@bgoofficial

Get Access to the FREE PDF referenced in the video: https://welcome.codetoceo.com/7-patterns

@Oluwasegun95

1. Solve boring but painful problems.
2. Think in systems, not in steps.
3. Success looks slow, until it’s not.
4. Do unscalable things first, ask questions later.
5. Charge early, even if it is messy.
6. They break the rule.
7. They commit before they are ready.

@flourishomotola5306

Thanks for sharing 
1. Solve Boring but Painful Problems 
2. Think in terms of First Principles 
3. Build systems and think in terms of systems, not steps. Small positive actions compound over time.
4. Success Looks Slow Until It's Not.
5. Do Unscalable Things First.
6. Learn about offers, sales, positioning, and  systems.
7. Charge early even if it's messy. If nobody is paying you for it, its a prototype, not a business. You are stall and not refining it if you are waiting for it to be perfect. 
8. Focus on profitability,  simplicity and sustainability. Focus on your values as opposed to what is popular or trending. 
9. Start before you're ready. You dont need to know how to code or even have an investor to start.

@dostongulmatov987

Things I Learned from this video:

1. Solve boring problem
2. If you are stuck Pause, see overall problem, think and solve
3. Build in silence. Continuesly push the limits
4. If nobody paying it is not product, it is prototype
5. Take the lead and take the risk
6. Break the rules
7. Make the product simple, profitable and compatable
8. You never feel ready so jump in and go all in.


Break the rules and commit to solve the small problem

@MaximBordyug.

Whoever is reading this.... Keep your head up and your heart strong. Many of life’s failures are people who didn’t realize how close they were to success when they gave up. Believe in yourself, work hard, and one day you will succeed. And I will be here to applaud you.

@Steward12625

Coding is basically to teach you logic!

@FunNFury

I could listen to you all day long man, great advice, Courage isn't confidence, it's commitment without guarantee, that  one is for the books.

@dragonsuper6195

My dad was exactly like this, though, its sad, he let a single person into his life, and that person, critically damaged his entire reputation.

@teamofwinter39

Bgo, you are motivating and inspiring and if I or when I make it big I will never forget about you and I will blame it on you

@CandidwithCAs

Clarity, examples, depth and what not ...great effort 👌

@laviray5447

Stripe solved a very painful problem but their true success came from the start up boom, so right timing amplified their success not necessarily solving the problem alone.

@nado-codes

Quite literally one of the best startup advice I've ever heard. Thank you sir 💪 Focus on solving real problems and getting to the root cause of issues instead of mindlessly charging forward, learn how to sell well vs. endlessly optimising behind a screen - and have an unwavering conviction in the face of consistent failure. Absolute gold. 💯

@PromethiumPromises

this video was only recommended to the lucky 768 people who will be entrepreneurs one day, keep it up!

@riyen_thy

It’s very hard to believe that you studied over 1,000 top tech founders.

@Moneyman077

Build something people make money from! That is my number strategy.

1. Build something people make money from.
2. Solve a problem 
3. Food production 
4. Housing!

@AdesewaAyinde

They learnt sales, positioning, offers and systems 8:15 ❤

@asu552

In the early days of their startup, they used coding knowledge to build their product, but they didn't stay with only coding; they went beyond that level to make their product better for the market.
Please correct me if i wrong 😊

@abdulsamadlukman-so2sb

"Don't guess your way forward 🤝". That hit the spot

@tanvirhassan7859

Miss you, hazard in Chelsea. What a great player you are. ⚽

@dancingdoormanable

This is an inspiring video, but motivation alone does not create opportunity. Although a more internally motivated idealistic approach is the right way to go for a startup, just believing in yourself is a motivational strategy it's not a strategy to start a business. Be brutally honest, analyze things, have a vision and prepare, then with the risk that is left, take the leap of faith and adjust when you know more.
Analysis paralysis is real, but can be combated by estimating the impact of a choice. Don't sweat the small stuff, but most certainly pay attention to the big stuff.