what I loved about this is it breaks down into a few steps something I've had in the works for a while. It allowed me to see my own work in a way clearer way, so thank you so much for this video.
Very cool model. The one request at a time and 48hr delivery is key though. This way clients would realistically only get a couple requests fulfilled each month. There is simply not enough time in the month to fulfill that many requests this way. Unlimited feedback rounds is smart too, as with this model you want the client spending time on minor details, preventing them from having the time to request new designs. Clearly stating what design work you don't cover is a must too. He also added 'complex designs may take longer', covering that aspect too. Smart dude. I see Design Pickle uses 24 hr business hours turnaround, even more precise.
I’ve watched so many of these videos and my main takeaway is do something you genuinely enjoy. When first starting it’s easy to get overwhelmed when thinking of what you want to do but I believe as long as you do what you love, the money will follow. I’m the type of person that has many hobbies and interest so it’s hard to narrow that down but that can also be used to my advantage
I’ve tested this exact model in 2024 and only got 1 client in 6 months after launch, I say this for all aspiring designers, using this model is harder than you think in 2024. If you don’t have a personal brand nobody will care to try the offer
@@SuperReyand not sure why my respnoses keep being deleted, but summarizing for the 3rd time... Yeah, I implemented all steps that made Brett successful, expect getting an influencer to tweet about me
Put demand first. Brett filled a need by offering unlimited, affordable graphic design services. Price your service high. Brett started at $449/month and raised his prices to $88,000/month. Set boundaries. Brett created boundaries to protect his time, such as requiring clients to submit design requests asynchronously via a Trello board. Go after $5,000 clients, not $500 clients. Brett focused on clients who were willing to pay $5,000/year because he knew they would be high-value. Create a high-demand, low-touch service. Brett created a service that was in high demand but had low overhead. This allowed him to scale without increasing his time commitment. Build once, sell many. Brett increased his revenue by creating products that could be downloaded and sold repeatedly.
Nice overview, thank you. one thing I don’t think we talk about enough of this genre is the high value skills that that person built prior to getting their business idea. Without those years of knowledge and experience, Brett would have not been able to do the same thing. - I think we could spend a lot more time talking about that.
So how did he get that client if it was brand new, he had no rankings? Did he use google ads or have a mailing list or some kind of social following or a network of old agency clients to tap up? That missing piece would be key to mention, I feel.
Stop being a tight bastard and pay for his website then, these videos are to inspire and give small insights not to teach you how to start scale and build a business
All I want to know is how he manages his hour allocation to client projects. As a design joy client can I create a task to design an entire web app and have it turned around in 48 hrs? Or Design an e-commerce site for electronic music equipment? And continue to submit a request like that every 48 hours? What about reviews or changes?
This isn't the first video around here about the guy. What I still don't get and what all videos fail to explain is where the clients come from and how you actually close a deal. The graphic design market, just as any service market, is extremely oversaturated. It's basically race to the bottom for freelancers. So it sounds like you managed to reinvent the wheel and game the system by offering unlimited services for a flat price. But it's just pricing. Nobody cares about pricing tricks, it's not the point, and pricing alone won't get you new clients, especially larger brands. It's also a lie that there are only a handful of graphic designers out there who can deliver high quality services on time. There's an almost infinite number of them, at least a lot more than there's demand for. So this is a fake clickbait video that fails on multiple levels. I don't blame you tho: you just want to roll out videos fast as you can, and put the most ridiculous clickbait dollar sums on the thumbnail because you want to make a buck while you sleep. Who wouldn't want that, instead of wasting time properly investigating a business model and making a video that gives you something tangible.
You say " It's basically race to the bottom for freelancers. " The thing is, that he create a brand, and sell him like a business, and not as a freelancer. Thats how he boost himself up, not selling himself as a freelancer instead as a business. There are a lot of freelancers with high quality designs, but fewer with a business mentality. Did you notice that?
