I Failed at 6 Businesses Before This One. Here's What Each One Built in Me.

In 1948, David Ogilvy arrived in New York City with $6,000, no clients, no credentials, and no experience writing advertisements. He was 38 years old. What came before that moment was seventeen years of getting expelled from Oxford, working in a hotel kitchen preparing meals for customers' dogs, selling stoves door to door in the Scottish Highlands, farming with the Amish in Pennsylvania, and failing at most of it. Eleven years after opening his agency, he had every client on his wish list. Time magazine called him the most sought-after wizard in advertising. He became known as the Father of Advertising. And when people asked how he did it, he pointed back to the years that looked like nothing and said none of it was wasted. Andrew believes him. Because over the last decade he has started a merchant services company, a financial blog he stopped at five articles, a vehicle wrap business called Dryvr that signed up over a hundred drivers and never found a single paying client, a solar domain name venture that earned him a hundred dollar deposit and a lesson, a follow-up email business that worked but wasn't worth building, and two Amazon number one bestsellers that felt significant and then quietly faded. This episode goes back through every one of those failures, not for the story but for what each one actually built. The skill, the self-knowledge, the judgment, and the internal capacity that made everything that followed possible, including this podcast. What season are you in right now that feels like a detour? What if it isn't? Money isn't the main currency of a good life. This podcast gives you the tools to build a life of meaning and fulfillment. Free Ultimate Goal Setting Framework → thecurrencyofhappiness.com Subscribe on YouTube →    / @thecurrencyofhappiness   Instagram → instagram.com/thecurrencyofhappiness Listen on Spotify and Apple Podcasts → Search "The Currency of Happiness" If this episode hit home, share it with one person. Every share helps build what comes next.