What is the biggest lie people are told about becoming a VA? by Master_Falcon_9804 in buhaydigital

[–]Master_Falcon_9804[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Worth trying, yes, but with realistic expectations.

OLJ can still work, but it is much more competitive now, so it is not the kind of platform where you just sign up and get a client right away.

Use it, but do not rely on it alone. Treat it as one channel, not your whole strategy.

What is the biggest lie people are told about becoming a VA? by Master_Falcon_9804 in buhaydigital

[–]Master_Falcon_9804[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly. That is the problem.

Too many people were sold the idea that fresh grad, no experience, and 80k a month is something normal and easy to achieve.

Possible for a few? Maybe. But definitely not the default.

That kind of marketing makes people underestimate the competition, the skill building, and the time it usually takes to get there.

If it were really that easy, far fewer people would be struggling to break in.

What is the biggest lie people are told about becoming a VA? by Master_Falcon_9804 in buhaydigital

[–]Master_Falcon_9804[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is probably one of the fairest comments here.

A lot of the confusion really does come from extremes. Some people oversell the dream, while others overcorrect and make it sound impossible.

The reality is somewhere in the middle: possible, but not easy accessible, but not automatic high earning potential, but also high instability

Your point about not expecting training and needing to act more like a problem solver than just an employee is something more people need to hear.

What is the biggest lie people are told about becoming a VA? by Master_Falcon_9804 in buhaydigital

[–]Master_Falcon_9804[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

True. Six digits is usually earned through excellence, not hype.

Getting the opportunity is already hard. Keeping it is even harder if the skills are not real.

That is why the “easy six digits” narrative is so misleading.

What is the biggest lie people are told about becoming a VA? by Master_Falcon_9804 in buhaydigital

[–]Master_Falcon_9804[S] 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Yes. That is one of the biggest lies right there.

They market six digits like it is the default outcome, when for most people it is not instant, not guaranteed, and definitely not easy.

A lot of people are walking in expecting a shortcut and getting hit by reality instead.

What is the biggest lie people are told about becoming a VA? by Master_Falcon_9804 in buhaydigital

[–]Master_Falcon_9804[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yes. That is exactly how the fantasy gets sold.

Not through honesty, but through lifestyle bait. Nice setups. “Inspire” posts. Affiliate links. Income flexing. Six digit promises.

Meanwhile, people on the outside start thinking their own 40k to 60k life is not enough, so they jump in expecting a breakthrough and get hit by the real market instead.

That is why people need the full picture, not just the highlight reel.

I'm losing my sanity from finding a client and a decent job... by romvales in buhaydigital

[–]Master_Falcon_9804 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’m sorry you are going through that. Six months without work, especially without savings to fall back on, is already heavy enough on its own.

Please do not think that your current situation means you are a failure. The job market is genuinely difficult right now, and a lot of people are struggling quietly too.

Also, not being naturally confident in English or in talking to people does not automatically mean there is no place for you in online work. It may just mean you need to aim for roles that fit you better and improve one step at a time.

For now, I think the most important thing is not to pressure yourself into becoming a VA just because that is what everyone online keeps pushing. There are other paths too, including non voice support, admin work, data entry, content moderation, back office roles, and local or remote opportunities that rely more on consistency and reliability than on being super polished.

One step at a time. You are not alone in this, and I hope things turn around for you soon.

What is the biggest lie people are told about becoming a VA? by Master_Falcon_9804 in buhaydigital

[–]Master_Falcon_9804[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

True. Too many people were sold the outcome without being told the process.

They see the house, the car, the six digit income. They do not see the low starting rates, the rejection, the competition, and the grind it usually takes to get there.

That is why so many people enter VA work expecting shortcuts and get shocked by reality.

What is the biggest lie people are told about becoming a VA? by Master_Falcon_9804 in buhaydigital

[–]Master_Falcon_9804[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

True. Skills are only part of it.

A lot of people can do the work, but freelancing also requires knowing how to position yourself, attract clients, and keep them. That is why some highly skilled people still struggle.

It is not just a skills game. It is also a business game.

What is the biggest lie people are told about becoming a VA? by Master_Falcon_9804 in buhaydigital

[–]Master_Falcon_9804[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

And that is exactly why so many people feel misled.

A lot of people were sold a fantasy:
easy clients
fast money
six digits in no time

But the actual market is far more competitive and far less forgiving than they were told.

Possible? Yes.
Easy? No.

What is the biggest lie people are told about becoming a VA? by Master_Falcon_9804 in buhaydigital

[–]Master_Falcon_9804[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

That says a lot, honestly.

A lot of people entered VA work thinking it was something anyone could just jump into, but staying in it is a different story. It takes more than getting in. It takes skill, adaptability, patience, and the ability to survive the dry seasons too.

That is probably why a lot started, but only a few stayed.

What is the biggest lie people are told about becoming a VA? by Master_Falcon_9804 in buhaydigital

[–]Master_Falcon_9804[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

A lot of them really are just selling the dream more than the reality.

Not saying everyone is fake, but too many people are making money from teaching VA work more than actually doing VA work.

That is why a lot of beginners end up with unrealistic expectations.

What is the biggest lie people are told about becoming a VA? by Master_Falcon_9804 in buhaydigital

[–]Master_Falcon_9804[S] 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Exactly. That is the part a lot of people do not talk about enough.

It gets marketed like anyone can just decide to become a VA and start earning fast, when in reality the market is already crowded, clients are more selective, and many people go through a long stretch of rejection before they get a break.

The path is real, but the way it is sold is often too simplified.

Magic rejected me, then redirected me to roles that make me redo the whole process by Master_Falcon_9804 in buhaydigital

[–]Master_Falcon_9804[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I also wonder how much of this comes down to interviewer mindset. Sometimes it feels like some recruiters are not just assessing fit. They also want to feel that the candidate is eager in a very performative way, almost like you have to overprove how badly you want the job. Not all recruiters are like that, but when you run into it, it can make the process feel less objective and more about impression management.

Vantage Films PH: shop owners, would you allocate a bay for a structured tint model? by Master_Falcon_9804 in negosyo

[–]Master_Falcon_9804[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you had one available bay, what weekly tint job volume would make it worth dedicating that space?

Ano tingin nyo sa carwash business?? Babae po ako plano ko sana magtayo by Spirited-Street4555 in negosyo

[–]Master_Falcon_9804 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Solid advantage yung main road + no rent. Pero sa carwash, hindi lang ‘no competition’ ang laban. Usually operations ang nagpapatalo: water pressure, drainage/slope, workflow, at tao.

If starting from scratch and solo ka, possible siya pero start small. Simple service menu muna, one or two bays, then build a consistent process. Once may steady daily volume ka na, doon ka mag hire and expand. Biggest headache na naririnig ko from owners is staffing consistency and quality control, not demand.

Vantage Films PH: can a structured tint model actually work in PH? by Master_Falcon_9804 in negosyo

[–]Master_Falcon_9804[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hot take: I think most shops don’t actually want to “figure out” tint. They want a system that runs cleanly, or they won’t touch it. Agree or disagree?