During an email chat, Mike asked me that question. Thanks, Mike.

Of course, I have unfinished projects.

I have the same issues as everybody else, lack of focus, distractions from the 3D world, etc.

We have a month-old granddaughter, and she's been taking up time, but it's just another distraction.

Crashing my bike and dislocating my collarbone has also been a distraction.

That's life. No one's life runs smoothly from one day to the next

We all have to cope with large and small events at home, at work, locally and globally.

We have to work around that stuff if we want to get the incomes of our dreams.
 

In the late 90s, a small company in Melbourne had written an accounting package that they were trying to sell. 

They put a lot of time and effort into it, but it wasn't selling as well as they wanted.

One weekend the lead developer wrote a simple little program to help newbies build websites, it was clunky as hell and built fairly crappy sites, but there wasn't anything else out there at the time.

They sold it for peanuts online and sold millions of them. 

It made more revenue than their sophisticated accounting software.

The software was called HotDog and was written by the company Sausage Software

I always loved that branding. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HotDog.

I bought a copy, and that's what got my daughter and me into building websites. 

We learned together.
 

Moral of this story?

Don't write off a simple idea because you have a big project you're working on.

That doesn't mean you dump your big project, but sometimes slapping out a quick product can give you a mental break from the big one and provide you with a feast of ideas to improve it.

Plus, of course, you could strike it lucky with the quickie.
 

Regards,
Brent.


P.S. Your ability to generate significant revenue online is directly related to your collection and efficient use of content and data

If you follow that principle, you make a living.

But unfortunately for all the people struggling to make a living online, they either never hear about this concept or decide not to listen, leading to the inevitable path of failure.

Data collection doesn't mean copy and paste for your content. 

It means aggregating it, rewriting some or all of it, transforming or combining what you learn to other content or other formats.

Sharing your insights and interpretations with your audience establishes you as someone worth listening to or reading.

With attention comes trust, with trust, comes sales of recommended products, tools, etc.

Not everyone will like you, and that doesn't matter.

You are not trying to communicate with them, but you are trying to build a following of people who do like what you do for the insights they get from your work.

How do you find these people?

You put your work in front of as many of the correct type of audience as you can.

This activity means blog posts, forum comments, videos, document sharing sites, etc.

It's not hard, and it doesn't take much time out of your day.

Write the content once, then transform it into other formats and upload it to where your potential audience can see it.

Tools help speed this up.

I use Vidnami for my videos because it's the fastest tool I have tried, and the end result rarely needs any editing.

https://go.wm-tips.com/14-day for your 14-day trial.

 
  Brent Milne
12 Torrens St
Happy Valley
South Australia

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