Interview with SEO Hobby Consultant, a 23-year-old entrepreneur who lives on holiday — how you can live on holiday too
If you want to know how to live on holiday, read this interview with the SEO Hobby Consultant. He explains his mindset, the steps he takes, and the ways he keeps things working. He used these ideas to leave a regular job behind and go for a location-independent income. He is just 23. He travels all the time. He runs his online income day by day, which lets him live on holiday, not for a few days but all the time. You should read this if you want to stop the daily work cycle for good. It also gives real advice on how you can make living on holiday a way of life for yourself.
Who are you and what does it mean when you say you “live on holiday”?
My name is SEO Hobby Consultant. Two and a half years ago, I had a regular job in the UK from 9 to 5. I was stuck doing the same things every day. I would go to work. Go back home. Do it all over again. Now, my life has changed. I feel like I am always on holiday. This is not just the showy life you see with drinks and pretty views on Instagram. My online business gives me freedom, so I am not stuck in one place.
I am able to travel and live in many places — Thailand, Brazil, Miami, Lisbon — and I earn money from each place. To feel like you live on holiday means you own your day and how you get paid. You do not have to ask anyone to live your life. You wake up in a new spot and know your bills are taken care of. The future is yours.
How did you go from a 9-to-5 to being able to live on holiday?
I started by being upfront with myself. I had the same dream you have right now. Picture waking up next to the beach with no long drive to work. You can wear shorts every day. But dreams alone will not make a life. You need steady action that leads somewhere. I picked up a high-paying online skill (online sales). I found a system that works and stuck to it. I used my savings for a runway and took a chance by going to another country. I pushed myself to know how to make money while being away because I did not want to turn back. After some time, my skill paid for itself. My pay was no longer tied to any location. That is how I am able to live like I am on a break all the time now.
What’s the first mindset shift someone must make to live on holiday?
You need to stop lying to yourself by saying, “I’m in charge.” If someone else signs your paycheck, they run your income. That means they also run your time and life in some way. The first step is to know in your heart that how things are right now—even if things feel easy—won’t give you the life you want. Move from saying, “I wish” to saying, “I will.” Tell yourself that you are worth the life you see other people living online. You must do something now, not just wait around until you feel that it is the right time.
You mentioned fantasy vs reality earlier. What’s the practical difference?
Fantasy is thinking about a better life without putting in the work to get it. Reality is knowing what you need to do and taking clear steps forward. A lot of people stay in fantasy because it feels easy and safe. But living in reality means you have to make some hard choices. You might have to learn something new, risk your money, ask people for support, and step outside what feels easy. If you want to live like you are on holiday, you have to face reality instead. You need to learn a skill that lets you work from anywhere, be in or build a system that brings in steady money, and be ready to move out of your comfort zone.
Can you define the “three things” someone needs to make living on holiday stick?
Yes. There be three main things that make this way of living work for a long time:
A high-earning skill that lets you work from anywhere. I think online sales is the best choice. It scales well, you can do the same thing over and over, and it brings in money right away.
A plan to keep making money all the time. This could be a sales setup, scripts, helping new clients, and the group of people who send work your way. You need this set way to make sure you still get paid even if you move.
The guts to step out of your comfort zone. Good planning and skills can take you a long way, but the last step is to buy that one-way ticket and go for it. If you don't, this way of living will always feel out of reach.
Why do you recommend online sales as the skill to learn if you want to live on holiday?
Online sales is easy to get. You can do it in many businesses. It also gives you steady pay. If you learn to sell things or services on the internet, you can make money from home with just a laptop. Sales is all about practice. You will get better over time, and the results also build up. Some people I know have made between £3k and £10k+ a month from online sales. They did this by getting good at selling, using a plan, and doing it again and again.
How much money do you realistically need to start living on holiday?
You don’t need a million. That’s not true. To begin, you need some extra money saved and a goal to earn about £3k–£5k each month. That lets you feel good in most places where things don’t cost much. It will cover the things you need, let you travel, and let you use some for growing more. A lot of people I know started living anywhere they wanted when they got to about £3k a month. Some people reached £6k–£10k each month, and that makes life feel easier. But you can start with much less than most people think. If you have enough money saved for two or three months and you want to learn the skill, you can get going.
How long does it take to go from zero to living on holiday?
