Best Websites To Find Remote Jobs

John reveals the best websites to find remote jobs

So, I'm going to show you websites to find remote jobs in this video and I'm also going to go on my computer and actually show you some of those sites where you can find work.

Now before I go into the best websites to find remote jobs, I want to start with a quick distinction of gigs versus jobs. This video is going to focus on finding remote jobs, and I'm not really going to discuss gigs. You know gigs are, you know, just to define them, gigs are things that where you can work for multiple companies at one time, and they're not, and it's not necessarily full-time employment. Gigs are just little pieces of work you do. , some sites you can find those if you're looking for them or like Amazon Mechanical Turk and upwork.com, freelancer.com and there's a bunch of other sites, but we're going to focus on finding full-time remote jobs in this video. Now, a few things you need to understand, it's a very competitive marketplace for finding remote jobs. Again, you may think you're very valuable, but you're generally speaking going to take a pay cut if you are working a remote job.
Okay. Cause there are people all over the world. So that's one quick distinction. You have to really fight hard to get these remote jobs, and if you get one, you have to keep it okay. And make sure you're always at the top of your skillset because employers have a lot more people to choose from when they're looking for remote jobs as it doesn't. Everybody wants to work at home and play with their kids, and you know, hang on the beach in Thailand, everybody wants to do and have a consistent paycheck. It's obvious everybody wants to do that. So it's more competitive.

Second off is you want to have a niche. So a niche, if you are a video editor, it's better to be a video editor for self-development videos. If you have a really defined niche, you're going to be able, there's going to be way more companies that are going to be willing to work.

You can work remotely with. Okay. One side note to keep in mind is any job can be a remote job, and I'm not going to talk about how you can turn any job into a remote job in this video, but really if you have a very well defined niche, like what I just said, no self-development YouTube videos, you can work remotely anywhere. You just contact a company that has those sorts of clients, and you can work remotely for them. If you have a niche such as, you know, you are, I don't know, it can be, it can be anything. You know, you are a web designer for consumer electronics websites. That's, you know, that's a niche, you know, and that's something that you can turn any job in a remote job if you're one of the better people in your field.

The last thing is ego. Ego. You got to get rid of it, okay? You've got to get rid of your ego. When you work in a remote job, again, the marketplace is very competitive. So if you come into something where you know, and I'm not saying lose your personality, but if you have, you know, if you have certain political beliefs, if you have certain religious beliefs, if you have certain, you know, if you have a certain type of sense of hor that some people find divisive, if you are, if you joke around with your clients too much, if you are, there's any nber of things where you really inject your ego into situations in your job or with your employer. But again, in a regular job, people are basically, you know, people can handle these weird differences in personality, but when you're working remotely, you can't do it. You can't do it.

And really just have to be client focused. How can I get the most work done? How can I give you what you want, not inject what I feel is needed into the situation? So you really have to move your ego aside and just become a productive little capitalists citizen. Now I'm going to show you these three different distinctions about a remote job that you know that you need to get them. And then I'm going to show you some websites where you can find a remote job.

Okay. So let's check out some websites where you can find remote jobs. So the first website I'm bringing up here is called working nomads, and working nomads is kind of a play on this term called digital nomad. A digital nomad is kind of, you know the new term for people who are really working remote jobs. It kind of glorifies this side of things because generally speaking, if you can work a remote job and I'm talking about a real full-time job, or you're getting paid like it's a full-time job, you can live anywhere in the world you want.

It's a really beautiful thing. And in another video, I talked about you know how to take time off and travel for a year. I talked about how really all you need to travel full time is $500 to $2,000 and really any job, any skill-based job that you can get here in America is going to pay you at least $2,000 a month no matter what skill you have. So you can travel full time with any job really. You have a remote. Okay. So let's go into this.

So as you see, there's a ton of jobs here in most jobs that are posted are going to be for things that are something around something around development. There's a massive demand for developers and development. Look, junior, graduate developer, you know, graphics creator, a lot of design jobs, VP of communications, project manager, react js developer, okay.

Software engineer, Ruby developer, UI developer, Dev ops engineer. So many Dev jobs. But if we look here, we can also see there's a lot of there's a lot of marketing jobs out there too. Okay. Obviously development. If you want to work remotely, get a skill and development, okay. Get some sort of, you know, become a swift developer, become, you know, whatever. Get some kind of development skill. But if you want to do something else, lots of, lots of marketing jobs, you know, director of marketing, VP of communications, PPC manager, SEO Manager, copywriter, project manager, you know, creative directors. You have all sorts of marketing positions available. But keep in mind, if you look at this, it's a six to one ratio. Okay. Six to one ratio of Dev jobs, verse marketing jobs. So it's just a bit more competitive, and the pay is a bit less for marketing jobs. Whereas if you have, if you can develop well you, you know, you have an excellent chance of getting hired., you know, that gives you your best chance of working Devs job.

Another site I like is called tech guys who get marketing. And this is a site I actually used because in my business I work with a lot of people who do various marketing activities. For me, I have God, I have so many people that do marketing related stuff for my business, and they're all remote. You know, I use sites like this one. , so you see right here, tech guys who get marketing and I'm at their job page. So work at tech guys. So as we see on this page, they have a bunch of requirements. Again, you know, they're looking for people who are good in programming. They're looking for people who are excellent in design, and they're looking for people who are good in project management here.

So it's programming, project management, etc. Now they have a lot of requirements here. They require you to send videos of yourself. They require you to know all of this different, you know, all these different marketing, you know, marketing aspects of things. They require you to know these different CRMs. They required to know a lot of specific tools and skills that frankly it'll take time to learn. But if your goal is really to get a remote job, it might be essential to look into. You know, even if you're a developer that knows PHP, CSS, and HTML, you know, they're looking for people that know infusion soft that knows WordPress, that knows salesforce, right. These are all essential things. If you are looking to work with, if you're a tech guy looking to work with a marketing company and I'm sure it's, you know, they have some pretty good jobs there.

So those are all things you want to be aware of. Now last but not least, you just Google job boards, remote work, job boards in Google, and you can find a bunch of job boards. Here's, here's an article on a medi 28 job boards to find remote work for travelers and digital nomads. Okay. So if we scroll down here, we see a ton, a ton of job boards, good pro-angel lists, atlas, and boots, digital nomad, DNX jobs, flex jobs. You have a ton of job boards out there where you can find a digital job, remote jobs. And again, there is a marketplace for it out there. A lot of new business owners like myself are primarily working with. People are exclusively working with people on a remote basis. So the jobs are out there. It's increasing. You do have to be competitive, but you can do it.

