I find I'm spending more time working on myself than on a business.
I'm really trying to build the foundation for which I can focus time, energy, and effort on solving real-world business problems. I understand now that personal training isn't going to be scalable. It may be when I enter the online space, but that's going to be an experiment in of itself in the near future.
It may sound 'slowlane', but in the interim, I'm working my a$$ off for someone else as a highly-paid sales rep at this startup company, and honestly I don't think it's a bad idea. A lot of people on this forum like to write as if they're all CEO and A player #1 guys and discredit the #3, 4 and 5 guy..
I'm confident I'm an A player and will be a great founder in the future, but for now I'm living like I'm that broke start-up guy (bare essentials in a shared small apartment) and I'm learning everything I can while raising my net worth / savings. Before I'm 29, I will have accumulated somewhere in the realm of $300-500K at the rate I'm saving, so once I hit that mark I'm going to get a few other boxes checked and then go all in as an entrepreneur.
I figure if I'm making a 5-7% residual on 300K, I'll make $15K-$21K a year, which is more than enough for me to live off of. At this point, I'm going to get either an apartment or house and mortgage in some other part of the country, and go 100% all in on entrepreneurship. For now I keep learning, saving, and spending the rest of my days building whatever need I can solve - right now personal training is more of a side-hustle and income, and I have a few other things in the works as well. My biggest challenge has been executing too slow, overplanning, and focusing on $ instead of value creation, so I've been making modifications to execute quicker.
So for the time being, I'll collect the paycheck (a large one due to hustling / commission etc) and focus the rest of my time on the offense of business-building. Then when I've got a few things more in place, I'm going all in. I enjoy working for a startup, but I know I can be an A-player.. I just don't agree with the way traditional entrepreneurship is glorified to eat ramen and be dead broke and on the verge of bankruptcy and requiring a level of 'struggle' to the point that you set yourself up to fail.
When I hear those stories, I know there's a large percentage of people who had a similar struggle but did not, and may not ever make it in this world.
So, I'm going to at least set myself up to be able to make it by aggressively saving and preparing for war.
In the meantime, I'm saving tons of $$, I'm scaling my income, I'm focusing all my time on how I can add value to the world (whether it be at this job or on my own projects), I'm living frugal as hell, and I'm preparing for war.