The current market disruption in luxury fashion, marked by scandals and a loss of trust, presents a significant opportunity for small, authentic founder-led clothing brands to thrive by prioritizing transparency, genuine brand identity, and community building.
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So, the clothing brand space just
entered a completely new era. It is more
saturated than ever with thousands of
new brands popping up everywhere. And
the luxury fashion space just got
exposed in a way that's kind of flipped
everything upside down. But while most
people see this as a dead market, I see
this as probably the biggest opportunity
for small brand owners in years. And I
know this because I've been working with
clothing brands for six plus years now.
I've scaled my own brand, Tame
Psychotic, to well over seven figures.
and I've learned to spot these
opportunities in the clothing space that
most people are blind to. So, in this
video, I'm going to break down three
different things. First, why this exact
moment is the golden opportunity to
start a brand. Second, the limiting
beliefs keeping you on the sidelines and
how to overcome them. And then third,
the framework that I would use and take
into 2026 to build a winning brand next
year. Now, let me start by kind of just
breaking down everything that's going on
in the fashion world because this
changes everything for small brands. You
see, major luxury houses like Dior and
Armani just got exposed for using
exploitative workshops in Italy. And I'm
talking sweat shop conditions, unsafe
work environment, low pay, pretty much
everything that you'd expect from like a
teu factory in China. Meanwhile, they're
charging thousands of dollars for their
pieces and then marketing them like
they're some crazy handcrafted by
artisans in Italy product when in
reality they're just using little kids
in sweat shops to make them. And if that
wasn't bad enough, videos from Chinese
factory workers claiming most of these
brands make everything in China for
pennies on the dollar have started going
viral as well. Now, whether those
factory videos are actually factual is
neither here nor there, right? What
matters is the perception that those
videos create. And this is not just an
isolated incident, right? It's a pattern
across the entire luxury industry. But
here's what matters for us small
clothing brand owners, right? The fact
of the matter is everybody is
questioning the legitimacy of luxury
fashion at this point. They're
questioning the authenticity, the
honesty, the values, everything about
the brand. And this provides a
hesitation to buy, which means
opportunity for us. Because here's what
you need to understand about market
opportunity. Market opportunity does not
come from an empty market. Market
opportunity comes from the market's
participants losing trust in the current
players. And right now, customers, they
still want high-quality clothing. All
right? They still want a brand that they
can believe in. They still want a
community. They still want authenticity.
They still want clothes they're proud
of. So, the desire for brands that
people can stand by has not gone away.
And if anything, it's like 10 times
stronger than before because it's on
everybody's minds now. The legitimacy,
the skepticism of authenticity, it's on
people's minds and they're searching for
something real. And you know what? If
you were to summarize all of these
scandals into one problem, the one issue
would be a lack of transparency. Lack of
transparency around their supply chains,
their manufacturing methods, the cost to
actually produce the $2,000 bag that
they're trying to sell. And that is
exactly where founder brands have the
advantage. And I'm not saying that the
entire luxury industry is going to
collapse and all those people are just
going to come flooding into your doors
to buy your clothes. But what I am
saying is that the demand for such
brands is on the rise with people
looking for a brand that they can stand
behind. One that they feel represents
their personal values, one that they
feel that they can trust. Now I know
you're thinking, "Oh, well Marshall,
yeah, there's a demand for founder
brands, right? But isn't the market
still saturated?" Well, you're right.
The clothing space is and has always
been extremely crowded. But here's what
people don't understand about that
crowded concept. The market isn't
saturated with real competition. It's
saturated with poor attempts. It's
saturated with people making the same
mistakes keeping them at level zero. I'm
not even concerned about the competition
because there are so few people
operating in a way that will bring them
even close to where I'm operating and
where I look to try and help other
people operate. And when I say they're
all making the same mistakes, I'm
talking about brand DNA, brand identity,
right? Going in saying, "Oh, I want to
sell hoodies." Not like, "Why do I
exist?" Right? What is the reason for my
product to exist? What am I here for?
What do I stand for? Who am I speaking
to? Right? Nobody thinks about these
things. And you know what? Without an
authentic brand, identity, DNA that
represents who you truly are as a
founder, you're just another faceless
company. All right? Selling goods for
three times the price that you bought
them for. You got to understand that the
biggest brands in the space, Kith, Bape,
Amlon, Dior, Supreme, Stuy, they're all
extensions of their founders
personalities represent. You can
directly see it in their content into
New York, you can directly see it in
their content. K2 Studios, you can
directly see it in their content. Their
personalities and tastes as founders and
operators are so congruent with the
identity and DNA of the brand. All
right? how the brand presents itself,
how the brand is perceived. It's the
same thing. All right, my brand is the
same thing. But most brands just decide
to copy what they see. All right, monkey
see monkey do. And that's not authentic
because most people are not going to
connect with another spider hoodie.
