>pay for 4 courses from online entrepreneurship influencers
>pay for membership in their exclusive chat groups
>all of my attempts at starting an ecommerce business have failed and I'm out of money to try again
>their chat groups are full of retards who have no idea how to help me
>have a pallet of shitty t-shirts nobody wanted to buy sitting in my garage
now what?
>>60545005 (OP)assuming this is real, you need to delete TikTok and YouTube and Instagram from your phone and go connect with entrepreneurs in the real world
if you live in a city with at least 2 million residents I guarantee there's an in-person meetup for entrepreneurs, go there and start networking with people
and stop looking for get-rich-quick schemes
>>60545018>le ebin networking memefuck off, what are a bunch of other know-nothing mongs going to do for me
>get-rich-quick schemesretard, I'm not trying to flip crypto or some other scam I'm trying to start a business. how the fuck is that a get rich quick scheme when it's well known a business will take like 2 years to get off the ground?
lmao
md5: 3305ed34b52cc498cfb9e7e47ae6d159
🔍
OP, unfortunately the course sellers make their income off course selling, they often don't care if their course is effective or not, since they can easily fake testimonials (or at least cherrypick the few good ones.)
I'd recommend a regular part-time job you like (it can be online, but in-person is better for socializing) and then trying out some side hustles. T-shirts seem like a tough sell and oversaturated, you might be better off pivoting to something else. I'd say the best tactic is joining communities, like /r/passiveincome, /r/workonline, etc.