# The 'Side Hustle King' Reveals Why 99% of People Fail to Start ## Summary Chris Koerner, known as the 'Side Hustle King,' shares his philosophy on building over 80 businesses. He argues that any side hustle can scale into a full-time venture if the entrepreneur prioritizes action over research, embraces rejection, and focuses on finding a paying customer immediately. Koerner debunks the 'passive income' myth, emphasizes the importance of an abundance mindset, and provides a tactical framework for testing business ideas using low-cost distribution channels like Facebook Marketplace. ## Content The Truth About the 'Side Hustle King' Philosophy Quick Action Plan Stop Researching, Start Selling: Your first goal is to find a paying customer, not to perfect a business plan. The Copycat Strategy: Identify a proven business model in your local area and create your own rendition. Do not reinvent the wheel. Test with Low Friction: Use Facebook Marketplace or Meta Ads to validate demand before investing significant capital. Embrace the 30-Day Test: When hiring, prioritize a 30-day trial period over long, drawn-out interview processes. Prioritize Distribution: A mediocre product with superior distribution will almost always outperform a great product with no reach. In the modern economy, the term "side hustle" has become a catch-all for everything from high-growth startups to glorified gig work. Chris Koerner, an entrepreneur who has launched over 80 ventures, rejects the term entirely. To him, it is demeaning. His philosophy is simple: any small business, if treated with the right distribution strategy, has the potential to scale into a full-time operation. Whether it is selling used golf balls or managing a $250 million portfolio of RV parks, the underlying mechanics of commerce remain the same. I’ve analyzed the original material so you don’t have to. The "side hustle" label often acts as a psychological safety net, allowing people to avoid the true commitment of business ownership. True entrepreneurship, as Koerner suggests, is not about finding the perfect idea; it is about the relentless pursuit of a paying customer. For more on the psychological barriers to success, see The Secret Reason Why You’re Still Broke. Focusing on execution over theory is the hallmark of successful entrepreneurs. (Credit: Milin John via Unsplash) The Market Outlook: A Personal Analysis We are moving away from the era of "passive income" influencers and toward a period of hyper-local, service-based utility. When I look at the current market, I see people paralyzed by the fear of judgment. The biggest barrier to entry is rarely the lack of capital; it is the lack of a "bias for action." If you are waiting for the perfect moment to start, you are already behind. The market doesn't reward the most researched idea; it rewards the one that actually shows up. Related InsightsWhy Hard Work Isn't Enough: The Hidden Laws of Wealth CreationThe 17 Micro-Habits That Actually Build Lasting WealthThe 8 Hidden Rules of Wealth: Why the System Keeps You Poor Behind the Scenes & Transparency Log This editorial is based on a deep-dive analysis of Chris Koerner’s recent interview. As a financial strategist, I have synthesized his tactical advice with broader market principles. This content is current as of the transcript date and has been vetted for fidelity to the source material. My goal is to strip away the "get-rich-quick" marketing fluff often associated with these topics and provide a grounded, actionable framework for the reader. Debunking the Passive Income Myth The internet is saturated with courses promising "passive income." Koerner is blunt: most of these are marketing ploys. True passive income is not a starting point; it is the hard-earned reward for years of high-intensity, active work. The "asterisk" on passive income is that it requires significant upfront capital or labor. If you are buying a course that promises you can make money while you sleep without having first built a system that functions while you are awake, you are likely the product, not the entrepreneur. Learn more about building sustainable systems at Small Business Administration. Tactical Execution: How to Start Without a 'Big Idea' Most beginners get stuck in the "research loop," gaining dopamine from spreadsheets and market analysis rather than sales. Koerner’s advice is to "steal" an idea—find a business that is already working, verify its demand, and create your own version. Use the Meta Ads Library to see what is currently working for others, then replicate the distribution strategy. If a competitor is running a successful ad campaign for a service, that is your roadmap. You don't need to be original; it is about being effective. Using tools like the Meta Ads Library allows you to validate market demand quickly. (Credit: Jakub Żerdzicki via Unsplash) The Entrepreneurial Mindset: Resilience and Ambiguity Koerner credits his ability to handle rejection to two years of door-to-door missionary work in Hungary. This experience "rewired his brain" to stop fearing the "no." For the average person, the fear of rejection is a death sentence for their business. To succeed, you must develop an abundance mindset. When you enter a market, you aren't just taking a slice of the pie; you are often growing the market itself by normalizing the service or product for the consumer. "The pain of what people think about you needs to be lesser than the pain of being broke." Analytical Value-Add: Scaling and Hiring When it comes to scaling, Koerner advocates for a "numbers game" approach to hiring. Long interview processes are often a waste of time. Instead, implement a 30-day test period. If an employee doesn't impress you in the first week, they likely never will. Furthermore, he notes that in-person teams generally outperform remote ones due to the "water cooler effect"—the spontaneous, low-stakes conversations that solve problems before they become crises. For more on organizational structure, consult Harvard Business Review. The Contrarian's Corner While the industry standard is to "protect your ideas" at all costs, Koerner argues that this is total garbage. He believes you should share your ideas with everyone. Why? Because the statistical likelihood of someone having the exact resources, timing, and motivation to copy you and execute it better is near zero. By sharing, you gain feedback and potential partnerships. The real risk isn't that someone will steal your idea; it's that no one will care enough to try. Interactive Decision-Making Tool Are you ready to start? Answer these three questions: Do you have a paying customer yet? (If no, stop reading and go find one.) Are you willing to be rejected 10 times a day for a month? (If no, you may not be ready for the grind.) Is your current job "just good enough"? (If yes, you lack the hunger required to scale.) If you answered "No" to #1, your only task is to find a customer. Do not build a website. Do not print business cards. Just find a sale. Risk & Volatility Disclosure Entrepreneurship carries inherent financial risk. Koerner’s "copycat" strategy assumes a level of market demand that may not exist in your specific geography. Furthermore, relying on platforms like Facebook Marketplace or Thumbtack subjects your business to the "platform risk" of algorithm changes or policy shifts. Always maintain a cash reserve and avoid 50/50 partnerships without ironclad legal agreements, as these are the most common points of failure for small businesses. Behind the Numbers Koerner’s income variance is a function of "lumpy" cash flow common in private equity and business exits. When calculating your own potential, focus on Gross Profit Margin. If your business model requires high labor costs (like low-end lawn mowing), your net profit will be eroded quickly. Aim for high-margin services (like window washing or AI consulting) where the cost of acquisition is low relative to the job size. For example, if a customer costs $20 to acquire and the job pays $700, you have a sustainable path to scale. My Personal Toolkit Vibe Coding Tools: Use natural language AI (like Claude or ChatGPT) to build simple apps or dashboards without traditional coding knowledge. Meta Ads Library: The ultimate tool for competitive research. Use it to see exactly what ads your competitors are running and how long they have been active. Zapier: Essential for automating the "boring" parts of your business, such as connecting lead forms to your calendar or CRM. Sources:Original Source --- Source: Kodawire (EN)