Dividend investing for Beginners: What Actually Works

I started dividend investing last year without knowing what I was doing.
Why This Confused Me at First
The first thing that confused me was dividend investing. I searched online but most guides assumed I already knew the terminology. That is why I am writing this.
What I Actually Did
I started with a small test. Not $3,500. Something tiny. I wanted to see if dividend investing even made sense for my situation. After 1 year, I had enough experience to scale up slowly.
Mistakes That Cost Me Time
Looking back, I wasted time on things that did not matter. I overcomplicated dividend investing because I thought I needed to be an expert. You do not. You need patience and a small starting budget.
Tools That Helped Me Learn
I used free resources first. YouTube, Reddit, and basic Google searches. Once I understood the basics, I tried one paid tool. That was enough. Do not buy courses before you understand what you need.
Where I Am Now
After 1 year, dividend investing feels normal. Not easy, but normal. I track my progress weekly and adjust when needed. The key was starting before I felt ready. That never happens anyway.
If I can do it, you can too. Start small and learn as you go.
What I Would Do Differently
I would start even smaller. Test dividend investing with $50 or $100. See if the process feels right before committing real money. That is the advice I give everyone who asks me now.