Make a $1 Million in 1 year? Can be done?

I've had the book for awhile, but I keep thinking its going to be some tony robbins bullshit type of general advice like "believe in yourself" "dont take no for answer".

The kind of book you finish reading and realize this is reaaaally how these fucks are making their money...selling dreams

just not sure on this one

No it's not a motivational type of book, though they are good to keep you focused. You should always be reading something along the direction of self help or entrepreneurial to keep you grounded.

But Milli Fastlane is about helping you taking your "XYZ Idea", asking yourself, does it meet this criteria, does it meet that. Then it should be a millionaire maker if it meets all these different aspects in the book. If you didn't skimp/cheat (or bend the truth) on your answers to the questions.
 

No it's not a motivational type of book, though they are good to keep you focused. You should always be reading something along the direction of self help or entrepreneurial to keep you grounded.

But Milli Fastlane is about helping you taking your "XYZ Idea", asking yourself, does it meet this criteria, does it meet that. Then it should be a millionaire maker if it meets all these different aspects in the book. If you didn't skimp/cheat (or bend the truth) on your answers to the questions.



:yes::yes::yes:
 

No it's not a motivational type of book, though they are good to keep you focused. You should always be reading something along the direction of self help or entrepreneurial to keep you grounded.

But Milli Fastlane is about helping you taking your "XYZ Idea", asking yourself, does it meet this criteria, does it meet that. Then it should be a millionaire maker if it meets all these different aspects in the book. If you didn't skimp/cheat (or bend the truth) on your answers to the questions.

copped it for the nook, will start reading on my weekly biz trips. Propz.
 
I made about 200k from Just selling on Amazon
and I was selling moderately
If I go hard hard I could do 500k
then with more amazon accounts 1 million
 
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15 Startups With $100 Million+ Valuations That Hardly Existed Last Year


Nicccce but not a single black cofounder in that group of companies.

I'm gonna be gone for about a month where I doubt I'll have a connection fast enough to want to jump on bgol but I'm gonna drop some crucial knowledgge that every black entrepreneur or wanna be entrepreneur should check out before I go. Deals specifically with that problem...
 

Nicccce but not a single black cofounder in that group of companies.

I'm gonna be gone for about a month where I doubt I'll have a connection fast enough to want to jump on bgol but I'm gonna drop some crucial knowledgge that every black entrepreneur or wanna be entrepreneur should check out before I go. Deals specifically with that problem...



Nice, looking forward to it.

I do know for a fact that we are present but not visible. Doubt at these valuation levels though.

The connect game is tighter than a crapaud butt :smh:


Enjoy your trip and be safe......

:yes:
 

Nicccce but not a single black cofounder in that group of companies.

I'm gonna be gone for about a month where I doubt I'll have a connection fast enough to want to jump on bgol but I'm gonna drop some crucial knowledgge that every black entrepreneur or wanna be entrepreneur should check out before I go. Deals specifically with that problem...

looking forward to this brugh :yes:
 

Nicccce but not a single black cofounder in that group of companies.

I'm gonna be gone for about a month where I doubt I'll have a connection fast enough to want to jump on bgol but I'm gonna drop some crucial knowledgge that every black entrepreneur or wanna be entrepreneur should check out before I go. Deals specifically with that problem...

looking forward to it. We just got to keep kicking those doors down.
 

Nicccce but not a single black cofounder in that group of companies.

I'm gonna be gone for about a month where I doubt I'll have a connection fast enough to want to jump on bgol but I'm gonna drop some crucial knowledgge that every black entrepreneur or wanna be entrepreneur should check out before I go. Deals specifically with that problem...



We are coming up! (didn't quantify in the article though)


At Y Combinator’s Biggest Demo Day Yet, Mobile Is Taking Over


There are plenty of observations to be made about Y Combinator’s Demo Day. It’s the biggest ever, with 66 companies in this Winter class.
It’s more diverse than past years, with many companies being led by women and people of color.
And the audience, packed in at the Computer History Museum, is about as high-quality as you get at these sorts of things. It’s full of Silicon Valley elite, plus other investors and executives who have flown in from around the country and the world.

But the thing that is sticking out the most is the nature of the products being launched. Out of the 39 companies presenting on the record today, 15 are mobile-first by my count.