And if you do it, you know, I mean, the benefits are you can spend your whole life, you know, near your kids, you know, closer to home. Again, that doesn't mean you can't work. I think a lot of people think that means they can be lazy or just run to their kid when it's crying. You can't do that. Okay. If you're working a job, you can't just run out of the room and take care of your kids or whatever. But also you know you do and you can. It also means you can't just go to a foreign country that has no Internet access, you know, are not good Internet access. So you can't do go to meetings. You need to make sure you have stable Internet access, and you're available. When you tell your boss you're going to be available. It doesn't mean that you can slack off or you know your friends are feeling like doing something so you can leave early. It doesn't mean that a remote job is a job. It just means you can wake up in whatever city you want to and still do it.

So hope that educated you a little bit, about finding remote jobs on the Internet. Like this video, if this help, you got something from this. Leave a comment, and many of these particular resources helped you, whether it was, you know, just knowing what to google search, you know, like remote board job boards or a, you know, digital nomads or tech guys who get marketing, you know, these were placing, that helps you find a remote job. And I also subscribe to my channel with you learn how you can work for yourself as an Internet entrepreneur. I run my own business online, I've been running my own business online since 2012. I'm not working for anybody. If that's something that interests you, there's a link in the description that explains to you what I do. I do what's called affiliate marketing. So thank you for watching, and you have a great day.

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Best Places To Work Remotely

John lays down the best places to work remotely around the world

Remote work is the best, and I'm going to go over some of the best places that I've worked remotely in the last five or so years since I've been a digital nomad Internet entrepreneur.

So I'm going to get into from personal experience what my favorite place is and what the best place I believe is to work remotely. But you know, I do need to give a quick shout out to a nomad list because they have a great resource that I've used of all the different site, all the different best cities in the world rated by other digital nomads, to work remotely. A little bit about me. I've been an online entrepreneur for since 2012, and I've traveled to over 40 countries in that timespan just, you know, working everywhere around the world. Traveling was really one of my primary goals, you know, it was the reason why I started an internet business ,the reason I got into Internet business because it was the only business that would allow me to be anywhere in the world I wanted to be and still make money and still earn something sizable for myself.

So little disclaimer about this video. I'm going to go over the best places in the world to work remotely. Not like the actual specific like locations and I actually will name a few locations, but one thing you'll want to know is that wherever you are in the world, you want to make sure you have a quiet place. I'm putting quiet here, right? These are my four little tips about working remotely. A quiet place is crucial because you know if you're, if you're shooting videos or if you want to be focused, I think it's always good to have a quiet place. That being said here, my other criteria of places to work remotely in general, you need to be in cities where there's a fast internet connection, Okay. Fast Internet is so essential to working remotely, and it's one of the most significant problems that I ran into trying to travel the world and work.

I'd get to a country like Cambodia, and they've just absolutely awful internet connections. You can't work, you can't get anything done. If you need to upload video files if you need to download videos if you need to watch the videos if you need to upload a website or download a website or you know, a lot of just normal things. I think that goes along with, you know, running an internet business. You, you just need fast internet. I think it's kind of the nature of the beast. So go to places where there's a fast connection, and I'm going to go over a couple specific locations right after this of my, my, you know, the place on the top of my list. Kind of like right along up with a fast connection as you want a steady connection. Now I've gone to places like Haiti or Vietnam or even, you know, even certain locations in Thailand and the connection is just on, and it's off their brownouts because the electricity infrastructure isn't, you know, isn't built up enough.

So you know, the the the whole power grid Brown's out around, you know, noon or whenever, you know, whenever people are using the most air conditioning. And that happened to me a few times in certain places in Thailand, but you want to go places where this connection is steady. If you have to do a meeting, if you have to do a, you know, a business call or a conference call, you can't have that call drop in the middle of your go-to-meeting, and you know, the Internet's out for five to 10 minutes. So then hop back on and say, oh, sorry, the Internet browned out here for 10 minutes. Because then there, you know, they're just going to say, why the heck did I allow you to work remotely in the first place? This is an inconvenience to me. So you don't want to do that. If you have a remote job, you don't want to be dealing with those issues. You're lucky enough to have a remote job. You need a steady connection. So you know, make sure to check the down uptime and whatnot of the place you're at.

The other criteria I give to working remotely is cheap. Having a cheap place to work, remotely is a significant benefit. You know, assuming that you've got that fast, steady connection, you can really work anywhere and that's the benefit is you can save a lot more money if you have a job for a, you know, a German or a British or American company and you can work somewhere else in the world, that's fantastic because you can take that extra money that you would be spending at your cost of living and saving that up.

Now a few of my favorite places to work remotely, the first one I would say is, you know, Chiang Mai, Chiang Mai, Thailand, and there's a lot of good places to work remotely in Thailand. But Chiang Mai is one of one of my favorites. Chiang Mai is excellent because it has a great community of other expats and ex-pats means expatriates, people from other countries. So there's a lot of westerners, there's a lot of people from America, Australia, and Europe that are hanging out in Chiang Mai. You know, it's a lot of people that speak English, that are from America, you know, you can just, or from Europe, you know, that, that you can just connect very easily. And they have a lot of businesses that only cater to Westerners, which is really lovely. So you're living in a very foreign, you know,, it's a jungle, right? There's a, but you know, there are businesses like rock climbing, you know, rock climbing is not something they do, you know, they naturally do in Thailand. But you know, I'm a big rock climber, and they have some great rock climbing areas, and they have, you know, people who will belay and assist you and you know, they've, they've holes carved out in place around there. So that's what I mean by you can get some of these really cool western things you'd want in these foreign places. So I liked that about Chiang Mai. They've all sorts of stuff. It's extremely cheap. It's in the north of Thailand, and it's very laid back vibes, and they have a pretty consistent Internet. So, uh, that was a really cool aspect of Chiang Mai.

The second place in Thailand that, you know, I'm a huge fan of and I believe, you know, many other people are, it's kind of what I call, it's kind of the decompression chamber for all, you know, travelers in the world. I mean, this is the this is the spot where, you know, all roads kind of lead to Rome when you're, you're backpacking or when you're a digital nomad is Bangkok. Bangkok is, you know, fast, steady internet. I mean, it's a big city with literally every Western amenity you could want. And it's relatively cheap. I mean, if you're looking for some of those western comforts, it's not the cheapest place in the world. I'm going to go over, one of the most affordable places that fit these criteria in the world.

