person with one problem (now hopefully solved) thinks you’re a decent and spiffing fellow. Your reputation grows.

Best case scenario, you discover a scalable business opportunity​


I advise to start solving problems that are all around you, whatever your current industry, status, or hobbies. These are your potentially big snowballs.

Don’t look for massively scalable problems at first. Just start creating value in the world for someone.

As you do more, you will get better, and you will start to see which snowballs are rolling better than others. Then you can focus on those.


You have spent 2 years researching. Imagine that instead of researching you solved just one small problem a week for someone….taking trash out, gym surveys, or whatever.


By now you would have rolled 100+ snowballs, thereby massively increasing your chance of finding a real problem in the real world that you can solve and scale.

I think you are probably a pretty smart guy. Honestly, which use of your time makes more sense to you if you look at it objectively?...assuming you want to be a fastlaner!

Research doesn’t smash the ball out of the stadium. Focused energy with the right solution just might.

You can be a player, but you must decide to be player.

You might need to start on a little league field being watched by the community litter pickers, but that little league field is the first step to the majors.


You need to believe that the apparently small/hidden problems can lead to something much much bigger.

They can.

Ditch the soggy popcorn, pull on your problem solving plimsolls, “get in the game bro”, and start rolling some snow….then you have a massively greater chance of getting that Wagyu.

I truly wish you the best of success!
 

Dami-B

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In fact, scratch that, you probably need to build hundreds.
Lovely post @MustImprove to many people stop after the first snowball. What if you helped out 60 people from now till december. One person for each day, a mindset like that will help you notice the problems around you.

My mum has a ministry she founded, but she didn't have a website and for over 8 years now, she's been begging my elder bro (who is a web-developer) to help her design anything, but he has never had the time cause of his job. Last week i saw a video posted by @Silverhawk851 about wordpress sites and decided to build one for her. I didn't know how to code (i still don't know how to code) but i built her something really incredible. I just called her and was like mum i'm going to build you a website, my God, she was overjoyed, i'd never seen her so happy.
If you had told me 2 days prior I would be building a wordpress site, I would have laughed so hard in your face but within two days I was done and its like the best present anyone has ever given her. She didn't pay me a cent, cause things are really tight for her right now, but I like the idea of the imbalance in the world I just created and I know what this means for her and that makes me so happy. That's why I want to be an entrepreneur, to create this kind of experiences in the lives of others.

Reading your post has made it so much clearer, and I know i'm on the right path..I mean just think of all the architects, managers, tailors, barbers, etc. think of all the problems they all individually could have in their businesses and personal lives, and the possibility of solving these problems. We all are sitting on Gold mines, if only we could help each other more, create valuable solutions, solve problems.
 

TomTrepreneur

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Hey @TomTrepreneur !

You were first to bat in today’s Fastlane innings of life, so I’m going to dig in to your questions first.

I want to give you a personalised and thought-out answer, and so (if you will excuse me) I took a look through some of your old posts.

You come across as a decent and enthusiastic type. A good foundation! I’m not looking to beat you up or anything, and stalking isn’t my bag, so just take what I say as well intentioned. I want you to get “it”…….and all the joy that goes with “it”.


About 20 months ago in another thread, amongst other stuff TomTrepreneur said:

How would you go about finding out the information you would need in order to provide value in an area where it is lacking….”


MustImprove Translation Services Ltd reckons that might mean:

“……in what way do we go looking for problems to solve?”​


About 20 hours ago in this thread, TomTrepreneur said:

“…..in what way do we go looking for problems to solve?”


About 20 months ago in the other thread, a real smart person with more that 10k in his RepBank called @Get Right said to TomTrepreneur:


“Analysis paralysis.

Get in the game bro.

Love to see action in your next post! Go get it!”


….and, about 20 months ago in the other thread, some new guy called @MJ DeMarco with oh, I dunno, about 120k in his RepBank said:


“Engage in life. Engage an industry.”



…and yet….

About 20 hours ago in this thread, TomTrepreneur said:

“In a nutshell, my life currently comprises of me studying for most of the day, going to the gym in the evening and meeting friends on the weekends for drinks... “


Now that indicates to me that you haven’t really decided to be an entrepreneur yet, but you have decided that you like the potential payoff. Hmmmmm…….


