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In this episode:
01:09 – Do this if you want your business to grow
02:03 – Write it down
02:36 – A very common mistake
03:20 – Why aim for recurring income
03:33 – Are you selling to the right crowd?
04:18 – Where is there a demand?
04:38 – How to be financially secure
05:23 – How to make people stay
05:43 – Make this your stable foundation
06:06 – Is more better?
06:39 – Building that bridge
07:10 – Create or consume?
07:50 – Tips to stay on top of the game
08:43 – Bringing your goals closer
09:04 – Doing what’s right vs. doing things right
09:44 – Using mental shortcuts
10:13 – Asking the big questions
For more business building concepts, join JamesSchramko membership
Tweetables:
Be the creator, not the consumer. [Click To Tweet]
Do the right things rather than doing things right. [Click To Tweet]
Become a master of change. [Click To Tweet]
Infographic:
Transcription:
To succeed in the world of business, there are mindsets and principles that are important to adapt and understand. Here are some of the ideas that are working for successful business owners and that will be useful to the aspiring entrepreneur.
You can’t do everything by yourself. You’ll only limit your capacity to deliver. If you expect your business to grow, you’ll inevitably have to build a team and let them do the things you can’t or don’t want to do. Avoid the time traps of doing your own support or the manual tasks of content creation.
List down everything you do. With that list, you’ll be able to identify the things only you can do and that you can impart high value to. It will also be clearer what you can easily delegate to someone else.
Work on your business model. A lot of people are trying to sell things one at a time to the wrong customers and at the wrong price points. Adopt smart strategies like a recurring income model and seek to attract the right market.
Move into a market where there is already a demand. Find out what people are already buying and offer an option that is different, has value and stands out. This is an easier, lower friction way of accessing instant revenue.
Avoid being single point sensitive. You want to be paid by multiple people. This is what makes a business more secure than a job. If you can also access multiple markets in multiple currencies, all the better. Think of the Parthenon, with several pillars holding up the roof.
The recurring subscription model. There’s nothing more secure than having recurring payment coming from a multitude of people each month, and the model can be applied to a wide variety of industries.
Have a great product that gives results. People will stick around for a great product. If someone can get an obvious benefit for investing in themselves, they’re likely to stay subscribed.
More is not necessarily better. Offering a long list of deliverables can overwhelm a prospect, and is not as effective as a single product that works, or in the case of educational products, a simple action plan that gets results.
Think about the result you want. What do you want to achieve with your business? Where are you at? And be brutally honest: what do you need to change to bridge the two?
Create more, consume less. Do you watch 3 hours of TV in the evening, or sleep early and read up on business in the morning? Prune back your inbox and cut back on Facebook. Spend more time on activities that will benefit your business.
Maximize your energy reserves. Do your most powerful, most important tasks when you’re at the peak of your energy and can do quality work. Have a cutoff time for business activities and use tools like RescueTime to track where your hours go.
Have shorter deadlines. Annual goals can seem so far away that they’re hard to take seriously. An evaluation of your business every 12 weeks can yield better results and more progress.
Do the right things rather than doing things right. Focus on the things that really matter, don’t be perfectionistic about everything.
Use frameworks. Frameworks and templates can maximize your success by using a consistent process to deliver desired results.
Question everything. A questioning mind is not static, it can adapt to and even initiate change. And if you can master change, your business is going to make it.
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Liked the episode? Subscribe to the podcast on iTunes
Comment on it: How many of these ideas are currently working in your business?
Resources mentioned in this episode:
Podcast episode:
Why The Recurring Subscription Model Is The Secret To Wealth
Books:
Willpower: Rediscovering Our Greatest Strength by Roy F. Baumeister and John Tierney
The Power Of Full Engagement by Tony Schwartz
The 12 Week Year by Brian P. Moran and Michael Lennington
App:
RescueTime (time management app, tracks how you spend time on your computer)
Greg Murch says
Loved the infographic, makes much more sense seeing it after listening to the podcast.
The information provided from James is brilliant and has really helped.
