What if we sent all our bitcoin to zoltron@strike.me haha wouldn't that be funny?
I should learn to how split up s19s into individual boards and run off 120v
I tried to mine a couple years ago, the electricity prices were right, but I was blocked by the wiring in my house - wasn't viable // couldnt stomach a 3k investment to rewire my house on top of the miner cost
bitcoin only > nuance Venn diagram for XMR > bitcoin only
Just use ecash
https://fountain.fm/episode/3Bd1tcxwgykW0G7d0P1f
nostr:nevent1qvzqqqpxquqzq3e0fkxs4kwq6a68jducfqpw3ls6zjhysy47jql3w3wk68cvlhdmqrfeya
The (midwit, and my own) heuristic is "why are the darknet markets using monero instead of bitcoin?"
Why are the poors so obsessed with sub-coin denominations?
# Starting Your Own Business: A Step-by-Step Guide
_Based on Jack Spirko's insights from "Finding the Right Business to Start"_
## Introduction
Starting a business is one of the most rewarding and challenging journeys you can undertake. This guide will walk you through the process of finding the right business for you, understanding your customers, building effective systems, and achieving the freedom that entrepreneurship can provide.
## Step 1: Identify Your Business Type
The first decision is determining what type of business aligns with your goals, skills, and resources.
### Product vs. Service vs. Hybrid
**Product Business Considerations:**
- Physical products require manufacturing, inventory, shipping logistics
- Digital products offer scalability without physical constraints
- Product businesses often require more upfront investment
- Consider whether you'll manufacture or resell products
**Service Business Considerations:**
- Lower startup costs in many cases
- Your time is the primary resource being sold
- Can be functional (accounting, design), educational (coaching, teaching), or entertainment-based
- Harder to scale unless you build a team or create systems
**Hybrid Business Considerations:**
- Combines elements of both product and service businesses
- Example: A custom cabinet maker who both creates products and installs them
- Offers multiple revenue streams
- May require more diverse skills and systems
**Action Item:** Write down 3-5 business ideas that interest you, noting whether each is product-based, service-based, or a hybrid.
## Step 2: Conduct Your Personal Inventory
Before committing to a business idea, honestly assess your personal situation.
### Skills Assessment
1. **What are you good at?** List your professional skills, technical abilities, and natural talents.
2. **What do you love doing?** Identify activities where you lose track of time.
3. **What do you hate doing?** Recognize tasks that drain your energy or that you consistently avoid.
### Resource Assessment
1. **Financial resources:** How much can you realistically invest without creating financial hardship?
2. **Time availability:** How many hours weekly can you dedicate to your business?
3. **Support network:** Do you have family, friends, or mentors who can provide assistance?
### Gap Analysis
1. Identify the gaps between your current skills/knowledge and what your business requires
2. Create a learning plan to address these gaps:
- Consider taking a job in the industry to learn (not primarily for income)
- Find courses, books, or mentors in your chosen field
- Use AI tools to create personalized learning plans
- Partner with someone who complements your weaknesses
**Action Item:** Complete a written personal inventory addressing all the points above. Be brutally honest with yourself.
## Step 3: Understand Your Customer
The foundation of any successful business is a deep understanding of your customer.
### Define Your Target Customer
Answer these three critical questions:
1. **Who are they?**
- Demographics: Age, location, income, education
- Psychographics: Values, interests, lifestyle, attitudes
- Needs: Problems they're trying to solve
2. **What do they want?**
- Core desires and aspirations
- Pain points and frustrations
- Goals they're trying to achieve
3. **How do they want it?**
- Preferred delivery methods
- Communication channels they use
- Format and presentation preferences
### Focus on Wants vs. Needs
Remember that people are more willing to spend money on wants than needs, especially during economic downturns. Even when selling necessities, focus on the "want" component:
- Don't just sell food; sell organic, locally-grown food that makes customers feel good about their choices
- Don't just sell accounting services; sell peace of mind and financial clarity
- Don't just sell home repairs; sell pride in homeownership and protection of their investment
### Customer Filtering
Develop a system to quickly identify your ideal customers:
- Create a clear customer avatar or profile
- Develop qualifying questions to identify good prospects
- Be willing to refer non-ideal customers elsewhere
- Focus your time and energy on high-probability conversions
**Action Item:** Write a detailed profile of your ideal customer, addressing all three critical questions (who they are, what they want, how they want it).
## Step 4: Test Your Business Concept
Before going all-in, test your business concept with minimal investment.
### Minimum Viable Product (MVP)
1. Create the simplest version of your product or service that solves the core problem
2. Focus on the essential features only
3. Get it in front of real potential customers quickly
### Feedback Loop
1. Collect honest feedback from early customers
2. Ask specific questions about what works and what doesn't
3. Be open to criticism and willing to make changes
4. Implement improvements based on feedback
### Iterative Improvement
1. Make small, continuous improvements rather than massive overhauls
2. Test each change with real customers
3. Keep what works, discard what doesn't
4. Document everything you learn
**Action Item:** Design a simple test of your business concept that you can implement within 30 days with minimal investment.
## Step 5: Build Systems From Day One
Even as a solo entrepreneur, thinking in terms of systems will set you up for growth.
### Documentation
1. Document every process in your business as you develop it
2. Create standard operating procedures (SOPs) for repetitive tasks
3. Use templates for common communications and deliverables
4. Organize your documentation in a central, accessible location
### Automation
1. Identify tasks that can be automated
2. Implement tools to handle repetitive processes
3. Set up automated marketing and follow-up sequences
4. Create templates for common responses and communications
### Delegation Preparation
Even if you're not ready to hire, prepare for eventual delegation:
1. Document processes as if someone else will need to follow them
2. Break complex tasks into simple, teachable steps
3. Identify which tasks must be done by you and which can be delegated
4. Consider what skills would be needed in your first hire
**Action Item:** Choose one core process in your business and create a detailed SOP document for it.
## Step 6: Marketing and Customer Acquisition
No business succeeds without effective customer acquisition.