….and that’s like trying to hit the winning home run, clinch the title, swig the champers, do the interviews, jump in the Lambo, raz back to your swanky mansion, and slap your supermodel wife on her tush as she pours the Margaux and flips your Wagyu steak……


……whilst you are on the back row of the stands with your soggy popcorn.


So yeh, like I said, first you got to decide man!

That’s step 1.


The key thing about this entrepreneurship lark is that you need to build a small snowball and start it rolling. In fact, scratch that, you probably need to build hundreds.

The point is that not all snowballs will hold together and gather momentum, but eventually you get better at building the core of the snowball, and better at rolling them. Then you have a chance of building one that starts to roll on its own, adding to its own layers as it trundles.


So, let’s assume that this time you REALLY decide to be an entrepreneur. Then what?


Let me address your questions directly:


“….is it literally as direct as asking random people "do you have any problems you need help with"?


No, if you do that, folks will think you’re a scout with a hormone issue. Best not.


“Like literally helping someone take out the trash? I know that's not much brain work, but is this the kind of attitude you're talking about, just to get into the mode of helping people in at least a small way?”

Now you are getting warmer, and since you mention the trash, let’s get all hypothetical.

Imagine, go on play along…..

…….You are on your way to work, and you see a previously un-noticed elderly neighbour struggling to lift their rubbish bag. Do you……


A) Trot on. “Hey, life’s tough for everyone dude, en I got ma mojo on to pay 6 dollars for a Starbucks pumpkin special!”


B) Stop and help.​


Turns out Mrs Jones wants to give you two dollars. Obviously you politely refuse (now ain’t that the perfect word!).


Turns out Mrs Jones has several elderly neighbours, and you know that old Jack has a bad back, and Mrs Jones used to help him, but now Mrs Jones can’t even do her own really.


Turns out your town has an aging population problem.


Turns out the official regulations forbid your official city refuse disposal experts from officially setting foot on private property.


Turns out that Mrs Jones is willing to introduce the pleasant and kind young man to her old dear’s tea party group so you can ask all the questions you want over a nice Earl Grey.


Turns out 10 of the 20 think 40 dollars a month to have an emptied, cleaned and washed bin at a time of their choosing, is a fair deal.


Well done! That’s a 400 dollar monthly recurring revenue from one street.


Hey, setting foot on the field of play wasn’t so bad was it?


Turns out that’s a snowball.​


As MJ and Jean-Luc say…..”Engage”!

Look you just must get out there and interact with people….naturally.

That can be in a slowlane job….there must a problem to solve there, otherwise the job wouldn’t exist.

Can you solve the original problem better?

Can you help the business owner save money?​


It can be at the gym (good for you)….what could be improved for the members?

Just casually chat to the manager

After small talk, say that you are passionate about improving businesses, especially good ones like his

Offer to do a member survey for the manager (for free)

Find the biggest problem

Find a viable solution.

Deliver a prototype (for free)

Ask him if he wants you to increase his member’s satisfaction significantly​


These are just examples based only on what you said, but those “off the cuff” examples can lead to serious Fastlane results.


“ I myself have been looking for a way to get started for quite a while, and researching to find a niche on the internet is the thing I've planning on doing to get started, but since you mention no need for research, I'm trying to determine, do you mean completely irregardless of whether we have our niche, product or service or not?”


When I said “no research” I was illustrating the point that once you have solved a problem for a person, they tend to trust you to solve their next problem. So I didn’t need to research to win this particular business. My previous action negated the need for research in this case.


Research can be important. When you have a snowball rolling, do research to make the snowball roll faster or better….but you don’t necessarily need it to get started.


My advice

You strike me as a good chap who has spent a long time procrastinating, looking/researching all over trying to find the perfect place to focus your effort. Stop. The perfect place does not exist.

Your previous 2 years of super-duper in-depth but ultimately fruitless research should tell you that.


Start building some small snowballs by having natural conversations with people about their lives in whichever organisation/location you have in your daily life.

Observe, ask questions, and listen.

Ponder.

Think how you can improve their life.

Make a gentle suggestion to them as to how you can help them make the improvement.

Listen again.

