I've been keeping notes from meetings with wealthy friends. Created a short ebook: "Things the rich don't want you to know." noahkagan.com/rich-pdf
1 year ago | 4
Andrew Tate talked about that. Speed is important. The main reason for that is because if you don’t act asap on your business thoughts more and likely they will stay just thoughts and get no where.
1 year ago | 43
My problem is not being able to code and the money/ resources for finding someone that can help me implement my idea fast.
1 year ago | 0
Reading about the King of Dubai he said the same. He was like you not the only with that idea, you better execute fast or be left in the dust.
1 year ago | 6
Money to promote, brains to invent, network to get your first 1000 paying clients.
1 year ago | 2
How do you balance this with setting up a Partnership or LLC, etc?
1 year ago | 2
Act "now not how" is Noah's mantra. Read his book, "Million Dollar Weekend" for more great wisdom and advice. I think successful entrepreneurs don't waste time thinking about the what if's and are doers. I always thought you had to think about an idea and think and think until nothing gets done.
1 year ago | 0
No matter what idea I have or how fast I wanna be, I can’t code. I am actually a tax adviser scouting a coder for a year now. Still scouting.
1 year ago (edited) | 0
If we have money we can just have ideas and hire people to make them reality Then speed works well. If you try to implement yourself everything I am not sure
1 year ago | 4
Noah Kagan
Something I’ve noticed from hanging around many successful entrepreneurs:
Speed.
They go from idea to first sale in the time it takes most to write a business plan.
My buddy Sam Parr is rich af and STILL moves insanely fast.
He launched samslist.co/ in a weekend.
Speed is a superpower.
1 year ago | [YT] | 559