### Value Proposition
1. Clearly articulate what makes your offering unique
2. Focus on benefits, not features
3. Address the "golden trifecta" where possible:
- Entertainment: How does your offering provide enjoyment?
- Profit: How does it deliver value beyond its cost?
- Life-changing outcome: How might it transform the customer's situation?
### Marketing Channels
1. Identify where your ideal customers spend their time
2. Focus on 2-3 primary marketing channels rather than trying to be everywhere
3. Create a consistent content or advertising schedule
4. Track results to determine which channels perform best
### Sales Process
1. Develop a clear, repeatable sales process
2. Create scripts or templates for common objections
3. Focus on solving problems rather than "selling"
4. Make it easy for customers to say yes
**Action Item:** Write your value proposition and identify the three most promising marketing channels for your business.
## Step 7: Financial Management
Sound financial management is crucial for business survival and growth.
### Startup Budget
1. List all anticipated startup costs
2. Add a 20-30% buffer for unexpected expenses
3. Determine how much you can invest without creating personal financial hardship
4. Identify potential funding sources if needed
### Pricing Strategy
1. Calculate your true costs (including your time)
2. Research competitor pricing
3. Consider value-based pricing rather than cost-plus
4. Test different price points with real customers
### Financial Tracking
1. Set up a simple bookkeeping system from day one
2. Track all income and expenses
3. Monitor key financial metrics for your business type
4. Review financial performance regularly and adjust as needed
**Action Item:** Create a startup budget and develop your initial pricing strategy.
## Step 8: Scaling Your Business
Once you've validated your concept, consider how to grow.
### Team Building
1. Identify roles that would provide the most leverage
2. Look for "commoditized skills" that are easier to hire for
3. Create clear job descriptions and expectations
4. Develop a training process for new team members
### Process Optimization
1. Regularly review and improve your core processes
2. Eliminate bottlenecks and inefficiencies
3. Standardize as much as possible
4. Document improvements for future team members
### Growth Strategies
1. Expand your product/service offerings
2. Enter new markets or target new customer segments
3. Develop strategic partnerships
4. Consider acquisition opportunities
**Action Item:** Identify the first role you would hire for when ready to expand, and write a basic job description.
## Conclusion: The Entrepreneurial Mindset
Remember that entrepreneurship is as much about mindset as it is about tactics.
### Persistence
- Expect challenges and setbacks
- Develop resilience and determination
- Learn from failures rather than being defeated by them
- Celebrate small wins along the way
### Continuous Learning
- Stay curious about your industry and business practices
- Invest in your own education and development
- Learn from competitors and other successful businesses
- Adapt to changing market conditions
### Freedom Focus
- Remember why you started: freedom and control over your life
- Make decisions that support your vision of freedom
- Build a business that serves your life, not the other way around
- Measure success by more than just financial metrics
Starting and growing a business is challenging, but the rewards of entrepreneurship—freedom, unlimited income potential, personal growth, and the satisfaction of building something valuable—make the journey worthwhile.
**Final Action Item:** Write down your "why"—the core reason you want to start a business—and keep it visible as you move forward on your entrepreneurial journey.
From nostr:nprofile1qqs2rlzal4lleatrezg4tdrxw5d4srg3tcfkutuvjr5fzvu9h0kmrncpzemhxue69uhhyetvv9ujuvrcvd5xzapwvdhk6qgdwaehxw309aukzcn49ekk2qghwaehxw309aex2mrp0yh8x6tpd4ehgu3wvdhk68uj6gq, analyzed with https://github.com/JohnZolton/Gobble
Gobble - podcast companion MCP server has vectorstores now so you can build a knowledge base off your podcasts
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I dreampt I was a regenerative farmer and lovingly tucked my alpacas in at night. Thinking "wow, I scaled this up way faster than I expected"
Then smash cut to being a werewolf living with a pack of were-Siberian huskies running through the tundra
Freud, what mean?
Its disappointing how boomers let the US leave gold standard but here we are
Tether posted a bunch of jobs for ai node js devs and in the app said to be comfortable building with pear
Pear isn't working at all on Ubuntu and debugging is hell BC its not open source (afaict)
Feels very sus idk
Thanks for the sats
OP_StockSplit please
Bitcoin meetups are dope AF
Met a guy doing bitcoin mining, didn't have time to meet with the farmer
The daydream is a mining-heated greenhouse so I can grow ghost peppers year round
Are there meshrastic cases that aren't aids to assemble? If I was mass producing this i'd kill myself 
Lmao I should just get a mortgage but on btc
I'll take a 30 y fixed rate and take custody of 10 coins
Qvac.tether.io feels so fucking strange.
Acting like running compute on-device is revolutionary
The site looks cool tho, kind of hokey but whatever
The ones that wore different shoes didn't make it
Politicians are hilarious, this is almost a direct quote:
"For too long prices have gone up, we need to make prices go down, this bill makes prices go down"
Literally out of parks and rec
I think I'm the only person in the world who believes it's possible to vibe code consistently. https://fredbenenson.medium.com/the-perverse-incentives-of-vibe-coding-23efbaf75aee
"brevity is the soul of wit, and machines have no soul."
Bitaxes are cool but feel kind of anemic
I'm surprised there isn't a cottage industry splitting up s19s to work on residential voltage
BTC over 100k has me contemplating becoming a chicken farmer
Can only imagine what it'll be like at 200 or 500k


