Summary of todayâs issue
đ #1 - How compound learning works
đ #2 - A story of how a real estate investor just kept swimming (and won)
đ#3 - Save yourself with more gratitude
I recently hosted two investors who were asked the same question:
what do you advise a young person early in their career?
They both looked over their shoulder, and after confirming that it was a confidential space said: âyou need to work incredibly hardâ.
Not everyone needs to be successful, rich, etc. You can live a perfectly good life without any of this.
But if your goal is to stand out in your craft there is no replacement for effort and time.
Imagine a chess game.
Youâre playing against a grandmaster, but each time they move once, you get to move twice.
Youâll win.
If you doubt this - grab a chessboard with a friend and give it a try.
Now, letâs talk about compounding.
If your competition is clocking out after 40 hours, and youâre spending 100 hours working then for every 1 year of work they put in, youâre getting 2.5 years of work.
Think of the difference between a 1-year-old baby and a 2.5-year-old.
One of them is mostly crawling. The other one is running around, stringing sentences together, and getting ready for preschool.
Now think of the difference between a 4-year-old and a 10-year-old.
Thatâs the power of compounded learning at work.
Following Beth on Twitter makes me want to be more persistent.
This deal is worth a read đ.
She bought a property, then realized she missed an important element in the lease called an exclusive. This meant a large pharmacy client couldnât lease a property in her âmallâ because the other tenants had a clause preventing pharmacies from entering the space.
She works, negotiates, and pleads her way through obstacle after obstacle, and eventually, she succeeded in a big way.
Itâs a story of incredible persistence, but also cookies.
I enjoy these stories because it reminds me just about any business problem, no matter how horrible is likely solvable.
With enough effort & creativity, humans can achieve anything.
Iâm a big believer in the power of gratitude.
If youâre a grateful person, you see the world through rose-colored glasses. Your life is less painful.
If youâre not naturally an openly grateful person, you can train yourself.
I fabricate games around habits that I want to develop.
Matt teaches you a game here to flex your gratitude muscle:
Set a timer for 3 minutes, and take turns going back and forth with a friend for 3 minutes non-stop about things youâre grateful for.
Something magical will start to happen after you play this game. You will start to notice things youâre grateful for in your day-to-day. Try it.
This applies to business too.
Business can be incredibly hard. Play the Gratitude Game with yourself and think of things you love about what you do.
This exercise will help you become more self-aware of your needs.
By knowing what youâre grateful for, you can spend time on those things while hiring or delegating the things youâre not grateful for.
Have a great week,
Sieva
ps: if you enjoyed todayâs newsletter consider sharing it with a friend. Thank you.
â