Can you acquire a business sense with self-learning?

Can you acquire a business sense with self-learning?

bump

Since knowledge is abundant everywhere, and thanks to robinhood, sites like nasdaq, marketwatch, Veeky Forums, and bloomberg, along with radio, TV, and millions of books on the subject, I have concluded that no, no you cannot.

Do minimum work for maximum profit. It's that simple.

I'm sure trying.

yes you can, read books

do what other succesfull people do. surround yourself with people with a positive attitude towards life and wealth.

Poverty is a mindset

Yup fail at it a couple of times. Never make mistakes again

Of course. Who wrote the first text book?

no, self-doing is also important

>Who wrote the first text book?
Neitzsche

Nietzsche*

>It's all about timing and location.

>Buy low, sell high.

>With someone else's money.

>Horde the profits.

>Rinse and repeat.

But none of these things matter unless you're tenacious and actually have the balls to do it.

No, but it helps. You have to hustle. That's the only way you'll ever acquire a "business sense" but keep reading about finance, business, marketing, and consumer behaviors and psychology to improve your hustle. Best learning is testing theoretical frameworks in the real world.

>2008 have no business sense
>start business
>fail hard
>learn lessons from failure
>2014 start business with past failure in mind.
>just cashed $32,000 check last week

Experience is the best teacher.

>32.500 a week
tell us more

It's for a month. Digging holes in the ground.

Obviously. All of the textbooks read in business school are available to the public. Not to mention widely available interviews from business and finance guys, including the guy in the pic you posted.
Beyond that, every sense comes from common sense. You can learn by doing.

"Buy low and sell high" is useless when you don't even know what low and high are. Buffet is a value investor who has been doing this for a LONG TIME. Don't expect overnight results.

>Surround yourself with positive people
Can't find anyone

The brightest minds act on logic, the average minds act on experience, and the dullest minds act on instinct.

*tips fedora, flourishes cape, does 360 and moonwalks out of the room*

>Buffet is a value investor who has been doing this for a LONG TIME.
That's the a huge part Veeky Forums will never get. It's not just the discipline to hold when there's a dip, it's the discipline to NOT to buy when there's a dip. Obviously Buffett over the years has found ways to shortcut assessing the intrinsic value of a company. But the thing to observe is just because a stocks cheaper than it was last week doesn't automatically mean it's worth buying this week.