27. Stage 2: The Validation Phase — When You’re Excited, but Overwhelmed
So, you picked an idea. You’ve taken some small steps. Maybe you shared it with a friend, wrote a blog post, made an Instagram account, or even built a basic offer.
You’re not just thinking about it anymore—you’re doing it.
Welcome to Stage 2: The Validation Phase.
This is where the side hustle starts to feel real—and where the rollercoaster begins.
You’re excited.
You’re overwhelmed.
You’re wondering, “Is this actually working?”
What Stage 2 Feels Like
This stage is packed with momentum—and just as much uncertainty.
You’re asking questions like:
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Will people actually pay for this?
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Am I doing this right?
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Is this just a hobby, or could this be something more?
You’ve gone from dreaming to experimenting—but now you want some kind of proof before investing more time, energy, or money.
Totally normal.
Why This Stage Matters
This is the turning point.
Stage 2 helps you move from “fun idea” to “viable direction.”
But don’t confuse “validation” with going viral or making $5K in your first month.
Validation can be small. Quiet. Low-pressure.
It’s just a signal that someone else sees value in what you’re offering.
That could mean:
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Someone asking to learn more
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A comment that says, “I’ve been looking for this.”
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One person paying for your service, even if it’s just a test run
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A few DMs after you share your story or expertise online
That’s validation.
What Gets in the Way
The biggest trap in Stage 2?
Overthinking and overbuilding.
You start wondering if you need a logo. A website. A funnel. A pitch deck. A subscription model.
You try to scale before you’ve really tested.
But here’s the truth:
You don’t need to automate, brand, or scale something until you know it works.
Focus on proof of concept. Not polish.
How to Move Forward in Stage 2
You’re not trying to build the “final” version of your idea.
You’re just trying to put it in front of real people and see what happens.
Here’s how to do that:
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Test it publicly. Share your idea in a post, group, or conversation. Invite engagement.
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Offer a tiny version of your service, product, or content. Think: one session, one PDF, one piece of advice.
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Ask questions. Talk to 3–5 people in your target audience. What do they need? What are they struggling with?
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Pay attention to patterns. What’s resonating? What feels effortless? What’s getting ignored?
You’re not launching.
You’re learning.
Let the results guide your next move.
What’s Coming Next
Once your idea starts getting some traction—even if it’s small—you’ll shift into a new set of challenges:
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How do I keep this going?
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How do I manage my time?
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How do I make this sustainable?
That’s where we enter Stage 3: Growth—where consistency, structure, and systems become the name of the game.
We’ll get into that in the next article.
For now, remember:
Validation isn’t about being “ready.”
It’s about being willing to test something real—and learn from what comes back.
You don’t need to be perfect.
You just need to be visible.
Talk soon,
Nathan Pearce
Creator of Risk Free Side Hustle
Other Articles in this "Four Stages of Side Hustling" Series
- The Four Stages of Side Hustling (and Why They Matter)
- Stage 0: The Pre-Commit Phase — When You’re Not Quite Ready (But Still Thinking About It)
- Stage 1: The Discovery Phase — When You’ve Got Ideas, But Don’t Know Where to Start
- Stage 2: The Validation Phase — When You’re Excited, but Overwhelmed - THIS ARTICLE
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