They're going to connect with
communities. They're going to connect
with identity, with meaning, people to
stand alongside. That's what gets people
actually to care about the brand. And on
the contrary, every successful brand has
this kind of narrative that people
connect with. And I see thousands of
brands that literally just post product
shots and think that they're going to
blow up. That's just not the reality,
right? It is not physically possible
unless you are some crazy [ __ ] Albert
Einstein genius person that can come up
with this crazy concept. And spoiler
alert, it's probably not you, right? It
wasn't me. It wasn't all of my friends
that have brands, and it's probably not
going to be you either. So, you need to
think about these things. You need to
think about the meaning and the identity
and the DNA and what the brand means
beyond just the products. And that is
your opportunity, right? Because if you
actually build a brand with a solid
identity, right? A good community,
authentic storytelling and good
products, you're not competing with
everybody else anymore. You're competing
in a very, very small subsection of
brands that actually know what they're
doing. So if you can understand these
elements walking into this, you can get
a head start ahead of everybody else.
That's the goal, right? At least for me,
it is. All right, so let's talk about
how to do that to make the current
market condition work in your favor.
There's four principles I want to go
over. The first one is going to be
radical transparency. Those luxury
brands that got exposed, they got
exposed for hiding [ __ ] and lying. And
generic brands don't share anything
because they don't feel like they have
anything interesting and worth sharing.
Which is why you need to document
everything. Even the [ __ ] that you don't
feel like you need to document the stuff
that you don't think is interesting.
Show your manufacturing process, your
design process, where your stuff is
made, how it's made. All right? Every
step of the way, how it's shot, how it's
posted, how it's put on the website.
Show literally everything. Because for
example, whenever I show the entire
process of making the V3 Mavic Denim,
right, the wash process, the fit
refinements, the pattern adjustments,
the detail adjustments, the distressing
kind of evolution that we created, the
coffee stained thread, the hardware, the
fireman's clasp, the tags, the leather
tag updates as we go through time and
mature the brand, right? All of that
stuff creates this transparency which
gives people this trust in the product
because they know that a lot of effort
went into it. They know the story behind
it, right? They know why these changes
took place. They know where the garment
started and how it's evolved over time.
And that story attributes value,
perceived value to the product, which
justifies higher price points. It
justifies more trust in the brand
whenever people go to spend money. So,
they are willing to spend more money.
And you know what? When you're
transparent about your manufacturers,
your suppliers, you're doing something
that 99% of brands are not willing to
do. Which is why for me, I have a trip
to China planned where I intend on
documenting going and seeing my factory,
talking and meeting with my
manufacturing partners in Dong Guang and
Guanghao, and I'm going to show the
entire process. And the brands who have
done that are the brands who are at the
very very top. So if you can do that
even virtually getting videos from your
manufacturer talking about the process,
you don't even have to go and show the
actual manufacturer and make it all
cinematic and stuff like the bigger
brands do, but even just talking about
it. Now, one of the reasons this works
is because you're treating your
customers like intelligent people.
People like being spoken to like they're
people, like they're smart people, like
they're capable people. And the direct
benefit of this method is not just the
transparency and the trust that you
gain, but also the content that you can
post. Everybody's always asking me, "Oh,
well, Marshall, what what what content
do I post this on my clothes? Post that
shit." Every sample that didn't work,
every manufacturer conversation, every
design iteration becomes a piece of
content that you can share and a part of
the conversation between you and your
audience. And also, your audience wants
to see the work that goes into making a
product, right? Because the showcase of
friction between the ideiation of a
product, the coming up with the idea of
the product and the actual creation of
the product attributes perceived value
to the product in your customer's mind
because they're not just buying a
product, they're supporting an entire
journey that's kind of like unfolded in
front of them. Recently this year, I
created a two-part series for one of my
back tochool collections that I did for
Attain Psychotic. And I'm 90% sure that
this attributed to probably 70% of the
revenue that we did. So part one was
essentially me talking about why I
wanted to make the collection, right?
