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Career & Job Opportunities A space focused on work, growth, and new opportunities. Here you can share job openings, ask for career advice, discuss interviews, compare industries, talk about salaries and career paths, and get feedback on your professional journey. Whether you’re looking for your first job, planning a career switch, or aiming for the next big step, this community helps you stay informed, prepared, and connected to real opportunitie.


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mozzapp 1782636162 [Career-job-opportunities] 0 comments
"The only way to do great work is to love what you do." – Steve Jobs That quote sounds nice and everyone repeats it, but honestly? Sometimes you're going to hate what you do. You'll hate the cost spreadsheet, you'll hate the client who doesn't pay, and you'll wonder why on earth you didn't take that stable job offered to you two years ago. Being your own boss isn't just about flexible hours; it's about taking full responsibility when things go wrong. And they will go wrong. People think success is a straight line, but look at the case of Colonel Sanders. The guy tried to sell his chicken recipe for years, was rejected hundreds of times, and was broke at 65. [The story of Colonel Sanders' resilience](https://www.google.com/search?q=https://www.biography.com/business-leaders/colonel-sanders). There was no glamour there, just persistence. Walt Disney didn't have an easy life either. [The story of overcoming adversity of Walt Disney](https://www.google.com/search?q=https://www.waltereliasdisney.com/). He went bankrupt with his first company and they said he lacked creativity. Imagine hearing that and still trying again. Sara Blakely sold fax machines door-to-door before Spanx happened. [How Sara Blakely overcame rejections](https://www.forbes.com/profile/sara-blakely/). What these guys have in common isn't some magic formula, but the fact that they didn't stop at the first stumble. If you want to start, don't spend months planning the perfect logo or the most complex website in the world. That's a waste of time. Try selling something simple first. See if anyone actually needs what you're offering. If they don't, change your strategy. Simple as that. The secret is to have minimal cash flow so you don't go bust by month three. It's less about wild ambition and more about basic survival, you know? And there are traps everywhere. People usually fail when they try to do everything at once. You want to be the marketing, the support, and the finance person and end up doing nothing right. Another classic mistake is spending money you don't have on a fancy office or high-end tools before you have a paying client. It makes no sense. And the isolation, my god, the isolation kills. You spend the whole day in front of the computer without talking to anyone about your pain, and that eats away at you. The point is that being your own boss is about dealing with chaos all the time. There is no such thing as a moment of peace where everything is "under control." You learn to live with uncertainty and do what needs to be done, even when you don't feel like it. What was the most annoying struggle you've ever faced while trying to start a business and how did you get out of it?

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