Author: anticodeguy

  • Scale Your Personal Brand With AI: The Content Creation System That Feels Like A Cheat Code

    Scale Your Personal Brand With AI: The Content Creation System That Feels Like A Cheat Code

    This is the second part of a two-part series of articles. If you haven’t read the first one, I highly recommend doing so: https://anticodeguy.com/articles/your-voice-ai-irreplaceable-the-creators-framework-for-ai-powered-content/.

    The AI-Powered Content Multiplication System

    Now let’s get into the tactical workflow that will transform how you create content.

    Content creation is a game of scale. The more you create, the more you get discovered. The more platforms you’re on, the wider your reach. But here’s the fucked up part – there are only 24 hours in a day, and you’re just one person.

    At least, that used to be the problem.

    In Part 1 of this series, I showed you the foundations of using AI to enhance your content creation without losing your authentic voice. Now I’m going to show you how to scale that system into a content creation machine that feels like you’ve discovered a cheat code for reality.

    According to a Synthesia AI Statistics report, “ChatGPT can improve individual productivity by up to 40%, mainly by saving time” and “general employee productivity can increase by 30% when AI systems are used.” But the examples I’m about to show you push those numbers way higher.

    A personal finance influencer who used to spend 4 hours writing a weekly newsletter integrated an AI tool to draft sections based on his bullet points and cut his writing time to 1.5 hours. That’s over 60% time savings. And it allowed him to publish more frequently, expanding his audience reach significantly.

    The CEO of a content agency quoted in Forbes said their team used AI to produce content 3 times faster than before, enabling them to meet the demands of posting daily without expanding staff.

    But there’s a critical nuance here. The most successful AI users strategically integrate AI into a human-led creative process.

    As Maya Angelou wisely observed,

    “You can’t use up creativity. The more you use, the more you have.”

    AI helps you express your creativity more efficiently, allowing you to create more, which in turn sparks even more creativity.

    Let me show you exactly how to do that.

    Your Past Self as Your Target Audience

    Before we dive into the tactical workflow, there’s a powerful mental model I want to share with you that creates an endless well of inspiration for your content.

    The ideal portrait of your target audience is actually you, but from a few years ago. Who better than you understands exactly what challenges you faced to get where you are today?

    Think about it – your current situation is like a completed puzzle, but a few years ago, some pieces were missing. What were those pieces? How did you find them and fit them into the overall picture? That’s what you should be explaining in your content.

    For each skill or stage of development you’ve been through, you can break it down in detail. Maybe you need to study it more deeply, discover techniques that helped you master that skill – even if you did it instinctively or had a natural talent for it.

    Things that seem obvious to you now weren’t obvious to your past self. You may have learned things that your past self didn’t even know they didn’t know. Opening their eyes to these insights is incredibly valuable.

    This approach creates authenticity that AI alone cannot replicate. As Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google, emphasized,

    “The future of AI is not about replacing humans, it’s about augmenting human capabilities.”

    What’s fascinating is that as AI-generated content becomes more common, truly human perspectives and stories will likely become more valued, not less. Stephen Hawking once warned that while AI might do a lot, human creativity and purpose will remain unique. And marketing guru Seth Godin argues that as AI generates average content, truly creative, risky ideas (a very human domain) will be what breaks through –

    “You cannot out-average the competition. Real humans doing something surprising will rise above the noise.”

    With this perspective, let’s build a system that leverages AI while keeping your humanity front and center.

    Introducing: ANTIghostwriter

    Before diving into the detailed system, I want to share a resource that could dramatically accelerate your content creation journey.

    After months of experimentation and refinement, I’ve developed a comprehensive content creation system with AI that allows me to consistently produce 2 newsletters (long-form articles), 60 social posts, 2 threads, 12 short video scripts, and SEO elements – all while maintaining my authentic voice.

    I’ve packaged this entire system into my course: ANTIghostwriter.

    Inside, you’ll get:

    • My exact, highly detailed prompts for every content format
    • Complete step-by-step workflows for seamless content creation
    • Specific AI tool recommendations with optimal settings
    • A blueprint for building your own content creation machine

    This is the exact system I use daily. If you want to bypass months of trial and error and implement a proven system immediately, check out ANTIghostwriter.

    Now, let’s explore the tactical workflow that will transform how you create content.

    1. Content Creation Workflow

    The foundation of your AI-augmented content strategy positions AI as your editor.

    Start with these steps:

    1. Draft your core ideas first. These can be bullet points, voice notes, or rough paragraphs.
    2. Feed this draft to your AI (which you’ve already trained on your voice profile from Part 1) with this prompt:
    I've written this draft about [topic]. Maintaining my authentic voice and keeping all my key points and examples, help me refine this into a more polished piece. Enhance the flow and clarity while ensuring it still sounds exactly like me.

    3. Review and edit the AI’s suggestions, adding your own touches.

      This human-in-the-loop approach maintains your creativity while leveraging AI’s strengths in structure and polish.

      For even better results, use specific prompt strategies to guide AI. The research shows that how you prompt significantly affects quality. For example, a case study in ACM Transactions on Information Systems (2023) showed that adding specific constraints and context to prompts reduced the occurrence of AI hallucinations by a notable margin.

      Try this prompt technique:

      After generating content, count the number of words and check if it follows all my guidelines. If not, revise it.

      This self-checking mechanism results in higher quality outputs.

      2. Multilingual Content Expansion

      One of the most powerful applications of AI is breaking the language barrier. If you’re creating content in English but want to reach audiences in other languages (or vice versa), AI translation has reached impressive levels of quality.

      DeepL and OpenAI’s GPT-4 demonstrate a high level of proficiency across dozens of languages. In a WMT translation competition, AI systems achieved results so fluent that for some language pairs, human evaluators preferred the AI translation over human translators’ work.

      Here’s the key insight from the research: feed the original language text to AI and directly ask for output in the target language. Don’t pre-translate, as you might lose idioms or emotional nuances.

      For example, if you write in Spanish and want to publish in English, don’t translate it manually first and then edit. Instead, feed your Spanish text directly to the AI with this prompt:

      Translate this text to English while preserving my voice, tone, and all cultural references. Maintain the emotional color and style of my writing. If there are idioms or expressions that don't translate directly, find English equivalents that capture the same feeling.

      This approach helps retain the emotional coloring and style of your native expression in the translated content, effectively “untying your hands” and enabling you to produce quality content for a global audience.

      More than 70% of professional translators now use some form of CAT (Computer-Assisted Translation) or AI tool in their workflow, showing how effective this approach has become.

      3. Content Repurposing At Scale

      This is where the magic really happens. Taking one piece of content and turning it into multiple formats for different platforms is a technique used by virtually all successful content creators. AI makes this process dramatically faster.

      According to HubSpot, 43% of professionals say they automate repetitive tasks with AI, which includes reformatting content for different channels. Additionally, 43% specifically say AI is important to their social media strategy.

      Here’s the workflow:

      1. Start with your cornerstone content (usually a long-form article or video script)
      2. Use this prompt:
      I've created this [article/video script/podcast]. Please help me repurpose it into: 1) A Twitter thread of 10 tweets, 2) 3 LinkedIn posts emphasizing different aspects, 3) 5 Instagram caption ideas with hashtag suggestions, 4) An email newsletter summary. Maintain my voice and ensure each format follows platform best practices.

      3. For visual platforms like Instagram, you can use tools like Midjourney or DALL-E to create supporting imagery based on key concepts from your content

      BuzzFeed has used this approach at scale, using OpenAI’s technology to help write quizzes and listicles, effectively reformatting existing information into new interactive content.

      The power of this approach is that once you’ve created a high-quality piece of cornerstone content, AI can help you extract maximum value from it across multiple platforms, giving you an omnipresence that would normally require a team of content creators.

      4. AI Model Selection Strategy

      Not all AI models are created equal. Different tools have different strengths, and knowing which to use for which purpose can significantly improve your results.

      Research from Stanford (Holistic Evaluation of Language Models, 2024) found that no single model is best at everything – some are better at open-ended creative writing, others at precise question answering, and some at following strict instructions.

      For example:

      • OpenAI’s GPT-4 is generally considered more accurate and nuanced for complex writing
      • Anthropic’s Claude has been noted for producing slightly more verbose but thoughtful prose (which some prefer for creative writing)
      • Google’s PaLM 2 (used in Bard) excels at certain reasoning tasks and coding. It’s an outdated model already, but for the sake of illustration…

      Many advanced users, including myself, swap models based on the task. They might use Grok for up-to-date factual queries (since it can search), and use another model like GPT-4o for rapid iterative drafting because it’s cheaper/faster.

      Create a workflow that leverages the strengths of each model:

      1. Use ChatGPT for initial content ideation and outlines
      2. Switch to Claude for more nuanced, thoughtful expansions
      3. Use Grok or Perplexity for fact-checking and current information
      4. Use specialized tools like Jasper.ai for specific formats like social media posts

      This multi-model approach ensures you get the best results for each part of your content creation process.

      5. Balancing Automation and Authenticity

      As you scale your content creation with AI, maintaining authenticity becomes increasingly important. According to Statista data, only 67.1% of influencers currently disclose when they use AI in creating content, meaning a sizeable share (~33%) might be presenting AI-crafted material as if it were entirely their own.

      This raises important ethical considerations. As AI detection becomes more sophisticated (though still imperfect – Stanford HAI study showed detectors incorrectly flagged human-written content as AI-generated in 15-20% of cases), transparency with your audience can build rather than erode trust.

      Elon Musk cautions that

      “AI is likely to be either the best or worst thing to happen to humanity.”

      For content creators, this translates to a responsibility to use these tools ethically and purposefully.

      Consider these approaches:

      1. Be selectively transparent about your AI use – you don’t need to announce it every time, but don’t hide it either; I personally use it, write about it, and even created a course around my content creation system (check it out)
      2. Focus on the value you provide, not the tools you use
      3. Maintain the “human touch” in key aspects of your content – personal stories, unique insights, emotional connections

      Remember Nick Cave’s reaction when shown AI-generated lyrics in his style:

      “This song is bullshit, a grotesque mockery of what it is to be human.”

      His point was that AI lacked the “suffering” and authenticity of human creativity.

      The goal isn’t to remove AI from your process – it’s to ensure that the final product still carries your unique human perspective, even if AI helped you express it more efficiently.

      Create Without Limits, Connect Without Compromise

      We’ve covered a lot of ground across these two articles. From training AI to write in your voice to building a complete content multiplication system, you now have the tools to scale your personal brand in ways that were previously impossible for individual creators.

      The research is clear: creators who effectively leverage AI can produce content 30-40% faster, with some reporting productivity gains of over 300%. But more importantly, when used correctly, AI amplifies your unique perspective by freeing you from the drudgery of content production mechanics.

      As Ginni Rometty, former CEO of IBM, wisely noted:

      “AI will not replace humans, but those who use AI will replace those who don’t.”

      This is particularly true in content creation, where the landscape is becoming increasingly competitive.

      The future belongs to creators who can maintain their authentic voice while leveraging AI to expand their reach. As Pablo Picasso famously said long before AI existed,

      “Computers are useless. They only give you answers.”

      The questions, the creativity, the perspective – that still comes from you.

      If you want to implement the exact system I use to create massive amounts of content consistently, check out my ANTIghostwriter course. It contains all my prompts, workflows, and tool configurations in one comprehensive package. What took me months to develop and refine can be yours instantly.

      For those continuing on their own, start implementing this framework today. Begin with a piece of cornerstone content that reflects your authentic voice and expertise. Use AI to help refine it, then leverage the content multiplication system to spread it across platforms. Experiment with different AI models to find the combination that works best for your specific needs.

      “Your brand is what people say about you when you leave the room,”

      Jeff Bezos once said. With AI handling the mechanics, you can focus on creating the substance that makes people talk about you even when you’re not there.

      Remember, in a world increasingly filled with AI-generated content, your unique human perspective is your greatest competitive advantage. AI won’t replace creators – it will replace creators who don’t use AI.

      The choice is yours. But now you can’t say you didn’t know the cheat code.

    1. Your Voice + AI = Irreplaceable: The Creator’s Framework for AI-Powered Content

      Your Voice + AI = Irreplaceable: The Creator’s Framework for AI-Powered Content

      You’ve probably felt it too – that strange mix of excitement and anxiety when you first tried ChatGPT or another AI tool. On one hand, holy shit, this thing can write a full blog post in seconds. On the other hand…will it replace me?

      Let me put your mind at ease: AI isn’t here to replace creators – it’s here to give us superpowers. But only if we know how to use it right.

      The numbers don’t lie. According to a recent SurveyMonkey study, roughly 50% of marketing professionals are already using AI to create content as part of their strategy. And 45% specifically use AI to brainstorm ideas, while 43% use it to automate repetitive content tasks. This isn’t some far-off future technology – it’s happening now, and it’s transforming how content gets made.

      The struggle is real, though. As a content creator, you’re expected to be everywhere – Twitter threads, LinkedIn posts, Instagram carousels, YouTube videos, newsletters, blog posts… It’s fucking exhausting. And the platforms keep changing the rules on us, demanding more and more of our time and energy.

      Here’s the thing – AI isn’t meant to replace your creativity or your voice. It’s meant to be your assistant, your research partner, your editor. Think of it as having a team of helpers while still being the creative director.

      In this article, I’ll show you exactly how to leverage AI to create more content with less effort, without losing what makes you special – your unique voice and perspective. Because in a world drowning in generic AI content, authenticity will become the ultimate currency.

      The Creator’s Dilemma: Be Authentic or Be Everywhere?

      Let’s be honest – the “solo creator myth” is bullshit. Those influencers who seem to pump out content 24/7 across multiple platforms? They have teams. They have systems. They have resources that most of us don’t.

      Or at least, they did. Until now.

      The game has fundamentally changed. With the right AI tools and framework, you can produce content at a scale that previously required a team of writers, editors, and researchers. But there’s a catch that most people miss.

      Having AI write your content from scratch creates soulless, generic garbage that readers can smell from a mile away. As Marina Byezhanova warns, if you simply copy-paste AI-generated posts, “at best, your personal brand will feel unoriginal, uninspired and lacking the emotional connector that compels audiences. At worst, you will find yourself building a personal brand rooted in phoniness.”

      Jeff Bezos put it perfectly:

      “Your personal brand is what people say about you when you’re not in the room.”

      AI alone can’t create that impression – only your authentic voice can.

      Let’s get real – ChatGPT doesn’t know your journey. It doesn’t understand your unique insights. It hasn’t lived your experiences or developed your expertise. It’s trained on the average of the internet, which means at best, it can give you average content.

      AI serves as an amplifier for YOUR voice. As Fei-Fei Li, Stanford AI Lab Director, explains: “Artificial intelligence is a tool to amplify human creativity and ingenuity.”

      Look at Ryan Reynolds – he used ChatGPT to help script an ad for his company Mint Mobile. He prompted the AI to write in his trademark style, including a joke, a curse word, and mention of a holiday promotion. The result? An ad that went viral because it still felt authentic to his brand, but was created in a fraction of the time.

      Or consider Karen X. Cheng, the creative director with over 1 million Instagram followers, who incorporates AI tools into her creation process – like using AI image generators and AR to produce a “VR dance” video where she appeared to paint in 3D. The result went viral because it combined her creative vision with AI’s capabilities.

      This is the fundamental shift in mindset that most creators miss. You remain the star of the show. AI becomes the stage crew helping you perform at your best.

      The AI-Augmented Creator Framework: Foundation Steps

      Now let’s get practical. I’m going to walk you through the foundation of a system that will transform how you create content, starting with the most critical elements.

      Before we dive into the actionable steps, I want to share something with you that could save you countless hours of trial and error.

      I’ve spent months refining my own AI-powered content creation system – tweaking prompts, testing different AI models, and optimizing workflows until I developed a system that allows me to consistently create 2 newsletters (long-form articles), 60 social posts, 2 threads, 12 short video scripts, and SEO elements per week.

      I’ve packaged all of this into my comprehensive course: ANTIghostwriter.

      In this course, you’ll get:

      My highly detailed, field-tested prompts for every content format

      Step-by-step workflows with video-guides for content creation and repurposing

      Specific AI tool recommendations with exact settings

      Everything you need to build your own content creation machine

      If you want to skip the experimentation phase and implement a proven system immediately, check out ANTIghostwriter. Now, let’s continue with the foundation steps you need to understand.

      1. Understand Your Audience Avatar

      The most powerful content speaks directly to a specific person with specific problems. AI can help you create an incredibly detailed picture of that person.

      AI tools like Delve AI and HubSpot’s AI persona generator automatically create data-driven customer personas from online data. But there’s an even more powerful approach you can use.

      As digital strategist Andy Crestodina demonstrates, you can use ChatGPT to “create a version of your target customer” and interview it to reveal their needs and preferences. He provides a prompt template to “Build me a persona” with specific attributes and challenges, and the AI outputs a fictitious persona complete with hopes, fears, and decision criteria.

      Try this prompt:

      Create a detailed avatar of my ideal audience member. They are [basic demographics]. They struggle with [problems]. They aspire to [goals]. Create a day in their life, their biggest challenges, and what would make them immediately interested in content about [your topic].

      But here’s the important caveat – these AI personas are only as good as the information you provide. They need validation against real customer insights. Use them as a starting point, not the final word.

      2. Develop Your Voice Profile

      This is where we separate the amateurs from the professionals. Most people just feed generic prompts to AI and get generic results. But you’re going to train the AI to write specifically in your voice.

      According to Zapier’s guide “How to train ChatGPT to write like you,” the process involves adding your own writing samples and stylistic pointers to ChatGPT’s custom instructions. This significantly tilts the AI’s voice toward yours.

      Here’s the step-by-step process:

      1. Collect 5-15 pieces of content you’ve created that best represent your voice and style
      2. Analyze what makes your writing unique: Do you use short sentences or long ones? Do you use humor? Slang? Technical terms? Metaphors?
      3. Create a voice guide document with these observations
      4. Feed this document to the AI with the instruction:
      This is my writing style guide. When helping me create content, please follow these patterns and characteristics to ensure the output matches my authentic voice.

      When AI emulates your quirks and mannerisms, it not only creates more authentic content but also helps your output pass AI detection checks more easily – a win-win.

