Category: Content creation

  • The 5 Human Needs That Make Your Personal Brand Impossible to Ignore [Part 3]: Spirituality

    The 5 Human Needs That Make Your Personal Brand Impossible to Ignore [Part 3]: Spirituality

    This is the third article in the series – the one that covers the final pillar of human needs, which I added to the list myself. The first four you may have already seen or heard from someone besides me; it’s not new. But when I think about these fundamental pillars, I can’t shake the feeling that something is missing. And the missing part for me may be even more grounded than the other four, because everything starts from it – it’s the core meaning, the reason behind life itself. So let’s dive into it.

    Here are the links to the previous articles:

    1. Health and wealth
    2. Relationships and happiness

    Spirituality: The Pillar That Gives Everything Meaning

    What Spirituality Actually Means (For Content Strategy)

    When I mention spirituality as a pillar, I can almost hear some of you checking out. “I’m not religious.” “My audience isn’t into that woo-woo stuff.” “I’m building a business, not a spiritual practice.”

    I get it. But hear me out, because spirituality in the context of content strategy is much broader than you think.

    Yes, over 75% of the global population identifies with an organized religion – Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism, and so on. Religion is a massive expression of the spirituality pillar. But that’s not the only way this need shows up.

    In the context of personal branding, spirituality refers to the human need for meaning, purpose, and connection to something greater than oneself. It’s about answering the big questions:

    • Why am I here?
    • What matters in life?
    • What do I want to contribute?
    • What legacy do I want to leave?
    Portrait of Viktor Frankl, author of “Man’s Search for Meaning,” symbolizing the role of purpose in building one’s ikigai

    Viktor Frankl, the psychiatrist and Holocaust survivor who wrote “Man’s Search for Meaning,” observed that

    “ever more people today have the means to live, but no meaning to live for.”

    He argued that beyond basic survival, humans crave meaning – that striving to find purpose in life is the primary motivational force in people.

    This is spiritual territory, even if it’s not religious in the traditional sense.

    The Pillar Stands Out For Itself

    And here’s the interesting thing about this pillar: you can address it at any stage of life. Unlike wealth (which tends to dominate certain life phases) or health concerns (which intensify as we age), questions of meaning and purpose can arise at any time. A teenager might be searching for their purpose. A successful executive might have a midlife crisis questioning whether their work matters. A retiree might be seeking ways to stay relevant and contribute.

    The spirituality pillar is also unique because it can be satisfied even when other pillars aren’t fully met. There are examples throughout history of people who lived in poverty or faced tremendous hardship, but maintained profound spiritual fulfillment. Think of monks who renounce material wealth, or activists who sacrifice personal comfort for a cause they believe in.

    I mentioned Tibetan monks in my earlier thinking about this framework. These are people who’ve essentially closed off the wealth pillar entirely, live with minimal health optimization, and yet report deep satisfaction because their spiritual practice gives them meaning. That’s an extreme example, and it’s not a path most people want to follow. But it illustrates how powerful this pillar can be.

    Why Purpose-Driven Brands Win

    Black-and-white portrait of Simon Sinek symbolizing the role of purpose and “why” in personal branding

    Simon Sinek became famous for a simple but powerful idea:

    “People don’t buy what you do, they buy WHY you do it.”

    This is the spirituality pillar in action. When a brand has a clear purpose, a mission that goes beyond making money, it resonates on a deeper level. Customers don’t just transact with that brand – they believe in it. They want to be part of what it stands for.

    The data backs this up. A global survey found that 64% of consumers choose, switch to, or boycott brands based on their values and sense of purpose. People want to support brands that stand for something meaningful.

    This is especially true for personal brands, where your “why” is inherently personal. When you can articulate why you do what you do – not just “to make money” (although I don’t see anything bad behind that reason) but the deeper purpose behind it – you invite your audience to join something bigger than a transaction.

    Inject The Meaning In Your Brand

    Let’s say you’re an eco-conscious entrepreneur creating sustainable products. You’re inviting your audience to join a movement to protect the planet. That’s a spiritual appeal – contributing to a cause that matters, being part of something meaningful, leaving the world better than you found it.

    Or consider a creator who teaches people to code. If their message is just “learn to code so you can get a high-paying job,” that’s purely about wealth. But if their message is “learn to code so you can build things that solve real problems and improve people’s lives,” now there’s a spiritual dimension. They’re helping people find purpose and meaning through their work.

    This is what I mean when I say my content had to evolve beyond just “make money online.” That angle addresses wealth, but it felt empty to me because it lacked meaning. When I started talking about building something that matters, about contributing value to others, about creating freedom to live on your own terms – that’s when the content started to feel aligned with who I am. And that authenticity came through to the audience.

    The Mindfulness Explosion

    Screenshot of Calm app homepage demonstrating emotional appeal through wellness and mindfulness content

    Even in secular contexts, we’re seeing massive demand for content that addresses spiritual needs.

    Consider the explosion of meditation and mindfulness apps. Headspace and Calm dominate the mental wellness app category, accounting for 96% of daily active users. The top 10 meditation apps collectively had been downloaded 52 million times as of 2019, and those numbers have only grown.

    Screenshot of Headspace app showcasing needs-based design focused on mental health and human connection

    What are these apps selling? Inner peace. Presence. Connection to something deeper than the everyday chaos. That’s spiritual content, even though it’s not tied to any particular religion.

    There’s enormous appetite for this kind of content because modern life often feels meaningless. We’re productive but unfulfilled. We’re connected digitally but isolated emotionally. We have more entertainment options than ever but still feel empty.

    Content that helps people slow down, reflect, find meaning, and connect to something beyond themselves fills a genuine need. Journaling prompts, life lessons, philosophical discussions, reflections on purpose and values – all of this addresses the spirituality pillar.

    The Caution and the Opportunity

    Here’s where you need to be careful with the spirituality pillar: it’s deeply personal, and it can be divisive.

    That same Pew study I keep referencing found that outside the United States, religion and spirituality were rarely cited as top sources of meaning. In most countries surveyed, 5% or fewer mentioned it spontaneously. In the U.S., it was 15%. This suggests that overtly spiritual or religious content has a more niche appeal in many markets.

    If you go too hard on spirituality – especially if you’re preachy or dogmatic about it – you risk alienating portions of your audience. Not everyone shares the same beliefs. Not everyone is on the same spiritual journey.

    But here’s the flip side: if spirituality is genuinely important to you, and you incorporate it authentically into your brand, you’ll attract an audience that aligns with those values. You might have a smaller audience, but it will be more devoted, engaged, and loyal.

    The “Be Authentic” Cliché

    The key word there is “authentically.” You can’t fake caring about meaning and purpose. People can tell when it’s performative.

    Look at Oprah Winfrey as an example. She’s infused her entire personal brand with spirituality and empathy – from her talk show discussions about life purpose to her Super Soul Sunday conversations with thought leaders. She’s not preaching a specific religion, but she’s constantly exploring questions of meaning, growth, and human potential. This attracted a massive audience of people who resonate with that approach. It’s also undoubtedly turned off some people who find it too “woo-woo.” But Oprah built one of the most powerful personal brands in history precisely because she stayed true to this dimension of her interests.

    If spirituality isn’t your thing, you don’t have to force it. But you can still address the underlying need by discussing values, legacy, contribution, or personal growth in broader terms. Talk about building something that outlasts you, work that feels meaningful, aligning your life with your principles. These are all spiritual themes without requiring any particular belief system.

    How to Use All 5 Pillars In Your Content

    Why Multi-Pillar Content Works Better

    Here’s what I’ve discovered: content that addresses only one pillar is commodity content. Content that addresses multiple pillars simultaneously is unique content.

    For example, when you write about the digital nomad lifestyle and travel, writing just about visiting cool places would be single-pillar content at best (maybe happiness – “travel is fun!”). Instead, you can intentionally wove in multiple pillars:

    1. Health: talk about how changing your environment can improve mental health. How walking in new cities provides natural exercise. How certain climates might benefit people with specific conditions. How breaking routine reduces stress.
    2. Wealth: discuss geographic arbitrage – earning in strong currencies while living in lower cost-of-living countries. New business opportunities that become visible when you’re exposed to different markets. The financial freedom that comes from reducing expenses without sacrificing quality of life.
    3. Relationships: share how travel makes you more open and social. How you meet new people constantly. How shared experiences in new places create bonding opportunities. How feeling good about your lifestyle makes you more confident in social situations.
    4. Happiness: The core theme is freedom. The freedom to design your life. The freedom to escape routines that don’t serve you. The joy of new experiences and constant learning. The satisfaction of proving to yourself that you’re capable of more than you thought.
    5. Spirituality: I framed travel as a path to self-discovery. Finding meaning through exploration. Gaining perspective on what matters. Contributing to local economies. Being part of something bigger than your small corner of the world.

    That’s five pillars in one piece of content. And because of that, the content resonate with a much wider range of people than if you’d just written “here are some cool places to visit.”

    • Someone primarily motivated by wealth saw the financial benefits.
    • Someone craving better health saw the mental and physical wellness angle.
    • Someone feeling lonely saw the relationship possibilities.
    • Someone searching for meaning saw the spiritual dimension.

    The Content Creation System

    One of the best things about understanding this framework is that you’ll never stare at a blank page wondering what to write about again.

    Here’s the system: whenever you’re planning content, ask yourself, “Which pillar does this serve?”

    If you can’t clearly identify at least one pillar, that’s a red flag. Your content might not resonate because it’s not addressing a fundamental human need.

    But more often, what you’ll discover is that almost any interest can be angled toward one or more pillars. You just need to think about the connection.

    Let’s take something as simple as gardening:

    • Health: Growing your own nutritious food. Physical activity. Stress reduction from working with your hands. Connection to nature’s rhythms.
    • Wealth: Saving money on groceries. Potential side income from selling produce. Learning skills that reduce dependence on the market economy.
    • Relationships: Community gardens bringing neighbors together. Teaching kids about nature. Sharing harvests with friends and family.
    • Happiness: The joy of nurturing life. The satisfaction of eating food you grew yourself. The beauty of a well-tended garden. The meditative quality of garden work.
    • Spirituality: Connection to natural cycles. Being part of the ecosystem. Contributing to sustainability. The metaphor of growth and cultivation applied to life.

    See? Gardening can hit all five pillars if you approach it thoughtfully.

    This is how the fitness influencer escapes their niche prison. Instead of only posting workout videos (health), they expand into:

    • Body confidence and relationships (how fitness affects your social life)
    • The economics of health (how being fit saves money on healthcare, or how the fitness industry makes money)
    • Finding joy in movement rather than punishment (happiness)
    • The discipline and personal growth that come from fitness practice (spirituality)

    Suddenly, they’re not just another fitness account. They’re a multi-dimensional brand that speaks to multiple aspects of their audience’s lives.

    Different Pillars For Different Stages

    Here’s an important nuance: while these five pillars are universal, their relative importance shifts based on where someone is in their life.

    Think about it. When you’re in school, relationships dominate your thinking. Being accepted, making friends, maybe finding romance – that’s what occupies your mental energy. You’re not lying awake at night worried about retirement savings or whether you should get a colonoscopy.

    In early career, wealth often takes center stage. You’re trying to establish financial independence, maybe pay off student loans, figure out how to afford rent and still have a life. Health is still mostly an afterthought unless something goes wrong.

    As you move into mid-life, health concerns tend to increase. Your body doesn’t bounce back the way it used to. You start thinking about longevity. Maybe you’re watching parents deal with health issues and realizing that’s your future if you don’t take care of yourself.

    Meanwhile, happiness and spirituality can pop up at any stage, often triggered by life events. A breakup might send you searching for happiness. A death in the family might trigger spiritual questions. A career milestone might make you wonder if this is all there is.

    Knowing Your Audience’s Life Stage

    The strategic insight here is that you need to understand where your audience is in their journey.

    • If you’re targeting young professionals, lean into the wealth and relationships pillars.
    • If your audience is middle-aged, health and spirituality might resonate more strongly.
    • If you have a mixed audience, make sure you’re addressing multiple pillars so different people find different entry points into your content.

    Most people aren’t approaching all five pillars with equal attention at any given time. That’s just not how life works. Usually, you’re sacrificing one or two pillars to focus on others. The young entrepreneur who’s grinding 80-hour weeks is prioritizing wealth at the expense of health and relationships. The new parent is prioritizing relationships (with their child) while maybe letting health and career slide. This is normal.

    But what’s powerful about creating content that touches multiple pillars is that you’re meeting your audience wherever they are. The person focused on wealth can engage with that dimension of your content, while the person searching for meaning can engage with the spiritual elements, and they’re both in your audience, both benefiting, both feeling served.

    The Evergreen Markets Revealed

    Here’s the final piece of the puzzle: these five pillars don’t just help you create better content. They reveal the fundamental structure of the market itself.

    Do you know about the concepts of “evergreen markets” or “eternal niches”? These five pillars are the evergreen markets. They’re the categories of human need that never go out of style because the needs themselves never change.

    Fashion, technology, and social norms change. But humans will always need health, wealth, relationships, happiness, and meaning. Always. A thousand years ago, these needs existed. A thousand years from now, they’ll still exist. Unless we switch to cybernetic bodies or something.

    This means that if you’re building products or services, they should address at least one of these pillars. If your offering doesn’t close one of these fundamental needs, you’re going to struggle to find buyers.

    This is why certain content niches consistently perform well across decades:

    • Health & fitness (health pillar)
    • Money & business (wealth pillar)
    • Dating & relationships (relationships pillar)
    • Self-improvement & happiness (happiness pillar)
    • Religion & spirituality (spirituality pillar)

    These aren’t trending topics that will fade, but permanent categories of human concern.

    And you don’t have to pick just one. In fact, the most successful personal brands typically combine multiple pillars, creating a unique positioning that can’t be easily replicated.

    You’re not just a finance person. You’re someone who teaches financial independence (wealth) as a path to freedom and happiness while building a supportive community (relationships) and helping people live in alignment with their values (spirituality).

    The Framework That Turns Interests Into Income

    So here we are at the end of this three-part series. Let’s recap what we’ve covered.

