This is an excellent question: I'm a disabled person but I think my primary disability is that I haven't acquired sufficient marketing skills - yet. Marketing, team-building, effective communication and Internet savvy are skills that can be taught to anyone. Those talents can easily be mastered irregardless of what physical disabilities a person might have.
What does it actually take to become successful with SFI anyways?
1. A person needs to have the personal drive and dedication to check in everyday to do the routine tasks that will earn points and ultimately build the SFI business one step at a time. Many able bodied people are truly handicapped because they don't possess the determination to become successful.
2. A person needs to have an optimistic mind to see that the road ahead is not short but that the course is straight. A disabled person has already experienced setbacks in life that non-handicapped person might have quailed at and they are already working through them. Conversely the path to succeeding at SFI is precisely the same for both.
3. Success takes team building and training your affiliates to duplicate your success and that requires communication skills. Unless the disability is in something that interferes with speech or keyboarding, a handicapped person is as able-minded as the able-bodied are.
4. You specifically mentioned marketing skills and I confessed that I haven't enough of those yet but the training in SFI can allow me to overcome that obstacle. In fact I think your question would be just as valid if the disabled aspect were removed from the equation. "How can an able-bodied person with no marketing skills build a successful business with SFI?" Both in the same way.
5. The final point I'll mention here is time and in this regard the disabled person may even hold the advantage towards being successful if they are on a disability allowance. That could mean the disabled person could build their SFI business on a full-time basis.
I suppose my overall point is that in many parts of life the disabled person is disadvantaged. Here at SFI though, the able-bodied person might be the one with the possible handicap as listed in point Number 5.
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This is an excellent question: I'm a disabled person but I think my primary disability is that I haven't acquired sufficient marketing skills - yet. Marketing, team-building, effective communication and Internet savvy are skills that can be taught to anyone. Those talents can easily be mastered irregardless of what physical disabilities a person might have.
What does it actually take to become successful with SFI anyways?
1. A person needs to have the personal drive and
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