      3. Content Ideation With AI

      Writer’s block is the enemy of consistent content creation. Luckily, AI excels at generating ideas – it’s like having a brainstorming partner available 24/7.

      According to Forbes, “one of the most common ways creators are using AI, specifically ChatGPT, is to generate content ideas.” A 2024 industry survey confirmed that 45% of marketers are using AI specifically for this purpose.

      The key is setting the right parameters. Instead of a vague prompt like “give me content ideas,” try this more specific approach:

      Based on my audience persona [paste your avatar from step 1] and my content focus on [topic], generate 10 content ideas that address their pain points and aspirations. For each idea, explain why it would resonate with them and suggest a compelling angle.

      Many writers report that AI helps them “unstick” when they’re out of inspiration. One creative director quoted in the research said that by using AI for ideation, she was able to increase her content output by 300% while actually improving quality because she could focus on developing the best ideas rather than stressing about coming up with them.

      Remember, though, the quality of AI-suggested ideas depends on the context you provide. Generic prompts yield generic ideas. With a well-specified prompt that includes your target audience and content goals, the ideas can be surprisingly targeted and innovative.

      4. Research Amplification

      Great content is backed by solid research, but gathering that research is time-consuming. This is another area where AI can be your secret weapon.

      Intelligent AI assistants can now fetch information from the web, summarize academic papers, and compile data points on any topic. Tools like Perplexity can return answers with cited sources when you ask for evidence on a topic.

      For instance, 51% of marketers report using AI tools to optimize content for search/SEO, which includes finding relevant facts and keywords. And 41% use AI to analyze data for insights.

      The Influencer Marketing Hub’s AI Benchmark report found that nearly 33% of successful AI use cases in business were in research – slightly higher even than those in content creation (31%). This underscores how AI is valued for information retrieval.

      However, there’s an important caveat here. AI models can sometimes hallucinate references or facts. So, always verify critical information from the original sources. In practice, creators use AI to gather quick statistics, then verify those facts from the cited source.

      For best results, try this prompt structure:

      Find me 3-5 recent statistics about [topic] that would surprise my audience. For each statistic, provide the original source so I can verify it.

      Or use research function of your AI tool.

      Ready for the Next Level

      We’ve covered the foundational elements of using AI to enhance your content creation without sacrificing your authentic voice. By understanding your audience in depth, training AI to emulate your unique style, leveraging AI for idea generation, and using it to enhance your research capabilities, you’re already well ahead of most creators.

      But this is just the beginning. In Part 2 of this series, we’ll dive into how to scale your content creation across platforms, leverage AI for multilingual expansion, and create a complete system that makes your content creation process feel like having a secret advantage.

      The productivity gains can be extraordinary. The MIT study I mentioned earlier found that using generative AI tools made professionals in writing-intensive jobs 37% more efficient on average, and improved the quality of their output as rated by senior editors.

      If you’re serious about scaling your content creation and want the exact system I use, check out my ANTIghostwriter course. It contains all my prompts, workflows, and AI tool configurations that enable me to create massive amounts of high-quality content consistently. The course pays for itself in time saved within the first week.

      For those ready to continue on their own, start implementing these foundation steps today. Train an AI to understand your voice. Create detailed audience personas. Use AI to generate ideas when you’re stuck. Amplify your research capabilities.

      Gary Vee reminds us that

      “The quality of a brand’s storytelling is directly proportional to the quality of its content. If it’s not good, no one will pay attention.”

      With AI as your assistant, you can maintain quality while dramatically increasing your output.

      Because in the content creation game, the winners won’t be those who avoid AI – it will be those who learn to wield it effectively while maintaining what makes them irreplaceable: their unique human perspective.

      In Part 2, I’ll show you how to take these foundations and build a complete content system that scales your personal brand to new heights. Stay tuned.

    2. The Never-Ending Content Engine: Create 100+ Content Pieces From One Idea

      The Never-Ending Content Engine: Create 100+ Content Pieces From One Idea

      If you’re building a personal brand or business through content, you’ve probably felt that never-ending pressure to create something new every single day. The constant demand for fresh ideas can feel overwhelming, especially when you’re trying to maintain quality. I’ve been there – staring at a blank screen, wondering what the hell to post today.

      But here’s something that might surprise you: the most successful content creators aren’t constantly inventing new things. In fact, the opposite is true. They’ve mastered the art of getting maximum mileage from minimal ideas.

      Look at Gary Vaynerchuk (Gary V), who famously built his content empire by extracting dozens of social media posts, videos, and articles from a single keynote speech or interview. His team has turned this into a science, generating upwards of 100 content pieces per day by repurposing and repackaging core ideas. This is a system.

      The problem is that most of us have been fed this myth that we need to be endlessly original. We think our audience will get bored if we repeat ourselves. But research tells a completely different story. Humans actually need repetition to internalize concepts. Without reinforcement, we forget roughly 50% of new information within an hour and 70% within a day.

      I’m going to show you how to create a sustainable content engine that will never run dry. One that allows you to produce massive value for your audience without the constant drain of starting from scratch. A system that works whether you’re building a personal brand, a business, or just trying to share your ideas with the world.

      No more content panic. No more starting from zero every morning. Just a reliable system that turns one good idea into a hundred great pieces of content.

      Why Most Content Creators Fail at Building Their Brand (And How to Fix It)

      When I first started creating content, I thought I needed a new breakthrough idea every single day. I’d spend hours trying to come up with something completely original, only to find that my “brilliant” ideas often fell flat. Meanwhile, some of my simplest, most straightforward posts would unexpectedly take off.

      What was going on?

      I eventually realized that successful content creation isn’t about constant innovation – it’s about effective communication and strategic repetition. And it starts with understanding the three fundamental categories of content that exist:

      1. Entertainment content makes people laugh, feel something, or simply enjoy themselves.
      2. Educational content teaches something useful or interesting.
      3. Motivational content inspires action or change.

      The magic happens when you combine these categories. The science channels that blend education with entertainment – like Vsauce on YouTube – don’t just inform; they captivate. Their viewers don’t even realize they’re learning because they’re having so much fun.

      I wrote the whole article dedicated to these three content categories: The Three Content Categories: How To Attract an Audience That Buys.

      But here’s something even more important to understand: your audience isn’t seeing everything you post. According to Socialinsider, the average Facebook post reaches just about 1.2% of your followers. Instagram is better at around 3-5%, but still – the vast majority of your audience misses most of your content.

      Let that sink in for a moment.

      That brilliant post you made last month? Most of your followers never saw it. The amazing thread you wrote last year? Your new followers definitely haven’t seen it.

      This is actually great news. It means you can reuse and repurpose your best ideas without boring your audience. In fact, you should be repeating your core messages regularly if you want them to stick.

      I remember when I published something a few weeks ago. But looking back at it now, I realize I could explain the concept better. My initial instinct was to just leave it alone – who wants to repeat themselves, right?

      But that’s exactly the wrong approach.

      The truth is, I’m not the same creator I was even a few weeks ago. I’ve learned new things, refined my thinking, gained new insights. And my audience has evolved too. Some followers have been with me from the start, but many are new and haven’t heard my foundational ideas.

      It’s like in RPG games – there are areas you shouldn’t enter until you’ve leveled up enough. Similarly, some of your advanced content won’t resonate with newcomers who haven’t mastered the basics yet.

      This brings me to a critical insight: the best niche is you. Not some artificially narrow topic, but your authentic self – your experiences, insights, and journey.

      Gary V has been preaching “document, don’t create” for years, and he’s right. Your life is already generating content-worthy moments every day. You’re learning new things, having realizations, solving problems. Document those moments, and you’ll never run out of content.

      James Clear, the author of Atomic Habits, built his entire brand on a handful of core concepts about habit formation. He didn’t reinvent the wheel with each blog post. Instead, he found new ways to articulate the same fundamental principles, building a library of content that all reinforced his central message.

      Red Bull doesn’t make ads about energy drinks – they document extreme sports and adventures. They turn one event, like Felix Baumgartner’s space jump, into years of content across multiple platforms.

      This approach is strategic. And it’s how you build a brand that lasts.

      The biggest trap content creators, including myself, fall into is perfectionism. They’ll spend hours polishing a post, only to look back at it a week later and want to completely redo it because they’ve already improved.

      Here’s my advice: publish now, improve later. Something published imperfectly today is infinitely better than the perfect post that never sees the light of day.

      Remember, content creation is not about having the most original ideas – it’s about effectively communicating valuable insights in a way that resonates with your audience. And that often means saying the same important things in different ways, over and over again.

      How to Turn One Idea Into 100+ Pieces of Content

      I’m going to walk you through a practical system that will help you create an endless stream of content without burning out.

      Step 1: Build Your Content Foundation

      Your content foundation is like a personal knowledge bank that you can withdraw from whenever you need. It starts with identifying which of the three content categories – educational, entertaining, or motivational – resonates most with you and your audience.

      Most powerful content actually combines at least two of these categories. Think about how you can teach while entertaining, or motivate while educating. This immediately multiplies your content possibilities.

      Next, start documenting your daily experiences and insights. This doesn’t mean sharing what you had for breakfast (unless you’re a food blogger). It means capturing the valuable lessons, observations, and solutions you encounter in your work and life.

      When I hit some interesting highlight in a book I was reading, I just took a screenshot and wrote about it. I explained why I found it useful for me and what perspective it gave. Sometimes I can even write an article around that topic. That single reading moment becomes content that can be repurposed many times.

      Build a system for capturing these insights. It could be as simple as a note-taking app or as sophisticated as a content database. The key is to make documentation a habit.

      Over time, you’ll build a library of ideas, examples, and insights that you can draw from whenever you need content. This library becomes more valuable as it grows, giving you more material to mix, match, and repurpose.

      As you document your journey, focus on the problems you solve and the insights you gain. These are the nuggets that your audience will find most valuable. Remember, what seems obvious to you might be a revelation to someone else.

      Step 2: Master Content Multiplication

      Once you have a solid piece of content – whether it’s a blog post, video, or podcast episode – it’s time to multiply it across formats and platforms.

      According to the content marketers surveyed by Databox, about 70% of blog traffic comes from posts that weren’t published recently. This means your old content continues to work for you long after you’ve created it.

      Start by identifying your “cornerstone” content – the comprehensive pieces that thoroughly cover important topics in your niche. A cornerstone piece can be broken down into multiple smaller pieces:

      • Turn key points into small posts (like for X with 280 characters)
      • Extract quotes for graphics
      • Create a simplified version for beginners
      • Develop an advanced version for experts
      • Record an audio version for podcast listeners
      • Make visual summaries for Instagram or Pinterest
      • Create a step-by-step guide for practical application (you can use it as a thread or even a product)

      The key is to adapt the format and depth to match different platforms and audience segments.

      For example, some post about screenshot tools could become:

      • A Twitter thread highlighting the top three tools
      • A comparison chart for Instagram
      • A quick tutorial video showing the tools in action
      • A resource guide with links to all the tools mentioned
      • A series of tips for getting the most out of screenshots

      Time-spacing is another powerful strategy. You can repost your best content at strategic intervals – perhaps a week later, a month later, and then quarterly. Each time, add a new angle, update the information, or improve the presentation based on what you’ve learned.

      Buffer’s social media team found that repurposed content often performs surprisingly well when given new life on a different platform. They routinely cross-post the same video from TikTok to Instagram Reels and YouTube Shorts, reaching different segments of their audience without creating entirely new content.

      This isn’t just efficient – it’s effective. By presenting the same core ideas in different ways, you help your audience internalize the concepts more thoroughly.

      Step 3: Leverage AI Without Losing Your Voice

      AI can be a powerful ally in content creation, but it needs to be used thoughtfully. The key is to use AI as a creative partner rather than a replacement for your unique voice and perspective.

      I don’t recommend using AI to generate content from scratch. The results tend to be dry and impersonal – audiences can tell the difference, and there are even tools designed to detect AI-written content.

      Instead, use AI for:

      • Brainstorming content ideas
      • Generating different angles on your core topics
      • Editing and refining your drafts
      • Creating outlines that you can flesh out
      • Suggesting ways to repurpose existing content

      Each AI model has its own strengths and quirks, so there’s a learning curve involved. Treat it as an iterative process – start with a rough idea, get AI suggestions, refine the output, and add your personal touch.

      The Associated Press provides an interesting case study. They use AI to generate basic earnings reports, which freed up their journalists to focus on more in-depth, analytical stories. The result was a tenfold increase in coverage – from 300 stories per quarter to 3,000 – without sacrificing quality where it mattered most.

      Similarly, you can use AI to handle the routine aspects of content creation while focusing your creative energy on adding unique insights and personal experiences that no algorithm can replicate.

      Remember, the goal isn’t to produce more content for the sake of it, but to amplify your best ideas without diluting your authentic voice.

      Step 4: Create Your Never-Ending Content Calendar

      A strategic content calendar is the engine that keeps your content machine running smoothly. It’s not just about scheduling posts, but more about creating a systematic approach to content recycling and audience building.

      The “past-present-future” content matrix is a simple but powerful framework:

      • Past content: Repurpose, update, and resurface your best previous work
      • Present content: Document what you’re currently learning and experiencing
      • Future content: Share your vision, predictions, and aspirations

      By balancing these three dimensions, you create a rich, dynamic content ecosystem that engages both new and longtime followers.

      Map your content to different stages of the audience journey:

      • Newcomers need your foundational concepts and beginner-friendly explanations
      • Regular followers benefit from deeper dives and practical applications
      • Advanced fans want cutting-edge insights and nuanced discussions

      Set up a systematic schedule for content recycling. For example:

      • Weekly: Share one core concept in a new format
      • Monthly: Update and republish a popular post from the past
      • Quarterly: Create a roundup of your best content on a specific theme
      • Annually: Produce a comprehensive guide that synthesizes your most important ideas

      This approach ensures that your content library is constantly working for you, reaching new people and reinforcing key messages with existing followers.

      Your calendar should also include regular content audits – reviewing what’s performed well, identifying gaps, and planning updates to keep everything fresh and relevant.

      With this system in place, you’ll never face the blank page panic again. Each piece of content becomes a seed that grows into dozens more, creating a self-sustaining ecosystem of ideas.

      Your Unstoppable Content Engine

      You now have a complete system for creating an endless stream of valuable content without constantly starting from scratch. Let’s recap the key components:

      • Understand that the best content often combines education, entertainment, and motivation
      • Build your personal content library by documenting your journey and insights
      • Master the art of repurposing, adapting your core ideas for different platforms and audiences
      • Use AI strategically to enhance your process, not replace your voice
      • Create a balanced content calendar that serves both new and longtime followers

      The most successful content creators aren’t necessarily the most original – they’re the most effective at communicating valuable ideas consistently and in multiple ways. They understand that repetition isn’t boring; it’s necessary for learning and retention.

      Remember that perfectionism is the enemy of progress. Don’t let the perfect post you want to create tomorrow prevent you from publishing the good post you have today. You can always improve and update your content as you grow.

      By building a system rather than chasing viral moments, you create something much more valuable – a sustainable content engine that continues to work for you day after day, month after month, year after year.

      This approach makes your content creation easier and makes it more effective at the same time. Your audience will better internalize your core messages through strategic repetition. Your brand will grow stronger as you consistently reinforce your key themes. And you’ll have more energy to focus on what really matters – creating genuine value rather than just filling a content calendar.

      Your life and work are already generating content-worthy moments every day. The secret is learning to recognize, capture, and leverage them strategically.

      So start building your content engine today. Document one valuable insight. Repurpose it for three different platforms. Schedule it to be reshared with a new angle in a month.

      That’s how you turn one idea into a hundred. That’s how you create a never-ending content engine that powers your brand for years to come.

      The wheel is already spinning. Now it’s your turn to keep it in motion.

    3. The Freedom Business Matrix: Why Personal Brand Wins in the Digital Age

      The Freedom Business Matrix: Why Personal Brand Wins in the Digital Age

      Finding the right business model to create true freedom isn’t easy. Most people jump between options, never fully committing to one path – ending up with neither freedom nor success.

      I’ve been there. I’ve tried the conventional employment route, explored various offline and online business models, and spent years searching for the perfect freedom vehicle – a business that’s completely mine, brings immediate income, scales well, and aligns with my passions.

      If you’re reading this, you’ve probably experienced similar frustrations. Maybe you’ve tried freelancing but found yourself with multiple bosses instead of one. Perhaps you’ve built someone else’s dream through a job or agency work. Or you’ve dabbled in online businesses only to discover they require constant attention without delivering the freedom you crave.

      Here’s what most freedom-seekers miss: not all business models are created equal when it comes to independence. Some require massive capital, others demand specialized skills, and many just create a different kind of prison – one where you’ve built a machine that owns you rather than setting you free.

      According to Gallup research, 62% of adults would prefer to be their own boss, yet most remain employees because they lack a clear roadmap to building a sustainable business. Even more troubling, Gallup’s 2022 State of the Global Workplace report found only about 21% of employees are actively engaged at work – meaning most people are trading their precious time for projects that don’t fulfill them.

      In this article, I’ll break down the key business models available today, evaluate them through the lens of freedom and control, and reveal why building a personal brand emerges as the optimal strategy for most people seeking independence in the digital age.

      By the end, you’ll understand exactly which business model aligns with your resources and goals – and why the most accessible, scalable, and future-proof option might be hiding in plain sight: you.

      The Business Model Showdown

      Let’s evaluate the major business model categories through the lens of what actually matters: ownership, scalability, barrier to entry, and freedom potential.

      Resource-Based Businesses: High Reward, High Barrier

      Resource-based businesses profit from owning or extracting natural resources – oil, minerals, land, etc. This is a massively scalable model that generates colossal wealth.

      Just look at the evidence: the wealthiest individuals of the 19th/20th century were often resource tycoons (Rockefeller with oil, Carnegie with steel). Today, companies like Saudi Aramco have valuations around $2 trillion and make over $100 billion in annual profit – a scale hard to match in other industries.

      If you have the opportunity to do resource business, go for it. The profits can be enormous because resources themselves are high-value and often monopolistic – owning a rare mineral mine gives you pricing power that’s hard to compete with.

      What’s the catch? Most people don’t have access to this model. Resources typically require large capital, government licenses, and come with geopolitical risks. They also face commodity price volatility (remember when oil crashed in 2020?) and increasing environmental scrutiny.

      While some entrepreneurs do break into resources (like wildcatters in the American shale boom), this isn’t a realistic starting point for most people seeking freedom without massive capital or connections.

      Production/Manufacturing: Building Real Value

      Manufacturing tangible products at scale can create tremendous wealth. The model is straightforward: make something the market needs, produce it efficiently, and sell it for profit.

      Real examples prove this works: James Dyson started making vacuum cleaners when established companies didn’t believe in his design. After years of iteration (and even personal debt), he built a global appliance company and became a billionaire. Sara Blakely started Spanx with a simple prototype (footless pantyhose) and became the youngest self-made female billionaire at the time.

      Today’s richest individuals include manufacturers like Elon Musk with Tesla – which, while tech-heavy, is fundamentally a car manufacturing success story requiring factories and production expertise.

      But the model has its limitations. High capital requirements, competition (often from lower-cost global producers), supply chain complexities, and technical expertise needs. Small manufacturing businesses frequently struggle against imports unless they focus on high quality, niche products, or innovative processes.

      If you have the desire and technical skills to create products at scale, this is an excellent option. But it’s not typically the first business most people can bootstrap without significant resources or domain knowledge.

      Local “Brick-and-Mortar” Businesses: Underrated Stability

      Local service businesses – laundromats, carpet cleaning, lawn care, plumbing – are deeply undervalued in today’s tech-obsessed culture. Yet they offer remarkable stability and are largely protected from AI disruption.

      The research confirms this: a widely cited 2013 Oxford study (Frey & Osborne) found that physical service occupations had the lowest probability of automation, as they involve complex physical tasks in unpredictable environments. Even as robots advance (like robotic lawnmowers), they become tools sold to service providers rather than eliminating the service entirely.

      These “boring businesses” can be quietly profitable. The book “The Millionaire Next Door” found that many U.S. millionaires were owners of unglamorous local businesses like HVAC companies or auto repair shops that steadily accumulated wealth.

      The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projects many skilled trade jobs will continue growing through 2030, whereas some office jobs are declining due to software automation. During recessions, people still need essential services (plumbing, cleaning), making these businesses relatively recession-resistant.

      The main limitation of this model is scale. A lawn care or laundromat business serves one city; you can open multiple locations, but it’s linear growth, not the exponential scale of an internet business. They also require daily operational effort or good managers.

      But for practical freedom-seekers, local service businesses offer a proven path with lower competition and more stability than many shinier options.

      Online Business: Global Reach, Platform Risk

      Online business has democratized entrepreneurship by removing location constraints and capital barriers. With over 5 billion internet users worldwide (more than 60% of the global population), an online business can theoretically reach a market far bigger than any local operation.

      E-commerce, software, digital products, and content creation all fall under this umbrella. The advantage is that digital products have near-zero marginal cost, so selling to 1,000 customers isn’t much more work than selling to 10.

      Global e-commerce sales reached about $5.5 trillion in 2022 and continue to grow as more consumers shift online. The creator economy has lowered barriers further – one can set up an online storefront or content channel with minimal upfront cost and potentially reach millions.

      But online businesses come with unique challenges:

      Agency Trap: Many start with service-based models (marketing, web development, consulting) that operate virtually. I ran a web development agency myself, and while it generated good income, each client effectively became a new boss. As I told myself: “it’s not my project, it’s the client’s business; I’ve just traded one boss for many bosses.”

      Platform Dependency: Content creators and marketplace sellers often build their business on platforms they don’t control (YouTube, Amazon, Instagram). Algorithm changes or account suspensions can destroy years of work overnight.

      Intense Competition: The low barriers that make online business accessible also mean you’re competing globally. Standing out requires exceptional execution or finding underserved niches.

      Despite these challenges, online business remains one of the most accessible paths to freedom – if you can solve the dependency and differentiation problems.

      The Personal Brand Advantage: Your Ultimate Asset

      After evaluating all these models, I concluded that building a personal brand solves the most critical problems while maximizing freedom potential.

      A personal brand business revolves around you – your unique combination of experience, knowledge, skills, and perspective. By definition, no one else can be you, which creates natural differentiation in a crowded marketplace.

      Here’s why personal branding emerged as my ideal path to freedom:

      Complete Ownership: It’s entirely my project, unique to me. Unlike an agency where I build clients’ dreams or a content channel dependent on platform algorithms, my personal brand belongs to me alone.

      No Boss Except Myself: I’m not reporting to an employer or serving multiple clients’ demands. I choose which opportunities to take based on my values and goals.

      Platform Risk Reduction: By diversifying across platforms (having my brand on multiple networks) and owning my audience’s contact information (email list), I’m protected from the whims of any single platform. All serious brands maintain presence across multiple channels – if one disappears, they can migrate followers elsewhere.

      Direct Monetization: Once you have an audience, they become potential buyers of products or services that align with their needs. This cuts out middlemen and platform revenue sharing. As your audience grows, you can introduce offerings that generate income directly – online courses, consulting, digital products, membership communities, physical goods – whatever fits your expertise and audience needs.

      Scalability with Integrity: A personal brand can grow without sacrificing authenticity. You can hire teams to handle operations, but the brand remains centered on your unique perspective.

      AI-Resistant: In an age of increasing automation, a personal brand is uniquely human. As more jobs become automated, the authentic human connection becomes more valuable, not less. I don’t feel a connection with ChatGPT or Claude, though I use them daily. I’m still interested in real people, their journeys, and their authentic perspectives.

      The research confirms personal branding’s effectiveness: businesses spent over $16 billion on influencer (or maybe we shall call them creators instead) marketing in 2022, up from $1.7 billion in 2016 – a testament that individuals with personal brands can monetize their influence effectively.

      Real-world examples abound: creators like MrBeast (Jimmy Donaldson) turned YouTube fame into businesses like MrBeast Burger and Feastables chocolate bars. Kylie Jenner leveraged her personal brand to build Kylie Cosmetics, reaching a $1 billion valuation. On smaller scales, thousands of creators earn full-time livings through courses, coaching, products, and memberships built around their personal expertise.

      Building Your Personal Brand Empire (The Future-Proof Strategy)

      Now that we’ve established why personal branding offers the optimal balance of control, scale, and future-proofing, let’s break down the specific strategy for building your freedom business.

      Step 1: Platform Diversification Strategy (Breaking Dependency)

      The biggest mistake most creators make is building exclusively on platforms they don’t control. Remember the cardinal rule: “Don’t build your empire on rented land.”

      When India banned TikTok, savvy Indian influencers who had already established presence on Instagram and YouTube minimized their losses. When OnlyFans announced (then retracted) a ban on adult content, creators with their own websites and email lists maintained their income.

      Implementation Strategy:

      • Identify 2-3 core platforms where your ideal audience spends time
      • Establish your primary platform first (where you’ll create most content)
      • Repurpose content across secondary platforms (e.g., turning blog posts into videos and podcast episodes, videos into short clips, reels, etc.)
      • Ensure consistent branding across all platforms
      • Create platform-specific content only after establishing your core message

      Unlike companies that need heavy branding guidelines, your personal brand can be more fluid while maintaining core themes and values. The consistency that matters is in your message and perspective, not necessarily visual perfection.

      Step 2: Audience Ownership Tactics (Building Your Own Asset)

      The single most valuable asset in your personal brand business isn’t your content – it’s your direct relationship with your audience. Platforms can disappear, but an email list you own remains yours forever.

      Implementation Strategy:

      • Create simple lead magnets that solve a specific problem for your audience
      • Establish an email capture system on your website or landing page (or use out-of-the-box services for that)
      • Regularly invite audience members to join your list with clear value proposition
      • Develop a consistent communication cadence (weekly/bi-weekly newsletter)
      • Segment your list based on interests and engagement
      • Treat email subscribers as your most valuable audience members

      Email marketing still delivers the highest ROI of any digital channel – $36 for every $1 spent according to some studies. Unlike social algorithms that might show your content to only 1-5% of followers, emails reach the inbox of everyone who subscribes.

      And the best part is that you own this channel completely. No platform can take it away. If it’s not obvious, you can just download your email-list, store it on your hard drive and use it in different email-platforms.

      Step 3: Monetization Methods Beyond Platform Revenue

      Once you’ve built an audience and established ownership, it’s time to create income streams that you control directly rather than relying on platform advertising revenue.

      Implementation Strategy:

      • Survey your audience to identify their biggest pain points and desires
      • Create digital products that solve specific problems (courses, templates, guides)
      • Offer services that leverage your unique expertise (consulting, coaching)
      • Develop community-based offerings (membership sites, private groups)
      • Consider physical products that align with your brand (merchandise, books, specific tools)
      • Explore affiliate partnerships with products you genuinely use and recommend

      The key is starting with audience needs rather than what you want to sell. When you solve real problems for people who already trust you, sales happen naturally without aggressive tactics.

      PewDiePie supplements his YouTube ad income by selling merchandise to tens of millions of fans. Thousands of creators earn sustainable livings through Patreon where followers pay monthly for exclusive content. The options are limitless when you have an audience that trusts you.

      Step 4: Creating Products/Services Aligned with Audience Needs

      The mistake many creators make is creating products in isolation, then trying to convince their audience to buy. The smarter approach is co-creating with your audience – developing solutions to problems they’ve already told you they have.

      Implementation Strategy:

      • Analyze questions and comments from your audience
      • Conduct informal research through direct conversations
      • Create a minimum viable product to test with a small segment
      • Gather feedback and iterate before full launch
      • Price based on value delivered, not hours spent creating
      • Build systems for delivery that don’t require your constant involvement

      This approach reduces risk dramatically – you’re not guessing what might sell; you’re responding to explicit needs. It also ensures higher conversion rates since you’re addressing known pain points.

      For example, if you notice your audience consistently asks about your productivity system, creating a course or template around that topic has a built-in market. If they’re struggling with a technical aspect of your field, a step-by-step guide solves a real problem.

      Step 5: Systematizing for Passive Income

      The ultimate goal of your personal brand business is creating income that isn’t directly tied to your hourly effort. This requires systematization and potentially team building.

      Implementation Strategy:

      • Document all processes in your business
      • Identify tasks that can be automated (email sequences, content scheduling)
      • Determine which functions could be delegated to team members or rather AI agents
      • Create templates and frameworks that reduce creation time
      • Build product suites that sell without constant promotion
      • Develop content that continues generating value for years (evergreen)

      While a personal brand does require your ongoing involvement to some degree, many aspects can be systematized. For instance, once you create an online course, it can sell 24/7 globally without additional effort. A book continues earning royalties long after writing it.

      Many successful personal brands eventually hire teams for editing, customer service, marketing, and operations – effectively creating a company where they serve as the figurehead but aren’t handling every detail. Nowadays you can handle a lot of these tasks with AI agents, which is way cheaper and doesn’t ask for promotion, social benefits, vacation, or sick days.

      Step 6: AI-Proofing Your Brand (Leveraging Human Uniqueness)

      As AI rapidly advances, more jobs will be automated or augmented by technology. This makes authentic human connection and unique perspective more valuable, not less.

      Implementation Strategy:

      • Focus on sharing personal experiences AI cannot replicate
      • Emphasize your unique journey, struggles, and insights
      • Create content that showcases your personality and values
      • Build community around shared human experiences
      • Use AI as a tool to enhance your work, not replace your voice
      • Stay current with technology but emphasize the human elements AI cannot duplicate

      A 2021 survey found that while virtual influencers have higher engagement in some metrics, many social media users don’t trust them for authentic recommendations the way they trust real people. This trust gap is your competitive advantage.

      Your personal story, delivered authentically, creates connections that algorithms simply cannot match. When you share vulnerabilities, unique perspectives, or hard-won wisdom, you create bonds that transcend transactional relationships.

      As Tom Peters wrote in his 1997 article “The Brand Called You”:

      “We are CEOs of our own companies: Me Inc. Start today. You’re every bit as much a brand as Nike.”

      In the age of AI, that human brand becomes your strongest asset.

      Your Brand, Your Freedom, Your Future

      We’ve covered a lot of ground, exploring why personal branding offers the optimal balance of control, scalability, and future-proofing for those seeking true freedom.

      Unlike resource or manufacturing businesses that require massive capital, or local services limited by geography, a personal brand can start with zero investment beyond your time and knowledge. Unlike platform-dependent models, you own your audience relationships completely. And unlike conventional employment, every hour invested builds your asset, not someone else’s.

      The personal brand business model checks all the critical boxes:

      • Ownership (it’s completely yours)
      • Low barrier to entry (start immediately with existing knowledge)
      • Immediate monetization potential (consult while building products)
      • Alignment with passion (based on your authentic interests)
      • Scalability (reach global audiences through digital channels)
      • Future-proofing (human connection becomes more valuable as AI advances)

      Is it easy? No. Building a successful personal brand requires consistency, vulnerability, and strategic thinking. You’ll need to create valuable content regularly, engage authentically with your audience, and develop offerings that genuinely solve problems.

      But compared to the alternatives – spending decades in corporate jobs, risking everything on speculative ventures, or building businesses that own you rather than free you – personal branding offers the clearest path to independence for most people.

      As Naval Ravikant wisely said:

      “Seek wealth, not money or status. Wealth is having assets that earn while you sleep.”

      Your personal brand, once established, becomes exactly that kind of asset – your reputation and audience continue working for you around the clock.

      The best time to start was years ago. The second best time is today. Begin creating content that showcases your unique perspective. Start collecting email subscribers who resonate with your message. Build relationships that transcend any single platform.

      Your freedom business doesn’t need to be perfect – it just needs to exist. And with each piece of content, each subscriber, each product, you move closer to the independence you’ve always wanted.

      The world needs your voice.

      You need your freedom.

      It’s time to connect these bad boys.

    4. Money Buys Everything (Despite What They Tell You): The Uncomfortable Truth About Modern Freedom

      Money Buys Everything (Despite What They Tell You): The Uncomfortable Truth About Modern Freedom

      Most people are fed the same bullshit their whole lives: “Money can’t buy happiness.” “Money doesn’t solve your problems.” “The best things in life are free.”

      What a load of crap.

      In our modern world, money doesn’t just solve problems – it solves almost everything. And I’m about to show you why the conventional wisdom about money is not just wrong, but actively designed to keep you enslaved.

      Here’s the uncomfortable truth: in today’s society, money can buy practically everything – health, happiness, relationships, and most importantly, freedom. I’ll prove it to you, point by point, because understanding this reality is the first step toward achieving the independence you’ve always wanted.

      Look, I get it. The idea that “money isn’t everything” sounds noble. It feels good to say. But it’s a convenient lie that benefits everyone except you. While you’re nodding along to platitudes about how “the simple life is best,” the people who actually control the system are accumulating wealth and the freedom it brings.

      Why? Because they know what I’m about to tell you: money is the most powerful tool for creating the life you actually want. Not because cash itself makes you happy, but because it removes the barriers preventing you from living on your own terms.

      A study from Princeton University initially suggested happiness plateaus around $75,000 in annual income, but newer research from University of Pennsylvania found no happiness ceiling at all – more money continues to improve well-being, especially for those who use it strategically. It’s not about hoarding cash; it’s about what that money enables.

      What follows is the equation for freedom that nobody taught you in school. I’ll break down exactly how money translates to independence, why you’ve been programmed to believe otherwise, and the clearest paths to building wealth on your own terms.

      By the end, you’ll understand why this reframing isn’t about greed – it’s about creating a life where you control your time, location, and choices. Where you’re not trapped in someone else’s system.

      Ready to see how deep this rabbit hole goes?

      The Real Power of Money (Everything They Don’t Want You to Know)

      Let’s start with the most common lie: “Money can’t buy health, happiness, or love.” I call bullshit. In today’s world, money can directly or indirectly buy all of these things.

      Money Literally Buys Health

      Think about it. With enough money, you can get organ transplants, cutting-edge treatments using stem cells, and access to experimental therapies most people never hear about. We’re getting closer to curing cancer every day – and do you think that research happens for free?

      The statistics are stark: wealthy Americans live 10-15 years longer than poor Americans. A study found the richest 1% of men live 14.6 years longer than the poorest 1%. For women, it’s a 10-year gap. That’s an entire decade of life, bought and paid for.

      Money buys the best doctors, the healthiest food, stress-free environments, time for exercise, and preventative care that catches problems before they become terminal. When you’re wealthy, you don’t ignore that strange pain because you’re worried about the bill. You don’t put off checkups because you can’t afford to miss work.

      Money Creates Relationship Opportunities

      “But you can’t buy love!” people protest. Well, not directly – but money creates the conditions where love thrives.

      With financial resources, you can create amazing experiences with potential partners. You can travel together, enjoy romantic dinners, and show up as your best self instead of being constantly stressed about bills. Money gives you the freedom to meet more people and the confidence to pursue relationships without desperation.

      Is someone initially attracted to your success? Maybe. But who’s to say genuine feelings won’t develop once they get to know you? Real-world data shows that financial stress is one of the top predictors of divorce – roughly 20-40% of divorces are attributed to money problems. Wealthier couples have significantly lower divorce risk, not because rich people are better at relationships, but because financial stability removes a massive source of conflict.

      Money Directly Impacts Happiness

      The data is clear: financial insecurity makes people miserable. A 2023 collaborative study showed that while the least happy individuals saw happiness level off beyond about $100,000 in annual income, the happiest people gained even more happiness as their wealth increased.

      Money doesn’t just buy stuff – it buys freedom from worry. It buys options. It buys time. And these are the actual ingredients of happiness.

      Think about what makes people unhappy: stress about bills, hating their jobs but being unable to quit, feeling trapped in bad situations, lacking control over their lives. Money solves all of these problems.

      As Warren Buffett said:

      “Money won’t create success, the freedom to make it will.”

      That freedom – to choose your path, take risks, innovate – is what leads to fulfillment.

      Money Is Freedom

      This is the big one, and the reason I’m writing this. Money buys freedom in multiple dimensions:

      Financial freedom – the ability to live without working because your assets generate enough income. Once you have sufficient savings or passive income, you’re no longer forced to sell your time for a paycheck.

      Location freedom – the power to live anywhere without being tied to a specific job location. With money, you can travel or relocate without asking anyone’s permission.

      Money can literally buy the legal freedom to move globally through investment visas or “golden passports.” Over 30 countries offer residency or citizenship in exchange for investment. Got €250,000 for Greek real estate? You’ve got permanent EU residence. Around $150K can make you a citizen of several Caribbean nations, giving you visa-free travel to 130+ countries. The whole world opens up to you.

      Freedom of choice – the ability to spend your time on projects you care about instead of ones that just pay the bills. When you’re financially secure, you can pursue your interests, start businesses that align with your values, and walk away from toxic situations.

      Freedom to help others – with resources, you can make a real impact through philanthropy. Building wells for clean water, constructing homes for those in need, funding medical research – none of this happens without money.

      The System That Keeps You Working

      So if money is so important, why are we constantly told it doesn’t matter? Simple: the system needs workers – a labor force that doesn’t ask questions and keeps the machine running.

      There’s a reason schools don’t teach financial literacy. There’s a reason we’re fed stories about the virtue of modesty and the corrupting influence of wealth. It’s aimed precisely at keeping normal people from pursuing true financial independence.

      In my home country, there was an explicit narrative that you can only get rich through corruption, theft, or being born wealthy. This is nonsense designed to keep people in their place. In more developed countries, the narrative is subtler but serves the same purpose – keep people satisfied with just enough, never reaching for more.

      Do you think it is a conspiracy theory? Modern education systems were literally designed to produce compliant workers. As Quartz reported, “the modern education system was designed to teach future factory workers to be punctual, docile, and sober.” The industrial-era school schedule (sitting in rows, moving at bells) emerged to prepare children for factory life.

      Even today, most curricula teach you to be employees rather than business owners. As Robert Kiyosaki (author of Rich Dad Poor Dad) points out, schools teach people “to work for money, not how to have money work for them.”

      The Job Trap

      Let’s be blunt about what a conventional job actually is: trading your freedom for money.

      When you work a 9-to-5, you spend your time on someone else’s project, building someone else’s dream. Your income depends on your boss’s whims. You need permission to take vacation. You can be fired at any time.

      According to a Gallup poll, 62% of Americans would prefer to be their own boss rather than work for someone else. Yet most remain employees out of fear or the need for steady income. Only about 21% of employees globally report being actively engaged at work, with the rest feeling unfulfilled or constrained.

      I see nothing wrong with work – for me it was a first step. But every time I worked for someone else, the itch to do my own thing intensified. I felt I was made for something bigger, something that was truly mine.

      Naval Ravikant puts it perfectly:

      “You’re not going to get rich renting out your time. You must own equity – a piece of a business – to gain your financial freedom.”

      As long as you trade time for money, your income stops when you stop working, and someone else captures the residual value of your work. Owning assets or a business lets you decouple income from hours worked.

      This is the fundamental truth: a conventional job rarely leads to financial freedom unless you have an unusually high salary coupled with aggressive saving and investing. It’s a stable path, but not one that leads to true independence.

      The Power of Creation

      Humans are natural creators. We constantly invent, build, and improve things to make our lives and society better. This creative drive is fundamental to our nature and deeply connected to our happiness.

      When you’re financially free, you can channel this creative energy into projects that truly matter to you – not just what pays the bills. You can build something meaningful that outlasts you, solve problems that fascinate you, or create art that expresses your unique perspective.

      This creative fulfillment is one of the most profound benefits of financial freedom. Just think about having the autonomy to bring your ideas to life without constraint.

      The feeling when you create something valuable, when people benefit from your work, when they tell you you’ve solved their problems or improved their lives – that satisfaction is unmatched. And if you’re earning good money from it? That’s when everything falls into place, when the puzzle forms a complete picture.

      This is what business truly is – a mechanism for earning money by solving people’s problems at scale. It’s not just about profit, but also about making a positive impact while achieving your own freedom.

      I may not be Elon Musk launching rockets into space (though with enough money, who knows?), but I can still create value in my own sphere of influence. The ability to build something of your own design, something that helps others while securing your independence – that’s the ultimate expression of freedom.

      The Path to Financial Freedom (Evaluating Your Options)

      Now that we understand why money matters so much, let’s look at the actual paths to financial freedom – including which ones are traps and which ones actually work.

      The FIRE Approach: Slow and Steady

      The FIRE movement (Financial Independence, Retire Early) advocates living extremely frugally, saving a large portion of income (often 50–70%), investing it in index funds or dividend stocks, and after 10–20+ years, accumulating enough to retire young and live off the returns.

      This is a perfectly real strategy, not a scam. The key metric is accumulating roughly 25 times your annual expenses (so you can withdraw 4% a year sustainably). But it requires serious sacrifice – living very stingily for decades and often working multiple jobs to save every penny.

      The numbers don’t lie: very few people achieve early retirement. In the U.S., only about 1% of people aged 40–44 are retired, and even at ages 45–49 it’s just 2%. Those statistics reflect how rare successful FIRE adherents are.

      Some FIRE participants themselves report feeling “lost and unfulfilled” after retiring extremely early, with a few returning to work due to boredom or unexpected expenses. There are also risks: if you retire extremely early and the market tanks or inflation spikes, your portfolio might not sustain 50+ years of retirement.

      I respect the discipline of FIRE followers, but personally, I’m not interested in working 2–3 jobs and pinching pennies until I’m old. I’d rather find a way to make a lot of money sooner through business, even if it means more risk.

      FIRE works if you have the temperament for delayed gratification and a steady career. But not everyone can save 50% of their income without undue hardship.

      Quick Flips and Arbitrage: The Opportunist’s Approach

      The strategy of buying something cheaply and quickly selling at a higher price can indeed generate fast money. When sanctions stop the import of a good, you import it via another route and profit until the window closes.

      This works – we saw it during the 2020 pandemic when some individuals made fortunes importing and reselling scarce items. During the 2017 fidget spinner craze, savvy importers bought spinners in bulk from China for pennies and sold them for dollars – until the fad died and latecomers got stuck with inventory.

      The problem with flipping is it’s “short-term…constantly chasing the next opportunity.” One day the window is there, next day it’s gone. Markets correct, or regulations change. Parallel import opportunities vanish if sanctions are lifted or big competitors move in.

      Flipping is also labor-intensive; you must continually find the next deal. It’s great for accumulating some starting capital but rarely scales into a lasting, passive business.

      Scams and Pyramid Schemes: The Dark Side

      Let’s be honest – especially in our modern world, opportunities to scam or defraud people are easier than ever, thanks to anonymity and the rapid spread of information. This accessibility gives fraudsters unprecedented reach and impact.

      The numbers are staggering: the FBI’s Internet Crime Report 2022 recorded an all-time high of $10.3 billion in cybercrime losses, up 49% from 2020. Cryptocurrencies have enabled many scams due to their anonymous, cross-border nature.

      But this path leads away from freedom, not toward it. If caught, you end up in jail (literal loss of freedom). Even if you’re not caught, you live in fear and ethical compromise. You’re constantly looking over your shoulder, waiting for consequences to catch up.

      Plus, scamming doesn’t bring the satisfaction that comes from creating genuine value. Fraudsters don’t experience the fulfillment of solving real problems or improving lives – they’re just extracting value from others.

      I have no interest in these approaches. They go against the very essence of freedom, which includes peace of mind and the ability to build something meaningful and lasting.

      Trading and Crypto: The Gambling Trap

      I’m extremely skeptical of amateur trading for quick riches. Non-professional day trading is essentially gambling – and the house usually wins.

      Studies consistently show that the vast majority of individual day traders lose money. In one comprehensive study of Brazilian futures traders, 97% of those who traded for more than 300 days ended up losing money. Only about 1% of day traders were consistently profitable over time.

      I’ve experienced this firsthand. I once tried trading currency pairs on Forex, spending my first $100 and watching it disappear. I later attempted stock trading too, but it was during a period when I was already focused on my offline business and planning to relocate to become a digital nomad. Neither trading venture panned out for me – either because I lacked the patience or because it simply wasn’t aligned with my mindset.

      Similarly, research on U.S. stock retail traders found that those who trade the most (trying to time the market) significantly underperform simple index funds. As one paper bluntly put it: “Trading is hazardous to your wealth.”

      Crypto trading is gambling, like betting on sports or at a casino. Many “crypto bros” deny this until a bear market (when everything goes down) wipes them out. According to a LendingTree survey, 38% of crypto holders sold at a loss, and undoubtedly more are holding underwater positions.

      If someone bought Bitcoin very early (e.g. $100) and sold at $100,000, that was immensely profitable – but that’s more long-term investing (or luck) than active trading.

      Professional trading is possible if treated like a full-time job – some people spend years and large sums learning it and a few succeed. But for the average person, trying to day trade their way to wealth is about as reliable as playing lottery tickets.

      The Business Route: Creating Your Freedom Machine

      This brings us to business – building a system that generates income by solving problems at scale.

      Unlike a job, where your income depends on trading time for money, a business can be grown to bring good income, and you can delegate tasks so it doesn’t consume all your time.

      Unlike trading or gambling, a business creates actual value in the world by solving real problems people have.

      Unlike FIRE, a business can potentially generate substantial wealth in years rather than decades, without requiring extreme frugality.

      The one catch? You need to figure out which type of business model fits your resources, skills, and freedom goals.

      In the next article, I’ll break down exactly which business models offer the clearest path to freedom, with special focus on why building a personal brand might be the most powerful strategy available in today’s economy. I’ll show you the full Freedom Business Matrix that lets you evaluate each model objectively.

      But for now, understand this: the path to freedom starts with rejecting the lies you’ve been told about money. It continues with choosing a strategy that actually works. And it ends with you controlling your life completely.

      Your Freedom Roadmap Starts Now

      We’ve covered a lot of ground, but the most important takeaway is this: money isn’t evil, greedy, or corrupting – it’s a tool that buys freedom in all its forms. Rejecting this reality only keeps you trapped in a system designed to extract value from your time while giving you just enough to stay compliant.

      The data is clear: money improves health outcomes, reduces relationship stress, increases overall life satisfaction, and most importantly, gives you control over your time and location.

      The good news? You have multiple paths to financial independence. Whether it’s disciplined saving and investing (FIRE), opportunistic arbitrage (flipping), or building a business, the options exist. What matters is that you choose one and commit to it rather than accepting the default path of trading your limited time for someone else’s profit.

      In my next article, I’ll show you the exact business models that offer the best balance of control, scalability, and immediate income potential – with special emphasis on why personal branding might be the ultimate strategy for creating freedom on your terms in the digital age.

      But don’t wait for that information to start shifting your mindset. Begin today by rejecting the narrative that money doesn’t matter. Start looking at your finances not just as numbers in an account, but as potential freedom tickets waiting to be accepted.

      As Naval Ravikant says:

      “Seek wealth, not money or status. Wealth is having assets that earn while you sleep.”

      Your journey to creating those assets begins now.

      The system wants you complacent.

      I want you free.

    5. Beyond Niching Down: The Multi-Interest Personal Brand Business. Part 2

      Beyond Niching Down: The Multi-Interest Personal Brand Business. Part 2

      This is the second part of a 2-part series article. I highly recommend reading part 1 first so you have all the necessary context.

      “Escape competition through authenticity… No one can compete with you on being you.”

      – Naval Ravikant

      The moment you stop forcing yourself into a niche and start embracing all your interests is when you create a business impossible to replicate and compete with.

      How many eggs baskets do you have

      The next point is the immediate unlocking of possible content options, products that you can offer, and you again don’t sew yourself into a narrow specialized niche, where you can only come up with a limited set of products. Obviously from a sports creator we all expect that he will sell protein powder, or pre-workout tablets, a completely expected story, and in most cases that’s how it happens.

      No, now, as a multi-niche brand you can sell, for example, seeds for growing bok choy in your backyard, or stylist services to pick suitable clothes for yourself. These are completely different things, and they complement each other, and they don’t contradict each other, so diversification immediately comes into play. The famous “don’t keep all your eggs in one basket”.

      An extremely useful principle, especially here, in business, which is constantly changing and in which you need to adapt, and this adaptability appears for you just with the versatility of your personal brand, you don’t have this limitation.

      Now you’re greatly expanding your audience. If before the audience was attracted only by that narrow segment that was covered by your one interest, which all your content was aimed at, now there are many interests, and, accordingly, the potential scale of your audience also increases, because, guess what, you’re not the only one in the world who combines several interests, not only are you interested in not just one thing, but many different things.

      Take any person, and there are, of course, maybe such exceptions that really dedicate their life to only one thing, but even this is a very superficial judgment about a person, if you look deeper, then, as a rule, it’s always a combination of different interests.

      Even if Thomas Edison tried to make the same light bulb ten thousand times, besides this he was interested in a huge number of other things, which just brought to his work this understanding of how everything is interconnected, and how to make his inventions, for example, useful, applicable in life, and not just some fun experiments in the laboratory, he was a very well-rounded person.

      Or take Leonardo da Vinci, who simply spread his genius across a huge number of domains – art, science, even biology and medicine, architecture, and painting. This is just a colossal, rather, the most extreme, probably, example that can be imagined, of such a handy, leggy person, for whom all this also worked out perfectly, and I, of course, admire such people, it seems like something unreal.

      You can take our contemporaries, like Elon Musk, who knows how to write programs, play computer games, launch rockets into space, make electric cars, establish connections with the president and play politics, buy out social networks and so on, this is also an extremely well-rounded personality, who precisely with the combination of all these interests attracts attention to himself, this is one of the most interesting people known to a huge number of the planet’s population.

      Someone loves him for one thing, someone loves him for rockets, someone loves him for Tesla, someone loves him for his closeness to the president, someone, on the contrary, doesn’t love him for this, but in essence it doesn’t change, it attracts attention to him.

      This is exactly what we want to do with our personal personal brand, that is, based on our various interests, we want to attract a different group of people with whom these interests combine.

      And here you go, a huge number of opportunities opens up before you, and immediately the size of the potential audience increases many times as soon as we start applying this.

      The Content System Approach for Consistent Brand Growth

      That’s exactly why with the launch of my personal brand I immediately began to describe the various domains of my life in which I have interests. It’s business, it’s psychology, it’s philosophy, because my stories, articles, and thoughts, they can often be a bit woo-woo, blurry, impractical, but this is my way of explaining things to myself, I’m sure that for some people precisely such a method will also be suitable, such reasoning, providing argumentation, some logical conclusions, and so on.

      I understand this, and I try to use it as my own advantage.

      Entrepreneur Marie Forleo, who famously calls herself a “multi-passionate entrepreneur,” struggled early on with advice to “choose one thing,” until she realized that her drive to pursue diverse fields (business, fitness, dance, spirituality) was an asset, not a liability.

      “Trust the drive and passion… to do many different things,”

      she says – following those genuine interests turned out to be the key to a meaningful, successful career.

      Now this gives a huge space for maneuver in terms of content. Because this question arises for everyone who becomes a content creator. Okay, I’m starting to develop my personal brand, but what should I write about, or what should I create content about, what should I shoot videos about, record podcasts. The answer is – about these very interests.

      And now, when you no longer have the limitation of just one niche, you can write about what you like.

      At first it might seem that all this will lead to us shooting a cannon at sparrows, and not catching any of them in the end, and this diversification of content will just lead to the fragmentation of the audience.

      But in fact, you can find several examples which, despite the fact that their interests are very different, are at the same time competitive and so whole, and there’s no contradiction here, again, because each person is a combination of several interests.

      And there’s a high probability that if you’re interested in, for example, five things, five domains of life, then there will be another person who will be interested in, for example, all these five domains, or at least one of your interests.

      And then what happens? When these people begin to immerse themselves in the study, for example, of some things, if you, of course, give some content that attracts their attention.

      What kinds of content, by the way, are there? I have an article that will answer the question of what kind of content I should create when I create my personal brand: The Three Content Categories: How To Attract an Audience That Buys.

      And it turns out that, getting to know, for example, about your other interests, the audience, possibly, will also adopt them. Because, if they’re interesting to you, it means that some part of your thinking coincides.

      This combination occurred to you, and it similarly occurred in another person too. But this means that, probably, for his mindset, another interest will be suitable, maybe he just didn’t know about it.

      According to Edelman’s Trust Barometer, 61% of people trust “a person like yourself” as an information source – higher than trust in advertising or corporate executives. A Twitter survey found 49% of consumers rely on influencer recommendations for purchase decisions. This explains why personal brands hold considerable marketing power – their audiences trust them.

      For example, there are a lot of people who are interested in the business domain. I’m taking, by the way, such broad domains of life, or interests, in order for it to be obvious. So, many people from business, they’re very interested in spirituality, or the inner world, those things that monks usually do, but for them it’s a narrow specialization. One interest is spirituality. So this monks sit somewhere in Tibet, in the mountains, and meditate. This is such an extreme, manifestation of one interest.

      But business people are versatile, they can do business, but at the same time be spiritual, while also meditating, engaging with their inner world, doing something to get to know themselves better, and they succeed perfectly at this.

      It’s understandable that a person from business, who has earned money, has time to do this, and this is what most people come to when they have this freedom of maneuver in life, to do whatever they want, regardless of whether it brings money now or not, and this is wonderful.

      But this says that these people are similar to each other in this, and it’s no coincidence that they all share their findings in this area through books, podcasts, and communication groups.

      They have their circles of communication, where they share just their findings, interests, and methodologies that they use to develop in one area or another.

      And guess what those people whom you will attract with your interests will do the same. This, actually, is our task, right? To attract people and share our findings with them.

      This, by the way, is also an answer to the question of what content to create, and what to do. Here it already depends very much on your personality, and on your interests.

      Let’s say, you can be naturally a very talented showman, and tell a good story. I, for example, am not very good at this, so I constantly delve into such philosophical stories. But it seems that this is exactly what I do better. This is not entertainment content, but rather for someone it can be educational, for someone it can be motivational and inspiring.

      This is what I seem to do much better. I can construct my thought in such a way as to explain something.

      Plus my profession predisposes to this. I am, by education a systems analyst, and I really like this field of knowledge, so I also often share in my content. When it comes to systems, about systems analysis, about how this is applied in business, you just can’t shut me up.

      And I try to build precisely around this my life, and apply a systemic approach to this.

      That is, exactly the same as now, telling about one topic, I try to systematically lay out the argumentation and make it so that you understand what we’re talking about, all this made sense.

      Where is the business

      Now, where’s the business here?

      Okay, I start my personal brand,
      okay, I don’t go into one deep niche,
      okay, and I have content,
      I understand what to create this content about.

      But where’s the business here?

      I have an article about the essential parts of business The Only Digital Business Skill I Wish I’d Mastered Earlier, which are people, product, distribution, brand. We’ve so far missed two elements from all this, although the first two we’ve actually already covered:

      The brand, precisely your personal brand, which will be unique in the market, not replaceable by some other, non-commoditized, precisely for the reason that you are a combination of different interests, you are that very unique composition, which another person can’t repeat, unless somehow he manages to live your life from your perspective.

      People or audience, and as soon as you begin to attract these people, they’re attracted by the fact that they follow your interests, and you do this naturally on social networks, on the internet, then over time you gather this audience, which suits you by type of thinking, which is somewhat akin to you, these are your followers.

      What we haven’t covered is the product, which I’ve already, by the way, partially touched on, and the distribution.

      You followers know your interests and know your audience as well, because you’re actually its main representative. Remember, you combine various interests, and some from your audience, will definitely repeat at least one of these interests, and will definitely match with you in understanding.

      And each of your products, it can be either in a combination of these interests, or follow one interest.

      What is a product? A product is a tool with which one or another need is closed.

      We can return even to basic needs, so that the understanding is very simple and clear. If a person needs to eat, he needs food, food is a product that closes his need, it’s hunger.

      Here we refer to Maslow’s pyramid, with the basic human needs, or think about the eternal four markets – health, wealth, relationships, and happiness.

      Everything that’s directed at these four markets – they are infinite, as long as there is a human, in his current incarnation, until we’ve changed, haven’t become some bio-robots and our sphere of interests hasn’t changed, these markets are inexhaustible.

      The food is a subdomain of health. If you don’t eat, you, accordingly, will endanger your own life, or health.

      So, your product should close one or several needs of your audience. And the easiest way to do this is to make this product close your need first.

      Build a product for yourself

      You as a representative of this audience, you perfectly know what interests you. You perfectly know what you need, and you can make something that closes your need.

      If you need to close it, then, again, there’s a high probability that it will close someone else’s need from your audience.

      What is this product? I’m speaking very abstractly now, because, it seems to me, we need to devote a separate article and discuss separately on this topic in order to build understanding.

      But the market is already very wide, it’s not limited to just some one option. Personally, I prefer digital products, because they have the highest margins, they’re the easiest to distribute, they can be made once and sold up to infinity, especially if these are such evergreen products, which will always be relevant.

      For me this is closest, because I’m an IT guy. But this, again, is my combination of interests, experience, and skills, which I can cover most easily. It’s easier and faster for me to make a digital product, and I have all the necessary skills for this, but you need to look at yourself.

      This can be an absolutely offline story, the example with the seeds from a bodybuilder, or a styling service. There’s a very wide choice of options and possibilities here.

      “I had no idea that being your authentic self could make me as rich as I’ve become. If I had, I’d have done it a lot earlier.”,

      Oprah Winfrey

      Distribute across your audience

      And finally, distribution, which is actually naturally covered by the presence of this audience. If you have an audience, then all you need to do is to let them know that you have your product.

      Here marketing, sales, and presentation skills come into play. You need to show that these products have some value, which you possess, which you can offer, and they close some need for your audience.

      As a rule, any product comes from some pain in the consumer, and you can just say such a simple thing as, for example:

      “I, when I started building a personal brand, faced the first problem or the first pain – creating content. And I needed to come up with a system for myself that would allow me to create content. And I was actually very afraid of this at first, because I didn’t understand what I needed to write, where I would need to get a huge amount of information, data, and so on.

      But in the end I managed to build a system for myself, which I, of course, constantly tweak. And it allows me, without spending a lot of time, to generate a huge amount of content, which literally allows me to plan publications for several weeks and even months ahead.

      And now I absolutely don’t have writer’s block, or some need to search for inspiration. My system works like clockwork, and I’m going to use it.”

      Sounds interesting, doesn’t it? And if you’re thinking about creating your brand, then, at a minimum, you understand that such a need will arise, or, if you’re already doing this, you have this need.

      So the first product takes shape, for example, from my point of view, this is the system that I use. I can simply sell it. And guess what, that’s exactly my first product – the System of content creation with the help of AI, witch I will announce very soon.

      And just now I literally did that very distribution that I was talking about. And if you’re reading this now, accordingly, we have at least one interest in common, and this is an interest in business, in building a personal brand.

      And surely you also have the task of creating content, if you decide to go down this path. And I’m offering a solution to this problem right here.

      And, since my audience consists of several people, then this is the distribution, I give notice that I have a product, and then you make a decision about acquiring this product.

      Living Your Personal Brand

      Thus, we’ve built a full-fledged business model of a personal brand, which is clear is future-proof or protected from any further changes in the business landscape. Also this model closes all the questions that I discussed at the very beginning of the article (in the part 1): it doesn’t feel like something incompatible with my personality, something that I need to force myself to do, because these are simply my interests.

      I share my findings, thoughts, knowledge, skills with you, I just kind of immerse myself in them deeper, I continue to grow, grow in audience, grow in potential products that I can offer.

      Sharing this we are actually building a community, because it turns out that, uniting around these interests, we form a group of people who have something to discuss together.

      And this, actually, is that very mechanism that allows not just for this business to exist, but which allows you to live it, that is, you literally just live your life, fill it with meaning, share your findings, share what interests you, and this brings you income.

      I hope everything has fallen into place for you, if not, then write questions in the comments, what exactly you lack for understanding, I’ll try to close these questions too.

      So what are you waiting for? Your unique combination of interests, experiences, and insights is the foundation of a business that can’t be copied or commoditized. Your personality is the differentiator in a crowded marketplace, and your growing audience becomes both your distribution channel and your community.

      Identify your constellation of genuine interests, create authentic content that expresses these passions, build an audience through consistency and value, and develop products that solve problems you’ve personally experienced. Let your audience guide your product development, leverage their trust for natural distribution, and diversify your income streams across multiple interest areas.

      In a world where attention is the new currency, cultivating a loyal audience around your authentic self is one of the best investments you can make.

    6. Beyond Niching Down: The Multi-Interest Personal Brand Business. Part 1

      Beyond Niching Down: The Multi-Interest Personal Brand Business. Part 1

      Throughout my life, I’ve tried dozens of different business models. Completely offline businesses like a flower shop or a guesthouse in Bali. Classic online stores, dropshipping, online courses – basically everything that was trendy when information about that business model was spreading across the internet.

      I’ve even run development agencies. It’s something I’ve been doing for many years, but I don’t consider it a business because I don’t have a working mechanism that brings me new clients. All the clients I have come through word of mouth – they’re recommended by previous clients. And honestly, I don’t do absolutely anything to develop this as a business. It’s more of a supporting mechanism that allows me to earn additional income, but it’s not my main source.

      And yes, I’ve tried various methods that should bring in clients: advertising, agency branding, cold emails, and other approaches that should theoretically attract clients somehow. But for various reasons, none of them worked.

      The main reason was a lack of clear motivation and understanding that this was, first, a working mechanism, and second, something I could do constantly, regularly, and with pleasure. Typically, everything boiled down to the fact that I needed to force myself to do it, to put it on like a straitjacket. But it felt artificial, a tortured process, a necessity.

      And they left me feeling that something wasn’t right, and so everything turned into, or rather, ended in self-sabotage. I would simply stop before achieving results.

      According to a 2023 creator economy report, this experience isn’t unique – 46% of independent content creators say it’s hard to be successful, and 41% struggle with burnout when trying to force themselves into business models that don’t align with their natural interests.

      What if there was a better way? A business model that feels authentic, that aligns with who you really are, that doesn’t require you to become someone else just to make money? I’m about to show you how the multi-interest personal brand business can provide exactly that – a way to build a sustainable future-proof business around the real you.

      Why Traditional Models Never Quite Worked

      It was like that picture where a guy with a pickaxe is carving his way to wealth, and there’s just one centimeter left to the coveted crystal deposits, but he gets discouraged and leaves. That’s how it often turned out for me.

      Cartoon of two miners digging for diamonds, with one giving up just before reaching them — symbolizing consistency in content strategy for audience growth

      I’m aware of this pattern, but I truly don’t have that inner feeling of wholeness with these processes, with these approaches. They don’t seem genuine somehow.

      I feel like it should happen differently, that something should occur in a way that aligns with my personality, with what I enjoy doing, and with what brings me pleasure, with some internal feeling I have.

      Maybe I’m getting too philosophical here, and many seasoned business people would say that business is absolutely different – there’s nothing irrational about it, everything is very simple and mechanistic.

      And many do business that way. You just do what you need to do, hire a team of marketers who do everything for you, handle advertising, hire other people who deal with promotion, client acquisition, and so on.

      But I’ve never been able to take my projects to the stage where I had enough money to hire a team, so I had to do everything myself. And doing it yourself is okay up to a certain point and time – when you’re learning a skill, when you’re studying something and performing the first iteration, it’s quite normal. But then, when what you’re doing doesn’t bring significant results, you hit a wall: either you need to spend more resources on it, and again, the question arises of human, financial, or time resources.

      It’s a question of all three. Most of them are covered by the resource of money – when a business brings in money, you can spend it to buy other people’s time and free up your own, but none of my projects have yet brought me enough money to afford that.

      There were other projects that should have brought in much more money, with high margins, like SaaS projects, various tools that were supposed to sell themselves.

      In the end, they all led to debt because, again, I had to pay the team that created these products and handled development. They didn’t bring in money, so funding came out of my own pocket, which led to negative income – I took out loans and then had to repay them.

      And it all boiled down to me getting a job to pay off the debts I incurred after trying to do business.

      But there’s a blueprint, right?

      My last such project was another startup where I invested $25,000, which is a classic amount by startup world standards. And in this story, everything was actually done according to the canons of launching startups – $25K in investments from “friends, family, and fools.”

      The fools in this case were ourselves, the partners who covered each other’s weaknesses. I was the technical founder, we had a founder who was the face of the brand, then a business development person and an operations director.

      So we had everything we needed – money, resources, we built a product that constantly pivoted. We did continuous market research, talked to users and customers, flipped the product several times, but after several years, having spent all the investments made in this project and not finding product-market fit, we successfully, or rather, unsuccessfully, just folded the project and parted ways, recording the losses.

      But it’s supposed to be different, right? After all, we did everything by the playbook, according to what others had already done, and it seemed like nothing could go wrong.

      People had already walked this path. They laid it all out in a book, saying, “Please, do it by the book, here’s a blueprint, just plug in your values, and you’ll get a business.”

      Unfortunately, that’s not how it works in life because reality is something with a huge number of variables that can’t be accounted for in any book.

      A book is written at one moment, read at another, when even the environment in which you’re doing business has changed beyond recognition. And the book actually needs to be rewritten.

      There are some books that, of course, can live forever, describing some universal principles that will probably only change over millennia, when humans evolve and noticeably differ from, say, our current model of thinking, behavior, and body.

      That is, maybe, I don’t know, we’ll grow into some cybernetic bodies, and we’ll have a completely new structure of values.

      But while we’re in our current state, these things don’t really change, so in our current state of consciousness, these universal principles work.

      I’m talking about classic books that have lived not just for decades but for hundreds of years and still remain relevant.

      But business literature doesn’t fall into this category. It becomes outdated very quickly, and I’ve actually read an enormous amount of business books throughout my life – literally everything that caught my eye, or any recommendation related to business immediately went on my reading list.

      I would download the book, buy it, or find it, or borrow it from friends, and devour it eagerly, leaving no remnant.

      And I always tried to apply this knowledge because each time it had profound meaning, and I understood that it’s all applicable, it’s all relevant, and there are a huge number of examples where it worked.

      But for some reason, it didn’t work for me.

      The Multi-Interest Advantage: Building On What Makes You Unique

      Now I’m at position zero, where I have a source of income – freelance web development that helps me keep my pants up and not starve to death.

      But it’s not super profitable, it doesn’t scale – or maybe I just don’t know how to do that. Again, it probably leads in the direction of an agency, which I don’t understand how to scale, develop, and make into a reliable business.

      Or I need to do something else.

      What’s missing in my current business to develop it as a business, one you can rely on, one with a flywheel that spins and continues moving due to the inertia it has already gained?

      I’ve already talked about this in my previous article ‘The Only Digital Business Skill I Wish I’d Mastered Earlier’ about distribution. Roughly speaking, it all comes down to product distribution, because as a technical person, I can build almost any product that’s needed, and I have enough experience to do it now.

      I’ve built a huge number of different services and systems for other people. I’ve done it on commission. I’ve communicated with Chinese suppliers and ordered customized production for products that are sold in online stores, and so on.

      So it’s all a matter of technique for me now. But how to sell it at scale, how to distribute the product, that’s a question that’s currently a skill issue for me.

      I don’t understand how to do it. This is precisely the knowledge and skills gap I’m going to close.

      And everything starts coming together when I dive deeper and deeper into building a personal brand.

      One person business model

      This is where everything starts falling into place. First, I see a huge number of examples of personal brands that earn enormous amounts of money.

      So it’s not, let’s say, survivorship bias, if you do everything according to common sense and certain rules of the game that can be mastered, because it really is a game that’s subject to certain laws, rules, if you know them, then you can quite succeed in it.

      And secondly, it all fits into that very puzzle and contains all the elements that I’ve been missing until now.

      That is, for example, that very distribution appears here in an absolutely natural way, and questions don’t even arise about how to distribute your products.

      You have an audience, all you need to do is let people who trust you, who listen to you, and whose eyes are directed toward you, that is, their gaze and attention are now on your side, and offer them the product you want to sell.

      This, in principle, is that very one person business, or a personal brand, call it whatever you want, it doesn’t change the essence.

      You have an audience, these are real people, we’re obviously not talking about bots, not about various scams, these are real subscribers and followers who are on the internet, in various social networks, this is the place that serves as a platform, a gathering of people or a place of their attraction, and you, accordingly, can interact with them.

      Interact how? In this case, we’re talking about offering some kind of product, and if you’re building your brand, if any business offers its brand online, then its next logical step will be to offer what it has to offer to this audience at a given moment in time.

      And then the person makes a choice whether to buy or not, it already depends on a large number of factors too, but, as a rule, everything comes together here, that is, the more subscribers, naturally, the more likely it is that among them there will be someone who needs the offered product right now.

      Research from Mighty Networks in 2023 found that creators who built community platforms retained audiences at rates 3x higher than those relying solely on one-way content feeds. Additionally, conversion rates for membership or courses can be 5-10% of an engaged community, versus less than 1% of a general social media following.

      Business within a narrow niche

      Now, how is this different from other business models I’ve tried before? Because it seems like it’s the same, for example, online business, the same online courses that everyone is already sick of, it’s online stores and so on.

      But I want to draw one important distinction. When you build, for example, an online store, typically building such a business starts from understanding what product you’ll be selling.

      Here, the question of niching comes first priority, that is, choose your niche. And it seems a bit strange if you go to some specialized store and find cosmetics products there, and suddenly find computer hardware products.

      I came here for cosmetics, for example, it’s a brand of some celebrity who advertises it, and it would be strange to see the sale of motherboards, which doesn’t seem to match either the brand, or the theme of the store, or that very celebrity who promotes the store.

      And here we begin to unravel this whole thing, of course, everything should match. When we talk about some niche store, when people launch it on various marketplaces, on Amazon, or build a Shopify store.

      As a rule, this is done from the premise of immediately making money, not building some brand. There’s nothing wrong with that, because business – its primary goal is to make a profit. This is built into the definition of business.

      But the fact is that the market is a very inconstant thing, and people’s interest, demand for certain products is constantly changing. Now it’s like this, tomorrow they don’t need these products, it’s inconstant.

      And most of the products, what can already be sold, or what people need, is what satisfies their needs, is already on the market. That’s why the market offers solutions to current human needs.

      According to Clayton Christensen of Harvard Business School, 75-95% of new products that established companies introduce each year fail to achieve significant success. For solo entrepreneurs, launching a product line means not only creating or sourcing the product but also investing in advertising, supply chain, customer support, etc., all with the risk that the market may not respond.

      If, of course, you’re a talented inventor and can come up with something new, patent this idea, some product that solves a unique problem that until now simply couldn’t be solved in any way, then, of course, you have every reason to go down this path, and it’s quite possible to invent your product, and supply it to these marketplaces.

      But again, this implies huge expenditures of resources, time, money, your personal strength and energy to invent all this.

      Then no one cancels, again, marketing and attracting an audience to your product, and, accordingly, resources to explain why they need this particular product, why they can’t solve this problem right now with other products.

      All this comes back, again, to the same distribution of this product.

      Personal Brand within a narrow niche

      Now let’s look at this picture from the perspective of a personal personal brand. And how it works.

      First, let’s immediately agree that the advice of narrow niching, some assignment of a narrow niche to yourself, is outdated. Yes, it can play to your advantage, especially at first, when you’re just building a brand, and your word in a certain narrow niche will attract those people who are very interested in this narrow niche.

      But at the same time, unfortunately, you deliberately or unintentionally close yourself in this narrow box of your one niche, which will be very difficult to leave, the more difficult the more time you spend in it.

      If you have a brand that tells about fitness, and you’ve been doing this for many years, it will be very strange to hear gardening advice from you.

      And for the audience, this will be, firstly, unusual, and secondly, it will be strange for you, and this feeling that okay, I’m going to lose my audience now, but I can’t anymore, I already sick of this fitness stuff, and I want to diversify my narrative a little bit, what I’m talking about.

      This all immediately combines with the fear and the real possibility of losing your audience, accordingly, your influence online, and this is no joke. This is indeed a quite expected outcome in such a scenario.

      But what if a personal brand is built precisely on personality, on your persona, which consists of multiple interests? This is a unique combination of experience, expertise, skills, knowledge that have been accumulated up to the current moment in time.

      This realization is supported by marketing advisor Angela Winter who suggests personal brands can successfully encompass multiple passions if you “make yourself the brand” and highlight the common thread or values linking your interests.

      You have multiple interests

      It’s not just fitness. Besides it you have skills in preparing high-protein dishes, some knowledge in cooking or gardening, which you do in order to grow organic fruits and vegetables in your backyard, so you can use them in cooking those meals.

      Besides this, in order to, for example, show your beautiful body, you understand that you need to dress appropriately, that is, you’re also interested in fashion, and you know how to select clothes corresponding to your personal style, which you have, again, developed over the years, and you know, for example, ways to combine these things, or buy them in a way that doesn’t hit your wallet hard or go beyond your usual image.

      Everything I’ve listed are very different domains of life, and it seems that gardening, fitness, fashion, cooking are precisely those niches that are occupied by separate people, but that’s the salt, because most content creators on the network are engaged in working within one niche, and here immediately several advantages arise if you stop following this outdated advice of niching down, and tell about several of your interests.

      First, you’re not sewn into this box, and from the very beginning you show that you are a person with diverse interests, and in fact they can all even be connected to each other. They can be less connected, but in the end you’ll understand that most of them are somehow intertwined at some point, which is called “ikigai,” if you build a graph where various interests of yours intersect, they can all be connected with each other.

      Or if you build a graph with all these interests, connect those of them that somehow combine with each other, for example, as in that chain that I just told about regarding fitness, it turns out that they’re all interconnected, and this is quite a consistent logical chain.

      Further, there’s no dissonance when someone reads you, because, again, combining all these interests, they get a complete picture of you as a person, and this combination of your different interests, it will each time be unique, because each person has their own life path, and different interests were acquired in completely different ways.

      It’s like musical notes, there are only seven notes in the world, yet the number of melodies is infinite, there may even be a limited number of interests and topics in the world, although this is not the case, there are definitely more than seven, but their combination in various proportions, if we also pass this through the prism of life experience, and your application of all these skills in life, then each time a unique composition will be obtained, which is called a personal brand.

      Now it’s not two dozen thousand influencers about sports, who, if you replace one with another, there won’t be much difference, and they’ll all talk about roughly the same thing, and then you just choose according to your intuition or because you like the voice or appearance of this content creator.

      But in this case, you’re already choosing by a set of interests that suit you, maybe you don’t like the whole set, but some of them coincide with yours, and here’s where you can share these interests, learn something new about them.

      Personal brand success stories like Marie Forleo (business coach, dance fitness instructor, spiritual advisor) and Tim Ferriss (lifestyle design, fitness, cooking, investing) show this approach works. Ferriss deliberately fashioned himself as a human guinea pig who deconstructs success in any domain, building a massive audience that follows him into whatever interest he tackles next.

      This is a very long topic so I decided to split it into two pieces. The next one starts with the solving of content creation puzzle – the number one question of every beginner level creator.

    7. The Three Content Categories: How To Attract an Audience That Buys

      The Three Content Categories: How To Attract an Audience That Buys

      Imagine yourself in a crowded marketplace, trying somehow to attract attention. How would you do it?

      You could entertain the audience by showing something funny, unusual, or interesting. I immediately picture someone on a pedestal or stage putting on a show, with a huge crowd gathering around them.

      Or you could provide real value. I picture a religious follower standing on a pedestal, sharing life wisdom through the lens of religion or worship of some deity. For many people, this represents value – they gather around, listen, agree, and appreciate these life principles.

      This person isn’t selling anything directly. Well, they’re selling loyalty to their church or their religion’s brand. That’s their product. But the essence doesn’t change – it’s a free way to attract an audience, a tool that allows them to gather attention without cost.

      People gather around and start listening attentively.

      The reality is, no matter what personal brand or business you’re building, you need an audience. It’s the missing element most aspiring entrepreneurs overlook. According to research from Conductor, brands that provide valuable content are 131% more likely to convert prospects into customers compared to those that don’t. And yet, most creators focus on platform tactics rather than understanding the psychological drivers behind content consumption.

      There are three categories of content that people consume: entertainment, educational, and motivational/inspirational. Any content that spreads online falls into one of these three categories.

      By understanding these categories, you can position yourself and your brand to attract the right audience that eventually buys from you.

      Why Most Entrepreneurs Fail At Building An Audience

      Most aspiring entrepreneurs make the same critical mistake: they don’t understand how content categories drive different psychological responses. Instead, they scatter their efforts across platforms without a coherent strategy for engaging their target audience’s mind and emotions.

      Each of these categories can be successful on its own. If you create content in just one category, it can thrive independently. This applies to someone like MrBeast – purely entertainment content. There’s no educational subtext or motivational angle. It’s an entertainment show, period. Or any gaming streamer – that’s also entertainment content designed for one purpose: entertaining the user.

      Then there’s educational content. This content aims to teach something, to present new information that expands your knowledge, abilities, and skills in a particular area. It’s content after which you develop new neural connections that you can apply in life.

      Many people mistakenly consider popular science channels as educational, channels that talk about science, for example, I really love channels like ScienceClick or The History of the Universe that talk about how our universe works, about cosmology, about the latest scientific discoveries and everything related to it.

      At first glance, it seems like educational content, but in my opinion, it’s purely entertainment because, well, I won’t learn anything new by watching these videos. They may provide some educational tools or information that can be considered educational, but mostly we watch such channels for entertainment. It’s not something that I, as a scientific researcher, would watch and then go make notes based on what was said in that video.

      Okay, maybe there’s some doubt about ScienceClick because it digs fairly deeply into the theoretical part and explains in detail how formulas or certain phenomena work. Fine, maybe that channel can be considered somewhat educational, but the others are purely entertainment.

      This in no way diminishes the importance of these channels and doesn’t make them better or worse. There’s no concept that one type of content is good and another is bad. No, these are all equivalent categories, and the question is only which category you choose to develop your business and personal brand.

      And finally, inspirational or motivational content – a good example here is Tony Robbins or channels with short motivational videos.

      Importance of categorizing

      Understanding and combining these three categories might be possible for someone, but it’s quite difficult, and again, these are three different goals that audiences come for. If I expect entertainment on MrBeast’s channel, I probably won’t understand a new video where he explains educational content. And vice versa.

      So the content category should be more or less consistent.

      This failure to understand content psychology leads to predictable outcomes: low engagement, minimal sharing, and worst of all – no sales. As one study in the Journal of Marketing found, content aligned with audience psychology was 30% more likely to be remembered than misaligned content. Your personal brand can’t afford to be forgettable in today’s attention economy.

      According to researcher Jonah Berger’s analysis of viral content, pieces that evoke high-arousal emotions like amusement or awe are significantly more likely to be shared than those eliciting low-arousal feelings. This explains why entertainment content spreads faster, but doesn’t necessarily convert to sales as effectively as educational content.

      Usage of content categories

      Why do you need to know these categories? Again, to understand which one is closer to you when creating your personal brand.

      In my view, entertainment content stands apart, because motivational and educational content are fairly tightly intertwined and complement each other very well. That is, if I provide useful information – I hope I’m providing useful information in this article – I can also inspire at the same time. I try to do that, inspire people to apply the information by giving examples from life, my own examples, or choosing words that will push you toward concrete action applying this knowledge.

      Because some time ago I didn’t know about these content categories, but now that I do know about them, I look through this lens at all content and immediately categorize it.

      I understand when to apply different types of content. For example, if I want to switch my brain off work right now, I’ll probably choose entertainment content to change the context.

      If I have time to listen to a podcast, for instance, if I’m driving somewhere and my hands are busy with the steering wheel, but my ears are free, I can make it so that an educational podcast is attached to them.

      Or if times are tough and something unclear and chaotic is happening in my head, and I need to somehow fix it in the moment, I can turn on motivational content, some Tony Robbins video, which, in fact, is very well constructed in this regard and very quickly breaks up negative thoughts and sets the right tone.

      Each category spreads differently

      So, understanding this categorization, you can build your positioning, your brand that you’re going to build, and you need to understand what content you’ll be distributing.

      Educational content, although it could be called the most useful from a human development perspective, no matter how much you’d like to present it, has the lowest spreadability because, frankly speaking, few people want to learn anything. As a rule, with age, a person becomes increasingly rigid, and the brain increasingly wants to maintain the status quo and not change what already exists.

      But what it definitely wants is entertainment. Entertainment will never be taken away from a person. In all times, any show, before there was internet, television, or any such things, gladiator shows, theater, and so on, always gathered masses of people in squares or in the Colosseum. It was always a center of attraction.

      So entertainment is something that unites us, something that’s very easy for a person to agree to. This is something they rarely refuse.

      And this is the most massive category, which is why we see among top YouTubers people like MrBeast or PewDiePie who make entertainment content, because most people in the world are quite easily attracted to entertainment.

      Accordingly, this is the most easily digestible content, and it’s easiest to spread, easiest to attract eyeballs to it, so you need to be aware of this.

      Motivational content is somewhere in the middle, and it quite easily attracts an audience because it’s relevant for almost every person, but just not everyone consciously realizes they need a dose of motivation. Everyone has their own goals and, accordingly, their own engines that make them get up in the mornings or, conversely, lie in bed as long as possible. In this case, you don’t want any motivation; you don’t need it at all.

      But if you understand that you need to do something in your life, then you’ll likely find a way to consume inspiring content.

      And finally, the educational category is the most difficult in terms of attracting eyeballs because people usually need to be forced to learn. We’ve had this since childhood. We can’t just go to school or university of our own free will. Well, some probably can, for whom it’s a real pleasure, but such people are a minority. As a rule, for most of us, it’s something we have to force ourselves to do.

      And here motivation is, let’s say, the threat of your future existence, and various methods come into play: that you’ll be homeless on the street, unable to earn money, unable to get a job, end up on the street, in prison, or somewhere else. In general, no rosy prospect awaits you. This is a pretty serious motivator for many to finish school, university, get an education, and that’s how it is.

      But until you understand that this whole thing is aimed exclusively at making you a cog in the general mechanism of some other system, until you realize that you yourself can be a builder of these systems and thereby escape from the matrix of the predisposed scenario.

      The Three Content Categories: Understanding Psychological Drivers

      So, we have three content categories that essentially answer the question of how to build your personal brand or your business brand. Again, it comes down to one of three categories: you need to either educate your potential client, entertain them, or inspire them.

      From this grow the following business models that you can implement once you have an audience, and typically, a product that suits an audience built on a particular type of content is easier to sell.

      Let’s go back a bit to what a business consists of, i.e., what are its components.

      There must be an audience, which we’re breaking down right now – attracting eyeballs, attracting people’s attention, i.e., gathering people.

      There must be a product that satisfies some need for your audience.

      There must be distribution of this product, which can and does happen through the channel through which you distribute content. It’s quite a logical story.

      And finally, a brand, which is built thanks to content.

      That is, these three constituent elements with content (audience, distribution, and brand), which we just categorized, are covered. We need to figure out the product – what to sell.

      And here this categorization comes into play again.

      If you make entertainment content, then the product that will best suit your audience is also some kind of mass product, i.e., something that can be commoditized, for example, because it fits better with this audience. This is such a mass audience; it doesn’t have any specific goal. This audience is very broad, and accordingly, the suitable product here is precisely one that suits a broad audience.

      Entertainment Content: The Attention

      Entertainment content is designed to capture attention and amuse or delight an audience. Psychologically, it triggers positive emotions – humor, joy, excitement – creating an immediate mood lift and enjoyment. This emotional payoff makes viewers more inclined to like, share, and remember the content.

      As one study found, ads that made people laugh were 30% more likely to be remembered than serious ones. When we laugh together, we feel connected. People are more focused and engaged when they laugh, and a well-timed joke can create rapport between a creator and their audience.

      Take MrBeast as an example, which I mentioned earlier. His products are chocolate and a chain of burger restaurants, i.e., Beast Burger, which is fast food. Fast food is also very common among the masses, so the decision regarding these types of products seems very logical, understandable, and well-aligned with the brand.

      Entertainment content often has high “spreadability” – it’s highly shareable. Funny memes, skits, or relatable amusements frequently go viral because they evoke strong emotions that compel sharing. According to Jonah Berger’s research,

      “Virality is partially driven by physiological arousal. Content that evokes high-arousal positive (awe) or negative (anger or anxiety) emotions is more viral.”

      People share entertaining content as a form of social currency – it makes them look witty or fun when they pass it along. Wendy’s fast-food chain gained massive brand exposure through its entertainingly “sassy” Twitter posts, which vastly boosted engagement.

      However, while entertainment content often generates immediate, broad engagement – lots of views, likes, comments – this engagement may remain at a casual level rather than deep discourse. Still, the volume can be substantial: humorous posts can drastically increase commenting as people tag friends.

      A Frontiers study found that well-crafted humor significantly boosts consumer engagement intentions (likes, shares). Nearly 80% of college-age individuals remember advertisements that are humorous – an enormous uplift in recall that correlates with higher engagement.

      Entertainment content humanizes a personal brand and builds likability. By making the audience laugh or feel joy, you come across as relatable. As marketing experts note, entertaining content can “quickly transform a ‘company’ into a ‘group of people just like me,’” crucial for building trust. Gary V puts it this way:

      “Whatever experience people are seeking on their preferred platforms, that’s what marketers should attempt to replicate.”

      In practice, many personal brands use entertaining posts to keep their audience’s attention between heavier or more serious content. Maya Angelou’s famous dictum applies perfectly here:

      “People will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.”

      Making your audience feel happy or amused can leave a lasting positive association with you.

      Motivational Content: The Emotion

      Motivational or inspirational content aims at uplifting the audience’s spirits, encouraging them to pursue goals, and resonating with their values and aspirations. This content type is inherently emotional – it often triggers feelings of awe, hope, encouragement, or determination.

      Psychologically, inspiring content taps into what positive psychologists call elevation or inspiration, a state that makes people feel connected to something larger and motivated to act on their better impulses. Research has shown tangible effects: college students who shared inspiring content on Facebook reported feeling more love and compassion over time, and exposure to inspiring videos has been linked to increases in daily experiences of gratitude and vitality.

      Of all content types, motivational content likely creates the deepest emotional engagement. It speaks to core human values and emotions – success, happiness, overcoming challenges, personal growth. Followers often respond to motivational posts with personal reflections, stories, or heartfelt reactions.

      Neurologically, inspiring narratives can trigger the brain’s reward circuits and even oxytocin release (associated with empathy and bonding), especially when stories of human triumph or kindness are involved. Simon Sinek emphasizes starting with the “why” –

      “People don’t buy what you do; they buy why you do it”

      – because communicating purpose and belief resonates deeply.

      Motivational content often leverages narratives which can cause viewers to identify with the protagonists and feel “If they can do it, maybe I can too.” This can be incredibly engaging – sometimes even life-changing – for the audience. However, measuring actual behavior change from motivational content is difficult.

      As Zig Ziglar famously quipped,

      “People often say that motivation doesn’t last. Well, neither does bathing – that’s why we recommend it daily.”

      This quote highlights that motivation needs to be continually reinforced – standalone content might spark something, but maintaining momentum is an ongoing process.

      Motivational content can be highly shareable, particularly if it strikes a universal chord or a timely theme. Quotes, affirmations, and inspirational stories work well on Instagram, and LinkedIn. As noted in a Buffer article,

      “Inspiration is contagious… when something you publish resonates with so many people so quickly that they can’t help but pass it on.”

      High-arousal positive emotions like awe are strong drivers of virality, and many inspirational pieces aim to evoke awe. Additionally, motivational content often has a broad appeal across demographics – messages about hope, success, or self-belief are not niche.

      In Jonah Berger’s analysis, pieces evoking awe (an inspirational emotion) were among the most emailed articles, even more than purely practical pieces. Another interesting stat: a psychological study found that when teens compare themselves to similar peers on Instagram, it can lead to inspiration and positive feelings – highlighting that seeing relatable motivational content can inspire viewers rather than incite envy.

      Motivational content aligns a personal brand with core values and purpose. By consistently putting out motivational messages, a brand signals that it stands for more than a product – it stands for inspiring and uplifting others. This can strongly differentiate a personal brand.

      For instance, Tony Robbins’ entire brand is about empowerment and “personal power” – his content reinforce the promise that you have the power to change your life. As one branding commentary noted, “Tony Robbins has an extremely defined and clear brand. He values people by providing motivation, determination, and perseverance-related content.”

      Motivational content also tends to encourage a community feeling around the brand. Followers often rally around shared positive ideals. This fosters brand loyalty because the audience isn’t just consuming passively; they are internalizing the brand’s inspirational message and possibly supporting each other.

      Educational Content: The Trust

      Educational content focuses on teaching or informing the audience – providing how-tos, insights, facts, or explanations that deliver concrete value. Unlike entertainment’s emotional appeal, educational content appeals to the rational and intellectual side of audiences.

      If we talk about educational or inspirational products, about an inspirational audience or an educational one, they can be very closely connected to each other. Here’s an example of Tony Robbins.

      His products are motivational – motivational courses, books, various trainings, and everything related to that, everything around motivation, around pushing yourself to become better and do something with your life. They complement each other very well in his content.

      Here everything is interconnected because if you read his books or listen to his podcasts, or go to his event, it all intertwines strongly with each other and contains all three elements on one hand.

      That is, he provides some information, and you learn new information about how our body works, how psychological aspects, emotional aspects are connected with our motivation, and with the fact that we have the energy to do something, how we can influence this – that’s the educational part.

      There’s also the motivational part with examples, with his emotional delivery, with the techniques used in his content, whether it’s video, live meetings, or something else, or books that inspire you to do something with your life.

      And of course, there’s an entertainment element because all his content is very easily digestible, and that’s not by accident, because he has honed the mastery of delivering this content throughout his career and knows how to present it so that it’s interesting to watch, lively, fun, engaging.

      And actually, the feeling that you’re not watching some boring educational show, but watching a real entertainment show, it’s absolutely different feelings.

      And, well, I’m not exactly a fan of Tony Robbins, but I really love what he does. I’ve been to his events, so maybe I’m a bit biased when talking about him, but nevertheless, this is a very good example of such a successful super-brand that brings him millions of dollars.

      Psychologically, educational content triggers interest, curiosity, and a sense of competence or empowerment from learning something new. Consuming educational material can trigger the brain’s reward system – people feel satisfied when they gain new knowledge or skills. This fulfills an innate psychological need for mastery and understanding.

      While educational content may not always spark the quick virality that entertainment does, it often generates stronger long-term engagement. Consumers seeking knowledge will spend more time on an in-depth article or tutorial video, and they are likely to bookmark, save, or revisit valuable content.

      Educational posts frequently have high dwell time (people read or watch longer) and can prompt repeat visits. People do share educational pieces – especially if they have practical utility (e.g., a life hack or guide). Berger’s principle of “Practical Value” in virality research shows that useful information is highly shareable because people like to help others by sharing tips.

      However, the spreadability of educational content may be more selective – it tends to be shared in targeted ways (to specific people who would care) rather than going broadly viral to everyone. One study found that only 7% of word-of-mouth happens online; people often share educational info offline or one-to-one, recommending articles to friends who asked about that topic.

      The biggest benefit of creating educational content is establishing your personal brand as an authority or expert in a niche. By teaching others, you demonstrate expertise. Over time, this builds credibility and trust with the audience – they come to see you as a go-to source of reliable information or skills.

      Providing genuine value through information creates goodwill; it’s a form of helping the audience, which invokes reciprocity. As Jay Baer puts it:

      “If you sell something, you make a customer today; if you help someone, you make a customer for life.”

      Research confirms the trust impact: In a 2022 study by Conductor, 83.6% of consumers chose the brand that provided them with educational content when faced with multiple brand options.

      Educational content also aligns the brand with specific values: generosity, expertise, and reliability. By freely sharing knowledge, a personal brand conveys “I’m confident in my expertise and I care about your success.” This strengthens brand positioning.

      Product that follows content

      Finally, when you create an educational content, the most logical product is an educational product, right? That’s what flows from the content itself.

      There’s certain information that you deliver in small portions. It’s clear that content these days, at least, can’t be delivered in one big portion all at once.

      Even in education, it’s structured so that lectures are divided into specific times, and they’re broken down by calendar, into semesters, or in school also into lessons, quarters.

      And accordingly, we consume them in pieces. We eat an elephant in pieces. We don’t sit down and learn the entire physics textbook in one sitting, because people perfectly understand that to remember, which is a strange goal of any education, at once is simply physically impossible.

      Our organism is built differently; it’s much easier to feed this information to it in parts, separate pieces, and to understand them separately.

      Roughly the same thing happens online, that is, separate pieces of information are presented, chewed up, put in the mouth, and then digested.

      And then you can apply them separately, as direct working mechanisms, or connect different elements that are interconnected.

      And for you, the picture then comes together like a puzzle. That is, first you have one piece, then you acquire another piece, and then you can connect them until you have a complete picture.

      Like, for example, my previous article was aimed at this missing element in business, which is distribution. And the next piece of the puzzle is this current article, which talks about how to attract audience. Well, more precisely, it’s clear that through content, but how to structure this content is the question here.

      I’m talking about categorizing this content, about what types exist. The picture is already being filled in.

      There are many more elements here that I’ll be adding in the future, but the meaning doesn’t change.

      That is, my task is to create a complete picture from such separate pieces. And each such separate piece is a content element. It’s a separate content unit.

      And I can already elaborate on it in detail in all my channels, forming an understanding of this particular area of knowledge.

      Thus, I try to make educational content, which, in my opinion, is the most difficult among the listed categories in terms of distribution, but, on the other hand, the most rewarding if everything works out, if you manage to attract attention, if you manage to retain the audience.

      And besides educational products, which logically follow from this, there’s also the possibility of other products, such as services.

      That is, it’s clear that when a person is aware of some problem that they can solve, which, rather, they need to solve, they can solve it themselves, or they can pay someone for its solution.

      So, any service product has a place here.

      Next, it could be a consulting product. That is, I can also talk about this one-on-one. Again, if someone doesn’t want to consume all the content, but they see value in it, this can be done in the form of consultations.

      Or a product that allows you to do this yourself, for example, some guide or, for example, a tool. Some software that will help you close one or another task that you face.

      Leveraging Content Psychology

      Each content type – entertainment, educational, and motivational – engages audience psychology in different ways, and each supports brand-building in unique, complementary fashions:

      Entertainment content grabs attention through emotional delight and laughter, creating immediate positive feelings towards the brand and encouraging mass sharing. It works on the psychology of joy and social bonding – people love to share a laugh (triggering dopamine and social connection). This content humanizes the brand and widens reach, which is great for awareness and approachability. Key brand benefit: it makes the audience like you, remember you, and want to engage with you because you make them feel good.

      Educational content provides intellectual and practical value, fulfilling the audience’s desire to learn and solve problems. It engages the psychology of curiosity and competence – people feel rewarded when they gain knowledge (a sense of mastery). This content builds trust and authority: by teaching, you demonstrate expertise and generosity. The audience not only pays attention; they depend on you for insights. Key brand benefit: it makes the audience trust you and see you as a leader or expert, which is crucial for converting followers into clients or advocates.

      Motivational content touches the heart and soul of the audience, connecting with their aspirations and emotions. It leverages the psychology of inspiration and hope – the audience experiences uplift, empowerment, and often a sense of personal connection or gratitude towards the content creator. This type of content is what turns a casual follower into a fan who feels that the brand genuinely cares about their well-being and success. Key brand benefit: it makes the audience believe in you (and with you) – they align with your “why” and often become part of a community around that shared inspiration.

      Importantly, these three categories are not mutually exclusive. The strongest personal brand strategies often intersect them: an entertaining presentation of educational material (edutainment) can double the impact, or an inspirational story that teaches a lesson hits both motivational and educational notes. For example, a well-told success story in a blog can inspire (motivate) readers while also informing (educating) them on how it was achieved, all delivered in a captivating (entertaining) narrative.

      As one framework puts it, “the four purposes of content are to entertain, educate, inspire, or convince” – and a single piece of content can cover multiple purposes. Personal brands should consider content mixes that play to each strength. Marketing statistics even suggest a balance: one common guideline is that only ~20% of your content should be overtly promotional, and the rest divided among educational, inspirational, and entertaining “pillars” to keep the audience hooked and bonded.

      Define your category

      In closing, understanding the psychological underpinnings of these content types allows a personal brand to strategically cater to the audience’s head and heart:

      Use Entertainment to attract attention and create positive affinity (lure them in with a smile or surprise).

      Use Education to deliver substantive value (give them something that genuinely helps, and they’ll reward you with trust).

      Use Motivation to forge an emotional bond and encourage action (lift them up, align with their dreams, and they’ll likely credit you in their success story).

      When executed with authenticity and consistency, this triad of content builds a well-rounded personal brand persona – one that is likable, credible, and inspirational. By entertaining, educating, and inspiring in combination, you make your audience feel happy, empowered with knowledge, and motivated to improve – a powerful formula for converting an audience into a devoted community and a personal brand into a lasting legacy.

      As an online entrepreneur, understanding these content categories has a holistic chain reaction: getting likes and followers, building a sustainable business foundation that attracts the right audience, establishes your authority, and creates meaningful connections that translate into sales.

    8. The Only Digital Business Skill I Wish I’d Mastered Earlier

      The Only Digital Business Skill I Wish I’d Mastered Earlier

      The skill I’m about to share with you is one I’ve consistently failed at with every business I’ve tried to start. None of these ventures made me a millionaire, none brought the results I was hoping for, and none grew to any meaningful scale.

      And it’s not about product creation. As a technical person, I can build virtually any product. We’re talking about digital products here, since most of my projects revolved around IT. But I’ve also launched an online store selling physical products, and honestly, finding products to sell at wholesale prices from suppliers isn’t that complicated. You can even customize them with your own brand or modify their configuration.

      It’s purely technical work, and there’s absolutely nothing difficult about it. You just need to find suppliers, who are themselves looking for buyers. It takes minimal effort, and suppliers will even find you if you put in a little work. Then you simply negotiate what changes you want to make to the product.

      For digital products, it’s even simpler. You just go and make those changes yourself, though naturally, you need to understand how to build the product. As an IT professional, this takes almost no effort for me. I can build these products myself or assemble a team and oversee developers, giving them appropriate tasks.

      But what’s consistently been missing from my business equation? Distribution.

      According to venture capitalist Peter Thiel, poor distribution – not a bad product – is the most common cause of startup failure. In his book “Zero to One,” he writes:

      “If you’ve invented something new but you haven’t invented an effective way to sell it, you have a bad business – no matter how good the product.”

      This insight would have saved me years of frustration had I understood it earlier.

      What makes this realization particularly painful is that we live in an age where creating content and products is easier than ever, but capturing attention has never been harder. Given that over 500 hours of video are uploaded to YouTube every minute and millions of blog posts are published daily, getting seen has become the main bottleneck, not content creation itself.

      This is the missing puzzle piece I’m finally coming to terms with. And in this article, I’ll show you why mastering distribution is the single most crucial skill for anyone building a personal brand or one-person business.

      The Distribution Blindspot: Why Talented Creators Stay Broke

      What do I mean by distribution? It’s the channels through which your product or information about your product spreads. These are essentially the same thing, because once someone receives information about your product, they can make a purchasing decision and take the corresponding steps – whether physical (going to a store) or digital (clicking buttons online). The essence doesn’t change.

      Distribution’s job is to lead customers by the hand. First, to your product. Second, to convince them that this specific product solves their problem or addresses their pain point.

      Distribution encompasses marketing – the spread of information about your product, or more precisely, about what benefits and value a potential customer gets by acquiring it. Regardless of what product we’re talking about, in the consumer’s eyes, the product isn’t valuable in itself. People buy solutions to their needs.

      We’re willing to pay for what we need. For example, we have a daily need for food. It’s undeniable – our stomach makes itself known, and we go to the store to buy groceries. No one needs to convince us to do this. But since this market is commoditized, with all products readily available (just go to a store and choose from a huge selection), the power of marketing comes into play, which aims to convince you that a particular brand is what you need.

      The next component of distribution is brand – a name that consumers trust. Even despite some fluctuations in the product itself, even despite different marketing approaches or sometimes the complete absence of obvious advertising (as with luxury brands, which have a slightly different development strategy), having such a brand makes consumers choose in its favor.

      A brand is a very powerful and significant element of distribution because, when you have one, spending money on marketing itself isn’t strictly necessary. If in the consumer’s eyes your product already represents value, and if they know your brand, the question becomes what to choose. They most often remain loyal to their brand and repeatedly choose it.

      Think about Coca-Cola. When you go to a store, you always see the same brands there. There’s never a situation where you go to a store today, there’s Coca-Cola, but when you come tomorrow, it’s gone, and some other brand is in its place. No, it will stand there for many more years every day and has been standing there for many years every day. You develop a certain familiarity with this brand, and it’s always presented to people.

      And every year, for example, Coca-Cola launches its famous New Year’s advertising. It has become such a tradition. This is an example of unsinkable brands that will work and will be associated with people with something, I don’t know, with a holiday, with such events.

      And people know that if they go to a store, to any grocery store, they will definitely find Coca-Cola there. Regardless of what day, week, and so on it is.

      Further, with a product, marketing, and brand in place, there’s one more component without which everything would be futile – people, or audience, or eyeballs. If we’re talking about modern distribution happening on the internet, it’s attention. And behind every smartphone or computer is a specific living person. That’s why they’re an important component.

      You need eyeballs to project your marketing, product values, and brand onto. I think this is obviously understandable, but for some reason, I personally overlooked it for a long time.

      Personal brands exemplify the power of distribution better than perhaps any other business model. Individuals who have built large, engaged followings can leverage that audience to launch products or services with remarkable success. Take Kylie Jenner, who turned her massive social media following into a $900 million cosmetics empire in just three years without traditional advertising. When she announced a product on Instagram, it sold out in minutes – her first lip kit batch reportedly sold out in under a minute online.

      What many technical founders (myself included) fail to understand is that attention is now the scarcest resource in business. Content is abundant – we’re creating 2.5 quintillion bytes of data every day, so much that 90% of the world’s data has been created in just the last two years. Yet human attention remains fixed – we still only have 24 hours in a day. This mismatch between infinite content and finite attention makes distribution strategies essential.

      To sell any product, you need people –potential buyers – and the closer they are to the value that this product provides, the better. The more likely someone from this group will make a purchase in your favor. This means you make a sale, which means you earn money. Consequently, the constant presence of information, marketing, distribution of the product itself, its values, and brand in front of potential consumers who are closest to the value, for whom it’s important, who have a pain point that the product addresses – if all this is constantly in front of them, within this circle of people, then this can already be called distribution and business.

      Building Your Distribution Machine: The 4-Part Framework

      1. Find Your Marketplace: Where Your People Already Gather

      Let’s start by asking where these people are. We’ve already answered: today, it’s the internet.

      But don’t rush to put something up for sale right away, because you still don’t understand how, what needs to be sold, since you don’t know your audience. You don’t know, first, how to appear in front of a large number of people, and you don’t quite understand how to convince them to buy what you have. Maybe you don’t even have anything right now. But we’ll figure all this out.

      I think there’s no doubt that the internet is today’s marketplace, at least where we all should be. We’re already all there now, so the difference between ten and ten thousand people is most quickly achieved through the internet.

      We see how social networks grow exponentially due to the network effect, and any account in these social networks can grow precisely because of the same network effect. This is exactly the platform where you need to do business.

      As Marc Andreessen, an early internet pioneer and prominent investor, emphasizes:

      “After a startup has a working product, the main thing becomes taking the market – figuring out how to get the product to the entire market, how to get dominant share.”

      He further states that contrary to Silicon Valley myth,

      “successful tech companies become distribution-centric rather than product-centric… A startup might have a better product but get beaten by a company with a better distribution channel.”

      This perspective is supported by concrete examples. Emily Weiss spent years cultivating a popular beauty blog, Into The Gloss, essentially building a massive community and distribution channel of beauty enthusiasts, before launching any products. By the time her company Glossier debuted its first creams in 2014, the audience was already in place (millions of blog readers and social followers), leading to immediate traction. Weiss’s strategy is often cited in business courses as “build the audience, then build the company.”

      2. Develop Consistent Visibility: Be Where Your Audience Looks

      Now, how do you attract these people? How do you make them start looking in your direction, start reading your account or what you publish online?

      By the way, we’re now talking about personal brand, which is that very representative picture or your representation online. I’ll cover this in more detail in my next article.

      Think of how the modern marketplace works. What is a store? It’s essentially a modern incarnation of a marketplace or market that existed before, which was a physical space where people would come if they wanted to purchase some goods.

      Many sellers were in this space, offering their goods to consumers. And they met in this marketplace.

      Over time, this evolved into a more convenient format called a convenience store, or simply a grocery store. Where you can come – now there are almost everywhere 24-hour stores at any time of day or night – and purchase the consumer goods you need. That is, what we consume on a daily basis. Food products, household goods, and so on.

      It’s a place that attracts many people. And people know that this is where they can find these goods.

      In today’s world, the internet is such a place. It’s a marketplace where people sell information. Or they don’t sell it, which doesn’t change the essence. The main thing is that it’s the space where you can come and start broadcasting something, and it doesn’t matter what it is.

      Someone makes their channel on YouTube, talks about their hobby; someone creates online services, puts them out there from their business; someone writes a blog on their personal website; someone does this through social networks, and so on.

      Different domains within this marketplace come into play, which attract more or fewer people in various ways.

      The importance of attraction

      If I just create my personal website now, naturally, no one on the internet will know about it. However, after some time, if I put enough effort into spreading information about this site –that is, engage in SEO, advertise it, mention it in various publications –this will already affect the site’s traffic.

      And thus will promote it in search engines, will bring those very people, their eyeballs, to look at it.

      And what happens next in this marketplace? You can always imagine this analogy with even a medieval market, for instance, where your task, as a seller, since we’re now talking about the business side, is somehow to convince the buyer to purchase your goods.

      First, they must need it. It’s obvious what’s needed – they must have some need that this product can satisfy.

      The simplest needs are physiological, such as nutrition, which is why food products have always been sold and will always be sold until we either replace our bodies with cybernetic ones, but even then, we’ll still need to feed our brain somehow, even in that case, or until we find some other way to nourish the organism.

      Until then, food will remain a necessity not just some optional thing; it’s simply necessary for survival.

      Any other product that isn’t so necessary for survival is optional. Here you still need to somehow persuade, convince the buyer that they need it.

      Or if the buyer has somehow come up with an idea for themselves that they need this product, then, in fact, for them, everything else ends with a choice between brands.

      If you decide that you desperately need a handbag, then you need to choose it based on visual characteristics, brand, capacity, how it looks with a dress, and so on.

      This is already an internal dialogue in the consumer’s head, which they conduct with themselves. And the business’s task is to be in front of them all this time, demonstrating its qualities, demonstrating the brand, demonstrating, for example, the color scheme, product variations, how this handbag will look on customer examples.

      In other words, information about the product, its value, and why it’s necessary to acquire this particular one must also be presented to the consumer.

      And this is exactly what’s missing in this entire puzzle. This very missing piece of the overall picture that’s emerging here.

      According to Jonathan Perelman, former VP of BuzzFeed:

      “Content is king, but distribution is queen – and she wears the pants.”

      This colorful analogy has been echoed by Forbes and Harvard Business Review in discussions of viral marketing. The meaning is clear: Great content or product (the “king”) is vital, but it’s ultimately the strategy for distribution (“the queen”) that dictates the success of that content.

      3. Target the Right Audience: The Game

      By now, we understand that we need to display the product, its value, and brand in front of people. And then the game of numbers comes into play.

      What is this? It means that the more people see this information, the greater the probability and the larger the number of people will be able to purchase it.

      For example, if the aforementioned handbag is seen by 10 people, what’s the probability that someone among them will buy it? Especially if, for instance, it’s a handbag of some luxury brand. Yes, it’s very small.

      Of course, we need to look at what kind of sample of people this is. This is another element. This is what’s called the target audience in marketing.

      That is, if these are the very people who are predisposed to such purchases, then naturally, the probability increases.

      But now imagine that regardless of what kind of people they are – they should, of course, be targeted – but there are now not 10 but 10,000 of them. Will the probability increase that someone among them will buy this product? Yes, significantly, because now we simply have a larger sample, and among these 10,000 people, there are many more of those who potentially need this, who can potentially afford it.

      So, the task here is to demonstrate the product, value, and brand to as many potential consumers as possible.

      And of course, one more element, this is precisely targeted demonstration. That is, not just for every person, but specifically for those who have a need for this product, ideally right now.

      This is the ideal picture that can mean positive development for a business, that is, large sales and potential growth in volumes and scale.

      Studies confirm this numerical advantage. A survey by Zazzle Media in 2019 found that 60% of content marketers regretted not focusing enough on distribution, and their top challenge was “getting content seen.” Trust plays a crucial role in this game of numbers. According to Nielsen’s global study on advertising trust, 92% of people trust recommendations from individuals (friends/family) above all other forms of advertising. Even advice from strangers online (reviews, influencers) is trusted by around 70% of consumers.

      4. Build Your Personal Brand: Become the Channel

      This brings us to the most powerful distribution strategy for a one-person business: becoming the channel yourself. Your personal brand is the ultimate distribution vehicle.

      The rise of the influencer marketing industry itself is testament to the power of personal-brand distribution. Brands are willing to pay creators for access to their audiences. In 2024, global spending on influencer marketing is estimated at $24 billion, up from just $1.7B in 2016 – a more than tenfold increase in 8 years. This rapid growth reflects that companies recognize the distribution power of personal brands and are reallocating budgets accordingly.

      What makes personal brands so effective as distribution channels? Lower customer acquisition cost. Personal brands often have built-in distribution channels (followers, email subscribers, etc.), allowing them to acquire customers at a fraction of the cost of firms starting from scratch. For example, when a YouTube creator with 10 million subscribers launches a merchandise line, they can reach those potential customers instantly at zero advertising cost (beyond content creation) – a huge advantage.

      Perhaps the boldest demonstration of personal brand distribution is Tesla, which for over a decade famously spent $0 on paid advertising. CEO Elon Musk instead relied on his personal brand’s distribution (over 100 million Twitter followers at the time, constant media attention) and on fans’ word-of-mouth to promote Tesla vehicles. This unconventional strategy helped Tesla become a household name and a $700B+ company, while competitors like GM, Ford, Toyota each spend $1–3 billion annually on ads. Musk’s ability to move markets with a single tweet exemplifies how a strong personal distribution channel can outperform traditional marketing playbooks.

      How do you start building your personal brand? Begin by consistently sharing your expertise, experiences, and insights in your chosen area. Create content that provides value to your target audience. Engage with your audience genuinely and build relationships. Over time, as you establish trust and credibility, your personal brand becomes a powerful distribution channel for whatever products or services you choose to offer.

      Creating your personal brand is about authentically sharing your knowledge and perspective in a way that connects with your audience. As David Ogilvy, the advertising pioneer, wisely noted:

      “Great marketing only makes a bad product fail faster.”

      Your personal brand must be backed by genuine value.

      Distribution First, Everything Else Second

      So, to sum up what we’ve covered: the skill that I wish I’d mastered earlier is distribution – the art and science of getting your product, content, or message in front of the right people. Without distribution, even the best product will languish in obscurity. With strong distribution, even an average product can thrive.

      For personal brands and one-person businesses, distribution is the core of your business strategy. It’s about building channels to reach your audience before you even have a product to sell. It’s about becoming the channel yourself.

      Remember, we live in an attention economy where eyeballs are the most valuable currency. As Seth Godin succinctly put it:

      “Ideas that spread, win, but ideas that don’t get spoken (or seen) always fail.”

      In a world where anyone can create content, getting noticed is the hardest part.

      The game has changed. It’s no longer “build it and they will come.” You can build an audience and build a business at the same time nowadays. This is the lesson that took me years of failed ventures to learn, and it’s the insight that can save you from the same fate.

      So, before you spend months developing that perfect product, ask yourself: Do I have a distribution strategy? Do I have channels to reach my audience? Have I built trust and credibility with the people I want to serve?

      If the answer is no, that’s where you need to start. Build your audience first. Become the channel. Master distribution.

    9. The Hidden Mental System Behind a Successful Life

      The Hidden Mental System Behind a Successful Life

      We all have those moments when it feels like everything is going wrong, or even that everything is going sideways. It’s like you’re stuck in a perpetual cycle of challenges that never seem to end, and you have no idea what to do about them. It feels like this will be your reality forever, but that’s not actually the case.

      What’s actually happening in these moments? On one hand, you’re experiencing stress. On the other, you’re facing a lack of clear understanding, vision, or sense of what lies ahead or even what’s happening now. This combination creates a mental fog that makes everything seem more difficult than it actually is.

      Previously, I wrote the article ‘How to Kill Stress Before It Kills Your Dreams,’ which will be a great pair with this one.

      The human brain is fascinating in its contradictions. It craves variety and has an inherent need for novelty, but simultaneously, it desperately desires predictability. Why? Because for your brain, predictability equals safety. When your brain understands that tomorrow will bring a new day, just as it does in nature where everything follows cycles, it knows there will be sunrise, daylight, and food. If suddenly the sunrise doesn’t come, or if daytime suddenly turns to night (like during a solar eclipse), or if your usual food source disappears from its normal place – these represent direct threats to your existence.

      In response, your brain switches to survival mode. This is why in our modern world, this feeling becomes strange and unpleasant. We live in a world of abundance, where everything necessary is available and even more, yet events that don’t follow expected cycles create increasing stress for each of us.

      The good news? There are effective ways to bring order to your life, clear the mental fog, and regain the ability to make optimal decisions. It’s not about having some magical personality trait – it’s about building a system that works with your brain rather than against it.

      Why Your Mental System Is Breaking Down

      The key element we need to address is clarity. Why do we experience this feeling of disorder or confusion? Because there’s no clarity. So we need to build it.

      Know how you think

      But before we go further, there’s a preventive step that, in my view, absolutely everyone should take. And the earlier, the better. You need to understand your thinking type and psychological profile.

      There are various ways to do this. You could ask any AI model how to do it, or perhaps the AI could even help you based on the information you provide. But the key point is that you need to understand how your thinking model works and how you reactively respond to different situations.

      For example, some people think rationally – like me. For me to convince my conscious and subconscious mind of the validity of a decision or to explain something to it, I need rational arguments. I need to present a series of arguments that follow systematic logic, and if everything fits together, if all the dots connect, if everything is absolutely sequentially connected, then that’s enough for my brain to calm down and accept the decision as correct, even if somehow it might be wrong. It’s a trick I play on my brain because I understand how it works, and I can manipulate it.

      It’s completely different if you think emotionally. For your brain to make decisions, it needs an emotion, some strong surge of feelings that will make your brain look in one direction or another. In this case, it needs to be told a story, or presented with an event or situation that will speak to one outcome or another of your decision. And in this case, it’s much more effective to engage in precisely this – to visualize the outcome of one choice or another and base your conclusions on that.

      But you need to understand which state your brain predominantly operates in – which model it more often thinks in. Because, understandably, at certain moments every person can switch from rational to emotional, but overall, one element usually prevails.

      I understand that if I’m currently in an emotional state where emotions predominate, I need to fight with my mind. Typically, rational thinking always surfaces for me, and I tell myself that okay, I’m just emotional right now, I need to wait a bit until they subside, and make a decision after that. This is, again, purely rational behavior. It’s neither good nor bad – there’s no need to put labels on it. You just need to understand how it works and use it to your advantage.

      Towards mental clarity

      Here’s what most people miss: the quality of your decisions directly depends on your mental clarity. A striking study of Israeli parole judges found they were approximately twice as likely to grant a favorable ruling at the beginning of the day than just before a break. As their mental energy drained, the quality of their decisions deteriorated. This highlights why simplifying and systematizing your life is so crucial – it preserves your cognitive resources for when you really need them.

      The state of mental clutter is particularly damaging because it hijacks your focus. Your consciousness becomes preoccupied with removing uncertainty or gaining clarity. That’s all your brain can focus on during these stressful moments. This essentially changes the focus and priority of your consciousness to dealing with this task. Your subconscious, which normally helps significantly, feels this burden too. And consequently, focusing on your current task, which you understand needs to be done, becomes more difficult – you have to force it out of yourself.

      Most successful people aren’t just “naturally organized” – they’ve developed systems that work for their specific thinking style. Take the famous examples of Steve Jobs, Mark Zuckerberg, and Barack Obama, who all adopted routine wardrobes to eliminate trivial decisions. By systematizing low-priority choices, they preserved mental clarity for what truly mattered. As Zuckerberg explained, he wears the same style gray shirt each day to “make as few decisions as possible about anything except how to best serve this community.”

      The Complete Mental System

      Once you understand your thinking model, you can build the appropriate framework for decision-making and your further actions. Since our goal is to bring clarity to a certain period of time ahead, we need to build it systematically.

      Here’s the step-by-step system that will transform your mental clarity:

      Step 1: Identify Your Dominant Thinking Style

      As I mentioned earlier, some people think rationally while others think emotionally. Identifying which category you predominantly fall into is crucial because it determines how you should approach organizing your mind.

      For rational thinkers, logical arguments and systematic approaches work best. You need to create structured lists, prioritization frameworks, and clear action steps. When making decisions, you’ll want to analyze pros and cons methodically.

      For emotional thinkers, visualization and storytelling are more effective. Create vision boards that represent your goals, use journaling to explore how different outcomes would feel, and make decisions based on emotional resonance after visualizing potential scenarios.

      You can determine your style by reflecting on past decisions. Did you make them primarily through logical analysis or emotional resonance? Neither is better or worse – they’re simply different ways your brain processes information. The key is to work with your natural tendencies rather than against them.

      By the way, notice how I describe all these moments from a rational point of view. I present information in such a way as to explain and argue each postulate of my article. I’m again thinking from a rational point of view. If you lack the emotional delivery here, it just speaks to the fact that we have different ways of thinking.

      Step 2: Create Environmental Order

      This is about physically organizing your surroundings. If you’re currently in a room or building, look around. If you’re in nature, you probably don’t have this feeling because in nature, everything is already in order. You observe and don’t feel that something is wrong or needs to be fixed. The way trees grow, the way plants grow, the way mountains look, how the sea behaves – everything seems natural and authentic. Because it is.

      If you leave nature as it is, it will flourish and prosper. And this is perceived absolutely naturally by humans because we are part of nature. We understand our unity with it, and nothing here causes any dissonance.

      Approximately the same thing should happen in the environment we create for ourselves. This is an artificial environment created by humans, for humans. That is, it’s the space where you are. Your house or your apartment, your room, your office, your bedroom. In general, all of this.

      If there’s disorder here, you know how you’ll feel. There are people, I know, who don’t understand this at all. For them, this feeling of being lost is absolutely normal. That is, something is always wrong, something is always not quite right, it’s not entirely clear what’s happening at all. And one can guess that in their room, most likely, there’s disorder.

      Tidy it up, overcome yourself, and sort through all the items, throw away what you haven’t used for a long time. For example, I can’t understand this story when people buy a huge number of things just to not use them. Just things, things, things. It’s a consumer approach. Absolutely incomprehensible. I, on the contrary, strive to get rid of things, to make them as few as possible.

      According to UCLA researchers, their 2009 study found that people who described their homes as “cluttered” had chronically high cortisol levels throughout the day compared to those who felt their homes were “restful” or orderly. These elevated stress hormones are associated with chronic fatigue and even physical health issues, providing biochemical evidence that disorder can literally “get under your skin.”

      I adhere more to a minimalist lifestyle and don’t quite understand why you need to buy something new unless it’s an absolutely necessary item or something I use every day for one task or another that somehow helps me in life. If that’s not the case, it’s not entirely clear why to buy it.

      Get rid of these things, sell them at a flea market, give them to someone who needs them, donate to charity. For example, clothes that you no longer wear can be donated to charitable causes. Of course, in your wardrobe, you’ll find more than one such item that you haven’t worn for a year, or maybe even several years.

      According to a controlled neuroscience study from Princeton University, people in organized settings outperformed those in messy environments on tasks requiring concentration. The researchers found that visual clutter overloads the brain, forcing it to filter out irrelevant objects and thereby reducing focus and performance. When surrounded by clutter, your brain has to work overtime just to filter out distractions, leaving fewer resources for the task at hand.

      Step 3: Brain Dumping

      Another method is bringing clarity through writing, or through some other mechanism that allows you to lay out all your thoughts. This is very similar to tidying up, but not in physical space, but in the mental one.

      How does this work? When you transfer your thoughts to paper – this is the most well-known method because it involves many sensory tools from your body. There’s vision and the visual part, there’s the tactile sensation of paper and pen, there’s also sound perception when you hear how the pen writes on paper or the rustle of the sheet. There’s also muscular interaction, that is, you have fine motor skills involved, and you feel this in your body. All possible sensory aspects of the body are involved here, which is why it’s the most effective way to do this.

      So, you simply lay out your thoughts, you give a simple flow of what’s happening in your head, and it doesn’t matter how well it forms into understandable logical structures, sentences, or even makes sense. These can just be some scattered thoughts, but that’s not essential. The principle here is exactly the same as when cleaning. That is, these thoughts no longer occupy space in your head; they now lie here on paper.

      A 2018 Baylor University study provided scientific evidence for this practice. Researchers found that people who took five minutes at bedtime to write down their to-do list for the next day fell asleep significantly faster than those who journaled about completed tasks (so both are valid). Writing down the list effectively offloaded their unfinished tasks from mind to paper, reducing bedtime worry and stress.

      Step 4: Short-term vs. Long-term Clarity

      While our aim is to introduce clarity to a certain time period ahead, it’s important to connect your short-term actions with your long-term vision. This doesn’t necessarily mean setting those clichéd goals for the year ahead – the brain finds it quite difficult to think in such large scales.

      It’s much easier for it to think short-term – about tomorrow, for instance. You can visualize what will happen tomorrow, paint that picture for yourself. In most cases, this will be enough to understand that a new day will come. By doing this simple mental exercise, you’re essentially performing a mental trick to convince yourself that everything is under control.

      Psychological studies on goal pursuit show significantly higher success rates with planning. Research on “implementation intentions” – specific action plans for goals – demonstrates that having concrete plans increases goal achievement by 60-70% compared to having no specific plans. While planning doesn’t guarantee success (plans can be derailed by unforeseen changes), it dramatically improves the odds.

      Management consultant Peter Drucker warned that

      “there is nothing so useless as doing efficiently that which should not be done at all.”

      In other words, being busy and organized with the wrong tasks is wasted effort – you must prioritize what truly matters. The implication is that clarity comes from knowing which short-term actions serve long-term values.

      US President Dwight Eisenhower famously said:

      “What is important is seldom urgent, and what is urgent is seldom important.”

      He developed the Eisenhower Matrix (urgent vs. important grid) as a systematic way to triage tasks. By planning and scheduling important-but-not-urgent activities, you prevent them from being drowned out by endless “urgent” minutiae.

      Step 5: Systems Thinking Application

      The final step is systematizing your vision. As a rational person, this is the most obvious tool that I want to apply first. This means creating a system – a system of vision, a system of the future, a system of what I will do. And for this, I lay out various tools that I possess, that I know how to use, that can help with this.

      Therefore, study models of thinking and system analysis, ways of modeling systems, select the one that suits you in this specific situation, because different ways of thinking and modeling will act and help absolutely differently in different situations.

      If you want to dig deeper into my tools for developing systems thinking, check out my previous articles:

      It’s much better to have a set of these tools in your arsenal to choose the most appropriate one for each situation.

      Dr. Atul Gawande demonstrated the remarkable power of systems thinking when he led the implementation of a 19-item Surgical Safety Checklist by the World Health Organization in hospitals worldwide. After adopting this simple, systemic tool, major complications in surgeries fell from 11% to 7%, and inpatient deaths fell by over 40%. This case shows systems thinking in action: the checklist provided clarity (everyone knows the critical steps and their timing) and reduced stress under pressure.

      By viewing your mind and environment as interconnected systems with feedback loops, you can identify leverage points: a small change (like adopting a checklist or clearing a desk) cascades into larger benefits via positive feedback – clarity, calm, and efficiency breeding more of the same.

      Psychologists have noted that when your environment is full of visual distractions, each irrelevant object or piece of information acts as a “distractor” that your brain must process or suppress. That consumes mental energy and can create a sense of mental chaos. On the feedback side, feeling mentally chaotic or anxious often manifests outwardly as disorganization – you might neglect cleaning up or fall behind in filing, creating a vicious cycle.

      However, positive feedback loops can be created by intentional order. For example, establishing a daily routine (a morning ritual, a set time for planning, etc.) conditions the mind towards clarity. It’s a reinforcing loop: a small initial change – say, clearing your desk at day’s end – gives a satisfying sense of closure that lowers stress, which then helps you start the next day with a clearer head, enabling further orderly behavior.

      The Freedom of a Systematic Mind

      We’ve explored the various ways to bring order to your life and create mental clarity. From understanding your thinking style to organizing your physical space, from brain dumping to systems thinking – each approach offers a path to greater clarity and reduced stress.

      As the philosopher Blaise Pascal observed,

      “Clarity of mind means clarity of passion, too; this is why a great and clear mind loves ardently and sees distinctly what it loves.”

      When your mind is clear, your actions become more purposeful, your decisions more sound, and your life more fulfilling.

      The paradox is that structure creates freedom. By establishing systems and routines, you free up mental space for creativity, innovation, and joy. As Steve Jobs said,

      “Simple can be harder than complex: you have to work hard to get your thinking clean to make it simple. But it’s worth it in the end because once you get there, you can move mountains.”

      Start with just one aspect of this system today. Perhaps begin by identifying your thinking style, or spend 15 minutes decluttering your workspace, or try a brain dump before bed tonight. These small changes can create powerful ripple effects throughout your mental landscape.

      Remember, clarity isn’t a lucky gift of temperament but a strategy – a way of operating. As Lao Tzu wisely stated,

      “To the mind that is still, the whole universe surrenders.”

      By viewing personal organization as a system to manage (and not a one-time project), you continually adapt and find what works for your unique situation.

      I wish you clarity and less time spent in a state of uncertainty. This will help tremendously in life and in business.