No is the first two letters of nothing. Is that what you want?
That is one of the closing questions I learnt as a Life Insurance Salesman.
I'm not sure it helped me much, but I always appreciated the sentiment.
It's true.
If life gives you an opportunity, say yes.
No one has lived to the fullest overusing the word no.
Most people's regrets in life come from saying no to an opportunity rather than saying yes.
That doesn't mean that saying no is a bad thing.
You should say no to things that will harm you or are likely to hurt you.
You're a smart person, you understand the difference between a positive opportunity and a destructive one.
Some think that opportunity only knocks once.
That's false.
Opportunity pounds on the door daily, but most people think it's the Jehovah's Witnesses and hide behind the couch.
The question you need to answer to yourself is, do I want to stay where I am, nice and comfortable but going nowhere, or do I want to grasp an opportunity to move up to nicer and more comfortable?
Only you can answer that, and you don't have to tell anyone your answer so that you can be 100% honest.
Regards,
Brent.
P.S. ChatGPT is taking the Internet by storm, but most of the people talking about it are little more than charlatans.
They want to sell you prompts they haven't tested and were possibly written by ChatGPT.
They want to tell you how you can make all kinds of money by copy pasting the output to get zillions of visitors for free.
But, through all the hype, there are kernels of truth.
It takes some serious winnowing to get to the kernels through all that chaff, but it is there.
Some people are genuinely making good money with these A.I. tools, and a smaller percentage share what they are doing.
This case study shows how one person developed a $640k income stream using ChatGPT.
Every step is included, the niche, the product, the prompts, the pricing, etc.
Get immediate access to the PDF here https://burtm10.systeme.io/casestudy.
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