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-A fellow Clevelander
in times that are tough you feel beat down and confidence seems like something only other people have. it's important to keep working through it even when you completely doubt yourself.
great post jim.
z
It is way more fun to not give up and people need to remember that. Thanks for your post too!!!!
My excellent husband keeps telling me not to give up, but he doesn't do the family's bookkeeping--I do. It's hard to remain positive when you have to make choices about who gets paid each month. Also, it's hard to know who to trust, there are so many (entrepreneurs) out there who say they have "the answer" to help you make money online for $X.XX. What say you?
Heartburn goes away.
Nice post Jim.
Great points you make here and I would like to throw in a piece of advice...
If you are trying to carve out your piece of the pie online do something noteworthy. Pick a market and a niche that you love and dig into it with both heels and work your A#% off... I mean really work (very, very hard) to provide help and quality to others in your niche. You WILL build a following and that loyal following will support your lifestyle.
Do something real, don't focus on the money, focus on the people that have the money by helping them... I mean really help them and the money will come. If any aspect of your business is not focused on the people that would support it (with money), you are in a short-term business and will have to rebuild, again and again ... Mark these words!
Charles Heflin
Twitter @CharlesHeflin
As you work though a down turn:
-You learn to do more with less, becoming more efficient with all your resources particularly your time and money.
-Your weaker competitors get washed away / give up.
So when you come out the other side of an economic downturn, you are stronger, smarter, have moved down the learning curve and will enjoy a much larger market share!!
As an entrepreneur lifer - I love the challenges and rewards of market downturns!
I'm totally at the financial wall.
We will run out of money in January 2009. The day job, broadcast television systems engineering and design, and senior technical project management roles have disappeared with the halting of capital expenditure-based projects. Even my friends at Google, Sony, and Ascent Media have stopped calling for my able assistance.
I've only been at this blogging / PPC / SEO game sine July 2008, and all around me are examples of people who persevered, like Jonathan Volk at $270,000.00 per month and growing in Affiliate commissions!
Yourself, Shoemoney, John Chow and Darren Rowse and Chris Brogan all experienced shifts in economic success at some time in your careers.
Hewlett Packard, one of the most successful corporations in the USA started in a garage with an idea for an oscillator. The US Government needed an oscillator and they were launched!
Thank you for your encouraging words. I'm attacking the income issue from all sides, by shooting digital video commercials for local businesses, blogging on nine monetized blogs with all kinds of techniques to drive traffic to them, and I will not quit until I have made it.
Ryan Hupfer at HubPages.com has been helpful in focusing on what to write about, and
I know something will break soon, I do not want to tell my wife that we have to declare bankruptcy, if my father were alive he would slap me and say "we lived through the depression, get over it..."
I respect your professional approach and depth of knowledge expressed in your post. Let's all put away the crying towels and get busy!
Respectfully, Nicholas Chase - 'the video guy' at BlogWorld Expo 2008
Spreading the gospel of gainful unemployment is a mission without end. The doorway to the new economy begins with casting down the shackles in a leap of faith. That faith, and plenty of good old fashioned hard work, paves the metaphor twisting road to success.
Failure is a state of Mind.
as is Being Poor.
I have enjoyed many reversals, but they have
always propeled me Forward at more rapid rate.
I think the Entrprenuerial Spirit and Mindset is Critical
Here is an uplifitng Audio for your
readers
6 Steps from T&GR
This is very much in line with what you are saying!
It is really tough when the economy gets bad, and your family demands change and your role in your in these change becomes more challenging. Such as a family illness, children in college and rising cost of tuition. It becomes really hard to even want to get out of bed in the mornings.
All the encouragement we give each other helps each and every one of us.
Thanks so much for the comment, as I haven't been able to make a post on my site for a couple of weeks because at the moment I am at my kids home at college, my daughter got sick and I came to help her catch up on things around here. My Mom is sick and she is aging and I feel like every moment with her is precious. I don't want to give up in these hard times, but I feel more challenged today than I have in a very, very, long time.
I absolutely loved this post. Thank you so much
It is right on. I know "that look." I get it a lot from my wife, who is not as much of a risk taker as me. And like yours, my small business is struggling, and has been since April. Some days are easier to deal with than others.
By meeting and corresponding with positive folks like you, really helps me through the down days. I NEVER want to work for anyone besides me. Ever Again.
Joel Libava
Franchise Selection Specialists Inc.
Cleveland.
This is exactly how I feel, an awesome perspective that really puts the optimism back in entrepreneurial. Tough times filter the good business people from the marginal business people, let the hunt begin!
Thanks Jim,
JR
Some people struggle as entrepreneurs simply because they don't have what it takes to do it--either they lack the temperment, sales ability or the discipline to do the hard things or take the long view. Often they don't have the people skills to really build enough of the solid kinds of relationships that it takes to prosper in business on one's own, but are transactional with too many people--which I liken to providing a quick sugar rush rather than lasting nourishment. And to encourage these folks is, I'm afraid, not merely counterproductive, but sometimes doing them a terrible disservice. Through long experience I've come to believe that an awful lot of people really should be working for others. Each of us has to look deep within and be honest about whether they're such a person.
I am from Malaysia and just started to find way to improve my traffic, however first thing first in my mind now is to write more good articles and enjoy blogging. :)
http://www.spreadingyourcashflow.com
...and it brought me to tears. I have to also admit that I haven't been coming by every day like I used to, and now I wish I was still visiting regularly - instead of in this hit or miss fashion. But you know, perhaps I was really ready to read it TODAY. You know?
Anyway - thank you - thank you so much for writing this encouraging post. I'm gonna tweet it and your new biz and then get back to the stuff I'm supposed to be doing! And I promise to come back and read the whole article!!
Seeing people like you who have accomplished so much, but can still relate to the uphill journey a blooming entrepreneur faces is very inspiring.
Good post!