Why you need persistence to avoid failing.
As Dan Kennedy might say, if we all stopped doing something, if the first time weren't perfect, the human race would soon die out.
There'd be no more babies born.
We wouldn't have bread, milk, aircraft, motorised vehicles, or vehicles.
We probably wouldn't even be walking or talking.
Why is it that when everyone has experienced the benefits of persistence, some give up after a few failures attempting to make additional money online?
Does it come down to thinking that success is only for the most talented?
There are no natural-born Internet marketers.
Sure, some people have a seemingly natural talent for communication, but anyone can learn that as they did when they were younger.
The beauty of working online is that no one knows who you are when you start.
No one knows what your education level is.
No one knows what nationality you are.
No one knows your real name if you don't want to give it.
No one knows precisely where you live unless you tell them.
When you start, the Internet is a blank slate for you to write on and create the persona you choose to be.
Thousands of people have already done that for illegal or immoral purposes, but there are also thousands more who have done it for legitimate and honourable reasons.
Even in the 3D world, many people use a nom-de-plume rather than their birth name for their public-facing work.
Authors, actors, and artists to mention a few groups who are more likely to do this, but it's not limited to those groups.
The other advantage of the Internet is that no one knows if the last six times you launched a product or tried to sell an affiliate product generated $0.
They'll only know your internet name when you have already generated some traction and made some sales.
If you have managed to screw up spectacularly, you can always start again with a different persona.
There is no failure online.
There is only giving up on yourself.
That's why you need to persist.
Don't let yourself or your family down by quitting.
It doesn't have to cost you anything except the time you'd probably spend on a screen anyway.
Start for free and test stuff until it works, then scale up.
https://go.wm-tips.com/llhome.
Regards,
Brent.
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