You know what’s easier than entrepreneurship? A day job. I say this with emphasis after not having a day job since 2012! But let’s go back to September 2012, three months after I left banking for good.
No sooner had I announced my retirement did e-mails and phone calls start flooding in from competitors who wanted to meet. Some were curious why I had retired, while the majority of them were basically trying to see if I would be a good fit to work with them. Fortunately, or unfortunately, the carrots that used to be delicious are not as orange anymore. Still, getting offered big bucks to work in a new environment, with a growing product is an exciting proposition!
The main reason why I retired from corporate America at the age of 34 was so that I can see what I can do entirely on my own. With all the work experience, education, and moonlighting, I’m curious to know if I can create a sustainable and fun business that can grow long after I’m gone. What I lacked was enough of my own time to make it happen.
Up until now, I’ve just been a hobbyist, writing online and not focusing much on the business aspect of things. I enjoy doing things for fun because I get impatient with boring activities the older I get. However, what I’m quickly discovering is how enjoyable it is to learn about business online no matter how slow the progress is! I just need more patience.
A Day Job Is So Much Easier Than Entrepreneurship
With a job, all you’ve got to do is be a nice person and do your work no matter how mindless it is. You can put in 60% effort or 110% effort, you will get paid an expected salary. Maybe you’ll get a nice bonus at the end of the year as a sweetener if you are extra special.
With entrepreneurship, you’ve got to not only come up with an idea, you’ve got to market and execute your vision. Even if you execute your vision, there’s no guarantee you’ll be profitable. Think about all those small business owners who borrow startup capital only to close down and lose all their investor’s money a couple years later.
Everybody who is disgruntled with their job should try their hand at entrepreneurship for six months to appreciate what they have. Starting a small business will also make you realize how much government bureacracy there is that seems to want to keep you from succeeding. You’ll also never want to pay taxes again.
Your job may be soul-sucking, but at least you’ll be able to put food on the table and insure yourself from any unfortunate disasters. With entrepreneurship, you might be ecstatic every single day, but you might also end up living in your mother’s basement. You might sacrifice your entire social life for the sake of a dream that might not come true.
This is why I made sure I could live off my existing passive income for 20 months in a row before I engineered my layoff. I didn’t want to go back and live with my parents. That would be too embarrassing for a 34-35-year-old man.
The Regret Minimization Framework
I don’t want to short change myself before I even get started with my entrepreneurial endeavors. As a result, I’m trying to go off the grid and not keep in touch with old colleagues and clients for the first three months.
I know there will undoubtedly be job opportunities which I will be tempted to take before giving my new journey a go. I don’t want to have to choose, because if a great person gives me a great offer, it’s going to be next to impossible to turn down!
When I look back on life, I want to know I at least gave entrepreneurship a full year before calling it quits. That way, I won’t be asking myself “what if?” I don’t want to be “an old man, filled with regret, waiting to die alone.”
Real entrepreneurs are successful, otherwise we’re just hobbyists. We can’t go on and on, spinning our wheels and not make enough to live a comfortable life. At some point, we have to face the music and realize we are failures. I will know in 12 months whether I am a failure based on my goals or not.
The Original Goal Of Work
Originally, I planned to work for another five years until the age of 40 and really kick back after. The problem is, it’s not in my nature to kick back, and I never anticipated five years ago there would be such opportunity online. Funny how opportunities randomly appear. It’s the X Factor I tell ya. You’ve got to be in the game to win.
So often we want things, and we want things now. We aren’t willing to wait for when we can afford something, which is why we get into consumer debt. We aren’t willing to accept we are “C” students foolishly trying to live “A” lifestyles. I am no different. I want my online success to be immediate rather than put in my dues over the next three years. As a result, I get frustrated with myself when things aren’t going the way I want. I’ve got to remind myself that I’ve only just begun and need to give it some time.
After all, it took 13 years to generate ~$80,000 a year in passive income, what makes me think I can replicate that amount in just several months? Patience is indeed a virtue. Besides, what the hell is the damn rush? The income / work goal is $200,000 a year / 20 hours a week in three years. It sounds like a pipe dream, but if you read the post, you’ll see that maybe, just maybe with some focused work, it can be achieved!
Take a couple minutes to watch Jeff Bezos talk about his regret minimization framework and why he left his stable, high paying job to start Amazon.com.
