Quote:
Originally Posted by crucifissio
the 1000$/hour is exaggerated but the principle is sound...you split up the work you do daily in to how much per hour that specific work you do brings you, and you outsource the low $/hour work that takes up your time to others...leaving you to focus on high $/hour jobs to expand your current profits...
simplified example: you are a painter...you make, for arguments sake, 10$/hour painting...your average profit for one job is say 1000$...you spend 100 hours painting but only 1 hour actually negotiating the job and striking the deal...if you outsource your manual painting job to others, that brings low $/hour income, you can focus on finding more customers that brings you high $/hour returns...yes you will make less money on manual painting because you have to pay others but you will overall make more $$ with less work because you will have more customers because you had time to focus on the high $/hour stuff like making new deals...
do not waste your time with low $/hour shit...pay others to do it...
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Cool it with the capitalism dude.