Introduction
Most people’s AI prompts are trainwrecks, like, y’know?
They type three words into ChatGPT, get garbage back, and blame the robot. “AI doesn’t work!” they wail, while their prompt looked like “write thing good.”
The robot’s fine. The prompt is the problem. It’s like blaming your coffee maker because you put in orange juice. (Don’t do that. The coffee maker has feelings. Also warranty issues.)
And you know what’s hilarious? People will PAY you to fix their prompts. Real money. The kind that buys coffee and keeps the lights on and maybe convinces your cat you’re not a complete failure.
The beautiful part? You don’t need a computer science degree or a PhD in robot-whispering. You just need to know the simple tricks that turn wimpy prompts into money-making machines.
Let’s turn you into a prompt-fixing wizard who actually gets paid.
Before You Begin
Think of AI prompts like ordering at a restaurant run by highly intelligent aliens who take everything literally.
If you point at the menu and grunt “food,” they’ll probably bring you something. But will it be edible? Will it be what you wanted? Will it be a potted plant because technically plants are food to someone?
(Narrator: It will absolutely be the potted plant.)
Specific requests get specific results. “I’ll have the grilled salmon with lemon butter, asparagus, and wild rice” gets you exactly that. “I’ll have fish” gets you a goldfish in a bowl and confused looks all around.
Here are three free resources to bookmark right now:
- OpenAI’s Prompt Engineering Guide – straight from the source
- Anthropic’s Prompt Library – hundreds of working examples
- Learn Prompting – free course that doesn’t make your brain want to pack a tiny suitcase and flee
These resources will teach you the foundations. But this guide? This guide shows you how to make MONEY from fixing other people’s broken prompts.
Because knowing how to fish is great. But selling fish pays the bills. And selling the ability to teach fish to talk? That’s where things get spicy.
Tools You Need
This business runs on basically zero overhead. Like, embarrassingly cheap to start. Your coffee budget is probably higher.
- ChatGPT – free version works fine, $20/month Plus gives you better models (and makes you feel fancy)
- Claude – free tier is generous, Pro is $20/month if you need more thinking power
- Google Docs – free for organizing your prompt library and pretending you’re organized
- Canva – free for creating example graphics that don’t look like a toddler’s first crayon adventure
- Notion – free for building your prompt database (or for procrastinating with pretty templates, no judgment)
Optional but helpful:
- Grammarly – catches embarrassing typos before clients see them and wonder about your life choices
- Hemingway Editor – makes your writing tight and clear (unlike your closet)
- A notebook and pen (seriously – sometimes the best ideas happen when you’re away from screens and the robot can’t hear you plotting)
- Coffee. Lots of coffee. The coffee is non-negotiable and possibly the most important tool on this list.
Your 10 Step Action Plan
Step 1: Learn What Makes Prompts Actually Work
You can’t fix broken prompts if you don’t know what good ones look like. It’s like trying to fix a car when you think engines run on hope and birthday wishes.
Spend a week playing with ChatGPT or Claude. Test different prompts. See what works and what produces word salad that would confuse a salad bar.
Notice how “write a blog post” gets you generic mush that tastes like cardboard had a baby with beige paint? But “write a 500-word blog post about indoor herb gardening for apartment dwellers, including 3 specific herb recommendations and care tips, written in a friendly conversational tone like you’re texting your plant-obsessed best friend” gets you something humans might actually read?
That’s the difference you’re selling.
Try the same request multiple ways. Add context. Add examples. Add constraints. Add ridiculous specificity. Watch how the outputs change like a mood ring on a rollercoaster.
Take notes. Build a swipe file of prompts that work. You’ll use these later when clients hire you and you need to look like you know what you’re doing. (You will. But fake it till you make it is a perfectly valid business strategy.)
Step 2: Identify Your First Prompt-Fixing Niche
You can fix prompts for anyone. But starting narrow makes marketing easier and prevents your brain from melting like cheese on a hot sidewalk.
Pick a niche where people already use AI but struggle with it like a giraffe trying to limbo. Real estate agents writing listing descriptions. Teachers creating lesson plans. Small business owners drafting emails that don’t sound like robots wrote them. (Ironic, but true.)
Coaches and consultants are GOLD here. They’re already selling services and need AI to speed up content creation, but their prompts produce garbage that would make a raccoon turn up its nose.
Etsy sellers need product descriptions that don’t bore people into comas. Bloggers need post outlines. Marketing agencies need ad copy that doesn’t make people want to delete the Internet.