@@Iniiaki No. At the end of the day, it is what it is, a solo guy sitting in a room churning out designs. It's the definition of freelancer. You are talking about marketing. So the only difference between broke and millionaire graphic designer is their marketing skills - or lack thereof? This is a very simplistic view of the graphic design business. We all have the same marketing tools available to us: social media, ads, etc. There isn't a single link to this guy's portfolio anywhere. If there was, I bet most of us would say it's just OK but not $2M OK.
"It's also a lie that there are only a handful of graphic designers out there who can deliver high quality services on time" Absolutely wrong. It's extremely difficult to find a high-end designer who can deliver. And a high-end designer who can deliver can literally transform the value of a company far beyond whatever Brett's monthly fees are
I was looking at productised commercial photography. The problem is that I usually need to travel to the client's country / city / property in order to photograph it. I'm looking at other avenues to productise it.
I am working on something very similar. A subscription based platform where I will be converting Figma designs to real web pages (React, angular, html, css, bootstrap). I will be launching it this week. So excited :-)
There are third-party plugins that can achieve that, and the developer who will be developing the code can correct minor flaws.e,g Anima . I do not intend to discourage you.
Most companies want design in less than 48 hours with majority needing it same day. Not sure why most will pay thousands of dollars for a longer turn around time. I know they're paying for quality but I'm sure they can hire a designer for same or less that will be dedicated and active around the clock.
Yes but imagine the hustle of hiring a designer the normal way, I bet it'll take you more than 48 hours to get him started or even find one. Can take weeks at best depending on what you want.
I'm thinking this model can work really well for some designers working with startups and companies who have money. I'm building an agency like that but without taking 100s of clients per year since that's obviously unhealthy.
What types of services lend themselves nicely to this model? Probably not things that take lots of time, like web/mobile app/game development. Probably not paper pushing work that you could just hire someone full time for. I can see why this works so well for Design Joy. I’m assuming these brands and companies that hire him need recurring work done. This video got me thinking I could maybe do something similar in the music or voiceover space. It is more time consuming, so definitely couldn’t do 16-20 clients, but could easily handle 2-3. Thinking I could target music libraries or music supervisors, authors, creative directors. That type of thing.
His service, offer, structure of business, USP, CVP & UVP are *all making ZERO sense* ... but as long as he was successful in hatching a scheme like this... then kudos for him, for discovering this untapped market!
Agreed. It’s an overly simplified model. I lost trust in the video when he said “companies know they’re getting a talented designer with years of experience” or something to that effect. They are skipping over crucial points that can make or break a business. All clients will unsubscribe if the price goes from 500 to 5000/mo. Also, all clients would want design reviews and implementation strategies. There will be emails, and calls and meetings. A client wants what he’s paying for, not a lucky packet - what I get is probably good enough.
I talked to Brett about this. He never raised prices on existing clients. Only for new clients. So gradually over a few years he was able to command way higher prices. What was smart was that he underpriced his services when he was a nobody. Same concept as doing work for free to get experience etc.
What's the difference between a freelancer price and an agency price Value bro!!! His a big name is the industry, the best in the space. SO he can charge what ever he likes and Clients will still pay it
@@starterstory that's make more sense. What does Alex Hormozi say, say the highest price possible out aloud and as long as you don't laugh, the price is fine. 🤔
Really insightful to see Brett Williams' journey to success. One key strategy for solopreneurs to scale like Brett is to automate lead gen with tools that integrate directly with your CRM, saving hours daily and keeping the pipeline full. Always focus on high-value tasks!
This is a great channel..i would love to replay some of your shows on my online radio station I broadcast out of Perth Western Australia. The 101 Connection. With your permission, of course.
One thing missed in 16x5K clients to make 1mil is 12 months multiplier. How many will stay full year paying 5K? This type of service is ultra rarely needing full-year maintenance. Most will stay for 2-3 months. Then you need to find new ones. So, something just does not add up, making this “genius structure” a nice candy coat of something else. If you need to find new clients every 2-3 months, you’ll be way more profitable doing the same and charging at least 2x fixed fee instead of a sub.
High-paying clients usually stick around for longer. As long as their revenue's good, they need ongoing maintenance for their websites most of the time, which basically saves them a ton of time and money.