I've seen in a second. But Bangkok has a vast community of, you know, Westerners that are there. They have, you know, a lot of businesses that catered to Westerners. If you want, you know, it doesn't matter what you want. Hamburgers, pizza, you know, if you want fried chicken, you know, they have KFC, they have McDonald's, they have, they have a Tgif there, you know, they have chilies, you know, they fat burger there. They have everything you would want. You could go to Bangkok, and you know, nothing. You could have this totally foreign experience because it's very culturally foreign, but you could hang out with all, or it's, it's really great. I really liked Thailand's got so much culture. And it really blends in foreign cultures very well.

Now the third place I'll recommend is one of the more exotic places, and it's incredibly cheap, but they actually have excellent, steady, fast internet. They have a good community of expats there, and they've really cool culture. I mean, it's really, and just beautiful, beautiful countryside. You know, the city itself, isn't that Nice? It's meta or Met's gene Colombia, and I was in Columbia. I stayed for three months in Columbia when I was traveling. And, you know, part of it was, you know, I took a six-week kind of intensive on salsa dancing. You know, I wanted to learn the Colombian style of salsa dancing. It's a little different than the kind of like straight forward way. And that was really fun. You know, for me, I'm very like, you know, left brain thinking.

So I'm trying, you know, I wanted to learn how to dance to like get me out of that. And I also really enjoyed their kite surfing, and I went on some jungle excursions, and Columbia is really great. And as I said, a lot of Americans live there. There's a vast community of Americans that live in Columbia. I'd say, Costa Rica, Panama, and Columbia are like three major hot spots for Americans, uh, outside of the US.

So that goes into my fourth place, which is Costa Rica, Costa Rica, massive community of American, very open-minded, self-conscious or conscious. You know, a lot of conscious entrepreneurs. A lot of people run companies down there, you know, uh, and hire people. So there's a whole community down there, and there are all the western amenities you want as well. If that's what you want, you know, if that's not what you want, cool. But if you want your Heinz Ketchup, you know, go for it. You know, if you want your excellent medical care, you know it's there so you can get all this stuff in Costa Rica. Costa Rica is a great, a great spot to check out.

And the fifth place, the last place I'll throw on this list is probably one of the coolest and one of the least known. And they've got a great internet connection, and it's, Tague has zoot Morocco, it's this place, on the seaboard of Morocco. It's inland from, I believe it's some somewhere close like Merrick cash or something. But there's this coworking spot called Sun Desk Son Desk, s, un de, s, k, and it's run by a German woman. She was a traveler. She was a digital nomad, and she wanted to settle down, start a business, and she started this great coworking spot that has a high-speed Internet connection. And you know, there's excellent surfing all along the coast. It's like a surfer's.

Morocco is a surfer's paradise. There are so many Germans that come down from Germany and surf there. It's like insane. I never knew how many Germans that were in, in Morocco, there are more Germans than French in Morocco. And the French used to own Morocco. I don't know how that makes sense, but it's an excellent spot for surfing. It's also an excellent spot for Kite surfing, which is one of the reasons I was there. And they've got all these fantastic like hidden valleys and desert oasis around there. It's so fricking beautiful, I went on a safari in the Sahara desert. There's this, you know, there's this big line of mountains called the Atlas mountains. You Cross over these mountains, and then you're in the Sahara desert, which is a vast desert that spans all of Africa.

And you know, I, we rode around on camels, and you know, I stayed in tents, and you know, all of this was, you know, like two hours away from Taka zoot. You're in a completely foreign, I mean it was just so awesome, and it's so amazing and very forward. Don't have a lot of western amenities in Taka zoot, but, you have what you need, and you have high-speed internet. So I really loved that place. And if you found this video helpful or informative in one way, let me know what was the best, uh, either tip or the best place that I named that got your interest the most in this video. Make sure to like subscribe. If you'd like to learn a little bit more about how you too can work remotely and, a, if you want to learn what I do for a living, you know, I'm an Internet entrepreneur and a half then for, you know, since 2012 you know, you, there's a link in the description, which includes free training so you can learn about what it is I do to make money for living.

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I want to Quit My Job But I’m Scared

Have you ever thought to yourself, “I want to Quit My Job But I’m Scared”? Many have, and John has some advice for you.

So I'm going to go over in this video how to quit your job, even if you're scared. And how I delayed this decision for months. I was freaked out of my mind quitting my job, but I did it. And how it can be the best decision of your life.

Am John Crestani and I quit my job in 2012. Now, I was super scared. Let me just put it that way. I was super scared when I first quit my job, and I would have put it off indefinitely if something didn't happen. And I'll tell you about what that something was for me, which really forced me to think about my life. Just to give you a little bit about my story, I was paralyzed for months. You know, I had gone into my boss, and I justified all the reasons I wanted to raise. And this was June in 2012, and I had everything to say to him, but I remember he had responded with saying or what, and that was the only thing I didn't have a response to you know, I didn't want just to quit. You know, I was working a job.

I believed in this whole idea of, you know, people get paid what they're worth, and you move up, you do good work, and you move up, and you know, or other companies hire you. It's been, I didn't know my answer to or what cause I wasn't about to threaten anybody with like I'm going to resign or something. But since I've quit my job, you know, my, at my job, I was managing Adwords accounts, and I was making $6,000 per month. In 2015, my company hit my first million seven figure year. I made roughly a million dollars in profit. Okay. Just to give you an idea, my first seven figure year was actually about almost 3 million. We did 2.8 million, and I did about a million dollars profit. And last year, 2018, my company did about 5 million, also again, about a million dollars profit. So just to give you an idea of where I've gone from quitting my job has been huge, and I'm so happy I did it.

But the fact that I'm even speaking to you right now, I'm in this position and just to give you an idea, youtube isn't my main business. You know Youtube, I have a lot of subscribers on here. I have people that follow me and all that jazz, but this is not my main business. I just kind of speak to people here because I like telling people my story and helping influence the world. I know a lot of people are looking for information. There's a lot of garbage out there on the Internet, but I hope this can give you some real insight into what it takes to quit your job.

Now let's zoom back a second to 2012 after I decided after my boss had been basically ‘D' bag to me and said, or what, you know, what I did is I was paralyzed for months. I decided I was going to quit, but I didn't do anything about it. I was too scared. You know I was too. You know, I didn't know what my parents think. I didn't know my coworkers would think, I didn't know. You know how I would make enough money sustainably. I was really worried, you know, I had wanted to work on my own, you know, I was looking actually to be an entrepreneur. I was just tired of the whole kind of job, corporate life. And I was also really freaked out because I knew when I, when I quit my job, and I went to work for myself, you know, there's a good chance that I will work for myself for a few months, then I will be right back at a job again. That's what had happened two years prior. I graduated college in 2010, and I tried to be an entrepreneur, worked really hard and you know, eight months or something like that.

