When she looked back on her childhood, she realized that she had an entrepreneurial spirit. Her father was a grocery store and could sell candy wholesale, so she made a small profit selling candy at school.
“I turned to entrepreneurship because it presented me with a low-risk opportunity to start my own private practice, something I had always wanted to do.A colleague offered me a job at another company that was renting office space at a very low rate. She was the only one charged when using the office space, so she had nothing to lose financially,” Wong said.
She realized that although she had the clinical knowledge to work with patients, she had to learn how to run a business from scratch. She read her tax forms and decided whether to register her business as a sole proprietorship or an LLC and how to identify deductions.
at the same time, sell sofa The podcast launched and Wong was hooked. The Dr. Melvin Varghese episode provided Wong with a template for building a private practice, including how to write website copy, set prices, and more.
Ultimately, it was Varghese's webinar that inspired her to start her own podcast. color of success. As Wong grew his podcast, it made sense to form an LLC. This led to the publication of her book. Cancel filter: Psychologists, podcasters, and the realities of working mothers of color.