You can pick up contract work as a developer on sites like Upwork. What Brett does is the same as being a freelancer. They just put a different spin on it.
the salient points and essential details he doesnt discuss hahahaha, one day Brett was poor, tadah, next day he got hundreds of clients out of the void
Great video Pat, the details and analysis in this video are not only mega helpful and inspirational but also well made and put together. Will use the tips from here!
First off: it is a business because he is offering a service directly to customers for a profit. And secondly, the reason his business is successful is because of the pricing model used (monthly subscription). Those two aspects of his business strategy are not unique on their own, but Brett combined them, which is something that was relatively new for his industry, and thus garnered a lot of attention/revenue for his business. A typical freelancer bills their clients on an hourly basis, even though they work for themselves, its a dynamic cost. Compared to the static monthly subscription model. I think it would help to widen your parameters on what a business is, as a business is anything where you are directly offering value to customers. A worker/employee sells their time/skills to a sole business/company. Business owners, freelancers, etc generally take on much more risk since their income is not fixed.
I was always thinking of applying this business model to my own business for a very long time but now I’ll definitely do this. Thanks for this content.
Awesome content! It's awesome to see Brett evolution compared to the first video. Can you share the name of song used in the final portion of the video? like at 11:03?
Thanks for sharing all these awesome videos. I am just starting my SAAS startup, really gained a lot inspiration and knowledge from your channel. Hope your channel goes viral soon so more people could benefit from your content.
Send email out to current clients ahead of time notifying them of the break, close gates on client signups, pause autorenew on current clients till back. That’s what I’d do anyway
@@stockvlogger1423 Damn the course part did look sketchy. I don't know the guy at all. How do you know his numbers are fake? Not saying you are lying, just interested in proofs.
It's funny how you say it wouldn't work for any other business since design has low touch but then Brett goes ahead on his channels saying everyone could do it, not matter the business you're in 🙈😛
great video, its got me thinking if this would work for a thesis-based VSL (video sales letter) design service or strategy design work ...so many options
Why’s it called Solopreneur? Entrepreneur doesn’t mean multiple people start a business. Entrepreneur actually define as a person who starts a business
The idea behind being a solopreneur is to build a highly profitable business and not sacrifice your sanity and your life in the process. So even when your business starts seeing success and growth, you don't start pouring the profits of the business into hiring people and spending more money. This is just one way to build a business - it is not for everyone! Hope you enjoyed the video.
step#1 demand based pricing
step#2 boundaries
step#3 the $500 client
step#4 high demand, low touch
step#5 build once, sell forever.
step 0 have a following, have a pipeline, lead magnet for getting people to care about the offer in the first place
@@jo69123 Clout is really all that matters in this day and age
what I loved about this is it breaks down into a few steps something I've had in the works for a while. It allowed me to see my own work in a way clearer way, so thank you so much for this video.
Very cool model. The one request at a time and 48hr delivery is key though. This way clients would realistically only get a couple requests fulfilled each month. There is simply not enough time in the month to fulfill that many requests this way. Unlimited feedback rounds is smart too, as with this model you want the client spending time on minor details, preventing them from having the time to request new designs. Clearly stating what design work you don't cover is a must too. He also added 'complex designs may take longer', covering that aspect too. Smart dude. I see Design Pickle uses 24 hr business hours turnaround, even more precise.
As a small business owner, I have to say, this video was absolutely inspiring!!!
Love this format Patt! It's great how you didn't take the simple route of just interviewing, but instead break down principles that we can learn from.
I’ve watched so many of these videos and my main takeaway is do something you genuinely enjoy. When first starting it’s easy to get overwhelmed when thinking of what you want to do but I believe as long as you do what you love, the money will follow. I’m the type of person that has many hobbies and interest so it’s hard to narrow that down but that can also be used to my advantage
I’ve tested this exact model in 2024 and only got 1 client in 6 months after launch, I say this for all aspiring designers, using this model is harder than you think in 2024. If you don’t have a personal brand nobody will care to try the offer
how exactly did you implement it?
so you did a branding and SEO and a website, or you just updated your portfolio and did a pricing section, mentioning the flatrate plan?