Pick one group. Master their pain points. Become their prompt hero.
You’re not trying to serve everyone. You’re trying to serve one group SO WELL that they tell their friends, their enemies, their houseplants, and that random person at the grocery store.
Then you expand. But first? Nail one niche like a backwards-walking penguin with a mission and a really good staple gun.
Step 3: Create Your “Before and After” Examples
Nobody buys abstract promises. They buy proof. They buy “holy cow, I need this right now before my business collapses into a pile of sad confetti.”
Take 5-10 common prompts in your niche and fix them like you’re performing prompt surgery. Document the weak original prompt, your improved version, and the results from both.
For example, if you’re targeting coaches:
Weak prompt: “Write a social media post”
(This is the equivalent of walking into a restaurant and saying “make food.” You’ll get food. It might be a pickle. It might be cold oatmeal. It will not be what you wanted.)
Fixed prompt: “Write a 150-character LinkedIn post about overcoming imposter syndrome as a new business coach. Include a thought-provoking question at the end. Use a warm, encouraging tone without motivational clichés that sound like a fortune cookie had a nervous breakdown. Start with a specific scenario that coaches will recognize – like staring at a blank screen before their first webinar wondering if they’re a fraud.”
Show the actual outputs. Let people SEE the difference between “meh” and “take my money.”
These examples become your portfolio. Your proof. Your “holy cow, I need this” moment for potential clients who are tired of getting potato-quality results.
Create examples for the top 5 things your niche struggles with.
Save them in a Google Doc. You’ll use them everywhere – your website, social media, sales pitches, client consultations, and possibly as wallpaper if you get really enthusiastic.
Step 4: Build Your Simple Service Offering
Don’t overcomplicate this like a Rube Goldberg machine made of paperclips and anxiety. You’re offering one thing: prompt fixing.
Start with three service tiers (because humans love options but get paralyzed by more than three):
- Starter ($37): Fix 5 prompts in their niche with detailed explanations of what you changed and why. Delivered within 3 days via Google Doc. Perfect for people who want to dip their toe in without committing their entire foot.
- Professional ($97): Fix 15 prompts plus a 30-minute Zoom call teaching them your process. They get a custom prompt library for their specific business. Good for people who want the fish AND the fishing lessons.
- GOLD ($147): Fix 30 prompts, two 45-minute training calls, plus 2 weeks of email support. They can send you new prompts to review and you’ll fix them faster than a caffeinated squirrel organizing acorns.
Price these based on TIME, not perceived value. You’re probably spending 15-30 minutes per prompt fix when you’re starting out.
Create a simple one-page offer in Canva. List what’s included. Show your before/after examples. Make it pretty but not so pretty people think you spent $5,000 on a designer and wonder why you’re only charging $37.
Add a Calendly link for booking. Done.
You’ll refine this later. But right now? You need something to SELL. Perfect is the enemy of paid.
Step 5: Find Your First 5 Clients
Here’s where most people chicken out and decide maybe accounting school wasn’t such a bad idea after all.
Don’t be most people!
Join 3-5 Facebook groups where your niche hangs out like caffeinated moths around a very specific lightbulb. Real estate agent groups. Teacher communities. Etsy seller forums. Places where people complain about things you can fix.
Spend a week just WATCHING. See what people complain about. Notice when someone says “I tried ChatGPT but it gave me terrible results” or “this AI thing is useless.”
That’s your opening. That’s the sound of money knocking.
Reply with genuine help. “I’ve been fixing prompts for [your niche] – want me to take a look at yours? No charge for the right now; helping people is fun, and I’m also building my portfolio.”
Fix their prompt. Show them the better version. Explain what you changed like you’re teaching them to fish but also hinting that buying fish is way easier.
Let the conversation evolve. Then say: “If you want me to fix more of your prompts, I have a $37 package that includes 5 custom fixes plus detailed explanations. Want the link?”
Do this 20 times. You’ll get 2-4 clients most likely. Some will ghost you. Some will become raving fans. This is normal. This is life.
No ads. No fancy website. Just human-to-human helpfulness!
You’re building proof and testimonials. Those are worth more than any marketing degree or motivational poster featuring an eagle soaring above the stormy clouds with the caption “Rise above the storm. Then retarget it!” Although I will admit… that *would* make for an awesome motivational poster!
Step 6: Document Your Prompt-Fixing Process
After you’ve fixed 20-30 prompts, you’ll notice patterns. The same mistakes keep showing up like that one relative at every family gathering who tells the same story.
