|
|
|
|
|
by profstasiak
1233 days ago
|
|
there are many niche unorthodox things that give way higher return than obvious orthodox advice. I won't name the one I found the most leverage as my account is semianonymous. I find it tirying. Reddit and to lesser but still high degree hackernews is giving such uninformed advice about many things. Twitter is also full of people that for example recommend the same 10 books on startup ideas, like Lean Startup bible. To keep in this theme, as this might not be that controversial I've read many good books about business innovation and it's so hard to find anyone mentioning them. On top of my head Something Really New has 39 ratings on goodreads and 4 on amazon. Yet it teaches you so much with comming up with startup ideas. All of my best ideas came from applying the method it teaches. There are other hidden gems. The book that had a life changing effect on me has 23 ratings on goodreads. It seriously changed my life in way that cannot be described in words. I sometimes just walk and hit my head. It's so obvious what the book is suggesting, yet all people ignore it because of evolutionary instinct blindness. Contact me and I will explain in full. edit: might be the case that some things are competetive vs cooperative. Meaning, sharing knowledge about startup ideas is not worth it for you as you help your competition, but anyone would happily share that ketogenic diet can help with mental illness |
|
I would love a full explanation if you wouldn't mind, please do tell more.