@@SuperReyand not sure why my respnoses keep being deleted, but summarizing for the 3rd time... Yeah, I implemented all steps that made Brett successful, expect getting an influencer to tweet about me
What’s your website?
@@Tickettoride-f8d designstoic
Put demand first. Brett filled a need by offering unlimited, affordable graphic design services.
Price your service high. Brett started at $449/month and raised his prices to $88,000/month.
Set boundaries. Brett created boundaries to protect his time, such as requiring clients to submit design requests asynchronously via a Trello board.
Go after $5,000 clients, not $500 clients. Brett focused on clients who were willing to pay $5,000/year because he knew they would be high-value.
Create a high-demand, low-touch service. Brett created a service that was in high demand but had low overhead. This allowed him to scale without increasing his time commitment.
Build once, sell many. Brett increased his revenue by creating products that could be downloaded and sold repeatedly.
These type of videos will always show you how easy it was done.
It'll probably show you the way it was done, not how easy .
It's never easy, you got to put 14h days, at least at the beginning.
Nice overview, thank you. one thing I don’t think we talk about enough of this genre is the high value skills that that person built prior to getting their business idea. Without those years of knowledge and experience, Brett would have not been able to do the same thing. - I think we could spend a lot more time talking about that.
so true
💯
9:50 the sound in the background, Ganja by Henrik Olsson.
What a pleasure to hear it again.
How does he take a vacation? seems like it would be mon-fri 52 weeks a year.
This is so easy to understand but so hard to do, it’s hard to come up with an idea of your own but definitely possible
So how did he get that client if it was brand new, he had no rankings? Did he use google ads or have a mailing list or some kind of social following or a network of old agency clients to tap up? That missing piece would be key to mention, I feel.
Think he mentioned before that he hit number 1 on ProductHunt and that brought in quite a few clients.
I think that's the thing, too. I wish these videos told you about the hard part. This just seems like an ad.
Stop being a tight bastard and pay for his website then, these videos are to inspire and give small insights not to teach you how to start scale and build a business
That's also what I'm thinking. It makes 0 sense
Feels like an ad for Brett's business 😅
You didn't talk about the main part, his marketing strategy.
exactly that is the key
No that will be available in his course you need to buy it😅😅
@@juan-dsouza its not even in there. last checked half a year ago
Exactly.
they didnt talk about hit because hes funneling a course and this channel is getting a percentage of people who buy it
Currently my favorite channel.
Video editing is not in demand? Do you know what platform this is we’re on?
He'll die with that unlimited design 😂
All I want to know is how he manages his hour allocation to client projects. As a design joy client can I create a task to design an entire web app and have it turned around in 48 hrs? Or Design an e-commerce site for electronic music equipment? And continue to submit a request like that every 48 hours? What about reviews or changes?
8:57 …then why would a client continue paying Brett’s monthly if websites are as said: “Build Once & Doesn’t Have to be Touched Up for Awhile”?
$200,000 salary for graphic designer employee? That’s got to be like a Harvard Phd
Extremely useful information. Well worth 11 minutes of a lunch hour.
how did he get his clients???! yes you can lower the price but how did that client find him???
This isn't the first video around here about the guy. What I still don't get and what all videos fail to explain is where the clients come from and how you actually close a deal. The graphic design market, just as any service market, is extremely oversaturated. It's basically race to the bottom for freelancers. So it sounds like you managed to reinvent the wheel and game the system by offering unlimited services for a flat price. But it's just pricing. Nobody cares about pricing tricks, it's not the point, and pricing alone won't get you new clients, especially larger brands. It's also a lie that there are only a handful of graphic designers out there who can deliver high quality services on time. There's an almost infinite number of them, at least a lot more than there's demand for. So this is a fake clickbait video that fails on multiple levels. I don't blame you tho: you just want to roll out videos fast as you can, and put the most ridiculous clickbait dollar sums on the thumbnail because you want to make a buck while you sleep. Who wouldn't want that, instead of wasting time properly investigating a business model and making a video that gives you something tangible.