Do a quick/small proof of concept for free.

Worst case scenario: one person with one problem (now hopefully solved) thinks you’re a decent and spiffing fellow. Your reputation grows.

Best case scenario, you discover a scalable business opportunity​


I advise to start solving problems that are all around you, whatever your current industry, status, or hobbies. These are your potentially big snowballs.

Don’t look for massively scalable problems at first. Just start creating value in the world for someone.

As you do more, you will get better, and you will start to see which snowballs are rolling better than others. Then you can focus on those.


You have spent 2 years researching. Imagine that instead of researching you solved just one small problem a week for someone….taking trash out, gym surveys, or whatever.


By now you would have rolled 100+ snowballs, thereby massively increasing your chance of finding a real problem in the real world that you can solve and scale.

I think you are probably a pretty smart guy. Honestly, which use of your time makes more sense to you if you look at it objectively?...assuming you want to be a fastlaner!

Research doesn’t smash the ball out of the stadium. Focused energy with the right solution just might.

You can be a player, but you must decide to be player.

You might need to start on a little league field being watched by the community litter pickers, but that little league field is the first step to the majors.


You need to believe that the apparently small/hidden problems can lead to something much much bigger.

They can.

Ditch the soggy popcorn, pull on your problem solving plimsolls, “get in the game bro”, and start rolling some snow….then you have a massively greater chance of getting that Wagyu.

I truly wish you the best of success!

Thanks Mustimprove for putting in the time to help and providing such a detailed response.

I certainly have no problem with you looking through my posts, that just shows you love to help.

OK lol I am guilty here now alright, but I have an excuse. I got a bit distracted throughout the last year and a half by an MLM and an internet marketing opportunity, but now I'm back to reality.

Ok yes that elderly neighbour and bins example definitely clears things up. I think the problem I have is that I'm thinking too hard about finding super technical/advanced kinds of soolutions.

Getting a job is also on my to-do list, something I was debating lately (just heard before that would be bad move for an entreprenuer), but I think it would be the best way to push me into a place where I get to excercise my abilities again. I've done almost nothing difficult for anyone in years (other than DJing - but that doesn't require too much).

And yes yes I've been procrastinating a long time, and about the research, the truth is I have not done very much at all, mostly just me studying different books and courses. It's only lately I came back to the research idea.




Thanks again for this great thread and response, I think now anyway, the first thing that I'll focus on is getting myself a job, and of course I'll have my problem solving hat on all the time regardless of where I am. I think if I can go out and reduce the amount of questions I have for my own benefit, and only think about how I can help other people (trusting that my future will work out) that would be a great start. Because honestly with the way I try to figure so much stuff out before I get started, I could almost call it "strategic analysis paralysis" :D

I'll do the best I can anyway, thanks.
 

ced

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Dear newly minted Fastlane member,


Good News!


With “just“ a focused attitude, relatively minor action (in terms of your life), little money, and without any formal qualifications whatsoever….

…(it’s true)….

…. you can set yourself on a verified road to financial freedom that will astound your friends, confound your enemies, and give you a grin to make Will Smith’s pearly white smile look British.

Well hot dang! Ain’t that terrific?

Sure is MustImprove, sure is! That’s why I’m here man! What next?!!

Well, I'll explain more below, but first.......


Bad News!

90% of people reading this won’t be bothered to make even the relatively minor effort required.

Threads here have shown time and time again that people can’t resist looking for the lazy-boy way to a mil, even though nearly every real millionaire says it doesn’t work like that.


…but wait, hold on, what’s that you say? All of you are part of the 10%?

Oh well, OK, then great! …and in that case I’ll continue. It’s my turn to put something in the pot.

This thread might get a few reads after all!


The Call We All Want…

A few days ago I received a most marvellous phone call. The type of call that makes you sing to your dog.


Oh, and for @Vigilante ----this is the start of the “next time”. Thanks. :)


It was a customer who I have done business with before, and he’s a good one.

This chap plays the yes/no game with millions of dollars. Are you a “yes” or are you a “no”?…for the money I mean. Well, he decides.

Anyway, I’ll paraphrase, but this is roughly how the conversation went”


Mr Millions – “Hey, MustImprove, how are you? Family doing OK?”