    The Five Pillars of Human Needs are:

    1. Health – The foundation of survival and well-being
    2. Wealth – Security and freedom through financial stability (read about them in details here)
    3. Relationships – Belonging and connection with others
    4. Happiness – Joy, fulfillment, and positive emotional states (read about them in details here)
    5. Spirituality – Meaning, purpose, and connection to something greater

    They’re the fundamental framework for understanding what humans care about, what content resonates, and what products sell.

    When I started building my personal brand around system analysis, I was addressing maybe one pillar at best, and even then, only tangentially. When I shifted to software development content, I faced same problem. I was creating content that might have been technically useful, but it wasn’t connecting to deep human needs. It was just information.

    That’s why I burned out and it felt like a grind.

    When I finally understood this framework and started creating content that wove together multiple pillars – talking about building online businesses (wealth) that give you freedom to travel (happiness) while building genuine skills (health, in the sense of capability) and contributing value to communities (relationships and spirituality) – everything changed.

    Not in terms of audience growth or engagement metrics, I have to put it here, I’m still in the bottom of the barrel. The real change was internal. Creating content became enjoyable again because I was talking about things that genuinely matter to me while knowing those same things matter to my audience for reasons that connect to their core needs.

    Be Multi-Dimensional

    The framework gave me permission to be multi-dimensional. To talk about different aspects of life without seeming unfocused. To bring my authentic self to the content without worrying that I was “off-brand.” Because the brand isn’t “guy who talks about one specific technical topic.” The brand is “person who explores how to live well in the digital age,” and that can encompass health, wealth, relationships, happiness, and meaning.

    Now, I want to be clear about something: this framework isn’t magic. You still have to create good content, you still have to understand your audience, you have to show up consistently, iterate and improve. The framework doesn’t do the work for you.

    But what it does do is ensure that when you put in that work, you’re building on a solid foundation. You’re creating content that addresses real human needs rather than just making noise in an already crowded space, giving yourself the strategic clarity to know which topics to pursue and which to skip, building toward something sustainable rather than just chasing the algorithm.

    Now, if you want to delegate part of this work to AI, I’ve got you covered. I have a content creation system that helps me create content for different platforms in the right format. Especially if you’re a busy person who wants to save time but still build an online presence, it can come in very handy. Having AI as your writing editor gives you an unfair advantage in that regard. I use this system myself, and it has evolved a lot with time and experience – I keep improving and updating it according to the latest changes in AI models. So, check it out: ANTIghostwriter.

    Challenge Your Content

    Here’s my challenge to you: go audit your last ten pieces of content. For each one, identify which pillars it addressed. You’ll probably find that most of your content clusters around one or two pillars. That’s normal.

    But then look at the pillars you’re not addressing. Those represent opportunities. Those are the angles that could differentiate you from everyone else in your space. Those are the dimensions that could attract entirely new segments of audience.

    Start experimenting. Take your next piece of content and deliberately try to weave in a pillar you usually ignore. If you normally focus on health, try adding a relationships angle. If you usually talk about wealth, try incorporating happiness or meaning. See what happens.

    In the worst case the content performs about the same as usual. But in the best case you discover a new dimension that resonates strongly and opens up entirely new creative territory.

    This framework made creating content actually enjoyable again for me. And in the long run, that’s what matters most. Because sustainable success in content creation is about building something you can maintain year after year, something that serves your audience while also serving you.

    When you align your authentic interests with your audience’s fundamental needs, that’s when the magic happens, content creation stops feeling like work and starts feeling like contribution, followers become community, and your personal brand becomes a legacy.

    Now go build something that matters.

  • The 5 Human Needs That Make Your Personal Brand Impossible to Ignore [Part 2]: Relationships And Happiness

    The 5 Human Needs That Make Your Personal Brand Impossible to Ignore [Part 2]: Relationships And Happiness

    The Pillars Nobody Teaches (Because They’re Harder to Fake)

    In Part 1 of this series, we covered Health and Wealth – the two foundational pillars of human needs that directly address survival. These are the obvious ones. If you’re a fitness creator, you instinctively know you’re selling health. If you’re a finance creator, you understand you’re addressing wealth anxiety.

    But here’s the problem with stopping at those two pillars: so does everyone else in your niche.

    Health and Wealth content is everywhere. It’s saturated. And while these pillars are powerful, they’re also the easiest to commoditize. There are ten thousand fitness influencers posting workout videos. There are endless personal finance accounts sharing budgeting tips. The content might be good, but it rarely builds the kind of deep, unshakeable loyalty that transforms casual followers into devoted advocates.

    That’s where the next three pillars come in: Relationships, Happiness, and Spirituality.

    These are the pillars most creators ignore – not because they’re less important, but because they’re harder to execute. You can’t fake genuine community building, manufacture authentic happiness through AI “photos”, or pretend to care about meaning and purpose without your audience seeing right through it.

    But when you do address these pillars authentically, that’s when your personal brand transcends content creation and becomes something your audience genuinely needs in their lives.

    So let’s dive into the three pillars that actually differentiate your personal brand from everyone else shouting about abs and dividends.

    Relationships: The Pillar That Makes Us Human

    Why Belonging Beats Everything

    Here’s a fact that should reshape how you think about content: relationships might be the most powerful human motivator of all.

    Psychologists Roy Baumeister and Mark Leary conducted landmark research demonstrating that the

    “need to belong through strong, stable interpersonal relationships is a powerful, fundamental, and extremely pervasive motivation.”

    Not just important or nice to have. Fundamental. As in, we’re literally wired for this at a biological level.

    Why? Because for most of human history, being part of a group meant survival. Being cast out meant death. We evolved to crave acceptance and fear rejection because our ancestors who didn’t have that wiring didn’t survive long enough to pass on their genes.

    Remember that massive Pew Research study I mentioned in Part 1? The one that surveyed people across 17 advanced economies about what gives their life meaning? Family – which is fundamentally about relationships – was the number one source of meaning in 14 out of 17 countries. Not money, career success, nor health, but relationships.

    And then there’s the Harvard Study of Adult Development, which followed the same group of people for 80 years to understand what makes life fulfilling. Their conclusion was this:

    “Close relationships, more than money or fame, are what keep people happy throughout their lives. They are better predictors of long and happy lives than social class, IQ, or even genes.”

    Black and white portrait symbolizing insights into relationships and happiness for authentic branding

    The study director, Robert Waldinger, put it even more bluntly:

    “Loneliness kills. It’s as powerful as smoking or alcoholism.”

    Think about that. The absence of relationships is as deadly as substance abuse. That’s how fundamental this pillar is.

    The School Kid Truth

    I had a realization about this pillar a while back that completely changed my perspective.

    Think about kids in school. At that age, most aren’t thinking about their health – their bodies work fine, they have energy, they’re not dealing with chronic pain. They’re not thinking about wealth – they don’t pay bills, they don’t worry about retirement, money is an abstract concept their parents deal with.

    But what are they thinking about constantly?

    • Whether they fit in.
    • Whether they’re accepted by their peers.
    • Whether they’ll have friends at lunch.
    • Whether they’re cool enough, funny enough, athletic enough, smart enough to belong to the group they want to be part of.

    The fear of being an outcast, of being rejected, of being alone – that’s the dominant anxiety of childhood. And here’s the thing: that anxiety never really goes away. It just evolves.

    As adults, we’re still terrified of social rejection. We’ve just gotten better at hiding it.

    • We still want to be accepted by our colleagues.
    • We still want to be valued in our communities.
    • We still want romantic partners who choose us.
    • We still want friends who genuinely care about us.

    The playground just turned into workspace, LinkedIn, dating apps, and social media.

    This need never stops. It’s always there, quietly driving huge amounts of our behavior.

    How to Leverage Relationships in Content

    The direct approach to the Relationships pillar is obvious: create content explicitly about relationships. Dating coaches, marriage counselors, parenting experts, networking gurus – they’re all selling solutions to relationship challenges.

    But the indirect approach is where things get really interesting, and it’s what most personal brand builders miss entirely.

    You may not directly create content about relationships, but instead, you can create actual relationships through your content.

    Look at Facebook. Love it or hate it, the platform has nearly 3 billion monthly active users. Why? Because the entire business model is built on the Relationships pillar. The platform facilitates connection between people – friends, family, interest groups, communities. People don’t go to Facebook for the features. They go because their people are there.

    Smart personal brand builders understand this principle. They create spaces where their audience can connect with each other. Here are some options:

    • Private membership groups
    • Discord servers
    • Live Q&A sessions where people interact in real-time
    • Forum discussions
    • Meetups

    When you build community around your content, something magical happens: people start coming back not just for what you post, but for the other people in the community. They form friendships, help each other, create inside jokes and shared experiences.

    That’s when followers become a tribe, when casual consumers become devoted advocates.

    Screenshot of a relationship marketing campaign representing emotional connection in audience trust

    Consider eHarmony as a case study. They built an entire brand on the promise of lasting love, using content like research-based compatibility insights and relationship advice to engage users’ hopes of finding companionship. The content was the beginning of addressing people’s deepest relationship needs.

    Or think about insurance commercials that show parents and children together. Tech ads highlighting how gadgets connect people. They’re deliberately triggering the Relationships pillar because it creates emotional resonance.

    The Content Strategy

    Here’s a practical example of how this works. Let’s go back to our hypothetical fitness influencer from Part 1 – someone who’s been posting workout videos and nutrition tips for months.

    That content addresses the Health pillar. It’s valuable. But it’s also what a thousand other fitness creators are doing.

    Now imagine this same creator starts talking about body confidence. Not just “get six-pack abs,” but “how improving your fitness helps you feel more confident in social situations.” Or “how your relationship with your body affects your romantic relationships.” Or even creating content about the gym as a social space – how to approach people, gym etiquette, finding workout partners.

    Suddenly, this creator is addressing both Health and Relationships. They’re helping people with their bodies and their social lives. That’s a much more compelling value proposition, and it attracts a wider, more engaged audience.

    The key is authenticity. As one marketing analysis noted, audiences are incredibly quick to sense contrived sentiment. If you’re just slapping stock photos of smiling families onto your content, people will see through it immediately. But if you genuinely care about fostering community and helping people connect, that comes through, and people respond to it.

    Happiness: The Universal Goal Nobody Knows How to Sell

    The Philosophy Everyone Agrees On

    Black-and-white bust of Aristotle, Greek philosopher, associated with the idea that happiness depends on ourselves

    Over 2,300 years ago, Aristotle wrote:

    “Happiness is the meaning and the purpose of life, the whole aim and end of human existence.”

    Black and white portrait symbolizing philosophical understanding of human nature in content creation

    A couple thousand years later, the philosopher Blaise Pascal echoed the same sentiment:

    “All men seek happiness. This is without exception. This is the motive of every action of every man, even of those who hang themselves.”

    That’s a dark way to make the point, but Pascal’s right. Whether consciously or unconsciously, whether directly or indirectly, virtually everything we do is aimed at either increasing happiness or avoiding suffering. We eat food we enjoy, we seek comfortable shelter, we pursue careers that (hopefully) provide satisfaction. we build relationships that bring joy, we avoid pain and pursue pleasure.

    Happiness is the universal human goal. It’s what we’re all chasing in one form or another.

    Modern psychology backs this up. Survey after survey shows that when people are asked about their priorities and values, happiness or life satisfaction consistently ranks at the top. The entire field of positive psychology exists specifically to study well-being. There’s even a World Happiness Report that treats national happiness as a key measure of progress.

    But here’s where it gets complicated for content strategy: happiness isn’t really a “pillar” in the same way Health and Wealth are. You can take direct action to improve your health. You can take specific steps to increase your wealth. But happiness is more like an outcome – a state that emerges when other needs are met and other conditions are right.

    So when I talk about Happiness as a pillar, I’m really talking about content that addresses personal fulfillment, positive emotion, mental well-being, joy, fun, and self-improvement. It’s the “quality of life” pillar.

    Why Happiness Content Is Everywhere

    The self-help industry is worth billions of dollars. What are they selling? Ultimately, they’re all selling happiness in various forms.

    Gretchen Rubin built an entire platform around “The Happiness Project.” Lifestyle influencers promote gratitude journals, mindfulness practices, and “living your best life.” Travel vloggers showcase joyful experiences in beautiful locations. Motivational speakers sell inspiration and hope.

    Even brands that aren’t explicitly about happiness use this pillar constantly. Remember Coca-Cola’s “Open Happiness” campaign? They were associating their product with simple joy and positive moments.

    This campaign launched in 2009, right in the middle of the global recession. The economy was collapsing, people were losing jobs and homes, anxiety was everywhere. And Coca-Cola’s response was to offer an “emotional refuge” – a moment of happiness in a difficult time. The ads showed people sharing Cokes, strangers smiling, friends laughing. The message was clear: in the midst of all this darkness, here’s a small, simple pleasure you can still enjoy.

    The campaign became a beacon of positivity amidst prevailing gloom, and it worked precisely because it tapped into the Happiness pillar when people needed it most.

    This is what makes happiness-focused content so shareable. According to research by Jonah Berger on what makes content go viral, positive emotional content – things that inspire awe, amusement, or inspiration – tends to get shared more than negative content. People want to spread joy. They want to make others feel good. Content that delivers positive emotion has built-in virality potential.

    The Happiness Paradox (And How to Avoid It)

    But there’s a trap here, and it’s important to understand it if you’re going to use the Happiness pillar effectively.

    Research has found that people who extremely value happiness – who put tremendous pressure on themselves to be happy all the time – actually end up more prone to disappointment and even depression. It’s called the “happiness paradox.” The harder you chase happiness as a direct goal, the more elusive it becomes.

    Think about it: if you walk around constantly asking yourself “Am I happy? Am I happy enough? Why am I not happier?” – that’s a recipe for misery. Happiness seems to work better as a byproduct of living well rather than as a target you can aim at directly.

    So what does this mean for content strategy?

    It means you need to be realistic and nuanced. Promising eternal bliss is not only untrue, but potentially harmful. The “good vibes only” crowd that pretends life should be positive all the time is doing their audience a disservice. Real life includes setbacks, failures, sadness, and struggle. That’s not a bug, it’s a feature.

    Happiness is a Journey

    The better approach is to frame happiness as a journey rather than a destination. Focus on finding meaning, building resilience, appreciating small daily joys, and accepting that life has ups and downs. This is why many thought leaders now blend happiness content with mindfulness, purpose, and growth rather than selling some fantasy of permanent euphoria.

    When I wrote about the digital nomad lifestyle, my core message wasn’t “move abroad and you’ll be happy forever.” It was about freedom – the freedom to design your life in a way that aligns with your values and brings you joy. That’s a much more honest and sustainable message than “this one trick will solve all your problems.”

    The word “freedom” itself is deeply tied to the Happiness pillar. I chose it deliberately because I know it resonates with many people on an emotional level. It resonated with me, and I trusted that others who value freedom the way I do would find that message compelling.

    Making Happiness Tangible in Your Content

    So how do you actually incorporate the Happiness pillar without falling into the toxic positivity trap?

    One way is simply through tone and energy. Even if your content is about technical topics – say you’re teaching people how to code, or explaining complex financial concepts – you can infuse your delivery with warmth, encouragement, and optimism. You can make learning feel joyful rather than intimidating.

    Black-and-white portrait of Maya Angelou, whose definition of success ties directly to the principles of the ikigai blueprint

    There’s a famous Maya Angelou quote that applies here:

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

    If your content consistently makes people feel good – whether that’s inspired, hopeful, amused, understood, or validated – they’ll keep coming back. Not necessarily because your information is objectively better than your competitors’, but because the emotional experience of consuming your content is more positive.

    This is differentiation in its purest form. When ten creators are all teaching the same thing, the one who makes learning feel joyful wins.

    The Final Pillar

    The next pillar I left behind is spirituality. Usually, you don’t find it among the four we already observed here -A that’s my personal addition. But I think of it as the final missing piece of a puzzle. I don’t think happiness as a topic covers spirituality enough, so we’ll discuss it further in the next article, aka the next part of the series.

    So stay tuned, and for now, try to implement these four into your content: health, wealth, relationships, and happiness.

    But don’t just constrain yourself within the content. Look at your life through these four lenses: are they fulfilled enough for your standards? Let’s get to work.

  • The 5 Human Needs That Make Your Personal Brand Impossible to Ignore

    The 5 Human Needs That Make Your Personal Brand Impossible to Ignore

    The Day I Realized My Personal Brand Was Suffocating Me

    A few years ago, I made a decision that nearly killed my passion for content creation.

    I positioned myself as a systems analysis expert. Made sense at the time – it was my professional expertise, I knew the material inside and out, and students studying the subject would find my videos helpful. And they did. The videos performed well, students thanked me, everything looked successful from the outside.

    But here’s what nobody tells you about building a personal brand around your day job: you’re essentially giving yourself a second shift doing the exact same work. When your profession already occupies most of your mental energy, creating content about that same profession doesn’t feel like creative expression. It feels like overtime.

    I burned out. Hard.

    Then I tried again with software development content. Same expertise-based approach, same logic, same problem. I was creating content about the very thing that was already draining me professionally. The content creation itself became another source of exhaustion.

    Here’s the brutal truth I discovered: when you build your personal brand exclusively around your professional expertise, you become a hostage to a single niche. You either exhaust the topic completely, or more likely, you exhaust yourself first.

    But what if there was a different approach? What if instead of asking “What am I an expert in?”, you asked “What do humans universally care about?” What if you could make your genuine interests – the things you’d pursue even without getting paid – interesting to a massive audience?

    That shift in thinking led me to discover a framework that changed everything: the Five Pillars of Human Needs. And in this series of articles, I’m going to show you exactly how to use these pillars to build a personal brand that doesn’t drain you, but energizes you, while simultaneously connecting with the deepest motivations of every human being.

    Random Content Dies – Strategic Content Thrives

    The Human Survival Operating System

    Let me be direct about something most content creators don’t want to hear: nobody cares about your interests. At least, not initially.

    Harsh? Maybe. But it’s rooted in biology. Every human being operates on a fundamental survival-first operating system. Before someone can care about your passion for, say, digital nomadism or cryptocurrency or artisanal coffee, you need to trigger something deeper – a recognition that what you’re sharing connects to their survival, their well-being, their fundamental needs.

    This is where most personal branding advice fails. Everyone tells you to “be authentic” and “share your passion,” but they skip the critical thing: making your authenticity relevant to universal human needs.

    The framework I’m sharing isn’t some new-age invention. It’s built on decades of psychological research, most notably Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, but repackaged specifically for content strategy. The Five Pillars are: Health, Wealth, Relationships, Happiness, and Spirituality (added by me).

    Yes, this sounds simple. And that’s exactly the point. These aren’t abstract concepts – they’re the evergreen markets that have driven human behavior since the beginning of civilization. Every successful content niche, every viral post, every personal brand that builds a devoted following ultimately taps into at least one of these pillars.

    The difference between this framework and Maslow’s academic model is this one is practical. This is about content strategy, and understanding which buttons to push – not manipulatively, but authentically – to make your interests resonate with others.

    The Universal Truth About Attention

    Here’s what changed my entire approach to content: I realized that people consume content for fundamentally selfish reasons, and that’s not a bad thing, but the human nature itself.

    Someone scrolling through social media isn’t thinking “I wonder what interesting hobbies I can learn about today.” They’re thinking about their own problems, their own desires, their own needs. A 2021 Pew Research study across 17 advanced economies found that when people were asked what gives their life meaning, the answers clustered around remarkably similar themes: family, health, material well-being, friends, occupation.

    In Spain, 48% of people cited health as their #1 source of meaning. In South Korea, financial stability emerged as the top factor. Across 14 out of 17 countries studied, family was the number one source of meaning. These are fundamental human needs expressing themselves through different cultural lenses.

    So when you create content, you need to ask yourself: does this address a pain point or desire point that connects to these fundamental needs? If yes, you have content that can resonate. If no, you’re creating content that will struggle to find an audience beyond people who already share your specific interest.

    Before publishing anything, run it through this filter: which pillar does this address? If you can’t identify at least one clear connection, your content probably won’t perform well.

    And here’s the beautiful part: once you understand this framework, you can take any interest and angle it toward one or more pillars. That’s how you make your interests interesting to others.

    Health: The Non-Negotiable Foundation

    Why Health Trumps Everything

    There’s an old saying: a healthy person has a thousand wishes, a sick person has only one. The Roman poet Virgil wrote over 2,000 years ago that “the greatest wealth is health.” These are acknowledgments of a fundamental truth about human priorities.

    When your health is threatened, everything else becomes secondary. You’re not thinking about your career ambitions or your social life or your spiritual growth when you’re in physical pain or mental anguish. You’re thinking about one thing: getting back to baseline.

    This makes health the most primal of all the pillars. It sits at the foundation of Maslow’s hierarchy for a reason – without health and safety, we can’t pursue anything else.

    The numbers back this up in a massive way. The global wellness economy reached $6.3 trillion in 2023, accounting for 6% of global GDP. That’s everything from fitness and nutrition to mental health and wellness tourism. People are spending trillions of dollars trying to optimize their health, and they’re consuming endless content in pursuit of that goal.

    That Pew study I mentioned earlier shown that in about one-third of countries surveyed, health was among the top three sources of life meaning. The COVID-19 pandemic only intensified this focus. As researchers noted, wellness has become “a universal value – who doesn’t desire the tools and opportunities to build a healthy life for themselves and their family?”

    How to Leverage Health in Your Content

    The obvious play here is if you’re in the fitness, nutrition, or wellness space. Fitness entrepreneurs and wellness influencers have built enormous audiences by directly addressing health concerns. Take Peloton as an example – they didn’t just sell exercise bikes, they sold the promise of better fitness combined with community support, turning workout content into a global movement.

    But here’s where most content creators miss the opportunity: health angles work for almost any niche.

    Let’s say you’re a travel blogger. The obvious content is beautiful destinations and travel tips. But what if you started framing travel through a health lens?

    • The mental health benefits of disconnecting from routine,
    • the physical health benefits of walking more in walkable cities,
    • the stress reduction that comes from experiencing new environments.

    Suddenly, your travel content isn’t just “nice to have”, but addressing a fundamental need.

    Or imagine you create content about technology. Most tech reviewers focus purely on specs and features. But what if you consistently highlighted ergonomic design, the impact of screen time on sleep quality, or productivity tools that reduce stress? You’re now connecting technology to health outcomes, which makes your content more resonant.

    I’ve seen this work in my own content. When I wrote about the digital nomad lifestyle, I didn’t just talk about the freedom to work from anywhere – I discussed how changing environments can improve mental health, how walking in new cities provides natural exercise, how certain climates might benefit people with specific health conditions. That health angle made the content relevant to a much broader audience than just people already interested in digital nomadism.

    The Credibility Requirement

    Here’s the critical warning about health content: you need to be responsible. Health is literally life and death. People make real decisions based on health information they consume online.

    This means if you’re incorporating health angles into your content, stick to evidence-based information. Link to reputable studies. When discussing medical topics, make it clear you’re not a doctor (unless you are). Avoid the “miracle cure” language that screams snake oil.

    The wellness industry is full of grifters making unsubstantiated claims, and audiences are becoming increasingly skeptical. When you provide genuinely valuable, well-researched health information – or even just thoughtful observations about how your niche connects to well-being – you build long-term trust and loyalty.

    As the old saying goes,

    “He who has health has hope; and he who has hope has everything.”

    By authentically addressing your audience’s health needs, you’re earning their trust at the deepest level.

    Wealth: The Security Every Human Craves

    Why Money Matters (Even When We Pretend It Doesn’t)

    Let’s talk about the thing everyone thinks about but feels awkward discussing: money.

    Wealth – or more accurately, financial security – is the second foundational pillar of human needs. And despite what some spiritual teachers might tell you, caring about money isn’t shallow. It’s rational. In modern society, money equals safety, shelter, food, healthcare, education, and freedom. Money is survival.

    A survey found that 71% of Americans report money as a significant source of stress in their lives. Another study showed that 80% of people are at least somewhat stressed about financial concerns. Think about that: four out of five people are walking around with financial anxiety.

    And this isn’t just an American phenomenon. Remember that Pew study? In 9 out of 17 countries surveyed, material well-being ranked among the top three things that give life meaning. Around one in five people mentioned income, basic needs, or comfort. In South Korea specifically, financial stability emerged as the #1 source of meaning – above even family.

    The desire for wealth is about the same thing as health: security and survival (not greed like many can think). Having money means not worrying about how you’ll feed your family, not stressing about medical bills, not feeling trapped in a job you hate because you can’t afford to leave.

    Now, not everyone is equally motivated by wealth. There are people who genuinely live off-grid, who’ve rejected material pursuits, who live in intentional communities with minimal financial needs. But here’s the reality: if you’re building a one-person business or personal brand, those people aren’t your target audience anyway. The vast majority of your potential followers are working within the system, trying to improve their financial situation, looking for information that helps them earn more, save more, invest smarter, or worry less about money.

    Content Strategies for the Wealth Pillar

    The direct approach to leveraging the wealth pillar is obvious: create financial content. Personal finance, investing, business building, career development. This is a massive space with enormous demand.

    Look at the success of platforms like NerdWallet, which grew to 23 million monthly users by 2023 simply by answering everyday money questions. From credit card comparisons to retirement planning to “how to save for college,” they systematically addressed financial pain points and built a brand worth over $500 million. Dave Ramsey built an entire media empire helping people get out of debt.

    But the indirect approach is where things get interesting, because you can tie almost any content back to financial benefits or opportunities.

    Let’s go back to my digital nomad content example. The surface appeal is lifestyle and freedom, but what really gets people’s attention?

    • When I talk about how moving to a lower cost-of-living country can help you save money while maintaining quality of life.
    • When I discuss business opportunities that become visible when you’re exposed to different markets.
    • When I frame geographic arbitrage as a wealth-building strategy.

    Even something like fitness content can incorporate wealth angles. A fitness creator could talk about how improved health reduces medical expenses, or how having more energy translates to better performance at work and higher earning potential. It doesn’t have to be forced – it just has to be a genuine connection.

    The psychology here is rooted in behavioral economics. People are highly motivated to avoid losses and secure gains. Content that addresses those anxieties or promises monetary benefit naturally performs well. This is why “how to make money online” content never goes away – it’s evergreen because the need is evergreen.

    The Ethics of Wealth Content

    Here’s where I need to be direct: the wealth pillar attracts scammers like flies to shit. Get-rich-quick schemes, crypto pump-and-dumps, fake gurus selling $5,000 courses with zero value. The space is polluted with bullshit.

    This is why credibility is everything. If you’re going to address wealth in your content, you need to be transparent, honest, and provide real value. No grandiose promises of “make $100,000 in your first month,” no unverified investment tips, no fake income screenshots.

    There’s also an important philosophical point here. Research shows that income does correlate with life satisfaction – up to a point. Moving from poverty to financial comfort absolutely increases happiness. But beyond meeting basic needs and having reasonable security, chasing wealth for its own sake shows diminishing returns on well-being.

    Black and white portrait symbolizing wealth and long-term vision in personal branding strategy

    Even John D. Rockefeller, one of the wealthiest people in history, cautioned:

    “It is wrong to assume that men of immense wealth are always happy.”

    The billionaire class is full of miserable people, which tells you that wealth alone isn’t the answer.

    So the responsible approach to wealth content is this: help your audience achieve financial security and freedom, not chase infinite growth. Talk about money as a tool for living better, not as the ultimate goal. Frame wealth content around empowerment – earning more, saving smarter, worrying less – rather than around materialism and status.

    When done ethically, addressing the wealth pillar empowers your audience. A financially empowered audience is more likely to become a loyal, engaged community. They’re also more likely to be able to afford your products and services down the line. It’s a genuine win-win scenario.

    My Own Example

    My own product falls into the wealth category. It’s a content creation system that can save you thousands of dollars. Here’s how: when you build your brand (personal or business), you have to create content – there’s no other way nowadays. The foundation of all content is text – whether it’s articles like this one, social media posts, or video scripts – it’s all text.

    So, to create it, you either spend your time or pay ghostwriters thousands of dollars to write for you. Or you can use the power of AI and build a system that helps you create more than 72+ content pieces per week while spending just a couple of hours.

    That’s my positioning within this pillar. Here’s the product if you’re interested: ANTIghostwriter.

    Two Pillars Down, Three More to Go

    So far, we’ve covered the two most foundational pillars of human needs: Health and Wealth. These are the survival basics, the bedrock of Maslow’s pyramid, the things that directly threaten our existence when they’re missing.

    But here’s the thing: most content creators already understand these two pillars intuitively. Fitness influencers know they’re selling health. Finance creators know they’re selling wealth. These connections are obvious.

    The real magic – and the real differentiation – happens with the next three pillars. This is where personal brands escape the trap of single-niche positioning, where a fitness influencer can start talking about relationships and spirituality without losing their audience, where you can create content that touches multiple human needs simultaneously, creating exponentially stronger resonance.

    In the next article of this series, we’ll dive deep into Relationships (the social pillar that makes us human), Happiness (the elusive goal everyone’s chasing), and Spirituality (the meaning-maker that transcends material needs). I’ll show you how to weave these pillars together, how to identify which pillars your current content is missing, and most importantly, how to use this framework to create a personal brand that feels authentic to you while being relevant to others.

    Bookmark this series. The framework gets even more powerful when you see all five pillars working together.

    In the next article: Why relationships might be more important than health, how happiness differs from all other needs, and why spirituality – yes, even for secular audiences – could be the most powerful pillar of all.

  • The Personal Brand Monetization Framework: From Your First Dollar to Sustainable Income [Part 2]

    The Personal Brand Monetization Framework: From Your First Dollar to Sustainable Income [Part 2]

    Let’s quickly recap the topic, because we covered a lot in the previous articles of the series. We unraveled the myth about 100,000 followers. We went through several monetization tactics that work from the beginning — the first three here, the last two here. In the last article, we dove deeper into the tactical stuff and started building the framework for monetizing your personal brand. In this article, we’ll continue to do so. Let’s begin.

    The First Version Will Suck (Do It Anyway)

    Let me tell you something that might save you months or years of delay: Your first product will not be perfect. It won’t even be great. It will, in fact, probably be kind of shit.

    This is not a reason to wait. It’s a reason to launch.

    Every successful digital product you admire – every polished online course, every seamless membership experience, every professional-looking guide – started as a rough first version. The creators behind them launched something imperfect, got feedback from real customers, and improved iteratively.

    This is how products evolve. Not through endless planning and perfecting in isolation, but through rapid deployment and continuous refinement based on actual market feedback.

    I can’t stress this enough: Market feedback is infinitely more valuable than your assumptions about what people want. You might spend six months building what you think is the perfect course, only to launch and discover that people are confused by the structure, or they wanted different outcomes, or you priced it wrong, or the problem you solved wasn’t actually their biggest pain point.

    Or you could spend two weeks building something “good enough,” launch it to your small audience, make a few sales, gather detailed feedback from actual customers, and use that information to improve version 2.0. Then improve 3.0 based on the next batch of customers. Within six months, you have a genuinely great product refined by real-world usage.

    Guess which approach leads to better outcomes?

    How I Failed My First Product

    That’s exactly what happened to the first version of my ANTIghostwriter content creation system. My first client complained about the quality of my speech during my screencast recordings. Since I’m a non-native English speaker, that wasn’t a big surprise to me. So I used AI to correct my speech and writing in all 24 lessons, reshot all the videos in the course, and released it as an updated version. Now I can iterate and polish the next things.

    The iterative path is more effective because you’re optimizing based on reality rather than guesses.

    This means your first product should be:

    • Simple enough to ship in 2-4 weeks
    • Focused on solving one specific problem
    • Priced to sell (you can change prices later)
    • Clearly “version 1.0” in your own mind (perfection comes later)

    Launch it to your existing audience, however small. If you only have 100 followers, that’s fine – you only need 5-10 customers for meaningful feedback. If nobody buys, that’s also feedback (probably about positioning, pricing, or product-market fit, not about your worth as a creator).

    Most likely, a few people will buy. They’ll go through your product. Some will love it despite its imperfections. Some will have questions or suggestions. All of this information is gold for improving the next version.

    And here’s a secret: Those early customers become your biggest advocates. They’ve seen the product evolve. They feel like they’re part of its development. They’re invested in your success. Many will leave testimonials, refer friends, and buy your next product too.

    So ship version 1.0. It’s better to have an imperfect product generating revenue and feedback than a perfect product that exists only in your head.

    The Four Eternal Markets (And Why They Matter)

    Here’s a framework that will help you position almost any product or service: the concept of eternal markets.

    There are four (arguably five) fundamental human needs that drive nearly all purchasing decisions:

    1. Health: Physical wellbeing, fitness, longevity, medical solutions
    2. Wealth: Money, career, business, financial security
    3. Relationships: Romance, family, friendship, social skills, influence
    4. Happiness: Fulfillment, purpose, mindset, emotional wellbeing

    I’d add a fifth that many consider a subset of happiness but I see as distinct:

    5. Spirituality: Meaning, consciousness, enlightenment, philosophical understanding

    Every product or service you can imagine falls into one of these categories. People spend money to:

    • Feel healthier
    • Become wealthier
    • Improve their relationships
    • Find happiness
    • Discover meaning

    This matters for your personal brand monetization because you need to connect your expertise and offerings to at least one of these eternal markets.

    “How to use Photoshop” isn’t compelling by itself. But “How to use Photoshop to build a freelance design business earning $5,000/month” connects to wealth. “How to edit photos to document your family memories beautifully” connects to relationships.

    Same skill, different positioning, different markets.

    Application To Products

    When building your product ladder, explicitly identify which eternal market each offering serves. This helps with:

    • Positioning: You can articulate the transformation in terms people instinctively understand and value.
    • Pricing: Products in the wealth category often command higher prices because the ROI is calculable. Health products also price high because the value (your wellbeing) is priceless to you.
    • Messaging: Your marketing becomes clearer when you understand the deep need you’re addressing.
    • Product Development: You can identify gaps in your ladder. “I have three products serving the wealth market, but nothing for relationships. Maybe I should develop something there.”

    Now, ideally, your products align with your personal brand’s themes. If you’re a fitness creator, health products make obvious sense. But you could also create wealth products (“How to become a certified personal trainer and build a $10k/month practice”) or relationship products (“How to work out with your partner to strengthen your relationship”).

    The eternal markets framework gives you flexibility while maintaining relevance to your core audience.

    Why Most Partnership Advice Is Wrong (For Some People)

    I need to share something personal here because it radically changed my approach to business and might resonate with some of you.

    Conventional wisdom says you shouldn’t start a business alone. You need a cofounder, a partner, someone to share the load and complement your weaknesses. This advice is so common it’s practically gospel in startup culture.

    I followed this advice like a law. Every significant business I started, I had a partner. And every single one eventually failed.

    It wasn’t until I went through therapy and talked about these repeated failures that someone outside the situation could see the obvious pattern I’d missed: The common thread in all my failed ventures was having a partner.

    The only business I’ve built that’s still running profitably years later, even without my active involvement is the one I started alone (my web-development agency).

    Now, I’m not saying partnerships are inherently bad. They work well for many people. But for me – for my psychology, my work style, my decision-making process – they were poison. I didn’t need a partner. I needed to work solo.

    This realization freed me. Now I focus on building my personal brand, which by definition can’t have a partner because it’s centered on me. This feels right in a way partnerships never did.

    What’s That For You

    Why am I telling you this?

    Because the “100,000 followers before monetizing” myth isn’t the only dogma holding people back. There are dozens of “rules” about how to build a business, grow an audience, or create products. Many are good general guidelines. But none are universal laws.

    You might succeed precisely by doing what everyone says not to do.

    Maybe you should have a partner (most people probably should). Maybe you shouldn’t niche down narrowly (which I believe). Maybe you should monetize immediately rather than growing first (which we’ve argued throughout this series). Maybe you should build in public even though everyone says wait until it’s perfect (I’d argue yes).

    The point is: Test the assumptions. Question the dogma. Be willing to discover that your path looks different from the conventional wisdom, and that’s okay – maybe it’s even optimal for you specifically.

    This is especially true for personal brands. Your brand, by definition, is unique to you. So the strategy that works for someone else might not work for you, and vice versa. Don’t be afraid to experiment and find your own path.

    Practical Implementation: Your Next Steps

    Alright, we’ve covered a lot of theory and framework. Let’s get concrete. Here’s what you should do next to start monetizing your personal brand, regardless of current audience size:

    Stage 1: Identify Your Transformation

    • Complete the Zero-to-One Exercise (list your transformations)
    • Choose one specific transformation to build your first product around
    • Write down exactly where you started (Point A) and where you are now (Point B)
    • Identify the key lessons, frameworks, or insights that enabled that transformation
    • Determine which eternal market this connects to

    Stage 2: Validate and Outline

    • Talk to 3-5 people who are currently at your “Point A” (before the transformation)
    • Ask them: What’s your biggest challenge? What have you already tried? What would success look like?
    • Use their language in your product positioning
    • Create a simple outline for your product (guide, course, or service)
    • Don’t overthink the structure – just brain dump everything you’d want to teach someone

    Stage 3: Build Version 1.0

    • Create your first product in its simplest form
    • For a guide: 20-30 pages of clear, actionable content
    • For a course: 5-10 video lessons (10-15 minutes each) or written modules
    • For a service: Clear description of what you’ll deliver, timeline, and process
    • Make it good enough to deliver real value, nothing more
    • Set a price that feels slightly uncomfortable but not absurd ($47-197 is a good starting range)

    Stage 4: Launch to Your Audience

    • Announce your product to your existing audience (email list, social media, wherever they are)
    • Explain the problem it solves and the transformation it enables
    • Share YOUR story of going from Point A to Point B
    • Make it easy to buy (easy-to-use checkout, remove all the unnecessary friction)
    • Set a deadline or limited spots to create gentle urgency
    • Follow up at least twice during the launch period

    That’s it. It might take just about thirty days from decision to first product launch.

    Lower Your Expectations

    Will you make $10,000? Probably not from your first launch. But you might make $500, or $1,000, or even $2,000 if you have an engaged audience and positioned well. More importantly, you’ll have proven to yourself that monetization is possible at your current size, and you’ll have feedback from real customers to improve version 2.0.

    Once you have one product launched and selling (even modestly), you can add another. Then another. You build your product ladder one step at a time, and each addition increases your overall revenue.

    Within 6-12 months of following this process, creators with just a few thousand followers often reach $1,000-3,000 per month in revenue. That’s $12,000-36,000 annually – meaningful money that can supplement or even replace a full-time income depending on your cost of living.

    And it all starts with launching version 1.0 of something simple.

    The Anti-Niche Strategy in Practice

    Let me bring this full circle with how the broad personal brand approach enables better monetization over time.

    When I started creating content online, I went extremely narrow. First, it was systems analysis – super specific, highly technical. Then I moved to software development, which was broader but still very defined. I built audiences in both niches.

    But here’s what I discovered: Staying in those narrow lanes felt suffocating after a while. My life isn’t only about systems analysis or coding. I’m also interested in business models, philosophy, personal development, psychology, science, cosmos, travel, and how these things interconnect through systems thinking.

    The narrow niches worked for getting initial traction. But they limited the kinds of products I could authentically create and the kinds of conversations I could have with my audience.

    Now, as I build a broader personal brand that encompasses business, development, philosophy, and lifestyle, I have far more product opportunities:

    • I can sell a course on business model analysis (wealth market)
    • I can offer coaching on building one-person businesses (wealth market) – of course, after I build one, not at this stage; otherwise, it would be a flop from a real impostor
    • I can create content about productivity and systems thinking (wealth/happiness intersection)
    • I can write about finding meaning and purpose (spirituality/happiness market)
    • I can share frameworks for making better decisions (applicable to all markets)

    Find The Connective Thread

    Each of these draws from different aspects of my knowledge and interests, but they’re all coherent under the umbrella of “systems thinking applied to life and business.” Someone might follow me initially for the business content, then stay for the philosophical perspectives, then buy a course on productivity.

    This wouldn’t be possible if I’d stayed narrowly focused on just web development or just systems analysis.

    The key is finding that connective tissue I mentioned earlier – the throughline that makes your diverse interests feel cohesive rather than scattered. For me it’s systems thinking. For you it might be optimization, creativity, psychology, storytelling, or something else entirely.

    Once you identify that thread, you can explore widely while maintaining brand coherence. And that exploration creates more opportunities for products, services, and income streams than any narrow niche could provide.

    The Compound Effect of Starting Now

    Here’s the final truth I want to leave you with: The best time to start monetizing was when you started creating content. The second best time is today.

    Every day you wait for that magical follower count – whether it’s 1,000 or 10,000 or 100,000 – is a day you’re not learning what works, not building your product ladder, not generating revenue, and not developing the business skills that matter more than audience size.

    The creators who succeed aren’t always the ones with the biggest audiences. They’re the ones who started selling early, learned from their mistakes quickly, iterated constantly, and built sustainable businesses rather than just large follower counts.

    Some of them have massive audiences now, sure. But many built those audiences after they’d already figured out monetization, using the revenue from their first customers to fund growth. The money came first, then the scale – not the other way around.

    You Already Have It

    You have everything you need right now:

    • A transformation you’ve undergone (your product)
    • Some people who trust you (your audience, however small)
    • Platforms to reach them (social media, email, content)
    • Tools to deliver value (courses, guides, services)
    • The only thing missing is the decision to start.

    So make it. Today, not tomorrow.

    Choose one transformation. Outline one simple product. Launch version 1.0 in the next 30 days. See what happens. Learn from the results. Iterate and improve.

    Six months from now, you could be earning your first $1,000 per month from your personal brand. Twelve months from now, maybe $3,000-5,000. Two years from now, potentially full-time income from work you love, serving people you chose to serve, on your own terms.

    Or you could still be waiting for 100,000 followers, convinced you need permission to start – permission that was never required and will never arrive because it doesn’t exist.

    The gates are open. They always were.

    The only question is: Will you walk through them?

    I’ll see you on the other side.

  • 5 Monetization Models That Work With Zero Followers (And Scale As You Grow) [Part 2]

    5 Monetization Models That Work With Zero Followers (And Scale As You Grow) [Part 2]

    In the previous article, we covered the first three monetization models that work with zero followers. This article continues the topic with two more models at your disposal.

    If you want to read the intro to the topic of how you don’t need 100K followers, please refer to the first chapter. And here, let’s dive right into it.

    Black and white portrait of Li Jin, symbolizing creator economy and small audience monetization

    Li Jin (Venture Capitalist and Passion Economy Expert):

    “I believe that creators need to amass only 100 True Fans – not 1,000 – paying them $1,000 a year, not $100. Today, creators can effectively make more money off fewer fans.

    Model 4: Direct Product Sales – Courses, Services, and Digital Products

    This is where things get really interesting, and where I think most creators should focus their early energy. Because creating and selling your own products or services gives you complete control over pricing, delivery, and profit margins.

    When you sell someone else’s product through affiliate marketing, you get a cut – often a good cut, but still a cut. When you sell advertising space, brands dictate terms and rates. But when you sell your own creation you keep everything. You set the price based on value delivered, not on what some platform algorithm decides you’re worth.

    The mental barrier most people face here is thinking, “But I don’t have anything to sell.” I’d argue you almost certainly do – you just haven’t recognized it yet.

    Let me share something powerful: Your transformation is your product. The journey you’ve already taken from Point A to Point B is exactly what someone else is trying to navigate right now. That knowledge gap – the difference between where you were and where you are now – is valuable. People will pay for shortcuts, frameworks, and guidance through terrain you’ve already mapped.

    Think about it this way: When you start building your personal brand or online presence, you face immediate challenges. How do I get my first 100 followers? Which platform should I focus on? What content actually works? These are real problems that demand solutions.

    Sell The Solution You Found

    Let’s say you figure it out. You experiment with different content formats, posting schedules, and engagement strategies. You test things, fail at some, succeed at others. Eventually, you crack the code enough to go from zero to 100 genuine followers who engage with your content.

    Congratulations – you now have your first product. You can create a guide: “How I Gained My First 100 Engaged Followers in [Platform] Starting from Absolute Zero.” Structure it as a step-by-step system. Include the tactics that worked, the mistakes you made, the timeline it took, and specific examples.

    Will this course command a $2,000 price tag? Probably not at first – though you’d be surprised what proper positioning can do. Maybe it’s a $29 course, or a $97 premium guide. But here’s the thing: You didn’t need 100,000 followers to create it. You needed the journey from 0 to 100, which you just completed. And now you can sell that knowledge to the next person starting from zero.

    This is the framework that unlocks everything. You’re always a few steps ahead of someone else in some dimension. That “few steps” is monetizable.

    Real-world example: Annie Wang, the vocal coach we mentioned in the first article of the series, built her entire business around this principle. She developed expertise in voice training, then packaged it into a 60-day program with course materials, one-on-one sessions, and group coaching. Her 3,000 Instagram followers provide more than enough demand to fill her programs at premium prices because the transformation she offers – improving your voice – is genuinely valuable to aspiring singers and speakers.

    My Own Example

    The beauty of digital products is their scalability without proportional work increase. Create the course once, sell it repeatedly. Yes, you’ll update and improve it based on feedback (your first version will be shit – accept that and launch anyway), but the core work is frontloaded.

    My own example: I started my journey as a content creator in a pretty scattered way. There’s too much information online, too many pieces of advice on how to do this and that – it overwhelmed me almost instantly. As a systems guy, I know that other people’s systems won’t work for me, therefore, I need to come up with my own.

    So I started creating content, writing articles, using AI to structure them properly, conduct research on the topics I was writing about, and repurpose content for different platforms. After several months of iterations, it finally felt like a solid algorithm, which is always the final goal when I create systems for myself.

    From that point, I was able to package this algorithm into a set of instructions combined with all the prompts and certain tools I use to create content for myself. It also implies the transformation principle I described here: from my point A – a scattered mind and inability to create and publish content online regularly – to point B, with a strict and solid system working like clockwork. So, check it out: AntiGhostWriter.

    I mention this as a pitch obviously, but also because it represents exactly what we’re talking about: I identified a problem I faced and that others in my audience faced (creating authentic content efficiently), I built a solution, and now I’m offering it to the people who need it. That’s the product creation cycle in a nutshell. Find a problem, solve it for yourself, package that solution for others.

    Beyond Courses

    The product you create doesn’t have to be a course. It could be:

    • Coaching or consulting services (one-on-one or group)
    • Templates or frameworks you’ve developed
    • Digital tools or resources (spreadsheets, checklists, databases)
    • Exclusive community access with direct interaction
    • Done-for-you services in your area of expertise

    The key is matching your skillset to a genuine need in your audience. And remember – your audience can be tiny. If you charge $500 for a coaching package and sell just two per month, that’s $12,000 per year. Sell to five clients monthly, and you’re at $30,000 annually. No massive following required, just deep expertise and the ability to deliver transformation.

    One more thing: Don’t wait until your product is “perfect” to launch. Your first version will be flawed – that’s not just okay, it’s expected. The iterative improvement cycle is where the real product magic happens. Launch something good enough, get real market feedback, improve based on actual customer needs rather than your assumptions. This is how every successful digital product evolves.

    Model 5: Membership and Patronage – Recurring Revenue From True Fans

    This is the model that most directly embodies Kevin Kelly’s “1,000 True Fans” concept and Li Jin’s “100 True Fans” update. Instead of selling products transactionally, you’re asking your most dedicated audience members to support you on an ongoing basis.

    Platforms like Patreon, Ko-fi, and Buy Me a Coffee have made this incredibly accessible. The premise is simple: Offer exclusive benefits to supporters who pay a monthly subscription. These benefits might include:

    • Behind-the-scenes content and work-in-progress updates
    • Early access to your public content
    • Exclusive articles, videos, or podcasts not available elsewhere
    • Direct communication (Discord access, Q&A sessions, office hours)
    • Input on future content or projects
    • Physical perks (merchandise, handwritten notes, etc.)

    The economics here can surprise you. According to recent Patreon data, the average pledge per patron has increased by 22% over two years, and there’s been a 21% increase in patrons paying over $100 per month to creators they love.

    This matters because it means you can generate meaningful income from a relatively small number of supporters. Let’s do some math:

    • 50 patrons at $10/month = $500/month ($6,000/year)
    • 100 patrons at $15/month = $1,500/month ($18,000/year)
    • 200 patrons at $25/month = $5,000/month ($60,000/year)

    That last scenario – a livable income for many people – requires just 200 dedicated fans willing to pay $25 monthly. Not 100,000 casual followers. Two hundred people who value your work enough to actively support it.

    Real example: Jalyn Baiden, whom we mentioned before, went full-time as a content creator with just 4,000 Instagram followers and 8,000 on TikTok. Beyond brand deals, creators like Jalyn often supplement income through Patreon or similar platforms. The combination of moderate brand sponsorship rates ($350-1,000 per post in her case) plus recurring support from a small percentage of highly engaged followers can easily add up to full-time income.

    Combine Different Models

    The membership model works especially well when combined with one or more of the previous models. You might have:

    • Free content on social media (audience building)
    • Email newsletter with basic tips (relationship building)
    • Affiliate recommendations (passive income)
    • Mid-tier digital products like courses (transaction income)
    • Premium membership tier (recurring income from superfans)

    This creates a natural funnel where people can engage with your work at whatever level matches their interest and budget. Most people consume free content. Some buy your course. A smaller group becomes monthly supporters. Each level monetizes appropriately for audience size and engagement depth.

    One crucial insight about membership models: You’re not selling access to content that’s otherwise impossible to find. You’re selling belonging, connection, and support. Your patrons aren’t just your regular customers – they’re fans who want to see you succeed and want to be part of your journey. This is why direct communication and community elements matter so much in membership tiers.

    When someone becomes a monthly supporter, they’re emotionally invested in your success in a way that one-time customers simply aren’t. They’ll promote your work, provide feedback, defend you in comments, and generally become ambassadors. This is the “true fan” dynamic in action.

    Platforms have made this easier than ever. Patreon handles all the payment processing, membership management, and content delivery. Ko-fi and Buy Me a Coffee offer even simpler options for one-time support or memberships. Stan Store (which I actually use for AntiGhostWriter and other offerings) combines product sales, memberships, and scheduling all in one creator-friendly platform.

    The barrier to entry is very low. You can set up a membership page in an hour. The hard part isn’t the technical setup anymore. But creating consistent value that makes people want to stay subscribed month after month is the real challenge here. But if you’re already creating content regularly, you’re already doing the work. Membership just adds a layer of exclusivity and direct connection for those who want more.

    The Diversification Principle

    Here’s something critical that ties all five models together: The most successful creators use multiple revenue streams simultaneously.

    Remember the statistic from the previous article (that’s where you also can find the first three models)? 66% of creators rely on a single income stream for most of their earnings, while the highest-earning creators typically have five or more revenue streams. That is the right strategy.

    Diversification protects you from platform changes, algorithm shifts, and market volatility.

    • If YouTube changes its ad policy, you still have your course sales.
    • If a brand cuts its influencer budget, you still have your Patreon supporters.
    • If affiliate commissions decrease, you still have your newsletter subscriptions.

    But beyond protection, diversification allows you to monetize different segments of your audience at appropriate levels. Some people will never pay for anything – they’ll consume your free content and that’s fine. Some will buy an affiliate recommendation. Others will purchase your course. A smaller group will become monthly members. Each segment contributes to your overall income without requiring everyone to engage in the same way.

    This is why you don’t need 100,000 followers to make this work. With proper diversification, you can generate sustainable income from a few thousand – or even a few hundred – highly engaged people distributed across multiple revenue streams.

    Let’s Do The Math

    Black and white portrait of Seth Godin, marketing thinker emphasizing trust and storytelling

    Seth Godin (Marketing guru and best-selling author):

    “Relentless pursuit of mass will make you boring, because mass means averageWhat’s the minimum number of people you would need to influence to make it worth the effort?

    Let’s imagine a realistic scenario for a creator with 2,000 total followers across platforms:

    • 10 Patreon supporters at $20/month = $200/month
    • One affiliate sale per week at $50 commission = $200/month
    • Two course sales per month at $150 = $300/month
    • Occasional brand deal (quarterly at $500) = ~$165/month average
    • Blog ad revenue = $100/month

    Total: $965/month or ~$11,580/year

    Not life-changing money, but absolutely meaningful supplemental income – from just 2,000 followers and a diversified approach. Scale that to 5,000 followers with better conversion, and you’re looking at $25,000-35,000 annually. At 10,000 engaged followers with optimized funnels as a full-time income becomes very realistic.

    The point is this: You don’t need to wait. You don’t need some massive audience milestone. You need to start implementing these models now, with whatever audience you have, and let them scale naturally as you grow.

    Starting Today, Not Tomorrow

    Look, I know this is a lot of information. Five different models, each with its own setup requirements and learning curve. It’s tempting to feel overwhelmed and default to “I’ll start when I have more followers.”

    Don’t.

    Pick one model – just one – and implement it this week. Not next month. This week.

    If you already have some content online, set up Google AdSense or another display ad network. It takes an hour.

    If you use tools or services you genuinely love, find their affiliate programs and start mentioning them in your content (just like I did in this one). You can do this today.

    If you have valuable knowledge from a transformation you’ve undergone, outline a simple guide or course (remember my AntiGhostWriter). And don’t perfect it at a launch point.

    If you have even 50 engaged followers, set up a Patreon with one basic tier. See if anyone joins.

    Ignite The Engine

    The hardest part is starting. Once you make that first dollar – even if it’s just $5 – everything changes. You prove to yourself that monetization is possible at your current size. That psychological shift is enormous.

    And then, as your audience grows (and it will, because you’re now focused on serving people rather than just chasing follower counts), your income grows proportionally. Ten followers become 100. $10/month becomes $100. $100 becomes $1,000. It scales naturally because you’ve built the infrastructure from the beginning.

    In the next article, we’ll get even more tactical. I’ll walk you through the exact framework for identifying what product or service you should create based on your unique knowledge and journey. We’ll talk about how to position it, price it, and promote it to an audience of any size. We’ll explore why broad personal brands often outperform narrow niches in the long run, and how to structure your content strategy accordingly.

    But for now, take action on one model. Just one. Choose the path that feels most aligned with where you are right now, and take the first concrete step today.

    Because the truth is, you already have everything you need to start earning online. You just need to stop waiting for permission from some arbitrary follower count that was never real in the first place.

  • The $100K Product in Your Head: Building a Personal Brand Business

    The $100K Product in Your Head: Building a Personal Brand Business

    The Journey Begins Where You Are

    Let me share something important right away – I’m not a successful personal brand guru. I don’t have millions of followers, and I haven’t built a massive online business yet. I’m in the process of building my own personal brand right now, just like many of you might be thinking about doing.

    What I am doing is gathering knowledge, testing approaches, and documenting what I learn along the way. This article is a synthesis of the information I’ve collected so far about building a personal brand business. I’m sharing it because I believe in building in public – showing my work as it happens, not just the finished product.

    The core concept we’re exploring today is what I call “the $100,000 product in your head.” This is a business model centered on monetizing the knowledge, skills, and experience you already possess – things no one can take away from you. It’s about creating a business built entirely around your personal brand, where you become the product people want to learn from.

    A personal brand business gives you independence. You don’t need employees, investors, or even physical products. You just need an internet connection and the courage to share what you know. Plus, when built correctly, a personal brand creates a unique position in the market that isn’t easily replicated by competitors.

    In this series of articles, I’ll share what I’m learning about building such a business. Today, we’ll focus on the fundamentals – what a personal brand business is, how content creates your audience, and how to identify your unique value. In future articles, we’ll explore digital product creation and monetization strategies.

    Remember, I’m figuring this out alongside you. So this is a practical knowledge from someone in the trenches, learning and applying these ideas in real time.

    The One-Person Brand: A Business Model for the Digital Age

    A personal brand business, or one-person brand, is a business model where you build your brand around content you publish online. This content attracts people with interests similar to yours, who connect with your unique perspective and experiences.

    The core idea is simple: you create content that resonates with people, build an audience around that content, and then monetize by creating products that help that audience solve specific problems or achieve specific goals.

    What makes this model so powerful? First, it’s accessible to virtually anyone with internet access. You don’t need special credentials, startup capital, or anyone’s permission. Second, it allows you to build a business around your authentic self – your interests, experiences, and unique voice.

    I’m particularly drawn to this model because it leverages what you already have. As I wrote in a previous article about personal branding, you are the unique foundation for this type of business. No one else has your exact combination of experiences, knowledge, and perspective.

    This uniqueness creates a natural moat around your business. According to research from DSMN8, 74% of Americans are more likely to trust someone with an established personal brand over a corporate entity. This trust translates directly into purchasing decisions – 67% of consumers report they would spend more money with a company whose founder’s values align with their own.

    The data is clear: personal brands have power in today’s economy. The creator economy – individuals monetizing their expertise online – was valued at around $250 billion in 2023 and is expected to more than double by 2027. That’s a massive market opportunity.

    However, I want to be realistic here. While the opportunity exists, success isn’t guaranteed. Studies show only about 4% of creators earn over $100,000 annually, making such professional incomes “the exception, not the rule.” Building a personal brand takes time, consistent effort, and strategic thinking.

    But this doesn’t mean you shouldn’t try. Many successful personal brands started small and grew steadily over time. The key is starting the journey with realistic expectations and a commitment to providing genuine value to your audience.

    Content as Your Growth Engine

    At the heart of any personal brand business is content. Content is how people discover you, how they learn to trust you, and ultimately, how they decide whether to buy from you.

    That content creation serves multiple purposes. It helps to clarify thinking, build an audience, and test ideas before investing heavily in product development. It’s both marketing and market research wrapped into one activity.

    Your content strategy should include both tools for growth and tools for depth. Growth tools are platforms like social media that help you expand your reach. Depth tools are long-form formats like blogs, newsletters, or extended videos where you can explore ideas more thoroughly.

    I’m focusing on both approaches in my own brand-building efforts. Short-form content helps me connect with new people, while longer articles like this one allow me to demonstrate expertise and build deeper relationships with you guys (I hope at least).

    The audience you attract through content becomes the foundation of your business. These are people who resonate with your ideas and approach. Some portion of them will have goals similar to yours, which creates natural opportunities for monetization.

    Choose consistency over perfection

    Black-and-white headshot of Joe Pulizzi, founder of Content Marketing Institute and personal branding advocate

    This audience-first approach is supported by marketing experts. Joe Pulizzi, founder of the Content Marketing Institute, emphasizes that

    “the absolute best way to start and grow a business today is not by launching or pushing products, but by creating a system to attract, build, and retain an audience.”

    Research confirms this strategy works. Content marketing generates three times more leads than traditional advertising while costing 62% less. Email marketing – a common channel for personal brands to monetize their audience – has an average ROI of 38:1 ($38 earned for every $1 spent).

    When building your content strategy, focus on consistency over perfection. You don’t need to produce masterpieces – you need to show up regularly with valuable insights that help your audience. As you create content, you’ll naturally improve, and your audience will grow with you.

    The beautiful thing about this approach is that your content becomes a business asset. Everything you create adds to your body of work and continues attracting new people to your brand. Unlike traditional advertising that stops working when you stop paying, content can continue working for you for years.

    I’m currently implementing this strategy myself – building my audience through consistent content. This patience is difficult but essential; successful personal brands typically spend months or even years creating value before introducing paid offerings, although I already have my digital products.

    Finding Your Unique Value Proposition

    How do you determine what content to create and what products to offer? This is where the concept of being your own target audience becomes incredibly powerful.

    One of the most valuable insights I’ve gathered is to look at your own journey as a roadmap. Consider what knowledge or skills you’ve acquired that others might find valuable. Ask yourself: “What transformation have I experienced? What did I learn along the way?”

    The key is identifying the gap between who you were before and who you are now. What knowledge helped you bridge that gap? What resources did you wish existed when you were starting? These questions point toward potential products.

    This approach simplifies the often complex process of identifying market needs. Instead of guessing what others might want, you reflect on what would have helped your past self. If others are on a similar journey, they’ll likely value the same solutions.

    A powerful way to communicate this value is through the transformation principle – showing the before and after states. Fitness influencers use this effectively with before/after photos, but it works in any field. Transformation marketing creates an 83% increase in engagement according to one analysis by ShapeScale. When people see evidence of change, they’re naturally drawn to learn how it happened.

    Structure your current knowledge

    You don’t need to be the world’s foremost expert in your field to provide value. You only need to be a few steps ahead of your audience. As I’m finding in my own journey, being transparent about still learning actually increases authenticity and trust. The “I’m figuring this out too” approach can be more relatable than presenting yourself as an infallible guru. I hope this message translates through my content clearly, but I still get those comments here and there that I position myself as a “business guru,” which is quite funny to read.

    Let me share a practical exercise you can use to identify your value: Create three columns on a piece of paper.

    • In the first, list areas where you’ve achieved some level of success or transformation.
    • In the second, note what specific knowledge or skills helped you get there.
    • In the third, write down what format might best deliver this value to others (course, ebook, coaching, etc.).

    For example, in my case, I’ve developed methods for structuring and organizing content creation using AI. This system helps me produce consistent, high-quality content more efficiently. I realized this could be valuable to others struggling with content organization, so I’m developing it as one of my first products: you can check it out here.

    Another approach is to pay attention to questions people frequently ask you. What do friends, colleagues, or followers want to know about your expertise? These questions often reveal product opportunities.

    Remember that your first product doesn’t have to be revolutionary or entirely unique. Many successful digital products simply organize existing knowledge in a more accessible format. People pay for convenience, structure, and results – not just raw information.

    Black and white portrait of Seth Godin, marketing thinker emphasizing trust and storytelling

    As marketing expert Seth Godin says,

    “People do not buy goods and services. They buy relations, stories, and magic.”

    Your personal story of transformation becomes part of what makes your offerings compelling, even in a crowded marketplace.

    Next Steps on the Personal Brand Journey

    Building a personal brand business is a marathon, not a sprint. Start by creating content consistently, focusing on topics where you have genuine insight or experience. This content builds your audience while helping you refine your voice and discover what resonates.

    As you build, remember that authenticity trumps perfection. Share your real journey, including the struggles and learning moments. This transparency creates connection and distinguishes you from polished corporate brands.

    The foundation we’ve covered today – understanding the personal brand model, creating valuable content, and identifying your unique value – sets the stage for monetization through digital products.

    In the next article in this series, we’ll explore how to create digital products based on your expertise. I’ll share the different types of digital products you can create, how to package your knowledge effectively, and strategies for ensuring your products deliver real transformation.

    For now, I encourage you to begin inventorying your knowledge and experiences. What have you learned that others would find valuable? What transformation have you undergone that you could help others achieve? Start creating content around these topics, and you’ll be taking the first steps toward building your own personal brand business.

    Remember, the $100,000 product might already exist in your head – you just need to recognize it and share it with the world. I’m on this journey too, and I’ll continue sharing what I learn along the way.

  • Monetizing Your One-Person Business: From Audience to Income

    Monetizing Your One-Person Business: From Audience to Income

    You’ve done the hard part. You’ve started creating content. You’ve begun building an audience. People are paying attention to what you have to say.

    Now comes the question that stops many creators in their tracks: How do I turn this attention into actual income?

    It’s a critical question because attention without monetization isn’t a business yet, but a time-consuming hobby. And while hobbies are wonderful, they don’t fund your lifestyle, pay your bills, or create the freedom you’re seeking.

    But the monetization potential of a personal brand has never been greater. Consider this: in 2022 alone, 116,803 one-person businesses generated over $1 million in revenue. That’s more than double the number from the previous year. I know these are outdated stats, and I couldn’t find the recent ones, but given the rise of content creation in general, we can assume it’s significantly larger and will continue to grow in 2025.

    Even more encouraging is that these weren’t celebrities or trust fund kids with massive advantages. They were ordinary people who built audiences around their knowledge and perspectives, then converted that attention into income through strategic monetization.

    The path from audience to income is available for all of us. It’s a systematic process that anyone can implement with the right approach.

    In this article, I’ll show you exactly how to monetize your personal brand through multiple revenue streams, build products that sell themselves, and gradually transform your business income into lasting wealth through smart investments.

    I’ll also address the common challenges creators face during monetization – particularly how to maintain consistent content production while developing products.

    Because the ultimate goal isn’t just to make money from your content. It’s to build a complete “freedom machine” – a business that generates income on your terms, evolves with your interests, and eventually creates the financial independence that lets you live life exactly as you choose.

    Beyond The Influencer Trap (Why Most Creators Stay Broke)

    Let’s start by addressing the biggest mistake most content creators make: building their entire business model around platform-dependent revenue.

    You see this everywhere – YouTubers relying solely on ad revenue, Instagrammers chasing brand deals, TikTokers banking on the creator fund. They’ve fallen into the influencer trap – becoming entirely dependent on platforms they don’t control.

    This approach has several critical flaws:

    First, platform-based monetization is notoriously unreliable. Tomorrow, they can change the monetization conditions or the percentage of deductions to you, and your business can change overnight. We’ve seen this happen repeatedly – algorithm changes decimating reach, monetization policies shifting without warning, entire accounts being banned for minor infractions.

    Second, platform revenue typically pays far less than direct monetization. Ad revenue and platform-specific creator funds are designed to benefit the platform first, with creators receiving pennies on the dollar of the actual value they create.

    Third, and perhaps most importantly, this model creates no real business assets. You’re building someone else’s platform rather than your own.

    M.J. DeMarco addresses this exact issue in his books. He warns against building businesses that are completely dependent on external platforms or market whims. Instead, he advocates for creating businesses where you maintain control of the key variables – your audience relationship, your products, and your distribution.

    This is why the most successful one-person businesses move beyond the influencer model to become true business owners with products, services, and direct customer relationships.

    Look at examples like:

    • Justin Welsh, who built a content and coaching business generating $7 million in revenue with approximately 90% profit margins
    • Dakota Robertson, who started as a ghostwriter making $50,000 monthly, then launched a cohort-based course that earned $280,000 in just two weeks
    • Dan Koe, who developed online courses, newsletters, and a community into a $2.6 million per year business

    What separates these creators from struggling influencers is their business model. They used content to build an audience, but they didn’t stop there. They created products that solved specific problems for their audiences, established direct relationships with customers, and built multiple revenue streams they controlled.

    This approach requires a mindset shift. Instead of viewing yourself as a content creator who occasionally sells something, start seeing yourself as a business owner who uses content as your marketing.

    The psychology behind monetization is also critical to understand. People don’t pay for content – they pay for solutions to problems, transformations they desire, and experiences they value. When you frame your offerings in these terms rather than just as “stuff I made,” your conversion rates improve.

    Another powerful approach unique to personal brands is building in public. This means sharing your product development process transparently with your audience, involving them in decisions, and creating anticipation for the launch.

    The most sustainable one-person businesses also evolve their offerings as their interests and expertise change. Because you’ve built a brand around your whole personality rather than just one skill or topic, you have the flexibility to introduce new products that align with your evolving passions.

    This adaptability is something traditional businesses can rarely match. As Naval Ravikant notes, the internet enables “8 billion monopolies” – each person can carve out a unique market position based on their specific combination of interests and perspectives. This uniqueness creates a moat against competition that allows you to evolve your business over time without losing your audience.

    Your Revenue Machine Blueprint

    Now let’s get tactical. Here’s seven-levels system for turning your audience into a sustainable, scalable income:

    Level 1: Identify Value Gaps

    The foundation of successful monetization is identifying specific problems your audience faces that you’re uniquely positioned to solve.

    These value gaps might be:

    • Knowledge gaps (things they need to learn)
    • Process gaps (systems they need to implement)
    • Tool gaps (resources they need to access)
    • Community gaps (connections they want to make)
    • Experience gaps (transformations they desire)

    The key is listening carefully to your audience rather than assuming you know what they need. Pay attention to:

    • Questions they repeatedly ask
    • Challenges they frequently mention
    • Solutions they’re already paying for
    • Results they explicitly want to achieve

    My ANTIghostwriter system came directly from identifying a value gap among creators like me – non-native English speakers who struggled to produce consistent, high-quality content that maintained their authentic voice. I built the solution for myself first, since I am my target audience, and I know that others like me face the same challenge.

    When you solve a real problem that people care about solving, monetization becomes natural rather than forced.

    Level 2: Develop Service Offerings

    Services provide higher revenue per customer and allow you to work more closely with clients who need personalized solutions.

    Effective service models include:

    Consulting: One-on-one or team-based advisory services where you apply your expertise to client-specific challenges.

    Coaching: Structured guidance to help clients achieve specific outcomes through ongoing support and accountability.

    Done-for-You Solutions: Implementing your expertise directly for clients who want results without doing the work themselves.

    Limited-Seat Programs: High-touch group experiences with capped enrollment to maintain quality.

    Services often provide your highest revenue streams, especially when you’re starting out. They also give you deep insights into customer needs that can inform future product development.

    I’ve used this approach myself, starting with web development services through my agency before creating productized offerings. The direct client work revealed exactly what problems most needed solving, making product development much more targeted.

    Level 3: Create Digital Products

    Digital products offer the highest margins and scalability in a one-person business. Once created, they can be sold repeatedly with minimal additional cost.

    Effective digital products include:

    Information Products: Courses, ebooks, guides, and templates that transfer your knowledge to customers. These work best when focused on specific outcomes rather than general information.

    For example, instead of a general “how to write better” course, ANTIghostwriter offers a complete system that solves a specific problem: how to create authentic, high-quality content at scale across multiple formats. Even more specific: with this system I create 2 long-form articles, 2 threads, 60 short-form posts, 12 short video scripts, and SEO-elements for my articles every single week.

    Software Tools: If you have technical skills or can partner with developers, software products provide recurring revenue through subscriptions. These might be apps, plugins, templates, or other digital tools that solve specific problems.

    Membership Content: Ongoing access to premium content, updates, and resources. This creates predictable recurring revenue while allowing you to develop a deeper relationship with customers.

    When developing digital products, focus on tangible outcomes rather than features. People buy results, not specifications. A well-positioned digital product answers the question: “What will my life/business look like after using this?”

    Level 4: Build Recurring Revenue

    One-time sales create a constant need for new customers. Recurring revenue creates stability and predictability in your business.

    Effective recurring revenue models include:

    Subscriptions: Ongoing access to content, tools, or services for a monthly or annual fee.

    Memberships: Community-based offerings where people pay for connection and ongoing learning.

    Retainers: Service arrangements where clients pay monthly for access to your expertise. That’s what I use for my client’s work in the development agency.

    License Renewals: Annual fees for continued access to your products or intellectual property.

    The key to successful recurring revenue is continuous value delivery. People stay subscribed when they regularly receive benefits worth more than they’re paying. (I bet you still subscribed to ChatGPT. Me too.)

    Level 5: Leverage Automation

    The beauty of a one-person business is maintaining control without needing employees. Automation makes this possible by handling routine tasks while you focus on high-value activities.

    Key automation opportunities include:

    Sales Processes: AI-agents, email sequences, and checkout systems that sell while you sleep.

    Content Distribution: Scheduled posting and cross-platform sharing to maintain presence without constant manual work.

    Customer Onboarding: Systematic processes to welcome and orient new customers without your direct involvement.

    Email Marketing: Segmented, triggered communications that nurture prospects and serve customers automatically.

    Content Creation Support: AI tools help you produce consistent content efficiently without sacrificing quality.

    For example, my ANTIghostwriter system allows you to transform one article into dozens of social media posts, video scripts, and other formats, maintaining your authentic voice while dramatically reducing production time with AI tools.

    The goal isn’t to remove the human element entirely – your unique perspective remains essential. It’s to handle repetitive tasks systematically so you can focus on creating value only you can provide.

    Level 6: Diversify Income Streams

    Relying on a single revenue source creates vulnerability. Diversification creates stability and opens new growth opportunities.

    A well-diversified one-person business might include:

    • A flagship digital course
    • A monthly membership community
    • Limited consulting slots
    • Affiliate partnerships with complementary products
    • Speaking engagements or workshops
    • Licensed intellectual property
    • Software tool that helps audience

    Each stream serves different customer needs while creating multiple paths to profitability. If one stream underperforms, others can compensate while you adjust.

    This approach also lets you meet customers at different price points and commitment levels, creating a natural ascension path from low-cost products to premium offerings.

    Level 7: Convert Income to Assets

    The ultimate goal isn’t just to generate business income but to build lasting wealth through strategic investments.

    Once your business generates consistent profits, allocate a percentage to building assets that provide passive income:

    Dividend Stocks: Companies that share profits with shareholders through regular payments.

    Index Funds: Diversified investments that track market segments with minimal fees.

    Real Estate: Properties that generate rental income and potential appreciation.

    Business Investments: Stakes in other companies that leverage your expertise but not your time.

    This creates a virtuous cycle: your personal brand generates business income, which you partially invest in assets, which generate passive income, which reduces your dependence on active work, which gives you more freedom to evolve your business based on your interests rather than financial necessity.

    As Warren Buffett wisely advised,

    “Never depend on a single income. Make investment to create a second source.”

    Your one-person business becomes the machine that powers not just your current income but your long-term financial independence.

    When implementing this seven-level system, remember that monetization is iterative. You’ll refine your offerings based on market feedback, develop new products as you identify additional value gaps, and gradually build a portfolio of income streams that work together.

    The key is starting with value first, then finding the right business model to deliver that value profitably. When you solve real problems that matter to your audience, selling becomes an extension of serving rather than a separate activity.

    The Ultimate Freedom Machine

    We began this three-part series by exploring why the conventional employment path is increasingly fragile in the age of AI and automation. We then examined how to build a personal brand and audience through authentic content creation. Now we’ve completed the picture by showing how to transform that audience into sustainable income.

    Together, these elements create you ultimate freedom machine – a one-person business that gives you:

    Economic Freedom: Income that you control, without the ceiling imposed by traditional employment.

    Creative Freedom: The ability to evolve your business as your interests and expertise change.

    Location Freedom: Work that travels with you, enabling the digital nomad lifestyle if you choose it.

    Time Freedom: Through automation and systems, the ability to generate income without trading hours for dollars.

    This freedom is being realized by thousands of solo entrepreneurs who’ve recognized that today’s digital economy rewards individuals who create unique value and build direct audience relationships.

    As Naval Ravikant observes,

    “You can escape competition through authenticity when you realize that no one can compete with you on being you.”

    Your personal brand, based on your unique combination of experiences, knowledge, and perspectives, creates a moat that no competitor can cross.

    Building this freedom machine takes time and consistent effort. It requires creating valuable content, building genuine audience relationships, and developing products that solve real problems. But unlike the traditional career path, every hour you invest builds equity in your own business rather than someone else’s.

    The tools to support this journey have never been more accessible. Platforms for reaching audiences, systems for creating products, and automation to handle routine tasks are all readily available at minimal cost or even for free.

    For creators struggling with the content demands of building and monetizing a personal brand, my ANTIghostwriter system offers a powerful solution. It helps you transform your authentic ideas into a complete content ecosystem – from in-depth articles to social media posts to video scripts – while maintaining your unique voice and saving countless hours. So check it out: https://stan.store/anticodeguy/p/antighostwriter.

    But whether you use specialized tools or build your systems from scratch, the fundamental approach remains the same: create authentic value, build direct audience relationships, and offer solutions to problems people care about solving.

    This three-part blueprint – escaping employment limitations, building your personal brand, and creating multiple revenue streams – provides the roadmap to building a business that’s truly yours. A business that can’t be automated away, outsourced, or rendered obsolete. A business that evolves with you rather than constraining you.

    In a world where traditional employment grows increasingly precarious, taking ownership of your economic destiny is becoming a necessity. The question isn’t whether you can afford to build a one-person business. It’s whether you can afford not to.

    The path is clear.

    The tools are available.

    The market is ready.

    All that remains is for you to take the first step – or if you’ve already begun, to implement the systems that will take your one-person business to the next level.

    The freedom you’ve always wanted isn’t just possible. With the right approach, it’s inevitable.

    So, go get it.

  • Building Your One-Person Business: The Content Creator’s Blueprint

    Building Your One-Person Business: The Content Creator’s Blueprint

    You’ve been consuming content your entire life. Scrolling through feeds, watching videos, reading newsletters. Always on the receiving end.

    It’s time to flip the script. To transform from consumer to creator (despite the fact that you may hate this word).

    This shift is a fundamental change in how you participate in the digital economy. And the numbers back it up: the creator economy now involves approximately 50 million people worldwide creating content for an audience of 5 billion social media users.

    But here’s what’s truly mind-blowing: even ordinary people with no special credentials are building extraordinary audiences and businesses. People who, just months or years ago, were complete unknowns are now earning five, six, or even seven figures from their personal brands.

    I’m not talking about celebrities or influencers with perfect lives. I’m talking about regular people who simply decided to start sharing what they know, what they’re learning, and what they’re passionate about.

    You have unique knowledge, experiences, and perspectives that others would find valuable. The question isn’t whether you have something worth sharing – you absolutely do. The question is how to package and distribute it effectively.

    In this article, I’ll show you exactly how to build a personal brand that attracts an audience, creates opportunities, and lays the foundation for your one-person business. You’ll learn how to create content that resonates, distribute it for maximum impact, and build the systems that make it sustainable.

    And if you’ve been holding back because content creation feels overwhelming, I’ll show you how tools like my ANTIghostwriter system can help you create authentic content at scale without sacrificing your unique voice.

    Because the truth is, your voice matters. Your ideas deserve to be heard. And there’s an audience out there waiting to connect with you – if you know how to reach them.

    Why Broad Personal Brands Win in the Digital Economy

    Before the industrial revolution, most people were entrepreneurs. They were craftspeople who specialized in specific trades – blacksmiths, bakers, tailors – passing their knowledge from generation to generation.

    Medieval marketplace with artisans and traders symbolizing traditional one-person businesses

    These craftspeople weren’t just doing jobs; they were living their calling. Their work was an extension of their identity. “Smith” wasn’t just a profession – it became a family name, a legacy.

    Today’s content creators and one-person businesses represent a return to this tradition of craftsmanship – but with a crucial difference. Instead of being limited to your local village, you can now reach the entire world.

    This global reach changes everything about how you should approach building your personal brand.

    One of the most common pieces of advice you’ll hear is to “niche down” – to focus on one narrow topic and become the go-to expert in that specific area. If you’re a blacksmith, just talk about blacksmithing on YouTube.

    This approach can work. It does work for many people. But I want to suggest something different – something that I believe creates a more sustainable, fulfilling, and adaptable business in the long run.

    Instead of niching down, build your brand around your entire personality and the full range of your interests.

    Why? Because you’re a multi-dimensional human being with diverse passions, and pretending otherwise is not only inauthentic but also limits your potential reach and sustainability.

    Think about it: Do you know anyone who has exactly one interest in life? Even people who are deeply passionate about one field still have other aspects to their lives. They eat food, they travel, they have hobbies, they care about relationships or fitness or philosophy.

    I’m in tech by profession. I’ve spent years as a systems analyst, project manager, and team leader in IT companies. I run a web development agency. But I’m also passionate about philosophy, psychology, astronomy, ancient civilizations, cinema, and gaming. And I write about all of these topics.

    Does this confuse my audience? Does this confuse you? I don’t think so. Because real people have multiple interests too. By sharing my diverse passions, I attract different groups of people who might initially connect with me on one topic but then discover they share my other interests as well.

    As Naval Ravikant observes,

    “The internet enables 8 billion monopolies”

    – meaning each person can carve out a unique market position based on their specific combination of interests, experiences, and perspectives. No one else has your exact mix of knowledge and personality. That’s your moat against competition.

    This approach also protects you from burnout. If you’re only creating content about one narrow topic, you’ll eventually exhaust your ideas or lose interest. But when you can pivot between different passions, you stay energized and inspired.

    It makes your business more adaptable too. If market conditions change or one topic becomes less relevant, you’re not starting from zero – you already have audience relationships built around your other interests.

    The key difference between this approach and the “influencer” model is ownership and independence. Many influencers build their entire businesses on platforms they don’t control, monetizing through ads or sponsorships controlled by the platform.

    This is incredibly risky. It depends on the will of the platform itself. Tomorrow they can change the monetization conditions or the percentage of deductions to you, and your business can change overnight. It can become better, but it can also become much worse.

    We’ve all seen creators lose their livelihoods overnight due to algorithm changes, account bans, or platform pivots. Your business is too important to build on such a fragile foundation.

    Instead, use platforms for visibility while building assets you control – your email list, your website, your direct customer relationships, and your products. This gives you independence from any single platform while still leveraging their reach.

    The most successful personal brands today focus on creating three types of content:

    1. Educational content that teaches valuable skills or knowledge
    2. Entertainment content that engages and delights
    3. Motivational content that inspires action

    I have an article in my newsletter where I cover these content types in details, highly recommend you to check out: https://anticodeguy.com/articles/the-three-content-categories-how-to-attract-an-audience-that-buys/.

    By mixing these three types based on your authentic interests, you create a content ecosystem that attracts different people for different reasons but keeps them engaged through your unique perspective.

    This is exactly what people like Justin Welsh, Dakota Robertson, and Dan Koe have done. They didn’t start as celebrities. They were ordinary people who consistently shared valuable content from their unique perspectives, gradually building audiences that trusted them, and then creating products those audiences wanted.

    They prove that the path from anonymity to authority is available to anyone willing to put in the work – including you.

    6 Pillars to Build Your Audience

    Building an audience isn’t about luck or overnight viral success. It’s about implementing a systematic approach that consistently delivers value and gradually builds trust. Here’s the exact blueprint to follow:

    1: Find Your Authentic Voice

    The foundation of any successful personal brand is authenticity. In a world of AI-generated content and copycat creators, your unique human perspective is your greatest differentiator.

    This doesn’t mean you need to share every detail of your personal life. It means developing a clear point of view and communicating in a way that feels natural to you.

    To find your authentic voice:

    • Identify your core values and beliefs about your field
    • Determine what perspectives you bring that others might not
    • Study creators you admire, but focus on why their approach works rather than copying their style
    • Experiment with different formats to find what feels most comfortable

    When I first started creating content, I tried to write exclusively about web development because that’s my professional background. But I quickly realized I was forcing myself to stay in that box, and the content felt strained and inauthentic.

    Once I allowed myself to write about my full range of interests – from technology to philosophy to travel – my content flowed naturally. I found myself in a state of flow rather than struggling to produce each piece.

    2: Choose Your Content Mix

    Content comes in many formats, each with its own strengths and audience preferences. The key is finding the right mix that:

    1. Plays to your natural strengths
    2. Reaches your target audience where they already are
    3. Creates a sustainable workflow you can maintain consistently

    Your content strategy should include:

    Cornerstone Content: These are in-depth pieces (like articles, newsletters, or long-form videos) that showcase your expertise and provide substantial value. They serve as the foundation of your content ecosystem.

    Distribution Content: Shorter-form content (social media posts, clips, threads) that reaches new audiences and directs them toward your cornerstone content.

    Community Content: Interactive elements (polls, questions, live sessions) that foster engagement and build relationships with your audience.

    The beauty of this approach is that you don’t need to create everything from scratch. One cornerstone piece can be repurposed into multiple distribution formats.

    After months of iterations and refining my content creation approach, I packed it into the ANTIghostwriter system https://stan.store/anticodeguy/p/antighostwriter, which allows me every week to transform my raw article drafts into:

    • 2 newsletters
    • 2 X threads
    • 60+ social media posts in various formats
    • 12+ short video scripts
    • SEO-elements for the articles

    This content ecosystem approach ensures maximum reach with minimum additional effort.

    3: Build Distribution Channels

    Having great content means nothing if no one sees it. Distribution is often the difference between obscurity and recognition.

    The key principles for effective distribution:

    Platform Diversity: Never rely on a single platform. Algorithms change, platforms rise and fall. Build presence across multiple channels to diversify your reach.

    Platform-Native Content: Each platform has its own culture and format preferences. Adapt your content to fit naturally in each environment.

    Consistency Over Perfection: Regular posting schedules build audience expectations and help algorithms favor your content. It’s better to publish consistently at 80% quality than sporadically at 100% (this changes after you gain a real following).

    Strategic Cross-Promotion: Guide followers from one platform to another, gradually moving them toward channels you fully control (like your email list).

    For language considerations, think global from the start. I chose to create content in English despite it not being my native language because it gives me access to a much larger potential audience. AI can help bridge language gaps.

    4: Create Consistent Value

    The single biggest predictor of success in building an audience is consistency. It’s not about going viral once – it’s about showing up regularly with valuable content over an extended period.

    The challenge for most creators isn’t knowing what to create – it’s producing enough content consistently without burning out.

    This is where having a systematic approach to content creation becomes essential:

    1. Idea Capture: Develop a habit of recording ideas whenever inspiration strikes (I use voice notes while walking)
    2. Content Batching: Set aside dedicated time to produce multiple pieces at once
    3. Editorial Calendar: Plan your content in advance to eliminate daily decision fatigue
    4. Template Creation: Develop reusable formats that speed up production
    5. Tool Leverage: Use appropriate tools to amplify your productivity

    My ANTIghostwriter system was born from my own struggle as a non-native English speaker trying to consistently produce high-quality content at scale. It allows me to capture my authentic thoughts and ideas, then transform them into polished content across multiple formats – all while preserving my unique voice and perspective.

    The system handles the structure, grammar, and formatting while keeping my original ideas and stories intact, making it possible to produce weeks worth of content in a single session.

    5: Engage Your Community

    Content creation is only half the equation. The other half is community building through meaningful engagement.

    Engagement isn’t just about collecting likes or followers – it’s about building genuine relationships with the people who consume your content. This means:

    • Responding thoughtfully to comments and messages
    • Asking questions that invite participation
    • Highlighting and celebrating community members
    • Creating opportunities for deeper connection

    The most successful personal brands don’t view their audiences as passive consumers – they see them as active community members. They create in public, share their processes, admit mistakes, and bring people along on their journey.

    This approach not only builds stronger loyalty but also provides invaluable feedback that helps you improve your content and offerings over time.

    6: Own Your Audience

    This is perhaps the most critical step in building a sustainable one-person business: converting platform followers into direct connections you control.

    Social media platforms are rented land. Email lists, customer databases, and community platforms are owned property. Your business strategy should focus on gradually moving people from the former to the latter.

    Practical ways to own your audience:

    • Create compelling lead magnets that solve specific problems
    • Develop a regular newsletter that provides exclusive value
    • Build community spaces where deeper discussions can happen
    • Offer products or services that create direct customer relationships

    When you own your audience relationships, you’re no longer at the mercy of platform algorithms or policy changes. You have a business asset that can weather any storm and evolve with changing market conditions.

    This doesn’t mean abandoning social platforms – they remain valuable for discovery and reach. But they should be the beginning of the relationship, not the entire relationship.

    By implementing these six principles consistently, you’ll gradually build an audience of people who not only consume your content but trust your perspective and value your unique contribution. This audience becomes the foundation upon which you can build multiple revenue streams.

    And remember, this will not be quick and overnight success story. The most sustainable audience growth happens gradually, through consistent value delivery over time.

    From Anonymous to Authority

    Think about where you are right now. Perhaps you’re scrolling through social media, consuming other people’s content. Maybe you have ideas and perspectives to share, but you haven’t found the confidence or system to share them consistently.

    Now imagine a different reality. One where you’re the creator, not just the consumer. Where your inbox contains messages from people thanking you for how your content has helped them. Where opportunities come to you because people recognize the value you provide.

    This transformation from anonymous consumer to recognized authority is the result of consistently implementing the system I’ve outlined in this article.

    It starts with embracing your authentic self – including all your diverse interests and perspectives – rather than trying to fit yourself into a narrow niche. It continues with creating valuable content consistently and distributing it strategically across multiple platforms. And it culminates in building direct relationships with your audience that aren’t dependent on any third-party platform.

    For those who find the content creation process overwhelming, my system ANTIghostwriter can help bridge the gap. It allows you to focus on your unique ideas and perspectives while handling the structure, formatting, and distribution mechanics that often become bottlenecks. So check it out: https://stan.store/anticodeguy/p/antighostwriter.

    But tools are just accelerators – they can’t replace the fundamental work of showing up consistently with valuable insights and authentic engagement.

    In the next article in this series, I’ll show you exactly how to monetize the audience you build – turning attention into income through multiple revenue streams. We’ll explore different business models, pricing strategies, and scaling approaches that allow a one-person business to generate extraordinary income without adding employees or complexity.

    The journey from anonymous to authority isn’t easy, but it’s tremendously rewarding. Not just financially, but in the impact you can have and the freedom you can create.

    Every expert you admire started as a beginner. Every authority was once unknown. The difference is the decision to start creating and the discipline to continue consistently.

    Your audience is out there waiting to hear what only you can share. The only question is: when will you start building the bridge that connects them to you?

  • The One-Person Business: Escape The AI Apocalypse

    The One-Person Business: Escape The AI Apocalypse

    The world is witnessing the beginning of another revolution – the AI revolution. It’s silently eliminating jobs at an unprecedented rate. But not just any jobs – intellectual ones. The kind we thought were safe.

    According to Goldman Sachs analysis, AI could automate and replace 300 million full-time jobs in the coming decade. And AI pioneer Kai-Fu Lee predicts that

    “Artificial intelligence will automate and potentially eliminate 40% of jobs within 15 years.”

    The industrial revolution kicked millions of manual laborers to the curb. The digital revolution did the same to clerical workers. Now, the AI revolution is coming for everyone else – programmers, writers, designers, analysts, and practically anything that involves working on a computer.

    Maybe you feel it already. That creeping anxiety watching AI tools getting better every month. The realization that you’re just a replaceable cog in a corporate machine that will discard you the moment it becomes profitable.

    No, you’re not paranoid. It’s real, it’s happening, you’re paying attention.

    But there’s a way out – a path that puts you in control, not at the mercy of some CEO’s cost-cutting initiative. And it’s not just theory or wishful thinking. In 2022 alone, 116,803 solo-run businesses generated over $1 million in revenue. People with no employees, just leveraging their skills, personal brands, and digital tools.

    I’m talking about building a one-person business – a business where you’re the brand, the product is an extension of your expertise, and the income ceiling doesn’t exist. A business that evolves with you, adapts to market changes, and remains immune to AI replacement because it’s built around the one thing AI can’t replicate: you.

    And here’s the best part: there’s never been a better time to start. The tools, platforms, and technologies needed to launch are more accessible than ever. The barriers have fallen. The playing field has leveled.

    In this article, I’ll show you why the conventional path is broken, why a one-person business is the solution, and why right now is the perfect moment to make your move. Because the future doesn’t belong to employees – it belongs to individuals who take control of their economic destiny.

    Why The 9-5 Game Is Rigged Against You

    Let’s be honest about the conventional life path most of us were sold: go to school, get a degree, find a stable job, work for 40+ years, retire on your pension, and hopefully have enough time left to enjoy life before your health fails.

    How’s that working out for most people?

    I remember the moment I realized this path was fundamentally broken. I was 16 when I looked at my grandmothers struggling on meager state pensions and understood that counting on that system was like hoping to win the lottery. The math simply doesn’t add.

    The World Economic Forum estimates a $400 trillion global retirement savings gap by 2050. That’s not a typo – $400 trillion. Retirees in major economies are projected to outlive their savings by 8-20 years on average. And governments are sitting on an estimated $78 trillion in unfunded pension obligations.

    But even if you ignore the pension crisis, the employment model itself is fundamentally flawed.

    Think about your typical workday. Waking up to an alarm. Rushing through breakfast. Commuting an hour to an office. Doing tasks you find meaningless. Pretending to care about “team building” with people you barely know. Taking orders from managers who measure success by how long you sit at your desk.

    Is this really what you want your one precious life to look like?

    The conventional path trades your most valuable asset – time – for money, with a strict ceiling on what you can earn. No matter how hard you work, how much value you create, your income is capped by what someone else decides you’re worth.

    Meanwhile, AI and automation are making this bargain even worse. When I talk about jobs being automated away, I’m not talking about some distant future. It’s happening right freaking now.

    Everything that involves working on a computer, will be replaced by artificial intelligence agents, and a new class of information systems based on AI.

    There’s no security in being a replaceable part in someone else’s machine. You’re one budget cut, one AI tool, one economic downturn away from being discarded.

    But there’s an alternative path that puts you in control.

    Look at people like Justin Welsh, who built a content and coaching business that generated $7 million in revenue in just 5 years – with no employees and 90% profit margins. Or Dakota Robertson, who quit his blue-collar job to start a ghostwriting agency that was grossing $50,000 per month within a year. Or Dan Koe, who built a digital education business to $2.6 million per year as a solo operator.

    These aren’t celebrities or trust fund kids. They’re ordinary people who recognized the broken system and decided to build something better – businesses centered around their skills, knowledge, and personalities.

    As Naval Ravikant says,

    “You will never get rich renting out your time. You must own equity – a piece of a business – to gain financial freedom.”

    When you build a one-person business, you own 100% of the equity. You control your destiny.

    Why Today’s Digital Landscape Is Your Advantage

    We’re living through a unique moment in economic history – a convergence of technologies, tools, and market conditions that makes building a one-person business more viable than ever before.

    Let me walk you through why now is the perfect time to make your move:

    1. Understand the AI Revolution

    The same AI technologies threatening traditional jobs are powerful leverage tools for solopreneurs. While employees fear replacement, entrepreneurs can use AI to multiply their output.

    Think about it: AI can help you research markets, generate content ideas, analyze data, design graphics, edit videos, automate customer service, and handle dozens of other tasks that previously required hiring people or spending countless hours.

    I’ve personally built a system using AI tools that allows me to produce multiple forms of high-quality content – from newsletters to social media posts to video scripts – at a scale that would have required a team just a few years ago. If you want to use this system, check it out.

    The key is using AI as an amplifier of your unique voice and expertise, not a replacement for it. When you position yourself as the irreplaceable human element in your business, AI becomes your competitive advantage rather than your threat.

    2. Leverage Global Reach

    The internet has created an unprecedented opportunity to reach audiences worldwide with near-zero distribution costs.

    You need to be online because that’s where all the people are. With 5 billion people on social media platforms, even a tiny slice of that audience can sustain a thriving one-person business.

    Before the internet, reaching customers beyond your local area required massive investment in advertising, distribution, and infrastructure. Today, you can build a global business from your laptop.

    Pieter Levels built Nomad List and Remote OK as solo ventures, reaching digital nomads worldwide and generating $3.2 million annually without employees. The internet provides that lever, that allows one person to have an outsized impact.

    3. Utilize No-Code Tools

    The technical barriers to starting a business have collapsed. You don’t need to be a programmer, designer, or marketing expert to build a professional online presence.

    No-code platforms let you create websites, online stores, membership sites, and digital products without technical skills. Payment processors handle transactions seamlessly. Email marketing platforms automate customer communication.

    For content creation – often the biggest bottleneck for solopreneurs – AI tools can transform your raw ideas into polished, authentic content across multiple formats. Instead of spending days writing articles and social posts, you can focus on strategy and growth while maintaining your unique voice.

    This technological democratization means you can compete with much larger businesses at a fraction of the cost and complexity.

    4. Recognize Market Timing

    The creator economy is booming, with an estimated 50 million people globally making money by creating and distributing content online. This market is still in its early stages, with plenty of room for new entrants.

    Consumer behavior has shifted dramatically, too. People increasingly prefer buying from individuals they trust rather than faceless corporations. They want authentic connections, personal stories, and direct relationships with the people behind the products.

    This shift plays directly into the hands of one-person businesses, which can provide the human touch at scale in ways big companies simply cannot.

    5. Build Platform Independence

    One critical lesson from the creator economy: never build your business on a single platform you don’t control.

    Many influencers have learned this the hard way when platform algorithm changes decimated their reach overnight or account bans erased years of work. Depending solely on platform-based monetization is extremely unreliable.

    The solution is to use platforms for visibility while building your own ecosystem – an email list, a personal website, direct customer relationships – where you have full control. This approach protects you from platform risk while allowing you to leverage social media’s reach.

    AI and no-code automation tools can help you maintain consistent presence across multiple platforms efficiently, diversifying your distribution channels without multiplying your workload.

    By implementing these principles, you’re positioning yourself to thrive in the AI economy rather than be displaced by it. You’re building resilience against technological disruption by becoming the architect of that disruption in your own sphere.

    The solopreneurs who succeed today aren’t fighting against technological change – they’re riding the wave, using every new tool and platform as leverage to amplify their unique human qualities.

    The Freedom You’ve Always Wanted

    We started this conversation talking about the AI apocalypse – the looming threat of automation replacing millions of jobs. But I hope you now see that this technological revolution isn’t just a threat; it’s also the greatest opportunity for individual economic empowerment in generations.

    When you build a one-person business around your unique skills, interests, and personality, you’re creating something that can’t be automated away or outsourced. You’re establishing control over your economic destiny in a way that traditional employment simply cannot provide.

    This isn’t about getting rich quick or finding some magical shortcut. Building a successful solo business requires real work, persistence, and continuous adaptation. But it’s work that serves you directly – building your own equity rather than someone else’s.

    As Warren Buffett wisely noted,

    “If you don’t find a way to make money while you sleep, you will work until you die.”

    A well-designed one-person business can eventually create that kind of leverage, where your income isn’t directly tied to your hours.

    In the next article in this series, I’ll show you exactly how to build your personal brand and audience – the foundation of any successful one-person business. We’ll explore how to create content that resonates, build distribution channels you control, and establish yourself as an authority in your space.

    For those struggling with the content creation demands of building a personal brand, my ANTIghostwriter system can help transform your ideas into authentic, engaging content at scale. It’s specifically designed for aspiring digital nomads and solopreneurs who need to create consistent, high-quality content without sacrificing their unique voice. And I use it myself, so check it out.

    But even without specialized tools, the path is clear: the future belongs to individuals who take ownership of their skills, build direct relationships with their audiences, and create businesses that evolve with them.

    The conventional employment model is crumbling under the weight of technological change. Don’t go down with it. Build something better – a business that’s truly yours, that can’t be taken away, and that gives you the freedom to live life on your own terms.

  • 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.