Trying Entrepreneurship For 12 Months Or Bust!
I’m going to give my entrepreneurial endeavors 100% attention for one full year. It’s brutally difficult to make a meaningful amount of income on your own, but at least it builds character! There are plenty of newly listed IPOs with millions of clients who still don’t make any money. But hey, the public is willing to buy a piece of a founder’s dream and make them wealthy.
The temptations of going back to work are everywhere. I miss the corporate card to spend with clients and friends on steak dinners and SF Giants ball games. I enjoy the occasional international business travel to a new country. Meanwhile, a healthy paycheck and benefits are also quite a treat. These are all the good things and I won’t mention all the bad things.
Alas, in order to realize my dreams, I must forsake these benefits. And if I decide I’m not on track to build something I’m very proud of that can also make enough money, then I’ll just have to re-strategize. In one year, at least I’ll be able to look back knowing I gave it my best and have no regrets.
For all of you who have taken the leap of faith and gone out on your own, I commend you! I know your struggles and have felt your highs, your lows and your frustrations. Remember that nothing good comes easy. We must fight for what we want and never fail due to a lack of effort. In the end, the journey is the reward, so let us never forget!
Related: Why Blogging Is The Best Business In The World
It’s Worth Starting An Online Business
Although being a successful entrepreneur is much harder than having a day job, it’s easier than ever to start your own website or online business now. I never thought I’d be able to quit my job in 2012 just three years after starting Financial Samurai. But by starting one financial crisis day in 2009, Financial Samurai actually makes more than my entire passive income total that took 15 years to build.
If you enjoy writing, creating, connecting with people online, and enjoying more freedom, see how you can set up a WordPress blog like mine in 15 minutes. It’s imperative that everybody brand themselves online and take advantage of the 3 billion+ internet users today. You never know where the journey will take you!
Always Negotiate A Severance Before Leaving Your Job
Finally, never quit your job, get laid off instead. If you get laid off, you can potentially get a severance, unemployment benefits, and job training. If you quit, you get nothing. You have more rights as an employee than you know. The book is on its 5th edition and has grown to 200-pages from 100-pages. Negotiating a severance was the catalyst for me to leave banking for good and focus on Financial Samurai.
Although being an entrepreneur is hard, you feel so much more proud earning $1 on your own than through a day job. Once you earn your first $100, it becomes easier and easier to earn more. The freedom an online business has provided us since 2012 has been wonderful.
We traveled the world for 6 weeks a year for the first five years. With the birth of our son in 2017, we appreciate even more the freedom to both raise our son every day! And with th birth of our daughter in 2019 and the global pandemic, entrepreneurship has been a life-saver. The value of online businesses have increased immensely because they have more defensible income streams. Even during a pandemic, an online business can’t get shut down.
Here’s my 10-year entrepreneurship recap. I plan to run Financial Samurai for as long as I can think and type. I see owning a small business as a productive use of my mind.
Having a small business also serves as career insurance for my children, who are facing an increasingly competitive world. With college acceptance rates dropping to the single digits, it’s very hard to get ahead nowadays.
Entrepreneurship is so, so hard, and that’s why I am not interested in it at all, despite most of my peers longing for it. I don’t want my life to be about work. I don’t want to look back on my life and regret putting in 16 hours a day trying to build my business when I had a tolerable job that I liked that only required 8. But then, I might get sick of working for a company and want to be creative. I just don’t think that’s me right now. I admire those who have the stamina to work for themselves!
I agree. If you are doing well, love your job, and can kick back, then don’t bother with entrepreneurship!
Have you joined free money finance Daisy?
Sam,
I am a first time reader of your blog. I really like the content and especially the honesty. I am in a similar situation as you. I worked my way up the corporate ladder, went on international assignments and was generally successful by the age of 33. I was grossing nearly $200k a year in salary and bonus. Yet I found that money alone wasn’t really motivating me any more. I wanted to see if I could reach beyond my potential.
What pushed me over the edge was the same Jeff Bezos video you posted above where he describes his “regret minimization framework.” Another one was a 2011 McKinsey report on big data.
Anyhow, I quit my cushy corporate job earlier in the year to start my own tech venture. I decided to not pursue venture capital funding and do it solo… You’re right – doing a start up is 5x harder than being a regular employee and at least 2x harder than being a high performing manager. There are days when I have a lot of self-doubt about my decision to venture out on my own. But I would be disappointed with myself if I didn’t attempt to create something. I wanted to find out if I had what it takes to be successful on my own.