That depends on how hard you work, what skills you have already, and the if you have a system to use. From what I see in my work with people, most do well with a plan that lasts about 90 days if they stay focused. For some, it can take three to six months. This can be much faster if you join a ready-made system and follow steps that already work, instead of trying out everything by yourself. You should know that showing up and doing the work regularly is better than working really hard only sometimes. Doing the same job over and over for 90 days will help more than working only now and then over a year.
What does your day-to-day look like when you live on holiday?
My day often has a couple of hours of focused work. This includes talking to clients, reaching out to people, closing sales, and doing operations. I also like to exercise or take a walk. I have free time to see the city. I might take calls in the morning. Later in the day, I shoot content or meet local friends.
Living on holiday does not mean you do no work. It means that you get to choose when and where to work. You get to be in charge of your own schedule. By being in charge, you can still keep making money.
What tools and essentials do you travel with to make living on holiday possible?
Minimalism helps. I keep my must-have items simple. I use a good laptop, smartphone, noise-cancelling headphones, a charger bank, a camera (DJI or the other main option) for content, and sunglasses. Internet is key, so I go for a good portable router or get a local SIM card with data.
Besides all the tech, I make sure I have apps to handle my money, digital copies of key papers, and an account with a bank I can use in other countries. That’s pretty much all I need. The less stuff you depend on, the easier it is to go from place to place.
What’s the financial safety net you recommend when you first decide to live on holiday?
Have savings that can cover your living needs for two to three months before you make the change. This helps you get started and feel safe while you build your new way of working. Try to make a small monthly income from home, like £1k–£2k, through freelancing or selling before you leave, if you can. At first, keep your lifestyle simple. A lot of digital nomads do well with much less than many people think in some countries.
You keep saying “your manager controls your income.” Why is that a problem if I like my job?
If someone else has the say over your income, they also have the say over what you can do. If you want three weeks to travel, you have to ask for it. If you want to change where you work or your work hours, you have to talk it out. When the boss is the person with power over your pay, they really have the power to choose what happens in your life. When you feel good about a job, it’s not the same as being fully free. You can feel the job is good, but you can still work on making another income so you do not depend only on your job’s location. Your aim should be to have at least one way to earn money that you the be in full charge of.
What are the common excuses people give for not attempting to live on holiday, and how do you answer them?
Common excuses include:
“I don’t know enough.” — You can learn the main skill in a few months. Start small and keep changing things as you go.
“I’m not ready.” — No one ever feels perfect and “ready”. Take action, even if it’s not flawless.
“I have responsibilities (family, dog).” — You can plan your travels around them. A lot of digital nomads take pets with them or choose places where they can handle family needs.
“I need more money.” — Start with a monthly goal you know you can try for. You do not need to make a huge amount to live and move to new places.
Most excuses come from fear of failing or not feeling good. The answer is to choose a plan and do it. Do not just keep searching for what to do.
How do I build the actual system that keeps income consistent while I move from place to place?
A sustainable system has these parts:
Lead generation: a simple way to find new leads. You can do this with cold outreach, content, or by having others send people your way.
Sales process: use clear steps, scripts, and offers to turn leads into people who pay for what you have.
Delivery & fulfillment: always give good value, so people feel good about paying you and also tell others to try you.
Operations: make billing, payment collection, and record keeping easy, even if you deal with people in other countries.
Plug into a plan that works. You can copy what people do who live on holiday now. My group gives you a ready-to-go sales system. Members use the same steps, and they get results faster than starting all alone from the beginning.
What does joining a network/system offer someone who wants to live on holiday?
Joining a group gives you help from mentors, tools you can copy, people who keep you on track, and ways to get new clients. You do not have to waste time guessing what works. You get a step-by-step guide that other people used and got results. In my group, people who follow the system make their first sales. They then grow their income to £3k–£10k every month. A good system makes it easier to go from “I want to live on holiday” to “I’m living on holiday.”
Can you share specific case studies from your network showing how people achieved this lifestyle?
Yes, there are many examples shared by our group.
James: He moved to Thailand. He used his online sales skills to make money every month, from £6k to £10k. He works only a few hours a day. He spends the rest of the time exploring the place. James set up a life that lets him feel like he is always on holiday.
Joe: He got his first closing deal just days after joining the program. He has been getting paid again and again. Joe started with nothing, but after learning the basic sales steps and following the plan, he now has paying clients.