Six or eight months later I failed. I couldn't make it, and I had to get a job, and that was a huge blow to my confidence, right? Because in my mind I was just going to quit my job being an entrepreneur. So in my mind, I had already tried that path. I'd already failed myself, and now here I was going to quit my job again to work for myself. I think I was twenty-three (23) at the time and everybody around me told me, John, you're making good money. You're making six grand a month. Like most of my other friends who had graduated from college, they weren't, they weren't making six thousand (6,000) a month. Most people I knew weren't making $6,000 a month. Most twenty-three (23 )year olds don't make six thousand (6,000) a month. Everybody around me was telling me I was supposed to be happy in my situation, but I knew inside of myself, I knew there was so much unmet potential that I felt I wasn't living up to.

I wanted to really have a big effect on the world. And by the way, keep in mind all during this time, I'm taking on freelance clients. I had been freelancing, and I had all these clients paying me Two hundred and fifty dollars ($250) five hundred dollars ($500) a month to manage their advertising accounts. But I could never get enough people paying me to really take over my income. It could have been, I just didn't have enough time, or there weren't enough people out there. I wasn't pitching high enough, or maybe it wasn't that I was, I was valuable enough. I didn't know. But it all freaked me out. Right. So it wasn't until August 2012 I went to a Tony Robbins event, and a this is not a pitch for Tony Robbins event, but this had a huge effect on my life. This is just my personal experience.

And I went to his event in Schaumburg, Illinois. And, and by the way, for anybody looking to do anything, Tony Robbins don't watch his youtube. Don't watch his podcast, don't read his books, just go to an event. That's where he shines. Okay, if you do anything, Tony Robbins, just go to an event. Don't do any of the little stuff. If you can't afford the event, don't do the little stuff. Just wait until you can afford an event. And his events are like five hundred (500) bucks. So I went to this event, went out there was staying in like some hostile. I was like, you know, scraped together some dollars. Went to it. Super pumped. I'd heard a lot about it. There's like 10,000 people in this room, right. It's a huge use a ton of people at these things, and the energy is off the hook. So was the second day, and Tony was speaking and what Tony went over was he did this exercise with us called the Dickens Process, and we can kind of go over this a little bit right now, but if you want to go through the dickens process, I suggest, you know, you can youtube it or something.

There's, I'm sure there are videos that go over this a little more in depth, but what the dickens processes are, it's a guided meditation where it forces you to really look inside of yourself and make hard decisions. And that's all Tony does. What Tony really helps you do is you do a lot of exercises, but it's all internal stuff. It's, he does a lot of kind of guided, basically guided meditation and he forces you to look at things in your life and figure out what your goals are, where you know, where you're at, where you want to go, you know what's happened in your past, how that affects your present or your future. He, you know, all that sort of stuff. It's internal and, but what the dickens process is he says, imagine one thing, one decision that you know you need to make in your life, but you decide to put it off for a year when he started the, you know, this, this guided meditation off with that.

I thought to myself, I said, “oh my gosh, I know exactly what decision it is I'm putting off.” I know exactly what he's talking about. I was like, “that's me, that's me.” And you know, I said, “I decided to quit my job, but I haven't done it.” And again, I was freaked out. I was scared. So he said, “put it off for a year” and he says, “I want you to think about where you're at a year from now.” “What are you feeling?” “Where are you?” “What's in your life?” “Are you closer to your goals or further away?” “What sort of people are you surrounded by?” Now the next thing he does is he asks, “okay, let's back up a second and let's go two years into the future.” He's like, “this decision that you know you-you need to make.” He says, “let's say you do nothing about it.”

He's like, “take yourself two years in the future. Where are you?” “How do you feel about life?” “What's life like?” “Who are you surrounded by?” “What are you wearing?” “Who Do you interact with on a daily basis?” “What is in your life?” “What new things aren't in your life?” “What smells are around you, and he asks you to do that.” You go five years in the future, delayed making that decision for five years, five years. “What are your feelings?”” How happy are you?” “What is life like?” “Where in the world are you?” “How much closer or further away from your goals are.” Okay, let's go 10 years in the future, you delay quitting your job for 10 whole years. “Where are you?” “What sort of people you surrounded by?” I don't know.

You know, for me, I didn't like any of my coworkers. They're just people. You're forced to be around. Isn't that funny? You know, most people don't like their coworkers? Isn't that a fun fact? By the way, why are you spending most of your life with people you don't even like being around who you wouldn't actually be friends with in real life? The only reason that you're friends with them or you hang out with them is because you're forced to work with them, right? So imagine spending the next ten (10) years of your life being with people that you don't actually like, that you won't actually be friends with in real life. And he has you do that 25 years in the future as well. What's your life going to be like? How much closer further away from your dreams, your goals are you in twenty- five (25) years if you don't quit your job? And you delay that decision for twenty- five (25) years.

Crazy, and I went through this exercise and he goes much longer, much deeper in that and it was painful baby. It was painful going through that exercise because you really have to imagine delaying that decision. You really have to imagine doing nothing, and if you really go deep in your brain, you have eyes closed, you're going there. You realize if you delay making that decision, it's a big problem. I realized I was so far away. I'd given up so much of my life if I had waited twenty-five 25 years to really quit my job. It was unbearable. It was unbearable.

Okay, and the second part of the exercise is he has you imagine how life will be like in one two five 10; 25 years. If you do make the decision how great life can be, you make this decision what people you're surrounded by, you're surrounded by self-intention, entrepreneurs. People are moving in the same direction as you or whatever. That is the point being. He really creates what is life like if you don't quit, what can life be like? If you do quit your job, you got to really think of these possibilities and get out of fear. Now what happened for me was after I went through this exercise, what happened during this exercise, I actually cried.

I'm not a crying person. I'm Irish, you know, in northern Italian. So I'm like very like, you know, I don't show emotions, you know, like emotions are bad, you know, emotions are vulnerability, and I'm not a vulnerable person because I'm a man, right. So emotions are bad, you know, in my kind of like culture growing up. So you're not supposed to cry. But again, I didn't know anybody at this Tony Robbins thing. I wasn't thinking about it because I was deep in the exercise. It speaks to me, and where I was, I was bawling. I was sobbing because I realized, you know, I really had put myself in that place of delaying making decisions I knew I needed to make for twenty-five (25) years.