It is a sobering feeling seeing my checking account being depleted month over month as I race against the clock to finalize the software I am attempting to build (did I mention that I’m not a software developer). It’s scary to say the least.
But when I look back at my life, this is the story I want to tell. Keep fighting Sam and remember that whether you think you can or think you can’t make it, you’ll be right.
Good to have you here! Thanks for sharing your story. As a software developer, you’ve got a great competitive advantage in this day and age!
Good luck on your venture and check back and let me know when it’s launched! One of the things I’m also trying would be entrepreneurs is to really strategize their day job exit. Severance can be a huge safety net for months if not years!
Good luck! I’ll be watching closely to see you how you. I am 35 too, running a blog that I don’t dedicate enough time too (but would like to expand and get into more online busienss’).
Thanks Andy. We’ll see in 9 months time what’s up!
“C” students wanting live “A” lifestyles, that speaks for many of us nowadays. We tend to ignore how much effort it takes to really achieve any of the things we see other people have accomplished. For entrepreneurialship, my personal experience is that it’s much easier if you do it while you have a part-time job or means to support yourself untill when your own thing can support you full time.
Harry, that’s exactly what I did. I began writing online as a hobby in 2009 until sometime end of 2010 I realize there was income potential due to the traffic increases. Two years after that, it’s balls to the wall and let’s see!
As I near Year 2 with my company, I’m seeing that the discipline and commitment that you require in the first 6 months to a year, while brutal are nowhere near as tough when you reach a phase when you are aiming for LEGACY. To get legacy, you start thinking about scaling, and going beyond yourself, and that will mean hiring and training others.
The minute I started to think about employees and hiring, it just became infinitely more complex and required even more personal discipline. It’s been challenging to balance personal reward with business needs as we grow.
For me it’s important to balance out the marathon of discipline with occasional moments of splurges (or somewhat irresponsible purchases). It’s like the balance of order vs. disorder. Both need to exist in some form.
Good to know Pashmina about your experience. I don’t plan to hire any employees in the foreseable future, but I am looking for a partner to help build a platform to harness the collective readership of the Yakezie Network.
I’m taking my time finding a partner. Whoever s/he is, I think they are going to do very well in terms of leaving a legacy!
Yep! And, no, I haven’t been tempted yet. Working as a dev isn’t quite as lucrative as what I imagine your old job was like.
I’m so thankful that you wrote this post and exposed some of the myths about becoming an entrepreneur. I feel like the media has glorified entrepreneurship without talking about the extreme amount of effort and responsibility it takes to run your own business.
I personally am using the one foot in, one foot out approach. I still maintain a full time job, but work VERY HARD after my wife and daughter go to sleep to get my blog and brand going.
If there’s anything you need or any questions you have please don’t hesistate to ask. I wish you luck brother and will be rooting for you.
I employed your footsie approach for at least the last 20 months of my career. I do think it is the spot on right approach for everybody to take as they build towards something new! It’s just that no matter how much you prepare, you have to keep fighting and expecting things to change.
Will have to check out your ventures!
I wish you luck on your venture to entrepreneurship. There is really be a big difference with working on an 8-5 shift in an office and owning a business of your own. When working in an office, you just do the same tasks over and over and get pad, but with having your own business, you have to strive hard everyday and evolve to succeed. I agree with you, but I think 24 months would be a pretty good gauge to see if you will succeed or take another route.
You are truly correct with that, being an ordinary employee is so much easier although you can always complain about your salary. On the other hand, you have the budgeting and the competition as the enemy in being an entrepreneur.
I went back to work on my terms which is considerably different than the tail between your legs return to work. My return gives me opportunities that I never thought of. I never would have started blogging if I had a regular job that required 50-60 hours a week. I am easing back into retirement through teaching. I only actually work 4.5 hours per day. I am starting volunteering and I am preparing for retirement again. Things could change in the next few years, but that is the plan.
Sam, I am just watching how things go with you as I contemplate my future as well. My wife and I have been chatting about this a lot, as of right now I have three jobs: I am a audio/visual systems engineer at a fortune 50 company. I help design and build conference rooms and other meeting spaces to integrate audio and video into those spaces. I am also an Enrolled Agent working for a small (high-end) CPA firm during tax season. My third “job” has become my blog.
