At an age when most are still finding their footing in corporate entry-level roles or graduate programs, Seyed Hashemihas quietly constructed a digital ecosystem that touches nearly 100,000 customers across multiple continents. His portfolio spans e-commerce ventures, digital product empires, and a creative agency engineered around one singular obsession — momentum.

Yet, spend even a few minutes speaking with Hashemi, and one thing becomes instantly clear: he isn’t impressed with his own success.
“I don’t think I’m where I should be,” he says plainly. “I’ve done well, but I’m still on my way up.”
This is not false modesty — it’s the unshakable mindset of a young visionary who believes achievement is simply a byproduct of forward motion.
The COVID Catalyst: When the World Stopped, He Accelerated
While the pandemic slowed the world to a halt, Seyed Hashemi went in the opposite direction.
“COVID was the turning point,” he explains. “I stopped wasting time. I just worked — every day, every hour. I built instead of consumed.”
What began as disciplined focus soon evolved into a philosophy — what Hashemi calls the fundamental law of business physics: momentum is everything.
He built multiple income streams simultaneously — automated e-commerce operations, faceless digital products, and later, a creative agency that uses advanced consumer psychology to drive conversion. His ecosystem grew organically, sustained by what he terms “focused intensity.”
The Anti-YOLO Doctrine: A Blueprint for Beast Mode Living
In a world obsessed with work-life balance and self-care, Hashemi’s views are unapologetically radical.
“I’m fully against the idea of YOLO,” he declares. “You only live once — so why waste it? You work hard now so you can live free later.”
His approach, dubbed “Beast Mode Living,” isn’t about glorifying burnout but mastering the art of long-term freedom through short-term sacrifice.
His lifestyle mirrors his ethos — long hours, minimal distractions, and an almost monastic focus on progress. “There’s a difference between destroying yourself and building yourself through discipline,” he clarifies. “I’m addicted to progress, not exhaustion.”
It’s a philosophy that’s polarizing — yet undeniably effective. His ventures now serve tens of thousands of customers, all built on systems designed to scale without personal burnout.
The Network Effect: Vertical Mentorship and the Power of Proximity
Perhaps the most unconventional part of Hashemi’s journey is his strategic relationship building. Unlike most in their twenties who network horizontally, he builds vertically, aligning with mentors and executives decades his senior.
“Proximity is power,” he explains. “I don’t spend time around people my age to feel comfortable — I spend time around people who’ve lived the success I’m chasing.”
Over the past five years, he’s invested six figures in mentorships and education, describing it as the ultimate shortcut.
“Simulation saves time,” he says. “When you learn from someone else’s experience, you’re literally living years ahead without spending those years. That’s what mentorship is — time travel.”
The dividends are evident: his creative agency now employs direct-response marketing strategies usually reserved for elite advertising firms, while his e-commerce systems leverage psychological triggers and automation techniqueslearned from eight-figure entrepreneurs.
The Geneva Experiment: Turning Students into Global Entrepreneurs
Earlier this year, Hashemi tested his frameworks on others — with remarkable results. He hosted an exclusive five-day retreat in Geneva, flying eight mentees by private jet for an immersive entrepreneurial transformation.
“It wasn’t a vacation,” he laughs. “It was five days of pure focus — no procrastination allowed.”

Participants ranged from 20 to over 60 years old, and every one of them left changed. The intensive covered direct-response marketing psychology, automated digital infrastructure, and ‘momentum maintenance’ — Hashemi’s proprietary system for sustaining progress without collapse.
“I can take anyone with basic digital literacy and turn them into a global entrepreneur in months, not years,” he says. “The Geneva group proved it. They went from local thinkers to global operators in days.”
The Belief Acceleration Principle: Redefining Timelines for Success
If there’s one belief that defines Hashemi’s success, it’s his obsession with compressing timelines.
“Stop thinking you have time,” he warns. “Every hour you waste compounds in the wrong direction.”
He calls it belief acceleration — the practice of setting goals so ambitious and immediate that they force transformation.
“If you think you’ll make a million by 40, you will — by 40. But if you believe you can do it by 22, your actions adjust to that belief.”
The principle helped him reach 100,000 customers before his mid-twenties. It’s not magic; it’s mindset engineering.
The Next Summit: Building Legacy, Not Noise
For someone whose trajectory already surpasses most seasoned entrepreneurs, Hashemi remains grounded.
“I never started to impress anyone else. I started to impress myself. I wasn’t chasing validation — I was chasing growth.”
When asked about his ultimate goal, he responds with both humility and ambition:
“Aim for the moon. Even if you miss, you’ll land among the stars.”
Cliché or not, coming from him — it feels like prophecy.
The Momentum Legacy
Seyed Hashemi’s story is more than an entrepreneurial success — it’s a manifesto for the next generation. In an age where most chase trends, he’s building infrastructure; where most seek instant fame, he’s cultivating long-term freedom.
His message to the world is elegantly simple yet profoundly demanding:
“Work hard now. Enjoy later. Momentum is everything.”
Because in Hashemi’s world, motivation fades — but momentum builds empires.
Instagram: @seyed.hashemi

