Never forget the definition of an entrepreneur:
"Entrepreneurs don’t do most of the work. Entrepreneurs identify the problems, discover the opportunities, and then build processes to allow other people and other things to do the work.
Entrepreneurs identify the problems, discover the opportunities and then build processes to allow other people and other things to get it done.
Discover the why of your motivation. What's your purpose? Where do you bring the most value? What gets you excited enough about your business that you'd spend a 5-hour flight consumed with only to be bummed when the plan is about to land? What gets you excited to wake up at 4AM and get going on it?
Set a revenue target for the year. What is a healthy run rate for your business that addresses your burn rate so you can continue to grow?
Ask better questions. Instead of asking how can I generate $2k this week, ask how can I generate $2k today? Your brain will find the answer. Give it a bigger problem to solve and get to work solving it.
Identify what is holding you back. What obstacles have you created? Which ones can you eliminate? These might be clients, or these might be bad business ideas you dedicate time to pursue. For me, I feel it's a lot of not-quite-finished projects that have the potential to generate recurring income without additional work.
To attract attention (& the money the goes with it), you've got to dream bigger than you ever have before.
https://www.mikemichalowicz.com/what-are-your-immutable-laws/