Two Completely Different Business Mentalities
You are going to read about building a financial empire. If you are looking into building a business of enormous size, you should already have put a few things in order. You should already have adequate insurance in case of catastrophic events, you should be saving on a regular basis, you should have plenty of emergency funds, and you should be either self-employed or work some part-time job on your own (not for an employer).
If your life resembles the above, you are prepared to build a business. You absolutely must be self-employed, full or part-time. Technically, self-employed people own a business, but forget this notion. For your purposes, self-employed people do not own a business; they own a job. If they owned a business, it would work for them; they would not be working in it.
However, owning your own job is not a bad thing. Owning your own job is the start to building a business. You need to own your own job before you begin to build a business.
Building a business and building a job require different mentalities. The job-builder might think something like, "The more work I do, the more money I will make. I will do all the work I can, and I will hire out what I lack the skills or time to do."
The business-builder thinks otherwise, "The more I work, the less it is a business for me, and the more it is like a job. I will hire out as much as I can afford, and I'll use my personal savings to afford even more. I will lose money for a long time, but that is okay, because eventually it will be so big that it will make me money without my working in it."
So, try not to think about how much money you could be making if you did more of the work yourself. You should be excited to spend the earnings from the business and as much of your own personal money as possible on the business! If the business was providing you with a lot of money, it would be alarming, because it should be spent on hiring people to do the work.
The mindset of a person who builds jobs is very different from one who builds businesses. One is not superior to the other, but one will give you freedom while the other will trap you into work. - 23226
If your life resembles the above, you are prepared to build a business. You absolutely must be self-employed, full or part-time. Technically, self-employed people own a business, but forget this notion. For your purposes, self-employed people do not own a business; they own a job. If they owned a business, it would work for them; they would not be working in it.
However, owning your own job is not a bad thing. Owning your own job is the start to building a business. You need to own your own job before you begin to build a business.
Building a business and building a job require different mentalities. The job-builder might think something like, "The more work I do, the more money I will make. I will do all the work I can, and I will hire out what I lack the skills or time to do."
The business-builder thinks otherwise, "The more I work, the less it is a business for me, and the more it is like a job. I will hire out as much as I can afford, and I'll use my personal savings to afford even more. I will lose money for a long time, but that is okay, because eventually it will be so big that it will make me money without my working in it."
So, try not to think about how much money you could be making if you did more of the work yourself. You should be excited to spend the earnings from the business and as much of your own personal money as possible on the business! If the business was providing you with a lot of money, it would be alarming, because it should be spent on hiring people to do the work.
The mindset of a person who builds jobs is very different from one who builds businesses. One is not superior to the other, but one will give you freedom while the other will trap you into work. - 23226
About the Author:
Cody Scholberg, an expert on business building, writes for Rapidly Make Money, your guide to info that will help you get rich. Check out these books about making money.


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