How I was homeschooled and I wanted to
make a clothing collection that
represented kind of like my fantasy
wardrobe of like what I'd want to wear
to school if I ever went to school. And
then that second part was about how I
basically just bet my entire life
savings on that drop because I was so
confident in the designs that I had
created and the world that I'd kind of
curated to sell the designs in. And
everybody that watched those videos
could see how much conviction I had
behind the product. They could see how
much investment I had behind the
product. They could see the lore behind
the products through me and my story,
which made them all the more convinced
to actually buy the product. So here's
what I want you to do. I want you to
take your phone and I want you to set it
up and I want you to record a 60-second
video of you explaining the reasoning
behind making one of your products.
You're not going to like it in the
beginning. It's going to be a little
uncomfortable. It's not going to make
sense. You're not going to know what to
say. But if you can commit to doing this
once, twice, three times a week, you're
going to get better and better and
better at it. And you're going to soon
be able to provide so much lore and
meaningful information about your
product to the product that once your
audience sees that, right? And once you
get good at making products and can make
something that will be wearable to an
audience that doesn't just care about
the story, but also about the product
itself enough to buy it, you are going
to be really, really good at this [ __ ]
I've gotten really good at it. And the
way I got good at it was by setting my
phone up for 60 seconds and talking
about why I made the product, right? why
I created the product and then coming up
with creative visual ways to aid the
storytelling stuff to throw in there to
kind of get people's attention to kind
of keep people visually stimulated, tell
it in a storytelling format, things like
that, right? But you have to start
somewhere and it starts with setting
your phone up for 60 seconds once a week
and you app it. All right, foundation
number two is really where most brands
completely [ __ ] it up and they jump
straight into making products, right? So
foundation two is not to be skipped. So
before you design anything, before you
start reaching out to manufacturers,
before you start making your tech packs,
you need to understand like what am I
actually making here, right? What what
are we making? Why are we making it? And
I'm not talking about a clothing brand.
I'm talking about like what you're
building on a deeper level. What's the
culture? What's the energy? What's the
vibe that runs through everything that
you're going to make? The clothing, the
content, the stories, the Instagram
posts, the reals, the Tik Toks, the
YouTube videos, the ads. What is that
feeling that's going to run through the
veins of every piece of content? So for
me with tame psychotic, right, I didn't
sit down and think, oh, I'm going to I'm
going to sell a hat and then I'm going
to sell some jeans, then I'm going to
sell, you know, a shirt. I thought back
to like, okay, why do I care about this?
What do I want to create? I wanted to
create something that would be kind of
like inspiring and supportive to my
younger self, right? To my current self.
Because my mom uh she passed when I was
17, but before she passed, she had a
nonprofit, right? supporting uh
chemotherapy patients because she was a
previous chemotherapy patient. She was a
cancer survivor and she created a book
and a nonprofit to support them. And for
me, I was like, okay, you know, I know
what creative things and what things
that I've made that have supported
myself in that state and I want to make
that for other people. So, the brand is
built on this idea that growth does not
look perfect. It doesn't look polished.
It doesn't look posh. It looks a little
gritty. It looks a little ugly
sometimes. It looks a little chaotic. It
looks a little punk. You know what I'm
saying? So for me, that's kind of like
where my identity for my brand is
rooted. Now that brand identity, right,
that idea of like why you're creating is
going to essentially be the rule book,
the blueprint for every single decision
that you will make for your brand in the
future. every single product that you
make, every single post that you make on
your Instagram story, your Instagram
feed, your Tik Tok, the way that you
speak, the way that you reference
graphics, the way that you present your
products, the way that you speak to your
customers, the way that you package your
products. Every single decision will
reference this blueprint that is your
brand identity. So, how do you know if
you've done it right? way that you can
know that you've done it right, the
foolproof way is to look at it and ask
yourself, is this so unapologetically me
that 90% of people would look at it and
say, "Yeah, that's not for me." and turn
around and walk away. If the answer is
yes, then you have something good,
right? But if the answer is I mean like
I guess everybody could like it or I
guess like most people could like it,
then you're probably not there, right?
Because it's not specific. It's not
distinct. What makes a movie character
special? It's not a character that
everybody likes. Otherwise, every
character in a movie would be the hero.
What makes a movie character special, an
antagonist, a protagonist, is that some
people will not relate with them. Some
people won't like them because they are
so distinct that they will really really
relate and really really resonate with
certain people and you want something
similar, right? That's going to resonate
with certain people and not with others.
