Most people who hit their seventies are slowing down, simplifying, or gratefully accepting that the heavy lifting part of life is behind them.
Not Hackett.
He's 74 and touring more energetically than musicians half his age. New albums, global tours, packed theaters, standing ovations, the whole
thing. He's out there every night proving that your main run in life doesn't have to be the final act.
There's something invigorating about that, which is why seeing him inspires me.
We're told, implicitly or explicitly, that reinvention belongs to the young. But the truth is that the people who thrive later in life are the ones who figure out how to take all the things they've accumulated -- skills, experiences, perspectives --
and turn them into something new.
Today, thanks to the technology we walk around with in our pockets, that second chapter is easier to build than it's ever been. You don't need the equivalent of a record deal or a production team, or six months and a studio. You don't even need much time.
That’s what the replay we posted this week demonstrates so cleanly.
In
under 30 minutes -- in other words, in only slightly more time than it takes to listen to the Genesis classic "Supper's Ready" -- we walk through how someone with no business at all can create a complete, fully formed online business: the concept, the name, the lead magnet, the landing page, the emails, and even the strategy for getting your first audience.
But it’s not just for beginners.
A lot of people
already have a business but haven't yet taken advantage of email -- which is still the most reliable way to get ongoing, automated sales. Otherwise, you rely on sporadic pushes, launches, or being physically present, so the revenue comes in waves instead of steadily.
The replay shows how to fix that.
We show you how to set up a system that brings in leads and sales whether you're hustling that day or not.
Modern tools have made the barrier to entry astonishingly low. The only hard part is convincing yourself you're still allowed to start something new, or improve what you already have.
Hackett is living proof that you are.
But if you want to see the replay, your last chance is tonight, while Regina and I are enjoying the great Steve Hackett.
It
comes down at midnight and after that, it’s gone.
Here's the link:
https://www.tomwoods.com/30minutes
Tom Woods