Daniel Vassallo Profile picture
Mar 8, 2021 32 tweets 5 min read Read on X
Everyone wants to decouple time from money.

The problem? It's an extremely unpredictable way to make a living. For every successful creator, there are thousands who make nothing or almost nothing.

So, how do you make the unpredictable, predictable? Here's what I learned:
See, there are two very distinct worlds of how to make a living in our universe.

The first world is the one we're mostly familiar with, where you follow a predictable career path.
Say you want to make a living as a programmer, a doctor, a plumber, an English teacher, etc. If you do certain things (learn to code, get a specific degree, etc.) you can increase the odds of getting what you want to very close to 100%.
And you can also expect such a profession to earn you a certain amount of money within a relatively narrow income range. Payoffs in this world tend to follow a normal distribution. The path to get what you want, and the expected payoff, are both highly predictable.
In the second world, the payoffs tend to follow a Pareto distribution, where you can expect wild differences in income among people doing the same thing. Making a living in this world is far from predictable.
There is no guaranteed way to make a living as a musician, an author, a startup founder, a blogger, a YouTuber, and so on. You can't just study YouTubing, pass a YouTube exam, and expect to start collecting the minimum wage by producing content for 40 hours a week.
This Pareto world is extremely competitive, random, and highly unpredictable.
So, if you want to make a living doing activities that fall into the Pareto world, you can't treat it like a normal career. You can't just rely on focus and hard work to make ends meet. You can't rely on perseverance and consistency.
If you do it that way, chances are you'll find yourself on the extremely long tail that's commonly occupied by starving artists.
To make a living in the Pareto world, you must behave like a venture capitalist, a book publisher, or a major film studio. You must have a portfolio of enough things going on that you can expect a few payoffs to be happening regularly.
A book publisher will publish thousands of books every year, with the expectation that a small number of them will produce all the profit. To make things work in this world, you have to adopt a similar attitude. But that still won’t be enough!
The problem is that as an individual, you can't realistically publish 1000s of books a year. You can't start 100 businesses at the same time. You can't possibly scale yourself like the corporate entities that operate in the Pareto world.
Successful operators of Pareto ventures make many asymmetric bets. These are situations where the downside is small and capped, but the upside is often large or unlimited.
For a book publisher, putting a book on the market usually has a small, fixed cost, but if the book becomes a best seller, the payoff is practically unlimited. With enough attempts, the outcomes will start to look almost predictable.
But, for you as an individual, asymmetric bets are not enough. Because if you can't fit enough repetitions in your life to have a reasonable chance of materializing a payoff in your lifetime, then the upside doesn't really matter.
If you're placing bets with odds of 1 in 1000, but you can only do so 5 times, the chances are you'll join the group of starving artists.

So how do you solve this problem?
Well, primarily, by giving up most of the upside and going for the low-hanging fruit. You want to do things that, while still very randomness-laden, will very likely yield a small win.
You can never squeeze out all the uncertainty from Pareto activities, so you must leave enough space to try a few things at the same time. And to be able to build a portfolio of such things, you must ruthlessly minimize the input required by you.
For example, you almost certainly won’t be able to write 1000 books this year. But you can almost certainly write 1000 tweets. If we assume it takes 15 minutes per tweet, posting 1000 tweets would take you just 41 minutes per day on average.
Now, you're not going to become the next J. K. Rowling by writing 1000 tweets, but you will have a very reasonable chance of building a small audience with just that small effort.
It's not guaranteed (nothing is in the Pareto world), but the odds are in your favor. And once you have an audience, you have an asset to build on. You gain optionality. You get more information. You build a distribution channel. You increase your luck surface area tremendously.
Trying to build an audience with minimal effort is just one example of a small bet. But let me give you a few other examples from my own recent business activities.
When I came up with the idea of writing a self-published book about AWS, I asked an ex-colleague of mine to become my co-author. I could have written the book myself, and in hindsight, I lost $52,958 (so far), just to save a couple of weeks of work.
But it was still the right decision. Back then, I had no clue whether I was going to sell $10,000 or $1,000, or any copies at all. Cutting the effort in half was a great choice, even though it was already going to be aggressively time-boxed.
Aggressively capping your inputs is important for many reasons. The most obvious is that it gives you space for more bets. But it also helps tremendously with motivation. It's a lot easier to do small things, and the failures hurt a lot less when you haven’t put in a big effort.
Most importantly, a fraction of a win is almost as valuable as a full win. I don't care much that I left half of the profit for my AWS book on the table. After the first $1,000 came in, I knew this profession could became a viable income stream for me.
And that's all I needed to learn. 4 months later, I released my second info product (the Twitter audience course), which crossed $200,000 in sales last month. And this one, I did all by myself.
But even with my second product, I tried ruthlessly to limit my input. Initially, I was going to publish that as another short book, but then I realized that I could say what I wanted to say much faster if I made a video instead.
And that's what I did. That product turned from an idea in my head to a product on the market in just 3 days. Over the last 10mo, it has made an average monthly profit of $17,643. That payoff was unpredictable (and totally unexpected), but the small input was very intentional.
And even my most recent product (Profit and Loss) has been shaped by ruthless input minimization. I was very tempted to do something more elaborate, with a full-blown community, weekly interviews, real-time dashboard access, and so and so forth.
The upside would have been considerably higher than what this product could ever achieve, but I quickly realized that doing all of that would have required a commitment from me that wasn't very compatible with my portfolio strategy.
And this is how I intend to keep making the unpredictable, predictable:

