Most People Have Boring Lives
Summary
- Don't feel pressured to record every aspect of your day; most daily activities aren't interesting enough for an audience.
- Use alternative methods to document your life; consider summarizing your experiences and lessons learned.
- Referencing my book, "$100 Million Offers," evaluate your calendar weekly to extract valuable insights.
- Distill the essence of your experiences into accessible content that others can benefit from.
- Choose a platform with low friction for documentation, such as Twitter, to share these insights conveniently.
- Regularly condense and communicate your weekly, monthly, or daily learnings to provide value to your audience.
Video
How To Take Action
I would suggest starting by looking at your weekly calendar. Take a moment each week to think about what you've learned. What were the big wins? What mistakes did you make and how did you grow from them? Don't worry about filming your every move. Your daily life might not be super exciting, and that's okay.
Instead, you can make a simple summary. Write down the key lessons you've learned. Maybe you figured out a faster way to do something, or you learned how not to do something. That's valuable stuff!
Choose an easy way to share what you've learned. Twitter is a great tool for this because it's straightforward. You don't have to spend hours making a video or writing a long blog post. Just tweet your insights. This is how you document without the hassle.
Now, make it a habit to condense your insights. You can do this weekly, monthly, or even after each project. Then share it with your audience. They'll get a lot from those nuggets of wisdom. This is about giving people the good stuff without needing a lot of time or money. Keep it simple, actionable, and consistent.
Remember, sharing your growth isn't just about helping others. It helps you too. By reflecting on your experiences, you're reinforcing your own lessons and getting better every week. And when things get really interesting or you have a big win, that's when you might want to share a bit more – maybe a quick video or a longer post. But only when it really counts.
So, take a look at your week, find the good stuff, and share it. Keep it low-cost, low-time, but high-value. That's how you'll grow and help others do the same.
Quotes by Alex Hormozi
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Full Transcript
document doesn't necessarily mean have somebody follow you around with a videotape all day cuz a lot of you guys have really boring lives and no one wants to watch it I'm just being really real with you but you can document in other formats and I talk about this in $100 million leads book which is look at your calendar and think okay what were the lessons from this week you can still crystalize or create an artifact from the week that consolidates a week's worth of stuff into 10 minutes that will be valuable so thinking like how can I distill things that happen so you're still documenting it doesn't mean you have to just capture it in real time and so I think having a method for documenting so for me Twitter is my actual document I would encourage you to have some outlet with the least amount of friction possible crystallize the learnings from the week or the month or the day and I think doing that will provide value to an audience