MustImprove – “All great thanks, hopefully you too. I’ve been hanging about with the cool kids over at The Fastlane Forum, discussing how wonderful entrepreneurial life can be. Boy oh boy, I sure feel dandy when I’ve added so much value for my customers that they just LOVE to do business with me, and that when they have a problem that smarts like a 5 year old jabbing your iris, I’m number 1 on their speed dial.”

Mr Millions – “Wowsers, I bet that’s a rockin good joint, but listen……..I have a problem that smarts like a 5 year old jabbing your iris, and you’re number 1 on my speed dial!”


OK, ya got me. That bit was HEAVILY paraphrased, but you get the gist.


So let’s split up and look for clues.

Those who still think the shiny silver bullet to drill the werewolf of mediocrity between the eyes is just around the corner on the internet, you go that way.

Those who are interested in learning something of the real world that can make every day like a Superbowl half-time show, come with me.


The Clues

Some of you still with me? Top work team! On we go!

Look, I’ve found some clues!

Besides, the luminous footprints, and a fake beard, please note the following:


Clue Number 1

Mr Millions didn’t talk about price. He knows my company will be one of the most expensive solutions, and this will be a 200k deal roughly (yeh yeh yeh fellow travellers, I know I need to expand my own mind-set too J). A solution is a higher priority.​


Clue Number 2

Mr Millions didn’t dictate terms, such as being here or there at certain times, or how I solve the problem. A solution is what matters.​


Clue Number 3

No clue, but just to drive it home like a prefect’s wedgie….. A. Solution. Mattered. More. Than. Anything.​


Now pay attention you potential power value generators, a key question is coming up!


A Key Question

How much incremental effort did it take me to secure a solution focused deal worth more than 7 times the average annual USA salary from just 1 customer?


I’ll have to hurry you…….​


You sir, with the stylish Hawaiian shirt at the back (not you Vigilante)….. Correct! – almost no effort at all!


Wow, imagine that. Almost zero effort!


No copywriting challenges and split-testing for months.

No 10k seminars with a guru.

No reading books for years.

No setting up a website, logos, and agonising over a brand.

No Google.

No research.

No digging in forums (again for years!) for the magic “buy now” link that will mean I can print money with no effort forever.

No No No No No No No….


”All” I did to win another great deal was solve the right problem at the right time for the right person ONCE BEFORE.


I want you to think about that.


<contemplation time for you and for me>


‘…and I wuda gotten away with it if it wasn’t for you darned kids!”


Enough reminiscing. What’s the lesson here, and what specifically should you do?


The Lesson Here

At the start, your most important piece of self-development (in my humble opinion), is to become a black belted, top-of-the-class, 1st round draft, Cyberdyne Systems Model 101, whoop-a$$ problem solver!

An ability (and reputation) for solving problems can open doors for you in any industry you choose, and for the rest of your life.

Think about that too!.....the rest of your life. Right now that probably feels like a long time. Well, that feeling won’t last as long as you expect, so enjoy it now!


…and by the way, some of those things I just told you “NO”/ not to do ARE actually important, just at a different time in your development. You need to use them selectively, but you don’t need them to start solving problems now.


So I say “become a problem solver”, and you (might) say. “Good for you MustImprove, but……..”:


“How do I become a problem solver?”


“Every problem is different!”


“How do I win the deal to solve the first problem?”


All valid questions. You are just starting out. You want/need more detail…I gets ya.


What Should You Do? – Two Steps

The first step is easy. It’s not easy to maintain, but that’s for later.


Step1….you find a girl to lov…..oops, sorry.

<reset>

Step 1 - Make a personal decision that from now on you will be steely determined


This means that you commit yourself to repeated and continuous effort, focused on a problem at hand, until you deliver a satisfactory solution (and ideally a delightful solution) for the person with the problem


Decided already?


Nah. Not right.


It doesn’t need to take a week, but you should consciously embrace this decision. It took me a few attempts, but one day, I really decided, and I’ve not looked back since.​



Step 2 - Develop your problem solving “muscle”

…and now we get to the piece that most of you will ignore, or promise to get back to later, and go for some action faking that will get you in trouble with @theag . If that’s you, you are probably one of the 90%.


