Constantly improving your skill set is one of the only ways to future-proof yourself. If you follow this guide, you’ll be better equipped to learn anything you’ve ever wished to learn.
The more smartly-practiced skills you learn, the faster you’ll learn other connected skills. And knowing your skill mastery and the direction they’re going gives you the clarity on what to learn next for maximum learning efficiency.
We are lagging behind evolution for the first time since 350,000 years, and it’s time to do something about it. Let’s build a collective intelligence and solve this before it’s too late!
Skill learning doesn’t have to be tedious. It can be really fun and you’ll be amazed how much you can actually learn in only 15–20 hours of deliberate practice!
You can choose to ride a trend or sit it out. Most successful writers I know don’t even care and just keep writing no matter what. They’re in it for the long game. That’s a winning strategy.
After learning over 80 skills in three years, I’ve found ways to sift through information productively. And I’m sharing with you my exact method in this article.
I want good ideas to find me, but currently, it’s recycling content from writers I know. Good ideas, to me, are ideas that challenge my point of view on things. They’re ideas that come from people who have a different background than I do. Currently, I have a hard time finding them.
There are only two good reasons to write anything publicly: educate or entertain the reader. That’s it. If you fail to do any of these two things, you won’t find much success in writing.
One thing to note about Grammarly is that it can limit your creativity and style. It tells you what you should do, overlooking your preferences. If all writers were to accept their suggestions, everyone would write the same way. And that would be boring.