- Write them down.
- Create a checklist.
- Make it official with bullet points and everything peoples *expect* from official goodies.
So what might those issues be?
Well, common prompt problems include:
- Too vague (like asking for “good vibes” from the universe)
- No context (AI doesn’t know you’re a vegan food blogger, not a truck mechanic)
- Wrong tone specified (or no tone at all, leading to robot-speak)
- No examples provided (AI is guessing wildly)
- Unclear output format (you get an essay when you wanted bullet points)
- Missing constraints (you get 5,000 words when you wanted 50)
- No audience defined (AI writes for everyone, which means no one).
Your checklist becomes your quality control. Every prompt you fix gets run through it like airport security for words.
Example checklist might include:
- Does the prompt specify the exact output format?
- Does it include the target audience and their reading level?
- Does it provide context or examples of the desired style?
- Did Laura marry Luke?
- Does it define the tone (professional, casual, funny, serious, or that weird space between all of them)?
- Does it include constraints like word count, structure, or forbidden words?
- Does it explain the PURPOSE of the content so AI understands the goal?
This checklist also becomes a PRODUCT. Sell it as a $17 PDF guide. “The 23-Point Prompt Audit Checklist for [Your Niche].”
You’re now making money from your process AND from fixing prompts.
This is called being clever.
Or efficient.
Or possibly just unimaginably brilliant.
You pick. 🙂
Step 7: Create a Simple Prompt Template Library
Your clients will ask the same questions repeatedly.
- “How do I prompt for email subject lines?”
- “What’s the best way to get ad copy?”
- “How do I make AI write in my voice instead of sounding like a textbook written by a committee of confused robots?”
Create templates for the top 10 most-requested prompts in your niche. Think of it like creating recipe cards, except instead of baking cookies you’re making money.
Each template should include: the prompt structure, variables to customize (marked clearly so people don’t leave [INSERT TOPIC HERE] in their actual prompts like amateurs), example outputs, and tips for adjusting results when AI gets creative in unwelcome ways.
Format them like this:
“Write a [length] [content type] about [topic] for [audience]. Use a [tone] tone that sounds like [specific comparison – ‘your smart friend explaining something over coffee’ works better than ‘professional’]. Include [specific elements like statistics, examples, or calls to action]. The purpose is to [goal – educate, persuade, entertain, or make people slightly uncomfortable]. Here’s an example of my writing style: [paste 2-3 paragraphs]. Format the output as [structure – paragraphs, bullet points, numbered list, haiku if you’re feeling wild].”
Then clients fill in the brackets like Mad Libs (remember those?) for business. Except less funny but more profitable. Win win!
Charge $17-37 for this template library. It’s a one-time creation that sells forever like a fountain of passive income.
You’ve just added passive income to your prompt-fixing business.
Plus, templates reduce the questions you get. Which means less time explaining basic concepts and more time earning money or drinking coffee or ideally both simultaneously.
Step 8: Teach One Free Webinar or Workshop
Nothing builds authority faster than teaching what you know. Plus it makes you feel smart, which is nice for the ego.
Host a free 45-minute workshop:
“5 Prompt Mistakes Costing You Hours (And How to Fix Them in 60 Seconds Without Crying).”
Promote it in your Facebook groups. Post about it on LinkedIn with enthusiasm but not enough enthusiasm that people think you’re having an emotional breakdown due to explaining funnels to relatives who still print emails during New Year’s Eve. Email your existing clients and ask them to invite friends who also struggle with AI.
During the workshop, fix 3 prompts live. Show your before/after examples. Teach your simple checklist. Be helpful. Be funny. Be the person people want to hire because you don’t make them feel stupid; instead, you make them feel smart from attending your workshop and being willing to learn.
Remember, 10 years from now people might never remember what you’ve said, but they’ll *always* remember how you made them feel.
So make them feel smart.
And then, after the thunderous applause ends:
End with your paid offer.
“If you want me to fix YOUR prompts specifically for your business – not generic ones but the actual prompts you use every day that currently produce results that make you want to throw your laptop out a window – I have 5 spots open this month for my $97 package. Link is in the chat.”
You’ll book a small number of clients from every workshop. That’s a $194-485 for 45 minutes of teaching. Your hourly rate just got interesting. Then…
Record it! Reuse it! This one piece of content works for MONTHS.
It’s like the fruitcake of marketing except people actually can’t wait to savor it for hours and days and weeks and …
Step 9: Package Your Knowledge Into a Mini-Course
Imagine the following.