And it freaked the hell out of me. What I imagined was it life wasn't that bad. Right? I, you know, if I delayed quitting my job, I was, I'm a really good hard worker. I would make more money. I'd hit that six-figure salary in a few years, it won't take me long to be hitting six figures. You know, I'd ended up marrying somebody at my work, like office buildings around where I worked, and I would have married some cute girl or whatever. And you know, we would wait a few years to have kids because we want it to feel financially sound and then we'd eventually have kids. But we need to get a mortgage.

But the mortgage would put me under financial pressure to make more money because even though I was making good money, we wanted to keep up with the Joneses. And that would kind of freak me out because you know, we, you know, we need to make more money. But again, we met, you know, we're both workers so she would support me working and we'd get a little, can be a little distance in a relationship, and I'd work harder, and she'd played more with the kids, and she'd take time off and we'd have a mortgage, and I have to, you know, work harder to make the mortgage payment and whatever and all this stuff happens and I would never have actually accomplished any of my dreams, which were to see the world. I wanted to see Thailand, I wanted to see Morocco. I want to see Brazil.

I love extreme sports. People tell me they love my stoke because I love doing fun things. I love skiing, Kite Surfing, you know, surfing, etc. I love doing these things. Jet skiing, I love, I love riding a jet ski and just popping a big way. If you know, I go out in San Diego, it's illegal actually, but you know, I go out on the wave fly up ten (10) feet in the air, it's great. But all these things I would have missed out on had I been working a job, and I would have settled for not a bad existence, a comfortable existence, honestly, but one where I didn't truly give my gift to the world, and hopefully I'm giving my stoke, you know, stoking you. That's a California term. But where I didn't truly give my gift to the world, I didn't truly live out my dream because I had been working in fear.

My advice to you, if you're scared about quitting your job is that it's natural. It's normal, and it's not your fault. It's the way we are conditioned to be throughout our whole government or education. The media has taught us to work a job and have somebody else pay for our value, but the reality is that you are never going to be able to shine your light on the world. You're never going to be paid what you're actually worth if you're working a job. If you spend those years between twenty- five (25) to sixty-five (65) eight hours a day, most of your life is spent working a job. And if, and the statistics are eighty -four percent (84%) of people hate working where they work, chances are if you're watching this, you hate your job in China and Japan and in Asia, it's, he actually even higher. Over ninety percent (90%) of people hate their job.

So why do you spend the majority of your life doing something you hate makes no sense. So my advice to you is if you're scared, don't worry. It's natural. It's not your fault. But at a certain point, you need just to do it. If you are looking for some information, how to quit your job. I've got another video I'll put up here, which goes over how to quit your job gracefully. It was over a few tips about that.

But if this video helped you out at all, hopefully, my story did. Let me know. Let me know in the comments if this had any effect on your decisions or anything that you're going through right now. In the comments, there'll be really meaningful for me to understand your context. Make sure you like this video and subscribe to my channel. If you want to learn more about, you know, not just quitting your job, but how to work for yourself or remote work opportunities. Now, my business is affiliate marketing, and if you want to learn more about how I do that and use the internet to make a lot of money, there is a link to my free training in the description. It's great speaking you, and I hope I added some value to your day.

What To Say When Quitting A Job You Just Started?

Have You Ever Wondered What To Say When Quitting A Job You Just Started?

Hey, so in this video, I'm going to be going over how to quit your job. You just started your dirty dog. Now I'm going to go over my three-step formula three BDP. I will be going over kind of some rules of thumb to do this as well.

Hey, so I'm going to go over my three step kind of formula for quitting a job that you know, you recently started, and I worked for myself. Now I'm kind of an entrepreneur, but back when I was working jobs, I'd quit jobs that I just started and never had anything bad come out of it. And I'll tell you a little story later about, you know, how I really, you know, actually made money from quitting my job. But let's go into this first.

So first is B and B stands for being brief, okay, be brief. Don't go into too much detail. Don't let your boss know you. Know that he's, that he's a total ‘D'bag and don't talk about, you know, these coworkers that you hate and that are stealing and stuff from the company and you can't stand the customers and you know it's an inhumane workplace and you are underpaid, overworked. Don't go into any of that. Just be brief, okay. Be Very brief. Just say, handing in my notice. I'm not going to be working here anymore. Thanks, but no thanks. Don't even say no things okay. Just be brief say I am handing in my notice.

Be Discreet When Quitting A Job You Just Started

Discrete, being discreet means don't give information. Don't let the person know when you resigned from a job that you just started, don't let them know that you're going to a competitor. Don't let them know that you really hate the job or that you hate the customers. That you hate the product or you think they're scamming people or it goes against your morals? They don't need to know why you're quitting, and they don't need to know where you are going. That's your business. It's your business. They don't need to know you're starting your own business. Whatever it is, that's you, baby. So be discreet again. No going into personal ego trips and emotions. Telling them what they can do or why you hated it. You know, it goes against my morals. It's not you, it's me. It's just my morals. Don't, you know, go with your company's products. That's a horrible thing. You know that because you're attacking them. Don't go into any of those things. Again, brief and discreet.

Last point here. The last point is to be positive. Again, you never know when you're going to have to go back into the workforce. You know, you might not be quitting to start your own business. You might not even be moving industries, okay. And chances are if you're quitting and you're going to stay in the same industry, you may need a job there again. So, always be positive and tell your boss, thank you for the opportunity to work here. Just say, I'm moving on, and I'm handing in my two weeks notice. There's not much more you need to say. Okay, be positive. Thank them for the opportunity. Don't go on the attack. I know so many people that you know, just love to flip tables and talk about how everybody's ‘A' holes and ‘D' bags and stuff like that. Don't do that. Be Positive. And also what this will do is it'll also cause your boss like mine trip because if you're positive and you don't tell people what you're doing, people get really curious. You know, they were like, why are you quitting? Then what happened? Did you win the lottery? Did you inherit some big money? Did you start a business, you know, make a lot of money, you know, what are you doing? People are always wondering where are you working for a competitor?

Give Less Information When Quitting A Job You Just Started

And the less information you give, the better. Because if you keep your boss guessing, you know what? What happened to me as I did this and my boss, he had no idea where he stood. And I think in his mind, I think he was thinking, he's trying to steal some of my clients for me. So what he did was he said, look, John, you don't have to do anything. You just, I just have to cc you on emails. And you have to reply every once in a while. If the client specifically calls you out, he says, it'll take you less than four hours per month.

Okay, of work, but I'm going to continue paying you $6,000 a month. So I was basically making $1,000 an hour. My boss was just doing it to hedge himself against me stealing a client. Even though we had employment agreements and all this sort of stuff, he was so worried about me stealing clients that he was going to pay me a big paycheck because I was so brief, discrete and positive.