Kyle: He closed a big deal with a client who lost £25k during six months. Kyle helped fix their process and got really good feedback.
Lewis: He made a deal that brought in £5k in revenue. Lewis got £1k as cash. This happened because he kept working and used the system the program taught.
Group wins: Many members shared wins like getting £575 commissions in one week, collecting £6.5k in two days, and sending invoices close to £9.8k. These are not just big claims made one time. Many people have learned the skill and followed the system, and they keep getting these results.
These case studies show how people went from working 9-to-5 jobs. They found ways to build steady income that does not need their all time. Now, they can live and feel like they are always on holiday.
How do people actually find clients for online sales when they’re remote?
Find clients in the same way, no matter where you are. First, look for a problem to solve. Then, find the people who can decide on it. Finally, tell them about your solution. You can use LinkedIn outreach, email outreach, content marketing, direct message on social platforms, or ask for referrals.
What sets you apart is how steady and open to changes you are. If you talk to the right people every day and change your message if needed, you will get replies. In sales, you need many leads, but you also need good ones. That is what brings customers.
Use templates, read from scripts, and track your work. This way, remote outreach can grow as you use your time.
What daily habits helped you transition to a location-independent life?
Daily habits that matter:
Daily prospecting — set a number for how many times you reach out each day. Send messages, make calls, and write emails.
Skill practice — practice talking to people for sales. Get better at sharing your pitch.
Content creation — be seen online to build trust and get leads to come to you.
Time blocking — plan your work times and free times. Stick to both.
Track money — always know how much money you have and what you spend each month.
Habits help to change nervous feelings into steady actions. The work may not be exciting, but the freedom you get from it is good and worth the time.
If someone is worried about isolation while living on holiday, what would you say?
It’s normal to feel alone sometimes. Just because you live on holiday, you are not always on the beach with people. Building up your group is important. You can do this at coworking spaces, at local meetups, and with groups of people who have the same ideas as you.
Many people make partners to check in with online. Pick a place where it’s simple to meet others. Thailand, Portugal, and Bali each have strong groups of people who work from anywhere. When you plan in the right way, living on holiday can feel full of friends and not alone.
What are the biggest mistakes people make when trying to live on holiday?
Top mistakes:
Leaving without a plan — no skill, no runway, no system.
Thinking there is more saved — not keeping in mind slow months and extra costs.
Going for “cool” places instead of money-wise places at first.
Not learning how to sell — just trusting income myths that sound easy.
Skipping community — working on everything by yourself.
Don’t make the lifestyle seem better than it is. Think of it like building a remote business. Be careful and take steps one by one.
How do taxes and finances work when you live on holiday?
Taxes depend on where you live and the places you earn your money from. You should talk to a tax professional to get advice that is right for you. It's good to get banking and invoicing set up so it works in other countries (transferwise, Revolut, Wise, or other apps for banking). Save money for taxes as you go. Keep all your money records easy to read and up-to-date. A lot of people work as freelancers or start a small business. Each one has good and bad points based on what your country asks for. The main thing is to plan ahead so you do not feel shocked by a tax bill when you are out of your country.
Is it safe to “go broke” abroad and figure it out as you go?
Going broke in another country is risky and not a good idea. You can try living in another place for a short time with some savings to see how you like the lifestyle. But don’t leave everything behind without a plan. I went to Thailand with just my savings and had to learn a lot quickly. It was tough, but I still had some time to figure things out. If you want less risk, you should get a small remote job before you go or maybe take a break from work if you can. The more money and income you have at the start, the less stress you will feel while you get better at living abroad.
How do you measure progress once you commit to living on holiday?
Measure progress through three metrics:
Income: Are you making close to £3k each month? Track how much money you get and the number of people who say yes.
Daily effort: Are you getting your work done each day and talking to people often? The more you do now, the more you will get later.
Runway: Do you have money saved up for slow times and for when things grow? Always know how much you have and add more money if needed.
Enjoy your small wins. It can be your first paid client. Or it could be your first regular payment. Maybe you feel good after your first month working while out of the country. Celebrate these moments.
How do you recommend someone start if they have zero sales experience?
Start small and structured:
Learn the basics. Read about sales frameworks and look at some outreach templates.
Practice your sales script with a mentor or a friend. Role-playing is very helpful.
Start your outreach by contacting small businesses that clearly need help. Your offer should be easy to explain.
