Don't Mistake Your Vocation – Choose a profession that aligns with your natural inclinations and talents; fighting against your nature makes success an uphill battle.
Select the Right Location – Place your business where there is an actual market and demand for it, avoiding oversaturated areas.
Avoid Debt – Debt is a trap that drains your energy and independence. Live within your means and let money work for you, not against you.
Persevere – Once you find the right path, stick to it. Most people fail simply because they give up too early.
Whatever You Do, Do It with All Your Might – Give complete attention and unyielding energy to your endeavors. Half-hearted efforts breed mediocrity.
Depend Upon Your Own Personal Exertions – Rely on your own hard work and judgment rather than expecting a stroke of luck, an inheritance, or friends to bail you out.
Use the Best Tools – Surround yourself with top-tier, competent employees who can think for themselves. Good help is worth paying for.
Don't Get Above Your Business – Stay grounded. Never consider yourself "too good" to do the hands-on work required to make your business run.
Learn Something Useful – Master a trade or acquire specialized, practical knowledge that will always ensure you can earn a living.
Let Hope Predominate, but Be Not Too Visionary – Maintain a positive, optimistic outlook, but don't get so lost in grandiose daydreaming that you lose sight of reality.
Do Not Scatter Your Powers – Avoid being a "Jack-of-all-trades and master of none." Focus your energy entirely on one thing at a time until you succeed.
Be Systematic – Structure your time, your records, and your daily operations. A chaotic routine wastes time and money.
Read the Newspapers – Stay informed about the world, current events, and shifting market trends to keep your business relevant.
Beware of "Outside Operations" – Avoid speculating or investing in flashy, secondary ventures that you know absolutely nothing about.
Don't Indorse Without Security – Never co-sign loans or guarantee financial debts for others unless they can provide concrete collateral to protect you.
Advertise Your Business – No matter how great your product is, it means nothing if the public doesn't know it exists. If you advertise, keep it up consistently.
Be Polite and Kind to Your Customers – Good manners cost nothing but build invaluable loyalty. Civility is a competitive advantage.
Be Charitable – True success involves giving back. Supporting your community and those in need creates a well-rounded and respected life.
Don't Blab – Keep your financial profits, future plans, and business secrets to yourself. Talking too much only invites competition or exposes vulnerability.
Preserve Your Integrity – Honesty is the foundation of long-term wealth. Once a reputation for dishonesty is earned, the public will rightly shun you.
This is well and all but I'm gwareeb I do not have the luxury to do these things.
It's always might is right or
Credentials matter more than skills
The person who wrote is a noble maybe even royalty but indians as a whole, if a character type is to be selected we will be the adventurers of a village or rogues.
We take what we can we spend what we could and tally the remaining in the hopes that tomorrow me's could figure it out.
Although the ideas are good but the implementation is lax.