By the way, @theag is a valuable member here. He’s a tough love “back-hander” kind of chap, and he smells action faking across continents. He knows the score. Good luck in the ring with him if you are a 90%er!​


For the remaining 10% of the 10% who stayed and haven’t got fed up with me yet, and by my reckoning that’s about 1% of those who read my opening lines, this is my Step 2 challenge to you.


I want you to get into the habit of solving problems for people.


That’s “all”.

It doesn’t need to take too much of your time.

It doesn’t need to cost you a lot of money.

It just takes a conscious decision and some effort.​


Just start, and start simply.


Your first goal is to find someone that has a problem…almost anyone with almost any problem, and smash that problem to smithereens…..out of the park son!

However small it seems, just make that person’s life better…..for free, and without obligation of any kind. Pheww…heavy I know!


….and then, when you have done that and they say thank you (probably), make some time for yourself, pause for more contemplation, and reflect that you got your “starter for 10” (first question) correct, and that you’re now “in the game” properly.

You will have solved a real problem for a real person.

That’s worth a whole week of browsing without real action.


So, then you are a hero to someone. Birds are flyin high, and you’re feelin……good.

….then go be a hero again!.....and again, and again, and again, and again, and again, and….well you know how this works.


You Will Become More Effective With Every Solution

As you solve each new problem you will get better and better at solving.

At first, your creative synapses will barely sputter a spark. You will find solutions hard to come by.

However with each solution sprint, and with your different: approaches, angles, and possibilities, you pour creative go-go juice onto your nascent twinkles of brilliance.

You get better. You get faster. You get stronger and more effective.

More importantly, your personal reputation will grow, as will your self-belief and personal confidence.

People will start to call you when they need a solution.

You will be number 1 on more speed-dials, and that’s a powerful position.


Start To Focus Your Energy

…and then, as you keep reading this forum and TMF (for young Jedi, I know you will still read a lot whatever I/we say), you will become more aware of the value that each of your solutions generate.

…and then, as you become more aware of the value that each solution generates, you will become more aware of the potential for money to flow to you as a result of your problem solving.


…and then you will be able to focus on the solutions that will make you a fully paid-up rubber stamped fastlaner.


….and Then Comes Copywriting and Marketing

@MJ DeMarco and others will tell you that selling, copywriting, and marketing are absolutely vital for fastlaning.

….and they’re spot on, absolutely right. Well, who knew eh?

My only nuance is that you get yourself on the road and rolling first, and in my (extremely) humble opinion you do that best by solving the problems you see first. As you roll on, you focus…..and then you scale with the skills!


Still Doubting?

Well, OK. I can’t force it, but do remember I am telling you this from a very personal perspective.

This is what has worked for me, and nearly every successful person I have known/read about operates (more or less) in this way.

By some standards I am reasonably successful (top 3% financially according to the stats), and I wake up thankful and happy every single day. Life is wonderful.

However I know that I am far from a finished article. I have a lot of work to do to improve. I must! ….but still I hope I can pass on a gift to you so that you can fulfil your potential in your own way.

I don’t need to write this up. I have nothing to gain, apart from the pure satisfaction of passing on some knowledge to others, and giving back to this most special community.

Make of it what you will.


Summary

Problem solving works.

It works for customers and it can give you everything you want too.

It’s not easy, but it is doable. You can do it. You just need to start doing it.

I have personally witnessed millions of dollars being given to people who solve problems. You can be one of those people.

You can choose to be a sheep in the utterly fruitless mass flock search for an easy mil, or you can choose to be a problem solver that the mil will find. It really is your choice.


Now, I’m off to sing to my dog. Success and good luck to you all!




P.S. Respect to MJ and all the other authors and posters who have shared “execution” stories and advice to help new fastlaners before me. I salute you. This is merely my take and real world experience around execution and solutions, and it’s just my small contribution to the shared pool of knowledge. Best wishes!

Problem Solving is everything. I think I have a lot of my own problems to solve first like living with my parents, having a dirty kitchen, having a dirty room. Get businesses more clients. Being a better brother. Building other people's reputations.
 
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MustImprove

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Hey @RoadTrip !

Batter up!

