Write One Quick Tip for Your Audience
Why This Matters
Quick tips are easy to create, easy to read, and easy to share.
They keep your business visible without turning every post into a sales pitch.
What This Does for Your Business
A quick tip helps you show expertise and stay useful.
What Your Customer Sees
Your customer sees a business that understands small practical problems.
The 10–12 Minute Fix
Pick one small tip your audience would appreciate.
Write it in this format:
Quick tip: [tip]
Then add one sentence explaining why it matters.
Finish with a soft CTA if appropriate.
Simple Example
Quick tip: Before leaving your home for the season, take photos of key rooms and outdoor areas.
That way, if you need someone to check something later, you have a clear reference point. If you want help keeping an eye on the home while you are away, send a message.
Virtual High Five
Good. You created a useful post without making it complicated.
That is how content gets easier.
Momentum Pep Talk
You probably know dozens of quick tips.
Write one. Share one. Move on.
Let’s fix one thing today.
Do Not Let This Be Another Good Idea You Forget
You just read one small business move. Good. Now give your business a few honest minutes and actually use it.
12 Minutes A Day is built for solo business owners, local service providers, freelancers, and side-hustlers who are tired of feeling behind but do not have time for another giant course, complicated system, or fake business guru speech.
Small enough to start. Useful enough to count.
Get One Small Business Task Per Day
Enter your email to get the free 12 Minutes A Day Small Business Challenge — 30 tiny moves to improve your website, follow-up, local visibility, reviews, content, offers, and confidence.
No spam. No daily yelling. Just practical small business help you can actually use.
Build a Better Small Business in 12 Minutes a Day
12 Minutes A Day gives small business owners practical marketing tasks, website fixes, follow-up ideas, local visibility tips, review requests, content prompts, and offer clarity exercises that can be done in short, focused sessions. The goal is not perfection. The goal is motion.
One finished task is not small. It is evidence. Evidence that your business is still alive, that you are still moving, and that the mess can get smaller one piece at a time. Set the timer. Do the useful thing. Let’s fix one thing today.