And that's what happens when your core
identity is real, right? when it comes
from your true values, your true
interests, your true references, your
true life, not what's trending on
TikTok. So, here's my actionable advice
for you. All right, I want you to pick
up a pen, a notepad, and I want you to
answer these questions for me. Number
one, what were you obsessed with before
you knew anything about fashion or
clothing? All right, very important
question. Number two, what was the
culture that you grew up in? What were
your influences? What were the distinct
differences between your culture and say
the culture from somebody who lived in
another state or another big city or
another country? What were the
non-negotiable values that you lived by?
Your stances, your core values like I
have to do this, I have to live this
way. There is no other way to live. And
the last question I'd like to encourage
you to ask yourself is what's your life
philosophy on navigating the world, on
navigating the human experience, right?
right? That you would like to share
maybe with other people. I want you to
write all those questions down. All
right? Don't write the answers yet. Wait
till the end of this video. Then sit
down for 2 or 3 hours and really answer
them as deeply as you possibly can.
Figure all that out first, right? And
then we'll build everything else around
those answers. Now, something that most
brand owners are really, really afraid
to do is putting themsel front and
center. They hide behind their brand
name. They try to position themselves as
this like anonymous corporate identity
and they just kind of hope that the
brand will kind of speak for itself. And
that is dead wrong. This is 2025, 2026.
People are not buying from faceless
anonymous entities, right? They're
buying from human beings. They're buying
from owners. They're buying from
founders who speak to the camera.
They're buying from teams that speak to
the camera. When people buy something
from Tame Psychotic, they're not buying
from this just unknown entity, right?
They're buying from me. They're buying
from Caleb. They're buying from Connor.
They're buying from Phil. They're buying
from Jonathan. They're buying from Nick.
They're buying from the whole team,
right? They're buying from people.
They're supporting me, my vision, my
team's vision, and the whole journey of
making something from nothing. And that
creates a completely different type of
story, right? Because I can go on
Instagram right now and find like five
or six brands that are copying what
we're doing. Copying our washes, copying
our distressing patterns, copying
graphics, copying the fit of our shirts,
stealing our size charts, right? But
what they can't steal is our story. What
they can't steal is our lore. What they
can't steal is our representation.
Right? What they can't steal is the
passion and the story that we have put
behind the products. Nobody can copy
your personality, your perspective, and
the way you see the world. That is
completely yours. you have a copyrighted
patent to that. And especially right now
after all these big luxury houses are
getting exposed for, you know, these
false narratives, these corporate
narratives, people want more than ever,
they want a face to thank, right, for
the good products. They want a face to
blame whenever the products are late or
the products are bad. But this is also
the part where a lot of people [ __ ] up,
right? They try to like put on this
like, oh, professional business, you
know, I've been doing business for 10
years even though you just started the
brand, right? you try to put on this
like face of like I'm a founder, right?
Instead of just acting like, you know,
the kid who wanted to start a clothing
brand and had like 500 bucks to his name
and started in his garage. That, in my
opinion, is a way cooler story. So, be
authentic with it. Don't try and play
some character. Don't try and be
somebody you're not. I'm here in my
[ __ ] boots drinking my energy drink.
This is just me, right? I'm not playing
a character. This is just truly who I
am. I'm not trying to act like a
professional YouTuber with the whole
plain white background and the the fancy
mic and [ __ ] right? I don't need that,
right? Because that's not who I am. And
and you guys need to kind of, you know,
portray that same authentic energy
because that's something that no brand
that's privately funded, no corporate
company can replicate. They can't do it.
So, here's your homework. Here's your
actionable steps. All right. This week,
I want you to make three pieces of
content. And these pieces of content are
going to feature you as the subject, not
the clothing. Talk about your story as a
founder trying to build something
meaningful to you. Talk about an element
of it that you really, really, really
care about. Talk about a major deciding
factor for you to even start the brand.
Maybe that's a day in the life video,
right? Maybe it's a recap of recent
events. Maybe it's even just as simple
as a photo dump. Maybe it's a video uh
voicing over a design process. Just
whatever is in your head. Documentation
of wins, losses, anything. Do this every
week and your brand will transform from
this faceless corporate entity to a
person and values and a story that
people really connect with. I promise
you, it takes time, but it will happen.
