You can work harder than anyone in the room and still end up broke because you picked the wrong vehicle. Operators send emails at midnight, take every call, personally handle every deliverable, and go nowhere. The car is broken, and the broken car is what has you stuck. This is the thing that's sabotaging you right now. Before you commit to any business model, run it through three filters. I call it the lame check. L is leverage. Can revenue grow without you working more hours? A stands for addressable ceiling. Can this thing produce enough revenue to justify your years? Then N, natural fit. Do your skills and your current access points match what the model demands? If any of those three comes back no, you've got a structural problem because willpower won't fix structure. A solo freelancer is selling hours. So, once you hit 30 to 40 billable hours a week, you're done. That's a wall built into the model. An agency removes that wall by adding people, but an agency with 10 employees and thin margins can be worse than a solo shop running at 70% profit. So, pick the model whose structure fits the income you want. They hear agency beats freelancing and rush to build a bloated team before they're ready. I see this all the time and it drives me crazy because complexity comes with its own cost. I've run cold email agencies, built and exited five SaaS companies, and trained over 14,000 agencies through Gallant and Gold. Solo done-for-you freelancing has low leverage and a capped ceiling, but it fits specialists naturally. Productized services get you high leverage once you document your delivery. Coaching has moderate leverage, but without an existing audience, it becomes a trap. SaaS has the highest leverage and ceiling, but pulling it off from zero is the hardest path. And these are not theories I picked up reading about someone else's business. I've tested this across multiple industries. If I ran this model at full capacity with a strong team, would I even want to be running it? That question determines whether you scale or quit. Hard work is a multiplier. It multiplies whatever the model can already do. So, if the ceiling is low, working harder just gets you to that ceiling faster. When you switch models, you've got to rebuild the front end. I use Scraper City to pull targeted lists filtered by industry, company size, and job title so I'm not blasting cold outreach to people who'll never buy because switching the structure means nothing if the pipeline is empty. If you need leads, check out Scraper City. For cold email coaching, check out Gallant and Gold. And if you want to see my favorite tools to grow your business, go to alexberman.com/tools. The next video is coming up now.