- The Digital Economy
- Posts
- Procrastination is a Superpower
Procrastination is a Superpower
feature not a bug
“I want to build an email course”
Top creators like Jay Clouse are leveraging the unique benefits of email-based courses to create demand, develop relationships, and convert customers.
Learn from an expert (whose first email course business was acquired) on how to do email courses the right way.
Sign up for Master the Email-Based Course today and see why Dickie Bush said he got “Takeaways within 5 minutes of digging in. Huge value.”
I procrastinate… a lot.
But I’ve learned that this is a good thing. Procrastination is my superpower for achieving what most people think is impossible.
I wait until the last minute, but in that last minute, I launch into the flow state and my mind is impossible to distract from the task at hand.
When I do this, the work is of higher quality than if I were to do scattered “planned” work for weeks before.
I have other things to worry about, and if my work isn’t the only thing on my mind, the quality will suffer.
I’ve discovered that this is a character trait.
It’s how some people are wired.
You only focus when focus is needed.
You are bad at texting people back.
You rarely did your homework on time in school.
Client work is put off until the last minute.
You struggle to make progress in business (because you don’t have someone managing you when it’s time to publish a project).
If this is you, procrastination is your key to getting ahead of 99% of people… if you learn to harness that power.
The work you procrastinate on isn’t real-time like a video game or sports where you get immediate feedback on your effort.
Society has made you feel bad for this character trait. You constantly feel like you are falling behind others because you can’t, and shouldn’t, play the same game as them.
You don’t need to change. You need to understand yourself, structure your life accordingly, and make calculated decisions.
Tactical Stress – Forcing Yourself To Survive
The best decisions I’ve made are the stupidest.
I spent a year of my college life trying to start an online business.
I lived in a different city to where I needed to be everyday, just to save money
I got rid of a profitable product I’d built because it was taking up too much of my time.
I built a landing page and accepted orders for a product before it was built. I’ve done this with every launch because, one, if it doesn’t sell, I don’t waste more of my time. Second, if it does sell, I’m forced to build it out before the launch date.
Every time I took these risks, I only gave myself two options:
Figure it out
Be crushed
It was a quarterly powerlifting competition for my mind. I put myself under my mental bench press max and forced myself to lift it without a spotter.
An example I see often in the business space:
“Should I purchase this software or take the free option?”
“Should I buy a course or waste my time learning on my own?”
“Should I start or wait until the pain is too great in my current situation so I end up starting 2 years later?”
The answer is obvious.
When I spent $1,000 on software (when that was the last $1,000 in my bank account), I was forced to learn and build with that software to make that money back.
When I spent $3,500 on a course, I was forced to make the teachings work to make that money back.
When you move into an $8,000/month apartment, you’re forced to increase your income to make that feel comfortable, resulting in $100,000 extra per month in your bank account.
You’re okay with where you are because you won’t take the risk that forces you to a level you can’t fathom right now.
There’s a myth that floats around occasionally:
Goldfish grow to fit the tank you put them in. But if you keep them in a small bowl, they never grow.
In reality, smaller tanks lead to poor water quality and less room to move freely. So, it’s not that they never grow, it’s that they suffer and die. A slight but important difference.
This is similar to my concept of Tactical Stress:
The conscious decision to force yourself into a do or die situation – knowing that you have the skill to make it work – and have no choice but to overcome your fears. The result is a season of intensity that propels you into the next level of your life.
The purpose of tactical stress is to launch yourself into the unknown, the land of infinite potential. Because if you don’t, entropy takes hold and you slowly begin to drown and suffer until the pain is so great that you have to do it anyway.
When you launch into new situations that can change your life, you become overwhelmed with information.
It’s too much for your mind to digest.
So, you’re forced to be consumed by chaos or to create clarity.
You set a goal that is borderline impossible, make a single decision that forces you to step off the cliff, and turn the resulting stress into a potent fuel that allows you to outwork anybody else. This does a few things psychologically:
Maintains Perspective – When you are in a do or die situation, you have no option but to focus on your goal. Distractions don’t register in your awareness, so you can’t fall to them.
Creates A Deadline – Most deadlines don’t work because they aren’t real. If you spend money on something or accept money for something, you are forced to deliver. A real deadline is created.
Narrows Focus – Survival mode puts you in a temporary state of stress. Stress narrows your focus on the task at hand, which allows you to survive. The only thing on your mind is achieving the goal you set out to achieve.
Makes Life Enjoyable – Since your goal is top of mind, anything you experience is filtered to aid in that goal. The books you read, conversations you have, and content you consume all “magically” seem to help you. Dopamine floods your brain as pattern recognition gets pushed into overdrive.
If your life isn’t enjoyable or you aren’t making progress, maybe it’s time to take a leap.
This isn’t for everyone, but what’s really holding you back from starting a new life? Quitting your job? Not having a plan B?
Only give yourself 2 options: win or die. And if you understand that success is a result of skill and knowledge, not luck, I have trust that you’ll figure it out.
I don’t want to hear any excuses, because that’s just a prime example of a lack of skill. You can’t control your ego and use your brain to create your own path.
Fabricating Urgency – The Deep Work Routine Nobody Talks About
To start, this will not work unless you take full control of your life.