Close some small deals first. This will help you feel more confident and get good feedback. Then you can move up to bigger deals.
If you can, join a group or program that shows you sales one step at a time. It helps cut down on wasted time and makes results show up faster.
What support systems are most useful when you decide to live on holiday?
Support systems that matter:
A coach or a mentor who has done it before.
A group where people keep each other on track for daily calling and help with plan ideas.
Local groups where people meet and help each other, like coworking places, meetups, and expat groups.
Money tools and a tax person to help with rules and planning.
These systems help you get a better chance to do well and feel less stress when you start working remotely.
Can you outline a 90-day action plan for someone who wants to live on holiday?
Yes. A focused, 90-day plan might look like this:
Days 1–14: Learn the basics. Study sales, try outreach templates, and learn about the group you want to help. Make a simple offer and show the value you give.
Days 15–30: Start reaching out every day. Send 20–40 messages each day using LinkedIn, cold email, and DMs. Test your messages and change them when needed.
Days 31–60: Turn the first leads into paying clients. Give great help so you get good feedback and referrals. Build a simple way to handle your work.
Days 61–90: Reach out to more people, adjust your prices, set up a clear way to deliver your work, and keep steady clients. Book your travel when your income is steady or you have enough saved up.
This plan helps you save time, but you have to work hard every day. The main thing is to keep doing the same things each day and follow a system that already works instead of making your own.
What should someone pack mentally before they decide to live on holiday?
Pack these attitudes:
Definiteness: Make a clear choice. Don't stay unsure.
Curiosity: Be ready to learn. Try new things in front of people.
Resilience: Be ready to face rejections, slow times, and troubles in planning.
Responsibility: Own your wins and also your losses. Do not blame the situation.
Those mental tools will help you stay on track. They let you keep the lifestyle going, and it is not just about looking good.
How do testimonials and case studies factor into convincing someone to make the move?
Testimonials are important because they show the system works for different people. In my group, you can see real money being made every month. James earns £6k–£10k a month. Lewis got £1k cash and £5k from new business, and other people had fast wins. These numbers are real and not just guesses. They help show that this way of selling can work for people from all types of backgrounds. Stories also give you a pattern to follow. You see what contact with clients looked like, how they got sales, and how their work was set up. If you want to live, work, or travel anywhere you like, look for a plan others have used before. The testimonials are signs to keep you on the right path.
How do you handle visas and long-term stays when you live on holiday?
Visas change from country to country. It is simple to get a tourist visa for a short stay. If you want to stay longer, you can check these digital visas. Long-term tourist visas and remote-work visas are also choices in some places. A few countries, like Portugal, Thailand, and Indonesia, offer ways to stay longer or visit again. Always look up these rules first, and read immigration guides. When you plan to live somewhere, think about the visa rules, so you don’t have to go back home by surprise.
How do relationships and family react to someone who wants to live on holiday?
People feel different ways. Some families feel worried. Others feel proud. Talking about things is important. Tell your family your plan, your timeline, and your money plans. Ask your family to visit you abroad. Show them the life you are making. Many of my students saw that at first their families did not feel good about it. When my students started making steady money and doing well, their families helped them. It is important to be clear and honest about what you do. You need to act in a careful and open way.
How do you balance travel and growth? Won’t travel distract from the work?
Travel can be both a rule to follow and a treat. You need to choose work times and stick to them. If you treat making money like a job you run, you look after your time. A lot of people work in the mornings and go out in the afternoons. You get to pick what to do, and that helps you get things done. You are not working for a boss. You do it for your future self.
What advice would you give to someone who’s absolutely terrified of leaving their job?
Start both things at the same time. Try to make a side income before you quit your job if that works for you. If that is not possible, save up some money and choose a date when you will start for sure. It is normal to feel scared, so pay attention to it but don't let it stop you. Take small steps, like going away for one month, trying part-time sales, or joining a group that helps you stay on track. A lot of my students were very scared at first, but got past it by doing one single thing that made them commit. They bought a ticket, sent out their first 100 sales messages, or joined a coaching call. Doing something always helps you feel less scared way more than just thinking about it.
What do you say to people who believe the lifestyle is for “lucky” influencers?
