How a 2.5% success rate made a billionaire.
We have been brainwashed to think that any loss is bad.
That if something you do doesn't work out, you're a loser.
Soichiro Honda claimed he was a business failure because most of what he tried failed.
No one knows his company, Honda, do they?
Warren Buffet is a total failure because he only had 10 winners from 400 investments.
Both of them, based on the brainwashing we get at school, social programming and the T.V. are losers.
Something doesn't stack up here.
Perhaps we need to change the way we perceive success and failure.
Instead of looking at the win/loss ratio, perhaps we should look at the wins return vs. the losses.
Warren Buffet is a massive winner on that measure, as his 10 wins have made him billions.
Soichiro Honda is also a massive winner because he also has made billions.
I suspect that you, like me, have doubts that we can make billions.
But nothing is stopping us from making thousands or even millions.
Humans are not winners or losers.
We are all valuable.
We all have ideas and skills.
We can all learn new skills if we choose to apply ourselves.
We can all try new things, and the Internet makes that super easy.
We can fail at 390 things online at minimal cost in time or money.
10 wins can be scaled into what others would see as a massive success.
Fail fast. Fail forward. Success is there for the taking.
Regards,
Brent.
P.S. It's too late to get beta access to the Kadaicha Method, but you can still use the upcoming launch to build your email list and make affiliate commissions.
Learn how to build your email list correctly here: https://go.wm-tips.com/sr-list.
Then, email me and request to become an affiliate.
I'll set that up for you manually and give you access to the affiliate tools page.
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