So if this helped you out, let me know in the comments. What was most helpful for you to quit your job that you just started? Was it being brief, was being discreet or was it being positive? Because I know all of these things are hard. Also, if you liked this video like it loves to see your likes. Like, like, like, like, like and subscribe to this channel if you'd like to see more information on quitting your job, working remotely and also, you know, working for yourself. I teach people how to create their own internet business. There's a link somewhere in the comments if you want to check out more about what I do to make money and am also happy to have been able to share this information.

How To Make A Commercial

Are you a teenager looking for creative ways to make money?

Rich people don't learn from poor professors. And in this video, I'm going to be showing you my three step system for creating commercials or ads specifically for Youtube and Facebook.

So here in my ski shell lay, I'm going to show you my three steps to creating a commercial for youtube or Facebook advertising specifically. Sorry, I'm making fun of Tai Lopez. But seriously, here are the three steps that I do to create ads for Youtube. I spend hundreds of thousands and millions of dollars between Youtube and Facebook advertising my products and other people's products and services and affiliate marketer. Now the three steps are simple. It's HSE, and I'm going to be going through each of these.

So first you want a hook, okay? That's the first thing. A Hook or what's also known as a pattern interrupt. Now, when I started this video, what I said was rich people don't learn from poor professors. That's kind of like, I don't know, it's kind of like a new statement. And one of my other ads, I said, Jesus won't teach you how to be rich, and you want to basically tie together two different things that don't normally go together to create a good hook.

That's a pattern interrupt. It's like, what, you know, one thing I said to one of my friends, which like just caught his attention , when I was talking about my experience at Burningham, and I said, “Oh yeah, you know, I went out one night, and I could taste all the lights, and I was looking at this red light in it. It tasted like a strawberry.” And he's like, what you can't taste lights? And uh, you know, but that's like, that's like catches people's attention. Or another one would be, you know, why don't models date poor guys, in that case, it's something that you don't normally hear said because that violates social to booze to say something like that. Or I could say, you know, like, let me tell you how this beer made me a millionaire and no, I don't own this beer. And you know, I could turn that into a story about, you know, how it was at a bar and I met my mentor getting me started in affiliate marketing and online business and all that stuff.

So a hook is just something that is very different from the norm. Okay. And you can use hooks for anything no matter what you're selling. I used a couple of different examples, but tie together things that don't normally go together. I was Buringham, and I was literally tasting colors, and you know, it's like what, you know, where do things go from there? I think the best hooks actually sort of having to do something with the subjects you're talking about it. As I said, Jesus won't make you rich. Right. I'm talking about money. Like that ad is meant to sell a training program of mine, which if you want to learn more about, there's a link in the description or you could subscribe my channel. But you know, a training program of mine that actually teaches people how to make money online. But most people don't tie together like religion and making money, or they don't say, Jesus, you know, it's like, oh, don't use that name.

You know, like, so that gets people's attention. The second thing is you want to have a good story. Everything marketing, all marketing is all sales are, it's storytelling, it's good directed storytelling that should overcome objections while you're telling the story and display the benefits of the product you're selling. Now the way I like to tell stories is you can't just dive in a long story, don't you hate it when you're talking to somebody, you say, oh your dog got sick, what happened? And they launched into like this 10-minute story, and you're just like, Bro, I didn't want that much detail.

Right you know, it's like, oh, okay. Like you told me your dog was sick, give me like two more sentences. And you're like, well, you know, I thought he'd really liked this garlic chicken I got from Zane Ku chicken, you know, the Mediterranean chicken place and I guess dogs can't eat garlic. So he just diarrhea it all over my kitchen. You're like, Haha, like they've got a little more detail. That's all I want to know. I don't want the 10-minute version. I just wanted you know, the 30 seconds longer version.

Now after those two sentences, if they were to say you diarrhea it all over the kitchen, really like what? What'd you do next? They're giving you permission to go into a little bit of a longer story, right? I'm going to spare you the detail about what happened my dog. But the point is they give you permission to go into a longer detail. So you told him one sentence, work into my formula, told them two sentences, told him four sentences, and then what I like to do, let's say I tell the four sentence story, what you can do with a story. Let's say that's about it, right.

We're talking for a good youtube or Facebook commercial. What's you're talking about is you're talking about two to three minutes, okay? Now on youtube, you can go longer. You can go like 10 minutes. I say longer the better, but two to three minutes is a good baseline okay. Don't do it shorter, you're leaving money on the table.

And I'll make up a story here, but basically, my formula tells them the story in one sentence. Then tell them the story in two sentences. Then tell them the story in four sentences. Summarize the story in two sentences and then summarize the story in one sentence. With a call to action. And with both of these, you have what I call a CTA. Meaning you're telling them what you want them to do. So let's make up a story here. Okay, let's make up an ad. Let's make up a story for selling you this marker.

So I had the hardest time finding markers to do my training presentations on, but I came across this Magnum sharpie I didn't know existed. And it has made people so much happier with my training presentations it's awesome. Told you a story in one sentence.

Let's go into the story in two sentences. So before the problem that I had was that I was using these boards and I would be using this little marker, you know, those little itsy bitsy markers you could like barely see their like little these little lines, and you could barely see anything. And I was going through all this time of like drawing diagrams, and then I would post the video on youtube and people would be like, John, I can't see what you're writing. So I did all this searching and googling, and I went to different office stores, and I found they actually sell this rare brand of sharpies really hard to find called Magnums. And there are these huge monster thing. I call them man markers, and you can write big, and people can understand them. Told the story in two sentences.

Now if I were to go further, I would tell the story in four sentences. So, you know, when I was writing small, it was hard for people to understand and I felt like my markers were holding back me conveying information to my audience to help train them in something that's very important, which is making, learning how to start their internet business. When I started using these big markers, it completely changed around how I was able to teach, and it allowed people actually to get the information I was trying to convey. Since then, I've been able to get a success story after success story. I have more subscribers on my youtube channel than ever, and it's growing by hundreds a day. And not only that, but I'm also seeing success stories coming from my students saying I was able to learn. The fact that I'm able to learn for free from mentors like you in such an easy to understand ways changed my life forever. Thank you, John. And that brightens up my day, told it in four sentences.

Now summarize in two sentences. So if you want to learn not only how you can use a better marker, but if you want to learn how to train better, I suggest you subscribe to my channel and check out the videos. Then I'll summarize in one sentence, subscribe to my channel, and you'll get easier to understand diagrams and information and training on how to start your online business. So I just told a big story there, sorry for the long-winded but that was 10 sentences. Okay. That would be a two to three-minute ad if I were to chuck that down.

You can follow the same format to tell any story. Use the hook and tell a story like that and you can convey a message with a strong call to action. That makes sense. One, two, four, two, one. Now what I do if I want to make it longer is I will actually do one, two, four, 16 four two one and I'll just do a much longer story. I kind of ramp it up in between, but I hope that makes sense.

Let's get down to the last thing. The last thing of doing a good commercial is editing. This is, I don't know how to do this stuff, but I pay people to do it now for youtube. Youtube ads are driven, and TV ads as well are driven by visuals. Five filmed myself, and I did this hook. I would take that video and what I would do for Youtube is I would splice some B roll into it. I'd splice some B roll of me using markers and creating stuff, and I'd splice some B roll of like, you know, a closeup of the marker and a pen around. I do whatever. I'd add in some B roll of some cool stuff.

The visuals are what drives youtube users because they're watching the ad and they're listening. They're hearing your language while you're talking of through the ad, but they want to be visually engaged as well. The way Facebook ads need to be edited. Again, you're working with a square. That's what shows up on Facebook. It's square. It's not that rectangle which shows up on youtube. You're watching a rectangle right now, but on Facebook, if you're doing an ad for Facebook, it's driven by not so much the visuals, but you need to be throwing words in peoples' faces. Most people, 84% of people are watching Facebook ads without any audio on.

They're kind of sitting there, and they're looking at, they're an ad, maybe they see the video, and they're kind of saying, ah, I don't want to click the button because if I clicked the button for sound and I'm like invested in the ad. Most people use Facebook, like when they're doing other things. Most people are not listening to your ad. That's why you need words flying in people's faces. You need to show people, you know why a marker changed my life, you know? Or something like that. That will get people's attention on Facebook. Here's my story. And then it's like the marker. People want those words flying in their face because they don't want to actually have to listen on Facebook to what the video is saying. So that's how you edit an ad for Facebook and youtube.

Oh! That is good information. That stuff. I haven't told anybody yet. And this is a whole new world, this video advertising stuff. Now, if you've got something from this, give me a big like and put a comment in there and let me know what the most useful was. Was it learning about the hook? And the pattern interrupt was learning about the story. What does it learning about the editing? This is new stuff. Nobody's talking about this, and I hope you're getting a ton of value from this because if you are scribe my channel, hit that bell so you can see what new videos I come out with. I'm always coming out with new videos on a daily basis about how you can create an online business and make money doing so. So I look forward to seeing you in my next video.

How To Gracefully Quit A Job You Hate

Do you hate your job? Don't waste your life working there. Here's How To Gracefully Quit A Job You Hate!

I'm going to be going over how to gracefully quit your jobs and five specific tactics you can use in handing in your resignation to make sure you keep your options open and open yourself to new opportunities.

I quit! Throw a flip over a table or something. Isn't that what everybody wants to do is just go crazy when they quit their job? Like this sucks. Screw you guys. Many of you or many of us or whatever. We'll have to go back and work a job. You know you want to leave your options open. If you don't want to burn all your bridges, it's not a good way to go through life. And in this video, I'm going to be going over how to quit a job gracefully. I know I quit my job. I had no intention of ever going back, but I did it in a graceful manner personally. And what ended up happening, my boss gave me, just literally gave me, my pay for, you know, I said I'm going to quit, but he gave me my pay for the next six months without having to do anything. He just said to answer a few emails from this one person. But I'm going to go over a few ways of how I was able to create such a crazy arrangement for myself quitting my job, but also a few ways how you can gracefully quit your job.

So the first suggestion I have to quit your job gracefully is give one month's notice. And this is what I did. If you're respectful, if you're truly trying to be respectful of any employer, keep in mind that their business, they, it takes time to hire people. It takes much longer than two weeks to hire a suitable replacement for whatever position it is you do. You know, the higher up of a position you are in, the longer it takes to hire somebody. I know I've employed plenty of people. I've employed dozens and dozens of people. I've also fired a lot of people, you know, in my career as an entrepreneur, it can take months to hire a good person. So give one month's notice. I mean, what you can do to be respectful truly is tell the employer, hey, you know, I'm, giving my one month's notice, but if you need a little bit longer, let me know. I want to make sure that you find you have enough time to find a replacement for me. That's a graceful thing.

A second way to quit your job. Grace, please be brief. Don't drag on it. Anything long winded, no stories. Okay, no stories. Don't go on about stories of what they can improve or what you can improve or how good of a job they did or how good of a job you think you did or what coworker was stealing from them or whatever. No, they don't need to know much. Be Brief. Okay. Just say, Hey, I just like to let you know I'm handing in, you know, I'm giving you my one notice. It was nice working here. Don't go into other things. Just say, I'm handing in my one month's notice. You don't need to go into other topics of conversation.

This goes into the third point which is discreet, really important, be discreet. Again, if you aren't going to a competitive competitor company, they don't need to know that. If you are going to work for another company, they don't need to know that if you are going to work on your own, they don't need to know that if you married somebody and they're making money for you, if you just inherited money from your grandparents, whatever the situation is, they don't need to know that. Be Discreet. Your situation is your own. Of course, any employer is going to be dying to know why are you quitting, especially if you're a good employee, especially if you're a high performing employee. But I'm going to go over and just in just a few points here, I'm going to go over how this third point actually can work to your advantage the most, and I'll go into that in just a little bit. I'll use a story from my own experience.

The fourth point is to be positive. If you don't give your boss a reason to hate your guts, especially if you are a good employee, you will drive them crazy. And I did this with, with my boss, the last job I worked. Again, I was brief and discreet, but I was positive. I said, oh, thank you so much for the opportunity to work here and the joy of the job. I'm giving my month's notice. Thank you for the opportunity. I learned a lot, but I'm moving up because in everybody's mind they're thinking, why the heck is this person leaving? Why are they thanking me? Why aren't they flipping tables? If you don't give them a reason to go to hate you, it flips their mind. It flips their minds. If you really want to drive your boss crazy, don't yell at them and be like, you're an ‘ A' hole, and you treat people like cattle and you know like you underpay people, you have zero respect, you have power problems. You know there's a reason your wife divorced. You don't go into any of that stuff. Just be positive. It'll drive them crazier, especially if you're a good employee and if you weren't a good employee, I don't know what to say, man. You know you have one life to give it your effort.

