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by thenomad 5021 days ago
As a side note to this - being a generalist can be valuable too, because you can see cross-overs between disciplines.

My entire online presence is pretty much built on this - being knowledgeable about storytelling and the birth of the 3D gaming world at the same time led to me leaping in whole-heartedly at the inception of "Machinima", the technique of using 3D gaming technology to make films. There are a lot of people who are better at making films than I am - but very few of them were also competent at editing Quake levels.

But more trivially, there are dozens of times when you can cross over your skills to achieve results a specialist couldn't. Patrick has referred to one of his in the past - if you're knowledgeable about both advertising best practise and Web programming, you can create landing pages which are generated programatically to appeal to the inbound traffic from your PPC ads.

That's a nice bit of synergy which I believe has netted him a non-trivial amount of money in the past. If you're a programmer and an ad guy, it probably seems like an obvious thing to do - but if you're just one or the other, I can assure you it's not.

Look at two fields you know, preferably both valuable ones, and see if you can figure out things you can teach from your knowledge of both that most people wouldn't be able to.

(Another more trivial example: I've recently done some consulting work on PPC ads for a Pilates instructor friend of mine, considerably assisted by actually knowing a reasonable amount about Pilates. There are a lot of PPC ad people out there. There are a lot of people who know Pilates out there. The number of people in the intersection of the two sets, however, is small enough that I'm considering spinning the area out as a specialised consultancy.)