Luck is the name people use after things happen. Those who seem lucky do some things many times. They learn a skill, fail, but keep going, and repeat steps that work. You and I can do that too. I was from the same background, and I am normal. I used to be thin, had an old laptop, and did not see much for myself. I made a choice to do things and move ahead when I failed. If you want life to feel like a holiday, stop looking at others and start using systems that work.
Do you offer coaching or a network for people who want to live on holiday?
Yes. I run a group with a plug-and-play sales plan. It helps people learn the skill, find leads, close clients, and manage things from home. In that group, there are people who started with nothing and now make between £3k and £10k every month. Some now live on holiday. If you want in, the video says to DM 'TRAVEL' on Instagram to get started. The key is to use a good system and stop guessing — systems help you reach your goals faster.
Detailed Step-by-Step Blueprint: How to start today and live on holiday within months
Step 1 — Decide and commit
Make a clear choice and let other people know about it. Say your plans to someone you look up to and set a date for when you want it done. Putting your target date down helps you and others see you mean it. If you want your life to feel like a holiday, decide in your mind that you will make it real. Stop waiting around. Once you do this, you won't let not making a choice be your safe spot anymore.
Step 2 — Pick a high-income skill (online sales recommended)
Spend 30 to 60 days learning about online sales. Look at outreach scripts. Study how to handle objections and close sales. Practice every day. When you build skill fast, you earn money faster. Sales is a skill that helps you in many jobs and fields.
Step 3 — Build a minimum viable offer
Make a simple and clear offer. It should help solve a clear problem. For example, help a business get more leads or fix issues with how people move through their website.
Keep prices easy to understand. Give real value to the customer.
When you first start, focus on quick results. Get feedback from happy customers and share their stories.
Step 4 — Start outreach and track everything
Set goals each day for reaching people. Send 20 to 40 messages on LinkedIn, by email, and in DMs. Look at replies, booked meetings, people who say no, and who ends up saying yes. Watch the numbers, because they show what is really going on. Change what you say based on what gets results.
Step 5 — Deliver, ask for testimonials, and scale
Get good results, ask your clients for feedback, and use it to charge more and work with bigger clients. When you start seeing wins happen again and again, reach out to more people and set up systems to do your work. This way, you can keep your way of living and make more money as you enjoy your holiday.
Step 6 — Plan travel around cashflow
Don’t plan long flights when you are busy with closing week. Match your travel plans to the way you make money. Pick your first countries that have low day-to-day costs and strong internet. When your income is steady, you can visit more places.
Step 7 — Optimize and automate
Use simple automations to help with things like reaching out, sending invoices, and doing follow-up. Bring in online help when you have extra money. This will give you more time for the things that matter most and for your own life. Doing things the same way each time lets you grow your work without going back to an office job.
Case Studies & Testimonials (real results from people who chose to live on holiday)
James — from savings-runway to £6k–£10k/month living in Thailand
James traveled to Thailand using his savings and did not want to go back home. He learned how to sell online and followed the sales system. Soon he started closing deals. After a few months, he was making between £6k and £10k each month. He now works a few hours each day, spends time at the beach, and lives like he is always on holiday. His story shows how much things can grow when skill meets a good system.
Joe — first closing offer within days
Joe got his first closing offer soon after he became part of the network. This shows that having a clear way to reach out and practice what to say can help you get wins early on. He used his first client to show what he could do and grew his work from that point. Getting the first client is the toughest part. After you have your first happy client to talk about their experience, it gets easier to get your next ones.
Kyle — recovering lost value for a client and earning a testimonial
Kyle helped a client who lost £25k in six months. He made key changes and got their money back. The client gave a great review. This helped Kyle get more people to use his services and also made people trust him more.
Lewis — steady revenue and early cash collection
Lewis chose a slower way, but he closed a client who brought in £5k in revenue and collected £1k cash fast. The steady way he kept in touch and got better over time brought real income and helped keep things moving.
Group wins — commissions and invoices that matter
Across the network, people say they got wins like £575 in commissions in a week, £6.5k cash in two days, and invoices close to £9.8k. This shows that when more than one person uses the same system, the same results can show up again and again. Stories from others are not just there to feel good. They show that the plan works and brings results.
FAQ
How can I start to live on holiday if I’m stuck in a full-time job?
Start learning a skill that can make you good money. You can do this in the evenings and on weekends. Online sales is one option. Test what you want to sell. Get in touch with people to show them your offers while you still get paid from your job. Save some money and build a safety net. When you start getting steady results or have enough money saved, you can choose to leave your job. A lot of people move to a new place after they see that their offer works and after they get their first clients.