Greg Murch says
Loved the infographic, makes much more sense seeing it after listening to the podcast.
The information provided from James is brilliant and has really helped.
James Schramko says
Thank you Greg!
Jun Han says
This is a really great post.
I unsubscribed most of podcasts except James’.
I really enjoy your show with no fluff.
Thanks.
Jun from Korea
Jun Han says
This is a really great post.
I unsubscribed most of podcasts except James’.
I really enjoy your show with no fluff.
Thanks.
Jun from Korea
James Schramko says
excellent Jun!
Sean says
One of your best podcasts to date – thanks James – well thought out and incredible value
Sean says
One of your best podcasts to date – thanks James – well thought out and incredible value
James Schramko says
Thank you Sean I appreciate your comment very much
Sean says
You should teach this stuff at schools and break the cycle of “went to school” teachers
James Schramko says
I taught my own kids. I’d like to write a book for kids
Sean says
I will be the first one to
buy your book (seriously) – I also have a website that teaches kids about finance –
so important – too embarrassed to mention it as not at all good re
SEO, appearance and still working on content etc.
James Schramko says
Well it’s a great start Sean! Well done
Nick Morris says
Seconded
Brian Adgey says
Hi James, I’m still in the video stage and not moved into the podcasts yet. With podcasts, is there software where you can see your analytics like you can with video? For sites that are starting and don’t have great analytics yet, can they track the bounce rate on podcasts? Great podcast, thanks!
Brian Adgey says
Hi James, I’m still in the video stage and not moved into the podcasts yet. With podcasts, is there software where you can see your analytics like you can with video? For sites that are starting and don’t have great analytics yet, can they track the bounce rate on podcasts? Great podcast, thanks!
James Schramko says
There are limited stats you can get for podcasts. I use Blubrry stats showing me downloads, players, regions and so forth. It is a simple re-direct you add to the plugin once and it tracks everything. The free version is good enough.
Brian Adgey says
When do you set out time to read, if you have a time slot? For me sometimes in the morning when I wake, gives me time to wake up or evening time.
Brian Adgey says
When do you set out time to read, if you have a time slot? For me sometimes in the morning when I wake, gives me time to wake up or evening time.
James Schramko says
I read something every day – mostly in the middle of the day.
Waddell Fields says
Hi James, Love your podcasts. I never received a true transcript, only notes as shown above. The notes do not enable me to easily get the resources (books, apps and websites) you refer to in you podcast. I have to listen to the podcast again, pause it and jot them down.
I enjoy that you are to the point and provide much needed information.
Thanks to you and your team.
Waddell Fields says
Hi James, Love your podcasts. I never received a true transcript, only notes as shown above. The notes do not enable me to easily get the resources (books, apps and websites) you refer to in you podcast. I have to listen to the podcast again, pause it and jot them down.
I enjoy that you are to the point and provide much needed information.
Thanks to you and your team.
James Schramko says
Hi Waddell, It seems we had just a summary transcript for this episode. I will have the resources mentioned added
James Schramko says
Added
Alexis Gonzalez says
this blog is one of the best on internet marketing, period!
Alexis Gonzalez says
this blog is one of the best on internet marketing, period!
James Schramko says
Thank you Alexis!
customerbloom says
It’s interesting you brought up Tony Schwartz. From my perspective I believe this is the greatest reminder of how important energy levels are to the business. Of all the things you mention, I believe this is the most critical. For example, I recently started running everyday consistently, and I found all of the rest flows much easier when you have the proper reserves to accomplish your day.
Matt Coffy says
It’s interesting you brought up Tony Schwartz. From my perspective I believe this is the greatest reminder of how important energy levels are to the business. Of all the things you mention, I believe this is the most critical. For example, I recently started running everyday consistently, and I found all of the rest flows much easier when you have the proper reserves to accomplish your day.
James Schramko says
Good highlight Matt. I find energy management critical. Increasing focus on that impacts every result. Willpower rediscovering your greatest asset is also worth a read