I am trying to figure out how to transition from my 50-hour a week A/V job to just taxes and online endevours. Honestly, I’ve got a 5-year plan roughed out, and I need to dive into details and reverse engineer the steps to get there.
But having done taxes for a bunch of self-employed individuals, I can easliy say that it is EXTREMELY hard to succeed on your own. No 401k, supplemented health insurance, etc… Most people are netting like $25-$30k, and need their spouses to work to keep up with the bills.
But man, every book I’ve read, or advice I’ve gotten from successful people starts with owning their own business, bootstrapping it for a decade, and then enjoying the fruits of their labor. Sam, you’ve got the drive and the passion for this, and you’ve obviously planned out some short-term/long-term goals to set this thing in motion, so you’ll probably succeed. Unless the universe suddenly stops revolving around money….then you’re screwed ;-)
Thanks Jacob. That’s very interesting how you say most people are netting only $25-30K from their small business. Could be bad, or could be good!
I know a lot of small business that are providing fantastic lifestyles for their owners. Think if you are a travel writer. ALL your travel expenses are expensible b/c you have to travel to write about your travel! You have to live in the Four Seasons if you write about the top hotels in the South of France!
The tough thing about being an entrepreneur is there is less separation between work and life. They become much more blended and that can make it a big challenge to sit back and relax. And getting adjusted to irregular income is tough. I know a guy in Silicon Valley who keeps getting tempted to go back to mainstream corporate work for this very reason. He’s held out for about four years now because even though he keeps getting job offers he just doesn’t want to part with his freedom and flexibility.
I completely agree that being an entreprenueur is way harder and more time-consuming and soul-sucking thana rgular job. My regular job is soul-sucking, but at least I know I get my paycheck every 2 weeks and I don’t have to manage stuff or market or come up with crazy ideas. Absolutely. It takes real balls to quit and be an entrepreneur!
Hi Stu – What exactly is a “residual revenue stream” in your opinion? Love to get some examples of what you recommend. Is it simply a membership site? If so, are we talking a new membership site, or a subdomain from financialsamurai.com?
Thanks for your thoughts. I hope you are killing it with your WP plugin!
Best, Sam
I just left a few months ago so I haven’t been tempted to go back yet.
We planned for a sustainable lifestyle after I quit my job so the finance hasn’t been a problem yet either. I’m completely done with a corporate job. Even if I go back to work, I’ll work for myself. Being an entrepreneur isn’t easy, but I’m more suited to that. I hated working for corporate for some reason.
Being grateful is truly something all of us should keep in mind.
I hope you do succeed with your online endeavor. Stick it out for three years and see where it takes you. Operating costs are low online!
In my experience being in a high complexity sales position such as Technology Sales is very close to being an entrepreneur. Yes you have a base salary, but if you want to really make money being nice and “doing your job” its not enough.
In high complexity sales you are responsible for demand generation, delivering proposals, sales orders follow ups, distribution channels recruiting and enablement and bundling/pricing, customer loving etc. Similar as being an entrepreneur, the lack of planning and executing this activities will just cause you to miss you sales, your quota and therefore you will miss your commissions.
What differs being in a sales position is if you have a couple of bad months you don’t have to worry about paying employees wages, rent and other fixed costs; being in such position as entrepreneur will wake you cold sweating everyday until you are back to breakeven.
Good analogy on the “high complexity sales” position. Would you say then that this is one of the best jobs in the world then? What is the burnout rate, and how long have you been doing Tech Sales? Do you ever plan to hang it up?
I agree with you Sam on many points. I can’t wait to be done with residency and start earning a decent income to (hopefully) invest in properties which will allow me to retire one day. No one have been supportive of my plans to invest, especially in property rentals and CDs. Makes me want to succeed even more!
Isn’t the great thing about being a doctor is the fact you can work to 70, make good money, and dictate your hours? That’s what I’ve always thought! Late start to making money, but you can make for way longer than most!
I and my husband run our retail business. It took 2 years to start generating ok income. In 4 years we double our income of before we started the business. And yet still a lot of potential we are going to make. At the beginning (first year) we both worked very long hours (10-15 hrs / day) in order to build up good and strong business foundation. After you start pick up your clients base, you will start be able to focus on specific marketing and your business will start expand and take off. One rule I really appreciate in business is you are never perfect, always have room to improve and do better. and also open eyes look for opportunity along the way all the time !
