While it's technically possible, I wouldn't bet on it. Lots of people have launched startups that were a sure thing just to have them fail with no users. If you need money I would get a job.
Edit: if you need some demotivational material, you can check out https://www.failsights.com. A guy I know in the UK does it, and he covers startups that fail, often costing the founder significant amounts of money
The reason I have asked this question is because more than often various articles, videos, and podcasts share some incredible yet so unbelievable to me examples that someone managed to find their "sweet spot" such we say, their niche if you like, and have managed to make profit before the end of the year.
I have found it quite amusing and mind blown at the same time, it's quite difficult to understand how some people do such thing.
I assume it's marketing to join their secret club (Telegram group, Dicord channel, course) where you first have to buy something. "I made $500k by selling 5000 people the idea of making $500k for $100 each".
I mean you can absolutely make a million a year with a successful small business. Every large town has a concrete company, and most of those owners are millionaires. It is just exceptionally hard to do, and it takes decades to get there.
Also, I messed up: quoted yields are annualised, so for a 6 mo maturity you'll want to have 34M lying around with which to buy those gov't obligations.
With work + trading. I did similar amount and lost big too. It's not certain or anything, if markets crash big it's hard to manage that. But I'm optimistic
Its happening with AI wrappers (eg. AI headshot) and smart-contracts; but it will ~probably~ take more than 6-months to familiarize yourself with the space and market; if you had the domain knowledge, you could succeed insofar as there is not much code to write.
Depends on how big the initial investment is. If you start with 1000 euros - unlikely. If you start with 5,000,000 euros - plausible. Large scale marketing costs heaps and returns only a tiny percentage of paying customers.
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[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 39.8 ms ] threadEdit: if you need some demotivational material, you can check out https://www.failsights.com. A guy I know in the UK does it, and he covers startups that fail, often costing the founder significant amounts of money
I have found it quite amusing and mind blown at the same time, it's quite difficult to understand how some people do such thing.
In the next six months? Unlikely enough to be a myth.