This shouldn’t be surprising, I suppose. Study after study is showing that feature phones, iPhones and Androids combine to reach millions more people than the web. And lots of top technologists are declaring that the companies of the future are going to be mobile before they hit the web.

Still, Y Combinator began in 2005, before smartphones were mainstream. The seed-stage firm helped pioneer the idea of the ambitious online startup done on the cheap. I know, I was there in 2007 and my class was almost entirely in that category. And, to date, most of its best-known companies have been web-centric — from Reddit to Dropbox to AirBnb.

The shift so visible today has been building over the last couple of years; before, there were only a few outliers, like recently-acquired location company Loopt. Partner Harj Taggar says startups like note-syncing startup Simplenote helped kick off the trend back in 2010. The Android explosion, he says, has made the mobile focus particularly attractive.

The companies today are also noticeably practical — these are not just games and simple utilities. PlanGrid is providing blueprints to construction sites via iPads, and is starting to blow up since launching at the beginning of the month. Medigram is a HIPAA-compliant messaging app for hospitals. It hopes to one day connect all vital medical information via devices to doctors making split-second decisions that can save lives.

I suspect the next few classes of YC companies are going to be even more about mobile. Maybe the next one will pass the 50% mark? And with that, here are the 15 mobile-centric companies, in order of stage appearance today. Some haven’t presented yet, so I’ll update the list with any clarifications as I get a closer look at them.

Plangrid — blueprints on tablets
Medigram — chat for doctors
Popset — group photo albums
SendHub — SMS for organizations
Lvl6 — social mobile games
Midnox — video camera app + hosting
Sonalight — voice texting (while driving)
Flypad — smartphone as game controller
TiKL — walkie-talkie app
Kyte — kid phone in software
Pair — messaging for couples
Per Vices — software-defined radio
iCracked — tablet repair network
Socialcam — video sharing
Exec — Uber for work


http://techcrunch.com/2012/03/27/ycmobile/




:cool:
 
Yup, this has pretty much replaced the traditional 25 - 30 page business plan. 10 - 15 slide deck. Alot of teams go w/the “10/20/30 rule of PowerPoint”— 10 slides, 20 minutes and no font smaller than 30 point.

I haven't seen one vc or investor that really cared if u had one or not over the past few years. Sometimes banks still wanna see em...

But what if you suck at power point. Is it a good idea to draw up on paper and have someone format things for you? Or should you use some type of powerpoint assist program?
 
But what if you suck at power point. Is it a good idea to draw up on paper and have someone format things for you? Or should you use some type of powerpoint assist program?

In 2012, if you suck at something, you find the resources that are adequate for what you want to do. There is no excuse anymore, the playing field has largely been leveled. Not completely, but a big chunk of it has.
 
But what if you suck at power point. Is it a good idea to draw up on paper and have someone format things for you? Or should you use some type of powerpoint assist program?

would prolly cost less than $200 to have someone format your text/images into 10-15 slides.

and if u are in business and doing any type of presentations, i cant see why u dont take a weekend and learn how to use powerpoint. its damn near invaluable.

then again there's also a new tool called prezi thats interesting. puts out great looking presentations. try it out.

that makkonen thread is pretty low even for ur standards btw billy.

In 2012, if you suck at something, you find the resources that are adequate for what you want to do. There is no excuse anymore, the playing field has largely been leveled. Not completely, but a big chunk of it has.

yup
 
would prolly cost less than $200 to have someone format your text/images into 10-15 slides.

and if u are in business and doing any type of presentations, i cant see why u dont take a weekend and learn how to use powerpoint. its damn near invaluable.

then again there's also a new tool called prezi thats interesting. puts out great looking presentations. try it out.

that makkonen thread is pretty low even for ur standards btw billy.



yup


yo main thanks. I know you wont believe this but I have a problem stepson. He put me on to BGOL during the period I was trying to be a friend to him, not a father.

I let him use my account to check on my business contacts while I was away and overseas. He posted that bullshit about the dude.

so again apologies man. Thanks
 
I've had the book for awhile, but I keep thinking its going to be some tony robbins bullshit type of general advice like "believe in yourself" "dont take no for answer".

The kind of book you finish reading and realize this is reaaaally how these fucks are making their money...selling dreams

just not sure on this one




:rolleyes:
 
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