What I’ve learned channeling the worldview of successful creators

An internet creator’s manifesto, Draft 1.0:
I have a duty to be useful and to be myself.

I don’t know what’s useful or obvious to others, so I share things useful or obvious to me.

I never know what will resonate.
I show up daily and give myself permission.

“The warrior and the artist live by the same code of necessity, which dictates that the battle must be fought anew every day.” -Steven Pressfield
I post freely.

If a tweet gets 100,000 impressions in a day, 99.95 percent of the people on Twitter that day didn’t see it.
If I’m creating, I’m succeeding.

I measure my success by how much I am discovering about myself.
I think long-term.

Creating is not a race against time nor a competition with anyone else.

Learning and creating takes time, and the best time to start is now.
I don’t need to know everything, I just need to put myself out there.

If I create and share enough, I’ll spiral into a style no one else can replicate.
I direct others’ attention.

“Any painter, any poet, any musician, sets a trap for your attention. That is the nature of art.” -Marshall McLuhan
I play positive-sum games with positive-sum friends.

My creations help others, and others’ creations help mine.
My attention is an asset and I spend it wisely.

I listen intently and I'm selective about what I listen to.
I follow my curiosity and learn.

If I’m curious enough about something, I will be successful at it.

The more curious I am about it, the more successful I will be at it.
I don’t need my own style at the outset.

I develop it by what I observe and mimic.
When I pay close enough attention, I can’t help but create.

If I’m not creating from the things I’m consuming and experiencing, I’m not consuming or experiencing them well.
I share ideas in the spirit of helping others.

I aim to capture less value than I create.
I don’t need to find or impress everyone. I just need to communicate.

One ten-thousandth of one percent of people on the internet is four thousand six hundred people.
The scale of opportunity on the internet is huge and hard for me to grasp.

Twitter’s daily active users would fill the largest stadium in the United States 2,000 times.

The internet is one million one hundred sixty-five thousand groups of 4,000 people.
I know everything is a remix.

I’m original by building on the thoughts of others.
I learn more by creating than consuming.

I refine my ideas by sharing them.
I focus on the process, not the outcome.

I refine what I create, then throw the output back into the process.
I do what creators have always done: take the counsel of other creators.

I promote them, give them feedback, and tell them when their work is valuable.
I promote myself and my work so other people don’t have to.

If I’m creating valuable things, sharing them is selfless.
My reward isn’t transmitting.

My reward is how fast I can learn from others transmitting to me.
The more I share, the more I interact with like-minded people.

The more I interact with like-minded people, the more I discover about myself.

The more I discover about myself, the more I share.
I make my own serendipity.

My luck is a product of participation.
I don’t copy others, but I say things without worrying if others have already said them.
I pare what I create to its essentials.

If the quality of the things I create is compelling, then the value of the things I create is compounding.
I try to write one true thing I now know.

“The great thing is to last and get your work done and see and hear and learn and understand; and write when there is something that you know; and not before; and not too damn much after.” -Ernest Hemingway
I strive to create consistent A+ content, but I realize consistent B+ content gains attention over time and can be later refined into A+ content.
Published content isn’t final content. It’s just published.
Every time I’ve written something, someone else has made it ten times better.

I’d love to iterate on this manifesto with as many creators as possible, with the goal of creating something that motivates us all.

Comment in this shared doc!

docs.google.com/document/d/1PU…
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More from @jmikolay

20 May
Thinking about a thread on the common operating principles of successful internet creators.

Things that aren't intuitive until you start participating. Would this be of interest?
This would be a deep dive across every creator I've ever channeled and studied.

Not what makes them unique, but rather what they've come to believe and understand (and most important, what they DO) in common.
In combination, these traits would amount to an internet creator's worldview -- the philosophy and ethos of the creator economy.

What's not obvious to people who haven't been immersing themselves in this world.
Read 5 tweets
18 May
Last week, on the @10percent Happier podcast with @danbharris, meditation teacher Jeff Warren talked about the four most important habits in life.

They're the same four habits great creators apply to their work.

Here they are, in Jeff's words:
The first habit is concentration: the skill of calm.

When we focus, there's a tendency for the thing we're focusing on to become more stable.

And if we hold our attention long enough, we can have the experience of flowing and merging with that activity or object.
The second habit is clarity: the skill of discernment.

This is the part of us capable of panning out to a broader perspective and zooming in to notice previously unconscious habits of thinking and responding.

Anything that teaches self-awareness boosts the habit of clarity.
Read 7 tweets
6 May
THREAD: I didn’t start participating on Twitter until I was 40 years old.

When you learn things in your 40s, it’s not too late to pretend like you figured them out in your 20s.

Here's 1,000 words on what I’ve learned about writing, creativity, and putting yourself out there:
People have been building tools for thousands of years to free you to do more creative work.

Do it.
If you have enough curiosity, attention, and time,

No one can stop you.
Read 35 tweets
16 Apr
It's here!✨

The 10x Creator Course, powered by Maven: turn your big ideas into a flagship digital product, in four weeks.

I’m teaching:
🔷A cohort-based course
🔷Structured around projects
🔷Open to 36 talented creators

Apply: maven.com/justin/10xcrea…
The course starts on June 7th.

You will learn a step-by-step method to bring structure to your work and package your thoughts into a compelling, successful product – ready for launch by July 2nd.
I'm curating students with a strong point of view and valuable expertise.

This course is for emerging creators who need help building a flagship product; veteran creators who need help building their best product yet; and 10x creators who need help upgrading a major product.
Read 7 tweets
12 Apr
A distillation of what @balajis said in conversation with @tferriss on The Tim Ferriss Show:
Covering:
🔷Financial & Ideological Independence
🔷Product, Distribution, & Media
🔷Crypto & Decentralization
🔷The Pseudonymous Economy
🔷Digital Native Education
🔷Attacks on Bitcoin
🔷Leadership & Crypto
🔷Anarcho-Primitivism & Transhumanism
🔷Capital
🔷India
🔷War
Financial independence is upstream of individual and ideological independence. It means you can’t be canceled. You can ride it out and not back down.

You know consequences may come, but you accept them because you’ve planned for the future and banked up.
Read 193 tweets
29 Mar
A distillation of what @naval, @shl, and @benthompson said about the creator economy on Clubhouse this weekend:
Naval: To be a good creator, you have to be creative, and being creative means constantly creating things.

You’re not just creating something; creativity is who you are and what you do. You're always creating things in your domain. Nonstop. Constantly.
Naval: There's a tinkering mentality that can keep you ahead of the curve.

Most successful creators are tinkerers. They just play at the edges of their field on something that’s interesting to them, but they don’t do it with a strong motive. They’re genuinely interested.
Read 81 tweets

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