- You’ve now fixed 50+ prompts.
- You’ve taught workshops.
- You have a system.
You might even have opinions about AI that you share at parties to the rapt audience of people who can’t spell “A I” but have heard about this fabulous beast and are hanging on your very words.
Turn all of *that* into a $37-97 mini-course that people can buy at 2am in their pajamas while feeling motivated to conquer the word!
Use Gumroad or Stan Store to host it. Keep it simple – 5 video lessons, each 10-15 minutes long. Nobody wants a 47-hour course that requires a sabbatical to complete (I know. Impossible to believe, aye?). Such a course might include:
- Module 1: Why prompts fail (and the 5 elements every good prompt needs, like a recipe for success except with fewer eggs)
- Module 2: The Before/After Method (with 10 real examples from your niche that make people go from “ohhhhh” to “ahhhh”)
- Module 3: Creating your prompt library (with 15 fill-in-the-blank templates that do most of the thinking for you)
- Module 4: Customizing prompts for your voice and brand (so you don’t sound like everyone else who took the same course)
- Module 5: Advanced tricks that make AI actually useful (instead of making you question your life choices)
Include your checklist, your templates, and a swipe file of 25 working prompts. Basically give them everything except your coffee mug (*nobody* touches that) and your guilty pleasures like reading romance novels or crafting stained glass pieces or building rockets to Mars.
Sell it to people who want to learn the skill themselves. Meanwhile, you’re still booking 1-on-1 clients who want you to DO it for them because they have money but no time.
You know what that means?
Two income streams from the same knowledge!
It’s like selling both the cake recipe AND offering to bake cakes for people.
Astute.
Possibly mind-bogglingly clever!
In all cases, definitely profitable.
Step 10: Scale With a Monthly Subscription
Once you’ve got 10-20 happy clients who think you’re a wizard, offer a subscription model. Recurring revenue is the holy grail of business. It’s predictable. It’s reliable. It pays your bills while you sleep.
$47-97/month for unlimited prompt reviews. Clients can send you prompts anytime, and you’ll fix them within 24 hours like a prompt-fixing superhero with a reasonable turnaround time.
Most clients will send 5-10 prompts per month. That’s 30 minutes of work for $47-97 recurring revenue. Do the math. It’s beautiful. It’s like having a money garden that you water occasionally.
Get 20 subscribers and you’ve got $940-1,940/month in predictable income that shows up whether you’re working or eating savory oatmeal with shitake mushrooms, cilantro and scallions in your pajamas at noon on a Tuesday.
Not that I’m doing that right now, you understand.
Use No Limit Emails to stay in touch. Send weekly prompt tips, examples, and updates. Keep them engaged like a good TV show that doesn’t get canceled.
Add a members-only Facebook group or Slack channel. They can share prompts, get quick feedback, and learn from each other. You facilitate. They do some of the teaching. Everyone wins.
You’ve now built a sustainable business fixing prompts. One-on-one services, templates, courses, AND subscriptions.
All from knowing how to make AI stop producing garbage.
All from understanding that most people’s prompts are the equivalent of walking into a library and yelling “BOOK!” at the librarian.
See what I mean?
Let’s now continue with:
5 Super Creative Tips
Tip 1: Steal from Your Own Email Inbox
Every question a client asks is a future product hiding in plain sight like money under your couch cushions.
Someone asks how to prompt for Instagram captions? Create a $7 Instagram Caption Prompt Pack right then and there.
Another client needs help with email sequences that don’t sound like a robot having an existential crisis? Make a $17 Email Prompt Bundle!
Client wants product descriptions for handmade candles that smell like “autumn but make it romantic”? Boom. $12 Etsy Product Description Prompt Kit.
Your inbox is basically a customer research goldmine. Your goal? Mine it like a backwards-walking prospector who struck gold and is walking backwards to confuse claim jumpers.
- Every “how do I…” email is a product.
- Every “can you help me with…” message is a template.
- Every “I’m struggling with…” confession is a course module.
Write them down. Create them. Sell them. Life is good.
Tip 2: Partner with AI Tool Creators
Reach out to people who create AI-powered tools. They made the shiny thing. They need someone to teach people how to actually USE the shiny thing without breaking it or crying.
Shiny things that actually *work* are ‘way better than shiny things that destroy computer monitors (by one heaving the keyboard straight thru it, powered by the energy of a thousand suns, all focused upon one’s prompting failure).