Now the fifth tip is to have a plan. Do you know? No, obviously all that should have been number one, but I think it's just obvious. If you're quitting your job, have a transition plan, maybe you're going to a competitive company, maybe one of your clients, maybe one of the company's clients is hiring you directly. You know, maybe you're starting your own company, whatever that is. You should have a plan to make money when you're going off on your own. Now, whatever company you're going to work for, make sure you have, you know, multi-month contract, you're working on your own, makes you getting paid at least, you know, one and a half times what you were being paid at, you know, the monthly salary at your old company. Just to give yourself that buffer zone because entrepreneurship is hard. The other caveat to this is known, your number either have a plan and or no your number because there's a very good chance if you do these four things, your boss will be driven crazy, and you'll be given an offer to work for them at a higher price point.

They'll say, what do you want to stay here? I'll give you a raise; I'll give you more money. I'll give you a bonus structure. What you know, I'll give you equity. What do you need to stay here? And so know your number. If that number is a higher salary, let's say making 40,000 a month and maybe if you're making 6,000 you would do better. Or maybe it's having a investments schedule if you're living in some like you know, high tech area like me like you want some equity in the company, right? Maybe move to different position, whatever that is. Know what things that your boss could throw at you, where you'd have to be. But also keep in mind if you are telling your boss you're going to quit once, you need a much higher salary number because they made just say something to get you to stick around and then fire your, butt very quickly because you're an unloyal soldier. Generally, I would tell you don't threaten to resign and then just go back and work at the company. Because once you've shown that you're not loyal to the company, you know, that's not a good sign.

Now, what happened in my case, you know, my last job was in 2012 I worked at an ad agency, and I hated it. I did all of these things and what ended up happening was I had set a goal for myself. I had a, I was, I was taking on some clients on a freelance basis, and I got of roughly what I told myself I do is I was making $6,000 a month at my job. To quit my job, I knew I had to be making about $10,000 a month on a recurring basis, right. Because some clients, you know, I was managing Google ad words accounts as managing other people's Google ads.

And I knew some clients would drop, you know, they dropped off every month. And some clients, they, you know, I got new clients some months if I was out there talking to people. But overall, I knew I needed that $10,000 a month. Now, what happened was, I won't go into the full story, but I realized I wanted to get one client at $10,000 a month. And I changed around a lot of things in my life. I had to start hanging out of new places. I got one client at 10,000 a month, and then I handed in my resignation to my job. I had additional clients that are paying me $500 a month. So I was making $13,000 a month outside of my job. And I was just like, okay, sweet. I landed this big deal. I told my boss, I said, he, I won't use his real name.

Hey, B I'm, you know, giving my month's notice. I was discreet, and he was worried. He was worried. I had no intention of working for him. I hated him. I hated his guts. He was a total A-hole, totally turn me off the job experience, but I did all of these things. Brief, positive, discrete. He had no idea what I was doing. He thought I was stealing his biggest clients. Okay. In his mind, I believe what he was thinking is; he thought that I was either trying to negotiate for a raise or I was trying to steal his biggest clients. And what ended up happening was, the first thing he said is, what do you want? He said, “what do you want?” I said, “Oh, I'm just giving you my one month's notice.” He said, “I know, what do you want?”

Which is kind of crazy? Okay because I had gone to him two months prior asking for a raise and a, what he had told me was in that meeting, I justified my raise. I just to let you know, I added personally an extra hundred thousand dollars per month in profit to this ad agency into my boss's pocket. So he was making a lot of money, extra from my work and his answer to when I asked for raise was, are what or else what that was, what he said are else what? I said are else I don't know? Because I was, interested in moving up in the company, but he's just said are else, what are you going to do? So when I told him I was quitting, I knew I was quitting. I wasn't going to let them jerk me along. I didn't want to work for this guy. He asked me all the questions. He said, “are you moving to another company? You're working for another agency?” And I just said, you know, that's, I was very discreet. I was very discreet. So that's my own business.

But I'm handing it in my month's notice. If any started going on the attack, he said, “you know, I have legal agreements with you, John, if you were trying to, if you, if you're trying to work for one of these other companies, you know, that would be a big problem, right” And I said, “yes, I understand that.” He's like, you understand there's non-disclosures. And I said, yes, I understand that. He had no idea what was going on. He said, are you going to work for yourself? Are you starting your own thing? But I said that's none of your business. I said, or I said, that's my own business. Something like that. It was very polite. I was discreet. Who knows? Brief. It drove his mind crazy. What he did was, he came back to me, and he offered me, he said, I'll pay you your salary six grand a month.

The client, you know, one of our clients really likes you a lot. I will; I'll just end. This was the biggest client he said, just, I just asked you, communicate on emails with them. The maximum amount of time will be four hours, per week that you'll need to communicate on emails. That's it. And I'll pay you six grand a month. And for me, that was awesome because, for me, I was thinking, okay, I'm making about 13 grand a month now, or whatever it was. I'm quitting my job, but I was going to make the extra six grand a month from my job anyways for the next six months. So what ended up happening was I took it. Not only, not only was I making all this money on the side, but I didn't even lose the income from the job because I quit my job so gracefully.

I put my boss, I freaked out his mind, and I was a, I was able to earn, and the story goes on. I ended up getting a second client, and I had been pitching three clients at 10,000 a month retainers. So I got a second client. I'm at $10,000 a month. So I ended up going from making roughly $6,000 a month to $30,000 a month. My first month was working for myself, and I was 23 years old. It was the scariest decision I'd ever made in my life, but I did it the right way. I did it the right way. I left my opportunities open, and I ended up making that money from my job anyway. It was crazy. So that started me off on my entrepreneurial career and in that timespan I, I ended up making a lot of money, and I had no, I had very little costs of living very little.

I was living in like a one bedroom apartment. I was eating ramen noodles. I'd been, I'd been saving up money like crazy because I was so worried about quitting my job and I ended up going from, you know, my expense, my living expenses were like $2,000 a month, and I was making $30,000 a month. So that got me started in my career as an entrepreneur. It also gave me a little nest egg to go from, and that's, it's gotten me to where I am today, where I'm doing this business model called affiliate marketing, and I'm making over $500,000 per month. So I implore you, quit your job gracefully. It doesn't; you don't be mean to people. It never pays off.

If you want to learn more about my business, I do have a link in the description. I have free training. You can check it out. If you like this video, I encourage you to like it. Subscribe to my channel if you'd like to see more information about, you know, just quitting your job or remote work or you know, working for yourself. And also in the comments, let me know what was the most impactful bullet point here, was it, you know, one month's notice, brief positive, discrete, or having that plan. So let me know what the most impactful in the comments was. Speak to you soon. You Rock, you can do this. I am looking forward to you quitting your job.

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