#参与荣誉积分抽奖,赢Macbook、精美周边! One is to make money, one is to earn money, and of course there is another way to be valuable.
Earn money, raise your hand, create wealth with both hands, sell labor, sell time, sell skills for money, including opening stores, running factories, being able to have enough to eat and be modestly prosperous, but its essence is still physical labor, because there is a limit and your energy is limited, this is because the time to do one thing can only earn one income.
Making money, as the name suggests, means using money to make more money. The upper limit is like a business-level pro such as Charlie Munger, Warren Buffett, and Duan Yongping investing. Of course, resource integration is also a way of "making money", that is, one side is a good product and the other side has demand. Money is a medium tool used for communication and promotion. The essence remains the same, helping to connect a group of people to solve their needs. In other words, in ancient times, people who were called "daoye" now become scalpers or streamers who promote products. But the point is still the same: people who make money (note that this is "people who make money") may not have the ability to produce, invent, or create things, but they must have the ability to copy and paste experience (highlighted). This ability is really important.
So why is it that anyone with a little vision, a little brainpower and strong execution skills can eventually make money? It's just a matter of making more or less. For example, some of the people I know in the industry are not really cultured, but why are they like this? Some have gone on to write books, some have gone on to do training, and some have gone on to do courses, because they have figured out a underlying logic, a logic of "earning money" rather than "making money", that is, investing a certain amount of time, energy and money in copying, immersing themselves in it, breaking down what they have copied, and then reorganizing their souls into a good course (this is called innovation), which can then be sold to more people.
The above is what I have seen from them - choice > effort, manifested in them.
Of course, there is a big premise here - that is, you still need to know what kind of life you want and what your talent is. If you are interested, you can take a look at my article 'A Clear Explanation of How to Find Your Own Talent and Avoid Confusion!' Finally, about the [valuable] matter, let me tell you a story: In the book 'Rich Dad Poor Dad', there is a story about a village that doesn't have water. The village chief entrusted two young people to supply water to the village, and the villagers paid them for it. The first young man, Ed, immediately went to buy two large barrels and traveled daily to a lake 10 miles away to fetch water and deliver it to the village - Ed immediately made money.
And another person named Bill, disappeared since the contract was signed. However, half a year later, Bill returned to the village with a construction team and an investment. In the past six months, he made a business plan for himself, found investment, registered a company, hired professionals for project construction management. Not only that, he spent more than a year building an underground water supply pipeline system from the lake to the village.
The moment the clear water gushed out of the Faucet, Ed's business was destroyed, although he did make a year and a half's worth of money, quick money.
So have you understood? What kind of money-making things are you doing, and whether it is suitable for your conditions. You have to think it through yourself!
After all, valuable things, like what Bill faces before the water flows out, are the daily cash consumption and endless doubts from everyone about whether he can complete the connection of water and make money.
In conclusion, are you going to do something "to earn money", or something "to make money", or something "valuable", really nobody can tell anyone, just one point, in line with the general direction of the trend to choose > effort, has never changed.
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#参与荣誉积分抽奖,赢Macbook、精美周边! One is to make money, one is to earn money, and of course there is another way to be valuable.
Earn money, raise your hand, create wealth with both hands, sell labor, sell time, sell skills for money, including opening stores, running factories, being able to have enough to eat and be modestly prosperous, but its essence is still physical labor, because there is a limit and your energy is limited, this is because the time to do one thing can only earn one income.
Making money, as the name suggests, means using money to make more money. The upper limit is like a business-level pro such as Charlie Munger, Warren Buffett, and Duan Yongping investing. Of course, resource integration is also a way of "making money", that is, one side is a good product and the other side has demand. Money is a medium tool used for communication and promotion. The essence remains the same, helping to connect a group of people to solve their needs. In other words, in ancient times, people who were called "daoye" now become scalpers or streamers who promote products. But the point is still the same: people who make money (note that this is "people who make money") may not have the ability to produce, invent, or create things, but they must have the ability to copy and paste experience (highlighted). This ability is really important.
So why is it that anyone with a little vision, a little brainpower and strong execution skills can eventually make money? It's just a matter of making more or less. For example, some of the people I know in the industry are not really cultured, but why are they like this? Some have gone on to write books, some have gone on to do training, and some have gone on to do courses, because they have figured out a underlying logic, a logic of "earning money" rather than "making money", that is, investing a certain amount of time, energy and money in copying, immersing themselves in it, breaking down what they have copied, and then reorganizing their souls into a good course (this is called innovation), which can then be sold to more people.
The above is what I have seen from them - choice > effort, manifested in them.
Of course, there is a big premise here - that is, you still need to know what kind of life you want and what your talent is. If you are interested, you can take a look at my article 'A Clear Explanation of How to Find Your Own Talent and Avoid Confusion!'
Finally, about the [valuable] matter, let me tell you a story: In the book 'Rich Dad Poor Dad', there is a story about a village that doesn't have water. The village chief entrusted two young people to supply water to the village, and the villagers paid them for it. The first young man, Ed, immediately went to buy two large barrels and traveled daily to a lake 10 miles away to fetch water and deliver it to the village - Ed immediately made money.
And another person named Bill, disappeared since the contract was signed. However, half a year later, Bill returned to the village with a construction team and an investment. In the past six months, he made a business plan for himself, found investment, registered a company, hired professionals for project construction management. Not only that, he spent more than a year building an underground water supply pipeline system from the lake to the village.
The moment the clear water gushed out of the Faucet, Ed's business was destroyed, although he did make a year and a half's worth of money, quick money.
So have you understood? What kind of money-making things are you doing, and whether it is suitable for your conditions. You have to think it through yourself!
After all, valuable things, like what Bill faces before the water flows out, are the daily cash consumption and endless doubts from everyone about whether he can complete the connection of water and make money.
In conclusion, are you going to do something "to earn money", or something "to make money", or something "valuable", really nobody can tell anyone, just one point, in line with the general direction of the trend to choose > effort, has never changed.