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Owned by Bill

ADHD Focus Founders

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Turning ADHD Entrepreneurs into Focused Founders - with ā™”

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14 contributions to Community Builders
Give Free Members everything Paid Members get, except for 1 thing.
Selling course material is stupid, do this instead šŸ‘‡ āš ļø Warning: You may not like or agree with what I write here, but I promise it will make you more money if you implement this tactic. I don't sell information. I give it all away for free. ALL OF IT. Information has never been more free, abundant, and undervalued. So why try n sell it? Master @Frank Kern told me years ago that if I want to make a lot of money, I should first "prove to people you can help them by actually helping them." I took that to heart. Now? My FREE Skool community members get everything my low ticket ($197/month) & my high ticket (north of 5k) clients get, except for 1 thing... What's the thing? It's the only thing worth paying for! A service. An incredibly helpful service. I give everything (all my BEST course material + pdf's, recordings, etc.) away for free to my free Skool community members, and I reserve only my services for my paid members. Why? 100+ reasons. But here's one: How can I ethically withhold helpful information from people when I genuinely want to see them succeed ASAP? I can't. That'd be asinine. Which is why my free Skool community members get access to: 1) The same course materials my HT clients have access to. 2) The same links and resources my HT have access to. 3) The same workshops my HT have access to. 4) And yes... even the same group zoom coaching calls my HT attend! So then... what do my HT & LT clients get that my free members don't get? I already told you... A service! Your services can look like whatever you want them to look like, but here's what mine looks like: My low ticket clients get 5x small group sessions per week with my team & I where we help them grow their business quickly. Our service includes reviewing their Skool community, website, funnel, content, DM's, sales calls, etc. and giving them feedback to make everything better. My high ticket clients, on the other hand, get to work directly (1 on 1) with me & my team on Zoom (or IRL) for even quicker results.
10 likes • Oct '25
Fascinating!
Child abuse?
When he was 15, Daniel's parents forced him to spend his entire life savings on my coaching program. (Pictured below is us working together the day he paid.) What happened next probably won't surprise you but... His 15 year old brain soaked up all the info I could possibly throw at him... And his lack of cemented-self-identity allowed him to implement without any fear of failure or judgement from others... And now? 5 years later... He's got 1 offer, 1 optin funnel and 1 Skool community. He's a 2x Skool Games Winner and he's in the top 1% of income earners worldwide. He took what we created 5 years ago, made it his own, and dialed it in to the MAX. Now he helps me grow MY business! Today I wasn't feeling well, so I got him to cover for me and host my weekly private clients coaching call while I sat in attendance. Child abuse? Maybe. But when you start em young, you gotta keep em going! Plus, my clients loved getting his help on their business, and Daniel dropped some mega gold for us. If you wanna watch the private client coaching call recording of him coaching my clients today, just comment "DANIEL" below and I'll send it over. T
Child abuse?
3 likes • Oct '25
Daniel
I Watched Others Make Money Online and Thought, Why Not Me?
For the longest time, I kept seeing people online talking about how they were making money from their laptops, traveling, quitting their jobs, and living on their own terms. I’d scroll past their posts thinking, Must be nice… but probably not real. I wasn’t struggling, but I wasn’t exactly thriving either. I had bills, responsibilities, and a schedule that left me exhausted. The idea of starting an online business seemed impossible. I’m not tech-savvy. I don’t have time. What if I fail?—the usual doubts ran through my head. Then one day, I stopped scrolling and started asking questions. I reached out to someone who was actually doing it—running a Shopify dropshipping store—and instead of pitching me a dream, they explained how it really worked. No overnight riches, no magic formulas—just a system that, when done right, could actually work. I started small. I picked a niche, set up my store, and listed a few products. The first few days? Nothing. But then… my first sale came in. That $44 profit felt like a million-dollar moment because it proved that this wasn’t just something "other people" could do. It was real. Now, I look back and wonder why I didn’t start sooner. The difference between those making money online and those still watching? Taking action. If you’ve ever looked at successful online entrepreneurs and thought, Why not me?—the answer is simple: It can be you. You just have to start.
1 like • Apr '25
@Ameliah Brooks I did it by myself, yes. I don't do it anymore because I found another business that I enjoyed more and found more success in. I've been a freelance SEO content writer for 10 years now, and have also built and sold an affiliate site for multiple six-figures. One secret in business is finding something you enjoy and can stick to long-term. I've done that, and dropshipping would be a distraction from my current goals :)
1 like • Apr '25
@Ameliah Brooks I can create a lot of additional streams of income. That doesn’t mean they are not distractions :)
My path to business at 19 y/o:
13 years old — Gaming YT channel 15 years old — Started FB Ads 17 years old — Started video Editing 19 years old (now) — Started online biz I’m grateful for starting early. But if you haven’t? It’s not too late.
My path to business at 19 y/o:
1 like • Apr '25
What's your online biz?
0 likes • Apr '25
@Jaskaran Saini as in you help people generate leads from YouTube? Or you generate your own leads from YouTube?
🌱 How I Stopped ā€œBuilding a Communityā€ & Started Growing One
I used to think community growth was all about posting more. More content. More updates. More effort. Then I realized… the best communities aren’t built on content. They’re built on connections. šŸ‘„ One conversation can bring 10x engagement. šŸ’¬ One meaningful reply can create a superfan. šŸ”„ One post can start a movement -- if it speaks to the right people. Now, I focus less on ā€œcreatingā€ a community and more on cultivating one. If you had to start your community from scratch, what’s the FIRST thing you’d do differently? Drop it below! šŸ‘‡
3 likes • Apr '25
One thing I'm really enjoying doing to build community is creating virtual and in-person gatherings. I offer daily virtual co-working in my community, plus those of us in Austin meet up once a week to get coffee, chat, and be productive! Makes a huge difference when you talk to someone face to face vs commenting on a post.
2 likes • Apr '25
@Brennan Thompson Absolutely! I have quickly fallen in love with building community and connecting in-person.
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Bill Widmer
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29points to level up
@bill-widmer
The Hummingbird of Skool 🐦 — Helping ADHD entrepreneurs make $ with ā™”

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Joined Mar 20, 2025
ENFP
Austin, TX
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