Couverture de The Late Start Show

The Late Start Show

The Late Start Show

De : Ned Noon
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The Late Start Show helps adults over 40 make a smart late start with AI. This is a practical, conversation-first podcast about building new income streams, learning useful tools, and creating second-act opportunities without hype, jargon, or fake expert energy. Through honest back-and-forth between Sol and Simone, the show translates AI into plain English and tests real-world ideas around retirement income, side hustles, self-publishing, digital business, and modern reinvention. The focus stays on what is useful, what is realistic, and what actually deserves your time. This is not a podcast for tech bros, hustler cosplay, or empty motivation. It is for thoughtful late starters, skeptical beginners, and working people who want clarity, traction, and a real shot at building something meaningful. Produced by Noon Time Media.Noon Time Media Direction Economie Management et direction
Épisodes
  • Finish What You Wrote — With AI
    Jun 9 2026

    You started the book. Maybe you finished it. Now you are stuck — not sure where to go next, not sure how to clean it up, not sure how to actually get it out into the world.

    Saul and Simone break down exactly how AI can help you finish what you started. From unsticking your manuscript and writing in your own voice, to running it through an editing stack that catches what expensive editors miss, to uploading it to KDP step by step — this episode is the practical guide nobody gave you the first time.

    Ned Noon's book Losing Control is the live case study throughout, including the fifteen hundred dollar editing mistake that still left errors on the page.

    Get the free companion guide at nednoon.com.
    In this episode Saul and Simone cover:

    • How to use AI as a thinking partner when your manuscript loses steam
    • Building a style prompt so AI writes in your voice, not its own
    • The em dash problem and why your AI-assisted manuscript might sound like everyone else's
    • The three-tool editing stack: Grammarly, Claude, and ChatGPT in the right order
    • Why beta readers catch what AI never will
    • KDP step by step: description, metadata, keywords, categories, pricing
    • IngramSpark and when it matters
    • Jane Friedman's publishing course on Audible via The Great Courses

    Free companion guide for this episode: The Late Starter's Self-Publishing Roadmap at nednoon.com.

    Follow the show at Ned Noon dot AI on all platforms.

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    9 min
  • The Print on Demand Truth Nobody Tells You
    May 28 2026

    Episode description

    Most people who try print on demand fail. Not because the model is broken — because nobody explains how it actually works.

    In this episode, Saul and Simone get into the one financial fact that almost every print on demand guide gets completely wrong. You front the production cost on every sale. The platform pays you back later. That gap is where most new sellers get blindsided — and where smart ones build their margin strategy from day one.

    They also cover the three mistakes that kill most print on demand stores before they ever get traction: chasing trends instead of owning a lane, building a storefront instead of a brand, and treating the whole thing like a vending machine.

    And they lay out five revenue angles most people never consider — including bulk orders, high-end custom work, and premium positioning that lets you charge more and attract better customers.

    Ned is testing all of this in real time with RizzRags, so nothing in this episode is theory.

    What you will take away:

    • The cash flow reality of print on demand, stated plainly
    • How to pick a lane you can actually own
    • The difference between a brand and a storefront — and why it determines your ceiling
    • Five ways to make money inside one print on demand business
    • The free guide: The Late Starter's Print on Demand Guide at nednoon.com


    Show notes

    In this episode:

    Saul comes in with a failed print on demand experiment. Simone doesn't argue with the failure — she argues with the approach. What follows is the conversation most POD content never has.

    Topics covered:

    The financial model, correctly explained. You pay for production first. The platform reimburses you from the sale. No inventory sitting in a warehouse does not mean no money at risk. Understanding the float is the foundation of a real POD business.

    Why most stores fail before they get started. Trend-chasing, no real brand identity, and passive income thinking are the three most common entry mistakes. Each one is fixable. None of them are the model's fault.

    Five revenue angles inside one business. Standard retail, premium positioning, bulk and custom orders, high-end custom work, and occasion-based gifting. Most sellers only ever use the first one.

    Building the hands-off layer. Automation in POD is real — but you have to build it. The episode covers what can be automated, what should not be, and the right order of operations for setting it up.

    RizzRags as the live case study. Ned is actively building out the automation layer for RizzRags right now. This is a real-time experiment, not a retrospective.

    Free guide mentioned in this episode: The Late Starter's Print on Demand Guide — available at nednoon.com. Covers the cash flow model, store setup, product loading, getting your first sale, and a 40-point launch checklist.

    Next episode: Self-publishing — Part 1 of 2. Ned's book Losing Control is the case study. Available now on Amazon.

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    13 min
  • The Cost of Building an AI Powered Podcast
    May 28 2026

    Episode Description: Building an AI-powered podcast sounds straightforward until you're twelve minutes into a regeneration and something breaks. In Episode 2 of The Late Start Show, Saul and Simone break down what it actually cost — in time, money, and hard lessons — to build this show from scratch. We're talking real numbers: tools that worked, tools that didn't, sixty-plus hours over forty-five days, and a context window lesson that cost about fifty dollars in burned credits to learn. Plus a sixty-day honest update on the 365 Day Retirement Rebuild Challenge. What's been built, what hasn't launched yet, and why the first sixty days looked more like construction than revenue. If you're thinking about building something similar, this episode hands you the map that didn't exist when this build started.

    Free guide: nednoon.com

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    21 min
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