Short Advice
My 6 Month Rule: The Rule That Will Never Let You Fail
Apply this rule to achieve success in your entrepreneurship journey.
Nowadays, many entrepreneurs are trying to become successful, but only some of them are successful. Because most of them are teenagers. It’s not bad to become an entrepreneur as a teenager, although it helps them become independent and live life on their own rules.
But when teenagers become entrepreneurs, they also face some problems. Because they don’t have enough patience and motivation that an entrepreneur needs. That lack of patience and motivation leads them to thoughts like “Quick success”, which forces them to take bad decisions.
Their bad decisions affect their entrepreneurship in many ways like leaving a business in between without waiting for their success. But today I am gonna show you a rule, which you can implement in your entrepreneur journey to achieve success.
The 6 Month Rule
I have created this rule for all those impatient people who want quick success. But they don’t know that there is nothing like Quick success, and you always have to wait to achieve something.
The 6-month rule means, that you have to wait at least for 6 months in any business to achieve success. How will you become successful if you work on a business for 1, 2, or 3 months and then suddenly leave it because you didn’t get the quick success you wanted. In 2 or 3 months, you can’t even learn a new language properly and you want to achieve success in that little time.
If you are thinking about leaving something before 6 months, think about it again. Since there’s a good chance you’re leaving your success behind because you don’t know when you are going to succeed.
Final Thoughts
You shouldn’t leave anything without gaining some experience with it. And I think 6 months is enough time to learn any business’s ups and downs. It’s not compulsory to wait for only 6 months, you can wait for more until you achieve success. Because whenever I have seen successful people, I have always noticed a similarity in their stories: they don’t leave until they have achieved success.
