Mentors and Coaches are important But most of us can’t afford them
I replied to a Chris Do post today and that made me think:
This is a really complex supply/demand issue

The gist of it is: – People who become mentors/coaches professionally want to make good money because their work is valuable — so they sell it to the highest bidder (usually West) – People who want coaches and mentors, usually aren’t in a spot to ever afford them, especially in low-income areas like Pakistan
It is easy for me to say that hey if you want to learn you need to pay up
However, I am in a privileged position, because of being in tech. An industry where location doesn’t matter as much.
But with the average person and the average business, there’s just too much on their plate (see attached image)
Affordability is relative, but it is also the harsh truth for many — someone who is paying 50 bucks for their rent can’t just go pay 50 for a course, the value does not equate in their head.
The solution to this perhaps?
There needs to be inflation-adjusted pricing from more coaches and mentors, Justin Welsh and Zeeshan Syed recently had massive discounts on their courses making them much more accessible
BUT
I think that is still not enough
What are we left with meanwhile?
– Learn from free resources — as much as you can – Pay it forward — as much as you can – Help anyone who reaches out — as much as you can
Charge the people that can afford; Provide to the people in need
Source (the closest to ground reality I managed to find): https://livingcost.org/cost/pakistan/united-states
The Wandering Pro is a quiet, steady corner of the internet for people figuring out their next move in tech.
Whether you’re a freelancer, a junior developer, or someone building something for the first time – this is a space for showing up, learning, and making progress at your own pace.
If that sounds like what you need, come be a part of it.

See, at the heart of it – I love solving problems for people using tech, it doesn’t get simpler than that.
I am known for constant experimentation and relentless execution.
Right now – my focus is to help everyday folks of Pakistan understand tech, career, and business better with everything I do.