Do I need a lot of money to start living on holiday?
No. You need time and some money set aside. It helps to set a monthly income target that is real and clear. A target of £3k each month is usually enough for a good life in many places. If you save enough for two or three months of costs and work hard, you can get started.
Is it safe to quit my job and go abroad immediately?
It’s risky to quit without a plan. If you can, get some remote work before you leave, or make sure you have money to last for a while. You can also try a short trip first, and start to grow your business when you are away. The safer way is to switch things slowly and with thought, not just jump in.
What skills are most valuable to learn to live on holiday?
Sales, copywriting, client management, and basic money tasks like invoicing and bookkeeping can help people live and work from anywhere. Sales is the easiest way to bring in steady money, so many people say you should start there.
How do I find clients when I’m remote?
Use LinkedIn, cold emails, direct messages, content marketing, and referrals. Focus on certain industries, and make your messages feel personal to the people you contact. A tracking system can help you see what works and what to change. Keep reaching out often. Try to make your offer better over time. This is the best way to get remote clients.
What if I don’t want to travel but I want location freedom?
Location freedom does not mean you have to travel all the time. You can pick any place to stay and work from there. Many people stay in one city for a long time, like months or even years. The main thing is to be the person who decides when and where to work. Plan your life so it fits what you like.
How do visas and tax considerations work when you live on holiday?
Visa rules change in every country, so you should check them before you go. Some places let you use a digital nomad visa. If you can, take that visa. When it comes to taxes, ask a tax professional for help. They can tell you about the rules and what you need to do. Use banks that work well in other countries and watch your money so you follow the rules.
Can I bring family or a partner when I decide to live on holiday?
Yes. Many people bring their partners or family with them. You need to plan things like visas, money, and what you all expect. Choose places with good healthcare and that are safe, especially if you have your family or kids with you. To make it work, talk things out and make plans together.
How can I avoid scams when looking for remote work or programs that promise to help me live on holiday?
Look at reviews you can check, honest case studies, and clear steps. Stay away from anyone who promises big money fast, like a guaranteed six-figure income overnight. Ask them for references and proof that you can get the same results again and again. Make sure they explain how refunds work and what happens if they do not keep their promises before you spend your money.
Is living on holiday sustainable long-term or just a phase?
It’s something you can keep doing if you see it as a business and not a trip. You need to set up systems, take care of taxes, and keep good client relationships. A lot of people live this way for many years. Some of them grow and turn what they do into a business with teams and money that keeps coming in. The way you stay with it depends on having good habits and systems.
Closing thoughts: why living on holiday is about freedom — not flaunting
To live on holiday means you get to choose how you spend your time and your money. You can make the life you want. You make your own choices and do not have to wait for someone else to say yes. This way is not about trying to look better than someone else. It is about having true freedom. You do not need to be a person with many followers or feel like you are lucky. There is a way to reach this life. You learn a skill that helps you earn more money. I say that online sales is a good skill. Then, find or make something that brings money in often. You need to be real with yourself. It means going away from what feels easy or safe.
If you feel stuck in your job, doing the same talks every year just to get some more time off or a bit more pay, and working long hours for someone else, you can change things. A lot of people feel this way. Many feel unsure, and they worry about what to do next. They tried something different and put in the work. Now, they feel free, like they are always on a break. You can get this life too.
Make your choice today. Begin to learn and connect with other people. Join a group. It helps everyone get results faster. Living like life is a holiday is more than just a hashtag. It is what you make by choosing to do it.
Final actionable checklist to start your journey to live on holiday
Decide what you want and set a date. Make sure you stick to it.
Learn a skill. It should help you earn good money from home. Sales is a good way to start.
Make an easy offer. It must fix a real and simple problem.
Reach out to new people every day. Keep track of your numbers.
Help people get what they want. Ask them to share what you did for them. This will help you grow.
Before you travel, think about your money. Look at visa rules too.
Find a group or connect with someone who can help you. This can make things easier and help you grow fast.
If you want to get started now, write down your goal for the month. A good way is to start with £3k. Write a list of three skills you need to learn. For the next 30 days, talk to new people about your work each day. If you do this for a whole month, you will see change start to happen.
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