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by argiopetech
701 days ago
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Having also had this adventure, note that #1 and #2 are both full time jobs, and #3 can be when #1 vets poorly or #2 fails to get the job done on time and on target (and sometimes effectively at random). Still my favorite way to play, but you have to have time, talent, and interest in 2-3 disparate, full-time jobs. Edit: having read parent's article, absolutely agreed on the last point: Sales is hard. Not because selling things to people is inherently hard, but because it requires a long-term commitment to relationship and network building to find the people (you don't sell to companies) who are willing and able to purchase your services. Fail to keep that funnel full, and #2 and #3 no longer have a job. |
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Not sure they are full-time all the time, but definitely to be a one-person show you have to have or acquire skills in all of these.
One of my favorite things about my time consulting is how sharp it makes you. Sharp about tech, sharp about listening to customers, sharp about keeping your network alive, sharp about meeting and keeping in touch with new people.
So easy as an employee to dive into the company and not look around for years.