The reason you show up to a job every day is because your survival is at stake if you don’t. If you want to be free, you have to recreate this effect in your own work. Most people quit because they have nothing holding them accountable to continue writing, building, and selling toward their vision.
Everyone has a desire to be wealthy because they desire to do the work they want to do.
Yet, most people suppress this desire because they’ve been conditioned to believe they don’t stand a chance. Or they just feel guilty for making money because they grew up an environment – physical or digital – that had a terrible relationship with it.
The only reason I was able to do this was because I had full control over my time and income… because I had a business.
Some of these strategies can help you at work, but you need a business to fully leverage the asymmetric payoffs that come from taking risks.
A business gives you the creative boundaries to increase your income as much as you’d like. That isn’t possible at 99.99% of jobs, and I’m guessing you aren’t in the small minority that will make over $500K/year by working up the corporate ladder for 10-20 years when you can achieve that in 1-3 years of focused effort on building your own thing. I’ve had multiple friends and students make that amount in that timeframe by trusting the audience-building and digital product process I teach.
The question now is:
“What exactly do I do when I take a risk that forces me to survive?”
Repeat this as much as you’d like. You won’t make a ton of money in the first few rounds, but as your skill set and audience for your work grows, you will be surprised at what you are capable of.
How I Structure My Days
You’ve probably read about my routine before.
I build new projects in the first block of each morning
I write for the second block of each morning.
I maintain different aspects of the business for the third block of each morning.
I go on walks to clarify ideas and set intentions for my work in between blocks.
I go to the gym as a hard cut-off time for my work.
I have a life to enjoy after work, so I know I have to get my work done in the time I’ve allotted myself in the morning.
It’s counterintuitive, but my health and life take priority over my work, and that makes my work more impactful.
I have to go to the gym at the same time so I can be free in the afternoons, so my work is naturally focused because of this.
Quarterly Projects
If you don’t sell your own product, you will be forced to sell someone else’s.
There is a mind virus in the online space:
“It seems like everyone is selling something nowadays.”
“Look at this guy selling a product, he’s a sell out.” (I see this under many high level individuals posts).
“Ads ads ads ads.” (I saw this on Ali Abdaal’s promotion the other day).
Yes, silly, you need a product to earn an income. There literally is no other way. That’s how the economy works. Buying and selling. Sure, you can invest money, but where did you get that money? By playing a mechanical role in a company that sells a product and pays you a pay check in return for your replaceable efforts. And if you don’t make a lot of money, good luck ever making anything substantial through investing.
Ignore the blind hypocrites and launch a product anyway.
Ever since I started my business, I’ve launched a new project every quarter. Why?
It gave me plenty of ideas to write about relating to the product (because I was fleshing out the outline). I wrote most of the product as tweets and newsletters to test what ideas and marketing angles worked before I launched.
Product launches are the most profitable part of your products timeline. Like a graph that shoots up fast, drops hard, and levels out at a certain number.
I wanted to diversify my income streams. When you’re building an audience, one product can do well, but you wouldn’t bet on one stock to make you rich.
I became more experienced and had something more valuable to launch each quarter. If you’re doing this whole business thing right, you should have something new and better than the competition that you should launch. This leads to a lot of people copying you to capitalize on your good ideas, but you still get most of the sales and reputation. Quarterly launches keep you on top.
I don’t have to worry about being extremely successful with one launch because I know I’ll be iterating on it within 3 months.
It gave me quarterly public deadlines to hit. I didn’t have to guess when my next project was going to launch (so I couldn’t get stagnant with my business). If I wanted my income to increase – rather than decrease – I had to launch a product to survive.
People often ask, “What is the one thing that helped you get ahead of other people in this space?”
I would confidently say it’s launching a project every quarter.
It built my authority, kept me focused, and prevented me from trying to fuel a dead product.
What kind of products can you launch in such a short time frame?
Courses
Cohorts
Coaching
eBooks
Templates
You can build and test these fast. If one fails, that’s fine, build another. If it works, great, start building complimentary products and consider turning that idea into a business that demands more capital or resources.
At the start, these should form the foundation of your brand and build cash flow. Don’t try to get complex with the products you create until you have the resources to do so.
Then, you can plan for bigger products like a software to launch in one of those quarterly spots, but still keep launching other things.
Now, you don’t need to launch an entirely new product. You can:
Combine products into a bundle and launch that.
Add a new module to a current product increase your prices – you would promote the price increase “launching” on a specific date.
Run the same cohort over and over again each quarter. This is probably the simplest way to go about this. I would recommend having different topics for each cohort so you can attract customers with different needs.
By doing this every quarter, I could measure the impact and authority of my brand based on my revenue from the launch.
Launch a freelancing product around 500 followers, you’ll make around $3K. Launched a branding product when you hit 10,000 Twitter followers, you’ll make around $10K. 3 years later when your ideas are fleshed out, you’ll make $700K. People who only sell one product (and don’t improve it) end up marketing too hard and destroying their trust with their audience while making much much less in revenue.
The Lesson
Your deep work sessions are fuelled by your quarterly product launches.
Embrace procrastination at the start. You have time before the launch.
Work on the product outline and plan for 1-2 months leading up to your launch.
Set a public launch date. Set a first promotion date 3-4 weeks before that. Build the sales page to accept orders first. Execute the launch and get the product built.
If you aren’t building, you’re dying.