Hello, I hope all is well. I am an 18 year old that is looking to start a business. I have dipped into the service providing area in July where I was supposed to make websites for people but I ended up doing a free trial creating videos for a possible client. I ended up stopping that. Wasn’t leading me to earning income.

My main question here is, what would you tell your 18 year old self to start? I truly like the idea of having an online business. I am in Computer Science at the moment for school and I was thinking of getting into saas. But I also see tons of different videos on different businesses to start. I just want to mention, I do not have shiny object syndrome. I am just interested in starting & getting advice from anyone.

Also, one thing I see often is, dropshipping, smma(which I tried to go in on), trading and Amazon fba. I see this everywhere. I don’t know if truly you can make a large sum of income from it or it’s just the courses that help them.

I started learning about business at 15 where I started a YouTube automation channel and later stopped that. Then got into cutting hair for others. And ever since I have turned 18 I have been learning a lot more on stocks, credit, as well as retirement plans. But truly retirement isn’t my end goal. I just like idea of working towards something.

So if anyone that is in the business areas I have mentioned I’d be open to hear your perspective from it and any perspective from others as well.

  • Nice_Passenger_239@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    In the beginning, you will not know what you love. It is your grinding away at it and getting better that makes a lot of people fall in love with their industry.

  • TO_GOF@alien.topB
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    11 months ago

    I’d tell myself to do what I did, which is to say I stated a business in a field I enjoyed.

    Next I would tell myself that even though I hate college and do not want to be there, I should slow down and take to easy. Don’t try to get it over with quicker by taking more than a full load of courses each quarter as well as attending school in the summers. I would explain that you will burn yourself out by trying to go to school full time and work full time and that you will kill your entrepreneurial spirit.

    Finally I would tell myself that the key to a successful business is stubborn tenacity in the face of all adversity. No matter what happens never give up and as soon as you can, hire people to help, even if those people do menial clerical tasks so that you can focus on what is important. And for gosh sakes if you have family members who might be willing to help you a little, let them freaking help you.

  • Badbowtie91@alien.topB
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    11 months ago

    There are two problems with this:

    1. You have to realize that entrepreneurs “quit working 40 hours so they can work 70 hours” Not saying your scared of hard work, just realize that the reality is you gotta work 2x as hard to make the same $$$ the first several years.

    2. At 18 it is unlikely that you have more skills/knowledge/experience than the average person and that skills/knowledge/experience is what becomes your product. That’s not an insult it’s just realty.

  • willslater99@alien.topB
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    11 months ago

    Wouldn’t have mattered, 18 year old me wouldn’t have listened.

    Don’t bother with the Amazon FBA, dropshipping, etc type thing, truth is yes you can make money with all of them, but no more so than any other business.

    The simple fact of things is that the best business you can do is the one someone will pay YOU for.

    I run a marketing agency that works exclusively with SaaS Startups, (not a highlevel based SMMA, a proper one), but I don’t do that because Youtube told me to, it’s because I worked in marketing exclusively at multiple different startups before that, all of which either exited or received funding while I was there. I got good at knowing what SaaS will do well, what won’t and what type of marketing works in the most cost effective way. Doesn’t mean I know everything about SaaS marketing, but because of my experience I have a disproportionate unfair advantage compared to the majority of marketers or agency owners. As a result, I now a little over a year later have 4 members of staff, regular clients and pay myself a decent income. I’m not crazy rich, but we’re growing exponentially.

    People focus way too hard on the type of business, when actually it usually works the other way round. The type of business shouldn’t decide what you learn, what you know should decide the type of business.

    Think about your experience, and try and picture this. What Business would make people who know you go ‘well of course they’re doing well, compendiousbeing is running it no one can compete with that’. Might be something related to automation, or hairdressing, or computer science, or maybe if you can’t think of anything you need to spend more time learning, but basically dig deep, what is your ‘Unfair advantage’, the thing that most other people would need to study for months or years just to get to the knowledge level you possess today?

    Fastest way to get a leg up, so the fastest way to get towards profits.

      • willslater99@alien.topB
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        10 months ago

        Early on, sold to my previous employers, then a few that I did freelance work for, then I started working consistently on social media talking about the topic and interacted with people who interacted with my posts, and then with a bit of budget to play with started with Paid Search, then with a bit more budget setup retargeting ads on various platforms.

        When I’ve got the budget, I’ll choose to do it through marketing, when I don’t it goes back to the old school method of pulling up your black book and seeing who’s buying. If you ain’t got a black book, go make one.

  • founderscurve@alien.topB
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    11 months ago

    for what you describe -

    1. at 18, just a good job, one that pays and allows you to learn about business in situ. and, importantly gives you time for …
    2. start an affiliate site, google affiliate marketing, start a niche blog, work on it a little everyday, it’ll take a long time, but in the right niche, its great for (survival) passive income
    3. start freelancing (use fiverr or other freelance sites) - start with projects that are well within your expertise, try and find ones that are very similar so you can reuse code, grow this business.