I realise that some of my answers for @TomTrepreneur apply to you, and I thought that you might appreciate a little extra personal insight as well…..…. and thanks for the Rep you sent by the way.


Well, I donned my NSA baseball cap, and I looked at your old posts too.


I can see you have come up with some ideas already…..and at least one of the physical products got to the “sample ordered” stage. Good job, you have been taking some action!

…and it gets better for you because……


RoadTrip said:

“……..selling an infoproduct. Recently my first sales have come in. Now I'm working on scaling the business.”


You have solved a problem for some people (as long as they didn’t ask for their money back).

That’s a snowball mate!


Getting a stranger to send you any dough over the net can be more difficult than licking your elbow. So actually I think you have done pretty well there.


Credit to you. I’d say you have potential.


Let’s look at your specific statements/questions….


“….the common recommendation is recurring revenue through solving huge problems in old industries.


I bolded the “huge”, because I think that’s your (in politically correct language) area for substantial improvement.

You don’t need to solve huge problems, you need to solve problems. Ideally you create solutions that can scale.

I mean, you and I are probably best not trying to come up with an MVP for pulling a billion barrels of crude out of the Arctic for example. That’s a huge problem in an old industry.


However, what about painting and paint brushes? Can we find a problem (not a huge one) there?

Sure can brother!


You may or may not know about our very own @Likwid24 who has delivered one of the most fantastic entrepreneurial stories in TMF history. Here is a recent update thread.

https://www.thefastlaneforum.com/co...sh-cover-shark-tank-update-this-friday.58372/


Can’t be bothered to click? …I know, life is short so I’ll give you the headline news for free:

Smart Simple Solution >>>> Successful Shark Tank investment >>>> Serious wedge​

1.5 million dollars within 9 months


The problem wasn’t huge by some measures, but boy is it scalable!


Your next question…..


"What I can't get my head around... how to find these problems since I don't have that type of network (yet).”


Did @Likwid24 need a formal network? Hell no. He just needed to know some painters.


More importantly he needed to observe, ask questions, and listen.


Hands up. Networking can help you in life. Sure it can.


…but networking can just be talking to normal people in your everyday organisation and life.


So you work for a company. The company solves problems for cash and has expenses.

When did you last ask your boss or sales director what his/her biggest pain point was for client acquisition?

When did you last ask the CFO office types where they spend most of the money?​


See?


“TRUE value and build TRUE relationships”


You already have special access to a network of folks with a reasonable level of trust (TRUE relationships) in an established industry that experiences confirmed problems.


….and you are the kind of guy who can execute. I know, because you have done so already.


So start by increasing sales or reducing expenses for your current company. That’s “TRUE value”.

If they won’t listen to you, use your industry knowledge to develop a system that you can apply elsewhere.

If you are increasing revenue or lowering expenses then I bet you’ll be offered tea and biscuits externally before long.


IMPORTANT: In my opinion you already have much of what you think you need to find. You have looked 10,000 miles over the horizon for something that is under your feet.


“... Would be interested in your opinion on this.”


Well looky there….ask and ye shall receive!


@RoadTrip , I think you can make a difference in the world. Success!
 
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RoadTrip

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Thank you so much for your personalized reply! I really appreciate the effort you put into this. And thanks for the motivational boost!
Rep transfered, again

I can see you have come up with some ideas already…..and at least one of the physical products got to the “sample ordered” stage. Good job, you have been taking some action!

Yep, that was a failure. Got some valuable lessons from it though.

Getting a stranger to send you any dough over the net can be more difficult than licking your elbow.

While reading this I tried. Damn, that's extremely difficult indeed.

You have solved a problem for some people (as long as they didn’t ask for their money back).

That’s a snowball mate!

I offer a 60 day money back guarantee and the first of sales was about 30 days ago. But so far no refund requests! Will keep pushing there and increase the amount products too.

So start by increasing sales or reducing expenses for your current company. That’s “TRUE value”.

If they won’t listen to you, use your industry knowledge to develop a system that you can apply elsewhere.

I work for a Fortune 500 company specialized in IT outsourcing. Certainly, there are problems. But because of the size of the company and complexity of IT I feel like the problems are way too complicated and over my head. I'll keep my eyes and ears open though to see if any manageable opportunities pop-up.
 
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