You say " It's basically race to the bottom for freelancers. " The thing is, that he create a brand, and sell him like a business, and not as a freelancer. Thats how he boost himself up, not selling himself as a freelancer instead as a business. There are a lot of freelancers with high quality designs, but fewer with a business mentality. Did you notice that?
@@Iniiaki No. At the end of the day, it is what it is, a solo guy sitting in a room churning out designs. It's the definition of freelancer. You are talking about marketing. So the only difference between broke and millionaire graphic designer is their marketing skills - or lack thereof? This is a very simplistic view of the graphic design business. We all have the same marketing tools available to us: social media, ads, etc. There isn't a single link to this guy's portfolio anywhere. If there was, I bet most of us would say it's just OK but not $2M OK.
"It's also a lie that there are only a handful of graphic designers out there who can deliver high quality services on time"
Absolutely wrong. It's extremely difficult to find a high-end designer who can deliver. And a high-end designer who can deliver can literally transform the value of a company far beyond whatever Brett's monthly fees are
@@blackenedblue5401 You saying this from experience? If not, what's your source?
I agree with you on this one. 2 million my ass 😂
I was looking at productised commercial photography. The problem is that I usually need to travel to the client's country / city / property in order to photograph it. I'm looking at other avenues to productise it.
I am working on something very similar. A subscription based platform where I will be converting Figma designs to real web pages (React, angular, html, css, bootstrap). I will be launching it this week. So excited :-)
There are third-party plugins that can achieve that, and the developer who will be developing the code can correct minor flaws.e,g Anima . I do not intend to discourage you.
@@leomosia ofcourse there are but no client is interested in spending so much time doing the manual work. Most of them want a final working output
Cool! Best of luck💪🏾📈
How’s this working out so far?
Exceptional video! It shows how much effort you put into planning and production. Love the concepts covered.
Thank you for your videos. You are the modern time Napoleon Hill. Keep up the good work!
You know, if it’s too good to be true, then it’s too damn good to be true
Most companies want design in less than 48 hours with majority needing it same day. Not sure why most will pay thousands of dollars for a longer turn around time. I know they're paying for quality but I'm sure they can hire a designer for same or less that will be dedicated and active around the clock.
Yes they can, Fiverr or Upwork
you don’t get it, the leave after the first month, his clients only stay for 1 max
Have you tried getting a high-end designer who's available?
Yes but imagine the hustle of hiring a designer the normal way, I bet it'll take you more than 48 hours to get him started or even find one. Can take weeks at best depending on what you want.
I'm thinking this model can work really well for some designers working with startups and companies who have money. I'm building an agency like that but without taking 100s of clients per year since that's obviously unhealthy.
Its always a great day when Start Story uploads.
Deploying my app this month and found a remote part time position while the app gets traction.
Awesome! Excited for you!💪🏾
What types of services lend themselves nicely to this model?
Probably not things that take lots of time, like web/mobile app/game development. Probably not paper pushing work that you could just hire someone full time for.
I can see why this works so well for Design Joy. I’m assuming these brands and companies that hire him need recurring work done.
This video got me thinking I could maybe do something similar in the music or voiceover space. It is more time consuming, so definitely couldn’t do 16-20 clients, but could easily handle 2-3. Thinking I could target music libraries or music supervisors, authors, creative directors. That type of thing.
I'm both inspired and skeptical! Brett's $1.8M Playbook sounds like a dream, but is it sustainable for the long haul?
Isen't productize yourself form Jack Butcher? Are they partners or am i missing something?
Did he raise his prices on his initial clients or did they stay grandfathered into the original $500/month?
6:37 in what world does a graphic designer in house demand a $200,000 yearly salary? The average designer makes probably $55k a year bro.
Lol Facts
How does he find clients?
Yeah but how did he marketize himself at the start, like how the client knew who he was and how he did he find him
His service, offer, structure of business, USP, CVP & UVP are *all making ZERO sense* ... but as long as he was successful in hatching a scheme like this... then kudos for him, for discovering this untapped market!
Here we go again. Brett must be really in need of new clients for his course?
you think Brett paid for this video?