Offer to write their tutorial content or create prompt libraries for their users! They get better onboarding. You get exposure to their entire audience.
Win-win, like a perfectly balanced teeter-totter made of money.
You can charge $500-1,500 per partnership depending on the scope. Plus you get access to their email list for promoting your own services. They introduce you as an expert. Instant credibility.
Look for newer AI tools that don’t have comprehensive training yet. They’re desperate for good content and will pay you to create it.
Tip 3: Create a “Prompt of the Week” Series
Post one fixed prompt every week on LinkedIn, Instagram, or your email list. Show the weak version that makes people wince as if they were bit by 239 rabid mosquitos in synchronized precision. Show your fix that makes people go “ooooh.” Then show the improved output that makes them go “ahhhhhh!”
Consider adding mini-fireworks to complete the image.
People will share it. Tag friends. Save it for later. Send it to coworkers with “THIS IS WHAT I’VE BEEN TRYING TO EXPLAIN” in all caps.
See, you’re building an audience while demonstrating expertise which means: No hard sell needed at all! Just consistent helpfulness like a marketing fairy godmother.
After 12 weeks, compile them into a $37 guide. “52 Prompt Fixes That Actually Work (And Won’t Make You Want to Heave Your Computer Out a Window).”
Content that builds your audience AND becomes a product.
It’s like planting a tree that grows money. Except faster and with less dirt under your fingernails.
Tip 4: Offer “Prompt Audits” as a Lead Magnet
Let people send you ONE prompt for a free audit. You review it, show what’s wrong (gently, like you’re helping not judging), and suggest improvements.
Then pitch your paid service for fixing all their prompts. The ones they use daily. The ones costing them hours of frustration and possibly causing their eye to twitch.
This works because people experience the value before buying. They see you actually know your stuff and aren’t just making confident noises while winging it.
Plus, you’re collecting real-world examples for future content!
Set boundaries or you’ll drown in free audits: one per person, 48-hour turnaround, first-come first-served. After you hit 10 audits in a week, close it temporarily. Scarcity creates urgency. Also it prevents burnout.
Burnout bad! Alive and scampering about in a mountain field of flowers (or at least, the image of such a thing) good!
Tip 5: Build a Prompt Swipe File for Different Moods
AI can write in different emotional tones, but most people don’t know how to specify them beyond “professional” or “casual” (which means nothing to a robot).
Create collections:
- “15 Prompts for Funny Content That Won’t Get You Fired”
- “12 Prompts for Professional Email Tones From Warm to Iceberg”
- “20 Prompts for Empathetic Customer Service Responses When Karen and Chad Want a Refund.”
Sell each collection for $7-12. Bundle all three for $27 because bundles are fun! They sell better than single items like magic.
People buy these impulsively because they solve a specific, frustrating problem. They’re cheap enough to buy without asking permission from a spouse or accountant.
Low price, high volume, pure passive income.
It’s like selling candy bars except digital and with better profit margins… not to mention, no chocolate melting in your car.
5 Excellent Ways to Get in Front of Customers
Way 1: Answer Questions in Facebook Groups
Join groups where your target clients hang out like caffeinated moths around a very specific lightbulb. Set aside 15 minutes daily to answer questions about AI and prompts.
Don’t pitch your services immediately like an overeager Golden Retriever. Just be genuinely helpful.
Drop value bombs like “Here’s a better way to structure that prompt” with a specific example. Fix their problem right there in the comments. Make them look smart in front of their peers!
People will click your profile, see your offer, and reach out. Some immediately. Some three weeks later at 11pm when they finally hit their breaking point.
Helpfulness IS marketing when done consistently!
Show up. Be useful. Don’t be salesy. Let your expertise do the selling while you focus on being a decent human who knows stuff about prompts.
Way 2: Guest Post on Blogs Your Clients Read
Find 10 blogs in your niche. Things like, oh, hmmm…..
- Real estate blogs.
- Teacher blogs.
- Etsy seller blogs.
- Neuro-diverse blogs.
In other words, find places where your ideal clients go to learn and procrastinate!
Pitch them an article: “5 ChatGPT Prompts Every [Your Niche] Should Bookmark (And Why Your Current Ones Are Failing Miserably).”
Write a genuinely useful article with working prompts they can copy and paste immediately. No fluff. No filler. Just actionable value that makes people want to bookmark it and possibly frame it.
