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If you prefer to read this newsletter in your browser, click here. š” The Big Idea: The Right Way to Use Social MediaCal Newport is one of my favorite authors. But I think heās dead wrong about social media in the advice he gave a listener on a recent Deep Questions podcast episode (the question starts at about 55:08). Calās response to someone who asked a question about wanting to write a nonfiction book (without having social media or a blog) was basically:
And while I understand the dangers of social media (and agree wholeheartedly with what he shares earlier in the episode about it being a huge distraction most of the time), I think he is missing something important with his advice to this particular listener. The Real Reason to WriteLetās start with the first part: stop writing the book. I get what Calās going for here. Heās right that you donāt want to just show up to an agent with a finished work and then try to get them to publish it. Especially in the traditional publishing industry, agents and editors will want to help shape your ideas. But for someone whoās never written a book before, your best bet is to WRITE. Write a lot. Especially for non-fiction, where you wonāt really know what you think about something until you start writing. Iāve noticed this myself. Often I have a general idea of what to write about, but I discover the real work through the process of writing. As Dawson Trotman once said, āThoughts disentangle themselves through lips and pencil tips.ā And for me, also clicky keyboards. The quickest way to gain clarity on something that I know of is to start writing. Itās a great way to distill the information that Iāve consumed and has worked itās way through The Creativity Flywheel. Real briefly, here are the five steps:
One of the biggest mistakes people make with PKM is failing to make something new out of the pieces they've collected. It doesn't need to be for public consumption, but you'll never really make sense of things without an output (the Create phase). It also makes it easier to capture things that are useful (and keep the flywheel spinning) by opening up loops in my mind and piquing my curiosity. So if I were to give advice to Brom (the listener in the episode), I would say to start writing in public. I would advise him to start testing, validating, and developing his ideas by writing on social media every day. The platform doesn't really matter. I still like Twitter/X, but I also like Medium & LinkedIn. The important thing is to find where your people are hanging out and join the conversation. I would warn him that he wonāt get much of a reaction at first. At the beginning, the size of your "audience" doesn't matter. But if you keep writing and publishing every day for at least 30 days, youāll start to see trends. Youāll begin to see which posts gain more traction than others, which is an indication to explore those ideas more. Make noise, then listen for signal. This is exactly what I did. Even though I still struggle to post to social media regularly, Iāve gone through spurts (usually aligned with Ship30 cohorts) where Iād publish every day. I also found that my posts about Obsidian received 10x the engagement of anything else I wrote. So, I started writing more about applying values-based PKM principles using Obsidian. That approach bled over to my YouTube channel, which while still not huge, has grown significantly in the last year. But I believe anyone can do this. All it takes is a willingness to test your ideas and iterate in public. Which leads to the second point⦠Calās right that you can publish without using social media. But that doesnāt mean you should. I have friends who have books on the NYT bestsellers list. I know how the process works. And I know itās not as easy as Cal made it sound to ājust get an agent.ā The publishing world still very much relies on personal connections. You need to know someone who knows someone to make an introduction for you. If you can get your foot in the door, then youāve got a chance to get your proposal read. But if not, good luck. Doesnāt mean itās impossible. But very improbable. In my opinion, the safer approach is actually to publish your short-form ideas consistently. Create, not consume. Thatās the trick. Donāt get pulled into the infinity pools. But if you can use social media as a sounding board, do it. Just Make Good StuffThe barrier to entry for someone who wants to become a creator has never been lower. If you want to make videos, you donāt need an expensive studio. If you want to make podcasts, you donāt need a broadcast license. And if you want to write, you certainly donāt need an agent. What you DO need is a good idea. But why not validate that publicly? Sharing it with others is the quickest way to find out if an idea is any good. In The Creativity Flywheel framework I teach, the goal is to consistently go from capture to create. Information comes in, but it needs to go out again before you really glean the benefit from it. Why make that harder than it has to be? Publishing to Twitter, X, LinkedIn, Mastodon, Medium, or wherever your people tend to hang out has never been easier. Find your tribe and go join the conversation. Especially at the beginning of the creative process. Thatās when you donāt know what you donāt know about what you think you know. š Something Cool: Lazy Plugin LoaderāSomeone in The Library pointed out the Lazy Plugin Loader to me this week, and Iām a bit ashamed I hadnāt come across this sooner. Iām not sure how this plugins flew under my radar, but itās a great one if you have a lot of plugins like I do. This plugin lets you choose for each plugin installed whether you want to the plugin to load 1) immediately, 2) after a short delay, 3) after a long delay, or 4) be disabled entirely. You can configure the short and long delay periods (by default, itās 5 and 15 seconds, respectively), then choose one of the 4 options for each plugin in your vault. What this does is allow your vault to open (potentially) much sooner by prioritizing the order of the plugins that load. For example, if you only use Dataview occasionally but itās causing your vault to load slowly each time you open Obsidian, you could set that one to open after a delay so that you can access the contents of your vault quicker (without having to wait for slow plugins to load). š Book Notes: Hidden Genius by Polina Marinova PomplianoSince we talked about social media in this newsletter, I need to mention the book Hidden Genius by Polina Marinova Pompliano. We covered this one recently for Bookworm, but the section on optimizing your content diet was of particular interest to me. I really like the metaphor of our mind being our mental hardware and our beliefs being mental software, and Polina challenges us directly by asking, āwho wrote the software that is running in your head?ā This is actually what Cal Newport nails about social media⦠if youāre not careful, you can very easily get sucked into a vortex of distraction. And few of us ever stop to question what impact the information we consume actually has on us. If you want to download my mind map book notes for Hidden Genius, click here. ā Mike |
A weekly newsletter where I help people apply values-based productivity principles and systems for personal growth, primarily using Obsidian. Subscribe if you want to make more of your notes and ideas.
Prefer to read (or listen to) this newsletter in your browser? Click here. š” The Big Idea: Not All Core Plugins Are Created Equal. Obsidian ships with a bunch of core plugins, but some are definitely more useful than others. This week, I completed a full tier list ranking of all 30 core plugins. My tier list rankings for all 30 Obsidian Core plugins. If you don't recognize the icons, it's because I made them all myself š Here's the full breakdown of my Core plugin tier lists rankings: S Tier...
Prefer to read (or listen to) this newsletter in your browser? Click here. š” The Big Idea: Humans Are the Ultimate Context Machines One of my favorite new podcasts is the AI & I podcast with Dan Shipper. It's a great podcast if you're looking to make sense of the rapidly evolving AI landscape. One of my favorite episodes was the recent interview Dan did with Box CEO Aaron Levie about the role of AI and why he believes it won't take your job. Aaron does a great job of explaining what the...
Want to read (or listen to) this newsletter in your browser? Click here. š” The Big Idea: Simplify Your Ideas to Get More Out of Them. Richard Feynman was not only a Nobel-prize-winning physicist, he was also called āThe Great Explainerā for his ability to break down complicated ideas and communicate them to others in a simple, intuitive way. Heās also the inventor of The Feynman Technique, a method for developing a deep understanding of complex topics that has a lot of PKM parallels for...