And here's a few other accounts other
than my own that you guys can look to
for inspiration. You can just pause it
for a sec, take note, follow those guys
on IG, you know, consume their content
and kind of get a feel for what that
stuff kind of looks like. Now,
foundation concept number four, and this
is going to sound a little bit
ridiculous, all right? But I would
rather have 10,000 people who are
diehard fans from my brand than have a
million people that are engaged on a
surface level. See, real community is
not built through like one viral video.
It's built through consistency. I would
much rather gain 10,000 followers over
the course of a year from consistent
output than gain 10,000 followers in a
day from one viral video because those
10,000 followers are not created equal.
One of them is invested, has seen a
thousand pieces of content from you, has
supported you again and again and again,
and then the other has seen you one time
do something cool one time and has
followed you. They're still baby baby
baby supporters, right? Whereas the ones
earned from consistent output, those
guys, they're veterans, right? They've
been supporting you for a minute, right?
They are ride or dies. They are much
more likely to purchase from you than
the guys who just followed from one
viral video. Which is why this whole
element of consistency and the small
wins, the small actionable steps is so
so so important. So what this means is
investing in platforms where you kind of
own the relationship and can control the
communication in the relationship. Which
is why it's important to collect emails,
collect SMS, right? create lists of
people that you can directly contact. If
I want to send a message to the
customers who bought this glass cup from
my brand, if I was selling them, I can
directly communicate with them whenever
the [ __ ] I want and tell them whatever I
want, show them whatever I want. And
having that kind of control in the
communication dynamic between you and
your customers is really, really
important, right? So, you need to have
systems in place to be able to collect
those emails and phone numbers so that
you can have that direct line of
communication. I would typically use a
software like Clavio, Postcript, there's
a bunch of just apps to use this.
Omnisend I believe is another one. And
aside from that, I would also recommend
creating like these little mini
communities, right? Like it could be
Discord, it could be an Instagram
broadcast channel, it could be a group
chat even on Instagram, right? It could
be a Telegram, it could be anything. But
just having that kind of like direct
line of communication and familiarity
with your audience, intimacy and
closeness with your audience or at least
the option for it is really really big.
You need to understand that in order to
earn that, you need to make content that
really really resonates with the
relationship side of people. And I also
cannot stress enough how important it is
to make content that resonates
specifically with your target audience
before you try and sell anything, before
you know you try and make products.
Because if you're not speaking to your
target audience, you're not going to
make any [ __ ] sales. If you're trying
to sell pink hoodies, but you're talking
to an audience that likes brown pants,
you're not going to sell any pink
hoodies. So, in simpler terms, build a
community first and then everything else
follows. Because here's what happens
when you do this, right? Your community
will become your marketing team because
your community, the people who are
buying your clothing, care so much about
the clothes that they're going to go and
tell their friends about it. They're
going to wear it. They're going to post
it on their Instagram. They're going to
tag the brand. They're going to mention
you in their story whenever they wear it
and they're going to want everybody to
know, hey, this is, you know, this is my
brand, right? This is or this is so and
so brand for me. You know, people want
to know it's tame psychotic. And that is
the best form of traffic. That is the
best way to acquire a new customer
because people trust their friends more
than they trust an ad that they see on
the internet or a random video they see
on Tik Tok. Right? Remember that. So,
here's how you can start building your
community today. This is your actionable
step for number four. First, pick a
platform. Okay, Instagram or Tik Tok,
one of those two because those are
really the only two that have accessible
discovery first options, which means you
can easily reach people who do not
follow you. Now, Instagram uh has a few
more features, right? You can post on
the story, the feed, you can DM people a
little bit easier. They have, you know,
kind of like the broadcast feature. They
just have more features to choose from.
But Tik Tok also has a really, really
good discovery first mechanism. Their
algorithm is super super super good and
dialed at this point so you can reach
the people you're trying to reach much
easier than maybe on Instagram. But just
pick one. All right? Whatever you're
comfortable with. Don't spend too much
time thinking about this. And if you're
posting [ __ ] on one, just repost it onto
the other. You know what I mean? Posting
[ __ ] on Instagram, repost it on TikTok.
Now, next, you're going to commit to the
30 3030 rule. The 303030 rule states
that the first 30 minutes should be
spent engaging in content that is very
similar to what you would like to
create. So, if it's clothing brand
content that you want to make, consume
clothing brand content, engage with it,
like it, comment on [ __ ] right? So that
you can get more of it fed to you. You
can get inspiration. The next 30 minutes
is going to be spent actually making the
video. And then the last 30 minutes is
going to be spent engaging with the
people who engage with your video,
right? responding to comments,
responding to DMs, going and engaging
with more content so that you can be fed
more ideas and maybe people will see
your comments and then go and look at
your page next. And that is your method.
