In 1946, a 17-year-old Warren Buffett spent $25 on a secondhand pinball machine, walked into a local barbershop, and pitched the owner a simple idea: let me put this in your shop and we’ll split the profits. The barber said yes. Buffett had his $25 back by end of day. By the end of the week he had $125. He bought another machine. Then another. Seven machines across seven barbershops, and he never set foot in a single one to collect the coins. When he eventually sold the whole operation, he walked away with $1,200. That’s a 4,700% return on a $25 bet. Here’s what most people miss about that story. Buffett wasn’t the one showing up every day. He wasn’t trading his time for the income. The machines ran whether he was there or not, and when he was ready to move on, he sold the whole thing for a profit. Most of us are wired to be the machine. We show up, we produce, and the moment we stop, the income stops too. But what if you owned the machine instead? This is exactly what I set up for myself using Claude, and I put the whole thing into a simple PDF guide you can follow in an afternoon. Here’s how it works: you set up a Claude project that learns your niche, your audience, and your voice. From that point on, it generates done-for-you prompts tailored specifically to your market, not generic ChatGPT output, but content that sounds like it came from someone who actually knows your audience. You build it once. It keeps producing. If that sounds like something worth an afternoon of your time, grab the free guide here: https://link.ckv.to/prompt-guide Regards, P.S. Buffett also hired someone else to empty the coin trays. At 17, he was already thinking like an investor, not an employee. That mindset made all the difference. |