Be patient, have clear vision in your business, plan and do Execution well, always evaluate results compare with energy and effort you put into it, and Adapt !
Thanks for the “never perfect” tip AJ! I’ll take that to heart and adapt!
There is a reason the majority of the population have jobs, rather than their own businesses, online or otherwise. Most comments mention the relative income, and that’s all true. But I believe that’s not the main point.
The main reason most people have (and keep) regular jobs is risk. On your own you have a higher risk of failure, because, let’s face it: most of us know (more or less) how to succeed at a job. It IS a lot easier than succeeding at a business of your own.
Risk is a funny thing. I was risk loving from 22-28, and now I’m risk adverse ever since.
Yet, I guess I’m back to risk loving b/c I no longer work by my choice, but the severance package was a HUGE catalyst. I would say at least 35% of people who are working would quit their job if they could get a severance package worth 6 years of living expenses wouldn’t they?
When I did you’re interview (and those of the other bloggers), I’ve always had a notion that being self-employed was harder than being an entrepreneur. However, it is always a choice between doing what you want or doing what others want and taking it a little easier. I think you’d rather do what you want, even if it is a little harder. Regardless, I know you’ll be successful.
For sure… making $50,000 from a job is a walk in the park compared to making $50,000 from your entrepreneurial endeavors.
It builds character though, and it all depends on how much you want to work and make. Gotta last for the long run though!
Thx Rob!
I’m really close to the one-year mark and I can honestly say I haven’t been tempted to go back to my former career. A few times I’ve missed the money (especially during the slow weeks!) but I have never missed the work I used to do.
I still REALLY need to work on separating work and personal time – forget 20 hours a week; I’m doing more like 20 a day! But overall I’m thrilled with my decision to become self-employed and doing everything I can to ensure that I get to stay that way.
I have a great deal of confidence that you’ll be just fine, Sam! The first few months were the hardest for me, but now I’m in a groove and nothing has ever felt as natural as what I’m doing now. Looking forward to watching as it becomes easier for you – I know great things are in the works!
Andrea, your encouragement means a lot! That is wonderful you haven’t been tempted at all to go back. And in that way, you are lucky that you disliked your job. I was just getting a little bored. When you are at one place, doing the same thing for over 10 years, it does that!
20 hours a day is a lot! Maybe I need to work more, but that would definite my goal of a more balanced lifestyle :) But, perhaps I’ll take some inspiration and work a double digit work day once a week and do some supercharging.
Glad you’re back to writing on the blog after the week hiatus. Like water off a duck’s back I say!
My situation is different but similar to yours. I am about to sell and walk away from a small business I have owned for ten years. I did not invent anything or turn it into a fortune 500 company, but it has provided well for my family. As much as I have grown to hate the management, taxes, and regulation of the whole thing, it has never, ever been boring. While, I think I will enjoy not having that monkey on my back, I am very concerned that I might get bored or lazy. I also feel that I am supposed to still be working full time at my age. My hope is to find enough contract work to replace my income while working less hours per month. I hope to invest the money I will make from the business sale (I am carrying the balance on the loan for 10 years). After those ten years, I hope I can retire from optometry if it’s not fun anymore and/or find that business that I will be motivated to run. We have a few ideas that are drastically different than what we do now. Or I could just take a corporate job and work on autopilot, collecting my salary. It does seam appealing sometimes.
Congrats on selling the small business! When you say “carrying the balance on the loan for 10 years), do you mean the business sale is not enough to pay off the loan, or do you have a loan from something else?
I think a lot of people get the idea that mega millions come after selling a business. I know I do. Please help clarify!
Thx, Sam
Sorry, I am doing a seller finance, so I am essentially the bank. It carries some risk, but unless the buyer runs it into the ground, it should be fine. If he does, I’ll take it back and build it up again.
Gotcha. That makes sense now. I guess you are incentivized to help the buyer out as well to ensure he pays you back! A win-win!
I definitely have been thinking about keeping my job a few more years to build up that nut, partially thanks to our conversation. But, there still is a part of me that knows how much more I could do without working. It would take a while to make up the difference of my dayjob income, but probably not too long.
