Multiple Income Streams Before and After the Identity Shift
This is one of those distinctions that looks minor on the surface and turns out to matter enormously in practice.
Both option a and option b come up constantly in conversations about multiple income streams. They’re sometimes used interchangeably. They’re not the same thing — and confusing them leads to real problems.
Here’s how to tell them apart and when each one is the right choice.
What Option A Is
Option A describes a specific approach or orientation in your multiple income streams work. It has particular strengths, particular limitations, and particular situations in which it’s the right tool.
When it’s right: when your primary concern is [the specific driver it addresses], when your energy and life stage support it, when your clients most benefit from what it produces.
When it’s not right: when it requires sustained capacity you don’t currently have, when the outcome you need is better served by option b, when your business model isn’t structured to support it.
What Option B Is
Option B operates differently. It addresses a different layer of the multiple income streams challenge — and for many conscious entrepreneurs, it’s the layer that actually needs addressing first.
When it’s right: when option a has been tried and produced diminishing returns, when the constraint is structural rather than tactical, when longer-term sustainability matters more than immediate results.
When it’s not right: when it requires a foundation you haven’t yet built, when your current client relationships are better served by option a, when the timing in your business isn’t ready.
The Diagnostic Question
The most useful question isn’t “which is better?” It’s: “What is the specific constraint I’m working with right now?”
Your niche and positioning shape which approach fits. Your business model structure shapes what’s possible. And productising your gifts may create new options that make the comparison less relevant than it seems.
The Most Common Mistake
Choosing based on what looks more impressive rather than what fits your situation.
Option A often sounds more sophisticated. option b often sounds more practical. Neither of those is a useful reason to choose. What matters is the fit between the approach and the specific problem you’re solving.
If you’ve been running option a for more than a year without the progress you expected, option b may be worth trying — not as a replacement, but as a diagnostic. If option b alone has plateaued, layering in elements of option a may unlock the next phase.
They’re not opposites. They’re tools. The practitioner who understands when to reach for each one tends to move faster than the one who commits to only one.
A Practical Starting Point
Start by being honest about where your current multiple income streams effort is actually producing results and where it isn’t. That honest assessment will usually make the option a vs option b question answer itself.
Scaling without selling out and building sustainable income streams both require this kind of situation-specific honesty — not theoretical preference.
If you want to think through this comparison in the context of your specific situation — inside a community of conscious entrepreneurs doing the same — the Abundance GPS Skool community is where that happens. Come join us.