One of the proverbs that would fit along with the business is:
- Whoever runs after 2 rabbits does not catch one.
It seems extreme, but at least 2-3 months after you start the “big” business you do not do
anything else, leave aside even the fun, some hobby, the main activities like a job
somewhere. Many of us, in showbiz, become artists only after we have the courage to
give up our job. We go hungry for a while, we take it hard, but we succeed at the end. If
you can not, that's it, but give yourself a bad mark.
If you read biographies of billionaires or those who have succeeded in any field, you
will see that many were almost obsessed with what they were doing, and some really
obsessed with it. And in the “Billionaire” book I told you about, the man is wondering
what the secret is, how do you become a billionaire.
- I do not know what this secret is, but all I can tell you is that every opportunity I got
with both hands.
The most appropriate proverb for the second situation would be...many:
- Not everything that flies can be eaten. Prevision is the mother of wisdom. In this crap of
the world is full of pitfalls. At the praised tree, do not go with the bag. The home account
does not match that of the market.
Match a proverb for each question that you ask yourself and which you gave it a mark.
Then order the proverbs, put them one after the other, progressively, like the questions
you asked. There must be a “story” coherent, cursive, plausible. If any sentence is
absurd, look for another proverb. But
- Switching to a higher level of elimination of the possibilities of failure is
Method 3. STATISTICS
It's not about the official ones, which may be biased or may be valid in a context that
then expires, but about CULTURE, to the highest degree. Many, too many ignore it or
even laugh at it or even hate it. They can not be convinced earlier than 500 years to
appreciate it, whatever we do. And, again: