ENMy personal opinion—I don't care what anyone thinks, sorry in advance, but I'm gonna type it out. Every investment requires money. The family has to be rich or have money to support you. Like the kid in the clip, even though she says her grades were bad, she still got to study in good places. Some people might think, "Hey... it's not related. P.S. Just having effort makes you great. You can go far." Yes, that's true. But in real life, it's damn hard, bro. I admit she's talented, but her environment is set up perfectly for her. She has a foundation better than mine. If your family doesn't really have capital, it's tough. So, saying "money is easy" isn't easy for everyone. And all this "easy money"—is it even honest?
ENIt's so funny how Thais blindly praise her just by seeing the money amount and the video title. They go along with it. The speaking style and content in most of her videos—doesn't it look similar to a lot of foreign course-selling channels? To me, it's hilarious. Say some cool, slick quotes, add a little music, it's a riot. The words are recycled. Personally, I've seen some of her clips before. I think it's funny how she uses slightly harsh words to motivate people.
ENFor those who don't understand, let me sum it up: They told you to build your identity and the skills you're good at until you're great. Once people follow you and like you, someone will pay for what matches their needs.
ENSeeing the negative comments from Thai people saying the kid has privilege, life isn’t fair—I get it, everyone’s starting point is different. Four has a good foundation and he’s smart for leveraging it to grow more. Coaching requires high skill and confidence. No one knows everything when starting a business; you develop over time. I really admire him for daring to try and having the mindset to earn his own money.
ENParents have money, kids get opportunities to experiment and learn. Respect. Learning nowadays really costs money. No one teaches for free. If my family had money, I'd try everything—even if I fail, there's a soft landing. Every day I struggle to make ends meet and still have to support my family.
ENTrue. What he said about interviewing people who aren't interesting, aren't special, and having the interviewer talk to them many times with the same old stuff.
ENI'm confused. Came in here watching people talk about income but they never say what they actually do or what the approach is. I can't find any substance at all.
ENIs she really Thai, or of Chinese descent, or a Chinese person who moved to Thailand long ago, or half? Her speaking accent is so perfect. Also, why are her mindset, lifestyle, and way of thinking so out-of-the-box like a foreign kid from abroad? So different from typical Thai kids. Plus, her parents let her live alone and she makes a ton of money on her own for a 16-year-old—that’s really impressive. But I’m not criticizing her; I just want to warn Thai people: don’t just look at the surface or what she’s achieved. I know you want what others have, but use your judgment and research a lot before doing anything. Sometimes we’re not as lucky as others. Nothing comes easy—remember that. But if you have a lot of capital, go for it. Mike is an influencer too, right? Maybe have him let her try something—I’m curious how true the info really is.
พูดไทยให้ชัดก็ได้นะ ฟังดูเหมือนพยายามพูดให้ไม่ชัด เหนื่อยแทน ระวังจะเป็นแบบขายคอร์สระบบลูกโซ่ If it's too good to be true, it probably isn't
ENSpeak Thai clearly, it sounds like you're trying to mumble. Makes me tired for you. Be careful it's not a pyramid scheme selling courses. If it's too good to be true, it probably isn't.
ENIn summary, all I know is he's a life coach selling an online branding course. But it's impressive he can do this at his age. He knows Thais love life coaches, so he uses that to sell to them.
ENSome people wonder who her clients are. For example, she teaches kids aged 15-16, her age, to create content. Her clients are international kids with money, hiring her as a coach for tens of thousands a month.
ENI love her advice. You might not be good at some things, but you could be a genius at something else. Hope everyone finds themselves. I support everyone going all-in on what they love. If it’s not working out yet, maybe you haven’t given it your all. Just keep fighting✌️
ENHonestly, I bought it because it popped up on my IG feed. His course is such a scam. It teaches you to go make a course to scam others😅😅😅 It’s not like a real serious business guide. It’s teaching you to go trick others to keep the chain going. And it’s monthly, so it just eats up the profit from people who buy it. It’s not selling something tangible you can use. Like what Andrew Tate does—tricking people into a monthly subscription, teaching nothing, profit is less than the commission paid. But gotta admit, the kid is smart, but he’s sly. Makes videos with lots of views, goes viral, talks in an encouraging, uplifting way, gives advice everyone knows, adds sound and music, and people buy it—just fools like me who tried it😅😅😅😅😅😅
ENFighting. You have to be good at something, then spread it so many people see it. Then one of them will want to be as good as you and be willing to pay for that knowledge. You’ll get rewarded for the value and benefit you provide.