subject: Andrew Reynolds on Working One Hour Days [print this page] Andrew Reynolds on Working One Hour Days Andrew Reynolds on Working One Hour Days
At Andrew Reynolds Bootcamp I watched with the other attendees, the TV film of him being followed by a reporter and cameraman as he proved his business system works.
At one point in the film, Andrew Reynolds explained to the reporter how he had wanted to get rid of all the overheads of running a small business. And after he had been in business for a while he also wanted to fine tune it so he was working one hour a day for 3 or 4 days a week. The rest of the week would be leisure time.
So, we heard at Andrew Reynolds Bootcamp, how he made a wish list and then worked out how to make everything on it reality.
High on his wish list was he didn't want office premises. He wanted to be able to make money from a simple system which he could do from his laptop computer. This would give him the freedom to work from wherever he was in the world. He could make money when at home, on holiday, on the plane, in a hotel, or sitting on the beach.
Andrew Reynolds explained to the reporter filming him, that's exactly what he does these days. He can be in New York, and the orders come in online. He sends them to a fulfillment house and Andrew is finished with it.
This is the business model that Andrew Reynolds shows the attendees of his Bootcamps and demonstrated it in action on the TV film.
This is the business model which Andrew Reynolds has fine-tuned so anyone once they have fully learned the system can work on for one hour a day, 3 or 4 days a week. Using this way of doing business, Andrew Reynolds has pulled in over 50 million in the last twelve years.
If, like me, you are keen to learn how this works and to see for yourself the business model in action, then I highly recommend you go along to the next Andrew Reynolds Bootcamp.
If you want to know more of what I and the other attendees saw on this film at Andrew Reynolds Bootcamp go to the articles covering this, starting with: Andrew Reynolds on Proving Business System Works - Part One