All that to say that I can understand how tempting it would be to just return back to a dayjob and keep working the side business. Financial independence is nice, but making something out of nothing seems more valuable.
You can do much more, but it won’t necessarily translate into that much more revenue. It could be a 1revenue/10work ratio for all you know. The thing is, you never know until you try.
Just give your job 10 more years Corey! With what you’ve got and what you know, you’ll definitely be set for life!
It is good you know to stay away from the contacts that will tempt you back into another high paying job. I definitely think you’d have what-if thoughts in the future if you didn’t give it a shot!
Great article, Sam! Success is relative. It’s all in your mind because you set the gauge. Having said that, I agree that it’s much harder being an entrepreneur. I have been on both side of the aisle for a long time now.
I like the steady income that job brings, but I like excitement and sense of purpose with being an entrepreneur.
I think everyone should take a plunge at least once in lifetime. Life is too boring otherwise.
Thanks Shilpan. Everybody really should take the plunge, see if they succeed or fail, and then just get a job again and appreciate everything about it and then some!
Life does get a little too predictable sometimes. It’s fun to shake things up, and thank goodness for the internet!
Indeed. The benefits of having a job are often overlooked. From health insurance, to retirement savings, to paid vacations, to being able to get a mortgage to buy property.
I do think it is best for someone to get work experience and build a financial foundation while working on the side for a while. Although many entrepreneurs have done well with no experience.
If you do have the dedication you say you’ll have until mid 2013, you are indeed going to achieve great things. Compared to the few bloggers who display income, I think what you are reaching for is perfectly reasonable and attainable. Good luck!
Thanks Pauline, we shall see! I’m dedicated alright, b/c I don’t want to eat Ramen Noodles every for that much longer! Give me some Toro Sashimi!
$200,000 a year working only 20 hrs per week? Good luck.
Of course, anything is possible. What exactly IS your product, though? It isn’t very clear to me if you’re trying to reach this goal using this blog, or doing something differently.
I do know that you have the get on the map service. If 200 people pay you $1000 each you’ll be well on your way. You have to find a way to sale and guarantee the ROI for you consumers if you use this model.
Advertisers should be treating you well, right?
How is the book going? Have you asked all your Yakezie friends to post a banner on their site? Again, I’m sure they will do it free. What’s a simple 125 x 125 banner to someone who learned so much from a network you created? Hell, I’m going to put one up on my site for you.
You can write a post on Yakezie that asks people to put up your banner. It may be spammy, but you’re an entrepreneur now. Anything and everything within ethical and legal bounds is free game to try. I’m rooting for you!
Just to be clear, I’m going to post the advertisement on my personal blog, not my book’s site.
Hi Romeo,
To make $200,000 a year you need to make about $16,700 a month. That figure can be obtained through selling 438 copies of my book a month. After all, there are millions of working people all over the world, all of whom plan to one day leave their jobs whether by choice or otherwise.
I have not begun the affiliate marketing campaign for my book yet as I write pertinent content on my site for the first six months first. I’ll open things up in 2013. There’s really no rush as I’d like to gather feedback and be involved in the conversation.
My product is simply to provide the most helpful, and most entertaining personal finance content on the web from a person who has spent his entire career in finance, went to business school, and made his nut.
Thanks for your support Romeo! I appreciate it. And for other ways to get to $200,000 I detail the plan in this post: https://www.financialsamurai.com/2012/08/20/life-after-an-engineered-layoff-the-quest-to-work-20-hours-a-week-and-make-200000-a-year/
I started doing my own thing in 2008 and absolutely love it. I work a lot more hours than I ever did before but wouldn’t give it up for anything. I have the ability to do things that I enjoy during the week if I want to. There is a lot of stress involved, you just have to find ways to relax and rejuvenate yourself.
Sean, what is your own thing you started?
I have bought and sold a few websites, but currently my main website is a coupon/deals website, Freesnatcher.com. I have run it since the beginning in 2006. My situation was almost forced. I was working as an analyst with Bank of America until I was laid off in 2008. I put all my effort into my online marketing efforts and things started to click. Now I am just trying to diversify my online portfolio.
Very cool! Six years later, are you making enough from the site to just do that full time? Three years from now will be where you are now for me so I’m curious to hear your perspective on things (the dips, break throughs, ups, and downs). What would you do more of from years 3 to 6?
Thx
Note: Need to start a new thread to respond.