1) The best way to become an entrepreneur is to start as a solopreneur. You can test the waters, learn quickly, and start a following without the risks of a staff or investors

2) The best way to become a solopreneur is to start creating content. Costs are low, you can pivot quickly, and it’s largely passive income so you can fund follow-up efforts
3) The best way to start creating content is to curate content. You can develop your taste, leverage the audiences of others, and find out the gaps in existing products
4) The best way to start curating content is to learn the best, most proven methods already in existence, and repackage or teach them in new ways. Be sure to respect copyrights and to give credit, but this allows you to benefit from their learning and scale
5) The best way to learn the best methods is through immersion. Your biggest resource when you’re just starting is time, which is the scarcest resource for your potential customers. Immerse yourself deeply and go from beginner to intermediate in a short sprint
6) Once you reach intermediate level, create content that shows others how to do the same, faster and while avoiding pitfalls or mistakes that you made. Provide them a shortcut to the outcome you’ve achieved
7) Eventually, package up all of that into a stand-alone downloadable form that ppl can purchase and that won’t change too quickly (ebook, online course, PDFs, video recordings, etc)
8) Then talk to whatever audience you’ve built and ask them what they want next. Rinse and repeat. Each new product becomes a source of ongoing revenue, and you carry the audience into the next thing. Look out for random opportunities like speaking, training, and consulting gigs
9) Following this path took me from design thinking > GTD > habit formation > knowledge mgmt > project mgmt > work sprints so far. I never could have planned or imagined this progression, but in retrospect it makes sense
10) The faster and more unpredictably the world changes, the more ppl look to curators, guides, gurus, experts who have done it before, and recently. There has never been a better time to develop and sell ideas/methods online
11) You only need a niche of a few thousand among billions to make a great living. Start today by curating what you’re already reading/watching/learning anyway, and share or teach it to anyone who will listen. You’ll be amazed at how much it helps them
12) And my absolute best, foundational tip: create a newsletter list using @tinyletter, put the signup link in all your bios, and anytime someone thanks you or expresses appreciation, ask them if you can add them to your email list (and then do it, manually)
13) You’ll have 50-100 subscribers before you know it. Anytime you do or learn something interesting, send it out to them. You can keep in touch with 100x as many ppl this way, and the best opportunities will come from 2nd or 3rd degree connections you wouldn’t otherwise maintain
14) I’m beginning to understand my method in https://t.co/rJMaXWxc4O as the basic engine for this cycle of capture > curate > organize > share > recycle. Taking notes is the very first step

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https://t.co/6cRR2B3jBE
Viruses and other pathogens are often studied as stand-alone entities, despite that, in nature, they mostly live in multispecies associations called biofilms—both externally and within the host.

https://t.co/FBfXhUrH5d


Microorganisms in biofilms are enclosed by an extracellular matrix that confers protection and improves survival. Previous studies have shown that viruses can secondarily colonize preexisting biofilms, and viral biofilms have also been described.


...we raise the perspective that CoVs can persistently infect bats due to their association with biofilm structures. This phenomenon potentially provides an optimal environment for nonpathogenic & well-adapted viruses to interact with the host, as well as for viral recombination.


Biofilms can also enhance virion viability in extracellular environments, such as on fomites and in aquatic sediments, allowing viral persistence and dissemination.

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And here they are...

THE WINNERS OF THE 24 HOUR STARTUP CHALLENGE

Remember, this money is just fun. If you launched a product (or even attempted a launch) - you did something worth MUCH more than $1,000.

#24hrstartup

The winners 👇

#10

Lattes For Change - Skip a latte and save a life.

https://t.co/M75RAirZzs

@frantzfries built a platform where you can see how skipping your morning latte could do for the world.

A great product for a great cause.

Congrats Chris on winning $250!


#9

Instaland - Create amazing landing pages for your followers.

https://t.co/5KkveJTAsy

A team project! @bpmct and @BaileyPumfleet built a tool for social media influencers to create simple "swipe up" landing pages for followers.

Really impressive for 24 hours. Congrats!


#8

SayHenlo - Chat without distractions

https://t.co/og0B7gmkW6

Built by @DaltonEdwards, it's a platform for combatting conversation overload. This product was also coded exclusively from an iPad 😲

Dalton is a beast. I'm so excited he placed in the top 10.


#7

CoderStory - Learn to code from developers across the globe!

https://t.co/86Ay6nF4AY

Built by @jesswallaceuk, the project is focused on highlighting the experience of developers and people learning to code.

I wish this existed when I learned to code! Congrats on $250!!
I think a plausible explanation is that whatever Corbyn says or does, his critics will denounce - no matter how much hypocrisy it necessitates.


Corbyn opposes the exploitation of foreign sweatshop-workers - Labour MPs complain he's like Nigel

He speaks up in defence of migrants - Labour MPs whinge that he's not listening to the public's very real concerns about immigration:

He's wrong to prioritise Labour Party members over the public:

He's wrong to prioritise the public over Labour Party