Include a bio with a link to your paid services. Make it casual. “Jane fixes prompts for real estate agents who are tired of AI-generated garbage. Get your first 5 prompts fixed for $47 at [link].”
Blog owners love free content that’s actually good. You get a backlink and exposure to your exact target audience who trusts the blog.
One guest post can bring 10-20 clients over six months.
Write 5-10 guest posts and you’ve built a sustainable client pipeline that works while you sleep or binge-watch reality TV. No judgment.
Way 3: Create a Free “7-Day Prompt Challenge”
Run a challenge in a Facebook group or via email. Each day, participants get a new prompt-fixing lesson and homework that takes 10 minutes.
- Day 1: Learn the anatomy of a good prompt (with examples that don’t make your eyes glaze over).
- Day 2: Fix your first prompt with style and flair and see the difference.
- Day 3: Test three versions and compare results like a scientist but with less lab coat energy.
By day 7, they’ve improved their skills AND experienced working with you. They know your style. They trust you. They’re wondering if maybe they should just hire you to do this.
Pitch your paid offer on day 6: “Want me to fix all your business prompts personally so you can stop struggling and start actually using AI effectively?”
Challenges build momentum, community, and sales all at once.
Plus people finish things more when other people are watching.
(I can vouch for this, having joined the AI Profit Boardroom) where folks comment on everything and the wealth of knowledge being offered… astounding.
Social accountability is powerful. Use it for good and profit.
Way 4: Partner with Virtual Assistants
VAs are constantly looking for ways to work faster so they can take on more clients and make more money without working 97 hours a week.
Many are starting to use AI but struggle with effective prompts. Their prompts produce results that make them question if AI is actually just a very elaborate prank.
- Offer VA training groups a free workshop.
- Fix their most common prompts live.
- Show them how much time they can save.
- Make them heroes to their clients.
Then offer your services at a VA-friendly rate. $27 for 5 prompt fixes. They’ll tell every other VA they know because VAs talk to each other constantly and share “can you believe this?” types of stories everyone enjoys hearing.
VAs are networked like crazy. Get one, get ten.
And here’s a bonus – they work with multiple clients across industries!
Each VA you help can refer you to 5-10 clients who need the same help.
It’s like multilevel marketing except ethical, zero weird smoothies AND you can actually feel GOOD instead of icky!
Plus, quality VAs are simply gold. Treat them like the brilliant people they are.
Way 5: Run a “Prompt Makeover” Contest on Social Media
Post: “Drop your worst AI prompt in the comments. The one that consistently produces garbage. I’ll pick 3 and fix them publicly so everyone can learn from your brave sacrifice.”
People LOVE free makeovers! They’ll comment, tag friends, and share the post hoping to win. It’s like a lottery except with better odds and prompt-based prizes.
The result?
You demonstrate your skills to hundreds of people! Pick the most common mistakes so your fixes help everyone reading, not just the winners.
After you fix the 3 winners publicly with detailed explanations of what you changed and why, say: “Want ALL your prompts fixed? Not just one. All of them. Every single solitary prompt that’s currently making you want to gently lower your laptop outside the window on the skyscraper 13th floor and whisper “be free.” Here’s my offer.”
Then link to your services.
Free value that doubles as marketing and content creation.
Screenshot the before/after results. Turn them into social media posts. Use them in your portfolio. One contest becomes 10 pieces of content.
Ain’t life grand?
Your Next Steps
You don’t need to master AI to make money from it!
You just need to know more than the people struggling with it right now. (Which is most people. Most people’s prompts masquerade as a tragic Ancient Greek play.)
Start small. Fix prompts for free to build proof. Create your simple three-tier offer. Price it based on your time, not your insecurities.
(It’s okay to feel insecure, y’know. But with more time spent performing, said insecurities will melt away like ice cubes on a hot summer day).
Find your first 5 clients in Facebook groups by being genuinely helpful without being salesy. Document your process like a mad scientist keeping lab notes.
Turn your knowledge into templates and courses that sell while you sleep or eat breakfast or contemplate the meaning of existence.
Within 60 days, you could be earning $500-1,000 monthly. Within six months, $3,000-5,000 is totally realistic if you show up consistently and don’t get distracted by every new shiny object the Internet throws at you.
The prompts aren’t getting better on their own. But YOU can.
Start today. Fix one prompt. Show one person. Take that one tiny step toward building this business.
The coffee’s already brewing. Your laptop’s already open. And (this part is really important) you know more than you think you do!
In other words…
You’ve got this!
Enjoy.






