1. Pick your passion
2. Build a simple website on any builder
3. Learn SEO & start writing blogs
4. Share insights on relevant social networks
5. Package your content in a newsletter
6. Find a way to make money
Stop just reading.
Start DOING!
@fares_aktouf seo courses, there are many different, you can start by watching YouTube, to learn the basics: about the structure, to understand what kind of site you need, try to do a trial on Wordpress
@qudsia_ali i could never agree more. Even when I was in a 'corporate' startup (Workday), and college, I never learned more than when I was in a startup. Let's you become an extremely well managed, and well rounded person. Being an entrepreneur really helps you in all areas of life!
I actually think that this road is too slow π€
As I see it, there are two ways startup can start:
β Bring value (Vitamins)
β Solve a problem (Painkillers)
Community driven startups as you mentioned are mostly value driven. But I think this is too slow.
I would rather suggest to find a problem, figure out a solution, no-code something and start talking to users π
There are a lot of Notion Templates for example on PH and I believe that everyone could build an MVP now and get something going.
This is definitely faster and can iterate infinite numbers of times to the product-market-fit π
@shivi_jalota actually not, I strongly believe that you should go as soon as possible out of your confront zone straight to the market π
I do that all the time. For example when I wanted to understand how the Appsumo works instead of binging all the videos and searching the web, I've built a simple icon set in a few hours and launched it there. It failed miserably but the point was for me to learn not earn π
@qudsia_ali has a good point as well joining a startup is also a great alternative. Quite a few of my previous team members now have a startup of their own π
The only difference between learning in an MNC and startup is - startups teach you a lot of things. You are involved in almost every department. You get opportunity to work on different projects. The prospective of learning increases. This is quite insightful.
yea, after a while, reading doesn't help. Even though you have a degree in something or read about it, it's a whole different ball game when it comes to putting theory into practice. If anyone needs help with this, I would suggest a book that helps you puts things into practice, and it all has to do with MINDSET.
The book is mindset, by Carol Dweck