It's only 149 USD and it's very helpful.
@@nikolaybonapartov7379 What's his marketing strategy?
people truly believe he's only working a few hours a day with 1000's of clients. It's INSANE LMAOOOO
Agreed. It’s an overly simplified model. I lost trust in the video when he said “companies know they’re getting a talented designer with years of experience” or something to that effect. They are skipping over crucial points that can make or break a business. All clients will unsubscribe if the price goes from 500 to 5000/mo. Also, all clients would want design reviews and implementation strategies. There will be emails, and calls and meetings. A client wants what he’s paying for, not a lucky packet - what I get is probably good enough.
No client will go from paying $449 to $8000 per month, when originally they are soley focused on price.
Could be new clients, not the same old ones.
I talked to Brett about this. He never raised prices on existing clients. Only for new clients. So gradually over a few years he was able to command way higher prices.
What was smart was that he underpriced his services when he was a nobody. Same concept as doing work for free to get experience etc.
What's the difference between a freelancer price and an agency price
Value bro!!!
His a big name is the industry, the best in the space.
SO he can charge what ever he likes and Clients will still pay it
@@starterstory that's make more sense. What does Alex Hormozi say, say the highest price possible out aloud and as long as you don't laugh, the price is fine. 🤔
He just raised his prices again not to long ago
I attempted 3 graphic design related businesses since 2012. All 3 failed. After watching this I might go for a fourth ride.
Really insightful to see Brett Williams' journey to success. One key strategy for solopreneurs to scale like Brett is to automate lead gen with tools that integrate directly with your CRM, saving hours daily and keeping the pipeline full. Always focus on high-value tasks!
This is a great channel..i would love to replay some of your shows on my online radio station I broadcast out of Perth Western Australia. The 101 Connection. With your permission, of course.
It's like two rock heads promoting each other
One thing missed in 16x5K clients to make 1mil is 12 months multiplier.
How many will stay full year paying 5K? This type of service is ultra rarely needing full-year maintenance. Most will stay for 2-3 months. Then you need to find new ones.
So, something just does not add up, making this “genius structure” a nice candy coat of something else.
If you need to find new clients every 2-3 months, you’ll be way more profitable doing the same and charging at least 2x fixed fee instead of a sub.
High-paying clients usually stick around for longer. As long as their revenue's good, they need ongoing maintenance for their websites most of the time, which basically saves them a ton of time and money.
@ 5K is not high paying, and it’s definitely not the case in this range.
I'm here working it all out at 48 to get online with my passion ;)
Keep pushing bro, you'll do it!
Wow, this channel is so inspiring, i just happened to stumble upon it today. So much value FOR FREE, AMAZING! Thanks.
For every success story how many have crashed. You could also interview these folk to help guide start-ups away from the worst business mistakes.
Dammnnn! The value of this video is just insane!
Keep going Cuz' ! We like that !
🔥🔥🔥
What will you apply?
24h from the start of a site to first client in web design niche? Probably he can make milllions in google seo
Do you think this will work for developers ?
You can pick up contract work as a developer on sites like Upwork. What Brett does is the same as being a freelancer. They just put a different spin on it.
honestly, big ups to the hustle. however, whatever he built is still very much a job that could be very demanding at times
How did Brett get his first client? What did he do to market his skills?
the salient points and essential details he doesnt discuss hahahaha, one day Brett was poor, tadah, next day he got hundreds of clients out of the void
Great video Pat, the details and analysis in this video are not only mega helpful and inspirational but also well made and put together. Will use the tips from here!
So he is a very skilled web designer. This is not a business but a freelance job.
First off: it is a business because he is offering a service directly to customers for a profit. And secondly, the reason his business is successful is because of the pricing model used (monthly subscription). Those two aspects of his business strategy are not unique on their own, but Brett combined them, which is something that was relatively new for his industry, and thus garnered a lot of attention/revenue for his business. A typical freelancer bills their clients on an hourly basis, even though they work for themselves, its a dynamic cost. Compared to the static monthly subscription model. I think it would help to widen your parameters on what a business is, as a business is anything where you are directly offering value to customers. A worker/employee sells their time/skills to a sole business/company. Business owners, freelancers, etc generally take on much more risk since their income is not fixed.