    3 is actually the real business, 2 gives you backup income, 1 allows you to develop pays you and gives you options.

    pretty much what i did, but at a later stage in my career, its still what i do… just different % of time on each of the 3

    • Wise_Cut_2543@alien.topB
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      11 months ago

      I don’t know man… I don’t want to be counted with the slums of this world… There’s a lot of real estate gurus whom have simply lost my respect due to not helping solve the problem and more so promoting taking advantage of one of people’s basic needs…

      Som thing doesn’t make sense here… If you can help me understand then please speak but if you are going to only say 2+2 material then there’s no need in chiming in 😁

      It has occured to me that if someone wants my respect in real estate then they need to show me where they built 2 homes for every 3 they sold… Lay that fact out in front of them and that will likeky shut them up quite quickly because they have mentally timed their mind mostly in one direction only…

      • cassiuswright@alien.topB
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        10 months ago

        What if I told you investment in real estate doesn’t have to be flipping houses or renting property 🤔

        • Wise_Cut_2543@alien.topB
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          10 months ago

          Nah not really… That doesn’t catch my attention either… Are you buddies with the big real estate boys? Haha

  • jradnh@alien.topB
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    11 months ago

    I think I would have suggested starting an online search business called Google.

  • Chicago_Realtor_@alien.topB
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    11 months ago

    I would tell my 18 year old self I have study get real estate license or at least a leasing agent license. That’s exactly what I did but I did it at 28 years old.

    I eased my way into residential real estate by earning my leasing license to help clients with rentals (Chicago Market). Then after about a year I studied to get my brokers license which allows you to help with rentals, home buying, selling, and commercial real estate.

    Since then, I have made an okay salary for my family and I. If I had started when I was 18 years old I would have 10+ years of experience and wouldn’t have entered the industry in my youth. I’m not complaining or anything, but if I wasn’t such a pansy at the time, my sales skills would probably be 10 fold. That’s one end of the spectrum. The other end is, real estate would have chewed me up and spit me out and then knows where I’d be at then.

    Hindsight is 20/20!

  • TomFromOpenScreensIT@alien.topB
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    11 months ago

    It’s absolutely crucial that you do something that connects with your background, experience and motivations.

    If not, you are going to be on the same level as everyone else, or even worse, you are going to be at a disadvantaged in an industry where others already have an interest and knowledge of the subject.

    Dropshipping, trading, amazon fba and those types of things are like pop music or cat memes, they are oriented towards the largest common denominator, that’s why they dominate front pages and amass so many views. Steer away from those and look for smaller niches were your interest in computers and websites is going to be relevant.

    I personally got into offering IT infrastructure for small non-technical businesses, but I ended up doing staffing and Project Management for early stage startups as well.

    Just keep on exploring your industry and go deeper rather than going back, reevaluating and starting over from 0. You are 18 years old, prepare to go deep into a single industry and role for the next 5 years and you will be a monster at 23.

    Specialize, people want to do business with an expert in a subject. They want to mentally save you as the X-thing guy, and then move on, only calling you when they need help with X-thing.

    Good luck!

    • WindSlashKing@alien.topB
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      11 months ago

      What if I’m not interested in working in the field I studied for? I only like it as a hobby. I don’t want to fall for the sunk cost fallacy.

      • TomFromOpenScreensIT@alien.topB
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        10 months ago

        Nobody likes working, we do it because we have to.

        Unless it’s the first months of honeymoon, in that case you are starting to gain experience, keep focusing on that, don’t hop to the next shiny thing.

        • WindSlashKing@alien.topB
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          10 months ago

          Its not about liking working. It’s about continuing to do something I no longer enjoy for the sole reason that I’ve invested time in it. Makes no sense unless you are really old.

  • sketchyuser@alien.topB
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    11 months ago

    Just start. And be ready to pivot by learning and testing until something starts bringing in money

  • Itchy_Neighborhood51@alien.topB
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    11 months ago

    I was exactly where you are. So many ideas with all results posted for me to see. It made it easy to wish to try everything. I am 20 now, but started when I was 13, took a break and hit it hard at 15… Here’s what I wish I focused on

    Your number one approach is to answer these questions:

    1. What is something you’d like to learn and become an expert in?
    2. How can you use this skill to provide value to people? (People pay for value)
    3. What knowledge must I have in order to GROW this money? (value investing, not trading. Expansion. Systems, etc.)

    Hopefully this helps.

    Best Regards,

    Landon

  • TexasMadrone@alien.topB
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    11 months ago

    Thank goodness I learned some trades starting at a young age. My trade knowledge put me through college with a science degree, a good one. After working a couple decent jobs I learned that if I wanted to break out of entry level pay with my science degree I needed a Masters. I was burnt out on college and decided I would take some time and do small handyman type work. That led me into now owning and operating an excavation business which I thoroughly enjoy. I use skills from every trade I learned and incorporate my degree skills as well. These particular set of skills has allowed me to be a specialist in my field which distinguishes me from competition. Best of all, I get to work outside in new places and see some amazing country. I assist people building their dreams and get to be a part of it. I also enjoy the challenges and rewards of my risk taking. I get to teach my children all the life skills that I had to learn mostly on my own and we get to home school our children and live together as a family. Life may throw curve balls at you but in the end it typically works out pretty well if you have drive and are willing to take risks and learn lessons from failing. Find things you enjoy and nail down what you enjoy about them and then create opportunities with those goals in mind.