- Aggressive input minimization
- Ruthless application of the 80/20 rule
- Curbing grandiose ambitions
- Going for small wins
- Doing a few things at the same time

A portfolio of small bets.

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More from @dvassallo

Mar 12, 2023
People are not getting this. To hedge against a bank run you don’t need an account with 40 banks. You just need 2.

Forget about FDIC. You just need to buy time via basic redundancy. Just put ~3 months worth of expenses in another bank. I’ve done this all my life.
And this won’t just protect you against a bank run, but against anything that might happen to your primary account.

When I was moving to the US from Ireland 13yrs ago, my IE bank had a “technical issue” and froze everyone’s accounts for almost a month.

But I had redundancy.
Here’s the story for those curious. A bad deployment required manual reconciliation of millions of accounts, which left at least 600,000 people without access to their money for 28 days.

Even my Amazon paycheck bounced back.

This can happen to you too.

reuters.com/article/uk-rbs…
Read 4 tweets
Feb 2, 2023
This fellow @chrismanfrank believes he’s changing the educational panorama, and yet acts like a petulant 5yr old himself. On a conversation about… kids! 😂

We were mutual followers; judge for yourself:
Twitter shows who people really are sometimes
Is this with whom you would want to trust your kids? @synthesischool 😬
Read 5 tweets
Jan 19, 2023
I'm not a fan of FIRE, mainly because of its distinct bimodal approach towards life: the deferring phase, and then the living phase.
First of all, I believe that the discovery of our true preferences is a life-long exercise, and the most reliable way to reveal our preferences is to live them.
Everyone I know who retired after a grueling career went into retirement unprepared, and their life went downhill fast. The "Always Be Compounding" attitude during the deferring phase gets in the way of exercising the muscle that leads to discovering what we truly like & dislike.
Read 10 tweets
Jan 14, 2023
My goal this month is to convert this corner of my garage into a small room I can work from. Image
First, some insulation in the outside walls.

First time using mineral wool (cotton candy made from rocks) https://t.co/YcA1t6gs9Ten.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mineral_w…
Image
Insulation is inside the external walls.

Mineral wool turned out to be a lot more annoying to work with than fiberglass, but it is supposedly better for sound absorption and that’s my main concern. Image
Read 11 tweets
Jan 5, 2023
My self-employment income progression so far:

Revenue Profit
2019 $33,449 -$74,061
2020 $350,989 $209,912
2021 $336,706 $304,120
2022 $541,369 $436,752
Monthly Profit & Loss:
Revenue per product/activity:
Read 21 tweets
Nov 21, 2022
Why you probably should discount your prices for Black Friday:
Last year, my digital products sold over $28,000 during the Black Friday period.

This month, I'm already over $30,000, and the peak is yet to come.

Here's everything I learned about Black Friday and discounts in general:
When selling digital products with no real marginal costs, pricing is almost all about human psychology. You can charge what you think people are willing to pay for.
Read 16 tweets

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