The Prompt Engineer Playbook PLR; Stuck with a Business That's Going Nowhere

Published: Tue, 05/16/23


I'm headed to the hospital for my surgery, but have this email queued up to go out for me. The insurance issue ended up a big mess down to the last minute. The female doctor at the office I go to has to be pre-authorized, but the male doctor doesn't. So because the other office couldn't figure out the right health portal to request approval through, they just rescheduled me with the male doctor.

I'm fine with that and glad I had this settled before surgery but they sure like to make things stressful up until the last minute. LOL. Anyway, it'll be a long day but hopefully I'll get to rest for the rest of the day (and tomorrow) and then feel like a million dollars afterwards. Wish me luck!

Also, when I get out I'll be working on some new PLR - one will be a set of unlimited AI reports and the other will be limited PLR on a variety of topics. Are there any NON-AI topics you need? Let me know! Or, if there's an AI topic I haven't covered yet (or that you missed out on), let me know that, too. 

FYI: If you need to see what limited PLR is left and see what big, discounted store bundles are available, go here.

Don't forget: Justin Popovic has a deal on his Better Than Ever PLR that expires soon. 

The Prompt Engineering Playbook PLR

Charles Harper has a new video PLR (with other elements) package called The Prompt Engineer Playbook

You get: Check it out here while it's on a launch pricing discount:
https://warriorplus.com/o2/a/k5drp2/0

Stuck with a Business That's Going Nowhere

Continuing on with my replies for people who emailed me. Another pattern I saw was from people who started a business online and ended up stuck.

It wasn't because they didn't know what to do - it was usually because it was a business model that didn't play to their strengths. Or, things changed and they now were stuck with something that wasn't the right fit. 

You have to choose a business model without relying on a partner. I know many people do partner up, but you never want your business to depend on whether or not someone else is committed, can do a good job, has time to contribute to it, etc. 

If you currently have a business situation that's stuck, we'll address what to do with that in a minute. But to avoid getting in that situation in the first place, I recommend:

1. Picking something you'd enjoy doing yourself. This is why I don't do dropshipping (tried it) or FBA or even Etsy. I just don't enjoy it. I enjoy writing, and I enjoy both fiction and non fiction. 

2. Pick something you're capable of doing on your own. Never rely on a partner or even the hope that you can outsource, honestly. You never know about the reliability of others - even freelancers - so you want to be able to do the work when needed. 

3. Don't just choose things because others are making money at it. I could have (still could) make a killing with coaching. I don't want to - it's not my forte. It has to feel right and natural for you. 

Now what happens if it's too late? You started something with a partner who is no longer onboard or you keep hoping to find someone to partner with and in the meantime, your business is going nowhere.

This is a common occurrence. 

Honestly I recommend you reevaluate and ask yourself, "Can I do this myself?" If not, I'd cut your losses and start over with something that works better for your skills and talents as well as interests. I don't like partnerships. I don't like being forced to rely on freelancers who are VERY flakey, by the way. 

And this is HARD for many of you to accept. You may have spent a lot of time and/or money building your website to launch but then got in this stuck situation. 

Maybe it's been months (or even over a year). It's far better to say, "This sucks but it's a lesson learned" and move in the RIGHT direction than to keep spinning your wheels because you're feeling stubborn. Trust me, I've been there. And I cut loose businesses that were even making me money because I knew they were holding me back. 

This may not be the answer you want to hear, but it's the answer you need. Don't try to patch the gaping hole in the business model with someone else. If you can't carry it solo, it's an at-risk situation. If you have a site, flip it or just delete and move on. Stop wasting time and find something you are passionate about and good at on your own. 

Tiff :)

P.S. Prefer a weekly digest?
https://tiffanylambert.com/weekly-digest/ 

 
 


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