An hour and a half, hour and a half a
day. Commit to it, please. Your screen
time is probably already like four or
five hours a day anyways, right? Why not
use an hour and a half of it to actually
do something productive for your future,
right? Next, you're going to set up an
email list with Collabio or ConvertKit.
and you're just going to say, "Hey." And
then once you have that Convert Kit or
the Claio or the email list set up, you
are going to basically just send weekly
updates, right? Just talking about
what's going on, maybe showing some
products, showing some teasers, right?
Just communicating with your audience
saying, "Hey, we got this going on. You
can be a part of it if you like. Here's
when it's coming. Here's the updates on
how it's coming." Right? Stuff like
that. Don't over complicate it. Now, I
want you guys to understand that this
window is not going to stay open
forever. Right now, customers are really
looking for that alternative option cuz
they don't [ __ ] with these luxury houses
lying and misrepresenting things and
creating this corporate narrative. And
this isn't going to last forever because
every opportunity has a shelf life.
Eventually, some brands, they're going
to capture this moment and they're going
to crush it and they're going to start
dominating and then they're going to be
hard to compete against and then you
have more worthy competitors. Whereas
now you got a bunch of babies running
around in the market, right? You've got
your big dogs. Yeah, maybe you're
competing with them, but you've got all
these babies running around. So given
this information, given this awareness,
you have an opportunity to jump on it
early while everybody's looking for a
brand to support, you know, cuz I mean,
think about what Supreme did in the
'90s, right? They positioned themselves
as like that low-key authentic like
brand for skaters, right? that kind of
competed and went against the grain of
like the big fashion houses and stuff,
the big designer houses, you know what I
mean? And now they're billion-dollar
brand. And you know what? That same
opportunity exists now, right? Not for
streetear, but for authentic
transparency from founder
brands. So if you start now, you are
entering at the perfect time. Better
than probably any time we've had in the
last 5 years. All right. Right? I know I
broke down a lot in this video, but
something I want you to understand is
that watching this video and actually
working and building your brand is two
separate things. So, if you are serious
about this opportunity, if you are
serious about capitalizing on this
moment, I built a free master class.
It's 42-minute free course on YouTube
that you can go and watch and learn how
to do all the nitty-gritty setup stuff
with. It's the exact same system and
framework that I use to scale my brand.
Tame psychotic. Everything that I've
used to make clothing, to do my
websites, to do my social media, to do
my marketing, to do my positioning, to
do my reinvestment, right? It goes very,
very deep into all of that stuff.
Everything you are going to need to
know. That's why it's 42 minutes long.
And you know what? There is a reason
that video has damn near half a million
views. It's pretty [ __ ] good. The
link's in the description. It's
completely free. Go watch it. And you
know what? If you want more hands-on
help, right? and you want somebody to
kind of educate you and teach you and
guide you through the process of
actually doing all this. There is also a
link to apply to work with my team and I
with Urban Unity. We're very selective.
We only take on a few brand owners every
single month. But if we liked your
vision, we feel you were thorough with
your application, we feel you're a great
fit for us, we will build you a custom
road map to take you exactly where you
want to go in a timely manner with
structure, homework, feedback,
curriculum, support, calls. We go the
whole nine yards. We are not some silly
internet course. We are essentially a
university. That is what Urban Unity is.
And this is the exact support that I
wished I had whenever I started, right?
I was a trailblazer of sorts, right?
Just kind of figuring [ __ ] out with no
means of education. Just making
mistakes, learning from those mistakes,
trying again, [ __ ] up, trying again,
and just kind of like beating myself
against a wall until I figured it out.
And I don't want the same for you guys
because I lost a lot of time, money, and
energy in the process of doing that,
which is why Urban Unity exists. So, if
that is something you'd be interested
in, the link will be in the description
below. And if you want the free
alternative, then just go watch the
master class video, which will also be
linked in the description. Thank you
guys so much for watching this video. I
will be getting back to posting more
routine videos now that Black Friday is
kind of over. And if you guys have any
disagreements, any thoughts, any
questions, any concerns, please put them
in the comments. I'd love to chat with
some of you guys, as well as just get
some insight on what you guys would like
me to make videos on in the future. So,
thank you guys so much and I will see
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