pranav 🧫 Profile picture
Oct 3, 2020 11 tweets 4 min read Read on X
How to Find the Right Coaches + Courses

Every tom, dick, and harry is starting a course or a coaching program. Welcome to the goddamn gold rush.

Some are life-changing. Others are a huge waste of your time, money, and potential.

How can you tell the difference? Thread👇
1 The Best Have Integrity

You want someone honest + blunt.

The best make you feel uncomfortable at times (because you're pushing beyond your zone of normal.)

You need to have a LOT of trust from the get-go, so you know you're pursuing the right type of uncomfortable.
2 The Best Are Empathetic

They should care about you and your development more than money, validation, anything else.

Notice how his/her's incentives line up with your success.

A good coach/creator wants to make himself/herself obsolete.
3 The Best Can Go from Shitty -> Great

Pick a person who remembers what it was like to be shitty

You want someone who went from shitty -> great through specific actions + systems.

You also want them to prove they can teach others to go from shitty-> great.
4 The Best Can Speak in Your Language

A great coach = great explainer.

They should be able to tailor their conceptual metaphors to you.

They should be able to understand who you are and teach you based on THAT.

^ Shared backgrounds or an experienced teacher helps with this
5 The Best Rely on Specific KPIs

Coaching that is based on mushiness or feeling as its only metric is entertainment, not growth.

A coach or course should be able to easily prove (over a long enough period of time) the difference they have made in your life
The worst thing you can do is get a bad coach.

Don't base your choice on price. Be Strict in your selection criteria.

Don't take a course or accept a coach because they're cheap.

Coaching is essential to being a "Good Enough Human" in today's world.
You often need multiple coaches in your life.

A diverse petri dish of experts allows you to triangulate your views (h/t @RayDalio).

Even the best are wrong sometimes.

You'll also usually need a different coach to go from bad --> good enough. And from good enough --> great
I'm obviously biased, but if you're looking for life-changing creators + coaches start here:

Building a Second Brain @fortelabs
Write of Passage @david_perell
Emotional Fitness Bootcamp @ndwignall

Still use the criteria above. It's possible they work for me, but not for you
Special mention to @beondeck which I've heard amazing things about.

I'll be an upcoming writing fellow for #ODW1 and doing my research it seems like it may be one of the most transformative programs/courses I've taken yet.

I'll report back.
Additional Reading:

@trengriffin on How to Make Decisions like Ray Dalio (25iq.com/2017/04/28/how…)
@avthars on How to pick Good Teachers (avthar.com/blog/teachers-1)

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More from @PranavMutatkar

Aug 23, 2020
3 Questions about Polymaths

From @TheAlexYao's great @whatstheii salon

1. As @harry_ramsay pointed out, you can't self describe as a polymath. You are named a polymath by others after demonstrating mastery over multiple skills usually after death.

Is polymath-ism is a curse?
2. I've felt it's a curse because polymaths can never truly be at home. They have no identity. Nobody will truly understand their multitudes.

@davidavalerio pointed out that having no identity is an identity.

Are polymaths only truly understood by other polymaths?
3. Is it possible to become more polymathic?

@bryankam suggested discipline could just be a common language? So maybe all we need to do is learn different "languages."

Or is @Ahussain4 right? Is it a personality thing?

Are polymaths born w/ high openness + less neuroticism?
Read 4 tweets

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