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Don't "find" your niche, "develop" it

70 pointsby for_i_in_rangeover 1 year ago

12 comments

smashedover 1 year ago
I understand that communities evolve, mutate and sometimes divide over time. Online communities are the same, maybe just faster and larger.<p>The author of the article though feels a bit odd? What exactly is the endgame here? You divided a subreddit and created a new one, that&#x27;s good for you and your &quot;disciples&quot; I guess...? Like what the hell I&#x27;ve had just read...?
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tennisflyiover 1 year ago
It&#x27;s just an explicit explanation - which is great! I&#x27;m aiming for 1,000 people who love my content and will sub for $20&#x2F;month! I&#x27;d sleep very well with a quarter million a year as one person&#x2F;my own boss.
langsoul-comover 1 year ago
Only the end here is questionable. The part about you can make a decent living is true, but also very not. The author is fortunate that his hobby forked out and is the kind people would pay money for.
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arpowersover 1 year ago
Niche gymnastics are the realm of seriously good zero to one entrepreneurs.
natmakaover 1 year ago
The author mentions a &#x27;blue ocean&#x27; and this may not be a coincidence: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Blue_Ocean_Strategy" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Blue_Ocean_Strategy</a>
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turtleyachtover 1 year ago
This is the author of <i>Antinet Zettelkasten.</i> The podcast notwithstanding, the book helped me finally start my own slipbox. I also learned a lot about Niklas Luhmann&#x27;s zettelkasten (actually two).<p>For context, the previous podcast challenges the listener to try 30 days of creating impromptu audio content in the car--carpods--of something you&#x27;re interested in.<p>These aspects of Scheper&#x27;s presentation on zettelkasten spoke to me most:<p>- Positive correlation between handwriting and concept retention.<p>- Interacting with a &quot;second brain&quot; in a reflective way: reorganizing, rewriting, and reviewing.<p>- Writing in order to <i>publish.</i>
jonny_ehover 1 year ago
This reads more like a guide on starting a religion.
tgrierover 1 year ago
Scott is the real deal. I have followed him 2 years. If you do not like this message - fine. But he did this and built a following and a business.
hxiiover 1 year ago
Is it just me or does the website not display correctly on mobile Safari? Looks like the background is overlaying the content.
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glennonymousover 1 year ago
For people familiar with Scheper’s work: What are the “three challenges” he refers to in the hero’s journey?
j7akeover 1 year ago
This is excellent and applies to being a distinguished authority on a topic in general, not just writing.
Nevermarkover 1 year ago
Below, is an obviously dramatized, prose maximized, self-serving, motivational, shameless myth-making, story. But it is also true and an exciting time for me.<p>TLDR; More than a few years of my life rewritten to perspective of the article.<p>-- <i>Zone of Fascination</i> --<p>Some time ago, I discover a topic of fascination, full of challenging unsolved problems.<p>I dug in - improving iteratively - before hitting walls that nobody seemed to think were going to be magically solved. People wrote books and essays and Reddit rants with titles like &quot;This is Not Going to be Magically Solved&quot;.<p>I decided a group of these problems were really the same problem. I came to this conclusion by my progress that seemed to have an asymptotic element, partly by theory, and some hopeful intuition about how &quot;reality&quot; &quot;should&quot; work.<p>The concept seemed clear to me, but capable people I knew in the field consistently said things like &quot;Uh, no way&quot;, or &quot;WTF&quot;, or &quot;Good luck!&quot;. Or stared into my eyes and said nothing.<p>So I stopped asking. Over time a repetitive behavioral pattern emerged with friends and family: I say &quot;Things are great. I am making progress.&quot; They say &quot;So happy for you. Show it to me when it works.&quot;<p>-- <i>Hero&#x27;s Journey</i> --<p>So I forged ahead with 100&#x27;s of mostly quite small experiments. Probably 1000&#x27;s. And lots of time thinking. And holding my head in my hands. And staring into the void and saying nothing.<p>I found organization bit by bit. Directions that the problems led me, through perplexing and perhaps illusory, paths. But I went down every path I thought might be real. As long as I was finding paths, and seeming to find organization, maybe I could do this.<p>First I got snowed by a seemingly endless series of sub-quests. Often just ruling out alternatives. But then found some truths, and I saw patterns that let me tame those.<p>Then, I got bogged down in trees of sub-quests. But finally I recognized enough patterns to tame those.<p>Next, I got stretched across flows, directed graphs of abstractions. But after a lot of running in circles and tangents, I managed to find a partially independent basis that helped me separate many complex things, into fewer simpler things.<p>And finally, I got lost in a graph of sub-quests, multi-faceted bootstrap problems, chickens and eggs, Orourobus todo lists, and Escher progress that wasn&#x27;t progress.<p>But after wandering through many mazes of twisty little concepts, getting through houses of mirrors by feel, and inverting my own mind, I finally found the right approach. I knew I was close, as in nine months, by Christmas, maybe? Excitement!<p>And then, one day, only two weeks later, I got in. One last stumble, and I was staring at the complete design. Feelings of shock, satisfaction, and the surreal. A clear blueprint. Yay.<p>I can definitively say, &quot;I am not Don Quixote!&quot; Although he remains a hero.<p>Now I am building my niche, which is in fact a tool, and letting the constraints of the solution tweak the unformalized details into their perfectly formalized places.<p>-- <i>Split the Congregation</i> --<p>I have begun to start my congregation, one employee and customer&#x2F;partner at a time. I suppose this is &quot;forking the congregation&quot; in slow motion.<p>I have bet it all. I am scarily insolvent. But the negative numbers have not caught up with me, and I solved my problem. I am strangely unworried. Happy. Friends and family are helping me bridge cash flow issues for the moment.<p>What is next? I have my first customer&#x2F;partner. And other prospectives. Start slow, to move fast. Start small, to grow big. Stay focused to completely and overwhelming solve customer problems, one at a time.<p>If I do anything amazing it won&#x27;t be evident for some time. No big congregation any time soon.<p>But I feel good. Like I knew that I would!
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