The question is, how to acquire clients? I mean, how all those ppl come to his site?
i haven’t seen a designer salary for 200,000 😅
that is totally doable for a Senior designer in US
Amazing.. thank you!
Great video, How did the clients find Bret in the 1st place if he didn't use Upwork or similar services? you didn't say how they found him, Google?
Exactly! I have the same question. How?
Can confirm this playbook works to over 7 figures a year.
You should start a podcast of yours and present case studies that way.
is he use workflow as a web designer ?
Demand based pricing is good but don't act like undercharging was the secret sauce
I was always thinking of applying this business model to my own business for a very long time but now I’ll definitely do this. Thanks for this content.
Have you done it?
You not explained how he get clients, from which marketing channels!!!
Awesome content! It's awesome to see Brett evolution compared to the first video. Can you share the name of song used in the final portion of the video? like at 11:03?
Thanks for sharing all these awesome videos. I am just starting my SAAS startup, really gained a lot inspiration and knowledge from your channel. Hope your channel goes viral soon so more people could benefit from your content.
Hey ,I am looking for a co-founder of my saas startup.can we connect
woaa amazing history and very well told in full detail, lots of information to take away from this video and implement, just amazing, thanks man 🔥🙌🏻
1😊01😊1😊010111😊1111
Whats the set up when Brett wants or need annual leave?
Send email out to current clients ahead of time notifying them of the break, close gates on client signups, pause autorenew on current clients till back. That’s what I’d do anyway
Hire a VA and outsource the work to another designer and/or get a partner and/or build a team.
Amazing. Came across this video at exactly the right time
Brett is a fucking genius
I like the breakdown of the process and why. Thanks for the video!!
Same!!
Got to get real good at graphics
Starter Story getting paid to pump these course makers scams is crazy
Yes what is going on with this UA-cam channel? So much of these numbers seem fake. 😢
@@stockvlogger1423 Damn the course part did look sketchy.
I don't know the guy at all. How do you know his numbers are fake? Not saying you are lying, just interested in proofs.
man all of these youtube channels just keep scamming us.
What
Wait until you see the gpt eBook kid on a recent vid & do some research or just read the comments lol
@2:37 $449/m turned into $4,995/m when i checked his website
. that's insane.
Bro what camera do you film with? I need suggestions, thanks.
you have no idea...what video did for me today!!!!!
What the hell is "approved graphic designer" you need some sort aprovement to become approved?
You say he has zero expenses? How does he market the business?
I suppose mouth-to-mouth, being active on sites where people see his name and starter story.
On entrepreneurial online communities.
Great video man, keep them coming!
Just found your channel. Awesome content
Bro, is this an AI CGI version of you? If so, It’s awesome
Wow guys. This is great. I had no idea this extended onto a UA-cam channel.
It's funny how you say it wouldn't work for any other business since design has low touch but then Brett goes ahead on his channels saying everyone could do it, not matter the business you're in 🙈😛
Great video and storytelling!!! Love your vids man.
starter story on starter story
ima be honest. this sounds like a nightmare. 16 clients with unlimited demands? do not want no sir
great video, its got me thinking if this would work for a thesis-based VSL (video sales letter) design service or strategy design work ...so many options
Did he launch a paid pads to get the first customer? SEO wont work that fast.
Great insights! Thank you!
Thank you!!! Way to go Brett!!!
First 15 sec ... i want that!!
Why’s it called Solopreneur? Entrepreneur doesn’t mean multiple people start a business. Entrepreneur actually define as a person who starts a business
The idea behind being a solopreneur is to build a highly profitable business and not sacrifice your sanity and your life in the process.
So even when your business starts seeing success and growth, you don't start pouring the profits of the business into hiring people and spending more money.
This is just one way to build a business - it is not for everyone! Hope you enjoyed the video.
Amazing 🎉
You forgot to mention that he also promoted his services on Product Hunt.
Fantastic channel. You gained a new sub!
This is genius.