Over 20 years working on startups (mine and other peoples), automating marketing and operations. Multiple career holder. High school drop out, masters work in Physics. I write every week to help you grow and automate your startup.
Serious Question: Do you value your work? I keep seeing people write things like "I'm so overbooked". Why is that? Are you changing what you are worth ? Are you overbooked because you have undervalued yourself? Or is it tough to say no? (It's the same thing). I could be overbooked too if I undercharged. But I would be overbooked by people who didn't value me and didn't value what I do. I know people who are undercharging. It's criminal how little they want for what I think are incredible services worth double or triple. They are doing themselves a disservice. The more you charge the more you can focus on what people pay you to do. And the better quality of product they can have. And You aren't looking over your shoulder wondering if you are gonna make it. And you aren't resenting taking the work. And you aren't resenting the client. What I've done in the past is to raise my price for every single offer. That keeps the cash flowing while seeing what the market will bear. People can afford your rates. Once someone decides to work with you, the rest is semantics. When you join Flywheel Founders, you work directly with me. You are getting an CTO, a CMO, an executive coach and a mentor. You are getting access to a community of peers . You are getting Workshops and 1:1 meetings for 12 weeks. And more if you want it. The goal is setting you up to grow to 7 figures, and not killing yourself nor giving away your company to get there. I charge what I'm worth. And when we work together we make sure you are charging what you are worth. That's the only way we will reach our goals. Cheers |
Over 20 years working on startups (mine and other peoples), automating marketing and operations. Multiple career holder. High school drop out, masters work in Physics. I write every week to help you grow and automate your startup.